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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75250 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ LEFTY O’ THE BIG LEAGUE
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HE WAS SAYING TO HIMSELF: “ONE MORE! ONLY ONE MORE! I
+MUST GET HIM――I’VE GOT TO!”]
+
+
+
+
+ LEFTY
+ O’ THE BIG LEAGUE
+
+ BY
+ BURT L. STANDISH
+
+ Author of “Lefty o’ the Bush,” “Lefty o’ the Blue
+ Stockings,” “Lefty o’ the Training Camp.”
+
+
+ _ILLUSTRATED_
+
+
+ GROSSET & DUNLAP
+ PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY
+ GROSSET & DUNLAP, INC.
+
+ _All Rights Reserved_
+
+
+ _Printed in the United States of America_
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I GETTING IN BAD 11
+ II A CALL-DOWN FROM THE MANAGER 17
+ III THE RIOT AT THE THEATER 24
+ IV ONE AGAINST SCORES 31
+ V FRIENDLY BUCK FARGO 36
+ VI WHO WAS TO BLAME? 42
+ VII WITHOUT GRATITUDE 48
+ VIII THE MAN WHO KNEW 56
+ IX SOMETHING SUB-ROSA 63
+ X “WHEN THE CAT’S AWAY” 70
+ XI ALL IN 77
+ XII LEFTY’S FAILURE 82
+ XIII THE DISCHARGED WAITER 89
+ XIV BERT ELGIN’S LUCK 97
+ XV THE REASON WHY 103
+ XVI THE PURLOINED LETTER 108
+ XVII GUILE 114
+ XVIII THE MAN IN THE CORRIDOR 120
+ XIX NOT QUITE PROVEN 125
+ XX JANET HARTING WONDERS 131
+ XXI THE YELLOW STREAK 139
+ XXII LEFTY’S CHANCE COMES 147
+ XXIII THERE’S MANY A SLIP 152
+ XXIV THE UNEXPECTED 158
+ XXV THE STRUGGLE 167
+ XXVI GAINING GROUND 174
+ XXVII A CHANCE TO MAKE GOOD 181
+ XXVIII A BAD BEGINNING 186
+ XXIX TAKING A BRACE 193
+ XXX THE TRICKY TWIRLER 198
+ XXXI ONCE TOO OFTEN 206
+ XXXII THE SPIKING OF SCHAEFFER 213
+ XXXIII THE TELEGRAM 219
+ XXXIV NOTHING ELSE POSSIBLE 225
+ XXXV FOR WANT OF A LIE 231
+ XXXVI DROPPED OUT OF SIGHT 240
+ XXXVII OPENING THE SEASON 245
+ XXXVIII THE TWO MANAGERS 250
+ XXXIX THE MEETING IN THE GRANDSTAND 254
+ XL THE SURPRISE 263
+ XLI THE BEGINNING OF THE GAME 270
+ XLII THE TRUTH AT LAST 279
+ XLIII THE LUCKY SEVENTH 285
+ XLIV THE LEADING RUN 294
+ XLV LEFTY’S TRIUMPH 299
+ XLVI HOW IT ALL HAPPENED 305
+
+
+
+
+ LEFTY O’ THE BIG LEAGUE
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ GETTING IN BAD
+
+
+“Say, fellows!” sang out Red Pollock, the snappy little shortstop of
+the famous Hornets. “Look who’s here!” There was a general turning of
+heads and craning of necks on the part of three or four players waiting
+their chance to wield the willow in batting practice.
+
+“Another Yannigan,” groaned Cy Russell, star pitcher of the
+organization. “The woods is full of ’em.”
+
+“He don’t look much to me, neither,” stated big Buck Fargo critically.
+“Say, Jim, who is it, an’ where’d you root it out?”
+
+Brennan, the short, stocky, belligerent-looking manager of the Big
+League team, did not answer. With his bushy eyebrows drawn down in
+a frown over his deep-set eyes, he was staring at the young fellow
+threading his way through the groups of players scattered about the
+field at all kinds of training work. The stranger wore a soiled and
+faded gray uniform, upon the shirt of which was sewn a letter K, and
+dangled a worn leather glove by one finger. His cap, pushed back on a
+mane of heavy, dark-brown hair, revealed a clean-cut, pleasant face,
+dominated by a pair of keen brown eyes, a firm chin, and sensitive
+mouth.
+
+As he took in these details Brennan’s scowl deepened and his bulldog
+chin protruded dangerously. Catching sight of his face, Pollock grinned
+and nudged the man nearest him. “Look at the old man,” he whispered.
+“Something doing.”
+
+The stranger came on without a pause, and, a moment or two later,
+stopped before the manager. His lips were pressed tightly together, but
+otherwise his face was perfectly composed. “I’ve come to report, sir,”
+he said quietly.
+
+The manager’s eyes narrowed. Several things had been fretting him all
+morning, and his temper was not even at its uncertain best. “Indeed!”
+he sneered. “And who are you?”
+
+“Locke――Lefty Locke.”
+
+“Never heard the name before,” retorted Brennan shortly.
+
+For an instant the newcomer seemed taken aback. A faint touch of color
+came into his cheeks, and he looked at the manager as if wondering
+whether he could possibly be in earnest.
+
+“I――thought――Mr. Toler had written you,” he stammered. “He――said he was
+going to.”
+
+Brennan’s eyes flashed. “Well, he didn’t,” he snapped. “Where’d you
+come from? What’s your record?”
+
+“I pitched last season with the Kingsbridge team of the Northern
+League,” Locke said briefly.
+
+“A twirler!” exclaimed the manager. “Well, I’ll be――” He stopped
+abruptly, gulped once or twice, and then asked, in an ominously quiet
+voice: “What did you do season before last?”
+
+“Nothing. It was my first year in professional baseball.”
+
+“What!” Brennan’s face turned purple, and his last shreds of
+self-restraint vanished. “You pitched one season, an’ got the gall to
+expect a job with the Hornets! You expect me to believe that Ed Toler,
+the best scout I’ve got, picked you up without saying a word to me
+about it――when we’re overrun with pitchers, at that. I don’t want you.
+Training was begun ten days ago, an’ I got enough men. You can hike
+back to the bush, where you come from. I wasn’t born yesterday, an’
+you can’t put one over me like this. Get that?”
+
+As he listened to the tirade, the color flamed into Locke’s face,
+and his grip on the leather glove tightened. Then, from the group of
+players, who had been interested spectators of the interview, came a
+smothered laugh, which seemed to act like a tonic. As he heard it,
+Locke’s eyes narrowed and his face hardened.
+
+“You don’t want me?” he repeated, in a steady voice. “You’re willing to
+release me from the contract I made with Toler?”
+
+“That’s what I said,” growled Brennan.
+
+“Then I’m free to accept any other offer?”
+
+Something in his tone made the manager prick up his ears, all his
+professional instincts aroused. It is one thing to fire a man who isn’t
+wanted, but quite another to let him go when another club is after
+him. “Offer!” he sneered, with deliberate intent. “I s’pose the Tigers
+an’ the Blue Stockings are fair tearing each other’s eyes out as to
+which’ll have you.”
+
+Lefty’s lips tightened at the man’s tone. “You guessed right, in a
+way,” he retorted. “Twenty-four hours after I pledged with Toler, I had
+an offer from the Blue Stockings of a thousand dollars more than your
+scout promised me.”
+
+The silence which followed this statement was eloquent. Some one in the
+little group near by whistled incredulously. Brennan’s eyes were fixed
+intently on the cub pitcher’s face, as if he were trying to make out
+whether this was the truth or a magnificent bluff. Accustomed as he was
+to judging men, he was forced to admit that the youngster did not look
+like a liar.
+
+“And how much was that?” he demanded abruptly.
+
+“Twenty-five hundred.” Already Lefty was sorry for his impulsive
+outburst. In a flash he realized that if he had kept his mouth shut he
+would have been free in a moment to accept the better offer.
+
+“Humph!” grunted Brennan thoughtfully. If Doyle, of the Blue
+Stockings――the Hornets’ most bitter rivals――wanted this kid as bad as
+that, there must be something in him, and it would never do to let him
+go. Much as he hated backing water, the manager was too shrewd a man
+to allow personal feelings to influence his professional judgment. He
+scowled deeply, bit his lips, and then snapped sourly:
+
+“Well, seeing as you’re here, you might as well make yourself useful.
+Trot out there and take that fellow’s place; I can use him somewhere
+else. Toss a few straight, easy ones over the plate. Stir your stumps
+now,” he went on, turning fiercely on the astonished group near by.
+“You boys get busy. We’ve wasted too much time. We’ll stop this general
+shillalah swinging, and take the field in regular positions. Every one
+of you run your hits out. You need the exercise.”
+
+Without a word, Lefty turned, and made his way toward the cub pitcher,
+who had been shuffling around near the slab waiting for the altercation
+to end. He had been extremely foolish not to keep his face shut, but
+there was nothing to be gained by repining over the past.
+
+An instant later, as his eyes met those of the man he was replacing,
+he started slightly, and a look of dazed surprise flashed into his
+face. It vanished swiftly, but as he reached the fellow his lips were
+compressed, his eyes hard and cold.
+
+“Hello, Elgin,” he said stiffly.
+
+The other, his face black as a thunder cloud, growled out an
+unintelligible monosyllable, thrust the ball into Locke’s hand, and
+walked hurriedly away, leaving the latter to stare after him with an
+expression which told, as well as spoken words could have done, how
+unpleasant and distasteful the encounter was to him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ A CALL-DOWN FROM THE MANAGER
+
+
+The meeting had so surprised and startled Lefty that he stood there
+for a moment or two, ball in hand, watching Elgin join the manager
+and start with him toward another part of the field. He was aroused
+abruptly by a drawling, sarcastic voice from the plate:
+
+“Don’t hurry yourself, bub; any time to-day will do.”
+
+It was burly Buck Fargo, the prize backstop, who stood leaning
+indolently on his bat, watching Locke with mocking eyes. Lefty
+recognized him instantly from the many published pictures he had seen,
+and, berating himself inwardly for having given the fellow a chance to
+criticise, he swiftly toed the pitcher’s plate and sent the ball over.
+
+Of course, it went wide. The cub catcher let out a stream of sarcastic
+language as he stretched himself in vain for it. A joyful snicker arose
+from the waiting players, and Fargo grinned aggravatingly.
+
+“Try again, bub,” the latter invited pleasantly. “Jest a mite nearer
+this time, say a couple of feet. This here stick’s only regulation
+length, and I ain’t built like a gorilla.”
+
+Lefty bit his lips and made no response. A small boy retrieved the
+ball, and the irate catcher whipped it out with decidedly unnecessary
+force. With gritted teeth, Locke caught it, determined that there would
+be no more exhibitions like that. He did not know what was the matter
+with him. To be sure, he had done very little pitching for a long time,
+but he should be able to find the plate better than this.
+
+The second effort was not much of an improvement, and a howl of
+derision greeted it; for there is nothing a crowd of old baseball men
+enjoy more than having fun with a green cub.
+
+The sound had a curious effect upon Lefty. Before the echoes of that
+jeering chorus died away he had regained his grip. He realized that
+they were doing their best to rattle him and cause him to make an
+exhibition of himself, and his jaw squared resolutely.
+
+“I’ll fool ’em!” he muttered. “I’ll show him something.”
+
+He caught the ball easily, his eyes fixed on Fargo’s grinning face. The
+big catcher stood negligently swinging his bat, and when he saw the
+sphere coming apparently straight toward him with speed, he dodged back
+precipitously, only to behold it shoot gracefully in and cut a corner
+of the plate.
+
+“Well, well, well!” he exclaimed. “Accidents will happen. You’ve really
+got a curve, have you? Let’s have another one like that, if you can do
+it.”
+
+Lefty could and did, and the batter sent the horsehide soaring over the
+fence. Obedient to instructions, he tossed aside his bat, and began
+trotting leisurely around the bases. Halfway between first and second
+he paused for a moment. “You’ll learn, bub,” he chuckled. “Some time
+next fall mebbe we’ll make a pitcher out of you.” Then he resumed his
+placid way about the diamond, while a new ball was produced, and Locke
+faced the second batter.
+
+Lefty did not try any more curves, for he had suddenly realized that
+this was batting practice, not an exhibition of pitching. He continued
+to find the plate with a fair degree of accuracy, however, and one
+after another the three other players smashed out the sphere with
+joyous enthusiasm, forgetting in the delight of batting to continue
+their baiting of the new pitcher.
+
+Not so Buck Fargo. He enjoyed batting quite as much, as his companions,
+but he also dearly loved to get a cub’s goat.
+
+“Where’s your curves, bub?” he taunted, as he took up his bat for the
+second time. “Can’t you give us something interesting, or was they
+accidents, like I thought?”
+
+Lefty smiled faintly. He did not intend to give Fargo the satisfaction
+of seeing that his words made any impression whatever. In spite of his
+determination, however, as he flung his arm forward, unconsciously he
+gave it a little twist which, made the horsehide――seemingly wide at
+first――cut a corner of the plate in an elusive curve. The batter hit it
+glancingly, and popped up a little fly which Locke smothered without
+moving more than a step or two from his position.
+
+“Not bad for the bush,” chuckled Fargo, quite undisturbed. “Saved me
+the trouble of stretching my legs, anyhow. Come ahead, Cy, and see what
+you can do with the boy wonder from Squedunk.” He shot a swift glance
+out of the corner of his eye toward a distant part of the field, and
+went on in exactly the same tone, with scarcely a perceptible break:
+“He’s got a baby curve or two that might be fair if he could control
+’em.”
+
+Lefty was possessed by an irresistible impulse to see what he could
+do with the mighty pitcher, Cy Russell. He knew perfectly well that
+the discomfiture of one of their number might get the whole bunch down
+on him, but he was a very human individual, with a spice of obstinacy
+in his make-up. Moreover, he had failed to catch that quick glance of
+Fargo’s across the field, and so was quite unsuspecting.
+
+As Russell faced him, Locke deliberately sent over a drop which fooled
+the batter completely. A slow floater was equally successful, and a
+swift, straight one, cutting the center of the pan, completed the
+discomfiture of the notoriously poorest hitter in the organization.
+
+Fargo jeered out something about luck and “goose eggs,” and hustled the
+next man to the plate. Lefty, throwing prudence and common sense to the
+winds, resolved to give them what they clamored for if it was in his
+power. He fooled the batter into swinging at a clever bender, and then,
+oblivious to the sudden cessation of Fargo’s taunting voice, was just
+winding up to pitch again when a hand suddenly gripped his wrist, and a
+harsh voice sounded in his ear:
+
+“What the deuce do you think you’re doing, Locke?”
+
+Brought to earth, Lefty swung around, and stared for an instant, with
+mantling cheeks, at Jim Brennan’s angry face.
+
+“Gimme that ball!” rasped the manager. Locke handed it over without a
+word. “I s’pose you think you’re mighty smart showin’ off your cute
+tricks,” the older man went on, in a cold, biting tone; “but that’s
+where you fall down――hard. This is batting practice, not a Fourth of
+July celebration. When I want any fireworks I’ll let you know. Get
+that? Well, see you remember it. Another stage play like this will be
+your finish. All around the park, boys, and then back to dinner.”
+
+He turned from Lefty with an abruptness which made it impossible for
+the cub pitcher to say a word in his own defense, and perhaps it was
+just as well. To tell the truth, there was nothing to be said. Locke
+realized perfectly that he was totally in the wrong. A moment later,
+as he caught a glimpse of Buck Fargo’s grinning face, it flashed over
+him that the whole thing was a put-up job to get him a call. The big
+catcher could not have failed to see Brennan coming long before the
+manager got within hearing distance, yet he had kept up his taunts to
+the last minute in order that Locke might be taken by surprise.
+
+“Looks like my luck had deserted me,” Lefty thought, as he fell into
+the line of men trotting briskly around the field just inside the high
+board fence. “Haven’t been here an hour before I get a call from the
+manager and run into Bert Elgin.”
+
+At the thought of the latter’s presence in the squad, he frowned
+deeply. The call-down was swiftly forgotten, but this other annoyance
+was likely to be much more lasting and trouble-breeding in its results.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ THE RIOT AT THE THEATER
+
+
+“A rah, rah boy, is he?” sneered a voice from the group not far away.
+“I see his finish.”
+
+Lefty knew they were talking about him. He had been aware of the fact
+for five minutes or so, but this was the first remark which had reached
+his ears in its entirety. Sitting in a corner of the Hatchford House
+lobby, he turned his head slightly and met the belligerent glance of a
+burly, dark-browed, full-lipped fellow of twenty-six or seven, who was
+lounging against a pillar a little way off.
+
+For a moment their eyes clashed, and then Hagin――Lefty had heard him
+so called, and recognized the name as that of the left fielder on the
+regulars――laughed disagreeably and said something to the man next him,
+who glanced up, stared, and turned away with just the same sort of
+laugh.
+
+Lefty’s eyes dropped to the newspaper he held before him. In the
+scant nine hours since his appearance on the field that morning, the
+wide difference between a bush-league team and an organization like
+the Hornets had been forced upon him at every turn. In his joy and
+astonishment at the unexpected offer from Brennan’s scout, to say
+nothing of the better one which followed it so closely, he had given
+little thought to what his reception would be by the other players.
+
+He was far too sensible, of course, to expect anything like an
+open-armed welcome, but he had not quite counted on the cold-shouldered
+indifference which was meted out to him from every quarter.
+
+The other fellows were mostly friendly enough among themselves. On the
+field, in the hotel dining room, and now in the lobby, they gathered in
+little groups, laughing, joking, chaffing each other in a way which, in
+no small degree, emphasized the newcomer’s loneliness and isolation.
+
+Lefty had tried several times during the day to scrape acquaintance
+with some fellow who looked pleasant and friendly enough, for he was
+a chap who enjoyed the companionship of his fellow men, and exactly
+the sort of joshing give-and-take which is inevitable when a crowd of
+like-minded individuals get together. His mild little efforts had been
+met with such brusque, chilling indifference, however, that he speedily
+gave it up.
+
+“I seem to have gotten in wrong from the start,” he reflected, as he
+sat with his eyes fixed on the paper, though he had read scarcely a
+word. “Brennan’s sore as a crab because he had to back water before his
+own men. I wish to thunder he hadn’t! I’d be better off. Then there was
+that fool exhibition of mine on the field. I suppose they all think
+I’m swelled up about my pitching, and was showing off. And now they’ve
+found out I’m a college man. I wonder how they got wise to that. I
+didn’t mean any one should know, if I could help it; some professionals
+seem to have such a deep dislike for a fellow who’s been through
+college. I wonder if Elgin could have dropped a hint.”
+
+In reality Lefty had quite missed the most important reason of all.
+Other things may have influenced the men in some small degree, but the
+simple fact of his belated arrival at the training quarters accounted
+for more than anything else.
+
+Ten days had been ample for the cubs, or new recruits, to become
+acquainted. They had formed their little cliques, split up into their
+different factions. They were sufficient unto themselves. It was
+natural for them to treat a new arrival with jealous coldness, for
+every additional candidate only decreased the chances of the others to
+make good. As for the old men――the regulars of this especial team――they
+had small use for a youngster until he showed himself made of the right
+stuff.
+
+At length, tired of sitting alone, Lefty arose and sallied forth to
+take a casual inspection of the Texas town. Ashland was a place of some
+size, and decidedly up to date. A number of factories and various oil
+refineries gave employment to several thousand workmen, the majority of
+whom――it seemed to Lefty――were thronging the brightly lighted streets,
+blocking the corners, or crowding into the many moving-picture or
+vaudeville shows which lined the main thoroughfares.
+
+Lefty did not find this solitary inspection of the town very exciting,
+and, after he had traversed a few of the principal streets, he decided
+that he had had enough. A glance at his watch told him that it was
+only a quarter to eight. The evening seemed to be dragging along with
+infinite slowness. He might return to the hotel and go to bed, of
+course, but he wasn’t in the least sleepy, and somehow he had a feeling
+that by doing such a thing he would be giving in. Finally the glaring
+lights of a combination moving-picture and vaudeville show across the
+street gave him an idea. Crossing hastily, he bought a ticket and
+pushed into the darkened auditorium.
+
+The place was jammed to the doors with a rather boisterous crowd, made
+up almost entirely of men. Lefty could see no vacant seat, and so
+he took his place against the wall back of the last row, from which
+position he watched the progress of the pictured drama with a certain
+amount of interest. There was no questioning the unusual excellence of
+the films.
+
+Two of them were rolled off before the stage lights went up and the
+curtain lifted upon the Montmorency Sisters, vocalists. Lefty yawned,
+and decided to get out. The place was hot and stuffy, and he was on the
+point of crowding past the later arrivals who filled the space near
+him, when, suddenly catching sight of two men sitting three rows away,
+he changed his mind.
+
+One of them was a total stranger. Lefty did not remember ever having
+seen him before. The other was Bert Elgin, and, as his eyes took in the
+sharp profile, with the familiar, sneering uplift at the corner of the
+lips, Locke’s face darkened. The face had changed little since he had
+last seen it. An added line or two showed about the mouth, perhaps, and
+there was, no doubt, a certain maturity which years alone can bring. In
+all essential features, however, it was unaltered, and the sight of
+it brought a rush of vivid recollection into Lefty’s mind which made
+him frown. It seemed the irony of fate that they two should meet again
+under conditions which must throw them together in most undesirable
+terms of intimacy.
+
+Oblivious to the twittering pair capering about the stage, Lefty stood
+staring at the back of Elgin’s head with unseeing eyes. His mind
+was back in the past, and his expression showed how unpleasant the
+remembrance was.
+
+The burst of handclapping at the end of the act aroused him in time to
+see Elgin and his companion arise and crowd toward the aisle. He stood
+there waiting for them to go, for he had no desire to encounter the
+fellow just now. With narrowing eyes, he watched his old enemy elbow
+his way roughly toward the door, careless of who or what was in his
+path.
+
+It all came about so suddenly and unexpectedly that Lefty never knew
+just what was the real cause. He saw one or two men turn and stare
+angrily at the fellow shoving his way past them, muttering something
+under their breath as they did so. Then, just as the pair were opposite
+him and close to the door, Locke heard a sharp cry of pain in a
+woman’s voice, followed instantly by a bellow of fury from a man.
+Swiftly there came the thud of bare fists against flesh and bone. A
+dozen men sprang up and began shoving toward the door. A woman screamed
+shrilly.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ ONE AGAINST SCORES
+
+
+Instinctively Lefty joined the rush toward the center of disturbance.
+He caught a glimpse of two men struggling in close embrace, each
+raining blows upon the other’s face and body. He saw that one of
+them was Bert Elgin. The other was a big, burly fellow, dressed in a
+workman’s Sunday best, his face flushed, his eyes aflame with anger.
+
+A score of other men were trying to get close enough to put in a blow
+or two. The place resounded with shouts of: “Kill him!” “Lynch him!”
+“Beat him up!” Then the whole struggling mob burst through the narrow
+doorway into the garish, glittering lobby.
+
+Lefty was borne irresistibly toward the door by the crowd behind him,
+which seemed eager to take part in the fracas. By the time he reached
+it the entire audience was on its feet, making for the single exit.
+Hands pinioned helplessly at his sides, Locke was forced into the
+maelstrom of bodies. There was a squeeze, a breathless grunt, and he
+plunged out into the dazzling brightness.
+
+The disturbance had ceased to be a fight and turned into a riot. The
+mob was made up of men in the raw, lacking in self-restraint, whose
+passions were roused to a white heat with very little cause. A woman’s
+cry of pain, the roar of fury from her escort, and the trouble was
+started.
+
+As they surged against the frail, ornate booth from which tickets were
+dispensed, they were like a lot of madmen. Not half a dozen out of the
+crowd knew what the disturbance was about. Blows were rained on the
+heads and shoulders and backs of friends in their eagerness to get at
+the man in the very heart of that seething throng, and already two
+vigorous personal encounters had been started in different corners of
+the lobby on that account.
+
+As he was flung forward against the side of the ticket booth, Lefty
+felt sudden anger surge up within him. He forgot that Bert Elgin was
+his enemy, and remembered only that he was battling against odds.
+And when, a moment later, by some odd trick of chance, he saw the
+fellow’s face, bruised, battered, blood trickling from a cut on his
+cheek, and caught a fleeting glance of desperate appeal from Elgin’s
+terror-stricken eyes, he threw caution to the winds and jumped into the
+fray.
+
+The very size of the mob was in Locke’s favor, but it is doubtful
+whether he could have done much to help Elgin except for the unexpected
+giving way of the ticket booth. Slowly it began to sway under the
+tremendous pressure against one side. A door at the back was burst
+suddenly open, and the ticket agent dashed forth, clutching the cash
+drawer in both hands, only to trip and fall headlong, scattering money
+in every direction, and causing a new diversion. The crashing over of
+the booth was another, and for an instant Elgin was freed from the
+clutching hands which had held him prisoner.
+
+Lefty darted forward, gripped the man by the shoulders, and dragged him
+into the angle made by the wrecked booth and one wall of the lobby.
+Petrified by fear, the fellow sank helplessly to the floor, and Locke
+had barely time to leap in front of him before the yelling crowd surged
+forward again.
+
+In the second that he stood there waiting, the cub pitcher was
+conscious of a curious feeling which had come to him once or twice
+before at moments of great tension on the diamond. It was as if his
+brain had been wiped with a cold, wet sponge, clarifying his vision,
+and soothing his raw nerves to an almost uncanny degree.
+
+He felt that there could be but one end to the encounter, and yet he
+was not afraid. He eyed the semicircle of angry faces calmly, coolly,
+appraisingly, mentally picking out the exact spot on the protruding jaw
+of the foremost man with which he meant to make connections an instant
+later. When the fellow went down before his beautiful swinging blow,
+Lefty felt a thrill of successful accomplishment.
+
+A second man swiftly followed the first, but after that there was no
+time for picking and choosing. With a howl of rage, the crowd rushed
+forward in a body, bent on getting their hands on their prey and
+crushing him bodily. Luckily only three men could face Locke at once,
+and for a brief space he held them back by sheer skill and trained
+muscles.
+
+With fine precision he wasted not a single effort, but broke through
+clumsy guarding arms, to land on some vital spot with a jolt which sent
+his man reeling back against the others, or else crumpled him to the
+floor.
+
+In about three minutes those in the front rank were seeking to escape
+the deadly accuracy of his blows by dodging to one side or trying to
+push back through the crowd. Unfortunately for Locke, those in the rear
+continued to force their way forward, and thus slowly but inexorably
+the ring closed in.
+
+Lefty’s arms moved faster and faster. He had long ago ceased to pick
+and choose――it was impossible. Several times he had leaped back before
+it occurred to him to wonder what had become of Elgin. That was but a
+fleeting thought, however. He had never counted on the fellow’s aid, so
+it was just as well that he was not in the way.
+
+A number of glancing blows had struck home, one cutting his lips. At
+last he began to wonder how long he could keep it up, and what the end
+would be. He knew he might expect no mercy from the maddened crowd, all
+of whom supposed, by this time, that he was the one who had started the
+fracas. Unless the police came soon, or some other help――
+
+Suddenly he felt a movement behind him. His first thought was that his
+enemies had found a way to get him at the rear; but even before he
+could whirl about to face them, two hands caught his shoulders, and a
+familiar voice sounded in his ear:
+
+“Lemme have a whack at ’em, kid.”
+
+It was Buck Fargo, the big catcher of the Hornets.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ FRIENDLY BUCK FARGO
+
+
+Dazed, bewildered, a sudden overpowering weakness gripping his limbs,
+Lefty felt himself thrust against the wall, and saw the massive form of
+the man who had baited him so successfully on the field that morning
+leap into the front place, eyes blazing and huge fists doubled for
+action.
+
+Perhaps it was the sight of him――burly, menacing, and fresh――which
+turned the tide. More likely it was that sudden panicky awakening which
+comes to every mob when the first outburst of passion has run its
+course. At all events, Fargo had no more than time to land his fist
+with precision and force on the faces of two men, before some one at
+the rear started a yell that the cops were coming.
+
+The effect was magical. Out into the street poured the mob, and fled
+wildly in every direction. Before he realized that it was all over
+Lefty felt himself grasped by the shoulders, hustled out of the
+barricade and rushed across the street. The whole thoroughfare was
+filled with flying men, so that they passed unnoticed as Fargo headed
+straight for the nearest corner.
+
+“Them cops is coming at last,” he explained shortly, whirling into a
+side street. “We don’t want to be pinched. Think you’re good for the
+hotel, kid? If you ain’t, we can stop at a drug store and have you
+patched up.”
+
+“I can make it all right,” Lefty gasped. “I’m only――dead beat.” An
+instant later he stopped still. “What became of Elgin?” he asked
+abruptly. “I forgot him.”
+
+“He beat it.” Fargo’s tone was noncommittal. “He crawled out the same
+way I got in, while they was busy with you. That ticket coop was held
+up a mite at the end by hitting against the wall. He’s all safe.”
+
+There was an expression of curiosity on the catcher’s face, and for a
+moment he seemed about to ask a question. Apparently he changed his
+mind, however, for the next instant his lips closed and he hustled
+Lefty on again.
+
+They reached the hotel without attracting much attention. Locke had
+managed to wipe most of the stains of battle from his face, and as
+they entered the side door Fargo clapped his own wide-brimmed felt hat
+on the other’s head, starting some rough bantering with the elevator
+boy, which kept the fellow occupied. They stepped out on the top floor
+without the boy having really noticed Lefty at all.
+
+“Now we’ll take stock, kid,” the catcher said, as he switched on the
+lights in Lefty’s room and closed the door. “That face of yours ain’t
+so bad, after all. We’ll fix your mouth up in a jiffy. Got any plaster?”
+
+Locke nodded. “Yes, but I don’t want you to bother about it, Fargo.
+It’s white of you to――”
+
+“Stow that, son!” interrupted the big chap shortly. “This rumpus is
+going to get the old man up on his ear for fair. If he finds out you
+was in it, there’ll be blazes to pay.”
+
+“But how can he help it? I was there, and everybody saw me.”
+
+“Sure you was,” grinned Fargo, dexterously applying a wet towel to
+Locke’s countenance. “In the scuffle you got a tap or two by mistake;
+that’s all. You don’t s’pose that crazy bunch of roughnecks is going to
+remember faces, do you? They was clean off their nuts, every last one
+of ’em.”
+
+There was silence for a moment or two as the big, muscular fingers
+applied the plaster to the cut lips with surprising deftness. “There!”
+Fargo said with satisfaction. “That’ll do fine. There’s a scratch
+alongside your nose, but it don’t amount to nothing. Pull off your
+shirt, and let’s have a look at the rest of you.”
+
+Lefty obeyed without question, and revealed a muscular chest dotted
+here and there with bruises already beginning to darken. It had been
+impossible to guard himself at every point from the frenzied rushes,
+and he had instinctively protected his face.
+
+Fargo grinned as he saw the damage. “Won’t you be stiff and sore
+to-morrow morning!” he chuckled. “It’s lucky you can lay it to the
+first day’s practice. Say, kid, how in thunder did you two start that
+riot? You look like a peaceable guy to me.”
+
+“I didn’t start it,” Lefty returned swiftly. “I broke into the game
+afterward.”
+
+“Humph! Let’s hear about it.”
+
+Briefly, Lefty told him what little he knew about the beginning of the
+trouble. He said nothing of his dislike for Bert Elgin, but Fargo must
+have guessed it from his manner.
+
+“So that’s it?” the catcher commented. “I gather you two ain’t very
+chummy.”
+
+“Not exactly,” Lefty returned shortly.
+
+Fargo eyed him curiously. “Then why did you butt in? He started the
+muss, and I should say he deserved what he got.”
+
+“But the whole push was against him,” protested Locke. “I couldn’t
+sneak off and let them hammer him to pieces.”
+
+“Strikes me that _he_ sneaked,” Fargo said swiftly. “When I came
+across the street to see what was doing, there wasn’t any use trying
+to get near the front, so I made for the corner to see if I could get
+a glimpse over the top of that tipped-over ticket cage. I hadn’t been
+there a minute before Elgin came crawling out from underneath. He was
+so blamed scared that I hadn’t more’n got out of him that you were in
+there alone when he beat it. Looks like it didn’t worry him any to
+leave you alone for the bunch to hammer.”
+
+Lefty smiled faintly. “Can’t help that. It was up to him. I’d have
+hated myself if I’d gone away and left any man in that kind of a hole.”
+He hesitated an instant, the color rising to his face. “Besides, even
+if we aren’t friends, he’s――one of the bunch.”
+
+Fargo stared at him oddly; then he broke into a laugh. “Time we was
+both in bed,” he said abruptly. “Don’t forget to keep your trap shut
+about this to-morrow. You was there and got a love tap or two in the
+scuffle. Lucky the old man can’t see that chest of yours.”
+
+Outside the door he paused, the queer look in his eyes again. “One of
+the bunch!” he muttered aloud. “Well, I’ll be hanged!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ WHO WAS TO BLAME?
+
+
+On his way in to breakfast next morning, Manager Brennan bought a
+copy of the Ashland _Morning Chronicle_ to glance through during the
+progress of the meal. Having seated himself and given his order, he
+spread open the sheet. The first thing to catch his eye was the flaming
+headline, “Palace Theater Wrecked by Mob.”
+
+Having heard echoes of the affair the night before, the manager glanced
+over the account with interest. Halfway down the column he stopped
+short, clutched the paper, and stared with bulging eyes and purpling
+cheeks at a certain short paragraph:
+
+ The cause of the riot is not definitely known. It is said,
+ however, to have been started by the rowdyish behavior of one
+ of the visiting baseball men who was attending the performance.
+ We might call Manager Brennan’s attention to the fact that,
+ while Ashland is always ready to extend every hospitality to
+ himself and his famous organization, she does not care about
+ having that hospitality abused.
+
+With a guttural exclamation of rage, Brennan half started from his
+seat, only to relax again and glare around.
+
+“You read that stuff?” he demanded, catching the eye of Red Pollock
+across the table.
+
+“Sure!” grinned the latter. “Great dope. If Cy hadn’t coaxed me into a
+game of draw, I’d been there myself, instead of missing all the fun.”
+
+“You’d ought to thank me,” said Russell philosophically. “If you hadn’t
+been so busy losing your dough to Pete and me, you’d likely got your
+block knocked off down the street. According to accounts, there wasn’t
+nothing playful about that mix-up.”
+
+“I reckon not,” sighed Pollock regretfully. “They say the lad that
+started the rumpus, whoever he was, got into a corner and held off the
+whole bunch for ten minutes. He must be some scrapper. I got mixed up
+in a strike riot in Chicago once, and, believe me, it’s no cinch to
+stand off a crowd of roughnecks like that.”
+
+“Humph!” grunted the manager. He had cooled down considerably while the
+others were speaking, and was doing some thinking. “Any of the boys see
+it?”
+
+“Sure! Buck got a look-in, he was telling us.”
+
+Brennan glanced swiftly down to where Fargo sat at the end of the
+table. “How about last night, Buck?” he called, in a deceptively mild
+tone. “Were you the one who started the rough-house downtown?”
+
+“Nix on that!” grinned the catcher. “It was going full blast when I got
+there. I seen all I wanted to from the outskirts. The crowd was plumb
+crazy. About a hundred of ’em trying to get at one poor bloke penned in
+behind the upset ticket booth. Them that couldn’t get a whack at him
+hit somebody else for luck, and a dozen nice little individual scraps
+were going on all over the place.”
+
+“But who was the man?” Brennan persisted. “Didn’t you see him?”
+
+“Couldn’t get a sight of him from the street,” Fargo answered readily.
+“The ticket booth was too high. I run into one of your cubs――Locke’s
+his name――trying to get out of the crowd, and we came home together.”
+
+The manager frowned suspiciously. He knew Fargo of old, and realized
+that he was just the sort of man to be concerned in an affair of this
+description. The catcher’s gaze was candid and open, however, and the
+closest scrutiny failed to disclose as much as a scratch on his face.
+
+Brennan’s gaze veered swiftly to the next table, where his new
+recruit sat with some of the other youngsters. Locke looked cool and
+undisturbed as he ate his breakfast with evident relish. The manager’s
+keen eye discovered a bit of plaster on one lip and a scratch on one
+side of his nose; but, by what Fargo had said about the general nature
+of the fighting, those slight abrasions might easily be accounted for.
+Besides, Locke did not strike him as having much of the rowdy in his
+make-up.
+
+Without further comment, Brennan fell to on his breakfast and resumed
+reading the newspaper account. When he had finished it, he came to the
+conclusion that if one of his men had indeed been the cause of the
+disturbance the fellow must be a scrapper of unusual ability, and would
+surely bear upon his person unmistakable marks of the conflict.
+
+Being a man of action, he at once started the round of his players.
+He had no desire to antagonize the rougher element in Ashland. He
+knew perfectly well that this would mean a constant succession of
+bickerings, with the possibility of injury to some of his highclass
+players if they got into a fight.
+
+His critical inspection of the men showed the regulars to be beyond
+reproach. Not one had even a slight abrasion for which he could not
+account. The majority were provided with plausible alibis. Of the cubs,
+three were on the suspicious list. Locke he had already eliminated,
+and so did not bother about him. The other two were Bert Elgin and a
+young fielder named Ross, both of whom――and particularly the first
+mentioned――bore telltale signs on their faces.
+
+They told a plausible, well-balanced story: They had been sitting near
+the stage of the Palace Theater when the uproar started back by the
+door. They arose with the rest of the audience and were carried out by
+the rush of the crowd. When they finally emerged into the lobby――Elgin
+swore that he had left a good-sized piece of skin from his face on the
+edge of the door――the place was filled with men, yelling and fighting
+like maniacs. They were so busy forcing their way to the street that
+neither had been able to get a look at the cause of the disturbance.
+Both were hit several times in the face, and had naturally smashed
+back. On reaching the sidewalk, they had left the place at once and
+returned to the hotel.
+
+Brennan was slightly nonplused. The story rang true. It agreed
+perfectly, moreover, with Fargo’s account of the affair, and the
+manager knew that his catcher was not at all on friendly terms with
+either Elgin or Ross. Lastly, he was confident that neither of them
+had pugilistic skill or nerve enough to stand up before such a crowd
+after the manner which every account agreed that the unknown had done.
+
+Puzzled, with a vague feeling that there was something about it which
+he did not understand, Brennan was obliged to content himself with a
+strict order that the entire squad forego shows of any description in
+the future, under penalty of heavy fines.
+
+Later in the day he instituted inquiries throughout the town, with
+equal lack of success. The majority of people who had been at the
+theater had lost their heads, and could tell him nothing that he wanted
+to know. Three men there were who swore that they had obtained a good
+look at the mysterious individual, but their descriptions were so
+totally at variance that the manager gave up his quest in disgust.
+
+“A lot of dough-heads!” he growled. “Sounds as if they were each
+describing a different person.”
+
+Which happened to be exactly the truth.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ WITHOUT GRATITUDE
+
+
+“Well, it worked all right, kid,” remarked Buck Fargo as he caught up
+with Lefty on the way out to the field. “I’ll guarantee the old man
+didn’t even ask you a question, did he?”
+
+“No. I was waiting for him to brace me, but it never came off. What the
+deuce did you tell him?”
+
+Fargo grinned. “The truth――only not quite all of it,” he chuckled.
+“Wonder how our friend Elgin’s going to get out of it?”
+
+Lefty hazarded no guess. He had more than a suspicion that his old
+acquaintance would manage to evade the responsibility somehow. That had
+always been his strong point, for he was not overburdened with scruples
+about sticking to the letter of the truth.
+
+Fargo explained briefly what he had told Brennan, and then dropped back
+to his own crowd, leaving Locke alone. The latter was just turning into
+the gate of the field when some one touched his arm, and, turning, he
+saw Bert Elgin beside him, a frown of anxiety on his thin face.
+
+“Look here,” the man began abruptly, “Brennan’s just put it up to me
+about last night, and I had to give him a song and dance to steer him
+off. He’s mad as a hornet, and I couldn’t very well tell him I was
+mixed up in that fool business. I wanted to put you wise, so if he asks
+you, your story can fit in with mine.”
+
+Locke’s eyes were fixed coldly upon the other’s face. “And what was the
+story you told him?” he asked shortly.
+
+“Said I was down in front with Ross, and got these scratches getting
+out of the place. Didn’t know anything about what started the muss, or
+see the fellow who――”
+
+“And you expect me to back you up in this lie?” Lefty broke in, his
+eyes narrowing. “You’ve got another guess coming, Elgin. I came mighty
+close to lying for you once, and it’s the last time.”
+
+Elgin’s face darkened. “You’ll blab it all to him, then?” he burst out.
+“I might have known you wouldn’t let slip a chance like this to get
+back at me. You always were a――” He stopped abruptly and bit his lip, a
+slow flush rising in his face.
+
+Lefty’s eyes flashed ominously. “Well?” he snapped. “Let’s have it.
+What were you going to say?”
+
+Elgin’s gaze dropped to the ground, and he kicked a pebble awkwardly.
+“Nothing,” he mumbled. “I――wasn’t thinking――of what――you did for me
+last night.”
+
+Lefty’s lips curled scornfully. “Don’t let that worry you,” he
+retorted. “I didn’t do it for you. I did it to save my self-respect,
+and because you were one of the boys against a crowd of muckers. You
+don’t owe me anything. Get that? I don’t want you indebted to me. As
+for this story you told Brennan, it’s up to you. I won’t go out of my
+way to put him right, but if he asks me questions I’ll tell him the
+truth.”
+
+Elgin threw back his head, furious under the lashing contempt of the
+other’s voice.
+
+“If you’re such a good little boy,” he sneered, “how do you explain
+traveling under a name which isn’t yours? Strikes me that’s a lie, all
+right.”
+
+“That’s my business,” returned Lefty curtly. “Anything more?”
+
+“No,” snarled Elgin; “but if Brennan gets wise through you, I’ll settle
+your hash for good and all.”
+
+Lefty shrugged his shoulders indifferently. “Try it,” he laughed. “If
+you don’t have any better luck than you did the last time, I guess I’ll
+survive.”
+
+Without waiting for a reply, he turned and walked across the field,
+leaving Elgin glaring after him in speechless rage.
+
+For a moment or two Lefty was conscious of an unpleasant feeling, more
+like a bad taste in the mouth than anything else. He had not really
+expected any fulsome expressions of gratitude from Bert Elgin. He was
+quite sincere in not wishing the man to feel indebted to him in the
+slightest. And yet, inconsequentially enough, when it was all over he
+could not help wondering how any one could be so lacking in a sense of
+decency. At least the fellow could have kept his mouth shut, if nothing
+else.
+
+The whole matter was swept swiftly out of his mind, however. Brennan,
+still somewhat peevish at his lack of success in reaching the bottom
+of the riot affair, was decidedly short of temper, and he started the
+day’s practice with a rush and vim which kept everybody on the jump.
+
+“Get a hustle on you, Locke!” he snapped, as Lefty approached at a
+dogtrot. “I want to see what some of the cubs can do with a stick,” he
+went on, in a lower tone. “Get out there and loosen up a bit; a little
+smoke, you know. You was full enough of it yesterday.”
+
+Lefty caught the ball with outward calm, but as he turned and walked
+out to the pitcher’s box he groaned to himself. He had been hoping
+that he might be spared this to-day, for he had a bruise on his left
+shoulder as big as a silver dollar, and his whole upper body was stiff
+and sore from last night’s experience.
+
+There was nothing to do but grin and bear it, however, unless he
+wanted to rouse Brennan’s suspicions. While the cub batters were being
+gathered in, he tried warming up a little, but had no more than sent
+two balls over before he was brought up sharply by the manager’s roar:
+
+“Stop that, and get down to business!”
+
+The first delivery went so high that the cub backstop had difficulty in
+pulling it down. The second was equally erratic. Lefty flashed a swift
+glance at the stocky manager, whose face was set in a fierce scowl, and
+decided that he would have to take a brace at any cost.
+
+With an effort which sent a stinging twinge of pain through his bruised
+shoulder, he whipped over a speedy straight one, which the batter
+missed, following it by a drop that was quite as deceptive. Brennan’s
+scowl relaxed slightly, but more than once during the succeeding
+twenty minutes it deepened again; for Lefty managed to intersperse
+wild pitches with good ones in a manner which could not help being
+exasperating to one who knew nothing of the cause.
+
+“That’ll do!” growled the manager, at length. “You’re a winner, you
+are! What’s the matter with you to-day?”
+
+Lefty mumbled some excuse about not feeling very fit, and Brennan’s
+lips curled. “Huh!” he snorted. “Delicate, are you? Rot! Hey, Cy, come
+over and give this cub a few lessons in first principles.”
+
+There was a general grin from the watching group of cubs, and Lefty
+felt his cheeks burn. He recovered himself swiftly, however, and, at
+Brennan’s order, took his place with the batters. The fact that he
+smashed out a clean single the first time he was up before the Hornet’s
+star pitcher went far toward restoring his own self-respect, even
+though it had no visible effect on the Argus-eyed manager.
+
+Once during the course of the morning’s work Lefty caught Buck Fargo’s
+eyes fixed upon him, and as he was leaving the park toward noon the big
+backstop stepped out from the group of regulars and came over to him.
+
+“Looks like you were getting in bad with the old man,” he remarked
+seriously. “First impressions go a long distance with him. I’ve been
+thinking mebbe we made a mistake in keeping quiet about last night.
+He’d roar for a bit, but he couldn’t sling it into you like he would if
+you’d started that rough-house.”
+
+“You think it would be a good idea to tell him?” Lefty asked gravely.
+
+“That would put him wise to what was the matter with you.”
+
+The cub pitcher’s lips twitched. “Don’t you think it would be more
+sport to see if he could find it out by himself?” he suggested.
+
+Fargo let out a guffaw and brought one fist down on Locke’s shoulder
+with a force which made him wince.
+
+“For a cub, you ain’t half bad, kid,” he chuckled.
+
+That was all he said. The next instant he had turned away and rejoined
+his companions, leaving Lefty to jog on back to the hotel alone.
+
+But somehow, though he was alone, the cub was far from feeling that
+depressing isolation of the day before. The morning seemed to have been
+spent principally in stirring up an old enmity and getting in bad with
+the manager. But these things did not worry the bush pitcher as they
+might have done if he had not fancied that he had also made a friend,
+and one who was well worth while.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ THE MAN WHO KNEW
+
+
+Lefty had barely stepped inside the Hatchford Hotel lobby when some
+one leaped at him like a human whirlwind, and a vaguely familiar voice
+chortled in his ear:
+
+“Well, you old lobster! If I’m not glad to see your ugly mug again! Put
+it there, old fellow!”
+
+Whirling swiftly, Locke saw standing before him a short, slim, wiry
+chap of about his own age, with a deeply tanned and freckled face, and
+a big mouth stretched to its utmost in a wide grin of delight.
+
+“Jack Stillman!” he exclaimed joyously, grabbing the outstretched hand.
+“Well, what do you know about this! Last time I ran into you was on
+Broadway, over a year ago. What the mischief are you doing down here?”
+
+“That’s easy. I’m the only original live wire on the sporting page of
+the _Star_. Ran down to look over Jim Brennan’s live stock and give the
+fans something to think about. You don’t mean to say you’re one of ’em,
+Phil?”
+
+“Guessed right the first crack, Jack,” Lefty laughed. “You always were
+an awful clever boy.”
+
+“But how the deuce―― I didn’t even know you’d taken up baseball.
+Thought you were scratching away in a lawyer’s office.”
+
+“So I was until last spring. I played the season under the name of
+Lefty Locke. It’s a long story, but――”
+
+Stillman’s eyes widened. “You’re Locke?” he exclaimed interestedly.
+“Wouldn’t that get you? I heard a few things about his pitching out in
+the bush last summer, but I hadn’t any idea you were it. Let’s have the
+yarn. Any good copy in it?”
+
+“I hope not,” Lefty said hastily. “Come on upstairs and I’ll tell you
+the story of my life while I’m making myself respectable.”
+
+The newspaper man accepted with alacrity, and when they reached Lefty’s
+room he made himself comfortable while the latter proceeded with his
+toilet and the recital of the summer’s doings at the same time.
+
+“It’s a shame that Blue Stocking scout showed up just too late,”
+Stillman said regretfully. “Of course Jimmy Brennan is all right. He’s
+got more baseball under that dome of his than most managers in the
+country, and if you get in right you’ll be all to the merry. I’d hate
+like thunder to lose that coin though. Any more cub twirlers in the
+outfit?”
+
+“Bert Elgin,” Lefty returned quietly.
+
+Stillman stared, and an expression of incredulity flashed into his
+face. “What?” he gasped. “Not――”
+
+Locke nodded. “The same. Funny, isn’t it, we should run up against each
+other this way?”
+
+“Funny? I don’t see it. The cur!”
+
+Lefty turned swiftly from the bureau, a queer look on his face. “Just
+what do you mean by that, Jack?” he asked slowly.
+
+Stillman snorted. “You know very well what I mean,” he retorted
+forcibly. “I’m not supposed to be wise, but Bob Ferris told me the
+whole story, and it’s my opinion you were blamed fools to keep
+still about it. Any man who’ll steal from one college mate and then
+deliberately work to throw the blame on another isn’t fit for decent
+fellows to associate with. When you had him where you wanted him, why
+didn’t you come out with it, and let everybody know what kind of a
+mucker he was?”
+
+Lefty slipped into his coat, and dropped down beside his friend.
+
+“You know why we didn’t,” he said quickly. “He’d have been fired, and
+the varsity would have lost about every other game that season. You
+don’t suppose it was on Elgin’s account we kept still after we’d found
+how he was trying to throw the blame on me?”
+
+“I’m not quite a fool. All the same, you were wrong. We might have
+dropped a game or two, but you could have jumped into his place, all
+right.”
+
+“You know I couldn’t. I was slaving about ten hours a day to make up
+work I missed on account of that beastly typhoid. How long would I
+have lasted at Princeton if I tried to play ball, too? No; Bob and I
+thrashed it all out, and, though it came mighty hard, we decided it was
+the only thing to do, unless we wanted the team beaten to a frazzle.”
+
+“Why didn’t you come out with it the next year?” demanded Stillman.
+“You could have pitched then, all right.”
+
+“That would have looked fine, wouldn’t it? How would we have accounted
+for keeping quiet so long? I will say, Jack, that we were both sorry
+more than once afterward; but, having started out, there was nothing
+else to do but keep on. I don’t see how Bob came to tell you. It was
+understood that we should keep it entirely to ourselves.”
+
+“It wasn’t till a year after we’d graduated,” the reporter explained,
+his face still clouded. “It was one right at the Princeton Club. I
+don’t remember just how the subject came up. I suppose he thought there
+wasn’t any need of keeping still any longer.” He paused and glanced at
+his companion. “How’s he acted since you showed up? Same old Elgin, I
+suppose?”
+
+For an instant Lefty hesitated. He could picture Stillman’s sarcastic
+reception of the story of the night before, and, knowing his friend’s
+impulsive, quick-tempered nature, he decided that it would be wisest to
+keep silent.
+
+“He wasn’t overjoyed to see me,” he returned quietly.
+
+The newspaper man arose. “I should say not!” he commented briefly.
+“Afraid you’ll let the other fellows know what sort of a rotter he is.
+If I were in your place, I’d be hanged if I wouldn’t.”
+
+“Where would be the sense?” Lefty retorted. “It was all over and done
+with years ago. Of course, if he should try anything like the same game
+again, it would be different. You’re not thinking of――”
+
+“It’s none of my business,” Stillman put in. “I don’t want to have
+anything to do with the mucker. Let’s go down to dinner.”
+
+As luck would have it, stepping out of the elevator, they came face to
+face with Bert Elgin himself, talking earnestly with big Bill Hagin,
+a regular outfielder. For an instant the former stared blankly at
+Stillman. Then, with a great affectation of heartiness, he thrust out a
+hand.
+
+“Well, I’ll be hanged if it isn’t Jack Stillman!” he exclaimed. “Glad
+to see you, old hoss!”
+
+The reporter made no attempt to withdraw his hands from his pockets.
+He seemed, in fact, to thrust them deeper, and as his eyes met Elgin’s
+there was a look of withering, contemptuous scorn in them, which cut
+the ball player like a knife.
+
+“How are you, Elgin?” he said curtly, and passed on toward the dining
+room with Lefty.
+
+For a second Elgin stood staring after them, his face flushed and his
+eyes gleaming angrily.
+
+“Your friend don’t seem choked with joy at seeing you,” Hagin commented
+maliciously.
+
+Elgin came to himself with a slight start, and shrugged his shoulders
+indifferently. “No special friend of mine,” he said shortly. “Used to
+see him now and then three years ago.”
+
+Nevertheless, when he dropped into his place at the table a short time
+later, his face was still flushed and angry.
+
+“Stillman was friendly enough at Princeton,” he thought furiously.
+“That dog has turned him against me with his lying stories, that’s
+what’s happened.” He ground his teeth viciously. “If I don’t put it all
+over him, good and proper, I’m a liar!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ SOMETHING SUB-ROSA
+
+
+“Five-inning practice game at eight-thirty sharp,” announced Manager
+Brennan, at the close of the day’s work.
+
+Instantly every tongue stopped wagging, and each man turned an eager,
+inquiring face in his direction. After nearly two weeks of monotonous
+training, the prospect of a real game, even if it was only among
+themselves, was very welcome.
+
+The new recruits, especially, quivered with anticipation. It was a
+foregone conclusion that the game would be played between the regulars
+and the “Yannigans,” as the cubs are sometimes termed; and the chance
+of pitting themselves against their more experienced rivals thrilled
+each one of the youngsters through and through.
+
+The older men were more indifferent. They had played many such games
+in past training seasons, and knew that these were organized by the
+manager mainly for the purpose of watching the cubs in action and
+studying their possibilities. Still, there would be a chance to try
+their hitting skill against the bush pitchers, and any ball player
+will willingly go without a meal in order to bat.
+
+“You can try your hand at being field captain to-morrow, Cy,” Brennan
+said, glancing at Russell, “and make up your own team.” He pulled
+a pencil and rumpled piece of paper from his pocket and turned his
+attention to the expectant youngsters. “We’ll see how you make out
+bossing a team, Ogan,” he went on, as his eyes lighted on the promising
+young first baseman from Ohio. “I’ll want these men to start in
+playing. Afterward you’ll use your own judgment about keeping them in
+the game.”
+
+He began calling out the names of nine cubs, with the positions they
+were to take, jotting them down as he did so. When he finished with the
+words, “Whalen, catcher, and Locke on the slab,” Lefty beamed.
+
+He had worked hard for two days to atone for the bad impression he
+had made at first, and this looked as if he had succeeded. “And I’ll
+do even better to-morrow,” he resolved, tossing up his glove in sheer
+exuberance of spirits. “I’ll try to show him Toler wasn’t such a bad
+judge of pitchers, after all.”
+
+A glimpse of Bert Elgin’s scowling face only added to Lefty’s good
+spirits, and he departed from the field feeling very cheerful indeed.
+
+At the supper table Jim Brennan was conspicuous by his absence, and
+curious inquiries revealed the fact that he had taken a late afternoon
+train to Fort Worth, from which he did not expect to return until early
+morning. “Pop” Jennings, the oldest and most settled pitcher in the
+organization, was the source of this information. He added that he had
+been left in charge of the squad, and hoped he would not have to break
+too many heads to keep order.
+
+The announcement caused no immediate effect beyond a certain noticeable
+relaxation. There were a few more or less joshing remarks concerning
+Pop’s new job, but they were comparatively mild. Before entering
+the field of professional baseball Jennings had dallied with the
+four-ounce gloves to an extent which gave him something of a reputation
+in sporting circles on the Pacific coast. He was noted for a dogged
+determination to carry out orders at any cost――a trait which made him
+invaluable at the crucial moment of a hard-fought game. The players had
+learned from experience that there would be no slurring of Brennan’s
+instructions, and that any laxity of training would bring with it swift
+retribution.
+
+Happily, Pop had a praiseworthy habit of retiring promptly at nine
+o’clock. Jesters said it was because he was getting old and had to be
+careful of himself. The truth was that Jennings, raised on a farm, had
+been imbued from earliest years with the value of the old adage, “Early
+to bed, early to rise,” and couldn’t help himself.
+
+During the early part of the evening the behavior of the Hornets was
+unexceptionable. Some lounged in the lobby, reading papers, or chatting
+lazily. Most of the cubs were gathered in a corner, discussing the
+morrow’s game, and perfecting a system of signals for use on the
+field. Quite a number of the regulars, gathered about the pool tables,
+indulged in an innocent game of penny ante, or shot craps. A few
+drifted off early to their rooms. Pop, making a round of inspection
+a little before nine, decided that all were harmlessly employed, and
+departed to bed.
+
+Instantly the click of cues and balls ceased, card games languished,
+and a state of general restiveness ensued. Lefty and two or three
+companions, who had drifted in a few minutes before from the lobby,
+wondered what was going to happen. They were not kept waiting long. At
+the end of fifteen minutes Bill Hagin sprang to his feet.
+
+“He’s safe,” he announced. “Come on up to my room, fellows. It’s the
+whole length of the house from his, and we can have a little racket
+without his getting wise.”
+
+The response was instantaneous, for the Hornets, as a crowd, were
+nothing if not lively. Every regular in the room arose promptly and
+started toward the door. The three or four cubs present followed more
+slowly. They had been long enough with the organization to learn the
+wisdom of not being too pushing.
+
+Hagin, glancing back from the doorway, sensed the situation, and
+grinned. “Everybody come along,” he invited good-humoredly. “We’ll
+teach you kids the first principles of draw poker.”
+
+His remark was general, but his eyes happened to rest lightly on the
+face of Lefty Locke in a manner which was distinctly challenging. Now,
+Locke was a very normal young chap, and the tone of condescension
+rasped him slightly. He fancied he played pretty good poker, and had
+an idea that even the famous Hornets couldn’t show him a whole lot
+about the game. Consequently he accepted the invitation with alacrity,
+and was presently seated at a table in the big double room which Hagin
+shared with one of the other members of the team.
+
+Buck Fargo was on one side of him and Pollock, the red-headed
+shortstop, on the other. Cigars were produced and lighted, cards
+appeared, and presently, amid the babble of talk and laughter, Hagin’s
+voice sounded:
+
+“What’ll you have to drink, fellows? Speak up sharp, now; the boy’s
+waiting.”
+
+As he cut for deal Lefty glanced up and saw one of the hotel bell boys
+standing near the door, order-blank in hand. From the character and
+number of the drinks he put down, it became swiftly evident that the
+crowd was certainly making the most of Jim Brennan’s absence. Calls for
+high-balls, fizzes, gin-rickeys, whisky straights, beers, and ales came
+from every side. If there were any scattering orders for soft drinks,
+Lefty did not hear them. The Hornets seemed to agree with Red Pollock
+that “them soft slops was the worst things a man could put into his
+stummick.”
+
+When his turn came to order, Locke hesitated an instant. With the
+examples set him on every side by men so much more experienced in the
+game, he need scarcely feel any compunction in taking something he was
+used to in moderation. A single glass could scarcely do him any harm.
+
+“Light beer,” he said, at length.
+
+Glancing hurriedly over his cards, he quite missed the odd side glance
+which Buck Fargo flashed at him. But perhaps it was not meant for him
+to see.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ “WHEN THE CAT’S AWAY”
+
+
+The liquid refreshments arrived while they were in the midst of an
+unusually animated hand. Everybody had dropped out but Cy Russell,
+Siegrist, the first baseman, and Lefty. The latter, with three kings
+and a pair of tens, was half conscious that Fargo had taken a glass
+from the tray and set it down beside him. It was one of those cases,
+however, where one gets an impression without really seeing, and he
+could not have told afterward whether it was actually the big backstop
+who put it down, or the waiter. And when it came to that, he did not
+notice whether it was the hotel employee himself who held the tray, or
+some one else.
+
+He played his hand for all there was in it, and won the good-sized
+jackpot. Siegrist groaned as he flung down three queens and a pair of
+eights.
+
+Russell shoved over the chips with a grimace. “I was trying to get by
+with two pair, aces up. You don’t work that innocent-appearing face on
+me again, kid.”
+
+Lefty chuckled and took a long drink from the glass as he shuffled
+the cards to deal. The beer had an unusual flavor, and he sipped it
+again, trying to make out what was the matter with it. “Bum stuff,” he
+reflected. “Tastes sort of queer.”
+
+As the game progressed, however, he gradually drained the glass without
+thinking much about it. He was having unusual luck, and played his
+cards with a skill which put him away in the lead of the others.
+
+Presently Hagin sauntered up to the table. “What’ll you have, boys?” he
+asked. “Time for a second round.”
+
+Most of them ordered; one or two declined, among them Lefty.
+
+“No, thanks,” Locke said firmly, when Hagin pressed him. “I’ve had
+enough.”
+
+“I reckon you _have_ had enough,” put in Buck Fargo, in a tone which
+seemed so significant that the cub pitcher glanced swiftly at him.
+The big backstop was busy with his cards, and did not look up; but
+Lefty noticed that his face was oddly serious. He noticed also the
+half-emptied glass of seltzer standing beside Fargo’s scanty pile of
+chips, and a sudden qualm struck him.
+
+“Perhaps I shouldn’t have taken that beer, after all,” he said to
+himself. “I thought everybody was drinking something in that line.”
+
+A quick survey of the table told him that everybody else was, and,
+somewhat reassured, he went on with the game. Perhaps the catcher was
+a little peevish because he was losing so heavily. Adversity at cards
+brings out the good and bad points of a man’s character better than
+almost anything else.
+
+The game progressed. More drinks were brought, more cigars produced
+and lighted. No one got befuddled, for the Hornets were a hard-headed
+crowd, and each one knew his limit; but there was a general warming up
+throughout the room. Joshing and laughter sounded continuously. Now
+and then some one would burst into song, only to be sat upon instantly
+by three or four others. The tobacco smoke hung in a thick pall midway
+between ceiling and floor, stirred fitfully by soft breezes from the
+open windows.
+
+For a time Lefty continued to win. Then gradually luck seemed to turn
+against him. He still held much the same run of cards, but several
+times he made bad errors in judgment. Presently he became conscious of
+an extraordinary sensation of lightness in his head, like nothing else
+he had ever experienced. It was not especially disagreeable. On the
+contrary, it seemed as if his senses had become suddenly more acute, as
+if he could play two small pairs so cleverly that he would bluff out
+stronger hands. Instead, he lost, and kept on losing.
+
+It was most puzzling and annoying. He could not understand it. That
+first odd exhilaration passed in a little while, and was succeeded by a
+dull depression. His head began to ache. Was it the smoke? he wondered.
+Several times he caught one of the fellows eyeing him curiously, and it
+brought him up with a jerk, determined to stick it out and let no one
+know there was anything the matter with him.
+
+How long it continued he never knew. For seeming hours he went on his
+raw nerve, playing the cards dealt to him instinctively, his whole
+being occupied in fighting off a clogging sensation which constantly
+threatened his brain like a smothering blanket.
+
+It was Buck Fargo who made the first move to break up, and Lefty could
+have hugged him had he not been so taken up in keeping a grip upon his
+consciousness.
+
+“Well, fellows, I’m going to hit the downy,” the big backstop announced,
+with a cavernous yawn. “Let’s settle up.”
+
+There were protests, of course; but Fargo was firm.
+
+Released from the tension of playing, Lefty sat stupidly staring at the
+three red chips in front of him. He was aroused by Russell’s voice:
+“Come across with seventeen bucks, Locke. You made a bad finish.”
+
+Without a word, the cub pitcher fumbled in his pocket and drew forth a
+roll of bills. The numbers in the corners were blurred and indistinct.
+He picked out several at random, tossed them on the table, gathered in
+the change Russell handed him, and arose slowly to his feet.
+
+For an instant he stood gripping the chairback. The room was going
+around; the floor tilted dangerously.
+
+“What’s the matter, kid?” came in Fargo’s voice. “You look sort of
+funny.”
+
+Lefty straightened himself with a great effort. “Nothing,” he said,
+with laboriously distinct enunciation. “I’ve got a sort of headache.
+The bad air, I guess.”
+
+Then the men drifted over to the other table, bent on breaking up
+the game there, and Locke was left alone. He had given up wondering
+what was the matter with him. His one thought was to get out of the
+room while he could. Slowly he turned and faced the door. A shout of
+laughter, followed by the sounds of a good-natured rough-house, told
+him that the attention of the others was occupied for the moment. He
+let go his hold on the chair, reeled, recovered himself with an effort,
+and, with set teeth, slowly, laboriously crossed the room.
+
+It seemed an eternity before his hand touched the panels and fumbled
+for the knob. The next he knew he was in the still darkness of the
+hall, steadying himself against the wall. Somewhere in his head a
+sledge hammer was beating on an anvil. He wondered hazily how long
+flesh and bone could stand it. He took a step forward. Where was his
+room? Was it on this floor or the next?
+
+At last he remembered, and began a slow, painful progress down the
+hall. Several times before reaching the stairs he fell, but at last he
+struck the bottom step and began to crawl up on hands and knees.
+
+His room was directly opposite the elevator, or he would never have
+reached it. The door was, luckily, unlocked, and he managed to step
+in and close it behind him. As his finger instinctively pressed the
+electric button close at hand, flooding the room with light, he gave a
+sudden stifled cry.
+
+He was to pitch to-morrow in the first practice game of the season.
+The remembrance stabbed through his fading senses like a knife. He
+had meant to show Brennan what there was in him. He had planned to
+strain every effort in order that the manager should forget his first
+unfortunate fiasco. And now――
+
+He groaned aloud. Then, with a long, shuddering sigh, he felt his legs
+crumple under him. A black curtain fell before his eyes.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ ALL IN
+
+
+When Lefty came to himself the electric lights were still blazing in
+sickly opposition to the bright sunshine which poured through the two
+windows. For a moment or two he lay wondering what had happened and
+why he was stretched out on the floor, fully dressed. Then the dull,
+throbbing pain in his head brought him to a sitting posture, with a
+groan.
+
+He glanced at the bed and saw that it was untouched. He looked up
+dazedly at the cluster of lights, then down at his rumpled shirtfront.
+The glitter of his gold fob caught his eye, and, with an effort, he
+pulled out his watch.
+
+“Twenty-five minutes to eight,” he muttered. “Time I was getting――”
+
+He broke off abruptly and drew his breath with a swift intake as he
+remembered. The game was to begin at eight-thirty. He was to pitch for
+the Yannigans!
+
+Staggering to his feet, he went over to the washstand and plunged
+his face into a hurriedly drawn bowl of water. Nothing had ever felt
+so good before. He dashed it on his hair, regardless of the streams
+running over his shirtfront. Again and again he dropped his face back
+into the grateful, cooling contents of the bowl before he finally
+reached for a rough towel.
+
+He remembered everything now――the absence of Brennan, the adjournment
+to Hagin’s room, the cards, the smoke, the drinks, and――last of
+all――that horrible attack which had come upon him.
+
+What had brought it about? It couldn’t have been the beer. That was
+wretched stuff, to be sure, but a single glass of it would hardly
+produce such an effect. He had thrown his coat hastily to one side and
+was ripping the collar from his neck when suddenly he stopped abruptly.
+
+“Doped!” he exclaimed, aloud.
+
+It was an almost incredible supposition, but it explained everything
+perfectly. No single glass of ordinary beer could have the effect of
+that one upon a man in Lefty’s splendid physical condition, and there
+was the odd, repulsive flavor which he had set down to the poor quality
+of the brew.
+
+But who would do such a thing――and why? Locke’s first thought was of
+Bert Elgin, but the fellow had not even been in the room. Hagin had no
+motive――or, so far as he knew, any opportunity. Who else, then, could
+have been responsible?
+
+The answer did not come readily, for Lefty’s mind was working only
+by fits and starts as he flung his clothes right and left, threw a
+dressing gown over his shoulders, and darted down the hall to the
+shower which Brennan had caused to be put in for the benefit of his
+men. The tingling reaction of his blood under the icy spray meant much
+more to him than breakfast, for an intolerable lassitude seemed to grip
+his limbs, while the very thought of food was almost nauseating.
+
+Lingering under the shower as long as he dared, he dashed back to his
+room and began to drag on his baseball clothes. It was not until he
+was buckling his belt, however, that the significance of Buck Fargo’s
+remark when Lefty refused the second glass of beer came to him: “I
+reckon you _have_ had enough.” Why had he said that? Was it because
+he knew that the first glass was quite sufficient to do the business?
+There had been more to the big backstop’s tone, somehow, than just
+plain, casual agreement.
+
+“Rot!” snapped Locke, snatching up cap and glove and making for the
+door. “I’m loony! He hasn’t a single motive, and, besides, he’s not the
+sort of chap who’d do a dirty thing like that.”
+
+Nevertheless, the thought returned to torment him at odd moments during
+the hasty choking down of a little breakfast, followed by the jog out
+to the field――and afterward. It was the bitter disappointment and
+humiliation of that afterward, which Lefty never forgot.
+
+The cubs were in high spirits, eager for the chance to win their spurs.
+As he watched their antics on the way out to the park, Lefty felt a
+pang of envy. He would have given anything to have that same snap and
+ginger, instead of feeling the lassitude and weariness which gripped
+him.
+
+Several of his teammates asked if he wasn’t feeling well, but he forced
+a laugh, and put them off. He would rather have died than give up his
+place to Bert Elgin. When the time came for him to go into the box
+surely he would brace up and be more himself.
+
+Halfway out to the field Andy Whalen, the cub catcher, came up, and
+they discussed briefly the signals which had been talked over the night
+before. Lefty wished desperately that he had gone off to bed directly
+afterward, instead of strolling into the pool room and allowing himself
+to be drawn into that game in Hagin’s room.
+
+Regrets were unavailing, however. Though some one had given him the
+double cross, Lefty realized that he alone was to blame for making the
+opportunity. Then and there he registered a silent vow that nothing
+under heaven should ever again induce him to deviate a hair’s breadth
+from his manager’s rules of training. And then he wondered whether that
+resolution had been made too late.
+
+The teams had ten minutes’ practice in which to warm up; then the coin
+was tossed. The Yannigans won, and, choosing the field, romped gayly
+out to their positions, tossing up gloves, yelling persiflage at one
+another, and altogether behaving coltishly.
+
+Lefty was with them, but not of them. He had never in his life felt in
+poorer condition for pitching. His head ached, and he was as tired and
+drooping as if he had not slept in forty-eight hours. But he could not
+bring himself to beg off, and there was no other way out. He caught the
+ball from Brennan, who acted as umpire, shot a swift, appraising glance
+at the manager’s impenetrable face, and then took the signal from
+Whalen.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ LEFTY’S FAILURE
+
+
+The call was for a curve ball, and Lefty did his best to respond.
+Unfortunately he put so much curve into it that the sphere missed the
+plate by at least two feet. Whalen looked surprised, but said nothing.
+Lefty felt the blood rushing into his face and making his head pound
+more than ever.
+
+The backstop then signaled for a fast straight ball, indicating with
+one hand that it was to cross the batter’s shoulders. It was straight
+enough, but woefully lacking in speed, and Carl Siegrist promptly hit
+it on the trademark and dusted to first.
+
+Had this been a championship game, the rangy infielder, who had hit
+well over three hundred for several seasons, would have made it good
+for two bags, or even three. Siegrist, like all the other old men, did
+not believe in straining himself unduly, however. He took things easy,
+and camped on the initial sack.
+
+“Rotten!” snapped Ogan, from first. “What in Sam Hill’s the matter with
+you, Locke?”
+
+“Yes,” chimed in Tom Burley, at short; “this isn’t croquet. Wake up.”
+
+“Let’s have a little of that smoke you had up your sleeve the other
+day,” added the third baseman.
+
+Lefty made no reply to these remarks. He was watching Brennan’s face as
+the manager left the plate to take up his position behind the pitcher.
+Brennan looked anything but pleased, and, though he made no remark,
+Locke fancied he knew what was passing through his mind.
+
+The next batter drew two balls in succession, and then created a
+momentary respite for Lefty by flying out to center field. His
+successor, however, smashed the first pitched ball over the infield,
+and romped down the line amid a howl of delight from the regulars,
+whose interest in the game was warming up.
+
+Instantly a gatling fire of sarcasm was turned on Lefty by his
+teammates. Ogan raced into the diamond and caught the pitcher’s arm.
+
+“What do you think you’re doing?” he hissed fiercely. “Are you trying
+to throw the game away?”
+
+Lefty shook his head. His face was white now, his eye desperate. He
+knew he was making a miserable exhibition. He should not have started;
+he should have gone to Ogan before the game and told him he wasn’t
+in fit condition to pitch. His head was splitting so that he could
+scarcely see. He seemed to have no strength left in his arm.
+
+“Perhaps you’d better take me out, Al,” he muttered. “I seem to be on
+the fritz.”
+
+“You bet you are!” retorted the captain hotly. Then, catching a glimpse
+of Lefty’s wretched face, he hesitated an instant. “I’ll give you one
+more chance, Locke,” he went on shortly. “If you don’t make good, out
+you go. I’m not going to have this game handed over on a silver tray if
+I can help it. You’ve got the goods, Locke; brace up and hand ’em out.”
+
+When Ogan had gone back to his position, Lefty turned and glanced at
+the plate. His heart sank when he saw that Buck Fargo stood there,
+swinging his bat negligently. Nevertheless, with set teeth, the
+southpaw toed the rubber and pitched.
+
+It was a straight, high ball that cut the plate in half, and Brennan’s
+voice droned out “Strike!” as the batter let it pass. Lefty was
+heartened, and, at a signal from Whalen, he tried an outcurve. As
+before, this curved too far out even to cut a corner. Another ball
+followed, and then another strike. Then Fargo swung above a drop ball,
+and was declared out.
+
+As the big backstop tossed his bat aside and strolled, grinning, to the
+bench, there was a sigh of relief from the Yannigan infield. Perhaps
+their pitcher was taking an almost-despaired-of brace. One or two gave
+voice to brief words of commendation; but Lefty did not hear them.
+He was staring after Fargo in a puzzled way. No one knew better than
+he――unless it was Andy Whalen――how far those deliveries had fallen
+short of his usual form. He could not understand why Buck had failed to
+make connections.
+
+There was no time to think of that, however, for Bill Hagin was
+strutting to the plate. To Lefty his expression seemed more cocky and
+self-assured than ever, and the bush pitcher felt a sudden ardent
+longing to send him back to the bench as his predecessor had gone.
+
+Whalen signaled for a drop, but Lefty had watched Hagin batting the
+day before, and felt that a straight, speedy one, placed high, would
+bother him more. He notified the catcher to that effect, toed the
+rubber, tried to forget his pounding head, gathered every muscle for
+the effort, and pitched.
+
+The horsehide whirled toward the plate with speed enough, but crossed
+it a good foot below where Lefty intended. The bat met it squarely,
+with every ounce of the big fielder’s muscle behind it, and Lefty
+uttered a stifled groan of despairing surrender as the regulars began
+to circle the bases blithely.
+
+What had gone before was as nothing to the roar which rose from the
+cubs when they saw three grinning players jog, one after the other,
+across the plate. As one man, they turned on Lefty and poured out the
+vials of their wrath in vivid, soul-stirring, mouth-filling phrases,
+which left absolutely nothing to the imagination.
+
+Interspersed with these gusts of abuse were yells of: “Take him out!
+Take――him――out!” which were quite unnecessary. Lefty realized that he
+was done for, and did not even glance toward Ogan as he walked toward
+the bench. He heard the latter’s angry voice, however, yelling after
+him: “Get off the field, you boneheaded quitter!” And that seemed to
+hurt more than anything else.
+
+He wasn’t a quitter. He had done his best, and it was not his fault
+that he had failed. No doubt he should never have gone out there at
+all, but how many of those others, face to face with the alternative he
+had met that morning, would have decided differently?
+
+Head down and hands tightly clenched, he made his way toward the bench,
+not even looking up as he passed Bert Elgin, racing out to take his
+place. He flung himself down on the turf and lay there, chin propped in
+his cupped hands, eyes staring blindly out across the diamond.
+
+More than once the regulars glanced curiously in his direction, but
+no one spoke. A little later, when the Yannigans trooped in, having
+succeeded in holding down the score, Lefty fully expected a storm of
+bitter reproaches to be hurled at him; but nothing came. The fellows
+took their places on the bench or the coaching lines without so much
+as a glance toward the chap lying there on the grass. For all the
+attention they paid to him, he might have been a log of wood.
+
+As inning after inning passed amid that same studied silence and marked
+avoidance, Lefty felt that he would rather have endured sneers, blows,
+anything else. His head still throbbed and he was feeling wretched,
+mentally and physically. He was a fool not to have left the field at
+once; but, being there, his innate stubbornness kept him to the end.
+
+Presently Jack Stillman came up and chatted casually for a minute or
+two, but Lefty was so mortally averse to pity that his replies were
+short almost to ungraciousness; and the reporter walked away, a puzzled
+look on his face.
+
+By dint of fast, strenuous playing on the part of the cubs, assisted
+by the easy-going ways of their opponents, the regulars were kept from
+further scoring, while the Yannigans made two tallies before the end of
+the last inning. But for Locke’s errors they would have won the game.
+The realization did not tend toward soothing their ruffled spirits.
+
+As the teams mingled on the field at the end of the fifth inning, the
+one crowd grinning and joshing, the other responding with defensive
+sarcasm, Lefty caught an angry glare from more than one pair of eyes
+among the disappointed youngsters.
+
+“I s’pose they all have it in for me,” he muttered.
+
+The next instant he saw Jim Brennan bearing down upon him, his face
+more florid than ever, his sharp eyes glinting.
+
+“Good night!” the southpaw murmured. “Here’s my finish.”
+
+Instinctively he rose to his feet and stood there, nervously juggling
+his glove, his eyes fixed upon the approaching manager, waiting for the
+storm to break.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ THE DISCHARGED WAITER
+
+
+Lefty drew one sleeve across his perspiring face, and stared at the
+square, sturdy back of the retreating manager.
+
+“Whew!” he muttered. “And then some!”
+
+On second thought, he withdrew the comment. Jim Brennan had left
+nothing to be said, nothing to the imagination. In stinging phrases,
+which bit like acid and made the pitcher wince and grit his teeth, he
+had told his latest recruit exactly what he thought of such a disgrace
+among ball players.
+
+He applied to Locke every epithet in his repertory――he had a vocabulary
+the width and breadth and startling nature of which was unusual even
+among Big League managers――and Lefty was obliged to stand there and
+swallow everything. He had nothing to say, no excuse to make for his
+behavior. He might have explained everything by telling Brennan of the
+glass of beer which he was certain had been drugged. But that would
+have put the whole crowd in bad, and Lefty was no telltale.
+
+So he set his jaws, clenched his fists, and took everything the manager
+had to say, fully expecting the tirade to end in his being thrown out
+of the squad.
+
+When Brennan finally concluded his spirited monologue with a pyrotechnic
+burst to the effect that he proposed taking the blankety-blank bonehead
+personally in hand the next morning for the purpose of beating a little
+elemental baseball into his thick skull, and then strode away with
+eyebrows twitching, it was a full minute before Lefty realized that it
+had not come. He had not been fired!
+
+“Well, I’ll be hanged!” he exclaimed aloud, his eyebrows drawn together
+in a puzzled frown. “Why didn’t he do it? What use can he have for me
+after to-day?”
+
+For a while he stood there, trying to fathom the reason. Then he gave
+it up and started for the gate. The others had long since left the
+park, and he made his way back to the hotel alone, took his shower, and
+came down to the dining-room ten minutes late.
+
+For all the comfort he got out of his companions Lefty might as well
+have been alone at the table. From the beginning of the meal to its
+long-drawn-out finish not a single word was addressed directly to him.
+The others talked over him, around him, at him, but never to him. Among
+themselves, but in tones which plainly showed that their remarks were
+aimed at Lefty, they discussed that miserable first inning in detail,
+pointing out how different the result would have been with any one but
+a quitter in the box. They made many other scornful comments, and the
+southpaw was hard pressed to maintain a stolid, impassive demeanor. Not
+for the world would he have them guess how much they were hurting him.
+
+By supper time the determined ostracism of his cub companions had so
+worked on Lefty that his nerves were raw. He even caught Stillman
+regarding him queerly, and that was the last straw. He felt, somehow,
+that if he did not confide in some one he would blow up; so, after
+supper, he cornered his classmate in the lobby, and poured the whole
+story into his astonished ears.
+
+When Locke had finished, Stillman gave a long whistle of incredulous
+astonishment.
+
+“That’s the rottenest thing I ever heard of!” he exclaimed indignantly.
+“No wonder you went to smash that way. But look here, old fellow, are
+you certain about the drug part of it? Isn’t it possible that you had
+some sort of an attack of indigestion or something?”
+
+Locke shook his head. “No indigestion would ever give a fellow feelings
+like that. Besides, I was fit as a fiddle before I went into that card
+game. Something was put into that beer, Jack; take my word for it.”
+
+“But who would do such a thing? You say Elgin you’re sure wasn’t even
+in the room. Did you notice anything queer about any other man’s
+behavior?”
+
+For an instant Lefty hesitated, the thought of Fargo’s odd remark, with
+its odder inflection, in his mind. The next instant he gave a start as
+the big backstop strolled lazily up and paused beside his chair.
+
+“Sort of off your feed to-day, ain’t you, kid?” Fargo inquired, with a
+grin.
+
+“I certainly am,” Lefty answered. He hesitated a second, and then went
+on with deliberate purpose: “I reckon midnight poker games with all the
+fixings don’t agree with me.”
+
+“Cut out the fixings and the poker won’t hurt a baby,” the catcher
+returned swiftly. “It’s all right for the regular bunch to make fools
+of themselves swilling hard stuff if they want to, but you kids can’t
+afford to do that sort of thing. I was watching you last night and
+wondering if you was going to fall for that nonsense.”
+
+A flash of sudden comprehension leaped into Locke’s mind and brought
+the color swiftly to his face.
+
+“So that was why you said I’d had enough!” he exclaimed.
+
+Fargo looked slightly puzzled. “Sure! Why did you think I said it?”
+
+Lefty’s face was brick-red and his eyes dropped before the steady, open
+scrutiny of the catcher. “I――didn’t realize you were――paying so much
+attention to me,” he stammered. “I might have known, though, when you
+struck out to-day――to――to help me out. That was good of you, Fargo.”
+
+The backstop laughed. “Chase that notion out of your nut right off,
+son,” he chuckled. “I ain’t that crazy――yet. Reckon I must have been a
+bit off my feed, too, or else you took a spurt while I was up to the
+plate. I s’pose the old man sailed into you good and proper. He looked
+dangerous when I saw him heading your way after the game.”
+
+Locke explained briefly that the manager had raked him over the coals
+in a manner which left nothing to be desired. “I thought sure he’d end
+up by firing me out on the spot,” he confessed in conclusion.
+
+“Not him,” grinned Fargo. “He’s too sharp. You want to toe the mark,
+though, from now on. He’ll have them snappy optics of his on you every
+minute of the day to see whether this was a fluke or your regular way
+of doing things. You’ll have to show him, that’s all.”
+
+As the backstop strolled off, Lefty’s eyes followed him for a
+moment. He had been a fool to suspect for an instant that this big,
+rough-and-ready, but thoroughly straight, dependable fellow could be
+mixed up in anything so underhanded.
+
+Stillman, whose trained mind had missed no point in the conversation,
+quickly broke the silence.
+
+“You surely didn’t think he had anything to do with it?” he questioned.
+
+“I couldn’t understand why he said something he did last night,” Lefty
+explained. “I was an idiot, of course.”
+
+“You certainly were. Buck Fargo is one of the squarest men in the
+crowd, even if he is a little rough outside. He’d do anything in the
+world for a fellow he likes, and you’re mighty lucky he’s taken a fancy
+to you.” He paused for an instant, his brow furrowed thoughtfully.
+“Look here, old fellow,” he went on slowly, “why don’t you get after
+the man who served those drinks! I’ll bet he knows a thing or two, and
+you ought to be able to sweat it out of him.”
+
+Lefty’s eyes brightened. “By Jove!” he exclaimed. “That’s a good idea,
+Jack. I shouldn’t wonder if he did. At least it’ll be worth trying. He
+ought to be on duty now.”
+
+Without further delay, he arose and walked over to the desk. Though he
+did not know the fellow’s name, he remembered perfectly what he looked
+like, and the clerk recognized his description at once.
+
+“Oh, you mean George Miller? Why, the proprietor fired him this
+morning, Mr. Locke. He was stewed last night, and had a holdover this
+morning. He’s left the hotel, and I don’t know where you can find him.”
+
+Lefty turned from the desk, with a shrug. “That’s settled,” he thought
+disconsolately. “Why didn’t I think of it before? I suppose I wasn’t
+thinking of anything this morning, though.”
+
+As he walked back to where the newspaper man sat, he saw Bert Elgin
+crossing the lobby toward the door. For an instant he was moved to
+brace the fellow then and there and accuse him of playing that dirty
+trick the night before. Almost as quickly, however, he realized how
+futile that would be. Though Elgin was the only man with a motive
+strong enough to make him suspected, Lefty had no shred of proof
+against him.
+
+“Let him go,” the latter muttered frowningly. “I haven’t got anything
+on him――yet. I’ll be hanged if I don’t think he was at the bottom
+of it, though, and if I don’t dig up the truth somehow, I _am_ a
+bonehead.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ BERT ELGIN’S LUCK
+
+
+Bert Elgin was decidedly a ladies’ man. A pretty face in any of the
+front-rows of the grandstand never escaped his attention, and, no
+matter in what part of the country his team was playing, he seemed to
+have an almost uncanny faculty of scraping an acquaintance with the
+best-looking girl in town.
+
+His teammates growled and grumbled enviously, making sarcastic
+references to luck and bluff and working the rah-rah racket to
+perfection, but Elgin remained undisturbed by their comments. There was
+no questioning the fact that he could be very charming when he chose
+to exert himself. He had a ready tongue, the knack of subtle flattery,
+and knew how to utilize the glamour which most girls throw about a
+prominent athlete who has had a college education.
+
+Before he had been three days in Ashland Elgin maneuvered an
+introduction to Miss Molly Wendell, a charming young person with a
+penchant for baseball, and obtained permission to call. Within a
+fortnight he had availed himself three times of that permission, and
+they were on very friendly terms, indeed.
+
+This evening he arrayed himself with especial care, and sallied forth
+about half past seven, alone, from the hotel. Miss Wendell lived in
+the best residential section of town; but, as he made his way thither,
+Elgin was not so occupied with thoughts of the pleasure in store for
+him as to be blinded to the feminine charms of any chance passers-by.
+That was not his way.
+
+Having bestowed appreciative and very open glances on several
+attractive factory girls hurrying along the main street, the cub
+pitcher struck into a quieter thoroughfare which led toward his
+destination. He had almost reached High Street when a rickety, swaying
+hack, looking as if it might have seen its best days in some Northern
+city a decade ago, passed him and came to a stop in front of the corner
+house.
+
+Before the negro driver had time to open the door the horse――a big,
+raw-boned animal――took it into his head to back. Quite undisturbed and
+rather amused at the coon’s flow of language, Elgin watched the ancient
+vehicle tilt dangerously until it seemed as if another moment would see
+it topple over. Then he came opposite the door, glanced curiously into
+the hack, and the next instant became transformed.
+
+With a single leap he reached the horse’s head, gripping the bit with
+muscular fingers and dragging the animal forward a step or two.
+
+“Get down here and hold the beast, uncle!” he ordered. “You’re a nice
+one to take people out behind a dangerous animal like this. Hustle,
+now!”
+
+The colored man hurriedly descended, muttering something about
+“interferin’ w’ite trash,” and sulkily obeyed. Elgin sprang to the
+door, hat in hand, and held it open.
+
+“It’s all right now, sir,” he said deferentially. “Just take my arm, if
+you please, and let me help you out.”
+
+An elderly man, white-haired, frail-looking, and dressed in a
+clergyman’s suit of black, obeyed tremblingly. He was followed much
+more swiftly by a young girl, a glimpse of whose lovely face had been
+the cause of that sudden transformation in Bert Elgin.
+
+She barely touched the pitcher’s arm as she leaped from the cab, the
+color bright in her cheeks, a glint of anger in her wonderful eyes.
+
+“It’s outrageous bringing us up with a horse like that!” she exclaimed
+indignantly. “You know I asked particularly if he was gentle, and you
+said he was.”
+
+“’Deed he am, leddy,” the negro affirmed hastily. “Dis hyer am jes’ his
+playful way. If dat gemman hadn’t come――”
+
+“If he hadn’t so kindly come to our help,” the girl put in emphatically,
+“we should have been upset.”
+
+As she stepped forward to pay the cabman she cast a glance of gratitude
+at Elgin, which started the blood tingling through his veins.
+
+“What a peach!” he thought fervently.
+
+Nothing of this appeared on the surface, however. Instinctively he
+schooled himself to retain the same respectful, deferential attitude he
+had assumed from the first. Still bareheaded, he seemed to be devoting
+all of his attention to the father, who was palpably nervous and upset
+by the incident. It was not until she turned from the negro and came
+back to them that his eyes met hers.
+
+“I cannot thank you enough for what you have done,” she said quickly.
+“My father is not very strong, and if the cab had upset it would have
+been simply dreadful.”
+
+“It was really nothing,” Elgin protested. “I saw the horse was a
+bad-tempered brute, and got to his head in time. I’m glad I happened
+to be passing.”
+
+“You cannot be more thankful than my daughter and myself,” the older
+man put in rather weakly. “Your quick wit undoubtedly saved us from
+a serious accident. Just now I am too tired after a long journey
+to express my gratitude properly, but I hope you will give me the
+opportunity at some future time. I am the Reverend John Harting, and I
+shall be staying here a week or more with my friend, Henry Forsythe.”
+
+He held out a slim, white hand, which the ball player clasped firmly
+yet not too strenuously.
+
+“My name is Bert Elgin,” the younger man returned in respectful tones.
+“I’ll be very glad indeed to come and see you some evening before you
+leave town.”
+
+“Yes, yes,” the clergyman agreed, with impatience. “Janet, my dear, I
+think we had better go in. I am feeling――a little faint.”
+
+Without a word Elgin took one arm solicitously. The girl sprang to the
+other side of her father, and in silence they helped him up the steps
+of the veranda. A big, broad-shouldered man of middle age answered the
+ring, and, amid the bustle of greeting which followed, Elgin tactfully
+departed.
+
+At the gate he paused, glancing back at the closed door, the remembrance
+of a pair of wonderful violet eyes and a perfect mouth curved in a
+rather absent smile still vividly in his mind.
+
+“A queen!” he said aloud. “Molly Wendell can’t touch her for a minute.”
+Slowly he moved on a few steps; then he chuckled: “That was a cute
+trick, all right, and pulled off to perfection. I ought to hand that
+old bag of bones a square feed for giving me the chance. Will I call
+to-morrow night and let the old geezer thank me? Will I? Ask me!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ THE REASON WHY
+
+
+Out on the field next morning Lefty Locke threw himself heart and soul
+into his work. He was conscious that Manager Brennan was watching his
+efforts with the eyes of a lynx, and though that made him slightly
+nervous at first, it presently came to have the opposite effect,
+stimulating him to greater endeavor.
+
+“Kid ain’t doing bad to-day,” drawled Buck Fargo critically to Jack
+Stillman, sitting beside him on the bench. “He certainly was rotten in
+the game, though. I wonder what ailed him? Don’t seem like one glass of
+beer would knock a fellow out like that.”
+
+“Depends on what’s in it besides the beer,” the newspaper man replied
+impulsively.
+
+The big backstop straightened up and flashed a keen glance at him.
+
+“What do you mean by that?” he demanded shortly.
+
+Stillman hesitated an instant, his face slightly flushed, “I suppose
+I shouldn’t have said anything about it,” he returned slowly. “Lefty
+didn’t want it to get out, but I can’t see any harm.”
+
+And forthwith he proceeded to enlighten Fargo concerning the trick
+which had been put over on Lefty the night Brennan was in Fort Worth.
+When he had finished, the catcher made some vividly picturesque
+comments. Then he relapsed into a thoughtful silence. Finally he turned
+curiously to his companion.
+
+“What’s the trouble between Elgin and Locke?” he asked briefly. “Don’t
+tell me if it’s a secret, but it sure looks to me as if that was at the
+bottom of the whole muss.”
+
+“There isn’t a doubt of it in my mind,” Stillman answered. “Elgin hates
+Lefty like poison, and has every reason in the world to do him dirt.
+It happened when we were all at Princeton. Elgin was pitching on the
+varsity――pitching mighty good ball, too. He and Lefty had always been
+rivals, but Lefty couldn’t go out that year because of the back work he
+had to make up on account of an attack of typhoid. Just the same, Elgin
+seemed to have it in for him, and he never lost any chance to sneer
+about him to other men, and make things generally disagreeable.
+
+“Well, about the middle of the season a chap named Bob Ferris had his
+pocketbook, watch, and a lot of little trinkets stolen. Somebody swiped
+’em out of his room while he was at a lecture. He and Lefty were great
+friends and were in and out of each other’s rooms all the time. Ferris
+couldn’t find a single clew as to who had taken the stuff, but a few
+days later Lefty came in from a recitation unexpectedly and caught
+Bert Elgin in the hall right outside his door. He didn’t say anything
+then, but went in and looked the room over. Nothing seemed out of place
+except a table drawer which was a little way open. When he jerked it
+out, there were two of the stolen scarfpins lying right on top of a
+notebook belonging to Ferris, which he would probably have come in to
+get that very afternoon.”
+
+“The cur!” rasped Fargo. “He put ’em there a-purpose to throw the blame
+on Locke.”
+
+“Exactly. Lefty followed Elgin to his room, told him what he’d found
+out, and started to give him a nice comfortable thrashing. In the
+process of the scrimmage a watch fell out of Elgin’s pocket. It was
+Ferris’ watch. Lefty told Ferris afterward that the sight of it made
+him ashamed to be soiling his hands on such a mucker. He let up right
+away, told Elgin that unless the stolen goods were returned in
+twenty-four hours he’d go to the dean and tell him everything, and got
+out. Ferris was in New York that day, but when he got back next morning
+the stuff was all on his bureau.”
+
+Fargo stared at him an instant. “Well?” he queried sharply. “Is that
+all? Didn’t they put anybody wise to what the sneak had done?”
+
+Stillman shook his head. “No. He’d have been fired out of college, and
+there wasn’t anybody to take his place on the nine. Lefty and Ferris
+talked it all over and decided to keep still for the sake of the
+varsity.”
+
+“Humph!” grunted the big backstop. “I’ll be hanged if I’d have done
+it!” He paused a moment, interlacing his strong, brown fingers. “Well,
+there ain’t any doubt that’s what started things going here,” he went
+on. “Elgin’s sore as a boil, of course, to have Locke around, knowing
+what he does about this stealing. How he worked this dope trick gets
+me, though.”
+
+The newspaper man started to explain his theory of the waiter’s
+complicity, but in the midst of it the manager roared out an order to
+Fargo to get into the game and limber up some. The big backstop obeyed
+and was kept busy for the rest of the morning. Later on, however, he
+sought Stillman again, to hear the remainder of the story.
+
+When it had been told he made no comment. His face showed plainly,
+however, that his interest was aroused to an unusual degree; and the
+reporter congratulated himself on having secured a valuable ally for
+Lefty.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ THE PURLOINED LETTER
+
+
+It was rather difficult for Lefty to tell what sort of an impression
+the day’s work had made on Jim Brennan. That astute individual was
+thoroughly proficient in the art of keeping his thoughts to himself,
+and it was almost impossible for any one to guess what was going on in
+his mind. Those who knew him well had long ago ceased to guess.
+
+He had watched Locke all day as a cat does a mouse, picking at the
+least fault, hurling criticisms in that brusque, snappy way of his at
+the slightest opening, and never once giving his cub pitcher a word of
+praise. There seemed to be nothing in this to encourage the southpaw.
+
+Nevertheless, Lefty knew that he was in good form. He felt that between
+his work of to-day and that disgraceful exhibition of twenty-four hours
+ago there was a vast gulf, and he was comforted. And when, along toward
+the middle of the afternoon, he began to notice quite lengthy periods
+of silence on the part of his mentor――spaces of five minutes, or even
+longer, in which the manager could find absolutely nothing to carp
+at――his spirits began to rise.
+
+On the way back to the hotel several of the older men who had been up
+before him during the afternoon paused and made brief, half-joshing
+comments on his improvement. Stillman was enthusiastic in his praise,
+and even one of his brother reporters delivered himself of a more
+guarded opinion, practically to the same effect. To be sure, the
+silence of the other cubs was deep and absolute. Not one of them opened
+his head to Lefty on any subject, much less to tell him that he was
+doing well. Evidently the ban against him was still in force.
+
+In spite of this, however, Locke was feeling more hopeful, more
+assured, more satisfied that he could make good, than at any time since
+his arrival at training camp.
+
+“I’ll write Janet to-night,” he thought, while he was dressing, “and
+tell her all about it. I should have done it before, but things have
+been pretty uncertain.”
+
+Janet might have been a sister, but――she wasn’t. Any one observing the
+length of the letter Lefty wrote after dinner, and the pains taken
+with its composition, would have guessed that instantly. A fellow
+rarely sends more than four pages of closely written hotel paper to a
+relative, and as for tearing up a nearly finished sheet, and rewriting
+it――well, that settled the question.
+
+When the epistle had been carefully sealed and the envelope directed,
+Locke found he was out of stamps, and purchased some at the desk. He
+had just affixed one to the letter when Buck Fargo appeared and pounced
+on him.
+
+“Been looking for you, kid,” the backstop announced, taking Locke by
+the arm. “Come out with me for a little walk. I want to talk to you.”
+
+Locke acquiesced readily and, without turning, reached back for the
+letter he had left lying on the desk. He was so taken up with wondering
+what Fargo had on his mind that his action was really little more than
+mechanical. His fingers closed over an envelope which he thrust into a
+side pocket, and the two walked briskly away.
+
+Unfortunately for Lefty the proprietor of the Hatchford was of an
+economical turn of mind. Having been considerably fretted by every Tom,
+Dick, and Harry in Ashland dropping in and using his letter paper _ad
+libitum_, he instituted the system of having a supply at the desk, and
+nowhere else. When a guest of the house wanted stationery he helped
+himself. A townsman could do the same, if he wished. But the mere fact
+of having to face the argus-eyed clerk, instead of slipping quietly to
+a well-furnished desk, acted as a strong deterrent.
+
+When Lefty bought his stamps the supply of envelopes had dwindled to
+three, two of them stuck inside the flap of the third. They lay close
+beside his letter on the desk, and when he reached back without looking
+it was the three empty envelopes, stuck together as one, that he picked
+up and put into his pocket.
+
+His carefully composed epistle lay, face upward, where he had left it.
+The clerk was busy with his books, and no one else happened to see
+it until Bert Elgin, as immaculately garbed as he had been the night
+before, on his way to the street, paused to light a cigarette.
+
+The match flared up and he had conveyed it halfway to the weed between
+his lips when suddenly the motion was arrested, and he stared downward
+with widening eyes. For an instant he could scarcely believe his
+senses. Before him lay a letter addressed to the very girl whose charms
+had so smitten him the night before, and on whom he expected to call
+within fifteen minutes.
+
+There was no doubt about it. “Miss Janet Harting,” written in a strong,
+masculine hand, stared up at him like a basilisk. Some one in this
+very hotel was corresponding with her――some one who did not know that
+she had arrived at Ashland the night before; for the address was a New
+England town.
+
+“Kingsbridge!” The word came hissing through his clenched teeth as he
+remembered suddenly that this was the name of the team on which Lefty
+Locke had pitched during the past summer.
+
+The forgotten match burned his fingers, and he flung it to the floor. A
+second later, however, he reached over to where a box of them lay, and
+struck one, leaning close against the desk as he did so. When he moved
+away, the cigarette alight, his face was still slightly flushed, but
+his expression was once more composed. The letter had disappeared.
+
+Once in the street, he hurried along, scarcely able to restrain his
+impatience. Twice he hesitated by a lighted window, but each time the
+place seemed too public for his purpose. At last he stopped before a
+little store on a corner, glanced swiftly and suspiciously around, and
+drew the letter from his pocket.
+
+For a moment he stood scowling at the superscription before he ripped
+the envelope open. The frown deepened as he noticed the length of the
+inclosure, and then, with narrowed eyes, he sought the signature.
+
+“Hazelton!” he muttered hoarsely. “I knew it!”
+
+Rapidly, with now and then a nervous glance around, his eyes flew
+over the closely filled pages. The letter had evidently been written
+by one very good friend to another. There was little in it which any
+one might not have read, yet its very tone, with those references to
+past experiences together, to mutual friends, to hopes and fears and
+interests held in common, sent Bert Elgin off into a spasm of rage.
+He had plumed himself on having, with great dexterity and presence of
+mind, obtained the inside track with quite the most fascinating girl
+that he had ever seen, only to discover that the man he hated with
+every fiber of his being seemed to have the inside track.
+
+“Confound him!” he cried, crushing the letter between his fingers, “I
+can’t seem to get away from him.”
+
+For a moment he stood there hesitating, his fingers busy tearing the
+purloined letter into shreds. Then he turned the corner, and began to
+walk hurriedly toward High Street.
+
+“I’ll beat him yet!” he vowed. “I’ll put him out of the running here,
+or I’m a dub!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ GUILE
+
+
+“Really?” exclaimed Janet Harting, her eyes sparkling. Then she laughed.
+“It’s luck you didn’t tell father. He has an idea that professional ball
+players aren’t quite respectable.”
+
+Bert Elgin bent slightly forward, a hurt expression in the eyes fixed
+upon her face. During the fifteen minutes in which he had labored
+strenuously to ingratiate himself with her father, and succeeded
+beyond his hopes, he had gathered, by skillful probing, the impression
+that the older man was just the sort to look askance on professional
+athletics. Not a hint of this now appeared on the surface, however. His
+voice was regretful, with just the proper touch of indignation in it.
+
+“I hope you don’t share his prejudice, Miss Harting?” he said quickly.
+
+“Not at all,” the girl hastened to assure him. “I adore baseball, and
+could never understand why a man shouldn’t take it up just as he would
+any other profession. It’s much better paid than many, and I’m sure
+it must be a great deal pleasanter than being cooped up all day in a
+stuffy office.”
+
+Elgin’s sigh of relief was unmistakable. “I can’t tell you how glad
+I am to hear you say that,” he returned, his face clearing. “Your
+father is a clergyman of the old school, and I can quite understand his
+prejudice. But professional baseball to-day is very different from what
+it was in his time. There isn’t a cleaner, decenter sport going, or one
+more free from crookedness. Of course, there are people who look down
+on it. There are even players”――his voice took on a sneering tone――“who
+go into it under fictitious names, but they’re cads and bounders. I
+notice they’re not ashamed to draw their salary checks on the dot.
+I’ve played ball ever since I left college, and I can truly say, Miss
+Harting, that I’ve never once had reason to regret my choice of a
+profession.”
+
+For a moment there was silence. The girl’s cheeks were faintly flushed
+and she was plucking absently at the fringe hanging from the upholstered
+chair arm.
+
+“I’m sure you haven’t, Mr. Elgin,” she murmured presently. There was
+another momentary pause before she raised her eyes to his face. “I
+believe that what you say about a man’s playing under a false name is
+generally true, but don’t you think that once in a while there may be a
+perfectly good reason for it?”
+
+The pitcher shrugged his shoulders. “Once in a thousand times, perhaps,”
+he admitted. “It’s easy enough to invent a plausible reason, but I’ve
+noticed invariably that fellows do it because they’re ashamed, not of
+playing professional ball, but of having their friends know it. There’s
+an instance of this right here in the Hornet squad, a chap who graduated
+from Princeton the year after I did. He tried making his living as a
+lawyer, fell down hard, and then took up baseball. There isn’t an
+earthly reason why he shouldn’t use his own name, and yet he’s
+masquerading as Tom Locke.”
+
+“Locke!” the girl gasped, staring in startled amazement. “You don’t
+mean to say that Phil Hazelton is _here_?”
+
+Elgin’s jaw dropped most realistically, and he drew his breath sharply.
+
+“You――know him?” he faltered.
+
+“Of course I do. Why, he pitched all last summer for the Kingsbridge
+team. That’s where I’ve always lived, you know, until father’s
+health began to fail, and he was sent South by one of his wealthy
+parishioners. Philip Hazelton is a perfectly splendid fellow, and we’re
+great friends.”
+
+Elgin’s face was the picture of confusion. “I――beg your pardon, Miss
+Harting,” he stammered. “I――I had no idea――you knew him, or I should
+never have mentioned his name.”
+
+His expression was so contrite that the girl laughed merrily.
+
+“Of course you didn’t,” she returned. “How should you when I haven’t
+even told you where I lived? I’ll forgive you, though, for otherwise I
+might never have known he was here. I’m sure, Mr. Elgin, if you knew
+Phil Hazelton as well as I do you’d admit that he was the thousandth
+man you spoke of a while ago who has a perfectly legitimate reason for
+not playing under his own name.”
+
+“Very likely,” Elgin returned hastily. “I don’t doubt that you’re
+right.”
+
+His voice was quite lacking in conviction, however. It was the tone of
+one agreeing out of mere politeness and because he was anxious to get
+away from a disagreeable subject.
+
+Miss Harting, being keen of perception, noticed this, and her smile
+faded.
+
+“You don’t really mean that?” she said abruptly.
+
+Elgin spread out his hands depreciatingly. “I wish you wouldn’t,” he
+returned. “A fellow can’t help having his opinions, you know. Let’s
+change the subject.”
+
+“But I don’t want to change the subject,” she retorted warmly. “I
+insist on your telling me why you don’t agree with me.”
+
+The pitcher’s long lashes drooped over his eyes, and he bit his lip.
+
+“I knew Hazelton very well at college,” he began slowly. “We were
+friends until――certain things――came up which showed me――” he threw
+back his head, and looked her full in the eyes. “I can’t do it!” he
+burst out. “Please don’t ask me, Miss Harting. I’ve said more now than
+I should have. No matter what my opinion of him may be, I won’t talk
+about a fellow behind his back.”
+
+His attitude of manly embarrassment was so well done that the girl
+was completely deceived. She was angry at herself for having led the
+conversation into this channel, but her estimation of this man who
+would say nothing against another with whom he was evidently not on
+friendly terms, increased by leaps and bounds.
+
+They chatted on various other topics for a little while, but the
+conversation could not fail to be slightly constrained, and Elgin soon
+took his leave.
+
+After he had gone Janet Harting returned to the parlor and stood for a
+space leaning thoughtfully against the mantel.
+
+“It’s absurd!” she exclaimed aloud presently. “There’s been some
+misunderstanding between them. I won’t believe that Phil is anything
+but straightforward and absolutely honorable. He couldn’t do or think a
+mean thing. I’ll forget that I ever heard a whisper against him.”
+
+But this was not quite possible. In spite of her determination, a
+nagging little doubt returned more than once to trouble Janet Harting.
+Somehow, she could not forget that Bert Elgin had known Hazelton at
+college――known him for years probably, with chances for seeing phases
+of his character which the intimate life at a big university alone can
+give; while her own acquaintance with that selfsame individual was
+limited to nine brief months.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ THE MAN IN THE CORRIDOR
+
+
+“Hang such weather!” grumbled Buck Fargo, gazing disconsolately out of
+the dripping window.
+
+It was not a strictly original remark, considering the fact that it
+had been uttered, in some form or another, on an average of every five
+minutes since breakfast time. Nevertheless, it was fervently echoed
+by each one of the players who lounged within hearing distance in the
+lobby.
+
+It had been pouring all day, a cold, driving rain, which kept some
+forty-odd active, vigorous athletes cooped up in the confines of the
+hotel.
+
+It was not so bad in the morning, but by the middle of the afternoon
+pool had lost its charm, craps failed to interest; and even the
+inveterate poker players were becoming satiated with that game.
+
+“I can feel myself putting on pounds and pounds,” mourned “Splinter”
+Jones, one of the outfielders, whose winter of luxurious idleness
+had resulted in about fifteen pounds of troublesome and unnecessary
+weight. “It’ll set me back a week.”
+
+“Too bad there ain’t a Turkish bath in this blooming village,” yawned
+Cy Russell. “If we was only in little old New York you could sit in a
+steam room and lose all the weight you wanted to.”
+
+Fargo turned suddenly from the window, his eyes sparkling.
+
+“Gee whiz, Cy!” he exclaimed. “That ain’t a bad idea. Why can’t we fix
+up one?”
+
+The pitcher’s eyes widened. “Fix up what?” he inquired. “A Turkish
+bath? You talk nutty, Buck.”
+
+“Nix! It’s a cinch! One thing good about this hash house is they’ve
+always got plenty of hot water. What’s to prevent our hiking up to one
+of the bathrooms, stopping the cracks with towels, and turning on the
+hot water full. I’ll guarantee in ten minutes you couldn’t see across
+the room. Moreover, the radiators are all red-hot to-day, and if we
+wrap Splinter up in blankets and set him down on one in the bathroom,
+we’ll see him oozing away to a shadow before our very eyes.”
+
+Jones straightened up in his chair, his lips pursed disapprovingly.
+
+“Not me,” he declared firmly. “Mebbe I’ve done some fool things in my
+life, but I never yet set down on a red-hot radiator without my clothes
+on, and I ain’t going to begin now.”
+
+“You loon!” grinned Fargo. “Did you think I meant without something
+under you to keep you from getting scorched? I ain’t got it in for
+you that bad. A bunch of bath towels’ll do the trick and make you so
+comfortable you’ll be going to sleep. Come on, boy! Be a sport.”
+
+The others added their persuasions, and at length the stout outfielder
+yielded. The thought of parting with five or six pounds at one fell
+swoop was irresistible. He presently arose and, escorted by eight or
+ten fellows, made his way to the upper regions.
+
+Lefty Locke did not happen to be in the lobby to see them go. He
+had gone up to his room soon after dinner, read several chapters in
+a volume of Dickens, and taken a sudden notion to write to his kid
+brother. By the time the letter was finished and he had pottered around
+a little longer, fretting at the downpour and regretting that he had
+not been able to keep up the good work commenced on the field the day
+before, it was nearly half past four.
+
+“Reckon I’ll go down and scare up somebody for a game of billiards,” he
+thought.
+
+As he opened the door and stepped into the hall, he saw the figure of
+a man walking briskly away down the corridor. For a moment he paid no
+attention to the unknown. Presently something about the set of the
+fellow’s shoulders struck him as vaguely familiar, but even then he
+would probably have thought nothing of it had not the other swiftly
+turned his head, and as swiftly jerked his face around again.
+
+It was George Miller, the discharged waiter who had served Locke that
+fatal glass of doped beer two nights before.
+
+Without delay, Lefty started to run. The waiter took to his heels,
+also, whirled round a corner toward the servants’ staircase at top
+speed, and disappeared.
+
+Sprinting after him, Locke reached the corner just in time to see his
+man halfway down the long stretch of carpeted hall. The next instant
+a wild yell of pain and rage from somewhere close at hand broke the
+stillness with startling abruptness. A door at Lefty’s right was flung
+open. Buck Fargo, his face contorted with mirth, rushed out, flung
+himself against the door of the next room, and slammed it behind him,
+all in the twinkling of an eye.
+
+Lefty, bewildered, had no time even to wonder what had happened. Close
+upon the heels of the flying catcher came a strange figure, clad in
+blankets and nothing else, and giving vent to a continuous bellow of
+rage. He did not halt or pause. The whole impact of his big body struck
+Locke squarely, and they landed together on the floor with a crash
+which seemed to shake the building.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ NOT QUITE PROVEN
+
+
+“Blue blazes!” roared Splinter Jones, his hands clutching Lefty’s
+windpipe. “You bonehead! You mutt! I’ll teach you to pull them towels
+from under me! I’m scalded――parboiled――burned to a crisp! Wough!”
+
+Lefty grabbed the other’s wrists and, with a twist and a wriggle, freed
+his throat from the choking grasp.
+
+“Let up!” he panted. “What do you think you’re doing, Jones? Are you
+nutty?”
+
+The outfielder gasped and grunted with surprise. An instant later he
+had rolled over so that the cub pitcher’s face was plainly visible, and
+his eyes fairly popped out.
+
+“By thunder!” he groaned. “I thought you was Fargo.”
+
+A roar of delight issued from the open doorway. As Lefty sprang up, he
+saw that it was crowded with members of the Hornet squad, several of
+them in next to nature’s garb, and all convulsed with mirth. Behind
+them rose vagrant eddies of what looked like smoke, but had the hot,
+suffocating tang of steam.
+
+“Come and see our Turkish bath, Kid,” invited Cy Russell when he had
+recovered his power of speech. “Buck invented it, but something kind of
+went wrong, and he beat it.”
+
+“Went wrong!” snapped Jones, stung afresh by a sense of his injuries.
+“The pirate did it on purpose! Just wait till I get my hands on him.
+I’ll make him smart!”
+
+He looked so ridiculous as he stood there, scowling fiercely and trying
+to gather the inadequate folds of the scanty blanket around him, that
+another burst of laughter commenced. It was cut short, however, by the
+whirring of the elevator.
+
+“Come inside, you loon!” ejaculated Russell, grabbing the outfielder by
+the arm and hustling him into the room. “You ain’t decent. What if a
+woman should come along!”
+
+At the suggestion the men all scuttled out of sight. Lefty followed
+them. The interruption had given Miller ample time to make himself
+scarce, and, besides, Locke was curious to learn more of the trick
+which had been played on Jones.
+
+It proved to be simple to a degree. The improvised Turkish bath had
+been an unqualified success, as Lefty realized the instant he entered
+the superheated bathroom, where the atmosphere made him fairly gasp
+for breath. The water still boiled from the tap, sending up clouds of
+steam. In one corner was the fateful radiator that had aided Fargo in
+the perpetration of the prank which justly aroused the wrath of Jones.
+
+Until Buck Fargo’s unfortunate propensity for joking had got the
+better of him, everything had gone smoothly. Jones and several other
+players who thought they could stand a little less weight stripped,
+swathed themselves in blankets, and took turns sitting on the sizzling
+radiator, well protected by several thicknesses of bath toweling.
+Perspiration streamed from every pore as superfluous tissue oozed away.
+
+After each man had indulged in several rounds of the sweating process,
+it was observed that Jones was monopolizing the newly discovered boon.
+Protests were unavailing. He simply sat on the radiator until he
+could stand the heat no longer, regardless of the clamorous waiting
+list, and Russell was on the point of using force when he received an
+unmistakably insignificant wink from Buck Fargo, which made him refrain
+from butting in.
+
+When the outfielder’s turn came again, he carefully adjusted the
+blankets about him and approached the radiator. The others were all
+gathered around, uttering various joshing comments. The big backstop
+leaned carelessly against the wall close to the heated coils. The room
+was hazy with steam pouring out of the faucet of the bathtub.
+
+Cautiously Jones parted the blankets, and let himself down slowly,
+quite oblivious to the fact that Fargo had removed the towels with a
+dexterous twitch. The next instant a fearful yell rent the air, and
+the outfielder shot up as if galvanized, caught sight of the catcher
+slipping out of the door, and flung himself after in hot pursuit, with
+the resultant upsetting of Lefty Locke’s plans.
+
+The latter was not quite so entertained by the joke as he might have
+been had it not caused him to lose the waiter. He was swiftly becoming
+more and more convinced that, if he could only once get hold of the
+fellow and bring a little pressure to bear upon him, Miller might tell
+him a lot.
+
+What was the man doing back in the hotel, anyway? Lefty wondered as he
+took the elevator downstairs. The mere fact of his presence in that
+corridor after he had been fired looked suspicious.
+
+“It’s a shame I didn’t come out of my room a minute sooner,” the cub
+pitcher grumbled to himself as he entered the lobby. “I’d have nailed
+him. By Jove, Jack! You’re just the chap I want to see.” He caught
+Stillman by the arm, and propelled him toward a couple of empty chairs
+near by. “Who do you think I saw up in our corridor about fifteen
+minutes ago?”
+
+“That waiter who was fired yesterday morning,” the newspaper man
+returned without an instant’s hesitation.
+
+Lefty gasped. “What! Did you see him too?”
+
+“No; but I heard him talking to Elgin. Our rooms adjoin, you know, and
+there’s a connecting door which is locked. I was up there, doping out
+some stuff to send to the paper, when I began to hear scraps of talk
+coming through the door. Didn’t pay much attention at first, for I
+wanted to get my story off in the five-thirty mail, but I made out that
+somebody was trying to get money out of our friend. That made me sit up
+and take a little more notice. The chap wanted fifteen dollars to take
+him to Dallas. Elgin balked, of course, and then the waiter said it
+would be the last touch he’d make, and, anyhow, it was little enough,
+considering all he’d done for Elgin. They scrapped back and forth for
+a bit, and then I reckon Elgin shelled out, for I didn’t hear anything
+more.
+
+“The fool part of it was that I never wised up to who he was till
+afterward. I was thinking about my news dope, I suppose. Anyhow, it
+wasn’t till after I’d got that out of the way that I began to wonder
+whether the strange guy might not have been this man we want to get
+hold of. It certainly looked a bit like it, his bleeding Elgin that
+way.”
+
+“Didn’t he say anything about what he’d done for Elgin?” Lefty asked
+eagerly.
+
+“No, or I’d have woke up in a jiffy. It was only that he’d done
+something which put him personally to the bad. I haven’t a doubt now
+as to what that something was, but I’m afraid there isn’t anything you
+could call real proof.”
+
+Locke shook his head. “I’m afraid not,” he agreed slowly.
+
+More than ever he regretted that he had missed the rascal in the
+corridor by a hair’s breadth. Truly, luck seemed to be with Bert Elgin
+in everything he undertook.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ JANET HARTING WONDERS
+
+
+Lefty did not devote much more thought that night to Bert Elgin and
+his doings. Just before supper a letter arrived which drove every
+other idea from his head. For a second or two he stood staring at the
+familiar handwriting, wondering how in the world Janet had found out
+where he was. When he hastily slit the envelope and took in the meaning
+of the few lines on that single sheet of paper, his astonishment knew
+no bounds.
+
+First he gave a long whistle. Then a wide grin overspread his face.
+It did not much matter what had brought the girl to Ashland, the fact
+remained that she was here and that he would see her that night. That
+was all that really counted.
+
+He ate his supper hurriedly, oblivious for the first time to the
+continued coldness of his companions. His thoughts were elsewhere.
+Afterward he hastened up to his room and changed his clothes. Half an
+hour later he was running up the steps of the house on High Street.
+
+Janet received him alone, her father having retired directly after
+dinner. To Lefty she seemed prettier than ever, and there was no
+mistaking her pleasure in seeing him. After the first greetings were
+over, they sat down on the sofa, each eager to hear all about the
+other’s doings.
+
+“Father hasn’t been very well all winter,” the girl explained in answer
+to Lefty’s first question. “You remember my writing to you how he
+kept catching colds so easily, and couldn’t seem to shake them off?
+His rheumatism was worse than it had ever been before, too, and I was
+beginning to get really worried about him when one day, about a week
+ago, Cyrus King came in, and told father he’d arranged for us to go
+South and stay till spring. You know that gruff, positive way he has?
+Well, he’d planned it all out before he said a word to us, insisted on
+paying our expenses, and wouldn’t even let us thank him. Of course,
+he has quantities of money, and he and father are such old friends I
+didn’t mind much taking it from him.”
+
+“It was good of him!” Lefty said warmly. “But how in the world did
+you happen to pick on Ashland to come to? That’s what I don’t quite
+understand.”
+
+“We didn’t. At least, that’s not where we’re going to settle down.
+Doctor Lansing knew about some wonderful mineral springs at Billings,
+farther south in the State, and advised us to go there. We’ve only
+stopped off here for a week or ten days to see father’s old friend, Mr.
+Forsythe.”
+
+Lefty nodded and leaned back, his muscular fingers linked loosely over
+one knee.
+
+“I see. But what gets me is how you knew I was here. You could have
+knocked me down with a feather when I got your note. I suppose you must
+have seen my name in some paper that listed me as one of Brennan’s new
+recruits.”
+
+She shook her head. Her lips were half smiling, but her eyes were fixed
+on his face with an odd sort of intentness.
+
+“No,” she returned quietly. “Mr. Elgin told me.”
+
+“Elgin?” Locke repeated incredulously. “You can’t possibly mean Bert
+Elgin? I know you can’t mean that man!”
+
+Annoyed by the astonishment and involuntary disapproval in his voice,
+she drew herself up the least bit. If there was one quality on which
+Janet Harting prided herself it was her judgment, and she had never
+allowed any one save her father to criticise a person on whom she chose
+to bestow her friendship.
+
+“Why not?” she retorted. “I like him very much. Besides, he was the
+means of saving father and me from a serious accident.”
+
+She went on briefly to tell how the acquaintance had come about, and
+Lefty listened in frowning silence, gnawing his under lip with firm
+white teeth.
+
+Perhaps it was just as well that he had been prevented from giving
+vent to that first natural outburst of indignation which leaped
+up within him. The discovery that Elgin, of all men, had made the
+acquaintance and apparently won the liking of this girl filled him with
+intense anger. The cur wasn’t fit even to speak to her, and in that
+moment Lefty detested him as never before. Only the impossibility of
+interrupting Janet kept him from pouring out an impulsive account of
+what he knew about the scoundrel, and the even more contemptible things
+he suspected.
+
+But, with the passing of that first throb of anger, Locke felt that
+this would merely make matters worse. Certain as he was in his own
+mind of Elgin’s complicity in the plot against himself, he had no real
+proof, and anything he might say against the man would seem like the
+product of jealousy.
+
+“He came to call last night,” the girl concluded, “and father was
+quite charmed with him.” She hesitated an instant, and then went on
+slowly: “I’m afraid you’re not very good friends, are you, Phil?”
+
+“Oh! You gathered that, did you?” Lefty said stiffly. “I suppose he
+blackguarded me to beat the band.”
+
+“He did nothing of the sort. He never said a word against you. I simply
+got the impression from his manner, and thought it was a pity you
+shouldn’t be on better terms.”
+
+“That’s out of the question,” Lefty retorted shortly. He was perplexed
+over his inability to let her know exactly what sort of a man Bert
+Elgin was, and that added no little asperity to his manner. “We could
+never be friends.”
+
+Janet sighed a little. She was very human, and where is the girl who
+is not thrilled by the thought of reconciling old enemies and healing
+old sores by her influence? She did not give up hope of some day
+accomplishing it in this case. She only realized that nothing more
+could be done at present, and, womanlike, tucking it away in her mind
+for future use, changed the subject abruptly.
+
+“You really didn’t deserve to have me write you,” she said more
+lightly, “after the way you’ve neglected me lately. You must have got
+my last letter over two weeks ago, and I haven’t heard a word from you
+since.”
+
+“I know it,” Lefty acknowledged. “I ought to have written, but
+everything came about so unexpectedly, Janet, that I put it off till
+I could have something definite to tell you. Just because I’m with a
+Big League team now doesn’t mean I’ll stay. I’ve got to make good, and
+there were two or three things at first which handicapped me so that I
+had very serious doubts of ever doing it. I did write you a long letter
+last night, though, but naturally I sent it to Kingsbridge. You’ll
+probably get it in a week or so.”
+
+“Yes; all my mail is forwarded. But of course you’ll make good, Phil. I
+don’t see how you can have any doubt of it. Just look at the wonderful
+way you pitched last summer.”
+
+Lefty smiled whimsically. “It’s very nice of you to think that, Janet,”
+he said. “But there’s a lot of difference between last summer and now.
+This crowd is one of the fastest in the country, and I’ll have to be
+on the jump every minute of the time to keep up with them. I really do
+think I have a show, though, and that’s what made me write to you.”
+
+“I’m sure you have,” the girl returned positively. “Do you have any
+games? I’m crazy to see you pitch.”
+
+“There’s a short practice game every day, but I don’t know how soon
+they’ll give me a chance on the slab. I’ll tell you what: If I find I’m
+going to be used, I’ll tell you or send you word, and you can come out
+to see the game. If that doesn’t happen before you leave here, you’d
+better come, anyway; for the playing is worth seeing.”
+
+“Good!” returned Janet. “I’d love to come, and I can bring Jean
+Forsythe. She’s awfully nice, and crazy about baseball.” She paused for
+an instant, and then went on, more slowly: “I should think, now that
+you’re in the Big League, Phil, you’d play under your own name. You’re
+not ashamed to, are you?”
+
+“Great Scott, no!” Lefty exclaimed. “What put that notion into your
+head? You know how impossible it was to use my own name last summer,
+and, now that I’ve made what reputation I have under the name of Locke,
+it wouldn’t be good policy to change. You should remember that I have
+a father, also, who is strongly prejudiced against baseball, and I see
+no need of dragging the name of Hazelton into it. There’s not much in
+a name, anyhow. Many fellows take a different one, or have one thrust
+upon them by the fans.”
+
+There was a note of finality in his voice which made the girl realize
+the futility of continuing the subject. She was wise enough not to
+try, but after he had gone she could not help remembering Bert Elgin’s
+scornful remark that a professional could always find plenty of
+plausible excuses for playing under a name which was not his own.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ THE YELLOW STREAK
+
+
+“Believe me, fellows,” Bill Hagin said fervently, “that cub, Elgin, is
+some scrapper.”
+
+There was a sniff of incredulity from the half dozen regulars gathered
+near the plate waiting their turn. They had heard before of these
+pugilistic prodigies, and were inclined to be doubtful.
+
+“I’m from Missouri, Bill,” drawled Russell.
+
+“Well, if you’d been up in my room last night, you’d been shown good
+and proper,” Hagin retorted. “Elgin put it all over One-round Nolan in
+the prettiest way you ever saw.”
+
+At this announcement several of the men began to sit up and take
+notice; for Ed Nolan, the Hornet’s crack third baseman, was also
+renowned for his skill with the gloves.
+
+“Quit your kidding, Bill,” admonished Red Pollock. “You can’t tell me
+no cub put it over Ed.”
+
+“Truest thing you know,” averred the outfielder fervently. “Ask
+Monte Harris, or Dutch, if you don’t believe me. We was all talking
+downstairs about the match between Kid Baker and Young Glover in
+Memphis to-morrow, and Ross――he’s that punky cub fielder――says he’d
+back Elgin against any amateur in his class. Nolan picks up his ears,
+and, one word leading to another, we goes up to my room to call his
+bluff. Take it from me, there wasn’t any bluff about the kid, though.
+He’s got science and speed to burn, and the dandiest left hand wallop
+you ever saw. It sent Nolan sprawling in the third round as nice as
+could be, and Ed ain’t no slouch. I sure wish you all could have seen
+it.”
+
+“Why in thunder didn’t you put us wise, then?” demanded Russell
+indignantly. “You’re a hot sketch, pulling off a scrap and letting
+nobody in.”
+
+A chorus of similar reproaches were hurled at Hagin from all sides,
+mingled with eager queries about Elgin’s other good points, and calls
+for a more detailed description of the bout.
+
+Buck Fargo alone sat unmoved and apparently incurious, a look of
+incredulity on his face. He was thinking of that night in the Palace
+Theater when Elgin had slipped away, leaving Lefty to face the wrathy
+mob alone. He remembered, also, the story Jack Stillman had told him
+of the beating Locke had started to give his college mate three years
+before at Princeton, and he smiled a wide, disbelieving smile as he
+listened to Hagin’s vivid description of the cub pitcher’s prowess with
+his fists.
+
+But when, later in the day, Monte Harris and Carl Siegrist backed up
+the statement, and even Nolan himself admitted sourly that “the kid
+wasn’t so worse,” Fargo grew puzzled.
+
+“Something queer about this,” he thought. “Looks like I’d have to do a
+little investigating on my own hook.”
+
+All morning he was preoccupied and thoughtful, only arousing himself
+when Brennan’s eye was upon him, and even then quite lacking in his
+usual joshing repartee. Once or twice he noticed with a sort of
+absent approbation that Lefty was showing some steam and curves in
+the work-out with other pitchers; but aside from that he paid little
+attention to anything.
+
+During dinner his abstraction continued, but afterward, on the way back
+to the field, he might have been observed suddenly to slap one thigh
+with his hand, and mutter something under his breath. After that he was
+the old Buck Fargo again.
+
+The daily practice game now took place in the afternoon, leaving
+the morning for batting practice, throwing, running, and various
+other exercises. Ogan, the captain of the cubs, put Redmond, a fairly
+promising young twirler, into the box, but at the end of the second
+inning withdrew him, and substituted Bert Elgin.
+
+The latter seemed to be in fine form, and started off by fanning Cy
+Russell. The second man up flied out to center field, and then Fargo
+came to the bat. Elgin’s first delivery just missed the outside corner
+of the plate. He then put over a straight, swift one, and Fargo,
+seemingly “playing the game,” let it pass. The cub pitcher then wound
+himself up for the elusive curve which was one of his pet specialties.
+
+The ball whirled toward the pan, apparently heading straight at the
+batter. Fargo took a quick step back, then lunged forward. The next
+instant he dropped his bat with an exclamation of anger and pain as the
+sphere struck his arm with a dull impact.
+
+His face contorted, the big backstop trotted toward first, rubbing the
+injured member, and shooting at Elgin some extremely vivid and forceful
+comments out of the corner of his mouth.
+
+The incident flustered the latter to such an extent that he whipped a
+straight one over, which cut the center of the pan, and it was smashed
+out by Siegrist. The next man up sacrificed Fargo home, but Elgin took
+a brace; and shut out the regulars from further scoring.
+
+The game progressed in comparative peace and harmony for two innings.
+Then, strangely enough, Fargo was hit again by the second pitched ball,
+and instantly the air was blue. His previous remarks were as nothing to
+the words which now issued from his lips as he glared at the offending
+youngster, and they only ceased when Jim Brennan ordered sharply: “Quit
+that blackguarding, and take your base.”
+
+In spite of these two unfortunate happenings, the cubs nailed the game
+by a single run; for their opponents had not yet reached the point
+where they were willing to exert themselves overmuch. That run was
+scored in the last inning by Elgin, cleverly assisted by Ogan and Andy
+Whalen; and the instant the game was over the players streaked across
+the field toward the gate.
+
+Elgin alone lingered behind to get his glove, which he had tossed over
+near the bench. Oddly enough, it was nowhere to be seen. Having been
+much too occupied to notice anything outside the diamond during the
+past ten minutes, he had failed to see Fargo scoop up that same useful
+article when returning from the pursuit of a foul, and toss it over
+into the grandstand.
+
+Thus it happened that, while Elgin was searching vainly for his
+property, the field was deserted by all save himself and one other man.
+The latter was Fargo, who had started out with the rest, and then,
+halfway to the gate, paused, and turned back.
+
+He was within ten feet of the cub twirler before the latter glanced up,
+giving a slight start as his eyes took in the expression of cold menace
+on the big backstop’s face.
+
+“You common mucker!” rasped the latter fiercely, his big fists clenched
+as he strode rapidly forward. “If you think you can put a trick like
+that over me a-purpose, you’re a bigger chump than you look.”
+
+Elgin took a step backward, his face blanching. “I――didn’t do it on
+purpose,” he stammered. “It was――”
+
+“You lie!” snapped Fargo. “Once might have gone, but not the second
+time. You’ve got a big thrashing coming, if I can give it to you. Put
+up your fists, you boob!”
+
+His eyes seemed to blaze, and Elgin, after an involuntary motion to
+guard himself, dropped his arms and retreated a few steps. He was
+trembling and his lips quivered.
+
+“I tell you――I didn’t――mean――” he stammered, and then was silent.
+
+“You’re a liar!” was the retort. “Ain’t you going to put your fists up,
+or must I make you?”
+
+There was no reply, and, with a swift forward motion, Fargo lunged and
+brought his open palm against Elgin’s cheek with stinging force. The
+youngster staggered back, straightened, and stood there, head hanging,
+the picture of terror.
+
+For a moment Fargo stared in silence at the marks his fingers had left
+on the now crimson cheek. Then he burst into a laugh so full of scorn
+and contempt that the other winced.
+
+“A quitter!” the big backstop sneered. “A rotten quitter, that’s
+what you are! You haven’t got an ounce of grit in your whole hulking
+carcass. I thought there was something queer about your being such a
+wonder with your fists. If you had any nerve you could have knocked me
+endwise――but you haven’t. You’re yellow straight through. I let you hit
+me with the ball a-purpose, so’s I could see what you were made of.
+I’ve found out. Your glove’s over in the stand, where I fired it.”
+
+Without another word, he turned and strode toward the gate, leaving
+Elgin standing as if rooted to the ground. Bert’s face turned from red
+to white, from white to deep, purpling crimson. He gnawed his lips
+until the blood came, and his eyes were full of bitter shame at the
+humiliating discovery that he had been caught in the backstop’s trap to
+test his nerve.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ LEFTY’S CHANCE COMES
+
+
+Al Ogan, the promising cub first baseman and captain of the Yannigans,
+was not a bad fellow at heart. He had been as disgusted as any of his
+companions at Locke’s apparently inexcusable behavior which had lost
+them the first game with the regulars, and had joined heart and soul in
+the cold ignoring of the southpaw twirler from that time forth. But at
+the end of three or four days, during which he had watched Lefty’s work
+closely, he began to wonder whether he was right or not.
+
+“Maybe he was sick or something that day,” he thought to himself late
+one morning, as he stood watching Lefty pitching to Buck Fargo. “He
+hasn’t been the same chap since. He’s certainly got smoke, and he can
+put the stuff on the pill when he tries.”
+
+Presently a bit of friendly joshing between Locke and Fargo, in which
+Red Pollock and another of the regulars joined, made Ogan still
+more thoughtful. He kept his eyes open during the dinner lay-off,
+and at length he realized that Locke was on friendly terms with
+almost the entire regular crowd, and actually chummy with the gruff,
+rough-and-ready backstop.
+
+“I’ll be hanged if I know how he’s done it,” Ogan thought with some
+slight annoyance. “They don’t bother much about the rest of us. I
+reckon I must have made a mistake. That bunch would never take up with
+a quitter.”
+
+That afternoon he took occasion to speak to Lefty in a careless sort of
+way which seemed to indicate he had momentarily forgotten the boycott;
+and when Locke answered him without any signs of pique or soreness,
+they talked casually for a moment or two.
+
+At the end of the day Manager Brennan called Ogan to him.
+
+“I’m going to try an experiment to-morrow afternoon,” he said shortly.
+“We’ll lengthen the game to the full number of innings, and about the
+first of the seventh I’ll put Elgin into the box for the regulars. I
+want to see what he’ll do with that kind of support.”
+
+Ogan restrained his surprise, and nodded. “I suppose I’d better not use
+him early in the game, then?” he said.
+
+“No; take some of the others. He’d better be fresh when he goes in.
+The old boys are waking up and beginning to play ball.”
+
+This Ogan had observed the day before with some chagrin. Up to that
+time the cubs had won every game except that first one, and had come to
+have a pretty good opinion of their ability. Yesterday, however, they
+had been unaccountably nosed out in the last inning, while to-day their
+defeat had been even worse.
+
+Apparently there was no reason for it. They were in splendid condition
+and playing harder than ever. Their opponents did not seem to be
+exerting themselves a bit more than they had done from the very first.
+They still contented themselves with letting a hit go as a single when
+it might have been stretched for two sacks. Time and time again their
+pitcher let the bases fill, only to pull out of the hole by some wise
+old trick――the product of hard experience――which prevented the cubs
+from piling up runs.
+
+Some of the latter did not realize that they were the victims of inside
+baseball; that the regulars were regaining and perfecting the teamwork
+which was to count for so much a couple of months later on. But they
+would learn it soon, for that was the principal reason why they were
+there.
+
+As Ogan turned away from the manager a sudden thought flashed into his
+brain, and he looked swiftly around. The crowd was streaming toward the
+gates, intent on a refreshing bath and supper, but Ogan’s keen eyes
+soon singled out Locke in the rear, and in a couple of minutes he had
+sprinted over to him.
+
+“Want to go in to-morrow?” he asked abruptly.
+
+A faint flush stained Lefty’s face, but his voice was perfectly
+composed as he answered readily:
+
+“I sure do!”
+
+“I’ll put you in at the beginning of the seventh. The old man’s going
+to lengthen the game, and wants to run Bert Elgin in to pitch for the
+regulars. When he does, you can come out for us. We’ll talk it over
+to-morrow.”
+
+That was all he said, but as he walked away Lefty felt as if he could
+have hugged the fellow for giving him this chance. To pitch again for
+the cubs was enough in itself, but to be pitted against Elgin was more
+than he had hoped for; and it was with difficulty that he restrained
+the exuberant joy which welled up within him.
+
+He could scarcely wait until supper was over, so eager was he to tell
+Janet the good news. She was as pleased as he over it, and they were so
+busy planning her coming to the field that she quite forgot the little
+hint she had intended dropping of how glad she would be if he and
+Elgin would only make up their differences.
+
+The latter had called again the night before and conducted himself so
+tactfully that she found him even more pleasant than at first. She
+could not believe that either he or Lefty could have done anything
+very dreadful. It seemed rather as if there must have been some
+misunderstanding to turn them from friends to enemies, and her heart
+was set on being the means of bringing them together again. It was only
+after Lefty’s departure that she realized her omission and determined
+to rectify it on the morrow if even the slightest opportunity presented
+itself.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ THERE’S MANY A SLIP
+
+
+In company with Jean Forsythe, a pretty, breezy Texas girl, Janet
+reached the baseball park the next afternoon about half past two. They
+drove down in Jean’s runabout, and the little car had no sooner come
+to a stop on the turf back of first base than Miss Harting forgot
+everything but her enthusiasm at the sight she beheld.
+
+The whole field seemed filled with brown-skinned, clear-eyed athletes
+engaged in the usual practice. A number of them were scattered over the
+diamond in their regular positions, while some one batted to them. At a
+little distance others were practicing bunting. Back by the grandstand
+an old pitcher was warming up easily. Farther on a couple of cub
+twirlers were doing the same thing, with much more snap and speed. The
+crack of wood meeting leather sounded rhythmically, intermingled with
+shouts and joshing laughter. Balls curved gracefully into the sunlight.
+The air was soft and balmy, and full of the fragrance of growing
+things. The sky was a brilliant, cloudless blue, and it was springtime.
+
+As the girl’s eyes took in the scene, her heart began to beat a little
+unevenly; her gloved hands lay quietly in her lap, the fingers tightly
+interlaced.
+
+“It’s splendid!” she whispered to herself.
+
+It was deeply interesting to one who could delve beneath the surface,
+and see a little of what lay under that smiling, sunny crust. Here was
+a veteran whose name was famous from sea to sea, and to whom baseball
+was the very breath of life, struggling with every fiber of his being
+against the inevitable. Perhaps no one else had a suspicion that he
+was passing his prime, but some day――and that soon――his throwing arm
+would lose its vigor, or his legs fail to take him down to first in the
+marvelous way they had done for years. After that the toboggan slide;
+back to the minors for a while, and then to the scrap heap.
+
+To the seeing mind the field was full of little tragedies like this,
+which might seem cruel, but which were really inevitable. There is no
+sentiment in professional baseball. One unvarying law of the Big League
+is the survival of the fittest. As long as a man can fill a position a
+little better than any other player the manager can secure――and that
+individual is always on the lookout for new material――he stays on the
+crest of the wave. Once let him slip back a very little, however, and
+he sinks beneath the surface, never, or at least rarely, to struggle
+into sight again.
+
+Happily Janet did not realize all of this, though perhaps she sensed
+intuitively a little of the hopes and fears, the jealousies and
+heartburnings, which were inevitable in such a gathering. Presently
+she saw Lefty waving to her, and answered him with a quick smile and
+nod. A little later, when the game began, he hastened over to the car,
+bringing Buck Fargo with him; for he was anxious that his friend should
+meet the two girls.
+
+The big backstop could stay only a moment, but Lefty remained for
+several innings, enjoying the enthusiasm of the girls over the game.
+Toward the end of the fourth inning, however, he arose reluctantly from
+where he had been sitting on the step of the car.
+
+“I’ll have to start warming up,” he explained. “They’re going to put me
+in with the beginning of the seventh.”
+
+They both smilingly urged him to win the game for the cubs, said they
+would wait for him afterward, and watched him cross the field with a
+lithe, springy step.
+
+“He’s fine, isn’t he?” remarked Jean Forsythe enthusiastically. “I like
+that Mr. Fargo, too. Where’s the other one you were telling me about? I
+wonder he doesn’t come over.”
+
+Janet had been wondering herself. Quite early in the game she had
+picked out Bert Elgin over by the grandstand pitching to one of the
+youngsters who was not playing. It seemed rather odd that he could not
+spare a moment to run over and see them.
+
+“Oh, he’s warming up,” she explained carelessly. “He’s going in with
+the regulars at the seventh inning. It’ll be awfully exciting to see
+which does the better.”
+
+Lefty talked for a moment or two with Al Ogan, and then, corralling a
+fellow to catch for him, started to limber up his arm. He felt that he
+had never been in better form, and the realization inspired him. So
+far the game was very close, for the Yannigans were having a streak of
+hitting, of which they took every advantage, so that they were one run
+to the good at the end of the fourth inning.
+
+If Lefty could help them win the game it would be a triumph, indeed,
+and would more than atone for his losing the first time.
+
+At the end of the fifth inning the score remained unchanged. In the
+last half of the sixth, however, the regulars secured the tying run.
+A little later Lefty slipped into his sweater, walked to the bench,
+and sat down. Elgin had stopped warming up a moment or two before, and
+stood near; but neither paid any attention to the other.
+
+As the inning ended, Lefty saw Jim Brennan beckon to Ogan and engage
+him in conversation. He seemed to be laying down the law in that sharp,
+decisive manner of his, and something in the cub captain’s face sent a
+momentary thrill of apprehension through the southpaw.
+
+He thrust it from him, however, and when Ogan finally turned away from
+the manager and walked slowly in, Lefty moved to meet him.
+
+“Old man changed his plans?” the cub pitcher asked carelessly.
+
+Something, he knew not what, prompted him to put the question. It never
+really occurred to him that Brennan had changed his mind, but afterward
+he was more than thankful that the suggestion had come from him.
+
+“Yes!” snapped Ogan. “He wants Redmond to go in. I told him I’d
+promised you, and Redmond’s arm wasn’t limbered up, but that didn’t
+make any difference. Sorry, old fellow, but I’ll make it up to you
+another time.”
+
+Lefty turned away with a shrug, and tossed his glove up, catching it
+deftly as it fell. Then he laughed. Ogan could have no idea, of course,
+how difficult it was to make that laugh sound natural.
+
+“Sure!” Lefty said lightly. “You won’t want me at all, then?”
+
+“Not this afternoon. I’ll put you in to-morrow, though, if it takes a
+leg.”
+
+He passed on toward the bench, leaving Locke to follow more slowly, his
+face still indifferent, but his mind full of bitter disappointment.
+To-morrow! That promise was poor consolation when he had set his heart
+on pitching to-day. He would never have another chance like this to pit
+himself against Bert Elgin.
+
+The next instant he raised his head and met Elgin’s eyes fixed upon his
+face with a look of malicious satisfaction. For a fraction of a second
+Lefty stared. Then he smiled, and, turning, made his way straight
+toward the runabout containing the two girls.
+
+It had suddenly come to him that he would have to go back and explain
+to them. He hated the necessity intensely; but, since it had to be
+done, it might as well be gotten over swiftly.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ THE UNEXPECTED
+
+
+The remainder of the afternoon was one long trial for Lefty Locke. He
+was under the necessity of keeping up an appearance of light-hearted
+indifference before the girls, when all the time he simply ached to be
+out there on the diamond.
+
+He saw Redmond pitching the sort of ball to delight the veterans, who
+batted him mercilessly. He saw Elgin, backed by the whole strength of
+the regular team, make a showing such as he had never made before. He
+saw the cubs mowed down, snowed under, beaten to a frazzle; and all the
+time he had to laugh and joke and fight down any signs of the bitter
+disappointment which filled his soul.
+
+Janet, knowing him as she did, realized something of what he must be
+feeling, and tactfully refrained from any comments on Elgin’s pitching.
+Neither did she tell Lefty how sorry she was at the way things had
+gone, and for that he was thankful. It seemed as if Janet Harting’s
+pity would have been the last straw.
+
+When the last inning ended, with a score of nine to three in favor of
+the regulars, she further won his gratitude by suggesting to Jean that
+they leave the field at once, before the crowd started, and take Lefty
+with them.
+
+He accepted with alacrity. When they put him down at the hotel, he said
+good-by to Miss Forsythe, then held out his hand to Janet.
+
+“Thank you,” he said in a quiet voice as she took it.
+
+The girl smiled understandingly into his eyes. “Come and see us soon,”
+was all she said, as the car moved away.
+
+Of course, the principal topic of conversation that night was the
+wonderful exhibition of pitching shown by Elgin. Some of the newspaper
+men, in particular, were more than enthusiastic, hailing him as the
+most promising youngster Brennan had discovered, and predicting a
+bright future for him. The older players had seen too many “infant
+phenoms” to be in the least impressed; they knew, moreover, how much
+of his success had been due to their own assistance. The cubs were
+too downcast over their defeat to think of anything else. Redmond was
+wearing a grouch, and Locke’s stock began to soar when Ogan expressed a
+belief at the supper table that if the southpaw had been put in, as he
+desired, the result would have been quite different.
+
+Lefty missed Jack Stillman and was beginning to wonder where he was
+when the reporter suddenly issued from the elevator, about eight
+o’clock, and hurried over.
+
+“Had to get my copy off,” he explained. “Say! Have you seen old Oggie?”
+
+“You don’t mean Oggie Wilmerding!” Lefty exclaimed incredulously.
+
+“Surest thing you know! The old lobster was here when we got back from
+the field this afternoon. He’s traveling for the Wood’s Hoisting Engine
+Company. Talk about class! Oh, hush!”
+
+Lefty grinned. “Oggie always did have a hankering for lugs,” he
+chuckled. “But he’s all right, just the same. Where do you suppose he’s
+gone?”
+
+“Give it up. He said something about seeing a man the first thing in
+the morning, but perhaps he’s hunting him up to-night.”
+
+This surmise proved to be correct. About half an hour later a tall,
+well-groomed, prosperous-looking chap entered the lobby, and was
+instantly seized by the two Princeton men and mauled after the fashion
+of college mates who haven’t met each other in some time.
+
+He was unfeignedly glad to see Lefty, and when the first exuberant
+greetings were ended they settled down in a corner of the lobby to talk
+over old times.
+
+“You’re fat as a pig, Oggie,” Lefty remarked, with fond bluntness. “I’d
+like to have you on the squad for about a month.”
+
+Wilmerding waved away the suggestion with horror. “No, thanks! I never
+took to exercise. I’m very well satisfied as I am. Never did like to
+see every bone in a fellow’s body.” He paused an instant, and then
+chuckled. “But this is the best ever, running across you three old
+Princeton plugs in a bunch. Where’s Elgin? I was talking to him before
+supper, and I’ll be hanged if he isn’t a pretty decent chap. Never
+cared very much for him at college, but he seems to have improved a lot
+since then.”
+
+The silence which followed his remark was eloquent. Wilmerding glanced
+from one frowning face to the other, and raised his eyebrows.
+
+“What’s the matter?” he inquired. “Have I struck a false note?”
+
+“You certainly have if you sized up that cur as decent,” Stillman
+retorted impulsively.
+
+“You don’t mean it!” Wilmerding exclaimed. “Why, he seemed very
+pleasant. What’s he done to get you two on his neck?”
+
+“What he did at college was enough to get any self-respecting fellow
+down on him, let alone the dirty tricks he’s tried since then.”
+
+The plump chap looked puzzled. “At college?” he repeated. “I don’t
+understand, Jack.”
+
+“You will when I tell you that he was the one who stole Bob Ferris’
+watch and money, and then tried to put the blame on Lefty.”
+
+The effect of his words on Wilmerding was extraordinary. The healthy
+glow faded swiftly from the plump cheeks, leaving them pale and
+mottled. His jaw dropped, and for an instant he sat staring at the
+reporter with startled eyes.
+
+“Impossible!” he gasped at last, in a hoarse, trembling voice.
+
+“It’s not impossible,” Stillman retorted sharply. “The whole thing’s as
+plain as print. Lefty caught him with the goods.”
+
+Slowly Wilmerding turned his eyes on Locke. The look in them was that
+of one who is unable to credit the evidence of his senses.
+
+“It’s true,” Locke affirmed, wondering curiously what brought that
+extraordinary expression into the other’s face. “I saw the watch in his
+possession.”
+
+Wilmerding dropped his lids and swallowed hard. For a moment or two he
+sat staring at his lap, where his plump, well-cared-for hands lay, the
+fingers tightly interlaced. His mouth was twitching nervously and his
+face was still pale. At last he raised his head again and glanced at
+Stillman.
+
+“It isn’t possible, Jack,” he said unevenly. “You’ve made a big
+mistake.”
+
+“Don’t be a fool, Oggie,” the reporter snapped. “There isn’t a chance
+of that. What the deuce do you know about it, anyhow?”
+
+Wilmerding moistened his dry lips. “A great deal,” he said slowly.
+“I――was the――thief, myself.”
+
+“You?” exclaimed both men together.
+
+Then Locke laughed oddly. “Jove! That was well done, Oggie,” he
+exclaimed. “We both bit beautifully.”
+
+Wilmerding shook his head. His eyes were tortured.
+
+“You’re wrong,” he said, more clearly. “I’m not fooling; I mean every
+word I say.” He reached out, and gripped the edge of a small table
+standing beside his chair; somehow, the action seemed to steady him.
+“It’s mighty hard to tell you fellows,” he went on slowly. “I thought
+the whole wretched business had been buried forever. I never expected
+to hear of it again, but I can’t let you go on thinking what you do
+about Elgin. As true as I sit here, I stole those things from Ferris. I
+didn’t mean to do it, but I took them just the same. Ever since I was
+a kid I’ve been cursed with a sleepwalking habit, and not the ordinary
+sort, either. When I’m asleep I do things I’d never dream of doing in
+my right senses. You remember Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?”
+
+Lefty nodded silently. He was too amazed to speak.
+
+“Well, in a way I’m a Jekyll and Hyde. I’ve often thought that,
+sleeping and waking, I have two just such different personalities as
+those. I’ll never forget the awful sensation of finding out the first
+time that I’d been into somebody else’s room and stolen a scarfpin off
+the bureau. It was at a summer hotel, and I managed to put it back
+without any one finding out. At college I did the same thing every
+now and then, but never very much, and always managed to get my loot
+back undiscovered. I thought I’d done the same thing with Ferris’
+belongings.”
+
+“But, Oggie, this is all rot!” Lefty burst out. “You’re worrying
+yourself over something which is utterly impossible. I tell you I saw
+Ferris’ watch fall out of Bert Elgin’s pocket.”
+
+“Could you swear to the watch?” Wilmerding asked wearily and without
+conviction.
+
+“Well, it looked exactly like it.”
+
+“Must have been some other watch,” Wilmerding returned positively. “Did
+he ever confess to you that he did the stealing?”
+
+“N-o, I can’t say that. In fact, he denied it up and down; but of
+course he’d do that. I told him unless the things were returned in
+twenty-four hours I’d go to the dean. They were back on Ferris’ bureau
+the next morning.”
+
+Wilmerding nodded. “Naturally, when I put them there myself. In my
+sleep I had hidden them behind some books on a shelf, and I didn’t
+find them until that night. I tell you fellows, you’ve made a terrible
+mistake. I never cared much for Elgin in the old days, and had very
+little to do with him, but I can’t keep still and let any man suffer
+for my own wrongdoing.”
+
+There was no mistaking the deadly earnestness of his tone, and, as he
+realized what the disclosure meant, Lefty experienced an odd, sinking
+sensation. Thoroughly upright and straightforward himself, the thought
+that he had been the means of branding an innocent man as a thief was
+intolerable to him. Moreover, if Elgin was not guilty of that theft,
+what proof had they of his complicity in recent underhanded doings?
+
+With a feeling that the earth was dropping away under his feet, Locke
+turned toward Stillman. He saw on the reporter’s face that same
+expression of groping blankness which he knew was on his own.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ THE STRUGGLE
+
+
+Lefty went to his room rather early that night, but not to bed.
+The discovery of the terrible mistake he had made regarding Elgin
+bewildered him at first, and then made him feel as if he wanted to get
+away by himself to think it all over.
+
+For three years he had felt absolutely certain of Bert Elgin’s
+responsibility for that theft at Princeton. He had felt the scorn and
+contempt for his college mate which any decent man would naturally feel
+for a person guilty of what Elgin had done. He had, moreover, from the
+very first, never hesitated to show those feelings. Now it would seem
+that he had been totally in the wrong.
+
+It was a most disagreeable discovery. Lefty would have felt glad indeed
+had there been a chance of believing Wilmerding mistaken, but such a
+thing was hardly possible. Oggie had never been on friendly terms with
+Elgin in the old days, so there was no earthly reason to suspect him of
+making up the story in order to shield the real culprit.
+
+“And, anyway, he couldn’t have told it the way he did unless it were
+true,” Locke thought to himself. “It isn’t in him to fake a thing so
+realistically.”
+
+Frowning, Lefty moved restlessly about the room, picking up an article
+here and there and replacing it without a realization of what he was
+doing. Of course the only proper course for him to follow was to go
+straight to Elgin and apologize for having misjudged him so greatly,
+but the thought of doing so was intolerable.
+
+He detested the fellow as much as ever. His suspicion of Elgin’s
+responsibility for the doped beer remained unshaken. Whether the man
+had stolen or not, did not affect that question.
+
+“I can’t do it!” Lefty burst out, at length, a vivid picture of the
+sneering reception which would greet an apology on his part flashing
+into his mind. “I detest that man, and I won’t give him a chance to
+crow over me. He’d seize it gleefully.”
+
+For a time he deluded himself with the idea that, after all, it wasn’t
+up to him to do anything. The matter had never been made public. With
+the exception of Ogden Wilmerding, Stillman and Ferris were the only
+ones who knew anything of it. It had long ago been relegated to the
+past. Why should it be dragged out into the light at this late day? He
+would write to Bob Ferris that very night and put him straight about
+the matter. That should be enough.
+
+Deep down in his heart Lefty Locke knew that it was not enough. Because
+he was clean and straight and honorable, he knew that it was up to
+him to apologize to the man he had so cruelly misjudged, whether he
+detested him or not. He had been responsible for the stigma resting on
+Elgin’s good name, and that responsibility could not be shirked. Common
+decency made it imperative for him to acknowledge his mistake.
+
+The decision was not an easy one. In fact, Lefty had never struggled
+harder against the temptation to take the simple course and let things
+slide. If he kept silent, the chances were a thousand to one that Elgin
+would never hear a whisper of Wilmerding’s story. The latter was not
+likely to repeat it to others, and Stillman would certainly keep the
+matter to himself.
+
+In spite of all these plausible arguments, however, the southpaw knew
+that there was really only one thing for him to do, much as he hated
+it; and, having come to that conclusion, he lost no time in ridding
+himself of the unpleasant duty.
+
+A glance at his watch told him that it was not yet eleven. Possibly
+Elgin might still be up, and if the task could be done that night, so
+much the better.
+
+Stepping out into the corridor, he walked to Elgin’s room, noticed
+the light streaming through the transom, and, without further delay,
+knocked firmly on the door.
+
+“Come in!” called a voice impatiently.
+
+Elgin, partly undressed, stood in the middle of the room. As his rival
+entered and closed the door behind him, a look of surprise flashed into
+his face, followed swiftly by a scowl.
+
+“Well, what in blazes do _you_ want?” he snapped with pointed emphasis.
+
+Lefty bit his lips to keep back the retort he longed to utter. He
+realized that it was going to be even harder than he had expected.
+
+“I’ve found out that I was wrong about that affair at college, Elgin,”
+he said stiffly. “I came to tell you that I am sorry for having
+misjudged you.”
+
+For an instant Elgin stared at him in silence, the shirt he had just
+taken off trailing unheeded on the floor. His face was an odd mixture
+of astonishment and suspicious incredulity.
+
+“You mean――about the Ferris――business?” he asked jerkily.
+
+Locke nodded. “Yes; I was mistaken in thinking you mixed up in it. I’ve
+been mistaken for three years.”
+
+Elgin’s brows came together in a scowl. His lids drooped until they
+quite hid the expression in his dark eyes.
+
+“Humph!” he grunted. “And when did you find out what an ass you’ve been
+making of yourself?”
+
+Lefty flushed, and set his jaws. “I learned the truth to-night,” he
+admitted.
+
+Suddenly Elgin’s face relaxed from its rather tense, searching
+expression, and he laughed harshly.
+
+“And so you’re sorry?” he sneered. “That puts you right, I suppose!
+Without a shred of evidence, you accuse a man of stealing. For three
+years you blackguard him every chance you get, and then, when you find
+out the truth, when you wake up to the fact that you’ve been all kinds
+of a blackguard, all you can do is to come around whining about being
+sorry. Bah!”
+
+Lefty drew his breath sharply, his self-control strained almost to the
+breaking point.
+
+“What more can I do?” he demanded.
+
+Elgin’s lips curled. “Oh, nothing――nothing,” he sneered. “It’s what you
+should have done before that gets me. Anybody but a fool would have
+waited till he could prove it before he called a man a thief. But no;
+you had to jump in and show how smart you were without giving a thought
+to the damage you might be doing to a person’s character.”
+
+Lefty felt that argument would be futile. Besides, he knew that if he
+stayed any longer he would most certainly blow up and say something he
+might afterward regret.
+
+“I’ve told you I’m sorry, and I am,” he repeated briefly. “I’ll write
+to Bob Ferris to-night, and put him straight about the matter. I fail
+to see what more there is to do.”
+
+Without further words, he turned abruptly to leave the room. He had
+almost reached the door when Elgin’s sneering voice broke the silence:
+
+“If you think this squares everything between us, you’ve got another
+guess coming. I haven’t forgotten how you’ve slandered me, and I never
+will, even if you should crawl like this every day for the rest of the
+year.”
+
+Lefty whirled, his eyes blazing. “I don’t give a rip what you remember
+or forget!” he retorted sharply. “I apologized because I had to save my
+self-respect. If you imagine I want to have anything more to do with
+you than before, get rid of the notion right away. I don’t like you
+or your methods. You may not be guilty of stealing, but there are some
+other things fully as rotten that you have done.”
+
+Before Elgin could reply the southpaw had jerked the door open, stepped
+swiftly through, and slammed it behind him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ GAINING GROUND
+
+
+“What the deuce did you go and tell him for?” Jack Stillman demanded
+pettishly.
+
+“Because I had to,” retorted Lefty, with some asperity. He was tired of
+the whole subject, and desired to forget it. “Don’t be a fool, Jack.
+There wasn’t anything else to do.”
+
+The reporter shrugged his shoulders. There was a note of finality in
+his friend’s voice which he knew better than to disregard.
+
+“Well, all I can say is I’m thankful my conscience isn’t so blamed
+sensitive,” he sighed. “He’ll be so swelled up there won’t be any
+enduring him. Heaven knows he’ll be chesty enough, as it is, when he
+sees the papers.”
+
+“What do you mean, Jack?” Lefty asked curiously.
+
+The reporter scowled. “Same old dope about ‘Marvelous Cub Twirler
+Discovered by Astute Manager,’” he explained sardonically. Stillman had
+a trick of talking in capitals which made one fairly see the glaring
+headlines. “It’s the same every spring, only this year there are a lot
+more kids around than usual who can handle a murder case or robbery a
+heap better than they can a Big League training season.”
+
+Lefty grinned. “Oh, you mean they’re giving him a puff on account of
+yesterday?”
+
+“A puff isn’t quite the word. I wish you could have seen some of the
+rot Temple, of the _Blade_, doped out. He wanted my opinion on it;
+said he was a bit new to this, you know. I smoothed down the story a
+little, but I’m dead sure a lot more will rant as bad, or worse. Most
+of ’em seem to think because the regulars had a landslide it was due
+to Elgin’s pitching. They don’t figure out that Redmond’s bum work had
+anything to do with it.”
+
+“What’s the odds?” Lefty laughed. “You did the same thing last year,
+didn’t you?”
+
+“Not quite. I knew something about baseball to start with, and Johnny
+Hargreaves tipped me off to a whole lot more.”
+
+“Still, Elgin really did do pretty well,” Locke remarked slowly.
+“Anybody must concede that much.”
+
+“No better than he has half a dozen times before,” the reporter
+retorted. “That’s all I said in my story, but when I found the way the
+rest were piling it on, I had to stick in another paragraph. Otherwise
+I’d be getting a wire from the chief to wake up and take notice.”
+
+“After all, I don’t believe it amounts to a terrible lot,” Lefty said
+carelessly. “You can’t fool Brennan, and his opinion is really the only
+one that counts.”
+
+Nevertheless, as he joined the squad a little later for the morning jog
+out to the grounds, Lefty could not help feeling a twinge of regretful
+envy. If he had only been allowed to go on the slab for the cubs the
+day before, he had a notion that Elgin’s performance would not have
+seemed quite so brilliant. Those laudatory newspaper notices might have
+had someone else as the object of their praise, and, though he knew how
+little such plaudits really counted, Lefty was a very human sort of
+fellow, after all.
+
+According to his promise, Al Ogan put the southpaw in the box that
+afternoon, and Locke pitched for six innings to such purpose that the
+game resulted in a tie in spite of the fact that the regulars were in
+as good a form as ever, and seemed to work a little harder than usual.
+
+From that time on, Locke’s companions began to thaw. Once they realized
+that Lefty’s first disastrous exhibition had not been a sample of his
+usual form, they endeavored to make up for past unpleasantness.
+
+Perhaps their new friendliness was hastened by the newspaper prominence
+of Bert Elgin. Few men can view unmoved the sudden elevation to fame
+of a comrade, especially when they feel that this elevation has not
+been especially merited. Newspapers began to drift in from all the big
+cities, in which Elgin was heralded as “Brennan’s New Find,” “A Second
+Matty,” “By Far the Most Promising Recruit of the Season,” and so on.
+
+Then followed pictures of the new pitcher in every variety of pose; his
+style was dissected and analyzed; his progress was noted; for, having
+launched this boom, the reporters felt under the necessity of pushing
+it along.
+
+All of these things were not calculated to soothe the spirits of the
+other cubs, whose existence was noted by scant sentences scattered
+thinly throughout the sporting columns. They looked askance on Elgin,
+and the latter, not bearing up well under prosperity, gave them plenty
+to criticize. He developed an irritatingly jaunty air, which was
+flaunted at all times. He grew very familiar with most of the newspaper
+men, and when on the slab gave decided evidence of mannerisms, which
+tried the patience and aroused the ire of his fellow players.
+
+Unfortunately for them, his ability to pitch increased rather than
+lessened, so that their sarcastic utterances rather lost point. A man
+can make all sorts of a fool of himself off the slab, he may even go
+through ridiculous posings and posturings while winding up, but when
+his work is as uniformly good as Bert Elgin’s was, criticism is usually
+superfluous.
+
+The days passed swiftly, with the most of the squad showing an increase
+in efficiency. They were hitting better, running faster, and throwing
+more accurately. The regulars were rapidly perfecting their teamwork,
+and the cubs beginning to learn the importance of something more than
+the rudiments of “inside” baseball. Some of them took to it like ducks
+to water, and absorbed intricate secret signals and caught on to the
+theory of certain movements as if they had been brought up on nothing
+else from their cradles. These were the men who would push forward to
+the front ranks. The slower-brained recruits were doomed.
+
+Lefty Locke enjoyed that week more than any similar space of time
+he could remember. Baseball as a science had always interested him
+tremendously. He had spent a great deal of time studying out different
+plays and the reasons for them, but up to now these mental exercises
+had been generally limited to the more obvious sort, though he did not
+realize that at the time.
+
+He knew it, however, the moment the Hornets began to pick up and show
+what they could do when they were in trim; and, though the discovery
+was something of a blow to his self-esteem, it only goaded him to
+constant effort and increased mental agility to keep up the pace.
+
+Therefore his work steadily improved. While, perhaps, not so spectacular
+and dashing as Bert Elgin’s, it showed evidence of thought and clear
+judgment; and very soon it became apparent that he was crowding his
+rival close, if not actually surpassing him in general ability and
+resourcefulness.
+
+The one drawback to an otherwise pleasant period was Janet Harting’s
+behavior. She and Lefty had come perilously close to their first
+quarrel, and all because of his absolute refusal, not alone to make
+up his differences with Bert Elgin, but to tell her of what those
+differences consisted.
+
+After her first coolness she had been very nice about it, but somehow
+Lefty had a feeling that she was not quite the same. She was pleasant
+and cordial, and went twice to the baseball park to see him pitch
+before she and her father left Ashland for the mineral springs at
+Billings. In spite of all that, however, Lefty sensed the faint rift in
+their friendship, and it troubled him.
+
+Instinctively he laid it to Elgin, whom he knew visited Miss Harting
+almost as frequently as he did, and he despised the man more than ever
+for it. It was one of those cases, however, in which a person can
+do nothing. Locke simply had to sit still and let events take their
+course. He worried and fussed a bit at first, but presently his whole
+mind became so engrossed in the struggle to make good and win out that
+he ceased to be actively troubled over something which he could not
+remedy.
+
+After all, if he could only manage to outpitch Elgin on the diamond and
+prove himself the better player, there was more than a chance of his
+showing, at the same time, the girl he cared for that he was the better
+man.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ A CHANCE TO MAKE GOOD
+
+
+Jack Stillman lolled in the big cushioned chair, his eyes fixed on the
+backs of two men, carrying suitcases, who were just leaving the hotel
+in company with half a dozen of their fellow players.
+
+“Back to the hay fields for yours,” he murmured sardonically. “Another
+couple of years, and you may be ready for fast company. This is the
+beginning of the exodus, Lefty.”
+
+For an instant Locke’s face was rather serious. Then he smiled faintly.
+
+“You’re a stony-hearted ruffian, Jack,” he said. “I feel sorry for
+them. After working hard and getting your hopes away up, it’s a beastly
+disappointment to be told you haven’t made good. I suppose you’ll think
+it’s a joke when I pack my little bag and go forth into the cold world.”
+
+“I’d laugh myself sick,” chuckled the newspaper man. “At present,
+however, I don’t see any chance of that coming about. At the risk of
+giving you a swelled head, I’ll tell you, old chap, that you’re liable
+to stick around.”
+
+“This from the oracle!” laughed the southpaw. “I’m overwhelmed. But
+seriously, Jack, if I have improved a little, so has Bert Elgin. Of
+course, I’d never admit it to any one else, but it’s my private opinion
+that he’s the better pitcher.”
+
+“I don’t agree with you,” Stillman returned decidedly. “There’s no
+denying that Elgin’s good. He’s got speed and fine curves and very
+fair control, but the combination of all three doesn’t always make a
+first-class pitcher. He’s got to pitch with his brain as well as his
+arm, and he’s got to have plenty of nerve, both of which qualities I’ve
+noticed in you. I’m curious to see what Elgin will do when he’s up
+against a real team.”
+
+“Well, I hope the old man agrees with you,” Lefty returned. “It looks
+to me as if it would be a fight between us two as to which will be kept
+and which farmed out.”
+
+“Why shouldn’t he keep you both?” the newspaper man inquired.
+
+“Look at the corking bunch of regulars he has already,” Locke protested.
+
+Stillman laughed. “Haven’t you got wise yet to the fact that a team
+can’t have too many good twirlers? A Big League season is a whole lot
+different from the ball you played last summer. It begins in April,
+and doesn’t end till October. It’s fight, fight, fight, week after
+week, month after month, with the knowledge that a single game, a
+single inning, sometimes even a single play, may start a slump. It’s
+hard, grilling work, and Brennan knows well that any minute one of his
+star twirlers may be down and out. He’s not running any chances, and
+you take my word for it that, if you and Elgin don’t fall down, he’ll
+keep you both.”
+
+“You’re a real comfort, Jack,” Lefty said. “I’ll try not to slump. Wish
+I knew who was going on to the slab first to-morrow.”
+
+“Don’t you?” the reporter asked, with sudden interest. “I thought he
+picked the team this afternoon.”
+
+“So he did, all but the battery. Perhaps we’ll hear before bedtime.
+I’d sure like to go in. This will be rather different from the usual
+practice game.”
+
+Stillman nodded emphatically. “You bet your boots! The first game with
+an outside team is usually an eye-opener. You fellows think you’re
+pretty hot stuff because you’ve trimmed the regulars a few times,
+forgetting that the old men take things so easy during training season
+that you’d hardly know they were working at all. Cy Russell lets you
+hit him a dozen times in a game; so does old Pop. I’ve seen you fan
+Dutch Siegrist twice running. Do you s’pose you could do that a month
+from now? Forget it! This game to-morrow is going to be a jolt for some
+lads, if what I hear about that wild Texas bunch is right. I wonder the
+old man would consent to a match so early. They usually aren’t pulled
+off till just before we start north.”
+
+“Buck told me their manager had sent in a challenge, and the chief
+didn’t feel like turning it down,” Lefty remarked. “I s’pose he didn’t
+want to give ’em a chance to crow.”
+
+“Very likely. Well, it’ll be some fun, anyhow. I understand their
+pitcher has a reputation for rough-and-ready baseball. I’ll be hanged,
+old man, if I wouldn’t be just as well pleased to see Elgin up against
+that sort of thing if I were you.”
+
+“I’ll take a chance,” Lefty laughed. “I’ve been up against some tough
+characters before, and perhaps even this Texas steer can’t put much
+over me.”
+
+“That remains to be seen,” chuckled Stillman. “The old man’s heading
+this way with Ogan, and from the expression on his face I should say
+you’d been chosen for the goat.”
+
+His surmise proved to be correct.
+
+“You’ll start the game to-morrow, Locke,” the manager said abruptly, as
+he halted by Lefty’s chair. “I’m told this Schaeffer is a roughneck,
+so look out for squalls. No matter what he does, don’t let him badger
+you into anything. I’ll see to it that he’s kept within bounds, but
+them kind of ball players is so full of tricks you can’t catch ’em all.
+You and Ogan and Fargo better get together to-night and fix up your
+signals.”
+
+After Lefty and the cub captain had departed to hunt up their backstop,
+Jim Brennan stood for a moment looking at Stillman out of the corner of
+his eye. The latter was one of the few reporters with the squad that
+year who knew baseball from the ground up, and the stories he sent home
+to his paper usually had the manager’s entire approval.
+
+“You don’t seem much fretted about putting your cubs up against this
+young sagebrush fellow,” the newspaper man remarked presently.
+
+Brennan’s eyes twinkled a bit.
+
+“I ain’t,” he admitted. “Likely they’ll get the pants licked off ’em,
+but that’ll do ’em good.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ A BAD BEGINNING
+
+
+As the Broncs spread out on the field for preliminary practice, their
+opponents looked them over with undisguised interest. They saw nine
+husky, sunbrowned fellows, quick, lithe, and snappy in their movements,
+who scooped up grounders, smothered flies, and lined the ball from
+one to another without any bungling, hesitation or wooden headwork.
+They had been playing all winter in the Southern States, and certainly
+showed the fact in their efficiency and teamwork. They were not really
+Texans, although posing as such, but, instead, players gathered from
+various parts of the country.
+
+“Looks like a pretty swift crowd,” Al Ogan remarked to Lefty. “If any
+one should ask me, I’d say we had our work cut out for us.”
+
+Locke smiled faintly.
+
+“I reckon we can handle them,” he returned. “With Fargo and Pollock in
+the infield and Hagin at center, I’m not worrying. Each one of those
+men hit over three hundred last season.”
+
+“Exactly,” the cub captain said significantly, “but that was last
+season. Their averages have been pretty punk this spring. I’m not so
+sure that the team is strengthened a whole lot by running them in at
+the last minute.”
+
+“Personally, I’m mighty glad to have Fargo behind the pan,” said Lefty.
+“Whalen isn’t bad, but there’s not another backstop in the country who
+can teach Buck anything. Well, there goes the umpire. It’s up to us to
+show these bucking broncs that they’re not the whole shooting match.”
+
+Though he spoke confidently, Lefty did not feel quite as nonchalant and
+undisturbed as he pretended to be.
+
+The Hornets had the field, and it was up to their pitcher to keep the
+heavy hitters, who would almost certainly head their opponents’ batting
+list, from doing too much damage before he had discovered the strength
+and weakness of each man, and could govern himself accordingly.
+
+Lefty knew that Fargo would help him out to the best of his ability,
+but even the experienced backstop could not be counted on to gauge
+accurately the batting capabilities of men he had never set eyes on
+before. There was nothing to do but proceed cautiously, sounding the
+batters as best he could and relying on his support to take care of
+the hits.
+
+The first man up was “Cinch” Brown, one of the Texan outfielders, a
+tall, rangy fellow with a hawklike nose and a pair of keen, dark eyes
+which seemed to miss nothing. For a second the southpaw hesitated,
+trying to fathom just what sort of a ball would be “meat” to this
+Southerner.
+
+Something――intuition, perhaps――gave Lefty the notion that a low,
+straight one, close to the knees, would be less palatable than any
+other, and his judgment was strengthened when Fargo crouched behind the
+pan and made a signal beneath his huge mitt.
+
+Without delay, the southpaw put it over, straight, swift, and cutting
+the near corner just above the batter’s knees――and Brown lashed it out
+as if he preferred that kind of a ball to any other.
+
+But for the fast fielding of Bill Hagin, the hit would have been good
+for two cushions. The Big League man, however, got after the ball in
+splendid style, and made a running, one-handed stop, which prevented
+the sphere from getting away into the remote distance of center field.
+
+“That’s the stuff, Cinch!” came in a harsh voice from a little to the
+left of the plate. “That’s the way to start her off. This kid’s easy
+fruit. We’ll have him going. Smash it out, Bull; you can do it.”
+
+There was an odd, unpleasant quality to the voice which made Lefty
+dislike it intuitively. He cast a swift, curious glance in that
+direction, and saw, as he had surmised, that it came from the notorious
+Zack Schaeffer. The Texan twirler stood with his hands on his hips, his
+powerful legs spread wide apart. When his eyes met Lefty’s, a slight
+sneer curved his full red lips, and, with an unpleasant laugh, he
+turned to say something to the man near him.
+
+That sort of thing did not bother the southpaw in the least. With an
+inward determination to settle Schaeffer’s hash if he possibly could
+when the latter came to the bat, he turned his attention to Bull Kenny,
+the backstop of the Broncs.
+
+The latter looked dangerous as he squared himself at the plate, poising
+his bat over his shoulder. He was a big, square-jawed, heavily built
+fellow, and wielded a massive club. Ordinarily Locke would have looked
+for a bunt, but it was evident from the way he held himself that Kenny
+had no intention of sacrificing.
+
+He quite ignored a coaxer which Lefty tried him with, and the latter,
+taking a signal from Fargo, sent over a whistling high inshoot.
+
+Kenny smashed it full and fair, driving it out on a line over the head
+of Sandy Rollins at second. Then he dug his spikes into the ground, and
+went flying down the line to first at a speed which showed that hitting
+was not his only accomplishment.
+
+As before, it was Hagin who raced forward, scooped up the ball on the
+run, and lined it to second. Brown had taken a fair lead, however, and
+made the second sack by a hair’s breadth, amid a cloud of dust.
+
+“Got ’em going, boys!” yelled Schaeffer. “They’re e-easy. Now, Pete,
+you know what to do.”
+
+Nevens, third baseman, evidently did. He was prepared to sacrifice,
+but Locke kept the ball high so that it was difficult for him to bunt
+effectively. He was finally forced to hit, and hit he did, though not
+safely. Nevertheless, he pounded the ball into the diamond, and the two
+runners advanced, while he was thrown out at first.
+
+“That’s the stuff,” laughed Schaeffer, as he stepped out with his bat.
+“Here’s where we pull the Hornet’s stinger.”
+
+He had a peculiar swaggering gait, and carried himself in a manner
+which showed how thoroughly he appreciated his own ability. Lefty
+felt an intense desire to fan the fellow, who seemed so cocksure of
+himself. He was glancing at Fargo, ready to take the signal, when he
+saw that Schaeffer had crowded up to the plate, his toes well over the
+box line.
+
+“Get back,” Locke said sharply.
+
+“Aw, pitch the ball!” snapped Schaeffer. “What’s bitin’ you?”
+
+“You’re out of your box,” declared Lefty. “I’m liable to hit you.”
+
+“I’ll take a chance, Willie,” the Texan retorted offensively. “I ain’t
+seen you pass up anything very dangerous so far.”
+
+Nevertheless, at the umpire’s command, he edged back grudgingly, but
+persisted in keeping a bit of his toes over the line.
+
+“The close ones for him,” Lefty decided swiftly. “With that reach of
+his, he can hit anything a foot outside the pan.”
+
+He therefore shook his head when Fargo signaled. When the big backstop
+changed the sign, Lefty, after a glance at the base runners, used a
+short, swift delivery, and passed up an inshoot, intending to keep the
+ball close to the knuckles of the batter.
+
+Schaeffer stepped in, and was unable to dodge that shoot. It caught him
+glancingly, high up on the body, and made him stagger a bit. Then,
+growling a few choice epithets, he obeyed the umpire’s signal to take
+his base.
+
+“That man stepped out of his box, Mr. Umpire,” Fargo protested. “He
+wouldn’t have been hit if he’d kept his place.”
+
+“Aw, cut that out!” snarled Schaeffer, limping in an exaggerated
+manner. “I was hit a-purpose. Just wait, my young squab,” he added out
+of the corner of his mouth to Lefty. “I’ll get _you_.”
+
+The umpire refused to reverse his decision.
+
+As he took the ball from Fargo, Lefty’s blood was tingling, and his
+face flushed. He managed to keep a grip on his temper, however. With
+the bases full and only one out, coolness was at a premium.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ TAKING A BRACE
+
+
+“Sickening!” growled Bert Elgin sitting on the bench. “But what can you
+expect with a dub like Locke on the slab?”
+
+Andy Whalen, a little sore at having been left out of the game, nodded
+absently. Next instant, however, he turned his eyes from the diamond
+for a second to glance at his companion.
+
+“It isn’t altogether his fault, though,” he said. “It’s no cinch to
+start in pitching to a perfectly strange lot of batters, and Schaeffer
+shouldn’t have had that base.”
+
+“Don’t you believe it,” snapped Elgin. “If we had a real pitcher――”
+
+“A hit!” Whalen cried. “No, it isn’t, either. It’s going straight at
+Burley.”
+
+Springing to his feet, he watched the ball soaring out into left field;
+saw Tom Burley running back to get under it; held his breath as the
+white sphere dropped swiftly, apparently straight into the fielder’s
+hands; and then sank back on the bench with a groan as the fellow
+muffed miserably.
+
+“Butterfingers!” he said bitterly. “Why didn’t you hold it, you chunk
+of solid ivory!”
+
+Cinch Brown trotted easily over the plate, and Kenny, covering the
+ground with tremendous strides, rounded third, and was urged on by the
+coacher.
+
+Lefty knew the sphere would be relayed. Disappointed by the unexpected
+muff, it seemed to him as if the ball would never reach the diamond. In
+reality, Burley, trying to atone for his miserable error, made a swift
+throw which sent the horsehide straight into the baseman’s hands; and
+Daly, whirling, lined it to the waiting backstop.
+
+“Slide! Slide!” shrieked the spectators.
+
+The advice was unnecessary. Kenny had already launched himself, feet
+forward, at the plate, and so great was his speed that he almost
+overreached it. He managed to stop himself with one leg across the
+rubber just as the ball plunked into Fargo’s big mitt, and he was
+declared safe.
+
+Amid the yell of delight which greeted this decision, Locke turned just
+in time to see Schaeffer streaking toward third. Apparently he hoped to
+steal the base in the general excitement.
+
+Lefty shouted warningly to Fargo, but the big backstop, on the job, had
+already lined the sphere to Terry Daly. The latter caught it astride
+the base, but Schaeffer slid feet foremost straight for the sack, and
+spiked Daly, who dropped the ball.
+
+A chorus of protest arose from the Hornets. Schaeffer got up, slapping
+the dust from his clothes and volubly voicing his regret at the
+incident.
+
+“Too bad,” he said, as Daly limped off the field. “Accidents will
+happen, you know. He should have watched out for spikes, anyhow.”
+
+As he spoke he caught Locke’s eye, and the latter brought his teeth
+together with a click. He felt sure that the thing had been done with
+deliberate intention, and, in the fleeting glance he exchanged with the
+Bronc twirler, a sudden determination filled him to repay the man in
+the way it would hurt the most.
+
+As he walked slowly back to the slab and stood waiting for Brennan
+to send out a new man to take Daly’s place, a curious calm descended
+on him. The outfielder’s error, coming on the heels of all that went
+before, had brought Lefty to a state of nervousness which would have
+been fatal had it continued.
+
+It did not. In a flash it had vanished, leaving him cooler and more
+composed than he had been at any time since the game began. His face
+was so quietly indifferent that more than one player, catching a
+glimpse of it, frowningly recalled the day he had thrown away that
+first game to the regulars, and wondered with sinking hearts whether he
+really was the quitter they had thought him then.
+
+“He’s done for,” muttered Elgin on the bench. “They’ve got his goat.
+He’s given away the game in the first inning.”
+
+Andy Whalen made no reply. He was watching Lefty keenly, and something
+in the southpaw’s face made him doubt if Elgin was right. There was
+no question of the sudden change which had come over the pitcher, but
+whether it was for better or worse seemed a question. With furrowed
+brow, the cub backstop dropped his chin into his hands, and waited.
+
+Tony Vegaro, the wiry little Mexican shortstop, was at the bat.
+Schaeffer jumped away from third as Locke pitched, making a fake start
+for the plate. He stopped short, and retreated almost instantly, but
+behind him, Monte Harris, the experienced third baseman whom Brennan
+had put in, streaked to the sack like greased lightning, and was ready
+for business. Lefty had pitched the ball high to prevent bunting, thus
+sending it into Fargo’s hands in such a way that the backstop did not
+have to waste a fraction of a second in lining it to third.
+
+There was a shout of warning from the coacher, but it came too late.
+Schaeffer flung himself back with outstretched hand, but the ball
+plunked into Harris’ grasp, and he tagged the Texan an instant before
+the latter’s fingers reached the sack.
+
+“Well, what do you think of that?” chuckled the delighted Whalen.
+“Locke’s not so worse, after all.”
+
+“He had nothing to do with it,” snapped Elgin, concealing his
+disappointment with an effort.
+
+Schaeffer arose with a fierce scowl, protesting that he had got back
+to the base safely. When the umpire motioned him toward the bench, he
+snarled out something about robbery, and moved grudgingly away.
+
+Lefty then proceeded to fan the next batter with swiftness and
+dispatch; and the Hornets romped in from the field, their spirits
+beginning to rise at this unexpected finish of the inning.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ THE TRICKY TWIRLER
+
+
+Lefty approached the bench in a very dubious state of mind. He was not
+at all sure that this first inning might not prove his last, and when
+he saw Ogan hurry up to the manager and say something in a low tone of
+voice, he fully expected to be told that he might ornament the bench
+for the remainder of the game.
+
+He tried to gain some idea of what was passing through Brennan’s mind
+by watching his face, but swiftly came to the conclusion that this
+was hopeless. A mask of carved and painted wood could not have been
+more impassive. The manager listened to what the cub captain had to
+say, without moving a muscle of his face. Then he spoke a few rapid
+sentences, and Ogan turned away with a nod.
+
+“You’re up, Buck,” he said shortly. “Start us off with a good one, old
+fellow.”
+
+Fargo grinned, sauntered to the plate, and tapped the rubber indolently
+with his war club. Then he stood back, when Schaeffer, who seemed
+to have been unnecessarily slow in starting, requested permission to
+limber his wing a bit. The reason for this was soon apparent. The first
+ball fairly made the air smoke, and it cut the plate in half. The next
+was quite as speedy, but took a sharp hop as it neared the pan. The
+third was a whizzing curve.
+
+“Showing off,” Fargo commented, as if to himself, but in a voice which
+penetrated to Schaeffer’s ears. “I thought that was it.”
+
+Then he stepped into the box again, smiling at the Texan twirler in a
+manner which seemed to aggravate that individual not a little.
+
+With a sneering uptilt at the corners of his mouth, the slab man took
+Kenny’s signal and whipped the ball over with terrific speed. The speed
+was so great, in fact, that Fargo, in spite of the exhibition he had
+witnessed a moment before, struck a bit too late.
+
+“Ho! Ho! Ho!” shouted Pete Nevens from third. “He didn’t know it went
+by, Zack, old Bronc!”
+
+“Give him another sample,” urged the player on first.
+
+“Mebbe you’d like him to toss you one,” suggested Kenny. “He’s got a
+nice little lob ball that mebbe you can hit.”
+
+Buck Fargo simply smiled that wide smile of his, and waited quietly,
+his eye on Schaeffer.
+
+“Look out!” shouted the pitcher, as the ball left his fingers the
+second time.
+
+Fargo dodged instinctively, for the horsehide had started straight at
+him with burning speed. Only by bending swiftly and holding his bat far
+over the plate did he escape being hit.
+
+This was one of Schaeffer’s little tricks to disturb the nerve of a
+batsman. With the finest sort of control, he could usually put the ball
+wherever he desired, and he chose on this occasion to send it as close
+to Fargo as possible. He shook his head with an air of relief as if he
+had feared he might hit the backstop, and was glad he had not.
+
+As he straightened up, Fargo made no comment. He still smiled a little,
+but a close observer would have noticed that his jaw was a bit firmer
+and his lids slightly more drooping. If Schaeffer had only stopped to
+think, he might have realized how many, many times this Big League
+player had faced just such tricky pitchers before, and how perfectly he
+must have learned how to treat them.
+
+This thought did not come to him, however. Balancing himself on his
+toes, he took a wide swing of his arm for speed, and lined the ball
+over. It seemed to start exactly as the last one had, but, as Fargo
+quite expected, it took such a sharp shoot that it cut the plate almost
+in twain.
+
+The big backstop was ready for it. He met it directly over the pan, and
+sent it whistling above the head of the Texan first baseman, who leaped
+desperately and in vain for it.
+
+By rapid work, the right fielder got the ball in time to cut the hit
+down to a single.
+
+Bill Hagin stepped blithely to the pan, and Fargo danced away from
+first.
+
+The Hornet backstop was a fast man on the paths. To play for Jim
+Brennan a single season a man had to be that, and Fargo had been three
+years with the organization. Quick as a cat on his feet, he seemed to
+know by intuition just when the pitcher meant to deliver the ball to
+the batsman. For this reason he was able to get under headway in base
+stealing even before the horsehide left the pitcher’s fingers. Although
+Schaeffer drove him back several times, Fargo got his start on the
+first ball handed up to Hagin, and was off like a racer. Kenny made a
+fine throw the length of the diamond, but it was a fraction of a second
+too slow.
+
+Warned by the disastrous results of the last attempt, Schaeffer made no
+effort to intimidate the second batter. Hagin had the look of a man who
+eats speed, and his record quite bore out that impression. The Texan
+worked so carefully that he succeeded in getting two strikes on the
+outfielder, but this seemed simply to put the latter on his mettle. He
+finally placed his bat against the horsehide with precision and force
+for a long drive into deep center, which the fielder missed by less
+than a foot.
+
+Hagin was ready to take second on the throw-in, while Fargo, hitting
+the high spots, rounded third, and was urged home by the coacher. The
+ball was sent to second, and Hagin was driven back to the first station.
+
+“Here’s where we tie up!” cried Ogan jubilantly. “Here’s where we take
+the lead! Smash her out, Sandy.”
+
+Rollins, second baseman, stepped up with the expression of one who has
+every intention of making connections with the horsehide. Schaeffer had
+recovered from his momentary annoyance, and was on the job. He pulled
+the batter with the first ball pitched, which curved beyond Rollins’
+reach. Then came a foul tip, that counted as a strike, and Sandy
+flushed a little as he stepped into the box again.
+
+“This time he’ll send over a hummer,” he thought, taking a fresh grip
+on his stick.
+
+Schaeffer went through the movements which seemed to indicate that he
+was going to whip the ball over with terrific speed, but now, instead
+of a scorcher, he sent in a ball that seemed to hang and drag in the
+air, and Rollins struck too soon.
+
+“You’re out!” said the umpire.
+
+“That’s the goods, Zack!” laughed Kenny, pounding his mitt. “They can’t
+touch you. Put this sorrel-top in cold storage for me.”
+
+“Only one down!” cried Fargo. “Show this bunch of panhandlers what you
+can do when you try, Red.”
+
+Pollock stepped briskly to the plate, waited for a ball which looked
+good to him, and smashed it out for a single.
+
+Hagin, fleet as the wind, had been held at second. When Tom Burley
+came up, determined to atone for his fielding error, the runner took
+advantage of the catcher’s fumble of the first pitch, pilfering third
+for all of the backstop’s quick recovery and fine throw to the sack.
+
+Burley evidently wanted to bunt, but Schaeffer kept the ball too high,
+finally forcing the batter into popping a weak infield fly, which was
+smothered with ease.
+
+“It’s up to you, old man,” Fargo said, in a low tone, as Lefty passed
+him. “We’ve got to tie up the score, anyhow.”
+
+As Lefty faced the Texas twirler, the latter’s lip curled in that
+irritating sneer, and he promptly returned to his tactics of trying to
+get the batter’s nerve. Unfortunately for him, Locke did not rattle.
+He ducked a couple of whizzers sent straight at him, and then, when
+Schaeffer handed up his famous inshoot, he lashed a sharp grounder into
+the diamond, which smacked the pitcher squarely on the instep.
+
+There was a roar of pain, followed by a volley of furious language from
+Schaeffer. Then, recovering himself, he dove after the ball, secured
+it, and lined it home.
+
+It is probable that he had lost his head for an instant. Had he
+remembered that two men were out, he might have thrown to first and
+stopped the score; for he could have caught Lefty. Apparently he seemed
+to think that the only way to stop it was to put the ball to the plate.
+
+Bill Hagin had not been napping, however. At the first crack of leather
+meeting wood, he shot like a rocket toward home, slid feet foremost,
+and Kenny got the ball on him only when his spikes were shining above
+the platter.
+
+In his rage Schaeffer poured forth a volley of blackguarding language
+which got the umpire after him, and he might have been put out of the
+game had not his backstop hustled out into the diamond and grabbed him
+by the arm.
+
+“Don’t be a fool, Zack!” he snapped. “Keep your trap shut, or you’ll be
+canned. Can you go ahead with the game?”
+
+The twirler, managing to choke down his wrath, limped around the slab
+a few times, and then toed the rubber again. He was still furious,
+however, and Al Ogan landed on the first ball for a line-drive over the
+head of the shortstop. But for a phenomenal catch by Cinch Brown the
+Hornets might have scored more tallies.
+
+As Lefty came in from the field, he passed close to the disgruntled
+pitcher, and if looks could kill he would have been finished then and
+there.
+
+“I’ll get you yet, you swelled-headed squirt!” Schaeffer hissed. “Wait,
+that’s all――just wait!”
+
+Locke smiled blandly. “Quit your beefing,” he advised. “You’re making
+everybody tired.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ ONCE TOO OFTEN
+
+
+The Hornets were in high spirits as they took the field. To be sure,
+the score was no more than tied, but the expedition with which those
+two runs had been made was most encouraging. The sudden and effective
+brace Locke had taken in the last inning removed, in a measure, the
+fears some of his teammates had entertained concerning his ability to
+handle the situation; and, as they scattered to their places on the
+field, they urged him to “go in and eat ’em up.”
+
+Apparently that was just what Lefty meant to do. The first batter
+seemed unable to connect fairly with any of the balls passed up to him,
+and he finally hoisted a foul back of the pan, which Fargo smothered
+without difficulty.
+
+When his successor, Gash Benkard, fanned, it looked as if that half of
+the inning was going to be a tame one.
+
+In any game it is unwise to make predictions of that sort, however.
+Games have been won with no men on bases and two out, and this one was
+still young.
+
+Cinch Brown walked up to the pan, cool, confident, ready to duplicate
+his performance of the inning previous. He did not find it quite so
+easy, however. He slashed ineffectively at two balls pitched to him,
+but finally succeeded in dropping a dopy little Texas leaguer over the
+infield.
+
+Kenny followed him. He, too, had done well on his first trip to the
+plate, and hoped to do better now. He declined to nibble at Lefty’s
+teasers, but stood, grimly immovable, waiting for one which suited him.
+Nevertheless, the southpaw fooled him with two handsome shoots, and
+then, having a bit of leeway, tried a high, wide one.
+
+Kenny did an unexpected thing. Reaching far over the plate, he caught
+the ball within an inch of the end of his bat, and sent it into deep
+right field.
+
+With perfect handling, it would not have been dangerous. “Dolly” Walker
+had taken many such drives with ease, but perhaps he was too confident.
+At all events, the ball did not strike his mitt quite squarely, seemed
+to hesitate an instant, and then trickled unaccountably over the edge
+of the leather, falling to the turf.
+
+By the time the amazed and discomfited fielder had snatched it up and
+lined it to first, Kenny was safe on the sack, while Brown, who had
+apparently forgot that two were “down” already, slid to second just
+ahead of the flying horsehide.
+
+Schaeffer was exultant. “Got him on the run!” he jeered. “He’s a cinch.
+Get in there, Pete. A little single is all we want. A little safety’s
+the goods! You know where to put it.”
+
+Nevens hit into the diamond. The inning would have ended then and there
+had not Sandy Rollins, at second, fumbled the weak grounder and spent
+valuable time chasing it around his feet.
+
+Lefty felt a hot rush of anger stir within him. Two such errors are
+enough to try the temper of any pitcher, especially when he is working
+his hardest. The inning should have ended minutes before, and now
+the bases were full, and Zack Schaeffer was swaggering to the pan, a
+confident grin on his face.
+
+The sight of him cooled Locke as swiftly and completely as it had done
+once before that day. He shifted the ball in his fingers, taking his
+time. He hoped to fan this fellow.
+
+Suddenly he pitched, and the ball shot upward with a little jump,
+rising over the Texan’s bat as he struck.
+
+“Strike!” droned the umpire.
+
+“That’s the stuff!” cried Ogan from first. “Got him swinging like a
+garden gate, Lefty.”
+
+Schaeffer set his teeth, and the flesh seemed to harden over his jaws.
+His eyes gleamed.
+
+As before, Lefty took his time. When at length he poised himself on his
+right foot, flung back his arm, and brought it forward with a whiplike
+motion, the sphere came humming over with speed which almost made the
+air smoke.
+
+Schaeffer struck again. This time he missed, as before, but even as he
+swung he let go his hold on the bat, which went spinning through the
+air straight at Locke.
+
+“Look out!” cried Fargo.
+
+The southpaw ducked just in time to let the bat pass over him. When he
+straightened up, he stood for an instant, his eyes fixed on Schaeffer’s
+face with an expression in them which showed a little of the contempt
+that filled him.
+
+“Beg pardon,” mumbled the batter. “Accident.”
+
+Lefty knew the Texan lied. To be sure, a man sometimes throws his bat
+in striking, but almost never straight out into the diamond. Besides,
+Schaeffer did not have the least appearance of regret, unless it was
+regret that the stick had missed its mark.
+
+Locke made no comment, however. After the man had recovered his bat,
+the southpaw stood for a moment, ball in hand, looking fixedly at him.
+When he finally pitched, he used a delivery which seemed to promise a
+swift one, but instead it was the slowest sort of a slow ball. In spite
+of everything he could do, Schaeffer struck too soon.
+
+As the umpire’s voice sounded in his ears, a snarl broke from the
+Texan’s lips. For an instant it seemed almost that he meant to launch
+his bat again straight at Locke’s head. Perhaps he might have done so
+had it not been for the warning clutch of Gash Benkard’s fingers on his
+shoulder. Then, with a furious motion, he cast the stick to the ground,
+and walked out to the slab.
+
+“Looks devilish, don’t he?” commented Whalen, on the bench. “I wouldn’t
+be surprised if he picked a fight with Locke after the game.”
+
+“Wish he would!” growled Bert Elgin.
+
+He had been growing more and more disgruntled as the game progressed.
+The first ten minutes had filled him with satisfaction at the
+apparently poor showing made by his rival, but as the latter improved
+Elgin’s temper became more and more unrestrainable.
+
+“You seem to have it in for him,” Whalen remarked pointedly. “Strikes
+me he got out of that hole pretty neat.”
+
+“Bah!” retorted Elgin. “What did he get into it for? Any pitcher who
+knows his business would never let the bases fill with two out, the way
+he did.”
+
+“Wow-wow!” barked the cub backstop. “I s’pose it’s his fault that
+Walker dropped that fly and Sandy muffed a grounder that any kid should
+have nailed. Whew! Did you see that? That fellow had better be careful.
+One of these days he’ll bean a batter and put him out of business. Sore
+as a crab, I reckon, at being fanned.”
+
+Schaeffer was certainly vicious. Twice Monte Harris had barely escaped
+balls sent straight at him. He was no quitter, but he had a notion of
+his own value in the Big League, and did not relish being put out of
+business by a wild busher who had lost his temper. Having protested to
+the umpire without avail, he reached for a wide outcurve, popped a weak
+fly into the diamond, and retired to the bench.
+
+“That gink is going to get his one of these days,” he remarked to
+Brennan. “Why don’t you make him behave, Jim?”
+
+The manager made no reply, but, rising to his feet, walked slowly
+toward the plate. He had not taken half a dozen steps when the accident
+happened. Dolly Walker had stepped into the box, and apparently
+Schaeffer sized him up for easy meat. He promptly launched one of his
+cannon-ball whistlers at him, and the fielder was either too slow or
+too obstinate to get out of the way.
+
+There was a sickening thud; a smothered sound, half groan, half cry.
+Half a dozen men leaped forward to catch the swaying figure, from
+whose nerveless fingers the bat had slipped. No one was quick enough.
+It was the startled backstop of the Texans who thrust out his arms
+instinctively, and then stood helplessly holding the limp body and
+staring down at the white face resting against his chest protector. All
+could see that the man was seriously hurt.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ THE SPIKING OF SCHAEFFER
+
+
+Instantly the whole field was in an uproar. The Hornets, fighting mad,
+invaded the diamond in a body. Schaeffer, his face white as that of the
+unconscious man, half turned as if to run. Then he straightened up and
+faced the music.
+
+“It――wasn’t my fault,” he stammered. “He was out of his box. He
+couldn’t get away from my inshoot.”
+
+“You lie!” said Buck Fargo. “You tried to hit him. You’ve played that
+trick once too often, and I’m――going to hand you something!”
+
+He lunged at Schaeffer, who stepped back swiftly and threw up his
+hands. In an instant the crowd surged around him, shutting out those of
+his friends who were racing to his assistance. Fargo was on the point
+of swinging at the Texan’s jaw when suddenly the fellow staggered, his
+face contorted with pain, a yell issued from his bloodless lips.
+
+“I’m spiked!” he cried furiously. “Lemme get my hands on the dog that
+did it! I’ll――”
+
+His eyes met those of Lefty Locke, who stood close beside him on the
+right, and in a second both arms shot forward, his muscular fingers
+fastening with a convulsive grip on the southpaw’s throat.
+
+“You hound!” he frothed, emphasizing each word by a vicious shake.
+“You’ve put me out of business. I can’t play for weeks. It’s my left――”
+
+At this point Locke recovered from his astonishment, and, with a
+desperate effort, managed to tear the hands from their choking hold.
+
+“I never touched you,” he denied. “I wouldn’t――”
+
+Wild with pain and rage, Schaeffer frothed out an insult, and Lefty
+promptly dealt him an open-hander on the mouth.
+
+Cries of approval greeted the blow. Fargo was trying to get into the
+mix-up, and others showed their desire to have a hand in the Texan’s
+punishment. The latter’s fist shot out, but Locke parried skillfully.
+Three or four of the visiting team arrived on the run, and a general
+fight was imminent. The crowd was suddenly thrust aside, and Jim
+Brennan appeared.
+
+“Stop that!” he roared, grasping Lefty’s wrist and stepping between the
+men. His face was purple with anger, and his eyes glowed like twin
+sparks. “What do you think you’re doing?”
+
+“He spiked me!” snarled Schaeffer. “The cur spiked me! Look at that
+foot.”
+
+The manager glanced downward, and saw instantly that Schaeffer was
+not bluffing. Across his left shoe, the gouging marks of spikes were
+plainly visible. On one of them a faint crimson smear was showing.
+Brennan frowned and raised his eyes.
+
+“Somebody stepped on you by accident,” he said shortly.
+
+“It’s a lie!” rasped Schaeffer. “He done it a-purpose. I felt his foot
+jab down on me. He had it in for me all along.”
+
+“Who are you talking about?” Brennan asked.
+
+“Him!” retorted the pitcher, glaring at Locke. “I knew he’d be up to
+some dirty trick.”
+
+Lefty met the manager’s searching glance with perfect calm. “I never
+touched him,” he averred emphatically. “I was itching to smash one into
+him for knocking Dolly out, but spiking isn’t my style.”
+
+“Humph!” Brennan’s keen eyes roved around the circle of faces. “Anybody
+know anything about this?” he demanded.
+
+There was a chorus of denial, and the manager turned back to Schaeffer.
+
+“I’ll look into it,” he promised. “I’ll stand for anything but dirty
+business, and any man who’d do a thing like this gets the gaff, I don’t
+care who he is.”
+
+He hesitated for an instant, and his jaw squared. “As for you,” he went
+on harshly, his keen eyes boring the Texan’s flushed face, “you’re
+rotten. Talk about dirty playing! If I’d had any idea what sort of a
+cheap roughneck you were, this game would never have started. You can
+bet your boots I’ll take pains to let people know just what you are,
+and I kind of think you’ll have a hard job finding a decent team after
+this that’ll have anything to do with you. See?”
+
+He stood glaring at the Texan, who for once had nothing to say.
+Presently Brennan’s eyes swept the circle again.
+
+“No rough-house!” he snapped shortly. “You boys better beat it back
+to the hotel. There won’t be anything more doing to-day. Dolly’s come
+to and gone along with a couple of the men. This game’s finished. Get
+started now. There’s been enough monkey-shines to-day.”
+
+Reluctantly, and with many savage glances at Schaeffer, the Hornets
+obeyed. It came hard to leave the scoundrel that way, but they knew
+Brennan meant what he said, and so they gave in.
+
+“Serves him good and right,” said Andy Whalen, as he caught up with
+Elgin. “I’m blamed glad the cur got something to cook him, and I’ll be
+hanged if I blame any fellow for spiking him. Wonder who it was? Didn’t
+you see anything, Bert?”
+
+He looked curiously at Elgin, who shook his head promptly.
+
+“Not a thing,” the latter answered. “First I knew anything was wrong
+was when he yelled he was spiked. I wouldn’t wonder if it was an
+accident, anyhow. With everybody pushing and shoving, somebody likely
+stepped on him without meaning to.”
+
+“Nix!” retorted the cub backstop. “I took a good look at his foot, and,
+believe me, it wasn’t no accident. It was a good hard stamp, done on
+purpose.”
+
+This seemed to be the opinion of those who had been near the Texan when
+the incident occurred, and much curiosity was expressed as to who could
+have been the perpetrator of the affair.
+
+The general sentiment was that Schaeffer had been well repaid for his
+dirty work on the slab; but the more thoughtfully inclined, knowing
+Jim Brennan’s temperament, wondered what would happen if the manager
+ever found out who had done the spiking.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ THE TELEGRAM
+
+
+The days passed without the truth coming to light. At first Brennan set
+about systematically interviewing every man who had been on the field
+that day, but without avail. Having failed to arrive at the truth in
+this manner, and other and more important matters coming up to take
+his time, he seemed to drop the subject. Those who knew him, however,
+realized that it would always remain tucked away in some corner of his
+brain until he had finally solved the mystery.
+
+The work of training proceeded rapidly and successfully to its
+conclusion as the end of March approached. Each afternoon the cubs
+fought out their losing battle with the regulars on the diamond. The
+latter were getting into splendid shape, and their opponents had almost
+forgotten what it felt like to win a game.
+
+Nevertheless, they never gave up, or slackened their efforts, for the
+net was drawing closer and closer about them day by day. Every now and
+then a youngster would drop out of the race. He was not yet ready for
+the big game, and had either been sold by the manager, farmed out to a
+minor league, or released unconditionally.
+
+Of the cub pitchers, only two remained, Locke and Elgin. They were both
+remarkably good in their way, and the other players were divided as to
+their relative merits. The almost universal conclusion was that Brennan
+would keep both with the organization unless something unexpected
+occurred to give him reason for changing his mind.
+
+Lefty worked strenuously without a let-up. He knew his doubtful points
+almost as well as the manager himself, and strove with all his might to
+correct them.
+
+Hard as the labor was physically, the southpaw found it anything but
+disagreeable. He was well liked by most of the regulars and a great
+many of the cubs. In Buck Fargo he found a real chum whom he came to
+admire and think better of every day. When the diminishing number of
+players made a readjustment of rooms at the hotel desirable, Locke
+accepted with alacrity the big backstop’s invitation to come in with
+him, an arrangement which proved pleasant and satisfactory.
+
+With Bert Elgin and his little group of cronies, the southpaw had
+nothing whatever to do. The former had apparently resigned himself to
+the inevitable, and, since it looked as if both cub pitchers were going
+to be retained, he seemed to have given up his efforts to injure his
+rival.
+
+There were just two things which marred Lefty’s pleasure and absolute
+peace of mind. The first was Jim Brennan’s attitude of noncommittal
+impassiveness. Try as he would, the southpaw found it impossible to
+break down the barrier of reserve between them. No matter how good
+a showing the cub might make on the field, he never succeeded in
+eliciting a word of praise from the manager. The latter always gave
+the young twirler an impression of withholding judgment, a feeling
+that he was continually searching for something in Locke which he was
+constantly expecting but had failed to find.
+
+At first Lefty thought it was simply his ordinary manner. Then, when he
+noticed the manager unbend time after time to others, he reached the
+conclusion that Brennan had never forgotten the circumstances of the
+recruit’s arrival at training camp, and that he still felt resentment
+at the manner in which Locke had been, as it were, thrust down his
+throat.
+
+The explanation of this latter fact had been absurdly simple. Lefty
+learned in a roundabout way that Jimmy Toler’s letter had traveled to
+Ashland, Tennessee, and drifted on to the Texan town a couple of days
+after the busher’s arrival. It seemed incredible that any man could
+harbor such a thing so long, but Brennan was peculiar in many ways, and
+Lefty could think of no other reason for his conduct.
+
+The other matter which marred his contentment was the fact that Janet,
+while actually in the same State, was just beyond his reach. It was
+more tantalizing than if she had remained in that far-away New England
+town. They corresponded regularly, of course, but letters are always
+more or less unsatisfactory. Only once had he obtained permission to be
+away over Sunday, and Brennan’s grudging acquiescence to his request
+made him resolve never to repeat it.
+
+And so the time passed until there remained less than two days more at
+Ashland. On the twenty-fifth the training quarters would be deserted,
+and the teams, separating, would commence their homeward march by easy
+stages and different routes, playing exhibition games with minor-league
+organizations along the way.
+
+The days had sped with such swiftness that Lefty could scarcely believe
+the end to be so near when he arose that morning, and could say that
+to-morrow they would start. There was no doubting the fact, however,
+and, what was more, that very afternoon, a game had been arranged with
+one of the most prominent teams of the Southern League. It was the
+first chance the Hornets had been given to play against outsiders since
+that brief, disastrous contest with the Broncs, and they were agog with
+eager anticipation. The Flamingoes were in quite a different class from
+the bush organization of so-called Texans, and the game was likely to
+be exceedingly close. Lefty was to start off on the slab, so Brennan
+had briefly informed him the afternoon before. The youngster wondered
+whether the manager had any special motive in picking him.
+
+As the squad started for the field after breakfast, Lefty discovered
+that he had forgotten his glove, and hurried upstairs for it, telling
+Fargo that he would be along shortly. When he came down he raced
+through the lobby and almost upset a small boy in uniform who was
+coming up the steps.
+
+“Say, mister,” the latter inquired, as he recovered his balance, “is
+Tom Locke inside?”
+
+“That’s my name,” Lefty answered swiftly. “What is it?”
+
+The boy drew a yellow envelope from his pocket, and Locke snatched it
+with that queer, sinking feeling which an unexpected missive of the
+sort usually arouses. Tearing it swiftly open, he brought forth the
+sheet and unfolded it with a single motion.
+
+As his eyes took in the contents at a glance, he drew his breath
+swiftly, his face turning a shade less brown. The message had been sent
+from Billings, Texas, that morning. It read:
+
+ Father is dying. Come at once. I am all alone.
+
+ JANET.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ NOTHING ELSE POSSIBLE
+
+
+“Any answer?”
+
+Lefty raised his head and stared stupidly at the boy for an instant.
+Then he came to himself.
+
+“Yes! Give me a pencil――quick!”
+
+Snatching the stub from the other’s hand, he turned the message over,
+placed the paper against the side of the building, and hastily scrawled
+a few words.
+
+“There!” he exclaimed, thrusting it at the boy; “send that off right
+away. Don’t lose a minute. Here. Keep the change.”
+
+It was a silver dollar he handed the boy. Without waiting for thanks,
+he darted back into the hotel, hastily secured a time-table, and found
+that there was a train leaving in less than half an hour. It was only
+after he had reached his room and begun to strip off his baseball
+togs that he realized he must let Brennan know in some way of what he
+planned to do.
+
+“There’s no ’phone at the park,” he muttered, throwing a shoe into a
+corner. “I haven’t time, anyway.”
+
+He tore off his stockings, flung shirt and trousers on the floor, and
+made a dive for his street clothes.
+
+“Still, they’ll all be back here for dinner,” he went on aloud. “If I
+leave a note with Buck, he’ll put the old man wise. It’s tough! Poor
+little girl!”
+
+His voice broke just the least bit, but he went on rapidly with his
+dressing, and in less than ten minutes was ready to go. He gave no
+thought to the consequences of his leaving in this manner and at this
+time. Janet had called him for help; he must go to her. Besides, even
+Brennan, though he might growl and grumble a little, would understand
+how impossible it was for him to take any other course.
+
+Finding a sheet of paper, Lefty hastily scrawled a note to Buck,
+telling his chum where he had gone and why, and asking him to inform
+the manager. Having folded the paper and written Fargo’s name on
+the outside, he placed it on the middle of the table, where the big
+backstop could not fail to see it the instant he entered the room.
+
+That finished, he snatched his hat, and darted down the stairs without
+waiting for the elevator. At the station he had nearly fifteen minutes
+to wait, but at last the train pulled in.
+
+Lefty thought that the journey would never end. The train seemed to
+crawl along at a snail’s speed, stopping at every little hamlet by the
+way. He blamed the doctor at Kingsbridge for having suggested such an
+impossibly out-of-the-way place as Billings. He kept looking at his
+watch till he might better have held it in his hand. He bought a paper,
+and tossed it away unread. He opened a magazine, only to fling it aside
+impatiently. And all the time the thought of Janet, alone and helpless
+in this terrible situation, never left his mind.
+
+At Flat Rock Junction he had to change to another road. There was an
+exasperating wait of three-quarters of an hour, during which he nearly
+wore a rut in the wooden platform. Another weary, interminable hour
+followed; but at last, shortly after one, he flung himself off the
+still-moving train at Billings, and dashed up the main street.
+
+The air was soft and warm and caressing. Trees and shrubs were bursting
+into leaf; flowers were everywhere. Here and there a bird caroled
+joyously, and the sound stabbed Lefty like the thrust of a knife. How
+could any living thing be joyful when her father lay dying?
+
+Rounding a corner, he scarcely dared look at the house where they had
+taken lodgings. Perhaps he had come too late. Perhaps it was all over.
+
+He reached the wooden gate and thrust it open. A rustle of skirts
+sounded on the vine-clad porch, the quick catching of a breath, then a
+cry of glad surprise:
+
+“Why, Lefty!”
+
+She started up from the rocking-chair, her face pink and her eyes
+sparkling. A little smile curved the corners of her tender mouth,
+bringing out the dimple which had always fascinated him.
+
+The man stared up in petrified astonishment. What did it mean? Was he
+dreaming, or had she gone daft?
+
+“Why, Lefty!” she exclaimed again. “This is splendid! How did you ever
+manage to get away?”
+
+He swallowed hard and, without knowing what he did, wiped beads of
+perspiration from his forehead.
+
+“I came,” he gasped. “Your――father, Janet?”
+
+A little frown of perplexity came into her forehead.
+
+“Father?” she repeated. “Why, he’s all right. The springs are doing him
+no end of good. He’s taking his nap just now. Did you――”
+
+“You didn’t send me a telegram this morning, then?” Locke interrupted
+in a strange voice.
+
+“No, of course not. Why should I? I wrote you last night, but it was
+only―― Lefty! What is it? For goodness sake, tell me what has happened.”
+
+The skin over his jaws was hard as marble. The blood had rushed into
+his face, turning it a dull crimson under the brown, and bringing out
+a throbbing vein in his temple in bold relief. His lips were pressed
+tightly together, and the eyes fixed on the girl were not his eyes.
+They were wide open and almost black, full of cold, consuming wrath.
+They frightened Janet Harting, and made her step back involuntarily.
+
+“Lefty!” she cried again. “What is it? What makes you look so?”
+
+For an instant he did not answer. He had realized the bitter truth. The
+telegram was a forgery, sent for the sole and only purpose of getting
+him out of the way at the very time of all others during his baseball
+career that he should have been on the job. In a flash an illumination
+which comes too seldom to a man told him that Brennan’s reason for
+putting him on the slab to-day was in the nature of a final test of his
+ability. The other game had shown the manager nothing. This would have
+been the ultimate proof of his fitness to be retained as a member of
+the squad――and he would not be there to take advantage of the chance.
+
+Swiftly he glanced at his watch, the girl staring anxiously at him
+the while. He took out a crumpled time-table. The first train left at
+two-twenty. As he thrust the time-table back into his pocket, his face
+relaxed a little and a faint smile twisted the corners of his mouth.
+
+“There’s been an unfortunate――mistake, Janet,” he said quietly. “I’ll
+come up and tell you about it.”
+
+He had remembered the one consoling feature of the whole miserable
+business. Buck would surely find the letter and explain the matter to
+Brennan. The manager would doubtless be angry, but, after all, it was
+not as bad as if no word at all had been left.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ FOR WANT OF A LIE
+
+
+Locke would scarcely have been so self-contained had he known what had
+taken place at the hotel about the time he was feverishly pacing the
+platform at Flat Rock Junction.
+
+Through some pretext, Bert Elgin managed to leave the ground a few
+minutes ahead of the others. He had concealed his nervousness all
+morning, taking hope from the nonappearance of Lefty on the field,
+and reveling in Brennan’s openly expressed anger at the puzzling
+occurrence. But now he felt that he must find out something definite.
+
+Arriving at the hotel, he hastened up to the corridor above his own,
+taking care to use the stairs for the last flight, and made his way to
+a certain door, which he pushed open without ceremony.
+
+For an instant he stood staring curiously around the disordered
+room. Then a triumphant smile curved his lips, and his eyes danced
+maliciously.
+
+“Looks like the kid worked it, all right,” he said, in a low tone. “I
+was afraid he might slip up on something. What’s this?”
+
+Striding over to the table, he picked up the note addressed to Buck
+Fargo, opening it without hesitation. Having read it hastily through,
+he smiled again and thrust it into his pocket.
+
+“‘Tell Brennan all about it,’” he quoted, in a jeering voice, “‘and
+make him understand how I had to go.’ I guess we won’t tell anybody;
+it’ll be lots more fun to keep ’em guessing till you come back.”
+
+He hastened to the door, and stepped out into the hall. “I should say
+your goose was cooked nice and brown,” he muttered, with venomous
+satisfaction. “I wouldn’t give a whole lot for your chances with the
+Hornets after this little performance.”
+
+Happily for Lefty’s peace of mind, he guessed nothing of all this.
+As it was, he had worries enough to keep him company during that
+maddeningly slow trip back to Ashland. Time and again he went over
+the situation from the beginning, trying his best to see it from Jim
+Brennan’s point of view, and always he ended by a despairing grasp
+on that one frail straw: the manager might forgive the desertion as
+long as the absent man had done his best to let him know about it
+beforehand.
+
+Stepping off the train shortly after seven, the southpaw went at once
+to the hotel. The first man he ran into in the lobby was Buck Fargo.
+The expression on his chum’s face made Lefty’s heart sink into his
+boots.
+
+“Where the deuce have you been?” the backstop inquired directly, and
+with force. “How’d you happen to duck?”
+
+“For Heaven’s sake, Buck,” the young pitcher appealed fervently, “don’t
+tell me you didn’t get my note?”
+
+“If it explained what in thunder made you do such a fool trick as this,
+I most certainly didn’t,” Fargo returned.
+
+Locke groaned aloud. “I left it on the table. I told you just what had
+happened and why I had to rush off. I asked you to explain to the old
+man――”
+
+Catching a sudden warning in Fargo’s eyes, Lefty stopped abruptly and
+turned slowly around. Brennan stood just behind him, his hands on his
+hips, an expression on his square, heavy-jowled face which even the big
+backstop had rarely seen there before.
+
+“Well?” he questioned in an ominous voice, his sharp, deep-set eyes
+boring into Lefty’s brown ones. “Did I hear you say anything about an
+explanation? Strikes me it’s about time something of the sort was
+dished up.”
+
+His voice, cold, hard, and unrelenting, sent a flicker up and down
+Locke’s spine. If the man had only flared out at him, roared, bellowed,
+it would have been better than this. But that harsh, flinty, absolutely
+pitiless tone struck a chill to the youngster’s heart, and quenched the
+last spark of hope in him.
+
+“I had――a telegram――this morning,” he explained unevenly. “It came just
+as I was leaving for the field. It was from――a close friend of mine who
+is at Billings, with her father. She said that her father was dying,
+and asked me to come at once. She was all alone in a strange place.
+They knew no one. They had been in the South only a few weeks. I _had_
+to go.”
+
+He hesitated an instant, glancing desperately at Brennan’s face.
+Something in it――the flicker of an eyelash, perhaps, or the faintest
+possible relaxing of that steely, set expression,――made a tiny spark of
+hope revive in Lefty’s breast.
+
+“Well, go on,” growled Brennan.
+
+“There wasn’t time to send you word,” Locke continued. “I had to make
+the nine-five train. So I wrote a note to Fargo explaining things, and
+asked him to tell you about it. I left it on the table in our room.
+You must have missed it, Buck, or didn’t you go to the room?”
+
+He turned eagerly to his friend, but the latter shook his head.
+
+“There wasn’t any note,” he said slowly. “I was up there at noon and
+again to-night. There ain’t nothing on the table but a couple of
+magazines and a lamp. Mebbe it got blown off.”
+
+“Perhaps that was it,” Lefty agreed. “I wrote it and stuck it up where
+you’d see it the first thing.”
+
+He glanced again at Brennan and met the man’s searching gaze
+unflinchingly. For an instant there was silence as the manager scowled
+deeply to hide his annoyance.
+
+“You’d ought to have sent word,” he snapped. “You knew you was to pitch
+this afternoon. Why didn’t you leave a letter with the clerk, addressed
+to me?”
+
+“I never thought of that,” Lefty apologized. “I was so shaken up and
+worried and rushed that I couldn’t seem to think of anything but making
+that train.”
+
+The spark of hope had been fanned into a little blaze. Brennan was
+certainly relenting. Everything about him pointed to that. He stared at
+the cub pitcher from under his bushy eyebrows for a moment or two as
+if vainly searching for something more to find fault with.
+
+“You seem to have got back mighty sudden,” he said presently, in a tart
+voice. “Must have taken the first train. Didn’t your friend’s father
+die?”
+
+It had come, the question which Lefty had been dreading from the
+beginning and trying to get away from! For an instant he was
+tempted――desperately tempted. The manager was plainly influenced in his
+favor. If he lied and told some plausible story of Mr. Harting’s sudden
+recovery, all would be well, and the matter would probably be dropped.
+If he told the truth and admitted that no message had ever been sent――
+
+In that second of hesitation, many things flashed through his mind. He
+was already morally certain that he had Bert Elgin to thank for the
+trick. He told himself that a lie which would result in foiling the
+plotter would be no lie at all. The very words of a glib falsehood were
+on his lips when suddenly he brought his teeth together and threw back
+his head. He would tell the truth at any cost.
+
+“He was never sick at all,” he said swiftly, his face rather pale.
+
+Brennan stared. “Never sick!” he repeated sharply. “Then what in time
+did she send the telegram for, I’d like to know?”
+
+Lefty thrust both hands behind his back, gripping the fingers tightly
+together. His eyes met Brennan’s squarely.
+
+“She didn’t. She knew nothing about it. It was sent by some one else.”
+
+“What for?”
+
+The words came from Brennan’s lips like bullets. Suspicion,
+incredulity, anger, showed in his piercing eyes.
+
+“I don’t know,” Lefty answered. “It looks as if some one wanted to get
+me away from the game.”
+
+Brennan’s laugh was harsh and mirthless. “That’s likely, ain’t it?
+That’s a clever idea, that is! Where’s the telegram? Show it to me.”
+
+With leaden heart, Locke remembered what he had done with it. “I
+haven’t――got it,” he stammered. “I wrote a message on the back――and
+gave it to the boy to send.”
+
+“Is that so?” sneered the manager. “Did it get to the girl? Did it come
+while you were there?”
+
+“N-o.”
+
+“I thought so. It never went. Just so the other never came.”
+
+“But it did come,” protested Lefty, though he had a feeling that
+further words were futile. “The boy handed it to me on the steps. I
+opened it, and wrote an answer right there. That’s the truth.”
+
+“Is it?” retorted the manager incredulously. “Just you wait a minute
+and I’ll find out if it is or not.”
+
+Turning abruptly, he hurried over to a telephone booth and shut himself
+in. The instant the manager’s back was turned Buck Fargo groaned.
+
+“What the devil did you tell him for?” he said sadly. “I’m afraid
+you’ve gone and done for yourself, kid. I have never seen the old
+man in such a temper since Billy Smith sold a game to the Pinks last
+spring.”
+
+“I wanted to lie,” the youngster confessed, “but I simply couldn’t,
+Buck.”
+
+“You’re awful particular! Who do you s’pose done it, that cur Elgin?”
+
+“I can’t think of any one else equal to it,” Lefty answered. “It
+wouldn’t be the first miserable trick he’s worked.”
+
+He broke off as a door slammed and Brennan came striding toward them,
+his eyes savage and his face the color of a beet.
+
+“I knew it!” he said. “No such message went through the office.”
+
+He paused a second, his legs spread wide apart, regarding Lefty with a
+cold, contemptuous scrutiny.
+
+“I’m through with you!” he burst out, at length. “I can put up with a
+lot, but I haven’t any use for a quitter. I thought you was one when
+I first saw you, but now I know. You skipped out to-day because you
+were afraid――nothing else. You pretty near pulled me with that tale of
+yours――but not quite. You fooled me with that dirty spiking trick, too,
+but I’m wise now. I’m done with you! Go back to the bushes or the hot
+place, whichever you prefer!”
+
+He wheeled round and took a few steps across the lobby. Suddenly he
+turned back.
+
+“Mebbe you’re thinking of that fine offer you say was made by the Blue
+Stockings?” he sneered. “I wouldn’t give much for your chances with
+Jack Kennedy.”
+
+Lefty’s eyes were blazing. His lips parted for a hot retort, but he
+seemed to change his mind and choke it down. For an instant he stood
+absolutely still. Then, slowly, he turned and looked at Fargo.
+
+Neither man spoke.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ DROPPED OUT OF SIGHT
+
+
+The quickness with which a man can be forgotten is never flattering to
+his self-esteem. For a full month Lefty Locke had been a member of the
+Hornets’ training camp squad. During all that time he had been well
+liked by the majority of the older men, and admitted by some to terms
+of intimacy which are rarely accorded a new recruit. Ever since the
+strenuous contest with the team of Texas bushers his fellow cubs had
+also made him one of them in every sense of the word.
+
+Then came the catastrophe. For a brief space his name was in every
+mouth. The players took sides on the question of Brennan’s judgment,
+some contending that the manager was right, others voicing their
+continued faith in the disgraced player.
+
+But with the departure of Locke from Ashland, followed swiftly by
+that of the entire squad, the subject soon palled. There was so much
+else of vital personal interest that even those who had championed
+the unfortunate pitcher’s cause became more and more indifferent.
+Some, even, hearing the cleverly phrased traducements which Bert Elgin
+never lost a chance to utter regarding his former rival, came to the
+conclusion that they had been deceived. Jim Brennan rarely made a
+mistake in sizing up a man. There must, after all, have been a yellow
+streak in the young pitcher which he successfully concealed from all
+save the lynx-eyed manager.
+
+So at the end of one short week it is doubtful whether more than three
+men out of all that number wasted a single thought on the youngster who
+had, a brief time before, been so popular with them.
+
+Buck Fargo did not forget; he was not built that way. Esteemed as
+he was among players generally, and adored by the fans, it was,
+nevertheless, a fact that the big backstop did not usually make friends
+quickly――that is, what he called real friends, as opposed to pleasant
+but casual acquaintances.
+
+Somehow, Lefty had attracted him from the first. He liked the way the
+boy had taken Elgin’s part that night at the Palace Theater and stood
+up unflinchingly against heavy odds. He liked Locke’s attitude with his
+fellow recruits when they started the boycott against him early in the
+season. The way the southpaw set out to conquer his faults and improve
+his playing appealed strongly to Fargo, who had been obliged to labor
+quite as steadily and strenuously himself before reaching his present
+enviable position. And when, little by little, he had come to know the
+youngster better, the Big Leaguer’s liking changed to something deeper
+and more abiding, which made it quite impossible for him to forget.
+
+At first he had been openly angry. He berated Brennan for a blind
+idiot, and had to be forcibly restrained from punching Elgin’s head.
+Then he wanted Lefty to stay with the crowd on a chance of the manager
+coming to his senses. He soon saw, however, what an impossible
+condition of affairs that would bring about, and reluctantly, though
+with much outward brevity, said good-by.
+
+“You’ll write, of course, and let me know how you make out?” he urged.
+“I ain’t much of a hand with the pen, but I’ll guarantee to answer
+every letter right off.”
+
+There was a queer expression in Lefty’s eyes. He was finding the phases
+of the situation even more difficult than he had supposed. It was not
+easy to keep in place the mask of indifference he had assumed the night
+before.
+
+“I’ll write when I make good, Buck,” he returned quietly. “There won’t
+be anything to tell you till then.”
+
+Argument was futile. His mind was made up. He told no one his plans.
+It seemed doubtful whether he had made any. He simply said good-by and
+went his way, leaving behind ripples of discussion and conjecture,
+which swiftly spread out with ever-lessening volume until, like the
+departed pitcher, they vanished as if they had never been.
+
+Fargo’s one consolation was in Jack Stillman. He found the newspaper
+man’s feelings in perfect accord with his own. There was one
+difference, however: while the big backstop was ready and eager to do
+anything in his power to rehabilitate his friend, no way occurred to
+him; it was Stillman’s brain, trained by three years of reporting on
+a metropolitan newspaper, which hit upon the only possible manner in
+which that could be done.
+
+“We’ve got to find the boy who delivered that message,” he said tersely
+as they left the station. “If we can get hold of him and manage to
+choke the truth out of him, we ought to be able to nail this crooked
+trick fast to the man who put up the job.”
+
+He began working to that end at once. But the time was very short. The
+two squads――cubs and regulars――were leaving that very afternoon, and
+the task of finding an unknown boy in the few hours remaining, even
+though he had been foresighted enough to obtain an accurate description
+of the fellow from Lefty, was next to impossible.
+
+As it was, Stillman risked a call-down from his editor by staying over
+a day at Ashland. When he finally left to catch up with the team he was
+scheduled to accompany North, he had found no clew, but had placed the
+matter in the hands of a retired member of the San Antonio police force
+living in the smaller town.
+
+William Bowers was shrewder than the ordinary run of officers. He had
+been a sergeant for years, and time hung heavily on his hands. He might
+succeed, and he might not. Stillman felt that the result would be a
+toss-up. But it was the best he could do.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ OPENING THE SEASON
+
+
+Slowly and leisurely the Hornets zigzagged their way northward, pausing
+here and there to play an exhibition game with some minor-league team,
+which was usually won by headwork and experience rather than by any
+extraordinary display of hitting. Even after the regular period of work
+at the training camp, the big fellows were not wielding the hickory
+with special effect.
+
+They shaped rapidly into condition, however, and, when the time came
+to face some of the stronger teams of the minor-league clubs above
+what was once known as Mason and Dixon’s line, they did not disgrace
+themselves.
+
+Finally, with much rejoicing, the metropolis was reached and the two
+squads reunited. Jim Brennan, his mind finally made up after weeks of
+close watching and weighing, proceeded to discard the few remaining
+recruits who, in his opinion, had shown themselves not quite ripe.
+
+Then, with the squad trimmed down to the number at which it would
+remain throughout the season, a week or more of hard, strenuous work
+ensued. A new infielder had to be broken in by his veteran comrades
+to the finer intricacies of the game. New signals were devised and
+perfected. Various pitchers were tried out, one after the other, in
+a full nine-inning game, and their condition studied by the astute
+manager. The batting order was decided on. In fact, everything was
+done which could be done in preparation for that great occasion to
+which many thousands of enthusiastic fans had been looking forward so
+ardently――opening day.
+
+It came at last, with its tricky April breezes giving the lie to
+cloudless skies and brilliant yellow sunshine. There were the same
+joyous, pushing crowds, the same blaring bands. Some of the men
+had heard them many, many times before; but even they, though they
+might dissemble and pretend a careless nonchalance, were conscious,
+nevertheless, of that indescribable, irresistible thrill which they had
+always felt, and would continue to feel to the end of time――their time.
+
+Their opponents were the Terriers, an organization of scrappy players
+who had fairly won their name. The fans got the worth of their money in
+a snappy game which was not decided till the ninth inning, and then
+only by an infielder’s error, which let in the single tally made that
+day.
+
+The second game was lost by the Hornets; but they made up for it by
+having a streak of hitting in the third contest, and hammering out six
+runs to their opponents two.
+
+It was during this last game that Brennan tried out his cub pitcher,
+Bert Elgin, for a couple of innings, and was so pleased with the
+showing made by the youngster that he determined to put him on the slab
+two days hence when they met the Blue Stockings for the first time that
+season.
+
+“I’m going to take a chance with him, and do the unusual thing,” the
+manager confided to Jack Stillman while talking it over afterwards,
+as he had a way of doing with this particular reporter. “I need a
+youngster to work now and then until the old men get their wings well
+oiled up, and I’ve _got_ to take the chance. I’m banking on Elgin.”
+
+“Hum!” muttered Stillman.
+
+The manager detected the doubt in Stillman’s mind. “You’ll have to
+allow that he’s shown form and class for a youngster.”
+
+The newspaper man shrugged his shoulders. “I’ll admit that, all right,”
+he returned. “Still, that doesn’t prove him Cy Russell’s equal, for
+instance.”
+
+“Did I say he was? All the same, I wouldn’t be surprised if he pushed
+Cy pretty hard one of these days. What you got against him, anyhow?
+He’s speedy, and he’s got a fine change of pace. He’s brainy, too, that
+boy.”
+
+Stillman raised his eyebrows. “Well?” he drawled.
+
+“Well, what?” retorted Brennan. “What more do you want than speed, and
+control, and brains?”
+
+“Sand,” the reporter said succinctly.
+
+The manager laughed. “I ain’t seen any signs of his lacking grit. He
+was up against some proposition to-day, too, and he pulled out. I guess
+I ain’t making any mistake trying him out against the Blue Stockings.
+He’s as good as any of Jack Kennedy’s string of cripples. He ain’t made
+of the same stuff as that quitter, Locke, I fired in Ashland.”
+
+A faint touch of color tinged Stillman’s face.
+
+“You’re right there, Brennan,” he said briefly. “There’s no comparison
+between them. Well we’ll see how he pans out on Saturday.”
+
+As he turned away, a frown wrinkled his smooth forehead. He was
+thinking of Lefty, and wishing fervently that he might be there. What
+a chance it would have been! There wasn’t a question that, if he had
+remained with the Hornets, Locke might have had the opportunity which
+had been given to Elgin. Stillman knew baseball, and there was no
+shadowy doubt in his mind as to which of the two was the better man. He
+felt that Brennan could not have failed to see it, too, if he had not
+been tricked into turning the southpaw away.
+
+However, that was all over and done with. Not only had Locke been
+fired, but at this moment Stillman had not the least idea where his
+friend was. He had heard nothing from him since the day they parted at
+the Ashland station. The pitcher had promised to write when he made
+good, but he had not written.
+
+“Maybe he’s working for some fourth-rate bush league,” Stillman thought
+regretfully. “I can’t say I blame him for not wanting us to know. Maybe
+he hasn’t got any job yet. I’d give a farm to get that crook Elgin
+where I want him, and show Brennan what a mistake he’s made.”
+
+Unfortunately the ex-sergeant at Ashland had, so far, failed signally
+in finding a single clew to the mystery, and Stillman was beginning to
+grow discouraged. It looked as if Bert Elgin had won out, in spite of
+the fact that truth and honor and decency were all opposed to him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ THE TWO MANAGERS
+
+
+A door opened, and a tall, thin man, with a slight stoop, stood on the
+threshold, looking down upon the manager of the Hornets. His dark eyes
+glimmered and a smile stretched his wide mouth, which transformed the
+almost homely face into one that was positively good-looking.
+
+At the sight of him, Jim Brennan sprang up from his desk so hurriedly
+that he came near upsetting the revolving chair, and leaped toward the
+newcomer with hand outstretched.
+
+“Well, well!” he exclaimed. “Put it there, Ken, old boy! It sure does a
+man good to see your smiling face again. How’s things?”
+
+“Fine!” returned Kennedy, of the Blue Stockings, gripping the other’s
+hand. “Couldn’t be better, in fact. You’re looking blooming yourself,
+Jim. Taken on a few pounds over the winter, haven’t you?”
+
+“A few, maybe. I can stand it, though. Once fat, a little more never
+cuts any ice. Sit down and rest your face and hands. I see you’ve had
+a clean sweep so far.”
+
+Kennedy dropped into a chair beside the desk, crossing one long leg
+over the other. Though antagonists on the diamond, in private life the
+two men were the best of friends, and always enjoyed talking things
+over in this way whenever they met.
+
+“We have,” rejoined the taller man when Brennan had settled himself at
+the desk again, “won four games straight, which isn’t so bad to start
+in the season with.”
+
+Brennan grinned. “Well, you’re up against a team of real ball players
+to-day, Ken,” he chuckled. “Doing some stunts with a bunch of has-beens
+on the firing line. I’ve a sort of hunch that we’re going to break up
+that streak of luck.”
+
+“I should worry,” smiled Kennedy. “I’ve never seen the men in better
+shape. We’re going to make ’em all take our dust this year.”
+
+“Humph!” grunted Brennan. “That remains to be seen. Who you going to
+dish up for us to knock the stuffing out of――Pete Grist?”
+
+“Nope. I’ve got a man I had farmed out to a Southern independent team,
+with a string attached. He turned out to be a regular bush wonder, so I
+pulled the string the other day, and yanked him in here to try him out
+on you. It’s always best to give a youngster something easy to start
+with.”
+
+Brennan laughed. “Say, Ken, that’s sort of funny, though. I was
+counting on putting in a dark horse myself. He’s a kid I picked up
+last fall. I’ll guarantee right now that he’ll lick the pants off your
+Southern wonder.”
+
+“If it wasn’t so much like highway robbery, I’d make you back your talk
+up with cash,” Kennedy returned calmly. “As it is, I’ll have to content
+myself with a sight of your face after the game.”
+
+Brennan was scoffing at Kennedy’s folly in imagining he could take a
+fall out of the Hornets with a raw busher on the slab, when suddenly he
+stopped abruptly, frowning.
+
+“Say!” he burst out the next moment. “Did a fellow named Locke come
+around for a job within the last month? I meant to drop you a line
+about him, but I’ll be hanged if I didn’t forget it. He’s a southpaw,
+and I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if he applied under another name.”
+
+Kennedy shook his head. “No, he didn’t change his name. He couldn’t,
+seeing as I knew about him before. He blew in the day before we broke
+camp in Georgia; but I was a bit wary when I found out you’d dropped
+him that way. He didn’t stay long.”
+
+“Well, I’m glad you didn’t get stuck with him,” Brennan exclaimed
+emphatically. “I’d sort of felt it was my fault if you had, seeing as
+I forgot to put you wise about him. Believe me, Ken, he isn’t any use,
+but he shows up good at first. It took me the whole training season to
+get on to the fact that he’s yellow right through――one of the worst
+quitters I ever saw. We’re both well rid of him. Say, look at the time!
+I didn’t think it was so late.”
+
+He sprang up as he spoke, and slammed his desk down. Kennedy arose more
+leisurely, and together they left the office for the dressing rooms of
+their respective teams.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ THE MEETING IN THE GRANDSTAND
+
+
+Three games had been insufficient to take the edge from the enthusiasm
+of the fans, intoxicated with the wine of spring and bubbling with the
+joy of looking down once more upon that diamond after their long winter
+deprivation.
+
+Moreover, in point of strength there was no comparison between the
+Blue Stockings and the Terriers. To be sure, the latter had made a hot
+start this year, but the former were old rivals of the Hornets, who,
+year after year, had pushed them close in that desperate fight for the
+pennant, and last season had beaten them out by a hair. Consequently
+this first struggle between them drew almost as many spectators as the
+game which had opened the season a week before.
+
+The day was perfect. A sweep of blue sky, clear save for a few wispy
+clouds, was overhead. A trifling little breeze lurked here and there at
+sharp turns or corners, but it blew from the south, and held no chill
+undercurrent which was not offset by the warm, grateful sunshine.
+
+The fans rejoiced as they sped toward the grounds by every possible car
+line and conveyance. Those of them who had witnessed the opening game
+told one another how much better this one was likely to be.
+
+Long before one o’clock great throngs had assembled at the gates,
+and when those gates were finally opened there was a wild rush past
+ticket-takers into the clattering emptiness of the vast stands. Down
+over the tiers of seats they stumbled, struggling for the desirable
+front rows. Hats were smashed here and there, and there were occasional
+wordy altercations; but, as a rule, laughter and joshing and
+good-natured horseplay prevailed.
+
+By two o’clock, the bleachers were crowded, and the more expensive
+seats were filling fast. Half an hour later it looked as if every
+place, save in the reserved sections, was occupied; and still the crowd
+streamed in like a swollen river.
+
+Tramp, tramp, tramp! Regular, rhythmic, the sound of their marching was
+like the thunder of a great army. Ogden Wilmerding, hurrying toward
+a coveted place in the lower stand, felt the thrill which that sound
+brings to the heart of every fan who has hibernated reluctantly for six
+long months.
+
+“Nothing like it,” he chuckled as he was swept along. “This looks a lot
+like opening day,” he went on, peering over the top of the last row of
+seats. “I’m not so sorry as I was over getting back too late for that.”
+
+He soon saw that it would be impossible to get the seat he wanted. The
+section directly behind the plate was filled in solid. For a moment
+he stood there peering down at the reporters’ bench in a vain hope
+that some one he knew――Jack Stillman, perhaps――might find room for him
+there. He saw places enough; but neither Stillman nor any other of his
+newspaper friends had yet appeared.
+
+“Hang it all!” he muttered. “Why didn’t I start half an hour earlier,
+or wire from Boston for a box?”
+
+“Because you’re the same lazy old slob you were three years ago,”
+chuckled a voice in his ear.
+
+Wilmerding whirled, his eyes popping, stared for a second in speechless
+amazement at the young man against whose shoulder he had been almost
+leaning. Then he fell upon him with a roar of delight.
+
+“Well, I’ll be hanged!” he gurgled. “Snow, you old cut-up, where in
+time have you been? I thought you’d croaked years ago. Shove along and
+give me a chance. You’re spread over two seats, easy.”
+
+Snowden Pell obeyed laughingly. The man beside him, taking in the
+situation with a good-natured grin, likewise moved, and Wilmerding was
+accommodated with a seat.
+
+“It takes a lot to put me out of business,” Pell chuckled when his
+friend had settled beside him. “I’m very far from being a dead one, as
+they’ll tell you out in Seattle.”
+
+“But why didn’t you write and let somebody know how you were getting
+on? Last I heard, your father failed, or something, and you slipped
+out of Princeton right in the middle of the spring term without saying
+a word to anybody. To this day I never knew how much of the tale was
+truth and how much fiction.”
+
+“It was pretty much all truth,” Pell returned quickly. “My governor’s
+partner got playing the Wall Street game, and smashed the business to
+bits. There wasn’t enough left even for me to keep on and finish the
+term, and when I found out how bad things were I just faded quietly
+away. I didn’t want any of the boys to be sorry for me, or to think
+that I was an object of charity, the way――”
+
+“Rot!” broke in the stout chap emphatically. “You make me sick! At
+least, you might have said a word to your old friends. Look over in
+the bleachers. They’re firing one of those sandwich-chewing-gum-cigar
+baskets at each other. Next thing you know they’ll be tossing some kid
+around.”
+
+For a moment they watched the wicker basket rise and fall as the
+bleacherites employed their time in playing a sort of handball with it.
+Here and there in a distant part of the stand men were throwing paper
+at one another, sporting with the inevitable straw hat which some one
+always seems to bring along for the purpose, and otherwise enjoying
+themselves.
+
+Presently Wilmerding turned again to his friend.
+
+“Well, where’d you go?” he asked. “What you been doing ever since?”
+
+“I had a job offered me in Seattle, which I snapped up. It was a good
+opening for me, and I’m certainly glad I got with that particular
+concern, even if I had to borrow money to get out there. I had
+the first letter from them the very day I left Princeton; and, by
+Jove, Oggie!”――he threw back his head and laughed at the sudden
+recollection――“you came mighty near being the goat.”
+
+“What do you mean?” the stout fellow inquired tartly. “You didn’t
+touch me, that I remember. Of course, I’d have turned you down”――his
+tone was one of heavy sarcasm――“but at least I’d liked to have had the
+chance.”
+
+“You were the first person I thought of when I realized I’d have to
+sting somebody,” Pell laughed. “Trouble was, I couldn’t locate you.
+Went to your room, and stayed a deuce of a while in hopes you’d come
+in. Then, when I couldn’t wait any longer, I hunted up Victor Wood, and
+he did the business.”
+
+He hesitated an instant, and then went on swiftly, a note of sudden
+curiosity in his voice:
+
+“That reminds me of something I’ve always wanted to ask you. What sort
+of a game did you and Bert Elgin have together about that time?”
+
+Wilmerding stared. “Game?” he repeated blankly. “Bert Elgin? I don’t
+get you, Snow. Elucidate.”
+
+“Well, I thought it was a joke of some kind,” Pell returned. “Only
+it seemed funny that all of a sudden you should be as chummy as that
+with Elgin. While I was waiting for you, I strolled into your bedroom
+to brush my hair. I was standing before the bureau when I heard the
+outside door open. Thought it was you, of course, until some one called
+out your name. I didn’t feel in the mood for gassing with any one
+else, so I said nothing and slipped back to one side of the door.
+
+“To make a long story short, I heard the fellow moving around the
+sitting room, and pretty soon I happened to catch sight of him in the
+dressing-table mirror. It was Bert Elgin, and he was heading for the
+bookshelves in the corner.”
+
+Wilmerding gave a slight start, the color flaming into his face.
+
+“Go on,” he urged, as his friend, glancing at him, paused in his
+narration. “What――happened?”
+
+“He took something out of his pocket and dropped it behind the books,”
+Pell continued. “I didn’t see what it was; but as it fell there was a
+clink that sounded like metal――a chain or―――― Great Scott! What is it,
+Oggie? What’s the matter with you?”
+
+The color had vanished from Wilmerding’s face, and he was staring at
+his companion with a strained, incredulous expression in his eyes which
+testified to the emotion he was undergoing.
+
+“What――books――were they?” he gasped at length, in a hoarse voice.
+
+“The books he put the stuff behind, you mean?” queried Pell. “I don’t
+remember, but I think it was the second shelf from the top. I know
+they were over on the extreme right-hand end of the case.”
+
+Wilmerding drew his breath with a whistling sound. For an instant he
+sat silent. Then he moved his hand unconsciously, and caught Pell’s arm
+in a grip which made the man wince.
+
+“What day was that, Snow?” he breathed.
+
+“The twenty-sixth of May,” was the quick response. “I don’t think I’ll
+ever forget that date. It was about three in the afternoon. But what in
+thunder was it all about, Oggie? I never supposed it was anything but a
+joke. Can’t you put a fellow wise?”
+
+The big man at his side did not answer. He was staring out across the
+diamond toward the bleachers, black with their crowds of restless fans.
+He saw nothing, heard nothing. He could not speak for the joy which
+filled his soul as a realization of the truth came to him at last.
+
+He was not a thief!
+
+For years he had been so absolutely convinced that it was he who
+had――unconsciously, perhaps, but still none the less certainly――stolen
+those things from Bob Ferris’ rooms, that Pell’s story struck him as
+almost incredible.
+
+There could be no mistake, however. The details fitted too perfectly to
+admit of a coincidence. Lefty had been right, it was Elgin who was the
+thief, not he. And Elgin it was who had done a thing which would have
+been impossible in Wilmerding, waking or sleeping; he had deliberately
+stolen, and as deliberately planned to throw the blame upon an innocent
+man.
+
+Sudden, furious anger flamed up within the Princeton man. He felt as if
+he must search out that contemptible coward and give him a little of
+what was coming to him. He half rose from the bench, his face livid;
+and then he realized that all around him a wild uproar had arisen. Men
+yelled and cheered themselves purple; they stamped and shouted and
+waved their hats.
+
+Pell’s hand caught Wilmerding by the arm and dragged him down, but not
+before the angry man had caught a glimpse of the line of athletes in
+their immaculate uniforms, leaving the shadow of the distant bleachers
+and trotting briskly into the brilliant April sunshine on the field.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ THE SURPRISE
+
+
+Amid the roaring of the crowd, the Hornets made their way across the
+diamond. Brennan was in the lead, with Cy Russell beside him; and, at
+moments when the scurrying phalanx of photographers permitted, the
+manager talked to his star pitcher in low tones.
+
+“You’d better keep your arm limbered, Cy,” he said. “I shall send you
+in if they get to Elgin. The gink Kennedy’s going to open with ought to
+be soft for us.”
+
+“Who is he?” Russell asked curiously.
+
+The manager paused until a camera had been snapped and the reporter had
+retreated to a little distance.
+
+“Some busher,” he explained. “Ken seems to think he’s a find, but I’ve
+seen them kind before. Grist’ll take his place when we bat him out, and
+we want to get away to a flying start.”
+
+As they neared the bench, the fans gave a yell for Russell, and several
+newspaper men came up to inquire perfunctorily whether it was not true
+that he was to go on the slab first for the Hornets.
+
+“You boys’ll find that out in time,” Brennan returned evasively. “Don’t
+you know that I ain’t the kind to give out that information before the
+announcer? Chase yourselves.”
+
+He turned to Bert Elgin, who was standing not far away, looking as cool
+and nonchalant as if he had never played on anything but a Big League
+team, and proceeded to give him a few last bits of advice.
+
+While this was going on, another cheer went up from the stands as the
+Blue Stockings’ contingent appeared and rapidly crossed the field.
+
+Brennan’s back was towards them, and he was consequently surprised to
+see Elgin give a sudden start and stare fixedly at the approaching
+squad.
+
+For an instant Elgin’s face remained fixed; then into his eyes there
+leaped an expression of such utter astonishment, mingled with hate,
+that the manager’s words ceased abruptly, and he grasped the young
+pitcher by one arm.
+
+“What is the matter with you?” he asked sharply.
+
+Elgin swallowed hard, and his face, which had turned slightly pale, now
+flamed crimson.
+
+“Look there!” he said hoarsely.
+
+Brennan whirled and stared at the approaching players. For a second he
+saw only the line of blue-stockinged men, headed by Jack Kennedy. Then,
+as his eyes focused on the tall, lithe, graceful figure walking beside
+Spider Grant, the famous first baseman of the rival organization, his
+jaw dropped.
+
+“I’ll――be――hanged!” he gasped. “Tom Locke!”
+
+It was Lefty, browner than he had been a month ago, and with, if
+possible, an easier swing in his carriage. His face glowed with health.
+His teeth gleamed as he smiled at some sally of his companion. He
+showed no trace of the awkwardness or embarrassment which one might
+naturally expect at his first encounter with the team from which he had
+been dropped in such disgrace. True, his brown eyes flashed a single
+questioning glance at one man among the Hornets, but it was seen by no
+one save that man, who leaped forward as if propelled from a catapult.
+
+“Lefty, you old lobster!” he cried, as he gripped both of the
+southpaw’s hands in his. “What you deserve is a good larruping; and I’d
+like to hand it to you right now.”
+
+There was an odd expression on Lefty’s face as he grasped Fargo’s big
+fists firmly. For an instant he did not speak.
+
+“I didn’t make good, Buck――honest I didn’t,” he said at length in a low
+tone.
+
+“G’wan!” retorted the backstop. “What you giving us? Ain’t you with the
+Blue Stockings?”
+
+“Yes; but I’ve been with them only two days. Kennedy farmed me with the
+Badgers, down South. I never knew what he thought of me, or what he
+meant to do, till I got a wire telling me to come on at once. I had a
+streak of great luck down there, and I suppose――”
+
+“Luck be hanged!” interrupted Fargo forcibly. “You made good, just as
+you would have with us if that miserable sneak―― Say! You ain’t going
+into the game to-day?”
+
+Locke hesitated an instant, and then nodded. “Yes,” he said, lowering
+his voice. “Kennedy’s going to give me a chance.”
+
+Fargo grinned. “Glory be! The old man’s going to put Elgin on the slab.
+You’ll be up against him at last; and, if you don’t make him look like
+a rotten lemon, it’s all up between you and me.”
+
+For a second Locke stood looking at his friend, with sparkling eyes and
+swiftly reddening cheeks. His face took on a look of firm, indomitable
+purpose. Unconsciously both brown, muscular hands, hanging straight
+down at his sides, clenched themselves until the knuckles showed white
+through the skin. Then he pulled himself together with an effort, and
+laughed.
+
+“You’re a hot ball player to talk like that,” he joshed. “You sure
+don’t want your own pitcher to fall down, do you?”
+
+“I’m not keen about losing the game,” Fargo returned. “But I shouldn’t
+shed tears if Elgin was hammered out of the box.”
+
+Up on the reporters’ bench a telegraph instrument had suddenly ceased
+clicking, and a rush and bustle followed as a slim fellow in a long tan
+coat and rakish soft hat pushed hurriedly past his fellow reporters.
+
+He paid no heed to their comments and questions, but, reaching one of
+the gates, thrust it open, and hastened out upon the field. A moment
+later he, too, was shaking hands with Lefty and upbraiding him in
+unmeasured terms.
+
+Presently several more of the Hornets’ players strolled up and joined
+the little group about the young twirler. The fans, realizing that
+something was doing which they did not understand, gave vent to caustic
+comments and various sarcastic remarks about the folly of delaying the
+game.
+
+Brennan, still scowling, called peremptorily to his men, and sent
+them loping on to the diamond for preliminary practice. Locke took a
+position over to one side, and commenced warming up. The field was
+soon a picture of animated motion.
+
+“What kind of a game is this you’re giving me, Ken?” Brennan inquired
+tartly as Kennedy strolled up a moment later. “You told me you’d thrown
+down that fellow Locke when he applied for a job.”
+
+“No, I didn’t, Jim,” retorted the Blue Stockings’ manager mildly, a
+faint twinkle in his dark eyes. “I said he didn’t stay with me long.
+He didn’t. I let the Badgers have him. Hadn’t time to bother with him
+myself, so I shipped him to them for a try-out, with one of my scouts
+to keep an eye on him. The boy won every game he pitched, and did such
+brainy work that I pulled him in. The reason I didn’t tell you his name
+was because he asked me this morning not to say anything about him to
+any of your crowd.”
+
+“Humph!” growled Brennan. “Thought he was goin’ to jar me, I suppose.
+So this is the bush wonder you were telling me about. I wish you joy
+with that quitter. Better have an anchor ready to hitch to him about
+the third inning. You’ll need it.”
+
+“We’ll see if you’re right,” smiled Kennedy.
+
+Brennan turned away, grumbling incoherently. Evidently he was still
+feeling somewhat sore. The gingery fielding practice continued to the
+delight of the spectators, who applauded every snappy throw or pretty
+catch.
+
+When the Blue Stockings took their places on the diamond their efforts
+were cheered almost as much as had been those of the home team. The
+great crowd seemed to be in a jovial, good-natured mood; though, when
+the practice was over and the batteries for the day announced, there
+was a concerted growl at the discovery that two unknowns were to take
+the slab instead of the old favorites.
+
+Nevertheless, there was no great amount of kicking. The game was
+about to begin; that was the main thing. Besides, it would be rather
+interesting to see which of these cubs proved himself the better man.
+
+The photographers were shooed away and the field cleared. The Hornets
+pranced out upon the diamond like a lot of colts, eager for the
+fray. Elgin got a cheer all to himself for the cool, confident, and
+business-like way in which he took the slab. The umpires got into
+position, one of them tossing out a clean, new ball to the young
+pitcher. The fans yelled again, just for the sake of letting off steam.
+
+Then came a tense, breathless hush as they waited for the first ball to
+be pitched.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLI
+
+ THE BEGINNING OF THE GAME
+
+
+Rufe Hyland, the visitors’ right fielder and one of their crack
+hitters, stood at the pan, calm and smiling, swinging his stick with a
+short, gentle motion, which seemed to denote tense muscles and a brain
+alert and ready to take advantage of any pitched ball that should nick
+the platter.
+
+In spite of his seeming coolness, Bert Elgin had really never been more
+nervous in his life. He took his time, even after Fargo had given the
+signal, and, as he dug away the soil near the pitcher’s rubber with his
+copper toe, he heard his teammates coaching behind him.
+
+He was heartened by the sound of their friendly voices; but,
+nevertheless, the straight, low one he sent over seemed to lack his
+usual cannon-ball speed. Hyland lashed it out in a manner which sent
+the pitcher’s heart down into his boots. For an instant he thought it
+a two-bagger, at least. Then, as he whirled round, he saw that Dutch
+Siegrist, sprinting at full speed, had scooped it right off the blades
+of grass.
+
+The superb catch brought a yell of delight from the Hornets’ rooters,
+and seemed to brace Elgin amazingly. He took a long breath, and his
+nerves ceased to flutter as he surveyed the next batter. He felt a
+new confidence in himself in the realization that the team was behind
+him, ready to back him up with their wonderfully perfect organization.
+He lost instantly that sense of isolation he had been conscious of at
+first――the feeling that the entire weight and responsibility of the
+game lay on his shoulders. The boys were there, ready to cover any
+blunder or mistake he might make; and, though this did not bring about
+laxness in his pitching, it was infinitely consoling.
+
+Again he took the signal from the big backstop, but this time the ball
+he put over had burning speed, and a little jump to it which completely
+fooled Pink Dalton, the Blue Stockings’ second baseman.
+
+It was followed by an incurve that cut the corner of the plate.
+
+Dalton fouled back of the pan.
+
+Then came a couple of teasers which the batter ignored; and finally,
+with two and two, the Blue Stockings’ man hoisted a high fly into left
+field, which was easily caught by the guardian of that pasture.
+
+The roaring approval of the crowd caused the blood to tingle in Elgin’s
+veins. Before the end of the game he meant to have them shouting his
+name as loudly as they had yelled for Russell, or Pop Jennings, or any
+other of the old favorites, on the opening day. It wasn’t such a hard
+matter, after all, to pitch in a Big League contest.
+
+By carefully following Fargo’s signals, he struck out Brock, the
+visitors’ center fielder, and then walked toward the bench with a
+little, unconscious swagger. One or two of his fellow players told him
+how well he’d done. Brennan, even, added his approval.
+
+Elgin fancied that he had made a very good start, indeed, and that
+there wasn’t a doubt of his form improving as the game progressed. He
+was quite satisfied with his cleverness in letting only three batters
+oppose him. He gave no thought to how much the man behind the pan had
+contributed to this result. Neither he nor any one else had the least
+conception of the fight which had gone on in Buck Fargo’s mind between
+loyalty to his team and the contempt and hatred he felt for the pitcher
+his brains and experience were helping so greatly.
+
+The caustic comment and jeering criticism which had greeted Elgin’s
+appearance were as nothing to the disparaging chorus that arose when
+Lefty walked out into the diamond. Baseball fans are extremely
+partizan, and the supporters of the Hornets outnumbered those of their
+opponents ten to one.
+
+The southpaw could not help being a bit affected by the unflattering
+remarks hurled at him from the bleachers and grandstand, even though he
+knew how little such things counted and how fickle the average rooter
+is. He felt, too, and rather painfully, the lack of encouragement from
+his own team. He knew he was not one of them. They had shown him that
+only too plainly. With the exception of one or two, they had made him
+perfectly aware of the fact that they regarded him as a man who had yet
+to win his spurs, and on whom the honor of opening the first game with
+the Hornets had devolved more by accident, or through a whim of their
+manager, than from any real worth or proven merit. Their silence as he
+toed the slab was in vivid contrast to the behavior of their opponents
+in the first half of the inning.
+
+It made him set his teeth and resolve desperately to make good; to
+show them that he had something in him; to vindicate Jack Kennedy’s
+judgment; incidentally, to prove to the latter how grateful he was for
+having been given this chance.
+
+For a second he waited for his catcher’s signal, but none came. Dirk
+Nelson seemed to be occupied in settling down behind the pan and
+making sure that his mitt was in place. Lefty wondered whether the
+backstop’s well-known chumminess with Pete Grist, the popular Blue
+Stockings’ twirler, had anything to do with this unusual state of
+absent-mindedness. Grist had shown unmistakable signs of ill humor on
+discovering that he was not to start on the slab to-day.
+
+There was but a momentary hesitation. Bill Hagin was at bat, and Lefty
+had played too many practice games against the capable outfielder not
+to know pretty well his strong and weak points. Unfortunately the
+latter were few. The southpaw was satisfied, however, when he finally
+got Nelson’s belated signal. A slow floater was what he handed up for a
+starter.
+
+Hagin, doting on speed, could not restrain himself, and struck too
+soon. Lefty then tried a curve. The batter swung at it, making
+connections and bumping a slow grounder towards short.
+
+Eddie Lewis made the mistake of waiting for the ball, and was then
+forced to throw hastily in order to get it across the diamond in
+time. That hasty throw was wide, and Spider Grant had to leap off the
+cushion. Hagin was safe because of bad judgment and an error.
+
+The crowd cheered, and urged Dutch Siegrist to carry on the good work.
+
+The first baseman of the Hornets took no chances. In spite of Lefty’s
+efforts to prevent it, he managed to lay down a bunt which corkscrewed
+along the base line, ever threatening to roll foul, but in the end
+coming to rest a couple of inches on the right side. Locke snatched it
+up and lined it to Grant, but the delay had made it possible for the
+German to reach the sack in safety.
+
+Jim Brennan smiled significantly. He had watched Locke closely and
+expectantly, waiting for signs of the yellow streak to show. With two
+men on bases and none out, it looked very much as if the southpaw’s
+first inning would be his last.
+
+“We’ve got him going,” the manager of the Hornets muttered jubilantly.
+“Ken’ll have to yank him sudden. I reckon he’ll have more faith in my
+judgment after this.”
+
+When Nolan, his left fielder, presently sent a foul back of first and
+was put out by Grant’s wonderful sprinting and equally amazing catch,
+Brennan’s conviction was in no wise altered. This was pure luck, helped
+on by the skill of the first baseman, and reflected no credit on Locke.
+
+Buck Fargo was advancing to the plate, too, which boded well for the
+Hornets.
+
+“You know what to do, Buck,” the manager said, in a low tone, as
+the backstop passed him. “We’ve got this green portsider on the run
+already.”
+
+It was a curious situation. The two men facing each other were friends.
+Fargo’s sympathy for the young pitcher was such that he wanted him to
+make good almost more than he desired a victory for his own team. The
+big backstop could help very materially, if he wished, without any
+risk to himself; and he realized that this was a crucial moment in the
+inning when a hit might mean a run, while an out would go far toward
+killing the Hornet’s chances for scoring.
+
+To his honor, he walked to the pan with the fixed determination to
+forget that Lefty was pitching, and to give his manager the very best
+that was in him.
+
+And now Locke realized that the thing which had hitherto been in his
+favor was going to work the other way. If he knew intimately the likes
+and dislikes, the batting strength and weakness of each member of the
+opposing team, the man who faced him now was in a position to know
+quite as much, or more, about himself.
+
+Lefty’s face was a shade less brown as he toed the rubber, but his
+nerves were quite steady, his courage unabated. He would do his best;
+no man could do more.
+
+The cheering and comments in the stands had ceased. Even the murmur of
+voices died away as the spectators bent forward in breathless suspense.
+
+The first one was not over, and Fargo refused to go after it.
+
+“Ba-a-ll!” drawled the umpire.
+
+“He’ll put it over now,” thought Fargo, swinging his stick gently.
+He had ceased to think of Lefty as his friend; he was now simply the
+pitcher of the rival team.
+
+He was mistaken, however. Though it seemed to be Locke’s intention to
+cut the pan, Fargo saw the ball break for a curve which would carry it
+just outside, and again he refrained from swinging.
+
+“Two-oo!” said the umpire.
+
+In the silence of the breathless crowd some one was heard to say:
+
+“He’s afraid of him. He don’t dare let him hit it.”
+
+These words did not reach the southpaw’s ears. The latter, however, had
+no intention of pitching himself into a hole if he could help it. He
+bent over a sizzler.
+
+Fargo swung and missed, although he almost fancied that he felt the
+bat lightly touch the whistling ball. A murmur rose from the Blue
+Stockings’ rooters.
+
+A moment later, Lefty shot the ball back with a quick return, and,
+though he was not taken off his guard, the batter missed again.
+
+The murmur rose.
+
+Then Locke tried that slow, lingering ball which he could so cleverly
+deliver after going through movements which seemed to promise great
+speed.
+
+Unfortunately Fargo had seen him try that same trick more than once,
+and he refused to be fooled. Watching the horsehide as it came up and
+dropped toward the ground, he let it settle into the catcher’s hands
+without having moved his stick.
+
+The Hornets’ fans had a chance to yell, but their uproar was swiftly
+cut short. Now was the moment of greatest suspense. The next ball
+delivered would be decisive.
+
+After what seemed an eternity, but which was, in reality, the briefest
+sort of pause, the southpaw pitched.
+
+Fargo met the sphere on the trademark and sent it humming out on a line
+with the speed of a bullet.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLII
+
+ THE TRUTH AT LAST
+
+
+Like a flash, thousands of fans were on their feet. The roar which
+reverberated back and forth in the great inclosure was enough to shake
+the row of eagles ornamenting the roof of the grandstand. Hagin was off
+like a rocket. Siegrist was not far behind. Fargo himself showed that
+backstopping was not his only strong point.
+
+As for Lefty, after that first awful moment of sinking which had
+followed the fatal crack of leather meeting wood, he brought himself
+together with a jerk, and whirled round.
+
+Rufe Hyland, in right field, had not wasted an instant. Covering the
+ground with tremendous strides, he scooped the ball cleanly, spun
+around, and threw even while still in motion. It was meant to be
+a straight throw to the plate, but in a second Lefty saw that the
+fielder’s forced turn had lost him every particle of body motion which
+might have helped out his arm, and knew the sphere would fall short.
+
+Like a flash, the southpaw darted to one side, leaped into the air,
+and forked the ball with one hand. As he did so, Hagin, running like a
+racehorse, flung himself feet foremost to the ground, and slid over the
+plate.
+
+Siegrist had raced down to second, and crossed the sack at full speed.
+When he saw Lefty intercept the ball and whirl toward third, he sought
+to turn back. Locke whipped the sphere straight into the hands of
+Pink Dalton, who was covering the second anchorage; and the latter,
+after jabbing it on to the lunging German, snapped it to first with a
+lightninglike motion, not even taking the time to straighten up.
+
+It was one of the most surprising double plays ever seen on the New
+Grounds. Fargo, having rounded the sack and seen the ball speeding
+apparently toward the plate, naturally did not halt until he was nearly
+halfway to the second hassock. Even then he might have got back safely
+had it not been for the extraordinary accuracy of Dalton’s throw. As it
+was, the finish of the play was close. The keen-eyed umpire declared
+Fargo out.
+
+The applause of the Hornets’ rooters suddenly ceased. It was followed
+by the cheers of their rivals. The home team had made a run, to be
+sure, but this abrupt and unexpected ending of the inning rather took
+the wind out of their sails. They gave vent to their annoyance by
+heaping abuse on the umpire.
+
+As Lefty walked to the bench his eyes sought the face of his manager
+questioningly. He felt no doubt that only for the success of this last
+play he would have been taken out of the game at once. Only one hit had
+been made off him, to be sure, but he knew that a pitcher is frequently
+removed when the game is going wrong through no fault of his own. Jack
+Kennedy showed no such intention, however.
+
+“That was a heady play of yours, Lefty,” he said. “I saw the ball
+would fall short the minute it left Hyland’s hand. If you hadn’t had
+your thinker working, we’d likely have had more than one tally to buck
+against.”
+
+“It was Dalton who put a kibosh on them,” Locke returned. “That was
+some throw of his to first.”
+
+“Sure. But you used your nut and made it possible. One minute, Grant.
+You’d better――”
+
+His voice dropped to a whisper, and Lefty walked away, his face
+slightly flushed, his eyes bright. Jack Kennedy was a manager who never
+hesitated about blowing up his men, and he could do it in a cutting,
+caustic manner much more thorough than mere loud-mouthed ranting. He
+had also the much rarer trait of judicious praise, which was, perhaps,
+one of the reasons why he was so popular with his players.
+
+The second inning presented no such spectacular features as had
+appeared in its predecessor. Elgin, cool, confident, and a little
+cocky, did not let a man pass second. The fans were beginning to yell
+rough pleasantries at him, and reporters who had been with the Hornets
+through the spring training harked back to the prophecies they had sent
+home regarding this youngster’s exceptional ability.
+
+Locke, on the other hand, was touched up for two singles, and had men
+on first and third with only one out. One of these was caught while
+trying to steal second, and put out by Nelson’s beautiful throwing. The
+other was cantering toward the home plate, with the full expectation of
+scoring, when he discovered that the southpaw had reached forth a bare
+hand and plucked the batted ball out of the air, thus spoiling a base
+hit and ending the inning.
+
+“Great work,” chuckled Jack Stillman, up at the reporters’ table, as he
+reached for his tobacco pouch.
+
+“Great luck, I should say,” retorted the newspaper man next to him.
+“Looks to me like a fine case of horseshoes.”
+
+“I’m not so sure about that,” put in the sporting editor of the
+_Blade_, who sat on Stillman’s other side. “The boy seems to have a
+little gray matter, and there’s a bulldog expression about his mouth
+and chin which makes me think he’ll stand the pace longer than this
+Elgin, who’s beginning to strut a little already. You saw quite a
+little of him down at Ashland, didn’t you, Jack?”
+
+Stillman did not answer. With the leather pouch, he had pulled from
+his pocket a crumpled envelope bearing the postmark of that very
+Texas town. For a second he stared at it in a puzzled way. Then he
+remembered. The hotel clerk had handed it to him just as he was
+leaving for the game with a bunch of fellows, and he had put it aside,
+intending to read it later, only to forget its existence completely.
+
+With a swift jerk of one finger, he tore the envelope open. There was
+a long letter in the cramped, laborious handwriting of William Bowers,
+the ex-sergeant, but that was not what his eyes were fixed on with such
+curious intentness. He had received many of those letters in the past
+month, and all to no purpose. What he had never had before was this
+inclosure, an affidavit bearing the seal of a notary public and signed
+by one Edward Black, and several witnesses.
+
+With a swift-drawn breath, Stillman fairly raced through the document,
+his face flushing, his eyes snapping, an expression of the most intense
+satisfaction swiftly overspreading his countenance.
+
+“By Jove!” he breathed, when he had finished. “He’s got him at last! I
+knew that cur Elgin was responsible, and this proves it.”
+
+He half rose from his seat, only to drop back into it again as he
+realized the impossibility of reaching Brennan now.
+
+“Afterward will do as well,” he muttered. “If this doesn’t blow the
+scoundrel clean out of water, I’m a lobster!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+
+ THE LUCKY SEVENTH
+
+
+Unconscious of the gathering storm, Bert Elgin continued his fine work.
+Inning after inning he held the visitors down, rising to his highest
+pitch of excellence in the fifth by striking out the opposing batters
+in one, two, three order.
+
+His rival was equally successful so far as results went, but his
+methods were not as spectacular. He seemed not to exert himself until
+forced to the wall, and then, as likely as not, his manner of getting
+out of the hole was such that the bulk of spectators put it down to
+luck or the wonderful support back of him.
+
+Thus it was that, while the metropolitan fans were howling themselves
+hoarse with praises for Elgin, the Blue Stockings’ supporters could
+never be quite sure that the southpaw was not on the verge of “blowing
+up,” and their rooting was more for the team as a body than for the man
+on the slab.
+
+There were a few in the vast crowd, more observant than their neighbors,
+who realized the truth. Elgin was clever, to be sure, but little by
+little they saw how much of his success on the mound was due to the
+knowledge and experience of his fellow players.
+
+Buck Fargo was a born backstop. Absolutely perfect in the mechanical
+side of his position, he was able to give his whole attention to the
+batter and, therefore, seemed to possess, almost uncannily, the power
+of sensing the sort of ball which would be, at any particular moment,
+most distasteful. Happily for Elgin, the pitcher had the sense to
+follow his catcher’s signals implicitly.
+
+In addition to this, the others of the team were in thorough sympathy
+with their pitcher. He had been one of them from the beginning of the
+season, and had deported himself with cleverness that won the liking of
+not a few. There were no jealousies and heartburnings to combat. They
+were beginning, also, to feel a certain measure of confidence in him,
+and their support was of the finished Big League sort, plus enthusiasm,
+which was a joy to see.
+
+It was quite the contrary with their opponents. Though they might not
+realize it, the majority were still sore at having this busher put
+on the slab for such an important game. They had no confidence in
+his ability to pull out successfully, and, though their playing was
+mechanically perfect, their support was that of men who are thinking of
+themselves and their averages.
+
+During the last of the sixth the Hornets scored another tally on an
+error of the opposing shortstop, and the fans sat back comfortably,
+assured that the game was safe.
+
+With the opening of the seventh, there was a sudden billowing up of
+the crowd throughout the entire circle of stands and bleachers. They
+stretched themselves and stamped their feet until the noise was like
+the deafening rattle of stage thunder. The visitors, though fearful of
+defeat, nevertheless raised the stentorian cry of “Lucky seventh! Lucky
+seventh! Here’s where we do it!”
+
+Eddie Lewis, the Blue Stockings’ shortstop, was the first man up.
+Elgin eyed him critically, and, remembering that he had caught the man
+with an inshoot once before, decided to repeat the trick. He had been
+growing more and more cocksure as the game progressed, so, when Fargo
+called for a straight, fast high ball, Elgin responded with his own
+views on the subject. It was time, he decided, that he cut loose from
+the backstop’s apron-strings. He had been hitched to them too long
+already.
+
+Fargo repeated his signal, but Elgin shook his head obstinately.
+Finally he got the signal he wanted. Lewis stepped swiftly back;
+there was a ringing crack; the horsehide whizzed straight at Elgin,
+who――ducked!
+
+He had never done such a thing before, but the total unexpectedness of
+the hit, and the fact that the sphere was humming straight at his head
+with the speed of a cannon ball, deprived him for a second of reason,
+and made his act instinctive.
+
+Lewis got to first easily. The entire Hornets’ infield made various
+caustic comments. From the stands the fickle crowd showered insults
+which brought the color flaming into Elgin’s face and made him drop the
+ball when he received it from the outfielder.
+
+The incident so disturbed him that he proceeded to present Nelson
+with a free pass, which brought loud cheers from the Blue Stockings’
+rooters, and more unflattering comments from the upholders of the home
+team.
+
+“He’s going up! He’s going up!” chanted the visiting fans, grasping at
+a straw. “Send him to the stable! Put the blanket on him!”
+
+Elgin gritted his teeth and faced Jack Daly as he toed the scratch,
+bland and smiling. Men were yelling advice to the batter; others
+flinging taunts at the man on the mound. The tumult was increasing
+steadily. Fargo, catching a glimpse of Elgin’s face, dropped on one
+knee and deliberately adjusted his shoe-lace.
+
+Daly let a wide one pass, and then banged out a grounder which, but
+for splendid fielding, would have been a hit. As it was, Dirk Nelson,
+forced from the initial sack, was put out at second by a hair. Daly
+reached first safely, and Eddie Lewis executed an impromptu jig on
+third.
+
+By this time a perfect pandemonium had broken forth all over the
+stands. The visiting rooters, seeing hope for the first time, seemed
+trying to rattle the pitcher, while the fickle metropolitan fans howled
+at the unfortunate twirler they had been cheering so vociferously a
+short time before.
+
+“Take him out! Take him out!” they bawled. “Russell! We――want――Cy!”
+
+Amid this turmoil, Lefty Locke approached the pan, his heart pounding
+unevenly and his face glowing dully under the tan. So far he had
+shown little ability with the stick; nevertheless, the hopeful Blue
+Stockings’ adherents greeted him uproariously.
+
+“Kill it, Locke!” was the stentorian cry. “Kill it, old boy!”
+
+The sound of their voices thrilled the southpaw. Only an abnormally
+cold-blooded youngster would have felt no thrill. It exalted him and
+made him confident that he could hit anything Elgin ventured to whip
+over.
+
+There was a momentary pause as Fargo hurried into the diamond and spoke
+a few reassuring words to the white-faced twirler.
+
+While he waited, leaning on his stick, Lefty cast a casual glance along
+the wide sweep of stands and boxes crowded with yelling, cheering
+humanity. The next instant his heart stood still. He was staring
+fixedly at an upper box that was filled with a gay party of men and
+women. As Lefty gazed with unbelieving wonder, a woman suddenly arose,
+straight and slim and girlish, her face flushing and her eyes bright.
+Smiling down at him, she waved a tiny handkerchief.
+
+It was Janet Harting!
+
+His face crimson, Lefty pulled off his cap a little awkwardly. How
+she happened to be there he had no idea. Who she was with he did not
+know――or care. She was watching him pitch his first Big League game,
+watching his trial by fire, and she believed in him. He toed the slab,
+believing more than ever in himself.
+
+Elgin’s face was still pale and set. A moment before he had caught a
+glimpse of Brennan talking earnestly with Cy Russell, after which the
+pitcher peeled off his sweater and loped across the turf, beckoning to
+the second catcher. It looked as if the end were in sight.
+
+Nevertheless, he ground his teeth and scowled fiercely at the hated
+Locke. He must get him――he must! The words rang dully through the
+pitcher’s brain until he wondered whether he was speaking them aloud.
+He paused, looking beseechingly at Fargo, who repeated the signal.
+
+Reluctantly Elgin wound up and pitched.
+
+The southpaw’s bat met the horsehide with a smash that sent it flying
+over Nolan’s head toward the left field bleachers.
+
+With a mingled cry of anguish and joy, the spectators leaped to their
+feet and followed the progress of the flying sphere with straining
+eyes. For a moment it looked as if the fielder might get it by fast
+sprinting, and Lewis halted an instant on third, head twisted, gauging
+the rapidly falling dot of white.
+
+Then it was seen that Nolan must fail to make the catch, and the
+runner was sent home with a rush, while voices accelerated Daly’s
+flying progress from first. The latter rounded second without a pause
+just as the fielder made a beautiful recovery and lined the ball to
+third. There were frantic shrieks of “Slide! slide!” which Daly obeyed
+without hesitation, skimming over the ground amid a cloud of dust, to
+hook the hassock with his foot as the sphere smacked into Monte Harris’
+mitt.
+
+The latter sent it humming back to second, for Lefty was coming down
+the line with the speed of a racehorse. But he, too, slid safely;
+and the breathless stillness was rent by the loud rejoicings of the
+great crowd of Blue Stockings’ admirers who had come over from the
+neighboring city to watch their team open against the Hornets.
+
+“Oh, you Locke!” they shrieked fondly. “What’s the matter with Lefty?
+He’s――all――right!”
+
+When the thunder of their accompanying stamping had died away, they
+turned their attention to Elgin, calling for airships and the like,
+until their voices were drowned by the howls of the disappointed
+opposition:
+
+“Take him out! Take him out! Take-him-out! He’s yellow!”
+
+The pitcher, white-faced, beads of perspiration besprinkling his
+forehead, stood shifting about near the slab, with downcast eyes and
+lips which trembled in spite of his efforts to steady them. Once he
+cast a swift glance toward the manager, but received no hoped-for sign.
+
+He wanted to be taken out. He was afraid.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+
+ THE LEADING RUN
+
+
+Brennan’s reason for not doing at once the thing which was inevitable
+was not quite apparent. He had an obstinate streak in his make-up,
+and no doubt it went very much against the grain to see the man he
+had depended on and boasted about fall down so disastrously, though
+ordinarily that would have made no difference.
+
+At any rate, he held his hand, and it cost him another run. Rufe Hyland
+landed on the second ball pitched, and sent out a long fly to right
+field. The moment Johnny Burns caught the ball Daly darted for the
+plate.
+
+There was a momentary lull in the excitement as Burns made a great
+throw to Buck Fargo. Then the racket broke loose again as Daly slid
+over the dish in the nick of time; for Fargo had made a fruitless sweep
+of the hand to tag him.
+
+With the score tied and Locke on third, the visiting fans yelled
+without interruption as Pink Dalton came to the plate. Fargo again
+tried to brace Elgin up, but with poor success; and it was no credit
+to the pitcher that Red Pollock scooped up a red-hot grounder and lined
+it, sizzling, to the sack in time to end the inning and prevent further
+scoring.
+
+A storm of hoots and catcalls greeted Elgin as he walked slowly and
+dejectedly toward the bench. Brennan said nothing, but the look he cast
+at the twirler was more expressive than many spoken words could have
+been. Elgin, his face as flaming now as it had been pale, hurried past
+him, and slunk thankfully to the obscurity of the bench.
+
+When Lefty took his place on the slab, a roar of applause greeted him.
+He shot a glance at that upper box, and was even further heartened
+by the wave he received in return. His form was so perfect, and the
+support of his backers so full of new life and snap, that he retired
+the Hornets without letting a man reach second.
+
+A lull followed. Cy Russell, in splendid shape and aching to retrieve
+the blunders made by his predecessor, easily disposed of the batters
+who faced him during the eighth and ninth innings.
+
+Lefty was equally fortunate; and the tenth inning opened with the
+spectators on tiptoe with excitement, and some of them so hoarse they
+could scarcely speak above a whisper.
+
+Again it was Eddie Lewis who came up first, and the sympathizers with
+the Blue Stockings seemed to take it as a good omen. All around the
+field the visiting rooters were waving hats and yelling like demons.
+Russell put the first ball squarely over for a strike, and followed
+it with another. Lewis cracked the third one to left field for a
+two-bagger.
+
+With a concerted yell, every fan leaped to his feet. When Lewis made
+second safely they seemed to forget to sit down, so great was their
+excitement.
+
+“Lay down a bunt, Dirk,” Kennedy said quietly, as Nelson came up.
+
+The catcher obeyed the injunction to the letter. He bunted the ball
+within two yards of the plate just as Lewis started for third. Russell
+was on the alert and ready, and, rushing swiftly toward the horsehide,
+he snatched it up and shot it with the speed of a bullet into Harris’
+hands. Lewis beat the throw, however, and was called safe, while Nelson
+reached first without difficulty.
+
+“Here’s the run! Here’s the game!” came from the crowd as Jack Daly
+walked coolly to the plate. “Lewis will score!”
+
+A safe hit or a long fly meant victory, if Locke continued his fine
+work and shut out the home team in the last half of the inning. Lefty,
+swinging two bats to make one seem lighter when he should hit, felt his
+heart thudding like a trip-hammer.
+
+On all sides men were waving their arms wildly and making a tremendous
+tumult. If only Daly could do it! Locke followed Daly, and he wondered
+vaguely whether he could make good if the third baseman failed.
+
+Russell’s first ball went wide of the plate. Another one came across
+waist high, and Daly fell on it with all his might. There was a twist
+on the sphere, however, and, instead of a smashing line drive, a short
+fly to right field resulted.
+
+Burns called out that he would take it, and Russell raced behind Fargo
+to back up a throw to the plate. Burns made the catch easily, and was
+ready to throw Lewis out if he attempted to score.
+
+The Blue Stockings’ fielder was taking no chances, however. He stuck to
+third, waiting for something safer to take him home.
+
+The witnesses who favored the Hornets applauded the catch, while the
+opposition strained their lungs rooting for Locke.
+
+The latter felt a queer tightening of his throat as he toed the line.
+Again the opportunity had come for him to show what he could do.
+
+Russell had never been cooler or less flurried. He worked skillfully
+until two strikes and as many balls had been called. The fear came to
+Lefty that he was going to whiff, and he set his teeth, watching the
+pitcher like a hawk.
+
+Russell took his time. As the sphere left his fingers, Locke suddenly
+remembered a certain fast curve he had seen the Hornet man working up
+down in Texas, but which he had not used thus far in this game. The
+conviction flashed into his mind that it was being used now, and in an
+instant he had taken a single step forward, bringing his bat around
+with a powerful swing as he did so.
+
+The connection was perfect, and the ball went curving out toward the
+left wing of the grandstand, looking for a second or two like a home
+run. It was too high for that, however, and fell in front of the stand
+a couple of yards inside the foul line.
+
+The fielder got under it and smothered it effectually, making a long,
+powerful throw to the plate, toward which Lewis had sprinted the
+instant the catch was made. The ball went wide, however, and Lewis slid
+across the rubber in safety with the leading run.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLV
+
+ LEFTY’S TRIUMPH
+
+
+Again the crowd cheered and yelled like lunatics, shouting Locke’s name
+over and over as he walked toward the bench. His teammates surrounded
+him, patting him on the back and uttering brief, friendly words of
+praise. He was one of them now. He had won his spurs and fairly earned
+the right to their esteem.
+
+But the game was not over. Russell fanned the next batter with swift
+precision, and the Blue Stockings took the field. Their supporters in
+the stands urged the southpaw, in frantic terms, to “Hold ’em!”
+
+The Hornets’ sympathizers were equally vehement in their entreaties
+to the home team to “Get in there and smash it out!” The uproar was
+deafening. It subsided only when Ed Nolan walked up and squared himself
+at the plate. There were a few last shouts of encouragement, and then
+silence, tense and absolute, fell upon the vast inclosure.
+
+Lefty knew that the Hornets’ fielder was a man to fear. He could hit
+almost any kind of ball with ease. In fact, the southpaw, in spite of
+his having played so many practice games against the fellow, had never
+yet fathomed his hitting weakness. He wished that almost any other man
+in the batting list could have been the one to face him now, but there
+was no use pining for the impossible, so he proceeded to send over a
+tempting feeler.
+
+But Nolan declined to be fooled. He disdained the first two balls, and
+the crowd began to shout for a free pass.
+
+Then Lefty whipped over a good one, following it with a whizzer with
+a perplexing jump just before it reached the pan. But the batter was
+there with the goods, and, though he did not strike the horsehide quite
+squarely, he lashed it out between second and short.
+
+Lewis lunged for it, and his fingers almost touched the sphere, but not
+quite. Nolan rounded first to the accompaniment of much joyful clamor.
+
+And now came Fargo, the man who knew Locke’s methods better than any
+other on the team. The southpaw worked him with the utmost care,
+pitching as he had never pitched before; and then, just as he fancied
+he had the backstop in a hole, Buck suddenly and unexpectedly bunted,
+sending the ball rolling slowly toward first.
+
+Lefty got the sphere, but secured it in bad position to throw. Without
+attempting to straighten up, he jerked it past Fargo, who was making
+the final long strides for the sack.
+
+Grant should have caught it, for the throw was good. Perhaps he was
+too confident. Perhaps there was no excuse at all, for even Big League
+players make errors of that sort now and then. At all events, he
+dropped the ball. The spectators fairly made the stands shake with
+their raucous joy.
+
+“Hit it out!” they shrieked. “Smash it on the nose! Here’s where we get
+two runs and the game!”
+
+Pollock did his best, but only succeeded in sending up a high fly into
+short center which the fielder secured with ease. Then Johnny Burns
+hurried up, eager to help things along, and confident that he could do
+it.
+
+Lefty felt that the man was positively itching to hit. He could read
+it in the fellow’s face and manner, and he determined to play upon
+the batter’s eagerness. A high drop across Burns’ shoulder deceived
+him, but did not shake his confidence. It was followed by another high
+ball, which was, however, an inshoot, and again the Hornet fielder
+missed.
+
+“Hit it, Johnny!” pleaded the local fans. “Don’t let him fool you.
+Smash it out.”
+
+“Fan him!” shrieked the Blue Stockings’ supporters wildly, their hopes
+beginning to rise again. “Fan him, Lefty! You’ve got to do it.”
+
+Lefty hesitated a second, his face cool and impenetrable, the muscles
+of his jaw sharply defined. He felt that the batter would expect him to
+try a coaxer; for, with no balls called, most pitchers would feel that
+they could afford to waste one or two.
+
+He glanced round, his foot on the slab. When he turned back, he pitched
+without the slightest preliminary swing, sending over a high, straight,
+speedy ball. It had been his object to catch Burns unprepared, and he
+succeeded. The batter struck a second too late, and the ball spanked
+into Nelson’s glove.
+
+“Out!” called the umpire.
+
+But the word was not heard because of the deafening roar which rose
+from the delighted visitors.
+
+Lefty was scarcely conscious of the turmoil. It sounded faint and
+far away, like the beating of breakers on a rocky coast, and mingled
+insensibly with the words he was saying over and over to himself:
+
+“One more! Only one more! I must get him――I’ve got to!”
+
+He dared not risk a glance at that upper box. The moment was too
+tense. And yet in his mind he pictured the girl leaning breathlessly
+over the railing, her tiny gloved hands clasped rigidly together, her
+face a little pale, her violet eyes wide open and almost black with
+excitement. She must not be disappointed――she should not!
+
+How Sandy Rollins missed the first ball he reached for was something he
+never understood. When he struck, he felt absolutely certain that he
+would meet it full upon the trademark. His failure brought a ludicrous
+expression of surprise to his face.
+
+The Blue Stockings’ rooters yelled madly. Most of them were on their
+feet now, staring down into the diamond. The opposing fans, beginning
+to lose hope, divided their efforts between hurling caustic comments at
+the batter and trying to break the pitcher up.
+
+In this latter attempt they were unsuccessful. Locke paid absolutely
+no attention to them. It is doubtful whether he was conscious of their
+presence. He was not faltering now. He was wasting no time, yet he did
+not hurry. He put over an erratic curve that fooled Rollins even more
+than had the first one. Indeed, the ball seemed actually to dodge the
+bat as the Hornets’ baseman slashed at it.
+
+Another roar went up which drowned the umpire’s voice. Nolan, quivering
+with eagerness, held himself ready to run, working off third. Lefty
+drove him back.
+
+A hush settled upon the field. It almost seemed as if each little human
+atom of the thousands which overflowed the wide sweep of stand and
+bleacher had ceased to breathe. Even the coachers were silent for the
+instant――and Locke pitched.
+
+Rollins’ judgment told him that the ball would cut a corner when it
+broke. He was not mistaken. It came over; but, instead of crossing the
+outside corner, as he expected, it took such a sharp, amazing shoot
+over the inside that the batter missed cleanly.
+
+“Out!” shouted the umpire, flinging up one hand.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+
+ HOW IT ALL HAPPENED
+
+
+Cheer after cheer went up from the throng of visiting fans. Hats and
+canes and newspapers were thrown into the air with careless abandon.
+Men brought their fists down on shoulders and heads of persons they
+had never seen before; and these persons merely pushed out the tops of
+crushed derbies, and grinned.
+
+Down from the stands they poured like a cataract, yelling Locke’s name.
+They caught and surrounded him before he could flee to the shelter of
+the clubhouse.
+
+Jack Stillman was one of the first to reach the field. Though he
+longed to hurry over to Lefty and shake his friend’s hand, there was
+something more important which must be done first. He headed straight
+for Brennan, who, with gloomy countenance, was about to leave the field.
+
+“Wait a second, Jim,” the reporter called swiftly. “I’ve got something
+to tell you. You fired Lefty Locke because you thought he was a
+quitter,” he went on when they came together.
+
+“You needn’t rub it in,” snapped the sorely tried manager. “If that’s
+all you’ve got to say――”
+
+“It isn’t,” returned Stillman quickly. “Locke said he never wrote that
+fake telegram which called him away from Ashland the day of the game
+he was to pitch. He told the truth. It was sent by one of his own
+teammates, who hated him and wanted to put him in bad.”
+
+“What?” exploded the stocky manager. “I don’t believe it!”
+
+The reporter pulled a folded paper from his pocket and handed it to
+Brennan. “There’s the proof,” he said quietly.
+
+The manager jerked it open and cast his eyes hurriedly down the sheet.
+Wrath clouded his face.
+
+“Elgin!” he growled throwing back his head. “Where is he? Just let me――
+Hey, you Elgin! Come here!”
+
+His voice and manner had drawn several curious players near, among them
+Buck Fargo. The disgruntled pitcher, hearing his name uttered in that
+tone, came reluctantly over, expecting a call-down for his work on the
+slab. What followed was totally unexpected.
+
+“You can pack!” Brennan snapped, eying the fellow with a look of
+scathing contempt. “I’m going to send you down to the ‘Lobsters.’ They
+want a pitcher, and they can have you――for keeps, if I can’t sell you.”
+The Lobsters were a much scoffed-at minor league club.
+
+Elgin’s jaw dropped and his face flamed scarlet. “You’re going to send
+me down to the――the Lobsters?” he stammered.
+
+“I am. I’ve found out the dirty trick you played on Locke in Ashland,
+and I wouldn’t have a scoundrel like you on my team if you was the best
+pitcher in the country――which you ain’t, by a long shot.”
+
+For an instant the pitcher stood staring at him, an indescribable
+expression on his face. He cast a single swift glance at the players
+standing around. Then, without a word, he turned and walked hastily
+away through the gathering crowd.
+
+“Good riddance!” growled Brennan.
+
+He stood chewing meditatively on the stub of an unlighted cigar. After
+a moment he shrugged his shoulders and pushed his way through the crowd
+to where Lefty and a few of the Blue Stockings were hemmed in by the
+throng.
+
+“You did a fine job, kid,” he said gruffly, thrusting out a square,
+stubby hand. “Shake!”
+
+Without hesitation Lefty gripped his fingers. Brennan’s treatment
+had caused him some bitter hours, but this was no time to harbor
+resentment. The short manager turned to Kennedy, his mouth twisted in a
+wry smile.
+
+“You can kick me good and hard, Ken,” he said. “I sure fell flat on
+this deal.” His eyes twinkled, and the smile broadened to a grin. “I
+sort of think this boy belongs to me. I had the first rights to him,
+and I reckon I’ll pull him back now.”
+
+“Not if I know it!” laughed Kennedy. “You were thick enough to release
+him unconditionally. He belongs to me now, and you bet he’s going to
+stay.”
+
+But old Jack could not foresee the approaching wave of change that
+was to leave him stranded as a baseball manager. Nor was Lefty Locke,
+in spite of the splendid beginning he had made, to find it all fair
+sailing in the Big League. With Kennedy retired and Lefty missing,
+following his suspension by the new manager, the Blue Stockings were
+destined to have their troubles in the fight for the pennant. How old
+Jack and the young southpaw star returned to the field of battle barely
+in time to save the day is dramatically told in “Lefty o’ the Blue
+Stockings,” the third volume of The Big League Series.
+
+Brennan chuckled a little over Kennedy’s retort, and then turned to
+Lefty, his face suddenly serious.
+
+“I’ve found out about that fake telegram,” he said, in a low tone.
+“Jack Stillman ferreted out the truth, and the Hornets won’t have any
+further use for Elgin.”
+
+He walked away without waiting for a reply, leaving Lefty almost
+bewildered at the events which were coming so thick and fast. In the
+midst of everything, however, he kept thinking of Janet and wondering
+whether there was any possible chance of her coming down upon the field.
+
+The question was swiftly answered by the appearance of Jack Stillman,
+elbowing his way through the crowd.
+
+“Some pitching for a starter in the Big League, old man,” he laughed,
+his face glowing; “you were pretty fair! I can’t keep you now, though;
+there’s somebody over by the stand who wants a word with you. See you
+in the clubhouse, later.”
+
+Taking his friend by the arm, he piloted him through the throng, now
+beginning to stream toward the gates, to a point from which he could
+see the girl he had been thinking about so much. She stood near one
+of the lower boxes of the center stand, a slim, graceful figure in a
+blue tailor-made gown. At a little distance her friends were gathered,
+watching the animated scene interestedly.
+
+Janet herself was talking earnestly to Buck Fargo, but her eyes were
+quick to spy out Lefty as he approached. The glad smile she gave him
+was something to be treasured long in his memory.
+
+“Lefty!” she exclaimed, in a low voice, which vibrated with emotion.
+She took a quick step forward; their hands met. “I can’t tell you how
+glad and proud I am――and sorry.”
+
+The man held her hands for an instant. His face was puzzled.
+
+“Sorry?” he repeated. “What have I done to make you sorry?”
+
+Her lovely eyes were fixed earnestly on his. Fargo had slipped away.
+
+“Nothing,” she returned hastily. “What you have done is
+splendid――wonderful! It’s what I did that makes me sorry. Mr. Fargo has
+just told me everything, and I hate myself when I think how I――liked
+that dreadful Mr. Elgin――and tried to make you friends, and――and――”
+
+She stopped abruptly and bit her lip. Lefty looked around. Never before
+had he detested a crowd with such intensity. His eyes flashed back
+to hers, and something in their expression brought a vivid rush of
+crimson flaming to her face.
+
+“You mustn’t think about it,” he urged softly. “You weren’t to blame,
+and, anyway, it’s all over now. Everything’s turned out right. Please
+forget it.”
+
+His fingers tightened about hers. Her lids drooped. They had forgotten
+the crowd pouring out of the field. The clatter and tramp in the
+swiftly thinning stands, the last few cheers from the departing
+rooters, fell upon deaf ears. In that single moment they were conscious
+of nothing else in the whole wide world but just each other.
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes:
+
+ ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
+
+ ――Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
+
+ ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
+
+ ――Inconsistent hyphenation and compound words were made
+ consistent only when a predominant form was found.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75250 ***
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+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75250 ***</div>
+
+
+<figure class="figcenter x-ebookmaker-drop" id="cover_sm">
+ <img src="images/cover_sm.jpg" alt="book cover" title="book cover">
+</figure>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="noi halftitle">LEFTY O’ THE BIG LEAGUE</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<figure class="figcenter" id="i_frontis">
+ <img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" title="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_303">HE WAS SAYING TO HIMSELF: “ONE MORE! ONLY ONE MORE!
+I MUST GET HIM—I’VE GOT TO!”</a></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1>LEFTY<br>
+O’ THE BIG LEAGUE</h1>
+
+<p class="noic">BY</p>
+
+<p class="noi author">BURT L. STANDISH</p>
+
+<p class="noi works">Author of “Lefty o’ the Bush,” “Lefty o’ the Blue<br>
+Stockings,” “Lefty o’ the Training Camp.”</p>
+
+<p class="p4 noic"><i>ILLUSTRATED</i></p>
+
+<p class="p6 noic"><span class="adauthor">GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</span><br>
+PUBLISHERS<span class="sp2em">&#160;</span>NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="noic"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1914, by</span><br>
+GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class="smcap">Inc.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="r20">
+
+<p class="noic"><i>All Rights Reserved</i></p>
+
+<p class="p6 noic"><i>Printed in the United States of America</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<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">&#160;</th>
+ <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">I</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">Getting in Bad</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">11</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">II</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">A Call-down from the Manager</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">17</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">III</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">The Riot at the Theater</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">IV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">One Against Scores</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">31</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">V</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">Friendly Buck Fargo</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">36</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">VI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">Who Was to Blame?</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">42</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">VII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">Without Gratitude</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">48</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">VIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">The Man Who Knew</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">56</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">IX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">Something Sub-Rosa</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">63</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">X</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">“When the Cat’s Away”</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">70</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">All In</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">77</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">Lefty’s Failure</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">82</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">The Discharged Waiter</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">89</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">Bert Elgin’s Luck</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">97</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">The Reason Why</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">103</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">The Purloined Letter</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">108</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XVII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">Guile</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">114</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XVIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">The Man in the Corridor</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">120</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XIX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">Not Quite Proven</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">125</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">Janet Harting Wonders</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">131</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">The Yellow Streak</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">139</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">Lefty’s Chance Comes</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">147</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">There’s Many a Slip</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">152</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">The Unexpected</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">158</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">The Struggle</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">167</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">Gaining Ground</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">174</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXVII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">A Chance to Make Good</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">181</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXVIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">A Bad Beginning</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">186</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXIX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">Taking a Brace</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">193</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">The Tricky Twirler</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">198</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">Once Too Often</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">206</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">The Spiking of Schaeffer</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">213</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">The Telegram</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">219</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">Nothing Else Possible</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">225</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">For Want of a Lie</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">231</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">Dropped Out of Sight</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">240</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXVII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">Opening the Season</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">245</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXVIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">The Two Managers</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">250</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXIX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">The Meeting in the Grandstand</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">254</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XL</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">The Surprise</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">263</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">The Beginning of the Game</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">270</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">The Truth at Last</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">279</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">The Lucky Seventh</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">285</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">The Leading Run</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">294</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">Lefty’s Triumph</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">299</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">How It All Happened</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">305</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="noi title" id="LEFTY">LEFTY O’ THE BIG LEAGUE</p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br>
+<small>GETTING IN BAD</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Say, fellows!” sang out Red Pollock, the
+snappy little shortstop of the famous
+Hornets. “Look who’s here!”
+There was a general turning of heads and craning
+of necks on the part of three or four players
+waiting their chance to wield the willow in batting
+practice.</p>
+
+<p>“Another Yannigan,” groaned Cy Russell, star
+pitcher of the organization. “The woods is full
+of ’em.”</p>
+
+<p>“He don’t look much to me, neither,” stated big
+Buck Fargo critically. “Say, Jim, who is it, an’
+where’d you root it out?”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan, the short, stocky, belligerent-looking
+manager of the Big League team, did not answer.
+With his bushy eyebrows drawn down in a frown
+over his deep-set eyes, he was staring at the young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
+fellow threading his way through the groups of
+players scattered about the field at all kinds of
+training work. The stranger wore a soiled and
+faded gray uniform, upon the shirt of which was
+sewn a letter K, and dangled a worn leather glove
+by one finger. His cap, pushed back on a mane
+of heavy, dark-brown hair, revealed a clean-cut,
+pleasant face, dominated by a pair of keen brown
+eyes, a firm chin, and sensitive mouth.</p>
+
+<p>As he took in these details Brennan’s scowl
+deepened and his bulldog chin protruded dangerously.
+Catching sight of his face, Pollock
+grinned and nudged the man nearest him. “Look
+at the old man,” he whispered. “Something
+doing.”</p>
+
+<p>The stranger came on without a pause, and, a
+moment or two later, stopped before the manager.
+His lips were pressed tightly together, but otherwise
+his face was perfectly composed. “I’ve
+come to report, sir,” he said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The manager’s eyes narrowed. Several things
+had been fretting him all morning, and his temper
+was not even at its uncertain best. “Indeed!”
+he sneered. “And who are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Locke—Lefty Locke.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never heard the name before,” retorted Brennan
+shortly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span></p>
+
+<p>For an instant the newcomer seemed taken
+aback. A faint touch of color came into his
+cheeks, and he looked at the manager as if wondering
+whether he could possibly be in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>“I—thought—Mr. Toler had written you,” he
+stammered. “He—said he was going to.”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan’s eyes flashed. “Well, he didn’t,” he
+snapped. “Where’d you come from? What’s
+your record?”</p>
+
+<p>“I pitched last season with the Kingsbridge
+team of the Northern League,” Locke said briefly.</p>
+
+<p>“A twirler!” exclaimed the manager. “Well,
+I’ll be—” He stopped abruptly, gulped once or
+twice, and then asked, in an ominously quiet
+voice: “What did you do season before last?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing. It was my first year in professional
+baseball.”</p>
+
+<p>“What!” Brennan’s face turned purple, and
+his last shreds of self-restraint vanished. “You
+pitched one season, an’ got the gall to expect a
+job with the Hornets! You expect me to believe
+that Ed Toler, the best scout I’ve got, picked you
+up without saying a word to me about it—when
+we’re overrun with pitchers, at that. I don’t
+want you. Training was begun ten days ago, an’
+I got enough men. You can hike back to the
+bush, where you come from. I wasn’t born yesterday,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
+an’ you can’t put one over me like this.
+Get that?”</p>
+
+<p>As he listened to the tirade, the color flamed
+into Locke’s face, and his grip on the leather glove
+tightened. Then, from the group of players, who
+had been interested spectators of the interview,
+came a smothered laugh, which seemed to act like
+a tonic. As he heard it, Locke’s eyes narrowed
+and his face hardened.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t want me?” he repeated, in a steady
+voice. “You’re willing to release me from the
+contract I made with Toler?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s what I said,” growled Brennan.</p>
+
+<p>“Then I’m free to accept any other offer?”</p>
+
+<p>Something in his tone made the manager prick
+up his ears, all his professional instincts aroused.
+It is one thing to fire a man who isn’t wanted, but
+quite another to let him go when another club
+is after him. “Offer!” he sneered, with deliberate
+intent. “I s’pose the Tigers an’ the Blue
+Stockings are fair tearing each other’s eyes out
+as to which’ll have you.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s lips tightened at the man’s tone. “You
+guessed right, in a way,” he retorted. “Twenty-four
+hours after I pledged with Toler, I had an
+offer from the Blue Stockings of a thousand
+dollars more than your scout promised me.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
+
+<p>The silence which followed this statement was
+eloquent. Some one in the little group near by
+whistled incredulously. Brennan’s eyes were
+fixed intently on the cub pitcher’s face, as if he
+were trying to make out whether this was the
+truth or a magnificent bluff. Accustomed as he
+was to judging men, he was forced to admit that
+the youngster did not look like a liar.</p>
+
+<p>“And how much was that?” he demanded abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-five hundred.” Already Lefty was
+sorry for his impulsive outburst. In a flash he
+realized that if he had kept his mouth shut he
+would have been free in a moment to accept the
+better offer.</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” grunted Brennan thoughtfully. If
+Doyle, of the Blue Stockings—the Hornets’ most
+bitter rivals—wanted this kid as bad as that, there
+must be something in him, and it would never do
+to let him go. Much as he hated backing water,
+the manager was too shrewd a man to allow personal
+feelings to influence his professional judgment.
+He scowled deeply, bit his lips, and then
+snapped sourly:</p>
+
+<p>“Well, seeing as you’re here, you might as well
+make yourself useful. Trot out there and take
+that fellow’s place; I can use him somewhere else.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
+Toss a few straight, easy ones over the plate.
+Stir your stumps now,” he went on, turning
+fiercely on the astonished group near by. “You
+boys get busy. We’ve wasted too much time.
+We’ll stop this general shillalah swinging, and
+take the field in regular positions. Every one of
+you run your hits out. You need the exercise.”</p>
+
+<p>Without a word, Lefty turned, and made his
+way toward the cub pitcher, who had been shuffling
+around near the slab waiting for the altercation
+to end. He had been extremely foolish not to
+keep his face shut, but there was nothing to be
+gained by repining over the past.</p>
+
+<p>An instant later, as his eyes met those of the
+man he was replacing, he started slightly, and a
+look of dazed surprise flashed into his face. It
+vanished swiftly, but as he reached the fellow his
+lips were compressed, his eyes hard and cold.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, Elgin,” he said stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>The other, his face black as a thunder cloud,
+growled out an unintelligible monosyllable, thrust
+the ball into Locke’s hand, and walked hurriedly
+away, leaving the latter to stare after him with
+an expression which told, as well as spoken words
+could have done, how unpleasant and distasteful
+the encounter was to him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br>
+<small>A CALL-DOWN FROM THE MANAGER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The meeting had so surprised and startled
+Lefty that he stood there for a moment
+or two, ball in hand, watching Elgin join
+the manager and start with him toward another
+part of the field. He was aroused abruptly by a
+drawling, sarcastic voice from the plate:</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t hurry yourself, bub; any time to-day
+will do.”</p>
+
+<p>It was burly Buck Fargo, the prize backstop,
+who stood leaning indolently on his bat, watching
+Locke with mocking eyes. Lefty recognized him
+instantly from the many published pictures he
+had seen, and, berating himself inwardly for having
+given the fellow a chance to criticise, he
+swiftly toed the pitcher’s plate and sent the ball
+over.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, it went wide. The cub catcher let
+out a stream of sarcastic language as he stretched
+himself in vain for it. A joyful snicker arose
+from the waiting players, and Fargo grinned aggravatingly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Try again, bub,” the latter invited pleasantly.
+“Jest a mite nearer this time, say a couple
+of feet. This here stick’s only regulation length,
+and I ain’t built like a gorilla.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty bit his lips and made no response. A
+small boy retrieved the ball, and the irate catcher
+whipped it out with decidedly unnecessary force.
+With gritted teeth, Locke caught it, determined
+that there would be no more exhibitions like that.
+He did not know what was the matter with him.
+To be sure, he had done very little pitching for
+a long time, but he should be able to find the plate
+better than this.</p>
+
+<p>The second effort was not much of an improvement,
+and a howl of derision greeted it; for there
+is nothing a crowd of old baseball men enjoy more
+than having fun with a green cub.</p>
+
+<p>The sound had a curious effect upon Lefty.
+Before the echoes of that jeering chorus died away
+he had regained his grip. He realized that they
+were doing their best to rattle him and cause him
+to make an exhibition of himself, and his jaw
+squared resolutely.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll fool ’em!” he muttered. “I’ll show him
+something.”</p>
+
+<p>He caught the ball easily, his eyes fixed on
+Fargo’s grinning face. The big catcher stood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
+negligently swinging his bat, and when he saw
+the sphere coming apparently straight toward
+him with speed, he dodged back precipitously,
+only to behold it shoot gracefully in and cut a
+corner of the plate.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, well, well!” he exclaimed. “Accidents
+will happen. You’ve really got a curve, have you?
+Let’s have another one like that, if you can do
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty could and did, and the batter sent the
+horsehide soaring over the fence. Obedient to
+instructions, he tossed aside his bat, and began
+trotting leisurely around the bases. Halfway
+between first and second he paused for a moment.
+“You’ll learn, bub,” he chuckled. “Some time
+next fall mebbe we’ll make a pitcher out of you.”
+Then he resumed his placid way about the diamond,
+while a new ball was produced, and Locke
+faced the second batter.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty did not try any more curves, for he had
+suddenly realized that this was batting practice,
+not an exhibition of pitching. He continued to
+find the plate with a fair degree of accuracy,
+however, and one after another the three other
+players smashed out the sphere with joyous enthusiasm,
+forgetting in the delight of batting to
+continue their baiting of the new pitcher.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span></p>
+
+<p>Not so Buck Fargo. He enjoyed batting quite
+as much, as his companions, but he also dearly
+loved to get a cub’s goat.</p>
+
+<p>“Where’s your curves, bub?” he taunted, as he
+took up his bat for the second time. “Can’t you
+give us something interesting, or was they accidents,
+like I thought?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty smiled faintly. He did not intend to give
+Fargo the satisfaction of seeing that his words
+made any impression whatever. In spite of his
+determination, however, as he flung his arm forward,
+unconsciously he gave it a little twist which,
+made the horsehide—seemingly wide at first—cut
+a corner of the plate in an elusive curve. The
+batter hit it glancingly, and popped up a little fly
+which Locke smothered without moving more than
+a step or two from his position.</p>
+
+<p>“Not bad for the bush,” chuckled Fargo, quite
+undisturbed. “Saved me the trouble of stretching
+my legs, anyhow. Come ahead, Cy, and see
+what you can do with the boy wonder from Squedunk.”
+He shot a swift glance out of the corner
+of his eye toward a distant part of the field, and
+went on in exactly the same tone, with scarcely a
+perceptible break: “He’s got a baby curve or
+two that might be fair if he could control ’em.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was possessed by an irresistible impulse<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
+to see what he could do with the mighty pitcher,
+Cy Russell. He knew perfectly well that the discomfiture
+of one of their number might get the
+whole bunch down on him, but he was a very
+human individual, with a spice of obstinacy in
+his make-up. Moreover, he had failed to catch
+that quick glance of Fargo’s across the field, and
+so was quite unsuspecting.</p>
+
+<p>As Russell faced him, Locke deliberately sent
+over a drop which fooled the batter completely.
+A slow floater was equally successful, and a swift,
+straight one, cutting the center of the pan, completed
+the discomfiture of the notoriously poorest
+hitter in the organization.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo jeered out something about luck and
+“goose eggs,” and hustled the next man to the
+plate. Lefty, throwing prudence and common
+sense to the winds, resolved to give them what
+they clamored for if it was in his power. He
+fooled the batter into swinging at a clever bender,
+and then, oblivious to the sudden cessation of
+Fargo’s taunting voice, was just winding up to
+pitch again when a hand suddenly gripped his
+wrist, and a harsh voice sounded in his ear:</p>
+
+<p>“What the deuce do you think you’re doing,
+Locke?”</p>
+
+<p>Brought to earth, Lefty swung around, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
+stared for an instant, with mantling cheeks, at
+Jim Brennan’s angry face.</p>
+
+<p>“Gimme that ball!” rasped the manager.
+Locke handed it over without a word. “I s’pose
+you think you’re mighty smart showin’ off your
+cute tricks,” the older man went on, in a cold,
+biting tone; “but that’s where you fall down—hard.
+This is batting practice, not a Fourth of
+July celebration. When I want any fireworks I’ll
+let you know. Get that? Well, see you remember
+it. Another stage play like this will be your
+finish. All around the park, boys, and then back
+to dinner.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned from Lefty with an abruptness which
+made it impossible for the cub pitcher to say a
+word in his own defense, and perhaps it was just
+as well. To tell the truth, there was nothing to
+be said. Locke realized perfectly that he was
+totally in the wrong. A moment later, as he
+caught a glimpse of Buck Fargo’s grinning face,
+it flashed over him that the whole thing was a
+put-up job to get him a call. The big catcher
+could not have failed to see Brennan coming long
+before the manager got within hearing distance,
+yet he had kept up his taunts to the last minute in
+order that Locke might be taken by surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Looks like my luck had deserted me,” Lefty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
+thought, as he fell into the line of men trotting
+briskly around the field just inside the high board
+fence. “Haven’t been here an hour before I get
+a call from the manager and run into Bert Elgin.”</p>
+
+<p>At the thought of the latter’s presence in the
+squad, he frowned deeply. The call-down was
+swiftly forgotten, but this other annoyance was
+likely to be much more lasting and trouble-breeding
+in its results.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br>
+<small>THE RIOT AT THE THEATER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“A rah, rah boy, is he?” sneered a voice
+from the group not far away. “I see
+his finish.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty knew they were talking about him. He
+had been aware of the fact for five minutes or so,
+but this was the first remark which had reached
+his ears in its entirety. Sitting in a corner of the
+Hatchford House lobby, he turned his head slightly
+and met the belligerent glance of a burly, dark-browed,
+full-lipped fellow of twenty-six or seven,
+who was lounging against a pillar a little way off.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment their eyes clashed, and then
+Hagin—Lefty had heard him so called, and recognized
+the name as that of the left fielder on the
+regulars—laughed disagreeably and said something
+to the man next him, who glanced up, stared,
+and turned away with just the same sort of laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes dropped to the newspaper he held
+before him. In the scant nine hours since his
+appearance on the field that morning, the wide difference
+between a bush-league team and an organization<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
+like the Hornets had been forced upon him
+at every turn. In his joy and astonishment at the
+unexpected offer from Brennan’s scout, to say
+nothing of the better one which followed it so
+closely, he had given little thought to what his reception
+would be by the other players.</p>
+
+<p>He was far too sensible, of course, to expect
+anything like an open-armed welcome, but he had
+not quite counted on the cold-shouldered indifference
+which was meted out to him from every
+quarter.</p>
+
+<p>The other fellows were mostly friendly enough
+among themselves. On the field, in the hotel dining
+room, and now in the lobby, they gathered
+in little groups, laughing, joking, chaffing each
+other in a way which, in no small degree, emphasized
+the newcomer’s loneliness and isolation.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty had tried several times during the day to
+scrape acquaintance with some fellow who looked
+pleasant and friendly enough, for he was a chap
+who enjoyed the companionship of his fellow men,
+and exactly the sort of joshing give-and-take
+which is inevitable when a crowd of like-minded
+individuals get together. His mild little efforts
+had been met with such brusque, chilling indifference,
+however, that he speedily gave it up.</p>
+
+<p>“I seem to have gotten in wrong from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
+start,” he reflected, as he sat with his eyes fixed
+on the paper, though he had read scarcely a
+word. “Brennan’s sore as a crab because he had
+to back water before his own men. I wish to
+thunder he hadn’t! I’d be better off. Then there
+was that fool exhibition of mine on the field. I
+suppose they all think I’m swelled up about my
+pitching, and was showing off. And now they’ve
+found out I’m a college man. I wonder how
+they got wise to that. I didn’t mean any one
+should know, if I could help it; some professionals
+seem to have such a deep dislike for a fellow who’s
+been through college. I wonder if Elgin could
+have dropped a hint.”</p>
+
+<p>In reality Lefty had quite missed the most important
+reason of all. Other things may have
+influenced the men in some small degree, but
+the simple fact of his belated arrival at the training
+quarters accounted for more than anything
+else.</p>
+
+<p>Ten days had been ample for the cubs, or new
+recruits, to become acquainted. They had formed
+their little cliques, split up into their different
+factions. They were sufficient unto themselves.
+It was natural for them to treat a new arrival
+with jealous coldness, for every additional
+candidate only decreased the chances of the others<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
+to make good. As for the old men—the regulars
+of this especial team—they had small use for a
+youngster until he showed himself made of the
+right stuff.</p>
+
+<p>At length, tired of sitting alone, Lefty arose
+and sallied forth to take a casual inspection of
+the Texas town. Ashland was a place of some
+size, and decidedly up to date. A number of
+factories and various oil refineries gave employment
+to several thousand workmen, the majority
+of whom—it seemed to Lefty—were thronging the
+brightly lighted streets, blocking the corners,
+or crowding into the many moving-picture or
+vaudeville shows which lined the main thoroughfares.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty did not find this solitary inspection of the
+town very exciting, and, after he had traversed a
+few of the principal streets, he decided that he
+had had enough. A glance at his watch told him
+that it was only a quarter to eight. The evening
+seemed to be dragging along with infinite slowness.
+He might return to the hotel and go to bed,
+of course, but he wasn’t in the least sleepy, and
+somehow he had a feeling that by doing such a
+thing he would be giving in. Finally the glaring
+lights of a combination moving-picture and vaudeville
+show across the street gave him an idea.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
+Crossing hastily, he bought a ticket and pushed
+into the darkened auditorium.</p>
+
+<p>The place was jammed to the doors with a rather
+boisterous crowd, made up almost entirely of men.
+Lefty could see no vacant seat, and so he took his
+place against the wall back of the last row, from
+which position he watched the progress of the
+pictured drama with a certain amount of interest.
+There was no questioning the unusual excellence of
+the films.</p>
+
+<p>Two of them were rolled off before the stage
+lights went up and the curtain lifted upon the
+Montmorency Sisters, vocalists. Lefty yawned,
+and decided to get out. The place was hot and
+stuffy, and he was on the point of crowding past
+the later arrivals who filled the space near him,
+when, suddenly catching sight of two men sitting
+three rows away, he changed his mind.</p>
+
+<p>One of them was a total stranger. Lefty did
+not remember ever having seen him before. The
+other was Bert Elgin, and, as his eyes took in the
+sharp profile, with the familiar, sneering uplift at
+the corner of the lips, Locke’s face darkened. The
+face had changed little since he had last seen it.
+An added line or two showed about the mouth,
+perhaps, and there was, no doubt, a certain maturity
+which years alone can bring. In all essential<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
+features, however, it was unaltered, and
+the sight of it brought a rush of vivid recollection
+into Lefty’s mind which made him frown.
+It seemed the irony of fate that they two should
+meet again under conditions which must throw
+them together in most undesirable terms of intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>Oblivious to the twittering pair capering about
+the stage, Lefty stood staring at the back of Elgin’s
+head with unseeing eyes. His mind was back
+in the past, and his expression showed how unpleasant
+the remembrance was.</p>
+
+<p>The burst of handclapping at the end of the act
+aroused him in time to see Elgin and his companion
+arise and crowd toward the aisle. He
+stood there waiting for them to go, for he had
+no desire to encounter the fellow just now. With
+narrowing eyes, he watched his old enemy elbow
+his way roughly toward the door, careless of who
+or what was in his path.</p>
+
+<p>It all came about so suddenly and unexpectedly
+that Lefty never knew just what was the real
+cause. He saw one or two men turn and stare
+angrily at the fellow shoving his way past them,
+muttering something under their breath as they
+did so. Then, just as the pair were opposite him
+and close to the door, Locke heard a sharp cry of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
+pain in a woman’s voice, followed instantly by a
+bellow of fury from a man. Swiftly there came
+the thud of bare fists against flesh and bone. A
+dozen men sprang up and began shoving toward
+the door. A woman screamed shrilly.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br>
+<small>ONE AGAINST SCORES</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Instinctively Lefty joined the rush
+toward the center of disturbance. He caught
+a glimpse of two men struggling in close
+embrace, each raining blows upon the other’s face
+and body. He saw that one of them was Bert
+Elgin. The other was a big, burly fellow, dressed
+in a workman’s Sunday best, his face flushed, his
+eyes aflame with anger.</p>
+
+<p>A score of other men were trying to get close
+enough to put in a blow or two. The place resounded
+with shouts of: “Kill him!” “Lynch
+him!” “Beat him up!” Then the whole struggling
+mob burst through the narrow doorway into
+the garish, glittering lobby.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was borne irresistibly toward the door by
+the crowd behind him, which seemed eager to take
+part in the fracas. By the time he reached it the
+entire audience was on its feet, making for the
+single exit. Hands pinioned helplessly at his
+sides, Locke was forced into the maelstrom of
+bodies. There was a squeeze, a breathless grunt,
+and he plunged out into the dazzling brightness.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span></p>
+
+<p>The disturbance had ceased to be a fight and
+turned into a riot. The mob was made up of men
+in the raw, lacking in self-restraint, whose passions
+were roused to a white heat with very little
+cause. A woman’s cry of pain, the roar of fury
+from her escort, and the trouble was started.</p>
+
+<p>As they surged against the frail, ornate booth
+from which tickets were dispensed, they were like
+a lot of madmen. Not half a dozen out of the
+crowd knew what the disturbance was about.
+Blows were rained on the heads and shoulders and
+backs of friends in their eagerness to get at the
+man in the very heart of that seething throng, and
+already two vigorous personal encounters had been
+started in different corners of the lobby on that account.</p>
+
+<p>As he was flung forward against the side of the
+ticket booth, Lefty felt sudden anger surge up
+within him. He forgot that Bert Elgin was his
+enemy, and remembered only that he was battling
+against odds. And when, a moment later, by some
+odd trick of chance, he saw the fellow’s face,
+bruised, battered, blood trickling from a cut on his
+cheek, and caught a fleeting glance of desperate appeal
+from Elgin’s terror-stricken eyes, he threw
+caution to the winds and jumped into the fray.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span></p>
+
+<p>The very size of the mob was in Locke’s favor,
+but it is doubtful whether he could have done
+much to help Elgin except for the unexpected giving
+way of the ticket booth. Slowly it began to
+sway under the tremendous pressure against one
+side. A door at the back was burst suddenly open,
+and the ticket agent dashed forth, clutching the
+cash drawer in both hands, only to trip and fall
+headlong, scattering money in every direction, and
+causing a new diversion. The crashing over of
+the booth was another, and for an instant Elgin
+was freed from the clutching hands which had held
+him prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty darted forward, gripped the man by
+the shoulders, and dragged him into the angle
+made by the wrecked booth and one wall of the
+lobby. Petrified by fear, the fellow sank helplessly
+to the floor, and Locke had barely time to
+leap in front of him before the yelling crowd
+surged forward again.</p>
+
+<p>In the second that he stood there waiting, the
+cub pitcher was conscious of a curious feeling
+which had come to him once or twice before at
+moments of great tension on the diamond. It was
+as if his brain had been wiped with a cold, wet
+sponge, clarifying his vision, and soothing his raw
+nerves to an almost uncanny degree.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
+
+<p>He felt that there could be but one end to
+the encounter, and yet he was not afraid. He
+eyed the semicircle of angry faces calmly, coolly,
+appraisingly, mentally picking out the exact spot
+on the protruding jaw of the foremost man with
+which he meant to make connections an instant
+later. When the fellow went down before his
+beautiful swinging blow, Lefty felt a thrill of successful
+accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>A second man swiftly followed the first, but
+after that there was no time for picking and choosing.
+With a howl of rage, the crowd rushed forward
+in a body, bent on getting their hands on
+their prey and crushing him bodily. Luckily only
+three men could face Locke at once, and for a
+brief space he held them back by sheer skill and
+trained muscles.</p>
+
+<p>With fine precision he wasted not a single effort,
+but broke through clumsy guarding arms, to land
+on some vital spot with a jolt which sent his man
+reeling back against the others, or else crumpled
+him to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>In about three minutes those in the front rank
+were seeking to escape the deadly accuracy of his
+blows by dodging to one side or trying to push
+back through the crowd. Unfortunately for
+Locke, those in the rear continued to force their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
+way forward, and thus slowly but inexorably the
+ring closed in.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s arms moved faster and faster. He had
+long ago ceased to pick and choose—it was impossible.
+Several times he had leaped back before it
+occurred to him to wonder what had become of
+Elgin. That was but a fleeting thought, however.
+He had never counted on the fellow’s aid, so it
+was just as well that he was not in the way.</p>
+
+<p>A number of glancing blows had struck home,
+one cutting his lips. At last he began to wonder
+how long he could keep it up, and what the end
+would be. He knew he might expect no mercy
+from the maddened crowd, all of whom supposed,
+by this time, that he was the one who had started
+the fracas. Unless the police came soon, or some
+other help—</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he felt a movement behind him. His
+first thought was that his enemies had found a
+way to get him at the rear; but even before he
+could whirl about to face them, two hands caught
+his shoulders, and a familiar voice sounded in his
+ear:</p>
+
+<p>“Lemme have a whack at ’em, kid.”</p>
+
+<p>It was Buck Fargo, the big catcher of the
+Hornets.</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_V">CHAPTER V<br>
+<small>FRIENDLY BUCK FARGO</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Dazed, bewildered, a sudden overpowering
+weakness gripping his limbs, Lefty felt
+himself thrust against the wall, and saw
+the massive form of the man who had baited him so
+successfully on the field that morning leap into
+the front place, eyes blazing and huge fists doubled
+for action.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it was the sight of him—burly, menacing,
+and fresh—which turned the tide. More
+likely it was that sudden panicky awakening which
+comes to every mob when the first outburst of
+passion has run its course. At all events, Fargo
+had no more than time to land his fist with precision
+and force on the faces of two men, before
+some one at the rear started a yell that the cops
+were coming.</p>
+
+<p>The effect was magical. Out into the street
+poured the mob, and fled wildly in every direction.
+Before he realized that it was all over Lefty felt
+himself grasped by the shoulders, hustled out of
+the barricade and rushed across the street. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
+whole thoroughfare was filled with flying men,
+so that they passed unnoticed as Fargo headed
+straight for the nearest corner.</p>
+
+<p>“Them cops is coming at last,” he explained
+shortly, whirling into a side street. “We don’t
+want to be pinched. Think you’re good for the
+hotel, kid? If you ain’t, we can stop at a drug
+store and have you patched up.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can make it all right,” Lefty gasped. “I’m
+only—dead beat.” An instant later he stopped
+still. “What became of Elgin?” he asked abruptly.
+“I forgot him.”</p>
+
+<p>“He beat it.” Fargo’s tone was noncommittal.
+“He crawled out the same way I got in, while they
+was busy with you. That ticket coop was held
+up a mite at the end by hitting against the wall.
+He’s all safe.”</p>
+
+<p>There was an expression of curiosity on the
+catcher’s face, and for a moment he seemed about
+to ask a question. Apparently he changed his
+mind, however, for the next instant his lips closed
+and he hustled Lefty on again.</p>
+
+<p>They reached the hotel without attracting much
+attention. Locke had managed to wipe most of
+the stains of battle from his face, and as they
+entered the side door Fargo clapped his own wide-brimmed
+felt hat on the other’s head, starting some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
+rough bantering with the elevator boy, which kept
+the fellow occupied. They stepped out on the top
+floor without the boy having really noticed Lefty
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>“Now we’ll take stock, kid,” the catcher said,
+as he switched on the lights in Lefty’s room and
+closed the door. “That face of yours ain’t so
+bad, after all. We’ll fix your mouth up in a jiffy.
+Got any plaster?”</p>
+
+<p>Locke nodded. “Yes, but I don’t want you to
+bother about it, Fargo. It’s white of you to—”</p>
+
+<p>“Stow that, son!” interrupted the big chap
+shortly. “This rumpus is going to get the old
+man up on his ear for fair. If he finds out you
+was in it, there’ll be blazes to pay.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how can he help it? I was there, and
+everybody saw me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure you was,” grinned Fargo, dexterously
+applying a wet towel to Locke’s countenance.
+“In the scuffle you got a tap or two by mistake;
+that’s all. You don’t s’pose that crazy bunch of
+roughnecks is going to remember faces, do you?
+They was clean off their nuts, every last one of
+’em.”</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for a moment or two as the
+big, muscular fingers applied the plaster to the
+cut lips with surprising deftness. “There!”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
+Fargo said with satisfaction. “That’ll do fine.
+There’s a scratch alongside your nose, but it don’t
+amount to nothing. Pull off your shirt, and let’s
+have a look at the rest of you.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty obeyed without question, and revealed a
+muscular chest dotted here and there with bruises
+already beginning to darken. It had been impossible
+to guard himself at every point from the
+frenzied rushes, and he had instinctively protected
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo grinned as he saw the damage. “Won’t
+you be stiff and sore to-morrow morning!” he
+chuckled. “It’s lucky you can lay it to the first
+day’s practice. Say, kid, how in thunder did you
+two start that riot? You look like a peaceable guy
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t start it,” Lefty returned swiftly. “I
+broke into the game afterward.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph! Let’s hear about it.”</p>
+
+<p>Briefly, Lefty told him what little he knew about
+the beginning of the trouble. He said nothing of
+his dislike for Bert Elgin, but Fargo must have
+guessed it from his manner.</p>
+
+<p>“So that’s it?” the catcher commented. “I
+gather you two ain’t very chummy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not exactly,” Lefty returned shortly.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo eyed him curiously. “Then why did you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
+butt in? He started the muss, and I should say he
+deserved what he got.”</p>
+
+<p>“But the whole push was against him,” protested
+Locke. “I couldn’t sneak off and let them
+hammer him to pieces.”</p>
+
+<p>“Strikes me that <em>he</em> sneaked,” Fargo said
+swiftly. “When I came across the street to see
+what was doing, there wasn’t any use trying to
+get near the front, so I made for the corner to
+see if I could get a glimpse over the top of that
+tipped-over ticket cage. I hadn’t been there a
+minute before Elgin came crawling out from underneath.
+He was so blamed scared that I hadn’t
+more’n got out of him that you were in there alone
+when he beat it. Looks like it didn’t worry him
+any to leave you alone for the bunch to hammer.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty smiled faintly. “Can’t help that. It
+was up to him. I’d have hated myself if I’d gone
+away and left any man in that kind of a hole.”
+He hesitated an instant, the color rising to his
+face. “Besides, even if we aren’t friends, he’s—one
+of the bunch.”</p>
+
+<p>Fargo stared at him oddly; then he broke into
+a laugh. “Time we was both in bed,” he said
+abruptly. “Don’t forget to keep your trap shut
+about this to-morrow. You was there and got a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
+love tap or two in the scuffle. Lucky the old man
+can’t see that chest of yours.”</p>
+
+<p>Outside the door he paused, the queer look in
+his eyes again. “One of the bunch!” he muttered
+aloud. “Well, I’ll be hanged!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br>
+<small>WHO WAS TO BLAME?</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">On his way in to breakfast next morning,
+Manager Brennan bought a copy of the
+Ashland <cite>Morning Chronicle</cite> to glance
+through during the progress of the meal. Having
+seated himself and given his order, he
+spread open the sheet. The first thing to catch
+his eye was the flaming headline, “Palace Theater
+Wrecked by Mob.”</p>
+
+<p>Having heard echoes of the affair the night
+before, the manager glanced over the account with
+interest. Halfway down the column he stopped
+short, clutched the paper, and stared with bulging
+eyes and purpling cheeks at a certain short paragraph:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>The cause of the riot is not definitely known. It is said,
+however, to have been started by the rowdyish behavior of one
+of the visiting baseball men who was attending the performance.
+We might call Manager Brennan’s attention to the
+fact that, while Ashland is always ready to extend every hospitality
+to himself and his famous organization, she does not
+care about having that hospitality abused.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>With a guttural exclamation of rage, Brennan<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
+half started from his seat, only to relax again
+and glare around.</p>
+
+<p>“You read that stuff?” he demanded, catching
+the eye of Red Pollock across the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure!” grinned the latter. “Great dope. If
+Cy hadn’t coaxed me into a game of draw, I’d
+been there myself, instead of missing all the fun.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’d ought to thank me,” said Russell philosophically.
+“If you hadn’t been so busy losing
+your dough to Pete and me, you’d likely got your
+block knocked off down the street. According to
+accounts, there wasn’t nothing playful about that
+mix-up.”</p>
+
+<p>“I reckon not,” sighed Pollock regretfully.
+“They say the lad that started the rumpus, whoever
+he was, got into a corner and held off the
+whole bunch for ten minutes. He must be some
+scrapper. I got mixed up in a strike riot in Chicago
+once, and, believe me, it’s no cinch to stand
+off a crowd of roughnecks like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” grunted the manager. He had
+cooled down considerably while the others were
+speaking, and was doing some thinking. “Any of
+the boys see it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure! Buck got a look-in, he was telling us.”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan glanced swiftly down to where Fargo
+sat at the end of the table. “How about last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
+night, Buck?” he called, in a deceptively mild
+tone. “Were you the one who started the rough-house
+downtown?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nix on that!” grinned the catcher. “It was
+going full blast when I got there. I seen all I
+wanted to from the outskirts. The crowd was
+plumb crazy. About a hundred of ’em trying to
+get at one poor bloke penned in behind the upset
+ticket booth. Them that couldn’t get a whack at
+him hit somebody else for luck, and a dozen nice
+little individual scraps were going on all over the
+place.”</p>
+
+<p>“But who was the man?” Brennan persisted.
+“Didn’t you see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Couldn’t get a sight of him from the street,”
+Fargo answered readily. “The ticket booth was
+too high. I run into one of your cubs—Locke’s
+his name—trying to get out of the crowd, and we
+came home together.”</p>
+
+<p>The manager frowned suspiciously. He knew
+Fargo of old, and realized that he was just the
+sort of man to be concerned in an affair of this
+description. The catcher’s gaze was candid and
+open, however, and the closest scrutiny failed to
+disclose as much as a scratch on his face.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan’s gaze veered swiftly to the next table,
+where his new recruit sat with some of the other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
+youngsters. Locke looked cool and undisturbed
+as he ate his breakfast with evident relish. The
+manager’s keen eye discovered a bit of plaster
+on one lip and a scratch on one side of his nose;
+but, by what Fargo had said about the general
+nature of the fighting, those slight abrasions might
+easily be accounted for. Besides, Locke did not
+strike him as having much of the rowdy in his
+make-up.</p>
+
+<p>Without further comment, Brennan fell to on
+his breakfast and resumed reading the newspaper
+account. When he had finished it, he came to the
+conclusion that if one of his men had indeed been
+the cause of the disturbance the fellow must be
+a scrapper of unusual ability, and would surely
+bear upon his person unmistakable marks of the
+conflict.</p>
+
+<p>Being a man of action, he at once started the
+round of his players. He had no desire to antagonize
+the rougher element in Ashland. He
+knew perfectly well that this would mean a constant
+succession of bickerings, with the possibility
+of injury to some of his highclass players if they
+got into a fight.</p>
+
+<p>His critical inspection of the men showed the
+regulars to be beyond reproach. Not one had
+even a slight abrasion for which he could not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
+account. The majority were provided with plausible
+alibis. Of the cubs, three were on the suspicious
+list. Locke he had already eliminated, and
+so did not bother about him. The other two were
+Bert Elgin and a young fielder named Ross, both
+of whom—and particularly the first mentioned—bore
+telltale signs on their faces.</p>
+
+<p>They told a plausible, well-balanced story:
+They had been sitting near the stage of the Palace
+Theater when the uproar started back by the door.
+They arose with the rest of the audience and
+were carried out by the rush of the crowd. When
+they finally emerged into the lobby—Elgin swore
+that he had left a good-sized piece of skin from
+his face on the edge of the door—the place was
+filled with men, yelling and fighting like maniacs.
+They were so busy forcing their way to the street
+that neither had been able to get a look at the
+cause of the disturbance. Both were hit several
+times in the face, and had naturally smashed back.
+On reaching the sidewalk, they had left the place
+at once and returned to the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan was slightly nonplused. The story
+rang true. It agreed perfectly, moreover, with
+Fargo’s account of the affair, and the manager
+knew that his catcher was not at all on friendly
+terms with either Elgin or Ross. Lastly, he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
+confident that neither of them had pugilistic skill
+or nerve enough to stand up before such a crowd
+after the manner which every account agreed that
+the unknown had done.</p>
+
+<p>Puzzled, with a vague feeling that there was
+something about it which he did not understand,
+Brennan was obliged to content himself with a
+strict order that the entire squad forego shows
+of any description in the future, under penalty
+of heavy fines.</p>
+
+<p>Later in the day he instituted inquiries throughout
+the town, with equal lack of success. The
+majority of people who had been at the theater
+had lost their heads, and could tell him nothing
+that he wanted to know. Three men there were
+who swore that they had obtained a good look at
+the mysterious individual, but their descriptions
+were so totally at variance that the manager gave
+up his quest in disgust.</p>
+
+<p>“A lot of dough-heads!” he growled. “Sounds
+as if they were each describing a different person.”</p>
+
+<p>Which happened to be exactly the truth.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br>
+<small>WITHOUT GRATITUDE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Well, it worked all right, kid,” remarked
+Buck Fargo as he caught up
+with Lefty on the way out to the
+field. “I’ll guarantee the old man didn’t even ask
+you a question, did he?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I was waiting for him to brace me, but
+it never came off. What the deuce did you tell
+him?”</p>
+
+<p>Fargo grinned. “The truth—only not quite all
+of it,” he chuckled. “Wonder how our friend
+Elgin’s going to get out of it?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty hazarded no guess. He had more than
+a suspicion that his old acquaintance would manage
+to evade the responsibility somehow. That
+had always been his strong point, for he was not
+overburdened with scruples about sticking to the
+letter of the truth.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo explained briefly what he had told Brennan,
+and then dropped back to his own crowd,
+leaving Locke alone. The latter was just turning
+into the gate of the field when some one touched<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
+his arm, and, turning, he saw Bert Elgin beside
+him, a frown of anxiety on his thin face.</p>
+
+<p>“Look here,” the man began abruptly, “Brennan’s
+just put it up to me about last night, and I
+had to give him a song and dance to steer him off.
+He’s mad as a hornet, and I couldn’t very well
+tell him I was mixed up in that fool business. I
+wanted to put you wise, so if he asks you, your
+story can fit in with mine.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke’s eyes were fixed coldly upon the other’s
+face. “And what was the story you told him?”
+he asked shortly.</p>
+
+<p>“Said I was down in front with Ross, and got
+these scratches getting out of the place. Didn’t
+know anything about what started the muss, or
+see the fellow who—”</p>
+
+<p>“And you expect me to back you up in this lie?”
+Lefty broke in, his eyes narrowing. “You’ve got
+another guess coming, Elgin. I came mighty close
+to lying for you once, and it’s the last time.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s face darkened. “You’ll blab it all to
+him, then?” he burst out. “I might have known
+you wouldn’t let slip a chance like this to get back
+at me. You always were a—” He stopped abruptly
+and bit his lip, a slow flush rising in his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes flashed ominously. “Well?” he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
+snapped. “Let’s have it. What were you going
+to say?”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s gaze dropped to the ground, and he
+kicked a pebble awkwardly. “Nothing,” he mumbled.
+“I—wasn’t thinking—of what—you did for
+me last night.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s lips curled scornfully. “Don’t let that
+worry you,” he retorted. “I didn’t do it for you.
+I did it to save my self-respect, and because you
+were one of the boys against a crowd of muckers.
+You don’t owe me anything. Get that? I don’t
+want you indebted to me. As for this story you
+told Brennan, it’s up to you. I won’t go out of
+my way to put him right, but if he asks me questions
+I’ll tell him the truth.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin threw back his head, furious under the
+lashing contempt of the other’s voice.</p>
+
+<p>“If you’re such a good little boy,” he sneered,
+“how do you explain traveling under a name
+which isn’t yours? Strikes me that’s a lie, all
+right.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s my business,” returned Lefty curtly.
+“Anything more?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” snarled Elgin; “but if Brennan gets wise
+through you, I’ll settle your hash for good and
+all.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty shrugged his shoulders indifferently.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
+“Try it,” he laughed. “If you don’t have any
+better luck than you did the last time, I guess I’ll
+survive.”</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting for a reply, he turned and
+walked across the field, leaving Elgin glaring after
+him in speechless rage.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment or two Lefty was conscious of
+an unpleasant feeling, more like a bad taste in
+the mouth than anything else. He had not really
+expected any fulsome expressions of gratitude
+from Bert Elgin. He was quite sincere in not
+wishing the man to feel indebted to him in the
+slightest. And yet, inconsequentially enough,
+when it was all over he could not help wondering
+how any one could be so lacking in a sense of decency.
+At least the fellow could have kept his
+mouth shut, if nothing else.</p>
+
+<p>The whole matter was swept swiftly out of his
+mind, however. Brennan, still somewhat peevish
+at his lack of success in reaching the bottom of
+the riot affair, was decidedly short of temper, and
+he started the day’s practice with a rush and vim
+which kept everybody on the jump.</p>
+
+<p>“Get a hustle on you, Locke!” he snapped, as
+Lefty approached at a dogtrot. “I want to see
+what some of the cubs can do with a stick,” he
+went on, in a lower tone. “Get out there and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
+loosen up a bit; a little smoke, you know. You
+was full enough of it yesterday.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty caught the ball with outward calm, but as
+he turned and walked out to the pitcher’s box he
+groaned to himself. He had been hoping that he
+might be spared this to-day, for he had a bruise
+on his left shoulder as big as a silver dollar, and his
+whole upper body was stiff and sore from last
+night’s experience.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing to do but grin and bear it,
+however, unless he wanted to rouse Brennan’s suspicions.
+While the cub batters were being
+gathered in, he tried warming up a little, but had
+no more than sent two balls over before he was
+brought up sharply by the manager’s roar:</p>
+
+<p>“Stop that, and get down to business!”</p>
+
+<p>The first delivery went so high that the cub backstop
+had difficulty in pulling it down. The second
+was equally erratic. Lefty flashed a swift glance
+at the stocky manager, whose face was set in a
+fierce scowl, and decided that he would have to take
+a brace at any cost.</p>
+
+<p>With an effort which sent a stinging twinge of
+pain through his bruised shoulder, he whipped
+over a speedy straight one, which the batter
+missed, following it by a drop that was quite as
+deceptive. Brennan’s scowl relaxed slightly, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
+more than once during the succeeding twenty
+minutes it deepened again; for Lefty managed to
+intersperse wild pitches with good ones in a manner
+which could not help being exasperating to one
+who knew nothing of the cause.</p>
+
+<p>“That’ll do!” growled the manager, at length.
+“You’re a winner, you are! What’s the matter
+with you to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty mumbled some excuse about not feeling
+very fit, and Brennan’s lips curled. “Huh!” he
+snorted. “Delicate, are you? Rot! Hey, Cy,
+come over and give this cub a few lessons in first
+principles.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a general grin from the watching
+group of cubs, and Lefty felt his cheeks burn. He
+recovered himself swiftly, however, and, at Brennan’s
+order, took his place with the batters. The
+fact that he smashed out a clean single the first
+time he was up before the Hornet’s star pitcher
+went far toward restoring his own self-respect,
+even though it had no visible effect on the Argus-eyed
+manager.</p>
+
+<p>Once during the course of the morning’s work
+Lefty caught Buck Fargo’s eyes fixed upon him,
+and as he was leaving the park toward noon the
+big backstop stepped out from the group of
+regulars and came over to him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Looks like you were getting in bad with the
+old man,” he remarked seriously. “First impressions
+go a long distance with him. I’ve been thinking
+mebbe we made a mistake in keeping quiet
+about last night. He’d roar for a bit, but he
+couldn’t sling it into you like he would if you’d
+started that rough-house.”</p>
+
+<p>“You think it would be a good idea to tell him?”
+Lefty asked gravely.</p>
+
+<p>“That would put him wise to what was the matter
+with you.”</p>
+
+<p>The cub pitcher’s lips twitched. “Don’t you
+think it would be more sport to see if he could
+find it out by himself?” he suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo let out a guffaw and brought one fist
+down on Locke’s shoulder with a force which made
+him wince.</p>
+
+<p>“For a cub, you ain’t half bad, kid,” he
+chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>That was all he said. The next instant he had
+turned away and rejoined his companions, leaving
+Lefty to jog on back to the hotel alone.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow, though he was alone, the cub was
+far from feeling that depressing isolation of the
+day before. The morning seemed to have been
+spent principally in stirring up an old enmity and
+getting in bad with the manager. But these things<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
+did not worry the bush pitcher as they might have
+done if he had not fancied that he had also made a
+friend, and one who was well worth while.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br>
+<small>THE MAN WHO KNEW</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty had barely stepped inside the
+Hatchford Hotel lobby when some one
+leaped at him like a human whirlwind, and
+a vaguely familiar voice chortled in his ear:</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you old lobster! If I’m not glad to see
+your ugly mug again! Put it there, old fellow!”</p>
+
+<p>Whirling swiftly, Locke saw standing before him
+a short, slim, wiry chap of about his own age, with
+a deeply tanned and freckled face, and a big mouth
+stretched to its utmost in a wide grin of delight.</p>
+
+<p>“Jack Stillman!” he exclaimed joyously, grabbing
+the outstretched hand. “Well, what do you
+know about this! Last time I ran into you was on
+Broadway, over a year ago. What the mischief
+are you doing down here?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s easy. I’m the only original live wire
+on the sporting page of the <cite>Star</cite>. Ran down to
+look over Jim Brennan’s live stock and give the
+fans something to think about. You don’t mean to
+say you’re one of ’em, Phil?”</p>
+
+<p>“Guessed right the first crack, Jack,” Lefty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
+laughed. “You always were an awful clever
+boy.”</p>
+
+<p>“But how the deuce— I didn’t even know
+you’d taken up baseball. Thought you were
+scratching away in a lawyer’s office.”</p>
+
+<p>“So I was until last spring. I played the season
+under the name of Lefty Locke. It’s a long
+story, but—”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman’s eyes widened. “You’re Locke?”
+he exclaimed interestedly. “Wouldn’t that get
+you? I heard a few things about his pitching out
+in the bush last summer, but I hadn’t any idea you
+were it. Let’s have the yarn. Any good copy in
+it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope not,” Lefty said hastily. “Come on
+upstairs and I’ll tell you the story of my life while
+I’m making myself respectable.”</p>
+
+<p>The newspaper man accepted with alacrity, and
+when they reached Lefty’s room he made himself
+comfortable while the latter proceeded with his
+toilet and the recital of the summer’s doings at the
+same time.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a shame that Blue Stocking scout showed
+up just too late,” Stillman said regretfully. “Of
+course Jimmy Brennan is all right. He’s got
+more baseball under that dome of his than most
+managers in the country, and if you get in right<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
+you’ll be all to the merry. I’d hate like thunder to
+lose that coin though. Any more cub twirlers in
+the outfit?”</p>
+
+<p>“Bert Elgin,” Lefty returned quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Stillman stared, and an expression of incredulity
+flashed into his face. “What?” he gasped.
+“Not—”</p>
+
+<p>Locke nodded. “The same. Funny, isn’t it, we
+should run up against each other this way?”</p>
+
+<p>“Funny? I don’t see it. The cur!”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty turned swiftly from the bureau, a queer
+look on his face. “Just what do you mean by that,
+Jack?” he asked slowly.</p>
+
+<p>Stillman snorted. “You know very well what I
+mean,” he retorted forcibly. “I’m not supposed
+to be wise, but Bob Ferris told me the whole story,
+and it’s my opinion you were blamed fools to keep
+still about it. Any man who’ll steal from one college
+mate and then deliberately work to throw the
+blame on another isn’t fit for decent fellows to associate
+with. When you had him where you
+wanted him, why didn’t you come out with it, and
+let everybody know what kind of a mucker he
+was?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty slipped into his coat, and dropped down
+beside his friend.</p>
+
+<p>“You know why we didn’t,” he said quickly.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
+“He’d have been fired, and the varsity would have
+lost about every other game that season. You
+don’t suppose it was on Elgin’s account we kept
+still after we’d found how he was trying to throw
+the blame on me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not quite a fool. All the same, you were
+wrong. We might have dropped a game or two,
+but you could have jumped into his place, all
+right.”</p>
+
+<p>“You know I couldn’t. I was slaving about ten
+hours a day to make up work I missed on account
+of that beastly typhoid. How long would I have
+lasted at Princeton if I tried to play ball, too?
+No; Bob and I thrashed it all out, and, though it
+came mighty hard, we decided it was the only thing
+to do, unless we wanted the team beaten to a frazzle.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you come out with it the next
+year?” demanded Stillman. “You could have
+pitched then, all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“That would have looked fine, wouldn’t it?
+How would we have accounted for keeping quiet so
+long? I will say, Jack, that we were both sorry
+more than once afterward; but, having started
+out, there was nothing else to do but keep on. I
+don’t see how Bob came to tell you. It was understood
+that we should keep it entirely to ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span></p>
+
+<p>“It wasn’t till a year after we’d graduated,” the
+reporter explained, his face still clouded. “It was
+one right at the Princeton Club. I don’t remember
+just how the subject came up. I suppose he
+thought there wasn’t any need of keeping still any
+longer.” He paused and glanced at his companion.
+“How’s he acted since you showed up?
+Same old Elgin, I suppose?”</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Lefty hesitated. He could picture
+Stillman’s sarcastic reception of the story of
+the night before, and, knowing his friend’s impulsive,
+quick-tempered nature, he decided that it
+would be wisest to keep silent.</p>
+
+<p>“He wasn’t overjoyed to see me,” he returned
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The newspaper man arose. “I should say
+not!” he commented briefly. “Afraid you’ll let
+the other fellows know what sort of a rotter he is.
+If I were in your place, I’d be hanged if I
+wouldn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where would be the sense?” Lefty retorted.
+“It was all over and done with years ago. Of
+course, if he should try anything like the same
+game again, it would be different. You’re not
+thinking of—”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s none of my business,” Stillman put in.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
+“I don’t want to have anything to do with the
+mucker. Let’s go down to dinner.”</p>
+
+<p>As luck would have it, stepping out of the elevator,
+they came face to face with Bert Elgin himself,
+talking earnestly with big Bill Hagin, a regular
+outfielder. For an instant the former stared
+blankly at Stillman. Then, with a great affectation
+of heartiness, he thrust out a hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll be hanged if it isn’t Jack Stillman!”
+he exclaimed. “Glad to see you, old hoss!”</p>
+
+<p>The reporter made no attempt to withdraw his
+hands from his pockets. He seemed, in fact, to
+thrust them deeper, and as his eyes met Elgin’s
+there was a look of withering, contemptuous scorn
+in them, which cut the ball player like a knife.</p>
+
+<p>“How are you, Elgin?” he said curtly, and
+passed on toward the dining room with Lefty.</p>
+
+<p>For a second Elgin stood staring after them,
+his face flushed and his eyes gleaming angrily.</p>
+
+<p>“Your friend don’t seem choked with joy at seeing
+you,” Hagin commented maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin came to himself with a slight start, and
+shrugged his shoulders indifferently. “No special
+friend of mine,” he said shortly. “Used to
+see him now and then three years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, when he dropped into his place at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
+the table a short time later, his face was still
+flushed and angry.</p>
+
+<p>“Stillman was friendly enough at Princeton,”
+he thought furiously. “That dog has turned him
+against me with his lying stories, that’s what’s
+happened.” He ground his teeth viciously. “If
+I don’t put it all over him, good and proper, I’m
+a liar!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br>
+<small>SOMETHING SUB-ROSA</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Five-inning practice game at eight-thirty
+sharp,” announced Manager
+Brennan, at the close of the day’s work.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly every tongue stopped wagging, and
+each man turned an eager, inquiring face in his
+direction. After nearly two weeks of monotonous
+training, the prospect of a real game, even if it
+was only among themselves, was very welcome.</p>
+
+<p>The new recruits, especially, quivered with anticipation.
+It was a foregone conclusion that the
+game would be played between the regulars and the
+“Yannigans,” as the cubs are sometimes termed;
+and the chance of pitting themselves against their
+more experienced rivals thrilled each one of the
+youngsters through and through.</p>
+
+<p>The older men were more indifferent. They
+had played many such games in past training seasons,
+and knew that these were organized by the
+manager mainly for the purpose of watching the
+cubs in action and studying their possibilities.
+Still, there would be a chance to try their hitting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
+skill against the bush pitchers, and any ball
+player will willingly go without a meal in order to
+bat.</p>
+
+<p>“You can try your hand at being field captain
+to-morrow, Cy,” Brennan said, glancing at Russell,
+“and make up your own team.” He pulled
+a pencil and rumpled piece of paper from his
+pocket and turned his attention to the expectant
+youngsters. “We’ll see how you make out bossing
+a team, Ogan,” he went on, as his eyes lighted
+on the promising young first baseman from Ohio.
+“I’ll want these men to start in playing. Afterward
+you’ll use your own judgment about keeping
+them in the game.”</p>
+
+<p>He began calling out the names of nine cubs,
+with the positions they were to take, jotting them
+down as he did so. When he finished with the
+words, “Whalen, catcher, and Locke on the slab,”
+Lefty beamed.</p>
+
+<p>He had worked hard for two days to atone for
+the bad impression he had made at first, and this
+looked as if he had succeeded. “And I’ll do even
+better to-morrow,” he resolved, tossing up his
+glove in sheer exuberance of spirits. “I’ll try to
+show him Toler wasn’t such a bad judge of pitchers,
+after all.”</p>
+
+<p>A glimpse of Bert Elgin’s scowling face only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
+added to Lefty’s good spirits, and he departed
+from the field feeling very cheerful indeed.</p>
+
+<p>At the supper table Jim Brennan was conspicuous
+by his absence, and curious inquiries revealed
+the fact that he had taken a late afternoon train
+to Fort Worth, from which he did not expect to
+return until early morning. “Pop” Jennings,
+the oldest and most settled pitcher in the organization,
+was the source of this information. He
+added that he had been left in charge of the squad,
+and hoped he would not have to break too many
+heads to keep order.</p>
+
+<p>The announcement caused no immediate effect
+beyond a certain noticeable relaxation. There
+were a few more or less joshing remarks concerning
+Pop’s new job, but they were comparatively
+mild. Before entering the field of professional
+baseball Jennings had dallied with the four-ounce
+gloves to an extent which gave him something of a
+reputation in sporting circles on the Pacific coast.
+He was noted for a dogged determination to carry
+out orders at any cost—a trait which made him
+invaluable at the crucial moment of a hard-fought
+game. The players had learned from experience
+that there would be no slurring of Brennan’s instructions,
+and that any laxity of training would
+bring with it swift retribution.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span></p>
+
+<p>Happily, Pop had a praiseworthy habit of retiring
+promptly at nine o’clock. Jesters said
+it was because he was getting old and had to be
+careful of himself. The truth was that Jennings,
+raised on a farm, had been imbued from earliest
+years with the value of the old adage, “Early to
+bed, early to rise,” and couldn’t help himself.</p>
+
+<p>During the early part of the evening the behavior
+of the Hornets was unexceptionable. Some
+lounged in the lobby, reading papers, or chatting
+lazily. Most of the cubs were gathered in a corner,
+discussing the morrow’s game, and perfecting
+a system of signals for use on the field. Quite
+a number of the regulars, gathered about the pool
+tables, indulged in an innocent game of penny
+ante, or shot craps. A few drifted off early to
+their rooms. Pop, making a round of inspection
+a little before nine, decided that all were harmlessly
+employed, and departed to bed.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the click of cues and balls ceased, card
+games languished, and a state of general restiveness
+ensued. Lefty and two or three companions,
+who had drifted in a few minutes before from the
+lobby, wondered what was going to happen. They
+were not kept waiting long. At the end of fifteen
+minutes Bill Hagin sprang to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s safe,” he announced. “Come on up to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
+my room, fellows. It’s the whole length of the
+house from his, and we can have a little racket
+without his getting wise.”</p>
+
+<p>The response was instantaneous, for the Hornets,
+as a crowd, were nothing if not lively.
+Every regular in the room arose promptly and
+started toward the door. The three or four cubs
+present followed more slowly. They had been
+long enough with the organization to learn the
+wisdom of not being too pushing.</p>
+
+<p>Hagin, glancing back from the doorway, sensed
+the situation, and grinned. “Everybody come
+along,” he invited good-humoredly. “We’ll
+teach you kids the first principles of draw poker.”</p>
+
+<p>His remark was general, but his eyes happened
+to rest lightly on the face of Lefty Locke in a
+manner which was distinctly challenging. Now,
+Locke was a very normal young chap, and the tone
+of condescension rasped him slightly. He fancied
+he played pretty good poker, and had an idea that
+even the famous Hornets couldn’t show him a
+whole lot about the game. Consequently he accepted
+the invitation with alacrity, and was presently
+seated at a table in the big double room which
+Hagin shared with one of the other members of
+the team.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Fargo was on one side of him and Pollock,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
+the red-headed shortstop, on the other. Cigars
+were produced and lighted, cards appeared,
+and presently, amid the babble of talk and laughter,
+Hagin’s voice sounded:</p>
+
+<p>“What’ll you have to drink, fellows? Speak
+up sharp, now; the boy’s waiting.”</p>
+
+<p>As he cut for deal Lefty glanced up and saw
+one of the hotel bell boys standing near the door,
+order-blank in hand. From the character and
+number of the drinks he put down, it became
+swiftly evident that the crowd was certainly making
+the most of Jim Brennan’s absence. Calls for
+high-balls, fizzes, gin-rickeys, whisky straights,
+beers, and ales came from every side. If there
+were any scattering orders for soft drinks, Lefty
+did not hear them. The Hornets seemed to agree
+with Red Pollock that “them soft slops was the
+worst things a man could put into his stummick.”</p>
+
+<p>When his turn came to order, Locke hesitated
+an instant. With the examples set him on every
+side by men so much more experienced in the
+game, he need scarcely feel any compunction in
+taking something he was used to in moderation.
+A single glass could scarcely do him any harm.</p>
+
+<p>“Light beer,” he said, at length.</p>
+
+<p>Glancing hurriedly over his cards, he quite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
+missed the odd side glance which Buck Fargo
+flashed at him. But perhaps it was not meant
+for him to see.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br>
+<small>“WHEN THE CAT’S AWAY”</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The liquid refreshments arrived while they
+were in the midst of an unusually animated
+hand. Everybody had dropped out
+but Cy Russell, Siegrist, the first baseman, and
+Lefty. The latter, with three kings and a pair of
+tens, was half conscious that Fargo had taken a
+glass from the tray and set it down beside him. It
+was one of those cases, however, where one gets an
+impression without really seeing, and he could not
+have told afterward whether it was actually the
+big backstop who put it down, or the waiter. And
+when it came to that, he did not notice whether it
+was the hotel employee himself who held the tray,
+or some one else.</p>
+
+<p>He played his hand for all there was in it, and
+won the good-sized jackpot. Siegrist groaned as
+he flung down three queens and a pair of eights.</p>
+
+<p>Russell shoved over the chips with a grimace.
+“I was trying to get by with two pair, aces up.
+You don’t work that innocent-appearing face on
+me again, kid.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lefty chuckled and took a long drink from the
+glass as he shuffled the cards to deal. The beer
+had an unusual flavor, and he sipped it again, trying
+to make out what was the matter with it.
+“Bum stuff,” he reflected. “Tastes sort of
+queer.”</p>
+
+<p>As the game progressed, however, he gradually
+drained the glass without thinking much about it.
+He was having unusual luck, and played his cards
+with a skill which put him away in the lead of the
+others.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Hagin sauntered up to the table.
+“What’ll you have, boys?” he asked. “Time for
+a second round.”</p>
+
+<p>Most of them ordered; one or two declined,
+among them Lefty.</p>
+
+<p>“No, thanks,” Locke said firmly, when Hagin
+pressed him. “I’ve had enough.”</p>
+
+<p>“I reckon you <em>have</em> had enough,” put in Buck
+Fargo, in a tone which seemed so significant that
+the cub pitcher glanced swiftly at him. The big
+backstop was busy with his cards, and did not
+look up; but Lefty noticed that his face was oddly
+serious. He noticed also the half-emptied glass
+of seltzer standing beside Fargo’s scanty pile of
+chips, and a sudden qualm struck him.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps I shouldn’t have taken that beer,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
+after all,” he said to himself. “I thought everybody
+was drinking something in that line.”</p>
+
+<p>A quick survey of the table told him that everybody
+else was, and, somewhat reassured, he went
+on with the game. Perhaps the catcher was a
+little peevish because he was losing so heavily.
+Adversity at cards brings out the good and bad
+points of a man’s character better than almost
+anything else.</p>
+
+<p>The game progressed. More drinks were
+brought, more cigars produced and lighted. No
+one got befuddled, for the Hornets were a hard-headed
+crowd, and each one knew his limit; but
+there was a general warming up throughout the
+room. Joshing and laughter sounded continuously.
+Now and then some one would burst into
+song, only to be sat upon instantly by three or
+four others. The tobacco smoke hung in a thick
+pall midway between ceiling and floor, stirred fitfully
+by soft breezes from the open windows.</p>
+
+<p>For a time Lefty continued to win. Then gradually
+luck seemed to turn against him. He still
+held much the same run of cards, but several times
+he made bad errors in judgment. Presently he
+became conscious of an extraordinary sensation
+of lightness in his head, like nothing else he had
+ever experienced. It was not especially disagreeable.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
+On the contrary, it seemed as if his senses
+had become suddenly more acute, as if he could
+play two small pairs so cleverly that he would
+bluff out stronger hands. Instead, he lost, and
+kept on losing.</p>
+
+<p>It was most puzzling and annoying. He could
+not understand it. That first odd exhilaration
+passed in a little while, and was succeeded by a
+dull depression. His head began to ache. Was
+it the smoke? he wondered. Several times he
+caught one of the fellows eyeing him curiously,
+and it brought him up with a jerk, determined to
+stick it out and let no one know there was anything
+the matter with him.</p>
+
+<p>How long it continued he never knew. For
+seeming hours he went on his raw nerve, playing
+the cards dealt to him instinctively, his whole
+being occupied in fighting off a clogging sensation
+which constantly threatened his brain like a smothering
+blanket.</p>
+
+<p>It was Buck Fargo who made the first move to
+break up, and Lefty could have hugged him had
+he not been so taken up in keeping a grip upon his
+consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, fellows, I’m going to hit the downy,” the
+big backstop announced, with a cavernous yawn.
+“Let’s settle up.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span></p>
+
+<p>There were protests, of course; but Fargo was
+firm.</p>
+
+<p>Released from the tension of playing, Lefty sat
+stupidly staring at the three red chips in front
+of him. He was aroused by Russell’s voice:
+“Come across with seventeen bucks, Locke. You
+made a bad finish.”</p>
+
+<p>Without a word, the cub pitcher fumbled in his
+pocket and drew forth a roll of bills. The numbers
+in the corners were blurred and indistinct.
+He picked out several at random, tossed them on
+the table, gathered in the change Russell handed
+him, and arose slowly to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant he stood gripping the chairback.
+The room was going around; the floor tilted dangerously.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter, kid?” came in Fargo’s
+voice. “You look sort of funny.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty straightened himself with a great effort.
+“Nothing,” he said, with laboriously distinct
+enunciation. “I’ve got a sort of headache. The
+bad air, I guess.”</p>
+
+<p>Then the men drifted over to the other table,
+bent on breaking up the game there, and Locke
+was left alone. He had given up wondering what
+was the matter with him. His one thought was
+to get out of the room while he could. Slowly he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
+turned and faced the door. A shout of laughter,
+followed by the sounds of a good-natured rough-house,
+told him that the attention of the others
+was occupied for the moment. He let go his hold
+on the chair, reeled, recovered himself with an
+effort, and, with set teeth, slowly, laboriously
+crossed the room.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed an eternity before his hand touched
+the panels and fumbled for the knob. The next
+he knew he was in the still darkness of the hall,
+steadying himself against the wall. Somewhere
+in his head a sledge hammer was beating on an
+anvil. He wondered hazily how long flesh and
+bone could stand it. He took a step forward.
+Where was his room? Was it on this floor or the
+next?</p>
+
+<p>At last he remembered, and began a slow, painful
+progress down the hall. Several times before
+reaching the stairs he fell, but at last he struck
+the bottom step and began to crawl up on hands
+and knees.</p>
+
+<p>His room was directly opposite the elevator, or
+he would never have reached it. The door was,
+luckily, unlocked, and he managed to step in and
+close it behind him. As his finger instinctively
+pressed the electric button close at hand, flooding
+the room with light, he gave a sudden stifled cry.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
+
+<p>He was to pitch to-morrow in the first practice
+game of the season. The remembrance stabbed
+through his fading senses like a knife. He had
+meant to show Brennan what there was in him.
+He had planned to strain every effort in order
+that the manager should forget his first unfortunate
+fiasco. And now—</p>
+
+<p>He groaned aloud. Then, with a long, shuddering
+sigh, he felt his legs crumple under him. A
+black curtain fell before his eyes.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br>
+<small>ALL IN</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">When Lefty came to himself the electric
+lights were still blazing in sickly
+opposition to the bright sunshine
+which poured through the two windows. For a
+moment or two he lay wondering what had happened
+and why he was stretched out on the floor,
+fully dressed. Then the dull, throbbing pain in
+his head brought him to a sitting posture, with a
+groan.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at the bed and saw that it was untouched.
+He looked up dazedly at the cluster of
+lights, then down at his rumpled shirtfront. The
+glitter of his gold fob caught his eye, and, with
+an effort, he pulled out his watch.</p>
+
+<p>“Twenty-five minutes to eight,” he muttered.
+“Time I was getting—”</p>
+
+<p>He broke off abruptly and drew his breath with
+a swift intake as he remembered. The game was
+to begin at eight-thirty. He was to pitch for the
+Yannigans!</p>
+
+<p>Staggering to his feet, he went over to the washstand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
+and plunged his face into a hurriedly drawn
+bowl of water. Nothing had ever felt so good
+before. He dashed it on his hair, regardless of
+the streams running over his shirtfront. Again
+and again he dropped his face back into the grateful,
+cooling contents of the bowl before he finally
+reached for a rough towel.</p>
+
+<p>He remembered everything now—the absence of
+Brennan, the adjournment to Hagin’s room, the
+cards, the smoke, the drinks, and—last of all—that
+horrible attack which had come upon him.</p>
+
+<p>What had brought it about? It couldn’t have
+been the beer. That was wretched stuff, to be
+sure, but a single glass of it would hardly produce
+such an effect. He had thrown his coat hastily
+to one side and was ripping the collar from his
+neck when suddenly he stopped abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Doped!” he exclaimed, aloud.</p>
+
+<p>It was an almost incredible supposition, but it
+explained everything perfectly. No single glass
+of ordinary beer could have the effect of that one
+upon a man in Lefty’s splendid physical condition,
+and there was the odd, repulsive flavor which he
+had set down to the poor quality of the brew.</p>
+
+<p>But who would do such a thing—and why?
+Locke’s first thought was of Bert Elgin, but the
+fellow had not even been in the room. Hagin had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
+no motive—or, so far as he knew, any opportunity.
+Who else, then, could have been responsible?</p>
+
+<p>The answer did not come readily, for Lefty’s
+mind was working only by fits and starts as he
+flung his clothes right and left, threw a dressing
+gown over his shoulders, and darted down the
+hall to the shower which Brennan had caused to be
+put in for the benefit of his men. The tingling reaction
+of his blood under the icy spray meant much
+more to him than breakfast, for an intolerable lassitude
+seemed to grip his limbs, while the very
+thought of food was almost nauseating.</p>
+
+<p>Lingering under the shower as long as he dared,
+he dashed back to his room and began to drag on
+his baseball clothes. It was not until he was
+buckling his belt, however, that the significance of
+Buck Fargo’s remark when Lefty refused the second
+glass of beer came to him: “I reckon you
+<em>have</em> had enough.” Why had he said that? Was
+it because he knew that the first glass was quite
+sufficient to do the business? There had been
+more to the big backstop’s tone, somehow, than
+just plain, casual agreement.</p>
+
+<p>“Rot!” snapped Locke, snatching up cap and
+glove and making for the door. “I’m loony! He
+hasn’t a single motive, and, besides, he’s not the
+sort of chap who’d do a dirty thing like that.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, the thought returned to torment
+him at odd moments during the hasty choking
+down of a little breakfast, followed by the jog out
+to the field—and afterward. It was the bitter
+disappointment and humiliation of that afterward,
+which Lefty never forgot.</p>
+
+<p>The cubs were in high spirits, eager for the
+chance to win their spurs. As he watched their
+antics on the way out to the park, Lefty felt a
+pang of envy. He would have given anything to
+have that same snap and ginger, instead of feeling
+the lassitude and weariness which gripped him.</p>
+
+<p>Several of his teammates asked if he wasn’t
+feeling well, but he forced a laugh, and put them
+off. He would rather have died than give up his
+place to Bert Elgin. When the time came for
+him to go into the box surely he would brace up
+and be more himself.</p>
+
+<p>Halfway out to the field Andy Whalen, the cub
+catcher, came up, and they discussed briefly the
+signals which had been talked over the night before.
+Lefty wished desperately that he had gone
+off to bed directly afterward, instead of strolling
+into the pool room and allowing himself to be
+drawn into that game in Hagin’s room.</p>
+
+<p>Regrets were unavailing, however. Though
+some one had given him the double cross, Lefty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
+realized that he alone was to blame for making
+the opportunity. Then and there he registered a
+silent vow that nothing under heaven should ever
+again induce him to deviate a hair’s breadth from
+his manager’s rules of training. And then he
+wondered whether that resolution had been made
+too late.</p>
+
+<p>The teams had ten minutes’ practice in which to
+warm up; then the coin was tossed. The Yannigans
+won, and, choosing the field, romped gayly
+out to their positions, tossing up gloves, yelling
+persiflage at one another, and altogether behaving
+coltishly.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was with them, but not of them. He had
+never in his life felt in poorer condition for pitching.
+His head ached, and he was as tired and
+drooping as if he had not slept in forty-eight
+hours. But he could not bring himself to beg off,
+and there was no other way out. He caught the
+ball from Brennan, who acted as umpire, shot a
+swift, appraising glance at the manager’s impenetrable
+face, and then took the signal from Whalen.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br>
+<small>LEFTY’S FAILURE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The call was for a curve ball, and Lefty
+did his best to respond. Unfortunately
+he put so much curve into it that the
+sphere missed the plate by at least two feet.
+Whalen looked surprised, but said nothing.
+Lefty felt the blood rushing into his face and
+making his head pound more than ever.</p>
+
+<p>The backstop then signaled for a fast straight
+ball, indicating with one hand that it was to cross
+the batter’s shoulders. It was straight enough,
+but woefully lacking in speed, and Carl Siegrist
+promptly hit it on the trademark and dusted to
+first.</p>
+
+<p>Had this been a championship game, the rangy
+infielder, who had hit well over three hundred for
+several seasons, would have made it good for two
+bags, or even three. Siegrist, like all the other
+old men, did not believe in straining himself unduly,
+however. He took things easy, and camped
+on the initial sack.</p>
+
+<p>“Rotten!” snapped Ogan, from first. “What
+in Sam Hill’s the matter with you, Locke?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” chimed in Tom Burley, at short; “this
+isn’t croquet. Wake up.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s have a little of that smoke you had up
+your sleeve the other day,” added the third baseman.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty made no reply to these remarks. He was
+watching Brennan’s face as the manager left the
+plate to take up his position behind the pitcher.
+Brennan looked anything but pleased, and, though
+he made no remark, Locke fancied he knew what
+was passing through his mind.</p>
+
+<p>The next batter drew two balls in succession,
+and then created a momentary respite for Lefty
+by flying out to center field. His successor, however,
+smashed the first pitched ball over the infield,
+and romped down the line amid a howl of
+delight from the regulars, whose interest in the
+game was warming up.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly a gatling fire of sarcasm was turned
+on Lefty by his teammates. Ogan raced into the
+diamond and caught the pitcher’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you think you’re doing?” he hissed
+fiercely. “Are you trying to throw the game
+away?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty shook his head. His face was white now,
+his eye desperate. He knew he was making a miserable
+exhibition. He should not have started; he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
+should have gone to Ogan before the game and told
+him he wasn’t in fit condition to pitch. His head
+was splitting so that he could scarcely see. He
+seemed to have no strength left in his arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you’d better take me out, Al,” he
+muttered. “I seem to be on the fritz.”</p>
+
+<p>“You bet you are!” retorted the captain hotly.
+Then, catching a glimpse of Lefty’s wretched face,
+he hesitated an instant. “I’ll give you one more
+chance, Locke,” he went on shortly. “If you
+don’t make good, out you go. I’m not going to
+have this game handed over on a silver tray if I
+can help it. You’ve got the goods, Locke; brace
+up and hand ’em out.”</p>
+
+<p>When Ogan had gone back to his position, Lefty
+turned and glanced at the plate. His heart sank
+when he saw that Buck Fargo stood there, swinging
+his bat negligently. Nevertheless, with set
+teeth, the southpaw toed the rubber and pitched.</p>
+
+<p>It was a straight, high ball that cut the plate in
+half, and Brennan’s voice droned out “Strike!”
+as the batter let it pass. Lefty was heartened,
+and, at a signal from Whalen, he tried an outcurve.
+As before, this curved too far out even
+to cut a corner. Another ball followed, and then
+another strike. Then Fargo swung above a drop
+ball, and was declared out.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
+
+<p>As the big backstop tossed his bat aside and
+strolled, grinning, to the bench, there was a sigh
+of relief from the Yannigan infield. Perhaps
+their pitcher was taking an almost-despaired-of
+brace. One or two gave voice to brief words of
+commendation; but Lefty did not hear them. He
+was staring after Fargo in a puzzled way. No
+one knew better than he—unless it was Andy
+Whalen—how far those deliveries had fallen short
+of his usual form. He could not understand why
+Buck had failed to make connections.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time to think of that, however,
+for Bill Hagin was strutting to the plate. To
+Lefty his expression seemed more cocky and self-assured
+than ever, and the bush pitcher felt a
+sudden ardent longing to send him back to the
+bench as his predecessor had gone.</p>
+
+<p>Whalen signaled for a drop, but Lefty had
+watched Hagin batting the day before, and felt
+that a straight, speedy one, placed high, would
+bother him more. He notified the catcher to that
+effect, toed the rubber, tried to forget his pounding
+head, gathered every muscle for the effort, and
+pitched.</p>
+
+<p>The horsehide whirled toward the plate with
+speed enough, but crossed it a good foot below
+where Lefty intended. The bat met it squarely,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
+with every ounce of the big fielder’s muscle behind
+it, and Lefty uttered a stifled groan of despairing
+surrender as the regulars began to circle the bases
+blithely.</p>
+
+<p>What had gone before was as nothing to the
+roar which rose from the cubs when they saw
+three grinning players jog, one after the other,
+across the plate. As one man, they turned on
+Lefty and poured out the vials of their wrath in
+vivid, soul-stirring, mouth-filling phrases, which
+left absolutely nothing to the imagination.</p>
+
+<p>Interspersed with these gusts of abuse were yells
+of: “Take him out! Take—him—out!” which
+were quite unnecessary. Lefty realized that he
+was done for, and did not even glance toward Ogan
+as he walked toward the bench. He heard the latter’s
+angry voice, however, yelling after him:
+“Get off the field, you boneheaded quitter!” And
+that seemed to hurt more than anything else.</p>
+
+<p>He wasn’t a quitter. He had done his best, and
+it was not his fault that he had failed. No doubt
+he should never have gone out there at all, but
+how many of those others, face to face with the
+alternative he had met that morning, would have
+decided differently?</p>
+
+<p>Head down and hands tightly clenched, he made
+his way toward the bench, not even looking up as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
+he passed Bert Elgin, racing out to take his place.
+He flung himself down on the turf and lay there,
+chin propped in his cupped hands, eyes staring
+blindly out across the diamond.</p>
+
+<p>More than once the regulars glanced curiously
+in his direction, but no one spoke. A little later,
+when the Yannigans trooped in, having succeeded
+in holding down the score, Lefty fully expected a
+storm of bitter reproaches to be hurled at him;
+but nothing came. The fellows took their places
+on the bench or the coaching lines without so much
+as a glance toward the chap lying there on the
+grass. For all the attention they paid to him, he
+might have been a log of wood.</p>
+
+<p>As inning after inning passed amid that same
+studied silence and marked avoidance, Lefty felt
+that he would rather have endured sneers, blows,
+anything else. His head still throbbed and
+he was feeling wretched, mentally and physically.
+He was a fool not to have left the field at once;
+but, being there, his innate stubbornness kept him
+to the end.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Jack Stillman came up and chatted
+casually for a minute or two, but Lefty was so
+mortally averse to pity that his replies were short
+almost to ungraciousness; and the reporter walked
+away, a puzzled look on his face.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
+
+<p>By dint of fast, strenuous playing on the part
+of the cubs, assisted by the easy-going ways of
+their opponents, the regulars were kept from
+further scoring, while the Yannigans made two
+tallies before the end of the last inning. But for
+Locke’s errors they would have won the game.
+The realization did not tend toward soothing their
+ruffled spirits.</p>
+
+<p>As the teams mingled on the field at the end of
+the fifth inning, the one crowd grinning and joshing,
+the other responding with defensive sarcasm,
+Lefty caught an angry glare from more than one
+pair of eyes among the disappointed youngsters.</p>
+
+<p>“I s’pose they all have it in for me,” he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>The next instant he saw Jim Brennan bearing
+down upon him, his face more florid than ever, his
+sharp eyes glinting.</p>
+
+<p>“Good night!” the southpaw murmured.
+“Here’s my finish.”</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively he rose to his feet and stood there,
+nervously juggling his glove, his eyes fixed upon
+the approaching manager, waiting for the storm to
+break.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br>
+<small>THE DISCHARGED WAITER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty drew one sleeve across his perspiring
+face, and stared at the square, sturdy
+back of the retreating manager.</p>
+
+<p>“Whew!” he muttered. “And then some!”</p>
+
+<p>On second thought, he withdrew the comment.
+Jim Brennan had left nothing to be said, nothing
+to the imagination. In stinging phrases, which
+bit like acid and made the pitcher wince and grit
+his teeth, he had told his latest recruit exactly
+what he thought of such a disgrace among ball
+players.</p>
+
+<p>He applied to Locke every epithet in his repertory—he
+had a vocabulary the width and breadth
+and startling nature of which was unusual even
+among Big League managers—and Lefty was
+obliged to stand there and swallow everything.
+He had nothing to say, no excuse to make for his
+behavior. He might have explained everything
+by telling Brennan of the glass of beer which he
+was certain had been drugged. But that would
+have put the whole crowd in bad, and Lefty was
+no telltale.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
+
+<p>So he set his jaws, clenched his fists, and took
+everything the manager had to say, fully expecting
+the tirade to end in his being thrown out of
+the squad.</p>
+
+<p>When Brennan finally concluded his spirited
+monologue with a pyrotechnic burst to the effect
+that he proposed taking the blankety-blank bonehead
+personally in hand the next morning for the
+purpose of beating a little elemental baseball into
+his thick skull, and then strode away with eyebrows
+twitching, it was a full minute before Lefty
+realized that it had not come. He had not been
+fired!</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll be hanged!” he exclaimed aloud, his
+eyebrows drawn together in a puzzled frown.
+“Why didn’t he do it? What use can he have for
+me after to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>For a while he stood there, trying to fathom the
+reason. Then he gave it up and started for the
+gate. The others had long since left the park,
+and he made his way back to the hotel alone, took
+his shower, and came down to the dining-room ten
+minutes late.</p>
+
+<p>For all the comfort he got out of his companions
+Lefty might as well have been alone at the table.
+From the beginning of the meal to its long-drawn-out
+finish not a single word was addressed directly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
+to him. The others talked over him, around him,
+at him, but never to him. Among themselves, but
+in tones which plainly showed that their remarks
+were aimed at Lefty, they discussed that miserable
+first inning in detail, pointing out how different
+the result would have been with any one but a
+quitter in the box. They made many other scornful
+comments, and the southpaw was hard pressed
+to maintain a stolid, impassive demeanor. Not
+for the world would he have them guess how much
+they were hurting him.</p>
+
+<p>By supper time the determined ostracism of his
+cub companions had so worked on Lefty that his
+nerves were raw. He even caught Stillman regarding
+him queerly, and that was the last straw.
+He felt, somehow, that if he did not confide in some
+one he would blow up; so, after supper, he cornered
+his classmate in the lobby, and poured the
+whole story into his astonished ears.</p>
+
+<p>When Locke had finished, Stillman gave a long
+whistle of incredulous astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the rottenest thing I ever heard of!”
+he exclaimed indignantly. “No wonder you went
+to smash that way. But look here, old fellow, are
+you certain about the drug part of it? Isn’t it
+possible that you had some sort of an attack of
+indigestion or something?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span></p>
+
+<p>Locke shook his head. “No indigestion would
+ever give a fellow feelings like that. Besides, I
+was fit as a fiddle before I went into that card
+game. Something was put into that beer, Jack;
+take my word for it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But who would do such a thing? You say
+Elgin you’re sure wasn’t even in the room. Did
+you notice anything queer about any other man’s
+behavior?”</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Lefty hesitated, the thought of
+Fargo’s odd remark, with its odder inflection, in
+his mind. The next instant he gave a start as
+the big backstop strolled lazily up and paused
+beside his chair.</p>
+
+<p>“Sort of off your feed to-day, ain’t you, kid?”
+Fargo inquired, with a grin.</p>
+
+<p>“I certainly am,” Lefty answered. He hesitated
+a second, and then went on with deliberate
+purpose: “I reckon midnight poker games with
+all the fixings don’t agree with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Cut out the fixings and the poker won’t hurt
+a baby,” the catcher returned swiftly. “It’s all
+right for the regular bunch to make fools of themselves
+swilling hard stuff if they want to, but you
+kids can’t afford to do that sort of thing. I was
+watching you last night and wondering if you
+was going to fall for that nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span></p>
+
+<p>A flash of sudden comprehension leaped into
+Locke’s mind and brought the color swiftly to
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>“So that was why you said I’d had enough!”
+he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo looked slightly puzzled. “Sure! Why
+did you think I said it?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s face was brick-red and his eyes dropped
+before the steady, open scrutiny of the catcher.
+“I—didn’t realize you were—paying so much attention
+to me,” he stammered. “I might have
+known, though, when you struck out to-day—to—to
+help me out. That was good of you,
+Fargo.”</p>
+
+<p>The backstop laughed. “Chase that notion out
+of your nut right off, son,” he chuckled. “I ain’t
+that crazy—yet. Reckon I must have been a bit
+off my feed, too, or else you took a spurt while
+I was up to the plate. I s’pose the old man sailed
+into you good and proper. He looked dangerous
+when I saw him heading your way after the
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke explained briefly that the manager had
+raked him over the coals in a manner which left
+nothing to be desired. “I thought sure he’d end
+up by firing me out on the spot,” he confessed in
+conclusion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Not him,” grinned Fargo. “He’s too sharp.
+You want to toe the mark, though, from now on.
+He’ll have them snappy optics of his on you every
+minute of the day to see whether this was a fluke
+or your regular way of doing things. You’ll have
+to show him, that’s all.”</p>
+
+<p>As the backstop strolled off, Lefty’s eyes followed
+him for a moment. He had been a fool to
+suspect for an instant that this big, rough-and-ready,
+but thoroughly straight, dependable fellow
+could be mixed up in anything so underhanded.</p>
+
+<p>Stillman, whose trained mind had missed no
+point in the conversation, quickly broke the silence.</p>
+
+<p>“You surely didn’t think he had anything to
+do with it?” he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>“I couldn’t understand why he said something
+he did last night,” Lefty explained. “I was an
+idiot, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“You certainly were. Buck Fargo is one of
+the squarest men in the crowd, even if he is a
+little rough outside. He’d do anything in the
+world for a fellow he likes, and you’re mighty
+lucky he’s taken a fancy to you.” He paused for
+an instant, his brow furrowed thoughtfully.
+“Look here, old fellow,” he went on slowly, “why
+don’t you get after the man who served those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
+drinks! I’ll bet he knows a thing or two, and
+you ought to be able to sweat it out of him.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes brightened. “By Jove!” he exclaimed.
+“That’s a good idea, Jack. I shouldn’t
+wonder if he did. At least it’ll be worth trying.
+He ought to be on duty now.”</p>
+
+<p>Without further delay, he arose and walked
+over to the desk. Though he did not know the
+fellow’s name, he remembered perfectly what he
+looked like, and the clerk recognized his description
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you mean George Miller? Why, the proprietor
+fired him this morning, Mr. Locke. He
+was stewed last night, and had a holdover this
+morning. He’s left the hotel, and I don’t know
+where you can find him.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty turned from the desk, with a shrug.
+“That’s settled,” he thought disconsolately.
+“Why didn’t I think of it before? I suppose I
+wasn’t thinking of anything this morning,
+though.”</p>
+
+<p>As he walked back to where the newspaper man
+sat, he saw Bert Elgin crossing the lobby toward
+the door. For an instant he was moved to brace
+the fellow then and there and accuse him of playing
+that dirty trick the night before. Almost as
+quickly, however, he realized how futile that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
+would be. Though Elgin was the only man with
+a motive strong enough to make him suspected,
+Lefty had no shred of proof against him.</p>
+
+<p>“Let him go,” the latter muttered frowningly.
+“I haven’t got anything on him—yet. I’ll be
+hanged if I don’t think he was at the bottom of it,
+though, and if I don’t dig up the truth somehow,
+I <em>am</em> a bonehead.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br>
+<small>BERT ELGIN’S LUCK</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Bert Elgin was decidedly a ladies’ man.
+A pretty face in any of the front-rows of
+the grandstand never escaped his attention,
+and, no matter in what part of the country
+his team was playing, he seemed to have an almost
+uncanny faculty of scraping an acquaintance
+with the best-looking girl in town.</p>
+
+<p>His teammates growled and grumbled enviously,
+making sarcastic references to luck and
+bluff and working the rah-rah racket to perfection,
+but Elgin remained undisturbed by their
+comments. There was no questioning the fact
+that he could be very charming when he chose to
+exert himself. He had a ready tongue, the knack
+of subtle flattery, and knew how to utilize the
+glamour which most girls throw about a prominent
+athlete who has had a college education.</p>
+
+<p>Before he had been three days in Ashland Elgin
+maneuvered an introduction to Miss Molly Wendell,
+a charming young person with a penchant
+for baseball, and obtained permission to call.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
+Within a fortnight he had availed himself three
+times of that permission, and they were on very
+friendly terms, indeed.</p>
+
+<p>This evening he arrayed himself with especial
+care, and sallied forth about half past seven,
+alone, from the hotel. Miss Wendell lived in the
+best residential section of town; but, as he made
+his way thither, Elgin was not so occupied with
+thoughts of the pleasure in store for him as to be
+blinded to the feminine charms of any chance
+passers-by. That was not his way.</p>
+
+<p>Having bestowed appreciative and very open
+glances on several attractive factory girls hurrying
+along the main street, the cub pitcher struck
+into a quieter thoroughfare which led toward his
+destination. He had almost reached High Street
+when a rickety, swaying hack, looking as if it
+might have seen its best days in some Northern
+city a decade ago, passed him and came to a stop
+in front of the corner house.</p>
+
+<p>Before the negro driver had time to open the
+door the horse—a big, raw-boned animal—took
+it into his head to back. Quite undisturbed and
+rather amused at the coon’s flow of language,
+Elgin watched the ancient vehicle tilt dangerously
+until it seemed as if another moment would see
+it topple over. Then he came opposite the door,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span>
+glanced curiously into the hack, and the next instant
+became transformed.</p>
+
+<p>With a single leap he reached the horse’s head,
+gripping the bit with muscular fingers and dragging
+the animal forward a step or two.</p>
+
+<p>“Get down here and hold the beast, uncle!” he
+ordered. “You’re a nice one to take people out
+behind a dangerous animal like this. Hustle,
+now!”</p>
+
+<p>The colored man hurriedly descended, muttering
+something about “interferin’ w’ite trash,”
+and sulkily obeyed. Elgin sprang to the door,
+hat in hand, and held it open.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s all right now, sir,” he said deferentially.
+“Just take my arm, if you please, and let me help
+you out.”</p>
+
+<p>An elderly man, white-haired, frail-looking, and
+dressed in a clergyman’s suit of black, obeyed
+tremblingly. He was followed much more swiftly
+by a young girl, a glimpse of whose lovely face
+had been the cause of that sudden transformation
+in Bert Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>She barely touched the pitcher’s arm as she
+leaped from the cab, the color bright in her cheeks,
+a glint of anger in her wonderful eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s outrageous bringing us up with a horse
+like that!” she exclaimed indignantly. “You<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
+know I asked particularly if he was gentle, and
+you said he was.”</p>
+
+<p>“’Deed he am, leddy,” the negro affirmed hastily.
+“Dis hyer am jes’ his playful way. If dat
+gemman hadn’t come—”</p>
+
+<p>“If he hadn’t so kindly come to our help,” the
+girl put in emphatically, “we should have been
+upset.”</p>
+
+<p>As she stepped forward to pay the cabman she
+cast a glance of gratitude at Elgin, which started
+the blood tingling through his veins.</p>
+
+<p>“What a peach!” he thought fervently.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing of this appeared on the surface, however.
+Instinctively he schooled himself to retain
+the same respectful, deferential attitude he had
+assumed from the first. Still bareheaded, he
+seemed to be devoting all of his attention to the
+father, who was palpably nervous and upset by the
+incident. It was not until she turned from the
+negro and came back to them that his eyes met
+hers.</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot thank you enough for what you have
+done,” she said quickly. “My father is not very
+strong, and if the cab had upset it would have
+been simply dreadful.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was really nothing,” Elgin protested. “I
+saw the horse was a bad-tempered brute, and got<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
+to his head in time. I’m glad I happened to be
+passing.”</p>
+
+<p>“You cannot be more thankful than my daughter
+and myself,” the older man put in rather
+weakly. “Your quick wit undoubtedly saved us
+from a serious accident. Just now I am too tired
+after a long journey to express my gratitude
+properly, but I hope you will give me the opportunity
+at some future time. I am the Reverend
+John Harting, and I shall be staying here a week
+or more with my friend, Henry Forsythe.”</p>
+
+<p>He held out a slim, white hand, which the ball
+player clasped firmly yet not too strenuously.</p>
+
+<p>“My name is Bert Elgin,” the younger man
+returned in respectful tones. “I’ll be very glad
+indeed to come and see you some evening before
+you leave town.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes,” the clergyman agreed, with impatience.
+“Janet, my dear, I think we had better
+go in. I am feeling—a little faint.”</p>
+
+<p>Without a word Elgin took one arm solicitously.
+The girl sprang to the other side of her father, and
+in silence they helped him up the steps of the
+veranda. A big, broad-shouldered man of middle
+age answered the ring, and, amid the bustle of
+greeting which followed, Elgin tactfully departed.</p>
+
+<p>At the gate he paused, glancing back at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
+closed door, the remembrance of a pair of wonderful
+violet eyes and a perfect mouth curved in
+a rather absent smile still vividly in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>“A queen!” he said aloud. “Molly Wendell
+can’t touch her for a minute.” Slowly he moved
+on a few steps; then he chuckled: “That was a
+cute trick, all right, and pulled off to perfection.
+I ought to hand that old bag of bones a square feed
+for giving me the chance. Will I call to-morrow
+night and let the old geezer thank me? Will I?
+Ask me!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br>
+<small>THE REASON WHY</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Out on the field next morning Lefty Locke
+threw himself heart and soul into his
+work. He was conscious that Manager
+Brennan was watching his efforts with the eyes
+of a lynx, and though that made him slightly
+nervous at first, it presently came to have the
+opposite effect, stimulating him to greater endeavor.</p>
+
+<p>“Kid ain’t doing bad to-day,” drawled Buck
+Fargo critically to Jack Stillman, sitting beside
+him on the bench. “He certainly was rotten in
+the game, though. I wonder what ailed him?
+Don’t seem like one glass of beer would knock a
+fellow out like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Depends on what’s in it besides the beer,” the
+newspaper man replied impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>The big backstop straightened up and flashed
+a keen glance at him.</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean by that?” he demanded
+shortly.</p>
+
+<p>Stillman hesitated an instant, his face slightly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
+flushed, “I suppose I shouldn’t have said anything
+about it,” he returned slowly. “Lefty
+didn’t want it to get out, but I can’t see any
+harm.”</p>
+
+<p>And forthwith he proceeded to enlighten Fargo
+concerning the trick which had been put over on
+Lefty the night Brennan was in Fort Worth.
+When he had finished, the catcher made some
+vividly picturesque comments. Then he relapsed
+into a thoughtful silence. Finally he turned
+curiously to his companion.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the trouble between Elgin and Locke?”
+he asked briefly. “Don’t tell me if it’s a secret,
+but it sure looks to me as if that was at the bottom
+of the whole muss.”</p>
+
+<p>“There isn’t a doubt of it in my mind,” Stillman
+answered. “Elgin hates Lefty like poison,
+and has every reason in the world to do him dirt.
+It happened when we were all at Princeton. Elgin
+was pitching on the varsity—pitching mighty
+good ball, too. He and Lefty had always been
+rivals, but Lefty couldn’t go out that year because
+of the back work he had to make up on account of
+an attack of typhoid. Just the same, Elgin
+seemed to have it in for him, and he never lost
+any chance to sneer about him to other men, and
+make things generally disagreeable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, about the middle of the season a chap
+named Bob Ferris had his pocketbook, watch, and
+a lot of little trinkets stolen. Somebody swiped
+’em out of his room while he was at a lecture.
+He and Lefty were great friends and were in and
+out of each other’s rooms all the time. Ferris
+couldn’t find a single clew as to who had taken the
+stuff, but a few days later Lefty came in from a
+recitation unexpectedly and caught Bert Elgin in
+the hall right outside his door. He didn’t say anything
+then, but went in and looked the room over.
+Nothing seemed out of place except a table
+drawer which was a little way open. When he
+jerked it out, there were two of the stolen scarfpins
+lying right on top of a notebook belonging to
+Ferris, which he would probably have come in to
+get that very afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“The cur!” rasped Fargo. “He put ’em there
+a-purpose to throw the blame on Locke.”</p>
+
+<p>“Exactly. Lefty followed Elgin to his room,
+told him what he’d found out, and started to give
+him a nice comfortable thrashing. In the process
+of the scrimmage a watch fell out of Elgin’s
+pocket. It was Ferris’ watch. Lefty told Ferris
+afterward that the sight of it made him
+ashamed to be soiling his hands on such a
+mucker. He let up right away, told Elgin that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
+unless the stolen goods were returned in twenty-four
+hours he’d go to the dean and tell him everything,
+and got out. Ferris was in New York that
+day, but when he got back next morning the stuff
+was all on his bureau.”</p>
+
+<p>Fargo stared at him an instant. “Well?”
+he queried sharply. “Is that all? Didn’t they
+put anybody wise to what the sneak had done?”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman shook his head. “No. He’d have
+been fired out of college, and there wasn’t anybody
+to take his place on the nine. Lefty and
+Ferris talked it all over and decided to keep still
+for the sake of the varsity.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” grunted the big backstop. “I’ll be
+hanged if I’d have done it!” He paused a
+moment, interlacing his strong, brown fingers.
+“Well, there ain’t any doubt that’s what started
+things going here,” he went on. “Elgin’s sore as
+a boil, of course, to have Locke around, knowing
+what he does about this stealing. How he worked
+this dope trick gets me, though.”</p>
+
+<p>The newspaper man started to explain his
+theory of the waiter’s complicity, but in the midst
+of it the manager roared out an order to Fargo
+to get into the game and limber up some. The
+big backstop obeyed and was kept busy for the
+rest of the morning. Later on, however, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
+sought Stillman again, to hear the remainder of
+the story.</p>
+
+<p>When it had been told he made no comment.
+His face showed plainly, however, that his interest
+was aroused to an unusual degree; and the reporter
+congratulated himself on having secured
+a valuable ally for Lefty.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br>
+<small>THE PURLOINED LETTER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">It was rather difficult for Lefty to tell what
+sort of an impression the day’s work had
+made on Jim Brennan. That astute individual
+was thoroughly proficient in the art of keeping
+his thoughts to himself, and it was almost impossible
+for any one to guess what was going on
+in his mind. Those who knew him well had long
+ago ceased to guess.</p>
+
+<p>He had watched Locke all day as a cat does a
+mouse, picking at the least fault, hurling criticisms
+in that brusque, snappy way of his at the slightest
+opening, and never once giving his cub pitcher a
+word of praise. There seemed to be nothing in
+this to encourage the southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, Lefty knew that he was in good
+form. He felt that between his work of to-day
+and that disgraceful exhibition of twenty-four
+hours ago there was a vast gulf, and he was comforted.
+And when, along toward the middle of
+the afternoon, he began to notice quite lengthy
+periods of silence on the part of his mentor—spaces
+of five minutes, or even longer, in which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
+the manager could find absolutely nothing to carp
+at—his spirits began to rise.</p>
+
+<p>On the way back to the hotel several of the older
+men who had been up before him during the
+afternoon paused and made brief, half-joshing
+comments on his improvement. Stillman was enthusiastic
+in his praise, and even one of his
+brother reporters delivered himself of a more
+guarded opinion, practically to the same effect.
+To be sure, the silence of the other cubs was deep
+and absolute. Not one of them opened his head
+to Lefty on any subject, much less to tell him that
+he was doing well. Evidently the ban against him
+was still in force.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of this, however, Locke was feeling
+more hopeful, more assured, more satisfied that
+he could make good, than at any time since his
+arrival at training camp.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll write Janet to-night,” he thought, while
+he was dressing, “and tell her all about it. I
+should have done it before, but things have been
+pretty uncertain.”</p>
+
+<p>Janet might have been a sister, but—she wasn’t.
+Any one observing the length of the letter Lefty
+wrote after dinner, and the pains taken with its
+composition, would have guessed that instantly.
+A fellow rarely sends more than four pages of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
+closely written hotel paper to a relative, and as
+for tearing up a nearly finished sheet, and rewriting
+it—well, that settled the question.</p>
+
+<p>When the epistle had been carefully sealed and
+the envelope directed, Locke found he was out
+of stamps, and purchased some at the desk. He
+had just affixed one to the letter when Buck Fargo
+appeared and pounced on him.</p>
+
+<p>“Been looking for you, kid,” the backstop announced,
+taking Locke by the arm. “Come out
+with me for a little walk. I want to talk to
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke acquiesced readily and, without turning,
+reached back for the letter he had left lying on
+the desk. He was so taken up with wondering
+what Fargo had on his mind that his action was
+really little more than mechanical. His fingers
+closed over an envelope which he thrust into a
+side pocket, and the two walked briskly away.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for Lefty the proprietor of the
+Hatchford was of an economical turn of mind.
+Having been considerably fretted by every Tom,
+Dick, and Harry in Ashland dropping in and using
+his letter paper <i lang="la">ad libitum</i>, he instituted the system
+of having a supply at the desk, and nowhere
+else. When a guest of the house wanted stationery
+he helped himself. A townsman could do the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
+same, if he wished. But the mere fact of having
+to face the argus-eyed clerk, instead of slipping
+quietly to a well-furnished desk, acted as a strong
+deterrent.</p>
+
+<p>When Lefty bought his stamps the supply of
+envelopes had dwindled to three, two of them
+stuck inside the flap of the third. They lay close
+beside his letter on the desk, and when he reached
+back without looking it was the three empty envelopes,
+stuck together as one, that he picked up
+and put into his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>His carefully composed epistle lay, face upward,
+where he had left it. The clerk was busy with his
+books, and no one else happened to see it until
+Bert Elgin, as immaculately garbed as he had been
+the night before, on his way to the street, paused to
+light a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>The match flared up and he had conveyed it
+halfway to the weed between his lips when suddenly
+the motion was arrested, and he stared
+downward with widening eyes. For an instant
+he could scarcely believe his senses. Before him
+lay a letter addressed to the very girl whose
+charms had so smitten him the night before, and
+on whom he expected to call within fifteen minutes.</p>
+
+<p>There was no doubt about it. “Miss Janet
+Harting,” written in a strong, masculine hand,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
+stared up at him like a basilisk. Some one in this
+very hotel was corresponding with her—some one
+who did not know that she had arrived at Ashland
+the night before; for the address was a New England
+town.</p>
+
+<p>“Kingsbridge!” The word came hissing
+through his clenched teeth as he remembered suddenly
+that this was the name of the team on which
+Lefty Locke had pitched during the past summer.</p>
+
+<p>The forgotten match burned his fingers, and he
+flung it to the floor. A second later, however, he
+reached over to where a box of them lay, and
+struck one, leaning close against the desk as he
+did so. When he moved away, the cigarette
+alight, his face was still slightly flushed, but his
+expression was once more composed. The letter
+had disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Once in the street, he hurried along, scarcely
+able to restrain his impatience. Twice he hesitated
+by a lighted window, but each time the place
+seemed too public for his purpose. At last he
+stopped before a little store on a corner, glanced
+swiftly and suspiciously around, and drew the
+letter from his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment he stood scowling at the superscription
+before he ripped the envelope open.
+The frown deepened as he noticed the length of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
+the inclosure, and then, with narrowed eyes, he
+sought the signature.</p>
+
+<p>“Hazelton!” he muttered hoarsely. “I knew
+it!”</p>
+
+<p>Rapidly, with now and then a nervous glance
+around, his eyes flew over the closely filled pages.
+The letter had evidently been written by one very
+good friend to another. There was little in it
+which any one might not have read, yet its very
+tone, with those references to past experiences
+together, to mutual friends, to hopes and fears
+and interests held in common, sent Bert Elgin off
+into a spasm of rage. He had plumed himself
+on having, with great dexterity and presence of
+mind, obtained the inside track with quite the most
+fascinating girl that he had ever seen, only to discover
+that the man he hated with every fiber of
+his being seemed to have the inside track.</p>
+
+<p>“Confound him!” he cried, crushing the letter
+between his fingers, “I can’t seem to get away
+from him.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment he stood there hesitating, his fingers
+busy tearing the purloined letter into shreds.
+Then he turned the corner, and began to walk hurriedly
+toward High Street.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll beat him yet!” he vowed. “I’ll put him
+out of the running here, or I’m a dub!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br>
+<small>GUILE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Really?” exclaimed Janet Harting,
+her eyes sparkling. Then she laughed.
+“It’s luck you didn’t tell father. He
+has an idea that professional ball players aren’t
+quite respectable.”</p>
+
+<p>Bert Elgin bent slightly forward, a hurt expression
+in the eyes fixed upon her face. During
+the fifteen minutes in which he had labored
+strenuously to ingratiate himself with her father,
+and succeeded beyond his hopes, he had gathered,
+by skillful probing, the impression that the older
+man was just the sort to look askance on professional
+athletics. Not a hint of this now appeared
+on the surface, however. His voice was regretful,
+with just the proper touch of indignation in it.</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you don’t share his prejudice, Miss
+Harting?” he said quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“Not at all,” the girl hastened to assure him.
+“I adore baseball, and could never understand
+why a man shouldn’t take it up just as he would
+any other profession. It’s much better paid than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
+many, and I’m sure it must be a great deal pleasanter
+than being cooped up all day in a stuffy
+office.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s sigh of relief was unmistakable. “I
+can’t tell you how glad I am to hear you say that,”
+he returned, his face clearing. “Your father is
+a clergyman of the old school, and I can quite
+understand his prejudice. But professional baseball
+to-day is very different from what it was in
+his time. There isn’t a cleaner, decenter sport
+going, or one more free from crookedness. Of
+course, there are people who look down on it.
+There are even players”—his voice took on a
+sneering tone—“who go into it under fictitious
+names, but they’re cads and bounders. I notice
+they’re not ashamed to draw their salary checks
+on the dot. I’ve played ball ever since I left
+college, and I can truly say, Miss Harting, that
+I’ve never once had reason to regret my choice of
+a profession.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was silence. The girl’s
+cheeks were faintly flushed and she was plucking
+absently at the fringe hanging from the upholstered
+chair arm.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure you haven’t, Mr. Elgin,” she murmured
+presently. There was another momentary
+pause before she raised her eyes to his face. “I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
+believe that what you say about a man’s playing
+under a false name is generally true, but don’t
+you think that once in a while there may be a
+perfectly good reason for it?”</p>
+
+<p>The pitcher shrugged his shoulders. “Once in
+a thousand times, perhaps,” he admitted. “It’s
+easy enough to invent a plausible reason, but I’ve
+noticed invariably that fellows do it because
+they’re ashamed, not of playing professional ball,
+but of having their friends know it. There’s an
+instance of this right here in the Hornet squad, a
+chap who graduated from Princeton the year after
+I did. He tried making his living as a lawyer,
+fell down hard, and then took up baseball. There
+isn’t an earthly reason why he shouldn’t use his
+own name, and yet he’s masquerading as Tom
+Locke.”</p>
+
+<p>“Locke!” the girl gasped, staring in startled
+amazement. “You don’t mean to say that Phil
+Hazelton is <em>here</em>?”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s jaw dropped most realistically, and he
+drew his breath sharply.</p>
+
+<p>“You—know him?” he faltered.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I do. Why, he pitched all last summer
+for the Kingsbridge team. That’s where I’ve
+always lived, you know, until father’s health began
+to fail, and he was sent South by one of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
+wealthy parishioners. Philip Hazelton is a perfectly
+splendid fellow, and we’re great friends.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s face was the picture of confusion. “I—beg
+your pardon, Miss Harting,” he stammered.
+“I—I had no idea—you knew him, or I should
+never have mentioned his name.”</p>
+
+<p>His expression was so contrite that the girl
+laughed merrily.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you didn’t,” she returned. “How
+should you when I haven’t even told you where
+I lived? I’ll forgive you, though, for otherwise
+I might never have known he was here. I’m sure,
+Mr. Elgin, if you knew Phil Hazelton as well as I
+do you’d admit that he was the thousandth man
+you spoke of a while ago who has a perfectly legitimate
+reason for not playing under his own name.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very likely,” Elgin returned hastily. “I
+don’t doubt that you’re right.”</p>
+
+<p>His voice was quite lacking in conviction, however.
+It was the tone of one agreeing out of mere
+politeness and because he was anxious to get away
+from a disagreeable subject.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Harting, being keen of perception, noticed
+this, and her smile faded.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t really mean that?” she said abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin spread out his hands depreciatingly. “I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
+wish you wouldn’t,” he returned. “A fellow
+can’t help having his opinions, you know. Let’s
+change the subject.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t want to change the subject,” she
+retorted warmly. “I insist on your telling me
+why you don’t agree with me.”</p>
+
+<p>The pitcher’s long lashes drooped over his eyes,
+and he bit his lip.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew Hazelton very well at college,” he began
+slowly. “We were friends until—certain
+things—came up which showed me—” he threw
+back his head, and looked her full in the eyes.
+“I can’t do it!” he burst out. “Please don’t ask
+me, Miss Harting. I’ve said more now than I
+should have. No matter what my opinion of him
+may be, I won’t talk about a fellow behind his
+back.”</p>
+
+<p>His attitude of manly embarrassment was so
+well done that the girl was completely deceived.
+She was angry at herself for having led the conversation
+into this channel, but her estimation of
+this man who would say nothing against another
+with whom he was evidently not on friendly
+terms, increased by leaps and bounds.</p>
+
+<p>They chatted on various other topics for a little
+while, but the conversation could not fail to be
+slightly constrained, and Elgin soon took his leave.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
+
+<p>After he had gone Janet Harting returned to
+the parlor and stood for a space leaning thoughtfully
+against the mantel.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s absurd!” she exclaimed aloud presently.
+“There’s been some misunderstanding between
+them. I won’t believe that Phil is anything but
+straightforward and absolutely honorable. He
+couldn’t do or think a mean thing. I’ll forget that
+I ever heard a whisper against him.”</p>
+
+<p>But this was not quite possible. In spite of
+her determination, a nagging little doubt returned
+more than once to trouble Janet Harting. Somehow,
+she could not forget that Bert Elgin had
+known Hazelton at college—known him for years
+probably, with chances for seeing phases of his
+character which the intimate life at a big university
+alone can give; while her own acquaintance
+with that selfsame individual was limited to
+nine brief months.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br>
+<small>THE MAN IN THE CORRIDOR</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Hang such weather!” grumbled Buck
+Fargo, gazing disconsolately out of
+the dripping window.</p>
+
+<p>It was not a strictly original remark, considering
+the fact that it had been uttered, in some form
+or another, on an average of every five minutes
+since breakfast time. Nevertheless, it was fervently
+echoed by each one of the players who
+lounged within hearing distance in the lobby.</p>
+
+<p>It had been pouring all day, a cold, driving
+rain, which kept some forty-odd active, vigorous
+athletes cooped up in the confines of the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>It was not so bad in the morning, but by the
+middle of the afternoon pool had lost its charm,
+craps failed to interest; and even the inveterate
+poker players were becoming satiated with that
+game.</p>
+
+<p>“I can feel myself putting on pounds and
+pounds,” mourned “Splinter” Jones, one of the
+outfielders, whose winter of luxurious idleness
+had resulted in about fifteen pounds of troublesome<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
+and unnecessary weight. “It’ll set me back
+a week.”</p>
+
+<p>“Too bad there ain’t a Turkish bath in this
+blooming village,” yawned Cy Russell. “If we
+was only in little old New York you could sit in
+a steam room and lose all the weight you wanted
+to.”</p>
+
+<p>Fargo turned suddenly from the window, his
+eyes sparkling.</p>
+
+<p>“Gee whiz, Cy!” he exclaimed. “That ain’t a
+bad idea. Why can’t we fix up one?”</p>
+
+<p>The pitcher’s eyes widened. “Fix up what?”
+he inquired. “A Turkish bath? You talk nutty,
+Buck.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nix! It’s a cinch! One thing good about this
+hash house is they’ve always got plenty of hot
+water. What’s to prevent our hiking up to one
+of the bathrooms, stopping the cracks with towels,
+and turning on the hot water full. I’ll guarantee
+in ten minutes you couldn’t see across the room.
+Moreover, the radiators are all red-hot to-day, and
+if we wrap Splinter up in blankets and set him
+down on one in the bathroom, we’ll see him oozing
+away to a shadow before our very eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>Jones straightened up in his chair, his lips
+pursed disapprovingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Not me,” he declared firmly. “Mebbe I’ve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
+done some fool things in my life, but I never yet
+set down on a red-hot radiator without my clothes
+on, and I ain’t going to begin now.”</p>
+
+<p>“You loon!” grinned Fargo. “Did you think
+I meant without something under you to keep you
+from getting scorched? I ain’t got it in for you
+that bad. A bunch of bath towels’ll do the trick
+and make you so comfortable you’ll be going to
+sleep. Come on, boy! Be a sport.”</p>
+
+<p>The others added their persuasions, and at
+length the stout outfielder yielded. The thought
+of parting with five or six pounds at one fell swoop
+was irresistible. He presently arose and, escorted
+by eight or ten fellows, made his way to the upper
+regions.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty Locke did not happen to be in the lobby
+to see them go. He had gone up to his room soon
+after dinner, read several chapters in a volume
+of Dickens, and taken a sudden notion to write
+to his kid brother. By the time the letter was
+finished and he had pottered around a little longer,
+fretting at the downpour and regretting that he
+had not been able to keep up the good work commenced
+on the field the day before, it was nearly
+half past four.</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon I’ll go down and scare up somebody
+for a game of billiards,” he thought.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
+
+<p>As he opened the door and stepped into the hall,
+he saw the figure of a man walking briskly away
+down the corridor. For a moment he paid no attention
+to the unknown. Presently something
+about the set of the fellow’s shoulders struck him
+as vaguely familiar, but even then he would probably
+have thought nothing of it had not the other
+swiftly turned his head, and as swiftly jerked his
+face around again.</p>
+
+<p>It was George Miller, the discharged waiter who
+had served Locke that fatal glass of doped beer
+two nights before.</p>
+
+<p>Without delay, Lefty started to run. The
+waiter took to his heels, also, whirled round a
+corner toward the servants’ staircase at top speed,
+and disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Sprinting after him, Locke reached the corner
+just in time to see his man halfway down the long
+stretch of carpeted hall. The next instant a wild
+yell of pain and rage from somewhere close at
+hand broke the stillness with startling abruptness.
+A door at Lefty’s right was flung open. Buck
+Fargo, his face contorted with mirth, rushed out,
+flung himself against the door of the next room,
+and slammed it behind him, all in the twinkling of
+an eye.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty, bewildered, had no time even to wonder<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
+what had happened. Close upon the heels of the
+flying catcher came a strange figure, clad in blankets
+and nothing else, and giving vent to a continuous
+bellow of rage. He did not halt or pause.
+The whole impact of his big body struck Locke
+squarely, and they landed together on the floor
+with a crash which seemed to shake the building.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br>
+<small>NOT QUITE PROVEN</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Blue blazes!” roared Splinter Jones, his
+hands clutching Lefty’s windpipe.
+“You bonehead! You mutt! I’ll teach
+you to pull them towels from under me! I’m
+scalded—parboiled—burned to a crisp! Wough!”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty grabbed the other’s wrists and, with a
+twist and a wriggle, freed his throat from the
+choking grasp.</p>
+
+<p>“Let up!” he panted. “What do you think
+you’re doing, Jones? Are you nutty?”</p>
+
+<p>The outfielder gasped and grunted with surprise.
+An instant later he had rolled over so that
+the cub pitcher’s face was plainly visible, and his
+eyes fairly popped out.</p>
+
+<p>“By thunder!” he groaned. “I thought you
+was Fargo.”</p>
+
+<p>A roar of delight issued from the open doorway.
+As Lefty sprang up, he saw that it was
+crowded with members of the Hornet squad,
+several of them in next to nature’s garb, and all
+convulsed with mirth. Behind them rose vagrant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
+eddies of what looked like smoke, but had the hot,
+suffocating tang of steam.</p>
+
+<p>“Come and see our Turkish bath, Kid,” invited
+Cy Russell when he had recovered his power of
+speech. “Buck invented it, but something kind
+of went wrong, and he beat it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Went wrong!” snapped Jones, stung afresh
+by a sense of his injuries. “The pirate did it on
+purpose! Just wait till I get my hands on him.
+I’ll make him smart!”</p>
+
+<p>He looked so ridiculous as he stood there, scowling
+fiercely and trying to gather the inadequate
+folds of the scanty blanket around him, that another
+burst of laughter commenced. It was cut
+short, however, by the whirring of the elevator.</p>
+
+<p>“Come inside, you loon!” ejaculated Russell,
+grabbing the outfielder by the arm and hustling
+him into the room. “You ain’t decent. What
+if a woman should come along!”</p>
+
+<p>At the suggestion the men all scuttled out of
+sight. Lefty followed them. The interruption
+had given Miller ample time to make himself
+scarce, and, besides, Locke was curious to learn
+more of the trick which had been played on Jones.</p>
+
+<p>It proved to be simple to a degree. The improvised
+Turkish bath had been an unqualified
+success, as Lefty realized the instant he entered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
+the superheated bathroom, where the atmosphere
+made him fairly gasp for breath. The water still
+boiled from the tap, sending up clouds of steam.
+In one corner was the fateful radiator that had
+aided Fargo in the perpetration of the prank which
+justly aroused the wrath of Jones.</p>
+
+<p>Until Buck Fargo’s unfortunate propensity for
+joking had got the better of him, everything had
+gone smoothly. Jones and several other players
+who thought they could stand a little less weight
+stripped, swathed themselves in blankets, and took
+turns sitting on the sizzling radiator, well protected
+by several thicknesses of bath toweling.
+Perspiration streamed from every pore as superfluous
+tissue oozed away.</p>
+
+<p>After each man had indulged in several rounds
+of the sweating process, it was observed that
+Jones was monopolizing the newly discovered
+boon. Protests were unavailing. He simply sat
+on the radiator until he could stand the heat no
+longer, regardless of the clamorous waiting list,
+and Russell was on the point of using force when
+he received an unmistakably insignificant wink
+from Buck Fargo, which made him refrain from
+butting in.</p>
+
+<p>When the outfielder’s turn came again, he carefully
+adjusted the blankets about him and approached<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
+the radiator. The others were all gathered
+around, uttering various joshing comments.
+The big backstop leaned carelessly against the
+wall close to the heated coils. The room was
+hazy with steam pouring out of the faucet of the
+bathtub.</p>
+
+<p>Cautiously Jones parted the blankets, and let
+himself down slowly, quite oblivious to the fact
+that Fargo had removed the towels with a dexterous
+twitch. The next instant a fearful yell rent
+the air, and the outfielder shot up as if galvanized,
+caught sight of the catcher slipping out of the
+door, and flung himself after in hot pursuit, with
+the resultant upsetting of Lefty Locke’s plans.</p>
+
+<p>The latter was not quite so entertained by the
+joke as he might have been had it not caused him
+to lose the waiter. He was swiftly becoming more
+and more convinced that, if he could only once
+get hold of the fellow and bring a little pressure
+to bear upon him, Miller might tell him a lot.</p>
+
+<p>What was the man doing back in the hotel, anyway?
+Lefty wondered as he took the elevator
+downstairs. The mere fact of his presence in that
+corridor after he had been fired looked suspicious.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a shame I didn’t come out of my room a
+minute sooner,” the cub pitcher grumbled to himself
+as he entered the lobby. “I’d have nailed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
+him. By Jove, Jack! You’re just the chap I
+want to see.” He caught Stillman by the arm,
+and propelled him toward a couple of empty chairs
+near by. “Who do you think I saw up in our
+corridor about fifteen minutes ago?”</p>
+
+<p>“That waiter who was fired yesterday morning,”
+the newspaper man returned without an
+instant’s hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty gasped. “What! Did you see him too?”</p>
+
+<p>“No; but I heard him talking to Elgin. Our
+rooms adjoin, you know, and there’s a connecting
+door which is locked. I was up there, doping out
+some stuff to send to the paper, when I began to
+hear scraps of talk coming through the door.
+Didn’t pay much attention at first, for I wanted
+to get my story off in the five-thirty mail, but I
+made out that somebody was trying to get money
+out of our friend. That made me sit up and take
+a little more notice. The chap wanted fifteen dollars
+to take him to Dallas. Elgin balked, of
+course, and then the waiter said it would be
+the last touch he’d make, and, anyhow, it was little
+enough, considering all he’d done for Elgin.
+They scrapped back and forth for a bit, and then
+I reckon Elgin shelled out, for I didn’t hear anything
+more.</p>
+
+<p>“The fool part of it was that I never wised up<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
+to who he was till afterward. I was thinking
+about my news dope, I suppose. Anyhow, it
+wasn’t till after I’d got that out of the way that I
+began to wonder whether the strange guy might
+not have been this man we want to get hold of.
+It certainly looked a bit like it, his bleeding Elgin
+that way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Didn’t he say anything about what he’d done
+for Elgin?” Lefty asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, or I’d have woke up in a jiffy. It was
+only that he’d done something which put him
+personally to the bad. I haven’t a doubt now as
+to what that something was, but I’m afraid there
+isn’t anything you could call real proof.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke shook his head. “I’m afraid not,” he
+agreed slowly.</p>
+
+<p>More than ever he regretted that he had missed
+the rascal in the corridor by a hair’s breadth.
+Truly, luck seemed to be with Bert Elgin in everything
+he undertook.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX<br>
+<small>JANET HARTING WONDERS</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty did not devote much more thought
+that night to Bert Elgin and his doings.
+Just before supper a letter arrived which
+drove every other idea from his head. For a
+second or two he stood staring at the familiar
+handwriting, wondering how in the world Janet
+had found out where he was. When he hastily slit
+the envelope and took in the meaning of the few
+lines on that single sheet of paper, his astonishment
+knew no bounds.</p>
+
+<p>First he gave a long whistle. Then a wide grin
+overspread his face. It did not much matter what
+had brought the girl to Ashland, the fact remained
+that she was here and that he would see
+her that night. That was all that really counted.</p>
+
+<p>He ate his supper hurriedly, oblivious for the
+first time to the continued coldness of his companions.
+His thoughts were elsewhere. Afterward
+he hastened up to his room and changed
+his clothes. Half an hour later he was running
+up the steps of the house on High Street.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span></p>
+
+<p>Janet received him alone, her father having retired
+directly after dinner. To Lefty she seemed
+prettier than ever, and there was no mistaking
+her pleasure in seeing him. After the first greetings
+were over, they sat down on the sofa, each
+eager to hear all about the other’s doings.</p>
+
+<p>“Father hasn’t been very well all winter,” the
+girl explained in answer to Lefty’s first question.
+“You remember my writing to you how he kept
+catching colds so easily, and couldn’t seem to shake
+them off? His rheumatism was worse than it had
+ever been before, too, and I was beginning to get
+really worried about him when one day, about a
+week ago, Cyrus King came in, and told father
+he’d arranged for us to go South and stay till
+spring. You know that gruff, positive way he
+has? Well, he’d planned it all out before he said
+a word to us, insisted on paying our expenses,
+and wouldn’t even let us thank him. Of course,
+he has quantities of money, and he and father are
+such old friends I didn’t mind much taking it
+from him.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was good of him!” Lefty said warmly.
+“But how in the world did you happen to pick on
+Ashland to come to? That’s what I don’t quite
+understand.”</p>
+
+<p>“We didn’t. At least, that’s not where we’re<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
+going to settle down. Doctor Lansing knew about
+some wonderful mineral springs at Billings,
+farther south in the State, and advised us to go
+there. We’ve only stopped off here for a week or
+ten days to see father’s old friend, Mr. Forsythe.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty nodded and leaned back, his muscular
+fingers linked loosely over one knee.</p>
+
+<p>“I see. But what gets me is how you knew
+I was here. You could have knocked me down
+with a feather when I got your note. I suppose
+you must have seen my name in some paper that
+listed me as one of Brennan’s new recruits.”</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. Her lips were half smiling,
+but her eyes were fixed on his face with an
+odd sort of intentness.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she returned quietly. “Mr. Elgin told
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Elgin?” Locke repeated incredulously. “You
+can’t possibly mean Bert Elgin? I know you can’t
+mean that man!”</p>
+
+<p>Annoyed by the astonishment and involuntary
+disapproval in his voice, she drew herself up the
+least bit. If there was one quality on which Janet
+Harting prided herself it was her judgment, and
+she had never allowed any one save her father to
+criticise a person on whom she chose to bestow
+her friendship.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Why not?” she retorted. “I like him very
+much. Besides, he was the means of saving
+father and me from a serious accident.”</p>
+
+<p>She went on briefly to tell how the acquaintance
+had come about, and Lefty listened in frowning
+silence, gnawing his under lip with firm white
+teeth.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it was just as well that he had been
+prevented from giving vent to that first natural
+outburst of indignation which leaped up within
+him. The discovery that Elgin, of all men, had
+made the acquaintance and apparently won the
+liking of this girl filled him with intense anger.
+The cur wasn’t fit even to speak to her, and in
+that moment Lefty detested him as never before.
+Only the impossibility of interrupting Janet kept
+him from pouring out an impulsive account of
+what he knew about the scoundrel, and the even
+more contemptible things he suspected.</p>
+
+<p>But, with the passing of that first throb of
+anger, Locke felt that this would merely make matters
+worse. Certain as he was in his own mind of
+Elgin’s complicity in the plot against himself, he
+had no real proof, and anything he might say
+against the man would seem like the product of
+jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>“He came to call last night,” the girl concluded,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
+“and father was quite charmed with him.” She
+hesitated an instant, and then went on slowly:
+“I’m afraid you’re not very good friends, are you,
+Phil?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! You gathered that, did you?” Lefty said
+stiffly. “I suppose he blackguarded me to beat
+the band.”</p>
+
+<p>“He did nothing of the sort. He never said
+a word against you. I simply got the impression
+from his manner, and thought it was a pity you
+shouldn’t be on better terms.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s out of the question,” Lefty retorted
+shortly. He was perplexed over his inability to
+let her know exactly what sort of a man Bert
+Elgin was, and that added no little asperity to
+his manner. “We could never be friends.”</p>
+
+<p>Janet sighed a little. She was very human, and
+where is the girl who is not thrilled by the thought
+of reconciling old enemies and healing old sores
+by her influence? She did not give up hope of
+some day accomplishing it in this case. She only
+realized that nothing more could be done at present,
+and, womanlike, tucking it away in her mind
+for future use, changed the subject abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“You really didn’t deserve to have me write
+you,” she said more lightly, “after the way you’ve
+neglected me lately. You must have got my last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
+letter over two weeks ago, and I haven’t heard a
+word from you since.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know it,” Lefty acknowledged. “I ought to
+have written, but everything came about so unexpectedly,
+Janet, that I put it off till I could have
+something definite to tell you. Just because I’m
+with a Big League team now doesn’t mean I’ll
+stay. I’ve got to make good, and there were two
+or three things at first which handicapped me so
+that I had very serious doubts of ever doing it.
+I did write you a long letter last night, though,
+but naturally I sent it to Kingsbridge. You’ll
+probably get it in a week or so.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; all my mail is forwarded. But of course
+you’ll make good, Phil. I don’t see how you can
+have any doubt of it. Just look at the wonderful
+way you pitched last summer.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty smiled whimsically. “It’s very nice of
+you to think that, Janet,” he said. “But there’s
+a lot of difference between last summer and now.
+This crowd is one of the fastest in the country,
+and I’ll have to be on the jump every minute of the
+time to keep up with them. I really do think I
+have a show, though, and that’s what made me
+write to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure you have,” the girl returned positively.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
+“Do you have any games? I’m crazy to
+see you pitch.”</p>
+
+<p>“There’s a short practice game every day, but
+I don’t know how soon they’ll give me a chance
+on the slab. I’ll tell you what: If I find I’m
+going to be used, I’ll tell you or send you word,
+and you can come out to see the game. If that
+doesn’t happen before you leave here, you’d better
+come, anyway; for the playing is worth seeing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good!” returned Janet. “I’d love to come,
+and I can bring Jean Forsythe. She’s awfully
+nice, and crazy about baseball.” She paused for
+an instant, and then went on, more slowly: “I
+should think, now that you’re in the Big League,
+Phil, you’d play under your own name. You’re
+not ashamed to, are you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Great Scott, no!” Lefty exclaimed. “What
+put that notion into your head? You know how
+impossible it was to use my own name last summer,
+and, now that I’ve made what reputation
+I have under the name of Locke, it wouldn’t be
+good policy to change. You should remember
+that I have a father, also, who is strongly prejudiced
+against baseball, and I see no need of dragging
+the name of Hazelton into it. There’s not
+much in a name, anyhow. Many fellows take a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
+different one, or have one thrust upon them by
+the fans.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a note of finality in his voice which
+made the girl realize the futility of continuing the
+subject. She was wise enough not to try, but after
+he had gone she could not help remembering Bert
+Elgin’s scornful remark that a professional could
+always find plenty of plausible excuses for playing
+under a name which was not his own.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br>
+<small>THE YELLOW STREAK</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Believe me, fellows,” Bill Hagin said
+fervently, “that cub, Elgin, is some
+scrapper.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a sniff of incredulity from the half
+dozen regulars gathered near the plate waiting
+their turn. They had heard before of these
+pugilistic prodigies, and were inclined to be doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m from Missouri, Bill,” drawled Russell.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if you’d been up in my room last night,
+you’d been shown good and proper,” Hagin retorted.
+“Elgin put it all over One-round Nolan
+in the prettiest way you ever saw.”</p>
+
+<p>At this announcement several of the men began
+to sit up and take notice; for Ed Nolan, the Hornet’s
+crack third baseman, was also renowned for
+his skill with the gloves.</p>
+
+<p>“Quit your kidding, Bill,” admonished Red
+Pollock. “You can’t tell me no cub put it over
+Ed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Truest thing you know,” averred the outfielder<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
+fervently. “Ask Monte Harris, or Dutch, if you
+don’t believe me. We was all talking downstairs
+about the match between Kid Baker and Young
+Glover in Memphis to-morrow, and Ross—he’s
+that punky cub fielder—says he’d back Elgin
+against any amateur in his class. Nolan picks
+up his ears, and, one word leading to another, we
+goes up to my room to call his bluff. Take it from
+me, there wasn’t any bluff about the kid, though.
+He’s got science and speed to burn, and the dandiest
+left hand wallop you ever saw. It sent
+Nolan sprawling in the third round as nice as
+could be, and Ed ain’t no slouch. I sure wish you
+all could have seen it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why in thunder didn’t you put us wise, then?”
+demanded Russell indignantly. “You’re a hot
+sketch, pulling off a scrap and letting nobody in.”</p>
+
+<p>A chorus of similar reproaches were hurled at
+Hagin from all sides, mingled with eager queries
+about Elgin’s other good points, and calls for a
+more detailed description of the bout.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Fargo alone sat unmoved and apparently
+incurious, a look of incredulity on his face. He
+was thinking of that night in the Palace Theater
+when Elgin had slipped away, leaving Lefty to
+face the wrathy mob alone. He remembered, also,
+the story Jack Stillman had told him of the beating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
+Locke had started to give his college mate
+three years before at Princeton, and he smiled a
+wide, disbelieving smile as he listened to Hagin’s
+vivid description of the cub pitcher’s prowess with
+his fists.</p>
+
+<p>But when, later in the day, Monte Harris and
+Carl Siegrist backed up the statement, and even
+Nolan himself admitted sourly that “the kid
+wasn’t so worse,” Fargo grew puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>“Something queer about this,” he thought.
+“Looks like I’d have to do a little investigating
+on my own hook.”</p>
+
+<p>All morning he was preoccupied and thoughtful,
+only arousing himself when Brennan’s eye was
+upon him, and even then quite lacking in his usual
+joshing repartee. Once or twice he noticed with
+a sort of absent approbation that Lefty was showing
+some steam and curves in the work-out with
+other pitchers; but aside from that he paid little
+attention to anything.</p>
+
+<p>During dinner his abstraction continued, but
+afterward, on the way back to the field, he might
+have been observed suddenly to slap one thigh
+with his hand, and mutter something under his
+breath. After that he was the old Buck Fargo
+again.</p>
+
+<p>The daily practice game now took place in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
+afternoon, leaving the morning for batting practice,
+throwing, running, and various other exercises.
+Ogan, the captain of the cubs, put Redmond,
+a fairly promising young twirler, into the
+box, but at the end of the second inning withdrew
+him, and substituted Bert Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>The latter seemed to be in fine form, and started
+off by fanning Cy Russell. The second man up
+flied out to center field, and then Fargo came to
+the bat. Elgin’s first delivery just missed the outside
+corner of the plate. He then put over a
+straight, swift one, and Fargo, seemingly “playing
+the game,” let it pass. The cub pitcher then
+wound himself up for the elusive curve which was
+one of his pet specialties.</p>
+
+<p>The ball whirled toward the pan, apparently
+heading straight at the batter. Fargo took a
+quick step back, then lunged forward. The next
+instant he dropped his bat with an exclamation of
+anger and pain as the sphere struck his arm with
+a dull impact.</p>
+
+<p>His face contorted, the big backstop trotted toward
+first, rubbing the injured member, and
+shooting at Elgin some extremely vivid and forceful
+comments out of the corner of his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>The incident flustered the latter to such an extent
+that he whipped a straight one over, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
+cut the center of the pan, and it was smashed out
+by Siegrist. The next man up sacrificed Fargo
+home, but Elgin took a brace; and shut out the
+regulars from further scoring.</p>
+
+<p>The game progressed in comparative peace and
+harmony for two innings. Then, strangely
+enough, Fargo was hit again by the second pitched
+ball, and instantly the air was blue. His previous
+remarks were as nothing to the words which now
+issued from his lips as he glared at the offending
+youngster, and they only ceased when Jim Brennan
+ordered sharply: “Quit that blackguarding,
+and take your base.”</p>
+
+<p>In spite of these two unfortunate happenings,
+the cubs nailed the game by a single run; for their
+opponents had not yet reached the point where
+they were willing to exert themselves overmuch.
+That run was scored in the last inning by Elgin,
+cleverly assisted by Ogan and Andy Whalen; and
+the instant the game was over the players streaked
+across the field toward the gate.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin alone lingered behind to get his glove,
+which he had tossed over near the bench. Oddly
+enough, it was nowhere to be seen. Having been
+much too occupied to notice anything outside the
+diamond during the past ten minutes, he had failed
+to see Fargo scoop up that same useful article<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
+when returning from the pursuit of a foul, and toss
+it over into the grandstand.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it happened that, while Elgin was searching
+vainly for his property, the field was deserted
+by all save himself and one other man. The latter
+was Fargo, who had started out with the rest,
+and then, halfway to the gate, paused, and turned
+back.</p>
+
+<p>He was within ten feet of the cub twirler before
+the latter glanced up, giving a slight start as
+his eyes took in the expression of cold menace on
+the big backstop’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“You common mucker!” rasped the latter
+fiercely, his big fists clenched as he strode rapidly
+forward. “If you think you can put a trick like
+that over me a-purpose, you’re a bigger chump
+than you look.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin took a step backward, his face blanching.
+“I—didn’t do it on purpose,” he stammered. “It
+was—”</p>
+
+<p>“You lie!” snapped Fargo. “Once might have
+gone, but not the second time. You’ve got a big
+thrashing coming, if I can give it to you. Put up
+your fists, you boob!”</p>
+
+<p>His eyes seemed to blaze, and Elgin, after an
+involuntary motion to guard himself, dropped his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
+arms and retreated a few steps. He was trembling
+and his lips quivered.</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you—I didn’t—mean—” he stammered,
+and then was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a liar!” was the retort. “Ain’t you
+going to put your fists up, or must I make you?”</p>
+
+<p>There was no reply, and, with a swift forward
+motion, Fargo lunged and brought his open palm
+against Elgin’s cheek with stinging force. The
+youngster staggered back, straightened, and stood
+there, head hanging, the picture of terror.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Fargo stared in silence at the
+marks his fingers had left on the now crimson
+cheek. Then he burst into a laugh so full of
+scorn and contempt that the other winced.</p>
+
+<p>“A quitter!” the big backstop sneered. “A
+rotten quitter, that’s what you are! You haven’t
+got an ounce of grit in your whole hulking carcass.
+I thought there was something queer about your
+being such a wonder with your fists. If you had
+any nerve you could have knocked me endwise—but
+you haven’t. You’re yellow straight through.
+I let you hit me with the ball a-purpose, so’s I
+could see what you were made of. I’ve found out.
+Your glove’s over in the stand, where I fired it.”</p>
+
+<p>Without another word, he turned and strode<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
+toward the gate, leaving Elgin standing as if
+rooted to the ground. Bert’s face turned from red
+to white, from white to deep, purpling crimson.
+He gnawed his lips until the blood came, and his
+eyes were full of bitter shame at the humiliating
+discovery that he had been caught in the backstop’s
+trap to test his nerve.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII<br>
+<small>LEFTY’S CHANCE COMES</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Al Ogan, the promising cub first baseman
+and captain of the Yannigans, was not a
+bad fellow at heart. He had been as disgusted
+as any of his companions at Locke’s apparently
+inexcusable behavior which had lost them
+the first game with the regulars, and had joined
+heart and soul in the cold ignoring of the southpaw
+twirler from that time forth. But at the end
+of three or four days, during which he had watched
+Lefty’s work closely, he began to wonder whether
+he was right or not.</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe he was sick or something that day,”
+he thought to himself late one morning, as he stood
+watching Lefty pitching to Buck Fargo. “He
+hasn’t been the same chap since. He’s certainly
+got smoke, and he can put the stuff on the pill
+when he tries.”</p>
+
+<p>Presently a bit of friendly joshing between
+Locke and Fargo, in which Red Pollock and
+another of the regulars joined, made Ogan still
+more thoughtful. He kept his eyes open during<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
+the dinner lay-off, and at length he realized that
+Locke was on friendly terms with almost the entire
+regular crowd, and actually chummy with the
+gruff, rough-and-ready backstop.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll be hanged if I know how he’s done it,”
+Ogan thought with some slight annoyance.
+“They don’t bother much about the rest of us. I
+reckon I must have made a mistake. That bunch
+would never take up with a quitter.”</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon he took occasion to speak to
+Lefty in a careless sort of way which seemed to
+indicate he had momentarily forgotten the boycott;
+and when Locke answered him without any
+signs of pique or soreness, they talked casually
+for a moment or two.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the day Manager Brennan called
+Ogan to him.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to try an experiment to-morrow
+afternoon,” he said shortly. “We’ll lengthen the
+game to the full number of innings, and about the
+first of the seventh I’ll put Elgin into the box for
+the regulars. I want to see what he’ll do with that
+kind of support.”</p>
+
+<p>Ogan restrained his surprise, and nodded. “I
+suppose I’d better not use him early in the game,
+then?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“No; take some of the others. He’d better be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
+fresh when he goes in. The old boys are waking
+up and beginning to play ball.”</p>
+
+<p>This Ogan had observed the day before with
+some chagrin. Up to that time the cubs had won
+every game except that first one, and had come to
+have a pretty good opinion of their ability. Yesterday,
+however, they had been unaccountably
+nosed out in the last inning, while to-day their defeat
+had been even worse.</p>
+
+<p>Apparently there was no reason for it. They
+were in splendid condition and playing harder
+than ever. Their opponents did not seem to be
+exerting themselves a bit more than they had done
+from the very first. They still contented themselves
+with letting a hit go as a single when it
+might have been stretched for two sacks. Time
+and time again their pitcher let the bases fill, only
+to pull out of the hole by some wise old trick—the
+product of hard experience—which prevented the
+cubs from piling up runs.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the latter did not realize that they were
+the victims of inside baseball; that the regulars
+were regaining and perfecting the teamwork
+which was to count for so much a couple of months
+later on. But they would learn it soon, for that
+was the principal reason why they were there.</p>
+
+<p>As Ogan turned away from the manager a sudden<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
+thought flashed into his brain, and he looked
+swiftly around. The crowd was streaming toward
+the gates, intent on a refreshing bath and supper,
+but Ogan’s keen eyes soon singled out Locke in
+the rear, and in a couple of minutes he had
+sprinted over to him.</p>
+
+<p>“Want to go in to-morrow?” he asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>A faint flush stained Lefty’s face, but his voice
+was perfectly composed as he answered readily:</p>
+
+<p>“I sure do!”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll put you in at the beginning of the seventh.
+The old man’s going to lengthen the game, and
+wants to run Bert Elgin in to pitch for the regulars.
+When he does, you can come out for us.
+We’ll talk it over to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>That was all he said, but as he walked away
+Lefty felt as if he could have hugged the fellow
+for giving him this chance. To pitch again for
+the cubs was enough in itself, but to be pitted
+against Elgin was more than he had hoped for;
+and it was with difficulty that he restrained the
+exuberant joy which welled up within him.</p>
+
+<p>He could scarcely wait until supper was over,
+so eager was he to tell Janet the good news. She
+was as pleased as he over it, and they were so busy
+planning her coming to the field that she quite
+forgot the little hint she had intended dropping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
+of how glad she would be if he and Elgin would
+only make up their differences.</p>
+
+<p>The latter had called again the night before and
+conducted himself so tactfully that she found him
+even more pleasant than at first. She could not
+believe that either he or Lefty could have done
+anything very dreadful. It seemed rather as if
+there must have been some misunderstanding to
+turn them from friends to enemies, and her heart
+was set on being the means of bringing them together
+again. It was only after Lefty’s departure
+that she realized her omission and determined to
+rectify it on the morrow if even the slightest opportunity
+presented itself.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII<br>
+<small>THERE’S MANY A SLIP</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">In company with Jean Forsythe, a pretty,
+breezy Texas girl, Janet reached the baseball
+park the next afternoon about half
+past two. They drove down in Jean’s runabout,
+and the little car had no sooner come to a stop on
+the turf back of first base than Miss Harting forgot
+everything but her enthusiasm at the sight
+she beheld.</p>
+
+<p>The whole field seemed filled with brown-skinned,
+clear-eyed athletes engaged in the usual
+practice. A number of them were scattered over
+the diamond in their regular positions, while some
+one batted to them. At a little distance others
+were practicing bunting. Back by the grandstand
+an old pitcher was warming up easily.
+Farther on a couple of cub twirlers were doing the
+same thing, with much more snap and speed. The
+crack of wood meeting leather sounded rhythmically,
+intermingled with shouts and joshing
+laughter. Balls curved gracefully into the sunlight.
+The air was soft and balmy, and full of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
+the fragrance of growing things. The sky was a
+brilliant, cloudless blue, and it was springtime.</p>
+
+<p>As the girl’s eyes took in the scene, her heart
+began to beat a little unevenly; her gloved hands
+lay quietly in her lap, the fingers tightly interlaced.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s splendid!” she whispered to herself.</p>
+
+<p>It was deeply interesting to one who could delve
+beneath the surface, and see a little of what lay
+under that smiling, sunny crust. Here was a veteran
+whose name was famous from sea to sea, and
+to whom baseball was the very breath of life,
+struggling with every fiber of his being against the
+inevitable. Perhaps no one else had a suspicion
+that he was passing his prime, but some day—and
+that soon—his throwing arm would lose its vigor,
+or his legs fail to take him down to first in the
+marvelous way they had done for years. After
+that the toboggan slide; back to the minors for a
+while, and then to the scrap heap.</p>
+
+<p>To the seeing mind the field was full of little
+tragedies like this, which might seem cruel, but
+which were really inevitable. There is no sentiment
+in professional baseball. One unvarying
+law of the Big League is the survival of the fittest.
+As long as a man can fill a position a little better
+than any other player the manager can secure—and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
+that individual is always on the lookout for
+new material—he stays on the crest of the wave.
+Once let him slip back a very little, however, and
+he sinks beneath the surface, never, or at least
+rarely, to struggle into sight again.</p>
+
+<p>Happily Janet did not realize all of this, though
+perhaps she sensed intuitively a little of the hopes
+and fears, the jealousies and heartburnings, which
+were inevitable in such a gathering. Presently
+she saw Lefty waving to her, and answered him
+with a quick smile and nod. A little later, when
+the game began, he hastened over to the car, bringing
+Buck Fargo with him; for he was anxious that
+his friend should meet the two girls.</p>
+
+<p>The big backstop could stay only a moment, but
+Lefty remained for several innings, enjoying the
+enthusiasm of the girls over the game. Toward
+the end of the fourth inning, however, he arose
+reluctantly from where he had been sitting on the
+step of the car.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll have to start warming up,” he explained.
+“They’re going to put me in with the beginning
+of the seventh.”</p>
+
+<p>They both smilingly urged him to win the game
+for the cubs, said they would wait for him afterward,
+and watched him cross the field with a lithe,
+springy step.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span></p>
+
+<p>“He’s fine, isn’t he?” remarked Jean Forsythe
+enthusiastically. “I like that Mr. Fargo, too.
+Where’s the other one you were telling me about?
+I wonder he doesn’t come over.”</p>
+
+<p>Janet had been wondering herself. Quite early
+in the game she had picked out Bert Elgin over
+by the grandstand pitching to one of the youngsters
+who was not playing. It seemed rather odd
+that he could not spare a moment to run over and
+see them.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, he’s warming up,” she explained carelessly.
+“He’s going in with the regulars at the
+seventh inning. It’ll be awfully exciting to see
+which does the better.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty talked for a moment or two with Al Ogan,
+and then, corralling a fellow to catch for him,
+started to limber up his arm. He felt that he had
+never been in better form, and the realization
+inspired him. So far the game was very close, for
+the Yannigans were having a streak of hitting, of
+which they took every advantage, so that they
+were one run to the good at the end of the fourth
+inning.</p>
+
+<p>If Lefty could help them win the game it would
+be a triumph, indeed, and would more than atone
+for his losing the first time.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the fifth inning the score remained<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
+unchanged. In the last half of the sixth, however,
+the regulars secured the tying run. A little later
+Lefty slipped into his sweater, walked to the
+bench, and sat down. Elgin had stopped warming
+up a moment or two before, and stood near;
+but neither paid any attention to the other.</p>
+
+<p>As the inning ended, Lefty saw Jim Brennan
+beckon to Ogan and engage him in conversation.
+He seemed to be laying down the law in that sharp,
+decisive manner of his, and something in the cub
+captain’s face sent a momentary thrill of apprehension
+through the southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>He thrust it from him, however, and when Ogan
+finally turned away from the manager and walked
+slowly in, Lefty moved to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>“Old man changed his plans?” the cub pitcher
+asked carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>Something, he knew not what, prompted him to
+put the question. It never really occurred to him
+that Brennan had changed his mind, but afterward
+he was more than thankful that the suggestion had
+come from him.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes!” snapped Ogan. “He wants Redmond
+to go in. I told him I’d promised you, and Redmond’s
+arm wasn’t limbered up, but that didn’t
+make any difference. Sorry, old fellow, but I’ll
+make it up to you another time.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lefty turned away with a shrug, and tossed his
+glove up, catching it deftly as it fell. Then he
+laughed. Ogan could have no idea, of course, how
+difficult it was to make that laugh sound natural.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure!” Lefty said lightly. “You won’t want
+me at all, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not this afternoon. I’ll put you in to-morrow,
+though, if it takes a leg.”</p>
+
+<p>He passed on toward the bench, leaving Locke
+to follow more slowly, his face still indifferent,
+but his mind full of bitter disappointment. To-morrow!
+That promise was poor consolation
+when he had set his heart on pitching to-day. He
+would never have another chance like this to pit
+himself against Bert Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>The next instant he raised his head and met
+Elgin’s eyes fixed upon his face with a look of
+malicious satisfaction. For a fraction of a second
+Lefty stared. Then he smiled, and, turning,
+made his way straight toward the runabout containing
+the two girls.</p>
+
+<p>It had suddenly come to him that he would have
+to go back and explain to them. He hated the
+necessity intensely; but, since it had to be done,
+it might as well be gotten over swiftly.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV<br>
+<small>THE UNEXPECTED</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The remainder of the afternoon was one
+long trial for Lefty Locke. He was under
+the necessity of keeping up an appearance
+of light-hearted indifference before the girls, when
+all the time he simply ached to be out there on
+the diamond.</p>
+
+<p>He saw Redmond pitching the sort of ball to
+delight the veterans, who batted him mercilessly.
+He saw Elgin, backed by the whole strength of the
+regular team, make a showing such as he had
+never made before. He saw the cubs mowed
+down, snowed under, beaten to a frazzle; and all
+the time he had to laugh and joke and fight down
+any signs of the bitter disappointment which filled
+his soul.</p>
+
+<p>Janet, knowing him as she did, realized something
+of what he must be feeling, and tactfully refrained
+from any comments on Elgin’s pitching.
+Neither did she tell Lefty how sorry she was at
+the way things had gone, and for that he was
+thankful. It seemed as if Janet Harting’s pity
+would have been the last straw.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span></p>
+
+<p>When the last inning ended, with a score of nine
+to three in favor of the regulars, she further won
+his gratitude by suggesting to Jean that they leave
+the field at once, before the crowd started, and take
+Lefty with them.</p>
+
+<p>He accepted with alacrity. When they put
+him down at the hotel, he said good-by to Miss
+Forsythe, then held out his hand to Janet.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” he said in a quiet voice as she
+took it.</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled understandingly into his eyes.
+“Come and see us soon,” was all she said, as the
+car moved away.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the principal topic of conversation
+that night was the wonderful exhibition of pitching
+shown by Elgin. Some of the newspaper men,
+in particular, were more than enthusiastic, hailing
+him as the most promising youngster Brennan
+had discovered, and predicting a bright future for
+him. The older players had seen too many “infant
+phenoms” to be in the least impressed; they
+knew, moreover, how much of his success had
+been due to their own assistance. The cubs were
+too downcast over their defeat to think of anything
+else. Redmond was wearing a grouch, and
+Locke’s stock began to soar when Ogan expressed
+a belief at the supper table that if the southpaw<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
+had been put in, as he desired, the result would
+have been quite different.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty missed Jack Stillman and was beginning
+to wonder where he was when the reporter suddenly
+issued from the elevator, about eight o’clock,
+and hurried over.</p>
+
+<p>“Had to get my copy off,” he explained.
+“Say! Have you seen old Oggie?”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean Oggie Wilmerding!” Lefty
+exclaimed incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>“Surest thing you know! The old lobster was
+here when we got back from the field this afternoon.
+He’s traveling for the Wood’s Hoisting
+Engine Company. Talk about class! Oh, hush!”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty grinned. “Oggie always did have a hankering
+for lugs,” he chuckled. “But he’s all right,
+just the same. Where do you suppose he’s gone?”</p>
+
+<p>“Give it up. He said something about seeing
+a man the first thing in the morning, but perhaps
+he’s hunting him up to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>This surmise proved to be correct. About half
+an hour later a tall, well-groomed, prosperous-looking
+chap entered the lobby, and was instantly
+seized by the two Princeton men and mauled after
+the fashion of college mates who haven’t met each
+other in some time.</p>
+
+<p>He was unfeignedly glad to see Lefty, and when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
+the first exuberant greetings were ended they settled
+down in a corner of the lobby to talk over old
+times.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re fat as a pig, Oggie,” Lefty remarked,
+with fond bluntness. “I’d like to have you on
+the squad for about a month.”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding waved away the suggestion with
+horror. “No, thanks! I never took to exercise.
+I’m very well satisfied as I am. Never did like
+to see every bone in a fellow’s body.” He paused
+an instant, and then chuckled. “But this is the
+best ever, running across you three old Princeton
+plugs in a bunch. Where’s Elgin? I was
+talking to him before supper, and I’ll be hanged if
+he isn’t a pretty decent chap. Never cared very
+much for him at college, but he seems to have improved
+a lot since then.”</p>
+
+<p>The silence which followed his remark was eloquent.
+Wilmerding glanced from one frowning
+face to the other, and raised his eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter?” he inquired. “Have I
+struck a false note?”</p>
+
+<p>“You certainly have if you sized up that cur
+as decent,” Stillman retorted impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean it!” Wilmerding exclaimed.
+“Why, he seemed very pleasant. What’s he done
+to get you two on his neck?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span></p>
+
+<p>“What he did at college was enough to get any
+self-respecting fellow down on him, let alone the
+dirty tricks he’s tried since then.”</p>
+
+<p>The plump chap looked puzzled. “At college?”
+he repeated. “I don’t understand, Jack.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will when I tell you that he was the one
+who stole Bob Ferris’ watch and money, and then
+tried to put the blame on Lefty.”</p>
+
+<p>The effect of his words on Wilmerding was extraordinary.
+The healthy glow faded swiftly
+from the plump cheeks, leaving them pale and
+mottled. His jaw dropped, and for an instant he
+sat staring at the reporter with startled eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Impossible!” he gasped at last, in a hoarse,
+trembling voice.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s not impossible,” Stillman retorted
+sharply. “The whole thing’s as plain as print.
+Lefty caught him with the goods.”</p>
+
+<p>Slowly Wilmerding turned his eyes on Locke.
+The look in them was that of one who is unable to
+credit the evidence of his senses.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s true,” Locke affirmed, wondering curiously
+what brought that extraordinary expression into
+the other’s face. “I saw the watch in his possession.”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding dropped his lids and swallowed
+hard. For a moment or two he sat staring at his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
+lap, where his plump, well-cared-for hands lay,
+the fingers tightly interlaced. His mouth was
+twitching nervously and his face was still pale.
+At last he raised his head again and glanced at
+Stillman.</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t possible, Jack,” he said unevenly.
+“You’ve made a big mistake.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be a fool, Oggie,” the reporter snapped.
+“There isn’t a chance of that. What the deuce
+do you know about it, anyhow?”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding moistened his dry lips. “A great
+deal,” he said slowly. “I—was the—thief, myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“You?” exclaimed both men together.</p>
+
+<p>Then Locke laughed oddly. “Jove! That was
+well done, Oggie,” he exclaimed. “We both bit
+beautifully.”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding shook his head. His eyes were tortured.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re wrong,” he said, more clearly. “I’m
+not fooling; I mean every word I say.” He
+reached out, and gripped the edge of a small table
+standing beside his chair; somehow, the action
+seemed to steady him. “It’s mighty hard to tell
+you fellows,” he went on slowly. “I thought the
+whole wretched business had been buried forever.
+I never expected to hear of it again, but I can’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
+let you go on thinking what you do about Elgin.
+As true as I sit here, I stole those things from
+Ferris. I didn’t mean to do it, but I took them
+just the same. Ever since I was a kid I’ve been
+cursed with a sleepwalking habit, and not the ordinary
+sort, either. When I’m asleep I do things
+I’d never dream of doing in my right senses. You
+remember Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty nodded silently. He was too amazed to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, in a way I’m a Jekyll and Hyde. I’ve
+often thought that, sleeping and waking, I have
+two just such different personalities as those.
+I’ll never forget the awful sensation of finding out
+the first time that I’d been into somebody else’s
+room and stolen a scarfpin off the bureau. It was
+at a summer hotel, and I managed to put it back
+without any one finding out. At college I did the
+same thing every now and then, but never very
+much, and always managed to get my loot back
+undiscovered. I thought I’d done the same thing
+with Ferris’ belongings.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Oggie, this is all rot!” Lefty burst out.
+“You’re worrying yourself over something which
+is utterly impossible. I tell you I saw Ferris’
+watch fall out of Bert Elgin’s pocket.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Could you swear to the watch?” Wilmerding
+asked wearily and without conviction.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it looked exactly like it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Must have been some other watch,” Wilmerding
+returned positively. “Did he ever confess
+to you that he did the stealing?”</p>
+
+<p>“N-o, I can’t say that. In fact, he denied it up
+and down; but of course he’d do that. I told him
+unless the things were returned in twenty-four
+hours I’d go to the dean. They were back on
+Ferris’ bureau the next morning.”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding nodded. “Naturally, when I put
+them there myself. In my sleep I had hidden
+them behind some books on a shelf, and I didn’t
+find them until that night. I tell you fellows,
+you’ve made a terrible mistake. I never cared
+much for Elgin in the old days, and had very little
+to do with him, but I can’t keep still and let any
+man suffer for my own wrongdoing.”</p>
+
+<p>There was no mistaking the deadly earnestness
+of his tone, and, as he realized what the disclosure
+meant, Lefty experienced an odd, sinking sensation.
+Thoroughly upright and straightforward
+himself, the thought that he had been the means
+of branding an innocent man as a thief was intolerable
+to him. Moreover, if Elgin was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
+guilty of that theft, what proof had they of his
+complicity in recent underhanded doings?</p>
+
+<p>With a feeling that the earth was dropping away
+under his feet, Locke turned toward Stillman.
+He saw on the reporter’s face that same expression
+of groping blankness which he knew was on
+his own.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV<br>
+<small>THE STRUGGLE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty went to his room rather early that
+night, but not to bed. The discovery of
+the terrible mistake he had made regarding
+Elgin bewildered him at first, and then made
+him feel as if he wanted to get away by himself
+to think it all over.</p>
+
+<p>For three years he had felt absolutely certain
+of Bert Elgin’s responsibility for that theft at
+Princeton. He had felt the scorn and contempt
+for his college mate which any decent man would
+naturally feel for a person guilty of what Elgin
+had done. He had, moreover, from the very first,
+never hesitated to show those feelings. Now it
+would seem that he had been totally in the wrong.</p>
+
+<p>It was a most disagreeable discovery. Lefty
+would have felt glad indeed had there been a
+chance of believing Wilmerding mistaken, but
+such a thing was hardly possible. Oggie had
+never been on friendly terms with Elgin in the
+old days, so there was no earthly reason to suspect
+him of making up the story in order to shield
+the real culprit.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span></p>
+
+<p>“And, anyway, he couldn’t have told it the way
+he did unless it were true,” Locke thought to himself.
+“It isn’t in him to fake a thing so realistically.”</p>
+
+<p>Frowning, Lefty moved restlessly about the
+room, picking up an article here and there and
+replacing it without a realization of what he was
+doing. Of course the only proper course for him
+to follow was to go straight to Elgin and apologize
+for having misjudged him so greatly, but the
+thought of doing so was intolerable.</p>
+
+<p>He detested the fellow as much as ever. His
+suspicion of Elgin’s responsibility for the doped
+beer remained unshaken. Whether the man had
+stolen or not, did not affect that question.</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t do it!” Lefty burst out, at length, a
+vivid picture of the sneering reception which
+would greet an apology on his part flashing into
+his mind. “I detest that man, and I won’t give
+him a chance to crow over me. He’d seize it gleefully.”</p>
+
+<p>For a time he deluded himself with the idea
+that, after all, it wasn’t up to him to do anything.
+The matter had never been made public. With
+the exception of Ogden Wilmerding, Stillman and
+Ferris were the only ones who knew anything of
+it. It had long ago been relegated to the past.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
+Why should it be dragged out into the light at this
+late day? He would write to Bob Ferris that very
+night and put him straight about the matter.
+That should be enough.</p>
+
+<p>Deep down in his heart Lefty Locke knew that
+it was not enough. Because he was clean and
+straight and honorable, he knew that it was up to
+him to apologize to the man he had so cruelly misjudged,
+whether he detested him or not. He had
+been responsible for the stigma resting on Elgin’s
+good name, and that responsibility could not be
+shirked. Common decency made it imperative for
+him to acknowledge his mistake.</p>
+
+<p>The decision was not an easy one. In fact,
+Lefty had never struggled harder against the
+temptation to take the simple course and let things
+slide. If he kept silent, the chances were a thousand
+to one that Elgin would never hear a whisper
+of Wilmerding’s story. The latter was not likely
+to repeat it to others, and Stillman would certainly
+keep the matter to himself.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all these plausible arguments, however,
+the southpaw knew that there was really only
+one thing for him to do, much as he hated it; and,
+having come to that conclusion, he lost no time
+in ridding himself of the unpleasant duty.</p>
+
+<p>A glance at his watch told him that it was not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
+yet eleven. Possibly Elgin might still be up, and
+if the task could be done that night, so much the
+better.</p>
+
+<p>Stepping out into the corridor, he walked to
+Elgin’s room, noticed the light streaming through
+the transom, and, without further delay, knocked
+firmly on the door.</p>
+
+<p>“Come in!” called a voice impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin, partly undressed, stood in the middle of
+the room. As his rival entered and closed the
+door behind him, a look of surprise flashed into his
+face, followed swiftly by a scowl.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, what in blazes do <em>you</em> want?” he snapped
+with pointed emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty bit his lips to keep back the retort he
+longed to utter. He realized that it was going to
+be even harder than he had expected.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve found out that I was wrong about that
+affair at college, Elgin,” he said stiffly. “I came
+to tell you that I am sorry for having misjudged
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Elgin stared at him in silence,
+the shirt he had just taken off trailing unheeded
+on the floor. His face was an odd mixture of astonishment
+and suspicious incredulity.</p>
+
+<p>“You mean—about the Ferris—business?” he
+asked jerkily.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span></p>
+
+<p>Locke nodded. “Yes; I was mistaken in thinking
+you mixed up in it. I’ve been mistaken for
+three years.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s brows came together in a scowl. His
+lids drooped until they quite hid the expression
+in his dark eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” he grunted. “And when did you
+find out what an ass you’ve been making of yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty flushed, and set his jaws. “I learned the
+truth to-night,” he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly Elgin’s face relaxed from its rather
+tense, searching expression, and he laughed
+harshly.</p>
+
+<p>“And so you’re sorry?” he sneered. “That
+puts you right, I suppose! Without a shred of
+evidence, you accuse a man of stealing. For three
+years you blackguard him every chance you get,
+and then, when you find out the truth, when you
+wake up to the fact that you’ve been all kinds of
+a blackguard, all you can do is to come around
+whining about being sorry. Bah!”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty drew his breath sharply, his self-control
+strained almost to the breaking point.</p>
+
+<p>“What more can I do?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s lips curled. “Oh, nothing—nothing,”
+he sneered. “It’s what you should have done<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
+before that gets me. Anybody but a fool would
+have waited till he could prove it before he called
+a man a thief. But no; you had to jump in and
+show how smart you were without giving a thought
+to the damage you might be doing to a person’s
+character.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty felt that argument would be futile. Besides,
+he knew that if he stayed any longer he
+would most certainly blow up and say something
+he might afterward regret.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve told you I’m sorry, and I am,” he repeated
+briefly. “I’ll write to Bob Ferris to-night,
+and put him straight about the matter. I
+fail to see what more there is to do.”</p>
+
+<p>Without further words, he turned abruptly to
+leave the room. He had almost reached the door
+when Elgin’s sneering voice broke the silence:</p>
+
+<p>“If you think this squares everything between
+us, you’ve got another guess coming. I haven’t
+forgotten how you’ve slandered me, and I never
+will, even if you should crawl like this every day
+for the rest of the year.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty whirled, his eyes blazing. “I don’t give
+a rip what you remember or forget!” he retorted
+sharply. “I apologized because I had to save my
+self-respect. If you imagine I want to have anything
+more to do with you than before, get rid of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
+the notion right away. I don’t like you or your
+methods. You may not be guilty of stealing, but
+there are some other things fully as rotten that
+you have done.”</p>
+
+<p>Before Elgin could reply the southpaw had
+jerked the door open, stepped swiftly through,
+and slammed it behind him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI<br>
+<small>GAINING GROUND</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“What the deuce did you go and tell
+him for?” Jack Stillman demanded
+pettishly.</p>
+
+<p>“Because I had to,” retorted Lefty, with some
+asperity. He was tired of the whole subject, and
+desired to forget it. “Don’t be a fool, Jack.
+There wasn’t anything else to do.”</p>
+
+<p>The reporter shrugged his shoulders. There
+was a note of finality in his friend’s voice which
+he knew better than to disregard.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, all I can say is I’m thankful my conscience
+isn’t so blamed sensitive,” he sighed.
+“He’ll be so swelled up there won’t be any enduring
+him. Heaven knows he’ll be chesty enough,
+as it is, when he sees the papers.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean, Jack?” Lefty asked curiously.</p>
+
+<p>The reporter scowled. “Same old dope about
+‘Marvelous Cub Twirler Discovered by Astute
+Manager,’” he explained sardonically. Stillman
+had a trick of talking in capitals which made one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
+fairly see the glaring headlines. “It’s the same
+every spring, only this year there are a lot more
+kids around than usual who can handle a murder
+case or robbery a heap better than they can a Big
+League training season.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty grinned. “Oh, you mean they’re giving
+him a puff on account of yesterday?”</p>
+
+<p>“A puff isn’t quite the word. I wish you could
+have seen some of the rot Temple, of the <cite>Blade</cite>,
+doped out. He wanted my opinion on it; said he
+was a bit new to this, you know. I smoothed down
+the story a little, but I’m dead sure a lot more
+will rant as bad, or worse. Most of ’em seem to
+think because the regulars had a landslide it was
+due to Elgin’s pitching. They don’t figure out
+that Redmond’s bum work had anything to do
+with it.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the odds?” Lefty laughed. “You did
+the same thing last year, didn’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not quite. I knew something about baseball
+to start with, and Johnny Hargreaves tipped me
+off to a whole lot more.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still, Elgin really did do pretty well,” Locke
+remarked slowly. “Anybody must concede that
+much.”</p>
+
+<p>“No better than he has half a dozen times before,”
+the reporter retorted. “That’s all I said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
+in my story, but when I found the way the rest
+were piling it on, I had to stick in another paragraph.
+Otherwise I’d be getting a wire from the
+chief to wake up and take notice.”</p>
+
+<p>“After all, I don’t believe it amounts to a terrible
+lot,” Lefty said carelessly. “You can’t fool
+Brennan, and his opinion is really the only one
+that counts.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, as he joined the squad a little
+later for the morning jog out to the grounds,
+Lefty could not help feeling a twinge of regretful
+envy. If he had only been allowed to go on the
+slab for the cubs the day before, he had a notion
+that Elgin’s performance would not have seemed
+quite so brilliant. Those laudatory newspaper
+notices might have had someone else as the object
+of their praise, and, though he knew how little
+such plaudits really counted, Lefty was a very
+human sort of fellow, after all.</p>
+
+<p>According to his promise, Al Ogan put the
+southpaw in the box that afternoon, and Locke
+pitched for six innings to such purpose that the
+game resulted in a tie in spite of the fact that
+the regulars were in as good a form as ever, and
+seemed to work a little harder than usual.</p>
+
+<p>From that time on, Locke’s companions began
+to thaw. Once they realized that Lefty’s first disastrous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
+exhibition had not been a sample of his
+usual form, they endeavored to make up for past
+unpleasantness.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps their new friendliness was hastened by
+the newspaper prominence of Bert Elgin. Few
+men can view unmoved the sudden elevation to
+fame of a comrade, especially when they feel that
+this elevation has not been especially merited.
+Newspapers began to drift in from all the big
+cities, in which Elgin was heralded as “Brennan’s
+New Find,” “A Second Matty,” “By Far the
+Most Promising Recruit of the Season,” and so
+on.</p>
+
+<p>Then followed pictures of the new pitcher in
+every variety of pose; his style was dissected and
+analyzed; his progress was noted; for, having
+launched this boom, the reporters felt under the
+necessity of pushing it along.</p>
+
+<p>All of these things were not calculated to
+soothe the spirits of the other cubs, whose existence
+was noted by scant sentences scattered thinly
+throughout the sporting columns. They looked
+askance on Elgin, and the latter, not bearing up
+well under prosperity, gave them plenty to criticize.
+He developed an irritatingly jaunty air,
+which was flaunted at all times. He grew very
+familiar with most of the newspaper men, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
+when on the slab gave decided evidence of mannerisms,
+which tried the patience and aroused the
+ire of his fellow players.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for them, his ability to pitch increased
+rather than lessened, so that their sarcastic
+utterances rather lost point. A man can make
+all sorts of a fool of himself off the slab, he may
+even go through ridiculous posings and posturings
+while winding up, but when his work is as uniformly
+good as Bert Elgin’s was, criticism is
+usually superfluous.</p>
+
+<p>The days passed swiftly, with the most of the
+squad showing an increase in efficiency. They
+were hitting better, running faster, and throwing
+more accurately. The regulars were rapidly perfecting
+their teamwork, and the cubs beginning to
+learn the importance of something more than the
+rudiments of “inside” baseball. Some of them
+took to it like ducks to water, and absorbed intricate
+secret signals and caught on to the theory
+of certain movements as if they had been brought
+up on nothing else from their cradles. These
+were the men who would push forward to the front
+ranks. The slower-brained recruits were doomed.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty Locke enjoyed that week more than any
+similar space of time he could remember. Baseball
+as a science had always interested him tremendously.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
+He had spent a great deal of time
+studying out different plays and the reasons for
+them, but up to now these mental exercises had
+been generally limited to the more obvious sort,
+though he did not realize that at the time.</p>
+
+<p>He knew it, however, the moment the Hornets
+began to pick up and show what they could do
+when they were in trim; and, though the discovery
+was something of a blow to his self-esteem, it only
+goaded him to constant effort and increased mental
+agility to keep up the pace.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore his work steadily improved. While,
+perhaps, not so spectacular and dashing as Bert
+Elgin’s, it showed evidence of thought and clear
+judgment; and very soon it became apparent that
+he was crowding his rival close, if not actually surpassing
+him in general ability and resourcefulness.</p>
+
+<p>The one drawback to an otherwise pleasant
+period was Janet Harting’s behavior. She and
+Lefty had come perilously close to their first quarrel,
+and all because of his absolute refusal, not
+alone to make up his differences with Bert Elgin,
+but to tell her of what those differences consisted.</p>
+
+<p>After her first coolness she had been very nice
+about it, but somehow Lefty had a feeling that she
+was not quite the same. She was pleasant and
+cordial, and went twice to the baseball park to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
+see him pitch before she and her father left Ashland
+for the mineral springs at Billings. In spite
+of all that, however, Lefty sensed the faint rift in
+their friendship, and it troubled him.</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively he laid it to Elgin, whom he knew
+visited Miss Harting almost as frequently as he
+did, and he despised the man more than ever for
+it. It was one of those cases, however, in which
+a person can do nothing. Locke simply had to
+sit still and let events take their course. He worried
+and fussed a bit at first, but presently his
+whole mind became so engrossed in the struggle
+to make good and win out that he ceased to be
+actively troubled over something which he could
+not remedy.</p>
+
+<p>After all, if he could only manage to outpitch
+Elgin on the diamond and prove himself the better
+player, there was more than a chance of his showing,
+at the same time, the girl he cared for that he
+was the better man.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII<br>
+<small>A CHANCE TO MAKE GOOD</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Jack Stillman lolled in the big cushioned
+chair, his eyes fixed on the backs of two
+men, carrying suitcases, who were just
+leaving the hotel in company with half a dozen of
+their fellow players.</p>
+
+<p>“Back to the hay fields for yours,” he murmured
+sardonically. “Another couple of years,
+and you may be ready for fast company. This
+is the beginning of the exodus, Lefty.”</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Locke’s face was rather serious.
+Then he smiled faintly.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a stony-hearted ruffian, Jack,” he said.
+“I feel sorry for them. After working hard and
+getting your hopes away up, it’s a beastly disappointment
+to be told you haven’t made good. I
+suppose you’ll think it’s a joke when I pack my
+little bag and go forth into the cold world.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’d laugh myself sick,” chuckled the newspaper
+man. “At present, however, I don’t see
+any chance of that coming about. At the risk of
+giving you a swelled head, I’ll tell you, old chap,
+that you’re liable to stick around.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
+
+<p>“This from the oracle!” laughed the southpaw.
+“I’m overwhelmed. But seriously, Jack, if I have
+improved a little, so has Bert Elgin. Of course,
+I’d never admit it to any one else, but it’s my
+private opinion that he’s the better pitcher.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t agree with you,” Stillman returned
+decidedly. “There’s no denying that Elgin’s
+good. He’s got speed and fine curves and very
+fair control, but the combination of all three
+doesn’t always make a first-class pitcher. He’s
+got to pitch with his brain as well as his arm, and
+he’s got to have plenty of nerve, both of which
+qualities I’ve noticed in you. I’m curious to see
+what Elgin will do when he’s up against a real
+team.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I hope the old man agrees with you,”
+Lefty returned. “It looks to me as if it would be
+a fight between us two as to which will be kept and
+which farmed out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why shouldn’t he keep you both?” the newspaper
+man inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Look at the corking bunch of regulars he has
+already,” Locke protested.</p>
+
+<p>Stillman laughed. “Haven’t you got wise yet
+to the fact that a team can’t have too many good
+twirlers? A Big League season is a whole lot
+different from the ball you played last summer.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
+It begins in April, and doesn’t end till October.
+It’s fight, fight, fight, week after week, month after
+month, with the knowledge that a single game, a
+single inning, sometimes even a single play, may
+start a slump. It’s hard, grilling work, and
+Brennan knows well that any minute one of his
+star twirlers may be down and out. He’s not running
+any chances, and you take my word for it
+that, if you and Elgin don’t fall down, he’ll keep
+you both.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a real comfort, Jack,” Lefty said.
+“I’ll try not to slump. Wish I knew who was
+going on to the slab first to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you?” the reporter asked, with sudden
+interest. “I thought he picked the team this
+afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>“So he did, all but the battery. Perhaps we’ll
+hear before bedtime. I’d sure like to go in. This
+will be rather different from the usual practice
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman nodded emphatically. “You bet your
+boots! The first game with an outside team is
+usually an eye-opener. You fellows think you’re
+pretty hot stuff because you’ve trimmed the regulars
+a few times, forgetting that the old men take
+things so easy during training season that you’d
+hardly know they were working at all. Cy Russell<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
+lets you hit him a dozen times in a game; so does
+old Pop. I’ve seen you fan Dutch Siegrist twice
+running. Do you s’pose you could do that a month
+from now? Forget it! This game to-morrow is
+going to be a jolt for some lads, if what I hear
+about that wild Texas bunch is right. I wonder
+the old man would consent to a match so early.
+They usually aren’t pulled off till just before we
+start north.”</p>
+
+<p>“Buck told me their manager had sent in a
+challenge, and the chief didn’t feel like turning it
+down,” Lefty remarked. “I s’pose he didn’t
+want to give ’em a chance to crow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very likely. Well, it’ll be some fun, anyhow.
+I understand their pitcher has a reputation for
+rough-and-ready baseball. I’ll be hanged, old
+man, if I wouldn’t be just as well pleased to see
+Elgin up against that sort of thing if I were you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take a chance,” Lefty laughed. “I’ve
+been up against some tough characters before, and
+perhaps even this Texas steer can’t put much
+over me.”</p>
+
+<p>“That remains to be seen,” chuckled Stillman.
+“The old man’s heading this way with Ogan, and
+from the expression on his face I should say you’d
+been chosen for the goat.”</p>
+
+<p>His surmise proved to be correct.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You’ll start the game to-morrow, Locke,” the
+manager said abruptly, as he halted by Lefty’s
+chair. “I’m told this Schaeffer is a roughneck,
+so look out for squalls. No matter what he does,
+don’t let him badger you into anything. I’ll see
+to it that he’s kept within bounds, but them kind
+of ball players is so full of tricks you can’t catch
+’em all. You and Ogan and Fargo better get together
+to-night and fix up your signals.”</p>
+
+<p>After Lefty and the cub captain had departed to
+hunt up their backstop, Jim Brennan stood for a
+moment looking at Stillman out of the corner of
+his eye. The latter was one of the few reporters
+with the squad that year who knew baseball from
+the ground up, and the stories he sent home to his
+paper usually had the manager’s entire approval.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t seem much fretted about putting
+your cubs up against this young sagebrush fellow,”
+the newspaper man remarked presently.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan’s eyes twinkled a bit.</p>
+
+<p>“I ain’t,” he admitted. “Likely they’ll get the
+pants licked off ’em, but that’ll do ’em good.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII<br>
+<small>A BAD BEGINNING</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">As the Broncs spread out on the field for
+preliminary practice, their opponents
+looked them over with undisguised interest.
+They saw nine husky, sunbrowned fellows,
+quick, lithe, and snappy in their movements, who
+scooped up grounders, smothered flies, and lined
+the ball from one to another without any bungling,
+hesitation or wooden headwork. They had been
+playing all winter in the Southern States, and certainly
+showed the fact in their efficiency and teamwork.
+They were not really Texans, although
+posing as such, but, instead, players gathered from
+various parts of the country.</p>
+
+<p>“Looks like a pretty swift crowd,” Al Ogan remarked
+to Lefty. “If any one should ask me, I’d
+say we had our work cut out for us.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke smiled faintly.</p>
+
+<p>“I reckon we can handle them,” he returned.
+“With Fargo and Pollock in the infield and Hagin
+at center, I’m not worrying. Each one of those
+men hit over three hundred last season.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Exactly,” the cub captain said significantly,
+“but that was last season. Their averages have
+been pretty punk this spring. I’m not so sure
+that the team is strengthened a whole lot by running
+them in at the last minute.”</p>
+
+<p>“Personally, I’m mighty glad to have Fargo
+behind the pan,” said Lefty. “Whalen isn’t bad,
+but there’s not another backstop in the country
+who can teach Buck anything. Well, there goes
+the umpire. It’s up to us to show these bucking
+broncs that they’re not the whole shooting
+match.”</p>
+
+<p>Though he spoke confidently, Lefty did not feel
+quite as nonchalant and undisturbed as he pretended
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>The Hornets had the field, and it was up to their
+pitcher to keep the heavy hitters, who would almost
+certainly head their opponents’ batting list,
+from doing too much damage before he had discovered
+the strength and weakness of each man,
+and could govern himself accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty knew that Fargo would help him out to
+the best of his ability, but even the experienced
+backstop could not be counted on to gauge accurately
+the batting capabilities of men he had never
+set eyes on before. There was nothing to do but
+proceed cautiously, sounding the batters as best<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
+he could and relying on his support to take care of
+the hits.</p>
+
+<p>The first man up was “Cinch” Brown, one of
+the Texan outfielders, a tall, rangy fellow with a
+hawklike nose and a pair of keen, dark eyes which
+seemed to miss nothing. For a second the southpaw
+hesitated, trying to fathom just what sort of a
+ball would be “meat” to this Southerner.</p>
+
+<p>Something—intuition, perhaps—gave Lefty the
+notion that a low, straight one, close to the knees,
+would be less palatable than any other, and his
+judgment was strengthened when Fargo crouched
+behind the pan and made a signal beneath his huge
+mitt.</p>
+
+<p>Without delay, the southpaw put it over,
+straight, swift, and cutting the near corner just
+above the batter’s knees—and Brown lashed it out
+as if he preferred that kind of a ball to any other.</p>
+
+<p>But for the fast fielding of Bill Hagin, the hit
+would have been good for two cushions. The Big
+League man, however, got after the ball in splendid
+style, and made a running, one-handed stop,
+which prevented the sphere from getting away
+into the remote distance of center field.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the stuff, Cinch!” came in a harsh
+voice from a little to the left of the plate. “That’s
+the way to start her off. This kid’s easy fruit.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
+We’ll have him going. Smash it out, Bull; you
+can do it.”</p>
+
+<p>There was an odd, unpleasant quality to the
+voice which made Lefty dislike it intuitively. He
+cast a swift, curious glance in that direction, and
+saw, as he had surmised, that it came from the
+notorious Zack Schaeffer. The Texan twirler
+stood with his hands on his hips, his powerful
+legs spread wide apart. When his eyes met
+Lefty’s, a slight sneer curved his full red lips,
+and, with an unpleasant laugh, he turned to say
+something to the man near him.</p>
+
+<p>That sort of thing did not bother the southpaw
+in the least. With an inward determination to
+settle Schaeffer’s hash if he possibly could when
+the latter came to the bat, he turned his attention
+to Bull Kenny, the backstop of the Broncs.</p>
+
+<p>The latter looked dangerous as he squared himself
+at the plate, poising his bat over his shoulder.
+He was a big, square-jawed, heavily built fellow,
+and wielded a massive club. Ordinarily Locke
+would have looked for a bunt, but it was evident
+from the way he held himself that Kenny had no
+intention of sacrificing.</p>
+
+<p>He quite ignored a coaxer which Lefty tried
+him with, and the latter, taking a signal from
+Fargo, sent over a whistling high inshoot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span></p>
+
+<p>Kenny smashed it full and fair, driving it out
+on a line over the head of Sandy Rollins at second.
+Then he dug his spikes into the ground, and went
+flying down the line to first at a speed which
+showed that hitting was not his only accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>As before, it was Hagin who raced forward,
+scooped up the ball on the run, and lined it to
+second. Brown had taken a fair lead, however,
+and made the second sack by a hair’s breadth,
+amid a cloud of dust.</p>
+
+<p>“Got ’em going, boys!” yelled Schaeffer.
+“They’re e-easy. Now, Pete, you know what to
+do.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevens, third baseman, evidently did. He was
+prepared to sacrifice, but Locke kept the ball high
+so that it was difficult for him to bunt effectively.
+He was finally forced to hit, and hit he
+did, though not safely. Nevertheless, he pounded
+the ball into the diamond, and the two runners advanced,
+while he was thrown out at first.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the stuff,” laughed Schaeffer, as he
+stepped out with his bat. “Here’s where we pull
+the Hornet’s stinger.”</p>
+
+<p>He had a peculiar swaggering gait, and carried
+himself in a manner which showed how thoroughly
+he appreciated his own ability. Lefty felt an intense<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
+desire to fan the fellow, who seemed so
+cocksure of himself. He was glancing at Fargo,
+ready to take the signal, when he saw that Schaeffer
+had crowded up to the plate, his toes well over
+the box line.</p>
+
+<p>“Get back,” Locke said sharply.</p>
+
+<p>“Aw, pitch the ball!” snapped Schaeffer.
+“What’s bitin’ you?”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re out of your box,” declared Lefty.
+“I’m liable to hit you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll take a chance, Willie,” the Texan retorted
+offensively. “I ain’t seen you pass up anything
+very dangerous so far.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, at the umpire’s command, he
+edged back grudgingly, but persisted in keeping a
+bit of his toes over the line.</p>
+
+<p>“The close ones for him,” Lefty decided
+swiftly. “With that reach of his, he can hit anything
+a foot outside the pan.”</p>
+
+<p>He therefore shook his head when Fargo signaled.
+When the big backstop changed the sign,
+Lefty, after a glance at the base runners, used a
+short, swift delivery, and passed up an inshoot, intending
+to keep the ball close to the knuckles of
+the batter.</p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer stepped in, and was unable to dodge
+that shoot. It caught him glancingly, high up on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
+the body, and made him stagger a bit. Then,
+growling a few choice epithets, he obeyed the umpire’s
+signal to take his base.</p>
+
+<p>“That man stepped out of his box, Mr. Umpire,”
+Fargo protested. “He wouldn’t have been
+hit if he’d kept his place.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aw, cut that out!” snarled Schaeffer, limping
+in an exaggerated manner. “I was hit a-purpose.
+Just wait, my young squab,” he added out of the
+corner of his mouth to Lefty. “I’ll get <em>you</em>.”</p>
+
+<p>The umpire refused to reverse his decision.</p>
+
+<p>As he took the ball from Fargo, Lefty’s blood
+was tingling, and his face flushed. He managed
+to keep a grip on his temper, however. With
+the bases full and only one out, coolness was at a
+premium.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX<br>
+<small>TAKING A BRACE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Sickening!” growled Bert Elgin sitting
+on the bench. “But what can you expect
+with a dub like Locke on the slab?”</p>
+
+<p>Andy Whalen, a little sore at having been left
+out of the game, nodded absently. Next instant,
+however, he turned his eyes from the diamond
+for a second to glance at his companion.</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t altogether his fault, though,” he said.
+“It’s no cinch to start in pitching to a perfectly
+strange lot of batters, and Schaeffer shouldn’t
+have had that base.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you believe it,” snapped Elgin. “If
+we had a real pitcher—”</p>
+
+<p>“A hit!” Whalen cried. “No, it isn’t, either.
+It’s going straight at Burley.”</p>
+
+<p>Springing to his feet, he watched the ball soaring
+out into left field; saw Tom Burley running
+back to get under it; held his breath as the white
+sphere dropped swiftly, apparently straight into
+the fielder’s hands; and then sank back on the
+bench with a groan as the fellow muffed miserably.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Butterfingers!” he said bitterly. “Why
+didn’t you hold it, you chunk of solid ivory!”</p>
+
+<p>Cinch Brown trotted easily over the plate, and
+Kenny, covering the ground with tremendous
+strides, rounded third, and was urged on by the
+coacher.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty knew the sphere would be relayed. Disappointed
+by the unexpected muff, it seemed to
+him as if the ball would never reach the diamond.
+In reality, Burley, trying to atone for his miserable
+error, made a swift throw which sent the
+horsehide straight into the baseman’s hands; and
+Daly, whirling, lined it to the waiting backstop.</p>
+
+<p>“Slide! Slide!” shrieked the spectators.</p>
+
+<p>The advice was unnecessary. Kenny had already
+launched himself, feet forward, at the plate,
+and so great was his speed that he almost overreached
+it. He managed to stop himself with one
+leg across the rubber just as the ball plunked into
+Fargo’s big mitt, and he was declared safe.</p>
+
+<p>Amid the yell of delight which greeted this decision,
+Locke turned just in time to see Schaeffer
+streaking toward third. Apparently he hoped to
+steal the base in the general excitement.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty shouted warningly to Fargo, but the big
+backstop, on the job, had already lined the sphere
+to Terry Daly. The latter caught it astride the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
+base, but Schaeffer slid feet foremost straight for
+the sack, and spiked Daly, who dropped the ball.</p>
+
+<p>A chorus of protest arose from the Hornets.
+Schaeffer got up, slapping the dust from his
+clothes and volubly voicing his regret at the incident.</p>
+
+<p>“Too bad,” he said, as Daly limped off the field.
+“Accidents will happen, you know. He should
+have watched out for spikes, anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke he caught Locke’s eye, and the
+latter brought his teeth together with a click. He
+felt sure that the thing had been done with deliberate
+intention, and, in the fleeting glance he
+exchanged with the Bronc twirler, a sudden determination
+filled him to repay the man in the way
+it would hurt the most.</p>
+
+<p>As he walked slowly back to the slab and stood
+waiting for Brennan to send out a new man to
+take Daly’s place, a curious calm descended on
+him. The outfielder’s error, coming on the heels
+of all that went before, had brought Lefty to a
+state of nervousness which would have been fatal
+had it continued.</p>
+
+<p>It did not. In a flash it had vanished, leaving
+him cooler and more composed than he had been
+at any time since the game began. His face was
+so quietly indifferent that more than one player,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
+catching a glimpse of it, frowningly recalled the
+day he had thrown away that first game to the
+regulars, and wondered with sinking hearts
+whether he really was the quitter they had thought
+him then.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s done for,” muttered Elgin on the bench.
+“They’ve got his goat. He’s given away the
+game in the first inning.”</p>
+
+<p>Andy Whalen made no reply. He was watching
+Lefty keenly, and something in the southpaw’s
+face made him doubt if Elgin was right. There
+was no question of the sudden change which had
+come over the pitcher, but whether it was for
+better or worse seemed a question. With furrowed
+brow, the cub backstop dropped his chin
+into his hands, and waited.</p>
+
+<p>Tony Vegaro, the wiry little Mexican shortstop,
+was at the bat. Schaeffer jumped away from
+third as Locke pitched, making a fake start for the
+plate. He stopped short, and retreated almost
+instantly, but behind him, Monte Harris, the experienced
+third baseman whom Brennan had put
+in, streaked to the sack like greased lightning, and
+was ready for business. Lefty had pitched the
+ball high to prevent bunting, thus sending it into
+Fargo’s hands in such a way that the backstop<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
+did not have to waste a fraction of a second in
+lining it to third.</p>
+
+<p>There was a shout of warning from the coacher,
+but it came too late. Schaeffer flung himself back
+with outstretched hand, but the ball plunked into
+Harris’ grasp, and he tagged the Texan an instant
+before the latter’s fingers reached the sack.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, what do you think of that?” chuckled
+the delighted Whalen. “Locke’s not so worse,
+after all.”</p>
+
+<p>“He had nothing to do with it,” snapped Elgin,
+concealing his disappointment with an effort.</p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer arose with a fierce scowl, protesting
+that he had got back to the base safely. When
+the umpire motioned him toward the bench, he
+snarled out something about robbery, and moved
+grudgingly away.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty then proceeded to fan the next batter
+with swiftness and dispatch; and the Hornets
+romped in from the field, their spirits beginning to
+rise at this unexpected finish of the inning.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX<br>
+<small>THE TRICKY TWIRLER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty approached the bench in a very
+dubious state of mind. He was not at all
+sure that this first inning might not prove
+his last, and when he saw Ogan hurry up to the
+manager and say something in a low tone of voice,
+he fully expected to be told that he might ornament
+the bench for the remainder of the game.</p>
+
+<p>He tried to gain some idea of what was passing
+through Brennan’s mind by watching his face, but
+swiftly came to the conclusion that this was hopeless.
+A mask of carved and painted wood could
+not have been more impassive. The manager listened
+to what the cub captain had to say, without
+moving a muscle of his face. Then he spoke a few
+rapid sentences, and Ogan turned away with a
+nod.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re up, Buck,” he said shortly. “Start us
+off with a good one, old fellow.”</p>
+
+<p>Fargo grinned, sauntered to the plate, and
+tapped the rubber indolently with his war club.
+Then he stood back, when Schaeffer, who seemed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
+to have been unnecessarily slow in starting, requested
+permission to limber his wing a bit. The
+reason for this was soon apparent. The first ball
+fairly made the air smoke, and it cut the plate in
+half. The next was quite as speedy, but took a
+sharp hop as it neared the pan. The third was a
+whizzing curve.</p>
+
+<p>“Showing off,” Fargo commented, as if to himself,
+but in a voice which penetrated to Schaeffer’s
+ears. “I thought that was it.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he stepped into the box again, smiling at
+the Texan twirler in a manner which seemed to
+aggravate that individual not a little.</p>
+
+<p>With a sneering uptilt at the corners of his
+mouth, the slab man took Kenny’s signal and
+whipped the ball over with terrific speed. The
+speed was so great, in fact, that Fargo, in spite
+of the exhibition he had witnessed a moment before,
+struck a bit too late.</p>
+
+<p>“Ho! Ho! Ho!” shouted Pete Nevens from
+third. “He didn’t know it went by, Zack, old
+Bronc!”</p>
+
+<p>“Give him another sample,” urged the player
+on first.</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe you’d like him to toss you one,” suggested
+Kenny. “He’s got a nice little lob ball that
+mebbe you can hit.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
+
+<p>Buck Fargo simply smiled that wide smile of
+his, and waited quietly, his eye on Schaeffer.</p>
+
+<p>“Look out!” shouted the pitcher, as the ball
+left his fingers the second time.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo dodged instinctively, for the horsehide
+had started straight at him with burning speed.
+Only by bending swiftly and holding his bat far
+over the plate did he escape being hit.</p>
+
+<p>This was one of Schaeffer’s little tricks to disturb
+the nerve of a batsman. With the finest sort
+of control, he could usually put the ball wherever
+he desired, and he chose on this occasion to send
+it as close to Fargo as possible. He shook his
+head with an air of relief as if he had feared he
+might hit the backstop, and was glad he had not.</p>
+
+<p>As he straightened up, Fargo made no comment.
+He still smiled a little, but a close observer would
+have noticed that his jaw was a bit firmer and his
+lids slightly more drooping. If Schaeffer had
+only stopped to think, he might have realized how
+many, many times this Big League player had
+faced just such tricky pitchers before, and how
+perfectly he must have learned how to treat them.</p>
+
+<p>This thought did not come to him, however.
+Balancing himself on his toes, he took a wide
+swing of his arm for speed, and lined the ball over.
+It seemed to start exactly as the last one had, but,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
+as Fargo quite expected, it took such a sharp shoot
+that it cut the plate almost in twain.</p>
+
+<p>The big backstop was ready for it. He met it
+directly over the pan, and sent it whistling above
+the head of the Texan first baseman, who leaped
+desperately and in vain for it.</p>
+
+<p>By rapid work, the right fielder got the ball in
+time to cut the hit down to a single.</p>
+
+<p>Bill Hagin stepped blithely to the pan, and
+Fargo danced away from first.</p>
+
+<p>The Hornet backstop was a fast man on the
+paths. To play for Jim Brennan a single season
+a man had to be that, and Fargo had been three
+years with the organization. Quick as a cat on his
+feet, he seemed to know by intuition just when the
+pitcher meant to deliver the ball to the batsman.
+For this reason he was able to get under headway
+in base stealing even before the horsehide left the
+pitcher’s fingers. Although Schaeffer drove him
+back several times, Fargo got his start on the first
+ball handed up to Hagin, and was off like a racer.
+Kenny made a fine throw the length of the diamond,
+but it was a fraction of a second too slow.</p>
+
+<p>Warned by the disastrous results of the last
+attempt, Schaeffer made no effort to intimidate
+the second batter. Hagin had the look of a man
+who eats speed, and his record quite bore out that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
+impression. The Texan worked so carefully that
+he succeeded in getting two strikes on the outfielder,
+but this seemed simply to put the latter
+on his mettle. He finally placed his bat against
+the horsehide with precision and force for a long
+drive into deep center, which the fielder missed
+by less than a foot.</p>
+
+<p>Hagin was ready to take second on the throw-in,
+while Fargo, hitting the high spots, rounded third,
+and was urged home by the coacher. The ball was
+sent to second, and Hagin was driven back to the
+first station.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s where we tie up!” cried Ogan jubilantly.
+“Here’s where we take the lead! Smash
+her out, Sandy.”</p>
+
+<p>Rollins, second baseman, stepped up with the
+expression of one who has every intention of making
+connections with the horsehide. Schaeffer
+had recovered from his momentary annoyance,
+and was on the job. He pulled the batter with the
+first ball pitched, which curved beyond Rollins’
+reach. Then came a foul tip, that counted as a
+strike, and Sandy flushed a little as he stepped
+into the box again.</p>
+
+<p>“This time he’ll send over a hummer,” he
+thought, taking a fresh grip on his stick.</p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer went through the movements which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
+seemed to indicate that he was going to whip the
+ball over with terrific speed, but now, instead of a
+scorcher, he sent in a ball that seemed to hang
+and drag in the air, and Rollins struck too soon.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re out!” said the umpire.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the goods, Zack!” laughed Kenny,
+pounding his mitt. “They can’t touch you. Put
+this sorrel-top in cold storage for me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Only one down!” cried Fargo. “Show this
+bunch of panhandlers what you can do when you
+try, Red.”</p>
+
+<p>Pollock stepped briskly to the plate, waited for
+a ball which looked good to him, and smashed it
+out for a single.</p>
+
+<p>Hagin, fleet as the wind, had been held at second.
+When Tom Burley came up, determined to
+atone for his fielding error, the runner took advantage
+of the catcher’s fumble of the first pitch,
+pilfering third for all of the backstop’s quick recovery
+and fine throw to the sack.</p>
+
+<p>Burley evidently wanted to bunt, but Schaeffer
+kept the ball too high, finally forcing the batter
+into popping a weak infield fly, which was smothered
+with ease.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s up to you, old man,” Fargo said, in a low
+tone, as Lefty passed him. “We’ve got to tie up
+the score, anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span></p>
+
+<p>As Lefty faced the Texas twirler, the latter’s
+lip curled in that irritating sneer, and he promptly
+returned to his tactics of trying to get the batter’s
+nerve. Unfortunately for him, Locke did not rattle.
+He ducked a couple of whizzers sent straight
+at him, and then, when Schaeffer handed up his
+famous inshoot, he lashed a sharp grounder into
+the diamond, which smacked the pitcher squarely
+on the instep.</p>
+
+<p>There was a roar of pain, followed by a volley
+of furious language from Schaeffer. Then, recovering
+himself, he dove after the ball, secured
+it, and lined it home.</p>
+
+<p>It is probable that he had lost his head for an
+instant. Had he remembered that two men were
+out, he might have thrown to first and stopped the
+score; for he could have caught Lefty. Apparently
+he seemed to think that the only way to stop
+it was to put the ball to the plate.</p>
+
+<p>Bill Hagin had not been napping, however. At
+the first crack of leather meeting wood, he shot
+like a rocket toward home, slid feet foremost, and
+Kenny got the ball on him only when his spikes
+were shining above the platter.</p>
+
+<p>In his rage Schaeffer poured forth a volley
+of blackguarding language which got the umpire
+after him, and he might have been put out of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
+game had not his backstop hustled out into the
+diamond and grabbed him by the arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t be a fool, Zack!” he snapped. “Keep
+your trap shut, or you’ll be canned. Can you go
+ahead with the game?”</p>
+
+<p>The twirler, managing to choke down his wrath,
+limped around the slab a few times, and then toed
+the rubber again. He was still furious, however,
+and Al Ogan landed on the first ball for a line-drive
+over the head of the shortstop. But for a
+phenomenal catch by Cinch Brown the Hornets
+might have scored more tallies.</p>
+
+<p>As Lefty came in from the field, he passed close
+to the disgruntled pitcher, and if looks could kill
+he would have been finished then and there.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll get you yet, you swelled-headed squirt!”
+Schaeffer hissed. “Wait, that’s all—just wait!”</p>
+
+<p>Locke smiled blandly. “Quit your beefing,”
+he advised. “You’re making everybody tired.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI<br>
+<small>ONCE TOO OFTEN</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The Hornets were in high spirits as they
+took the field. To be sure, the score was
+no more than tied, but the expedition with
+which those two runs had been made was most encouraging.
+The sudden and effective brace Locke
+had taken in the last inning removed, in a measure,
+the fears some of his teammates had entertained
+concerning his ability to handle the situation; and,
+as they scattered to their places on the field, they
+urged him to “go in and eat ’em up.”</p>
+
+<p>Apparently that was just what Lefty meant to
+do. The first batter seemed unable to connect
+fairly with any of the balls passed up to him,
+and he finally hoisted a foul back of the pan, which
+Fargo smothered without difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>When his successor, Gash Benkard, fanned, it
+looked as if that half of the inning was going to
+be a tame one.</p>
+
+<p>In any game it is unwise to make predictions
+of that sort, however. Games have been won
+with no men on bases and two out, and this one
+was still young.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
+
+<p>Cinch Brown walked up to the pan, cool, confident,
+ready to duplicate his performance of the
+inning previous. He did not find it quite so easy,
+however. He slashed ineffectively at two balls
+pitched to him, but finally succeeded in dropping
+a dopy little Texas leaguer over the infield.</p>
+
+<p>Kenny followed him. He, too, had done well on
+his first trip to the plate, and hoped to do better
+now. He declined to nibble at Lefty’s teasers,
+but stood, grimly immovable, waiting for one
+which suited him. Nevertheless, the southpaw
+fooled him with two handsome shoots, and then,
+having a bit of leeway, tried a high, wide one.</p>
+
+<p>Kenny did an unexpected thing. Reaching far
+over the plate, he caught the ball within an inch
+of the end of his bat, and sent it into deep right
+field.</p>
+
+<p>With perfect handling, it would not have been
+dangerous. “Dolly” Walker had taken many
+such drives with ease, but perhaps he was too
+confident. At all events, the ball did not strike his
+mitt quite squarely, seemed to hesitate an instant,
+and then trickled unaccountably over the edge of
+the leather, falling to the turf.</p>
+
+<p>By the time the amazed and discomfited fielder
+had snatched it up and lined it to first, Kenny was
+safe on the sack, while Brown, who had apparently<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
+forgot that two were “down” already, slid
+to second just ahead of the flying horsehide.</p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer was exultant. “Got him on the
+run!” he jeered. “He’s a cinch. Get in there,
+Pete. A little single is all we want. A little
+safety’s the goods! You know where to put it.”</p>
+
+<p>Nevens hit into the diamond. The inning would
+have ended then and there had not Sandy Rollins,
+at second, fumbled the weak grounder and spent
+valuable time chasing it around his feet.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty felt a hot rush of anger stir within him.
+Two such errors are enough to try the temper
+of any pitcher, especially when he is working his
+hardest. The inning should have ended minutes
+before, and now the bases were full, and Zack
+Schaeffer was swaggering to the pan, a confident
+grin on his face.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of him cooled Locke as swiftly and
+completely as it had done once before that day.
+He shifted the ball in his fingers, taking his time.
+He hoped to fan this fellow.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he pitched, and the ball shot upward
+with a little jump, rising over the Texan’s bat as
+he struck.</p>
+
+<p>“Strike!” droned the umpire.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the stuff!” cried Ogan from first.
+“Got him swinging like a garden gate, Lefty.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span></p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer set his teeth, and the flesh seemed to
+harden over his jaws. His eyes gleamed.</p>
+
+<p>As before, Lefty took his time. When at
+length he poised himself on his right foot, flung
+back his arm, and brought it forward with a whiplike
+motion, the sphere came humming over with
+speed which almost made the air smoke.</p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer struck again. This time he missed,
+as before, but even as he swung he let go his hold
+on the bat, which went spinning through the air
+straight at Locke.</p>
+
+<p>“Look out!” cried Fargo.</p>
+
+<p>The southpaw ducked just in time to let the bat
+pass over him. When he straightened up, he
+stood for an instant, his eyes fixed on Schaeffer’s
+face with an expression in them which showed a
+little of the contempt that filled him.</p>
+
+<p>“Beg pardon,” mumbled the batter. “Accident.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty knew the Texan lied. To be sure, a man
+sometimes throws his bat in striking, but almost
+never straight out into the diamond. Besides,
+Schaeffer did not have the least appearance of
+regret, unless it was regret that the stick had
+missed its mark.</p>
+
+<p>Locke made no comment, however. After the
+man had recovered his bat, the southpaw stood for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
+a moment, ball in hand, looking fixedly at him.
+When he finally pitched, he used a delivery which
+seemed to promise a swift one, but instead it was
+the slowest sort of a slow ball. In spite of everything
+he could do, Schaeffer struck too soon.</p>
+
+<p>As the umpire’s voice sounded in his ears, a
+snarl broke from the Texan’s lips. For an instant
+it seemed almost that he meant to launch
+his bat again straight at Locke’s head. Perhaps
+he might have done so had it not been for the
+warning clutch of Gash Benkard’s fingers on his
+shoulder. Then, with a furious motion, he cast
+the stick to the ground, and walked out to the
+slab.</p>
+
+<p>“Looks devilish, don’t he?” commented
+Whalen, on the bench. “I wouldn’t be surprised
+if he picked a fight with Locke after the game.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wish he would!” growled Bert Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>He had been growing more and more disgruntled
+as the game progressed. The first ten
+minutes had filled him with satisfaction at the
+apparently poor showing made by his rival, but as
+the latter improved Elgin’s temper became more
+and more unrestrainable.</p>
+
+<p>“You seem to have it in for him,” Whalen remarked
+pointedly. “Strikes me he got out of
+that hole pretty neat.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Bah!” retorted Elgin. “What did he get
+into it for? Any pitcher who knows his business
+would never let the bases fill with two out, the
+way he did.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wow-wow!” barked the cub backstop. “I
+s’pose it’s his fault that Walker dropped that fly
+and Sandy muffed a grounder that any kid should
+have nailed. Whew! Did you see that? That
+fellow had better be careful. One of these days
+he’ll bean a batter and put him out of business.
+Sore as a crab, I reckon, at being fanned.”</p>
+
+<p>Schaeffer was certainly vicious. Twice Monte
+Harris had barely escaped balls sent straight at
+him. He was no quitter, but he had a notion of his
+own value in the Big League, and did not relish
+being put out of business by a wild busher who had
+lost his temper. Having protested to the umpire
+without avail, he reached for a wide outcurve,
+popped a weak fly into the diamond, and retired to
+the bench.</p>
+
+<p>“That gink is going to get his one of these
+days,” he remarked to Brennan. “Why don’t
+you make him behave, Jim?”</p>
+
+<p>The manager made no reply, but, rising to his
+feet, walked slowly toward the plate. He had not
+taken half a dozen steps when the accident happened.
+Dolly Walker had stepped into the box,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
+and apparently Schaeffer sized him up for easy
+meat. He promptly launched one of his cannon-ball
+whistlers at him, and the fielder was either
+too slow or too obstinate to get out of the way.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sickening thud; a smothered sound,
+half groan, half cry. Half a dozen men leaped
+forward to catch the swaying figure, from whose
+nerveless fingers the bat had slipped. No one
+was quick enough. It was the startled backstop
+of the Texans who thrust out his arms instinctively,
+and then stood helplessly holding the limp
+body and staring down at the white face resting
+against his chest protector. All could see that the
+man was seriously hurt.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII<br>
+<small>THE SPIKING OF SCHAEFFER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Instantly the whole field was in an uproar.
+The Hornets, fighting mad, invaded the diamond
+in a body. Schaeffer, his face white
+as that of the unconscious man, half turned as if
+to run. Then he straightened up and faced the
+music.</p>
+
+<p>“It—wasn’t my fault,” he stammered. “He
+was out of his box. He couldn’t get away from
+my inshoot.”</p>
+
+<p>“You lie!” said Buck Fargo. “You tried to
+hit him. You’ve played that trick once too often,
+and I’m—going to hand you something!”</p>
+
+<p>He lunged at Schaeffer, who stepped back
+swiftly and threw up his hands. In an instant
+the crowd surged around him, shutting out those
+of his friends who were racing to his assistance.
+Fargo was on the point of swinging at the Texan’s
+jaw when suddenly the fellow staggered, his face
+contorted with pain, a yell issued from his bloodless
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m spiked!” he cried furiously. “Lemme
+get my hands on the dog that did it! I’ll—”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span></p>
+
+<p>His eyes met those of Lefty Locke, who stood
+close beside him on the right, and in a second
+both arms shot forward, his muscular fingers fastening
+with a convulsive grip on the southpaw’s
+throat.</p>
+
+<p>“You hound!” he frothed, emphasizing each
+word by a vicious shake. “You’ve put me out of
+business. I can’t play for weeks. It’s my
+left—”</p>
+
+<p>At this point Locke recovered from his astonishment,
+and, with a desperate effort, managed to
+tear the hands from their choking hold.</p>
+
+<p>“I never touched you,” he denied. “I
+wouldn’t—”</p>
+
+<p>Wild with pain and rage, Schaeffer frothed out
+an insult, and Lefty promptly dealt him an open-hander
+on the mouth.</p>
+
+<p>Cries of approval greeted the blow. Fargo was
+trying to get into the mix-up, and others showed
+their desire to have a hand in the Texan’s punishment.
+The latter’s fist shot out, but Locke parried
+skillfully. Three or four of the visiting team
+arrived on the run, and a general fight was imminent.
+The crowd was suddenly thrust aside, and
+Jim Brennan appeared.</p>
+
+<p>“Stop that!” he roared, grasping Lefty’s wrist
+and stepping between the men. His face was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
+purple with anger, and his eyes glowed like twin
+sparks. “What do you think you’re doing?”</p>
+
+<p>“He spiked me!” snarled Schaeffer. “The cur
+spiked me! Look at that foot.”</p>
+
+<p>The manager glanced downward, and saw instantly
+that Schaeffer was not bluffing. Across
+his left shoe, the gouging marks of spikes were
+plainly visible. On one of them a faint crimson
+smear was showing. Brennan frowned and
+raised his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Somebody stepped on you by accident,” he
+said shortly.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a lie!” rasped Schaeffer. “He done it a-purpose.
+I felt his foot jab down on me. He had
+it in for me all along.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who are you talking about?” Brennan
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Him!” retorted the pitcher, glaring at Locke.
+“I knew he’d be up to some dirty trick.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty met the manager’s searching glance with
+perfect calm. “I never touched him,” he averred
+emphatically. “I was itching to smash one into
+him for knocking Dolly out, but spiking isn’t my
+style.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” Brennan’s keen eyes roved around
+the circle of faces. “Anybody know anything
+about this?” he demanded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was a chorus of denial, and the manager
+turned back to Schaeffer.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll look into it,” he promised. “I’ll stand
+for anything but dirty business, and any man
+who’d do a thing like this gets the gaff, I don’t
+care who he is.”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated for an instant, and his jaw squared.
+“As for you,” he went on harshly, his keen eyes
+boring the Texan’s flushed face, “you’re rotten.
+Talk about dirty playing! If I’d had any idea
+what sort of a cheap roughneck you were, this
+game would never have started. You can bet your
+boots I’ll take pains to let people know just what
+you are, and I kind of think you’ll have a hard
+job finding a decent team after this that’ll have
+anything to do with you. See?”</p>
+
+<p>He stood glaring at the Texan, who for once
+had nothing to say. Presently Brennan’s eyes
+swept the circle again.</p>
+
+<p>“No rough-house!” he snapped shortly. “You
+boys better beat it back to the hotel. There won’t
+be anything more doing to-day. Dolly’s come to
+and gone along with a couple of the men. This
+game’s finished. Get started now. There’s been
+enough monkey-shines to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly, and with many savage glances at
+Schaeffer, the Hornets obeyed. It came hard to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
+leave the scoundrel that way, but they knew Brennan
+meant what he said, and so they gave in.</p>
+
+<p>“Serves him good and right,” said Andy
+Whalen, as he caught up with Elgin. “I’m
+blamed glad the cur got something to cook him,
+and I’ll be hanged if I blame any fellow for spiking
+him. Wonder who it was? Didn’t you see
+anything, Bert?”</p>
+
+<p>He looked curiously at Elgin, who shook his
+head promptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Not a thing,” the latter answered. “First I
+knew anything was wrong was when he yelled he
+was spiked. I wouldn’t wonder if it was an accident,
+anyhow. With everybody pushing and
+shoving, somebody likely stepped on him without
+meaning to.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nix!” retorted the cub backstop. “I took a
+good look at his foot, and, believe me, it wasn’t
+no accident. It was a good hard stamp, done
+on purpose.”</p>
+
+<p>This seemed to be the opinion of those who had
+been near the Texan when the incident occurred,
+and much curiosity was expressed as to who could
+have been the perpetrator of the affair.</p>
+
+<p>The general sentiment was that Schaeffer had
+been well repaid for his dirty work on the slab;
+but the more thoughtfully inclined, knowing Jim<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
+Brennan’s temperament, wondered what would
+happen if the manager ever found out who had
+done the spiking.</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_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII<br>
+<small>THE TELEGRAM</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The days passed without the truth coming
+to light. At first Brennan set about
+systematically interviewing every man
+who had been on the field that day, but without
+avail. Having failed to arrive at the truth in this
+manner, and other and more important matters
+coming up to take his time, he seemed to drop
+the subject. Those who knew him, however, realized
+that it would always remain tucked away in
+some corner of his brain until he had finally solved
+the mystery.</p>
+
+<p>The work of training proceeded rapidly and
+successfully to its conclusion as the end of March
+approached. Each afternoon the cubs fought out
+their losing battle with the regulars on the diamond.
+The latter were getting into splendid
+shape, and their opponents had almost forgotten
+what it felt like to win a game.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, they never gave up, or slackened
+their efforts, for the net was drawing closer and
+closer about them day by day. Every now and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
+then a youngster would drop out of the race. He
+was not yet ready for the big game, and had
+either been sold by the manager, farmed out to a
+minor league, or released unconditionally.</p>
+
+<p>Of the cub pitchers, only two remained, Locke
+and Elgin. They were both remarkably good in
+their way, and the other players were divided as
+to their relative merits. The almost universal conclusion
+was that Brennan would keep both with the
+organization unless something unexpected occurred
+to give him reason for changing his mind.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty worked strenuously without a let-up. He
+knew his doubtful points almost as well as the
+manager himself, and strove with all his might to
+correct them.</p>
+
+<p>Hard as the labor was physically, the southpaw
+found it anything but disagreeable. He was well
+liked by most of the regulars and a great many
+of the cubs. In Buck Fargo he found a real
+chum whom he came to admire and think better
+of every day. When the diminishing number of
+players made a readjustment of rooms at the hotel
+desirable, Locke accepted with alacrity the big
+backstop’s invitation to come in with him, an arrangement
+which proved pleasant and satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>With Bert Elgin and his little group of cronies,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
+the southpaw had nothing whatever to do. The
+former had apparently resigned himself to the
+inevitable, and, since it looked as if both cub
+pitchers were going to be retained, he seemed to
+have given up his efforts to injure his rival.</p>
+
+<p>There were just two things which marred
+Lefty’s pleasure and absolute peace of mind.
+The first was Jim Brennan’s attitude of noncommittal
+impassiveness. Try as he would, the southpaw
+found it impossible to break down the barrier
+of reserve between them. No matter how good
+a showing the cub might make on the field, he
+never succeeded in eliciting a word of praise from
+the manager. The latter always gave the young
+twirler an impression of withholding judgment,
+a feeling that he was continually searching for
+something in Locke which he was constantly expecting
+but had failed to find.</p>
+
+<p>At first Lefty thought it was simply his ordinary
+manner. Then, when he noticed the manager
+unbend time after time to others, he reached
+the conclusion that Brennan had never forgotten
+the circumstances of the recruit’s arrival at training
+camp, and that he still felt resentment at the
+manner in which Locke had been, as it were, thrust
+down his throat.</p>
+
+<p>The explanation of this latter fact had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
+absurdly simple. Lefty learned in a roundabout
+way that Jimmy Toler’s letter had traveled to
+Ashland, Tennessee, and drifted on to the Texan
+town a couple of days after the busher’s arrival.
+It seemed incredible that any man could harbor
+such a thing so long, but Brennan was peculiar in
+many ways, and Lefty could think of no other reason
+for his conduct.</p>
+
+<p>The other matter which marred his contentment
+was the fact that Janet, while actually in
+the same State, was just beyond his reach. It
+was more tantalizing than if she had remained in
+that far-away New England town. They corresponded
+regularly, of course, but letters are always
+more or less unsatisfactory. Only once had
+he obtained permission to be away over Sunday,
+and Brennan’s grudging acquiescence to his request
+made him resolve never to repeat it.</p>
+
+<p>And so the time passed until there remained
+less than two days more at Ashland. On the
+twenty-fifth the training quarters would be deserted,
+and the teams, separating, would commence
+their homeward march by easy stages and different
+routes, playing exhibition games with minor-league
+organizations along the way.</p>
+
+<p>The days had sped with such swiftness that
+Lefty could scarcely believe the end to be so near<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
+when he arose that morning, and could say that to-morrow
+they would start. There was no doubting
+the fact, however, and, what was more, that very
+afternoon, a game had been arranged with one of
+the most prominent teams of the Southern
+League. It was the first chance the Hornets
+had been given to play against outsiders
+since that brief, disastrous contest with the
+Broncs, and they were agog with eager anticipation.
+The Flamingoes were in quite a different
+class from the bush organization of so-called Texans,
+and the game was likely to be exceedingly
+close. Lefty was to start off on the slab, so Brennan
+had briefly informed him the afternoon before.
+The youngster wondered whether the manager
+had any special motive in picking him.</p>
+
+<p>As the squad started for the field after breakfast,
+Lefty discovered that he had forgotten his
+glove, and hurried upstairs for it, telling Fargo
+that he would be along shortly. When he came
+down he raced through the lobby and almost upset
+a small boy in uniform who was coming up the
+steps.</p>
+
+<p>“Say, mister,” the latter inquired, as he recovered
+his balance, “is Tom Locke inside?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s my name,” Lefty answered swiftly.
+“What is it?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
+
+<p>The boy drew a yellow envelope from his pocket,
+and Locke snatched it with that queer, sinking
+feeling which an unexpected missive of the sort
+usually arouses. Tearing it swiftly open, he
+brought forth the sheet and unfolded it with a
+single motion.</p>
+
+<p>As his eyes took in the contents at a glance, he
+drew his breath swiftly, his face turning a shade
+less brown. The message had been sent from
+Billings, Texas, that morning. It read:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p class="noi">Father is dying. Come at once. I am all alone.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Janet.</span><br></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV<br>
+<small>NOTHING ELSE POSSIBLE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Any answer?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty raised his head and stared
+stupidly at the boy for an instant.
+Then he came to himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes! Give me a pencil—quick!”</p>
+
+<p>Snatching the stub from the other’s hand, he
+turned the message over, placed the paper against
+the side of the building, and hastily scrawled a
+few words.</p>
+
+<p>“There!” he exclaimed, thrusting it at the boy;
+“send that off right away. Don’t lose a minute.
+Here. Keep the change.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a silver dollar he handed the boy. Without
+waiting for thanks, he darted back into the
+hotel, hastily secured a time-table, and found that
+there was a train leaving in less than half an hour.
+It was only after he had reached his room and begun
+to strip off his baseball togs that he realized
+he must let Brennan know in some way of what
+he planned to do.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s no ’phone at the park,” he muttered,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
+throwing a shoe into a corner. “I haven’t time,
+anyway.”</p>
+
+<p>He tore off his stockings, flung shirt and trousers
+on the floor, and made a dive for his street
+clothes.</p>
+
+<p>“Still, they’ll all be back here for dinner,” he
+went on aloud. “If I leave a note with Buck,
+he’ll put the old man wise. It’s tough! Poor
+little girl!”</p>
+
+<p>His voice broke just the least bit, but he went
+on rapidly with his dressing, and in less than ten
+minutes was ready to go. He gave no thought to
+the consequences of his leaving in this manner
+and at this time. Janet had called him for help;
+he must go to her. Besides, even Brennan, though
+he might growl and grumble a little, would understand
+how impossible it was for him to take any
+other course.</p>
+
+<p>Finding a sheet of paper, Lefty hastily scrawled
+a note to Buck, telling his chum where he had
+gone and why, and asking him to inform the manager.
+Having folded the paper and written
+Fargo’s name on the outside, he placed it on the
+middle of the table, where the big backstop could
+not fail to see it the instant he entered the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>That finished, he snatched his hat, and darted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
+down the stairs without waiting for the elevator.
+At the station he had nearly fifteen minutes to
+wait, but at last the train pulled in.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty thought that the journey would never
+end. The train seemed to crawl along at a snail’s
+speed, stopping at every little hamlet by the way.
+He blamed the doctor at Kingsbridge for having
+suggested such an impossibly out-of-the-way place
+as Billings. He kept looking at his watch till he
+might better have held it in his hand. He bought
+a paper, and tossed it away unread. He opened
+a magazine, only to fling it aside impatiently.
+And all the time the thought of Janet, alone and
+helpless in this terrible situation, never left his
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>At Flat Rock Junction he had to change to another
+road. There was an exasperating wait of
+three-quarters of an hour, during which he nearly
+wore a rut in the wooden platform. Another
+weary, interminable hour followed; but at last,
+shortly after one, he flung himself off the still-moving
+train at Billings, and dashed up the main
+street.</p>
+
+<p>The air was soft and warm and caressing.
+Trees and shrubs were bursting into leaf; flowers
+were everywhere. Here and there a bird caroled
+joyously, and the sound stabbed Lefty like the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
+thrust of a knife. How could any living thing be
+joyful when her father lay dying?</p>
+
+<p>Rounding a corner, he scarcely dared look at
+the house where they had taken lodgings. Perhaps
+he had come too late. Perhaps it was all
+over.</p>
+
+<p>He reached the wooden gate and thrust it open.
+A rustle of skirts sounded on the vine-clad porch,
+the quick catching of a breath, then a cry of glad
+surprise:</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Lefty!”</p>
+
+<p>She started up from the rocking-chair, her face
+pink and her eyes sparkling. A little smile curved
+the corners of her tender mouth, bringing out the
+dimple which had always fascinated him.</p>
+
+<p>The man stared up in petrified astonishment.
+What did it mean? Was he dreaming, or had she
+gone daft?</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Lefty!” she exclaimed again. “This is
+splendid! How did you ever manage to get
+away?”</p>
+
+<p>He swallowed hard and, without knowing what
+he did, wiped beads of perspiration from his forehead.</p>
+
+<p>“I came,” he gasped. “Your—father, Janet?”</p>
+
+<p>A little frown of perplexity came into her forehead.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Father?” she repeated. “Why, he’s all right.
+The springs are doing him no end of good. He’s
+taking his nap just now. Did you—”</p>
+
+<p>“You didn’t send me a telegram this morning,
+then?” Locke interrupted in a strange voice.</p>
+
+<p>“No, of course not. Why should I? I wrote
+you last night, but it was only— Lefty! What is
+it? For goodness sake, tell me what has
+happened.”</p>
+
+<p>The skin over his jaws was hard as marble.
+The blood had rushed into his face, turning it a
+dull crimson under the brown, and bringing out a
+throbbing vein in his temple in bold relief. His
+lips were pressed tightly together, and the eyes
+fixed on the girl were not his eyes. They were
+wide open and almost black, full of cold, consuming
+wrath. They frightened Janet Harting, and
+made her step back involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>“Lefty!” she cried again. “What is it?
+What makes you look so?”</p>
+
+<p>For an instant he did not answer. He had realized
+the bitter truth. The telegram was a forgery,
+sent for the sole and only purpose of getting him
+out of the way at the very time of all others during
+his baseball career that he should have been on
+the job. In a flash an illumination which comes
+too seldom to a man told him that Brennan’s reason<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
+for putting him on the slab to-day was in the
+nature of a final test of his ability. The other
+game had shown the manager nothing. This
+would have been the ultimate proof of his fitness
+to be retained as a member of the squad—and he
+would not be there to take advantage of the chance.</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly he glanced at his watch, the girl staring
+anxiously at him the while. He took out a
+crumpled time-table. The first train left at two-twenty.
+As he thrust the time-table back into his
+pocket, his face relaxed a little and a faint smile
+twisted the corners of his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s been an unfortunate—mistake,
+Janet,” he said quietly. “I’ll come up and tell
+you about it.”</p>
+
+<p>He had remembered the one consoling feature
+of the whole miserable business. Buck would
+surely find the letter and explain the matter to
+Brennan. The manager would doubtless be
+angry, but, after all, it was not as bad as if no
+word at all had been left.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV<br>
+<small>FOR WANT OF A LIE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Locke would scarcely have been so self-contained
+had he known what had taken
+place at the hotel about the time he was
+feverishly pacing the platform at Flat Rock Junction.</p>
+
+<p>Through some pretext, Bert Elgin managed to
+leave the ground a few minutes ahead of the others.
+He had concealed his nervousness all morning,
+taking hope from the nonappearance of Lefty on
+the field, and reveling in Brennan’s openly expressed
+anger at the puzzling occurrence. But
+now he felt that he must find out something
+definite.</p>
+
+<p>Arriving at the hotel, he hastened up to the corridor
+above his own, taking care to use the stairs
+for the last flight, and made his way to a certain
+door, which he pushed open without ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant he stood staring curiously around
+the disordered room. Then a triumphant smile
+curved his lips, and his eyes danced maliciously.</p>
+
+<p>“Looks like the kid worked it, all right,” he said,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
+in a low tone. “I was afraid he might slip up
+on something. What’s this?”</p>
+
+<p>Striding over to the table, he picked up the note
+addressed to Buck Fargo, opening it without hesitation.
+Having read it hastily through, he smiled
+again and thrust it into his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“‘Tell Brennan all about it,’” he quoted, in a
+jeering voice, “‘and make him understand how I
+had to go.’ I guess we won’t tell anybody; it’ll
+be lots more fun to keep ’em guessing till you
+come back.”</p>
+
+<p>He hastened to the door, and stepped out into
+the hall. “I should say your goose was cooked
+nice and brown,” he muttered, with venomous
+satisfaction. “I wouldn’t give a whole lot for
+your chances with the Hornets after this little
+performance.”</p>
+
+<p>Happily for Lefty’s peace of mind, he guessed
+nothing of all this. As it was, he had worries
+enough to keep him company during that maddeningly
+slow trip back to Ashland. Time and
+again he went over the situation from the beginning,
+trying his best to see it from Jim Brennan’s
+point of view, and always he ended by a despairing
+grasp on that one frail straw: the manager might
+forgive the desertion as long as the absent man had
+done his best to let him know about it beforehand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span></p>
+
+<p>Stepping off the train shortly after seven, the
+southpaw went at once to the hotel. The first
+man he ran into in the lobby was Buck Fargo.
+The expression on his chum’s face made Lefty’s
+heart sink into his boots.</p>
+
+<p>“Where the deuce have you been?” the backstop
+inquired directly, and with force. “How’d
+you happen to duck?”</p>
+
+<p>“For Heaven’s sake, Buck,” the young pitcher
+appealed fervently, “don’t tell me you didn’t get
+my note?”</p>
+
+<p>“If it explained what in thunder made you do
+such a fool trick as this, I most certainly didn’t,”
+Fargo returned.</p>
+
+<p>Locke groaned aloud. “I left it on the table.
+I told you just what had happened and why I had
+to rush off. I asked you to explain to the old
+man—”</p>
+
+<p>Catching a sudden warning in Fargo’s eyes,
+Lefty stopped abruptly and turned slowly around.
+Brennan stood just behind him, his hands on his
+hips, an expression on his square, heavy-jowled
+face which even the big backstop had rarely seen
+there before.</p>
+
+<p>“Well?” he questioned in an ominous voice,
+his sharp, deep-set eyes boring into Lefty’s brown
+ones. “Did I hear you say anything about an explanation?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
+Strikes me it’s about time something
+of the sort was dished up.”</p>
+
+<p>His voice, cold, hard, and unrelenting, sent a
+flicker up and down Locke’s spine. If the man
+had only flared out at him, roared, bellowed, it
+would have been better than this. But that harsh,
+flinty, absolutely pitiless tone struck a chill to the
+youngster’s heart, and quenched the last spark of
+hope in him.</p>
+
+<p>“I had—a telegram—this morning,” he explained
+unevenly. “It came just as I was leaving
+for the field. It was from—a close friend of mine
+who is at Billings, with her father. She said that
+her father was dying, and asked me to come at
+once. She was all alone in a strange place. They
+knew no one. They had been in the South only
+a few weeks. I <em>had</em> to go.”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated an instant, glancing desperately at
+Brennan’s face. Something in it—the flicker of
+an eyelash, perhaps, or the faintest possible relaxing
+of that steely, set expression,—made a tiny
+spark of hope revive in Lefty’s breast.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, go on,” growled Brennan.</p>
+
+<p>“There wasn’t time to send you word,” Locke
+continued. “I had to make the nine-five train.
+So I wrote a note to Fargo explaining things, and
+asked him to tell you about it. I left it on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
+table in our room. You must have missed it, Buck,
+or didn’t you go to the room?”</p>
+
+<p>He turned eagerly to his friend, but the latter
+shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>“There wasn’t any note,” he said slowly. “I
+was up there at noon and again to-night. There
+ain’t nothing on the table but a couple of magazines
+and a lamp. Mebbe it got blown off.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps that was it,” Lefty agreed. “I
+wrote it and stuck it up where you’d see it the
+first thing.”</p>
+
+<p>He glanced again at Brennan and met the man’s
+searching gaze unflinchingly. For an instant
+there was silence as the manager scowled deeply
+to hide his annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d ought to have sent word,” he snapped.
+“You knew you was to pitch this afternoon.
+Why didn’t you leave a letter with the clerk, addressed
+to me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I never thought of that,” Lefty apologized.
+“I was so shaken up and worried and rushed that
+I couldn’t seem to think of anything but making
+that train.”</p>
+
+<p>The spark of hope had been fanned into a little
+blaze. Brennan was certainly relenting.
+Everything about him pointed to that. He stared
+at the cub pitcher from under his bushy eyebrows<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
+for a moment or two as if vainly searching for
+something more to find fault with.</p>
+
+<p>“You seem to have got back mighty sudden,”
+he said presently, in a tart voice. “Must have
+taken the first train. Didn’t your friend’s father
+die?”</p>
+
+<p>It had come, the question which Lefty had been
+dreading from the beginning and trying to get
+away from! For an instant he was tempted—desperately
+tempted. The manager was plainly influenced
+in his favor. If he lied and told some
+plausible story of Mr. Harting’s sudden recovery,
+all would be well, and the matter would probably
+be dropped. If he told the truth and admitted
+that no message had ever been sent—</p>
+
+<p>In that second of hesitation, many things flashed
+through his mind. He was already morally certain
+that he had Bert Elgin to thank for the trick.
+He told himself that a lie which would result in
+foiling the plotter would be no lie at all. The
+very words of a glib falsehood were on his lips
+when suddenly he brought his teeth together and
+threw back his head. He would tell the truth at
+any cost.</p>
+
+<p>“He was never sick at all,” he said swiftly,
+his face rather pale.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan stared. “Never sick!” he repeated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
+sharply. “Then what in time did she send the
+telegram for, I’d like to know?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty thrust both hands behind his back, gripping
+the fingers tightly together. His eyes met
+Brennan’s squarely.</p>
+
+<p>“She didn’t. She knew nothing about it. It
+was sent by some one else.”</p>
+
+<p>“What for?”</p>
+
+<p>The words came from Brennan’s lips like bullets.
+Suspicion, incredulity, anger, showed in his
+piercing eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” Lefty answered. “It looks as
+if some one wanted to get me away from the
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan’s laugh was harsh and mirthless.
+“That’s likely, ain’t it? That’s a clever idea,
+that is! Where’s the telegram? Show it to me.”</p>
+
+<p>With leaden heart, Locke remembered what he
+had done with it. “I haven’t—got it,” he stammered.
+“I wrote a message on the back—and
+gave it to the boy to send.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that so?” sneered the manager. “Did it
+get to the girl? Did it come while you were
+there?”</p>
+
+<p>“N-o.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought so. It never went. Just so the
+other never came.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span></p>
+
+<p>“But it did come,” protested Lefty, though he
+had a feeling that further words were futile.
+“The boy handed it to me on the steps. I opened
+it, and wrote an answer right there. That’s the
+truth.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is it?” retorted the manager incredulously.
+“Just you wait a minute and I’ll find out if it is
+or not.”</p>
+
+<p>Turning abruptly, he hurried over to a telephone
+booth and shut himself in. The instant
+the manager’s back was turned Buck Fargo
+groaned.</p>
+
+<p>“What the devil did you tell him for?” he said
+sadly. “I’m afraid you’ve gone and done for
+yourself, kid. I have never seen the old man in
+such a temper since Billy Smith sold a game to
+the Pinks last spring.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wanted to lie,” the youngster confessed, “but
+I simply couldn’t, Buck.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re awful particular! Who do you s’pose
+done it, that cur Elgin?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t think of any one else equal to it,” Lefty
+answered. “It wouldn’t be the first miserable
+trick he’s worked.”</p>
+
+<p>He broke off as a door slammed and Brennan
+came striding toward them, his eyes savage and
+his face the color of a beet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I knew it!” he said. “No such message went
+through the office.”</p>
+
+<p>He paused a second, his legs spread wide apart,
+regarding Lefty with a cold, contemptuous
+scrutiny.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m through with you!” he burst out, at length.
+“I can put up with a lot, but I haven’t any use
+for a quitter. I thought you was one when I first
+saw you, but now I know. You skipped out to-day
+because you were afraid—nothing else. You
+pretty near pulled me with that tale of yours—but
+not quite. You fooled me with that dirty
+spiking trick, too, but I’m wise now. I’m done
+with you! Go back to the bushes or the hot place,
+whichever you prefer!”</p>
+
+<p>He wheeled round and took a few steps across
+the lobby. Suddenly he turned back.</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe you’re thinking of that fine offer you
+say was made by the Blue Stockings?” he sneered.
+“I wouldn’t give much for your chances with Jack
+Kennedy.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes were blazing. His lips parted for
+a hot retort, but he seemed to change his mind
+and choke it down. For an instant he stood absolutely
+still. Then, slowly, he turned and looked
+at Fargo.</p>
+
+<p>Neither man spoke.</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_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI<br>
+<small>DROPPED OUT OF SIGHT</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The quickness with which a man can be forgotten
+is never flattering to his self-esteem.
+For a full month Lefty Locke had been
+a member of the Hornets’ training camp squad.
+During all that time he had been well liked by the
+majority of the older men, and admitted by some
+to terms of intimacy which are rarely accorded
+a new recruit. Ever since the strenuous contest
+with the team of Texas bushers his fellow cubs
+had also made him one of them in every sense of
+the word.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the catastrophe. For a brief space
+his name was in every mouth. The players took
+sides on the question of Brennan’s judgment,
+some contending that the manager was right,
+others voicing their continued faith in the disgraced
+player.</p>
+
+<p>But with the departure of Locke from Ashland,
+followed swiftly by that of the entire squad, the
+subject soon palled. There was so much else of
+vital personal interest that even those who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
+had championed the unfortunate pitcher’s cause
+became more and more indifferent. Some, even,
+hearing the cleverly phrased traducements which
+Bert Elgin never lost a chance to utter regarding
+his former rival, came to the conclusion that they
+had been deceived. Jim Brennan rarely made a
+mistake in sizing up a man. There must, after all,
+have been a yellow streak in the young pitcher
+which he successfully concealed from all save the
+lynx-eyed manager.</p>
+
+<p>So at the end of one short week it is doubtful
+whether more than three men out of all that number
+wasted a single thought on the youngster who
+had, a brief time before, been so popular with
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Fargo did not forget; he was not built
+that way. Esteemed as he was among players
+generally, and adored by the fans, it was, nevertheless,
+a fact that the big backstop did not
+usually make friends quickly—that is, what he
+called real friends, as opposed to pleasant but
+casual acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow, Lefty had attracted him from the
+first. He liked the way the boy had taken Elgin’s
+part that night at the Palace Theater and stood
+up unflinchingly against heavy odds. He liked
+Locke’s attitude with his fellow recruits when they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
+started the boycott against him early in the season.
+The way the southpaw set out to conquer his faults
+and improve his playing appealed strongly to
+Fargo, who had been obliged to labor quite as
+steadily and strenuously himself before reaching
+his present enviable position. And when, little by
+little, he had come to know the youngster better,
+the Big Leaguer’s liking changed to something
+deeper and more abiding, which made it quite impossible
+for him to forget.</p>
+
+<p>At first he had been openly angry. He berated
+Brennan for a blind idiot, and had to be forcibly
+restrained from punching Elgin’s head. Then he
+wanted Lefty to stay with the crowd on a chance of
+the manager coming to his senses. He soon saw,
+however, what an impossible condition of affairs
+that would bring about, and reluctantly, though
+with much outward brevity, said good-by.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll write, of course, and let me know how
+you make out?” he urged. “I ain’t much of a
+hand with the pen, but I’ll guarantee to answer
+every letter right off.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a queer expression in Lefty’s eyes.
+He was finding the phases of the situation even
+more difficult than he had supposed. It was not
+easy to keep in place the mask of indifference he
+had assumed the night before.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’ll write when I make good, Buck,” he returned
+quietly. “There won’t be anything to tell
+you till then.”</p>
+
+<p>Argument was futile. His mind was made up.
+He told no one his plans. It seemed doubtful
+whether he had made any. He simply said good-by
+and went his way, leaving behind ripples of
+discussion and conjecture, which swiftly spread
+out with ever-lessening volume until, like the departed
+pitcher, they vanished as if they had never
+been.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo’s one consolation was in Jack Stillman.
+He found the newspaper man’s feelings in perfect
+accord with his own. There was one difference,
+however: while the big backstop was
+ready and eager to do anything in his power to
+rehabilitate his friend, no way occurred to him;
+it was Stillman’s brain, trained by three years of
+reporting on a metropolitan newspaper, which hit
+upon the only possible manner in which that
+could be done.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ve got to find the boy who delivered that
+message,” he said tersely as they left the station.
+“If we can get hold of him and manage to choke
+the truth out of him, we ought to be able to nail
+this crooked trick fast to the man who put up the
+job.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span></p>
+
+<p>He began working to that end at once. But
+the time was very short. The two squads—cubs
+and regulars—were leaving that very afternoon,
+and the task of finding an unknown boy in the
+few hours remaining, even though he had been
+foresighted enough to obtain an accurate description
+of the fellow from Lefty, was next to impossible.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, Stillman risked a call-down from his
+editor by staying over a day at Ashland. When he
+finally left to catch up with the team he was
+scheduled to accompany North, he had found no
+clew, but had placed the matter in the hands of a
+retired member of the San Antonio police force
+living in the smaller town.</p>
+
+<p>William Bowers was shrewder than the ordinary
+run of officers. He had been a sergeant for
+years, and time hung heavily on his hands. He
+might succeed, and he might not. Stillman felt
+that the result would be a toss-up. But it was the
+best he could do.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII<br>
+<small>OPENING THE SEASON</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Slowly and leisurely the Hornets zigzagged
+their way northward, pausing here
+and there to play an exhibition game with
+some minor-league team, which was usually won
+by headwork and experience rather than by any extraordinary
+display of hitting. Even after the
+regular period of work at the training camp, the
+big fellows were not wielding the hickory with
+special effect.</p>
+
+<p>They shaped rapidly into condition, however,
+and, when the time came to face some of the
+stronger teams of the minor-league clubs above
+what was once known as Mason and Dixon’s line,
+they did not disgrace themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, with much rejoicing, the metropolis was
+reached and the two squads reunited. Jim Brennan,
+his mind finally made up after weeks of
+close watching and weighing, proceeded to discard
+the few remaining recruits who, in his
+opinion, had shown themselves not quite ripe.</p>
+
+<p>Then, with the squad trimmed down to the number<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
+at which it would remain throughout the
+season, a week or more of hard, strenuous work
+ensued. A new infielder had to be broken in by
+his veteran comrades to the finer intricacies of
+the game. New signals were devised and perfected.
+Various pitchers were tried out, one after
+the other, in a full nine-inning game, and their condition
+studied by the astute manager. The batting
+order was decided on. In fact, everything
+was done which could be done in preparation for
+that great occasion to which many thousands of
+enthusiastic fans had been looking forward so
+ardently—opening day.</p>
+
+<p>It came at last, with its tricky April breezes
+giving the lie to cloudless skies and brilliant yellow
+sunshine. There were the same joyous, pushing
+crowds, the same blaring bands. Some of
+the men had heard them many, many times before;
+but even they, though they might dissemble
+and pretend a careless nonchalance, were conscious,
+nevertheless, of that indescribable, irresistible
+thrill which they had always felt, and would
+continue to feel to the end of time—their time.</p>
+
+<p>Their opponents were the Terriers, an organization
+of scrappy players who had fairly won
+their name. The fans got the worth of their
+money in a snappy game which was not decided<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
+till the ninth inning, and then only by an infielder’s
+error, which let in the single tally made that day.</p>
+
+<p>The second game was lost by the Hornets; but
+they made up for it by having a streak of hitting
+in the third contest, and hammering out six runs
+to their opponents two.</p>
+
+<p>It was during this last game that Brennan
+tried out his cub pitcher, Bert Elgin, for a couple
+of innings, and was so pleased with the showing
+made by the youngster that he determined to put
+him on the slab two days hence when they met the
+Blue Stockings for the first time that season.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to take a chance with him, and do
+the unusual thing,” the manager confided to Jack
+Stillman while talking it over afterwards, as he
+had a way of doing with this particular reporter.
+“I need a youngster to work now and then until
+the old men get their wings well oiled up, and I’ve
+<em>got</em> to take the chance. I’m banking on Elgin.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hum!” muttered Stillman.</p>
+
+<p>The manager detected the doubt in Stillman’s
+mind. “You’ll have to allow that he’s shown
+form and class for a youngster.”</p>
+
+<p>The newspaper man shrugged his shoulders.
+“I’ll admit that, all right,” he returned. “Still,
+that doesn’t prove him Cy Russell’s equal, for
+instance.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Did I say he was? All the same, I wouldn’t be
+surprised if he pushed Cy pretty hard one of these
+days. What you got against him, anyhow? He’s
+speedy, and he’s got a fine change of pace. He’s
+brainy, too, that boy.”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman raised his eyebrows. “Well?” he
+drawled.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, what?” retorted Brennan. “What more
+do you want than speed, and control, and brains?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sand,” the reporter said succinctly.</p>
+
+<p>The manager laughed. “I ain’t seen any signs
+of his lacking grit. He was up against some proposition
+to-day, too, and he pulled out. I guess I
+ain’t making any mistake trying him out against
+the Blue Stockings. He’s as good as any of Jack
+Kennedy’s string of cripples. He ain’t made of
+the same stuff as that quitter, Locke, I fired in
+Ashland.”</p>
+
+<p>A faint touch of color tinged Stillman’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re right there, Brennan,” he said briefly.
+“There’s no comparison between them. Well
+we’ll see how he pans out on Saturday.”</p>
+
+<p>As he turned away, a frown wrinkled his smooth
+forehead. He was thinking of Lefty, and wishing
+fervently that he might be there. What a chance
+it would have been! There wasn’t a question that,
+if he had remained with the Hornets, Locke might<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
+have had the opportunity which had been given
+to Elgin. Stillman knew baseball, and there was
+no shadowy doubt in his mind as to which of the
+two was the better man. He felt that Brennan
+could not have failed to see it, too, if he had not
+been tricked into turning the southpaw away.</p>
+
+<p>However, that was all over and done with. Not
+only had Locke been fired, but at this moment
+Stillman had not the least idea where his friend
+was. He had heard nothing from him since the
+day they parted at the Ashland station. The
+pitcher had promised to write when he made good,
+but he had not written.</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe he’s working for some fourth-rate bush
+league,” Stillman thought regretfully. “I can’t
+say I blame him for not wanting us to know.
+Maybe he hasn’t got any job yet. I’d give a farm
+to get that crook Elgin where I want him, and
+show Brennan what a mistake he’s made.”</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately the ex-sergeant at Ashland had,
+so far, failed signally in finding a single clew to the
+mystery, and Stillman was beginning to grow discouraged.
+It looked as if Bert Elgin had won out,
+in spite of the fact that truth and honor and
+decency were all opposed to him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII<br>
+<small>THE TWO MANAGERS</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">A door opened, and a tall, thin man, with
+a slight stoop, stood on the threshold,
+looking down upon the manager of the
+Hornets. His dark eyes glimmered and a smile
+stretched his wide mouth, which transformed the
+almost homely face into one that was positively
+good-looking.</p>
+
+<p>At the sight of him, Jim Brennan sprang up
+from his desk so hurriedly that he came near upsetting
+the revolving chair, and leaped toward the
+newcomer with hand outstretched.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, well!” he exclaimed. “Put it there,
+Ken, old boy! It sure does a man good to see your
+smiling face again. How’s things?”</p>
+
+<p>“Fine!” returned Kennedy, of the Blue Stockings,
+gripping the other’s hand. “Couldn’t be
+better, in fact. You’re looking blooming yourself,
+Jim. Taken on a few pounds over the winter,
+haven’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>“A few, maybe. I can stand it, though. Once
+fat, a little more never cuts any ice. Sit down and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
+rest your face and hands. I see you’ve had a
+clean sweep so far.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy dropped into a chair beside the desk,
+crossing one long leg over the other. Though antagonists
+on the diamond, in private life the two
+men were the best of friends, and always enjoyed
+talking things over in this way whenever they
+met.</p>
+
+<p>“We have,” rejoined the taller man when Brennan
+had settled himself at the desk again, “won
+four games straight, which isn’t so bad to start in
+the season with.”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan grinned. “Well, you’re up against a
+team of real ball players to-day, Ken,” he
+chuckled. “Doing some stunts with a bunch of
+has-beens on the firing line. I’ve a sort of hunch
+that we’re going to break up that streak of luck.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should worry,” smiled Kennedy. “I’ve
+never seen the men in better shape. We’re going
+to make ’em all take our dust this year.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” grunted Brennan. “That remains
+to be seen. Who you going to dish up for us to
+knock the stuffing out of—Pete Grist?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nope. I’ve got a man I had farmed out to a
+Southern independent team, with a string attached.
+He turned out to be a regular bush wonder, so I
+pulled the string the other day, and yanked him in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
+here to try him out on you. It’s always best to
+give a youngster something easy to start with.”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan laughed. “Say, Ken, that’s sort of
+funny, though. I was counting on putting in a
+dark horse myself. He’s a kid I picked up last
+fall. I’ll guarantee right now that he’ll lick the
+pants off your Southern wonder.”</p>
+
+<p>“If it wasn’t so much like highway robbery, I’d
+make you back your talk up with cash,” Kennedy
+returned calmly. “As it is, I’ll have to content
+myself with a sight of your face after the game.”</p>
+
+<p>Brennan was scoffing at Kennedy’s folly in
+imagining he could take a fall out of the Hornets
+with a raw busher on the slab, when suddenly he
+stopped abruptly, frowning.</p>
+
+<p>“Say!” he burst out the next moment. “Did
+a fellow named Locke come around for a job within
+the last month? I meant to drop you a line about
+him, but I’ll be hanged if I didn’t forget it. He’s
+a southpaw, and I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if
+he applied under another name.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy shook his head. “No, he didn’t
+change his name. He couldn’t, seeing as I knew
+about him before. He blew in the day before we
+broke camp in Georgia; but I was a bit wary when
+I found out you’d dropped him that way. He
+didn’t stay long.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’m glad you didn’t get stuck with him,”
+Brennan exclaimed emphatically. “I’d sort of
+felt it was my fault if you had, seeing as I forgot
+to put you wise about him. Believe me, Ken, he
+isn’t any use, but he shows up good at first. It
+took me the whole training season to get on to the
+fact that he’s yellow right through—one of the
+worst quitters I ever saw. We’re both well rid of
+him. Say, look at the time! I didn’t think it was
+so late.”</p>
+
+<p>He sprang up as he spoke, and slammed his desk
+down. Kennedy arose more leisurely, and together
+they left the office for the dressing rooms of
+their respective teams.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX<br>
+<small>THE MEETING IN THE GRANDSTAND</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Three games had been insufficient to take
+the edge from the enthusiasm of the fans,
+intoxicated with the wine of spring and
+bubbling with the joy of looking down once more
+upon that diamond after their long winter deprivation.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, in point of strength there was no
+comparison between the Blue Stockings and the
+Terriers. To be sure, the latter had made a hot
+start this year, but the former were old rivals of
+the Hornets, who, year after year, had pushed
+them close in that desperate fight for the pennant,
+and last season had beaten them out by a hair.
+Consequently this first struggle between them
+drew almost as many spectators as the game which
+had opened the season a week before.</p>
+
+<p>The day was perfect. A sweep of blue sky,
+clear save for a few wispy clouds, was overhead.
+A trifling little breeze lurked here and
+there at sharp turns or corners, but it blew from
+the south, and held no chill undercurrent which
+was not offset by the warm, grateful sunshine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span></p>
+
+<p>The fans rejoiced as they sped toward the
+grounds by every possible car line and conveyance.
+Those of them who had witnessed the opening
+game told one another how much better this one
+was likely to be.</p>
+
+<p>Long before one o’clock great throngs had assembled
+at the gates, and when those gates were
+finally opened there was a wild rush past ticket-takers
+into the clattering emptiness of the vast
+stands. Down over the tiers of seats they
+stumbled, struggling for the desirable front rows.
+Hats were smashed here and there, and there were
+occasional wordy altercations; but, as a rule,
+laughter and joshing and good-natured horseplay
+prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>By two o’clock, the bleachers were crowded, and
+the more expensive seats were filling fast. Half
+an hour later it looked as if every place, save in
+the reserved sections, was occupied; and still the
+crowd streamed in like a swollen river.</p>
+
+<p>Tramp, tramp, tramp! Regular, rhythmic, the
+sound of their marching was like the thunder of a
+great army. Ogden Wilmerding, hurrying toward
+a coveted place in the lower stand, felt the thrill
+which that sound brings to the heart of every fan
+who has hibernated reluctantly for six long
+months.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Nothing like it,” he chuckled as he was swept
+along. “This looks a lot like opening day,” he
+went on, peering over the top of the last row of
+seats. “I’m not so sorry as I was over getting
+back too late for that.”</p>
+
+<p>He soon saw that it would be impossible to get
+the seat he wanted. The section directly behind
+the plate was filled in solid. For a moment he
+stood there peering down at the reporters’ bench
+in a vain hope that some one he knew—Jack Stillman,
+perhaps—might find room for him there.
+He saw places enough; but neither Stillman nor
+any other of his newspaper friends had yet appeared.</p>
+
+<p>“Hang it all!” he muttered. “Why didn’t I
+start half an hour earlier, or wire from Boston
+for a box?”</p>
+
+<p>“Because you’re the same lazy old slob you were
+three years ago,” chuckled a voice in his ear.</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding whirled, his eyes popping, stared
+for a second in speechless amazement at the young
+man against whose shoulder he had been almost
+leaning. Then he fell upon him with a roar of
+delight.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll be hanged!” he gurgled. “Snow,
+you old cut-up, where in time have you been? I
+thought you’d croaked years ago. Shove along<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
+and give me a chance. You’re spread over two
+seats, easy.”</p>
+
+<p>Snowden Pell obeyed laughingly. The man beside
+him, taking in the situation with a good-natured
+grin, likewise moved, and Wilmerding was
+accommodated with a seat.</p>
+
+<p>“It takes a lot to put me out of business,” Pell
+chuckled when his friend had settled beside him.
+“I’m very far from being a dead one, as they’ll tell
+you out in Seattle.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why didn’t you write and let somebody
+know how you were getting on? Last I heard,
+your father failed, or something, and you slipped
+out of Princeton right in the middle of the spring
+term without saying a word to anybody. To this
+day I never knew how much of the tale was truth
+and how much fiction.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was pretty much all truth,” Pell returned
+quickly. “My governor’s partner got playing the
+Wall Street game, and smashed the business to
+bits. There wasn’t enough left even for me to
+keep on and finish the term, and when I found out
+how bad things were I just faded quietly away. I
+didn’t want any of the boys to be sorry for me, or
+to think that I was an object of charity, the way—”</p>
+
+<p>“Rot!” broke in the stout chap emphatically.
+“You make me sick! At least, you might have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
+said a word to your old friends. Look over in the
+bleachers. They’re firing one of those sandwich-chewing-gum-cigar
+baskets at each other. Next
+thing you know they’ll be tossing some kid
+around.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment they watched the wicker basket
+rise and fall as the bleacherites employed their
+time in playing a sort of handball with it. Here
+and there in a distant part of the stand men were
+throwing paper at one another, sporting with the
+inevitable straw hat which some one always seems
+to bring along for the purpose, and otherwise enjoying
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Wilmerding turned again to his
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, where’d you go?” he asked. “What
+you been doing ever since?”</p>
+
+<p>“I had a job offered me in Seattle, which I
+snapped up. It was a good opening for me, and
+I’m certainly glad I got with that particular concern,
+even if I had to borrow money to get out
+there. I had the first letter from them the very
+day I left Princeton; and, by Jove, Oggie!”—he
+threw back his head and laughed at the sudden
+recollection—“you came mighty near being the
+goat.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean?” the stout fellow inquired<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
+tartly. “You didn’t touch me, that I remember.
+Of course, I’d have turned you down”—his tone
+was one of heavy sarcasm—“but at least I’d liked
+to have had the chance.”</p>
+
+<p>“You were the first person I thought of when
+I realized I’d have to sting somebody,” Pell
+laughed. “Trouble was, I couldn’t locate you.
+Went to your room, and stayed a deuce of a while
+in hopes you’d come in. Then, when I couldn’t
+wait any longer, I hunted up Victor Wood, and
+he did the business.”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated an instant, and then went on
+swiftly, a note of sudden curiosity in his voice:</p>
+
+<p>“That reminds me of something I’ve always
+wanted to ask you. What sort of a game did you
+and Bert Elgin have together about that time?”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding stared. “Game?” he repeated
+blankly. “Bert Elgin? I don’t get you, Snow.
+Elucidate.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I thought it was a joke of some kind,”
+Pell returned. “Only it seemed funny that all of a
+sudden you should be as chummy as that with
+Elgin. While I was waiting for you, I strolled into
+your bedroom to brush my hair. I was standing
+before the bureau when I heard the outside door
+open. Thought it was you, of course, until some
+one called out your name. I didn’t feel in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
+mood for gassing with any one else, so I said
+nothing and slipped back to one side of the door.</p>
+
+<p>“To make a long story short, I heard the fellow
+moving around the sitting room, and pretty soon
+I happened to catch sight of him in the dressing-table
+mirror. It was Bert Elgin, and he was heading
+for the bookshelves in the corner.”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding gave a slight start, the color flaming
+into his face.</p>
+
+<p>“Go on,” he urged, as his friend, glancing at
+him, paused in his narration. “What—happened?”</p>
+
+<p>“He took something out of his pocket and
+dropped it behind the books,” Pell continued. “I
+didn’t see what it was; but as it fell there was a
+clink that sounded like metal—a chain or——
+Great Scott! What is it, Oggie? What’s the
+matter with you?”</p>
+
+<p>The color had vanished from Wilmerding’s face,
+and he was staring at his companion with a
+strained, incredulous expression in his eyes which
+testified to the emotion he was undergoing.</p>
+
+<p>“What—books—were they?” he gasped at
+length, in a hoarse voice.</p>
+
+<p>“The books he put the stuff behind, you mean?”
+queried Pell. “I don’t remember, but I think it
+was the second shelf from the top. I know they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
+were over on the extreme right-hand end of the
+case.”</p>
+
+<p>Wilmerding drew his breath with a whistling
+sound. For an instant he sat silent. Then he
+moved his hand unconsciously, and caught Pell’s
+arm in a grip which made the man wince.</p>
+
+<p>“What day was that, Snow?” he breathed.</p>
+
+<p>“The twenty-sixth of May,” was the quick response.
+“I don’t think I’ll ever forget that date.
+It was about three in the afternoon. But what in
+thunder was it all about, Oggie? I never supposed
+it was anything but a joke. Can’t you put a fellow
+wise?”</p>
+
+<p>The big man at his side did not answer. He
+was staring out across the diamond toward the
+bleachers, black with their crowds of restless fans.
+He saw nothing, heard nothing. He could not
+speak for the joy which filled his soul as a realization
+of the truth came to him at last.</p>
+
+<p>He was not a thief!</p>
+
+<p>For years he had been so absolutely convinced
+that it was he who had—unconsciously, perhaps,
+but still none the less certainly—stolen those
+things from Bob Ferris’ rooms, that Pell’s story
+struck him as almost incredible.</p>
+
+<p>There could be no mistake, however. The details
+fitted too perfectly to admit of a coincidence.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
+Lefty had been right, it was Elgin who was the
+thief, not he. And Elgin it was who had done a
+thing which would have been impossible in Wilmerding,
+waking or sleeping; he had deliberately
+stolen, and as deliberately planned to throw the
+blame upon an innocent man.</p>
+
+<p>Sudden, furious anger flamed up within the
+Princeton man. He felt as if he must search out
+that contemptible coward and give him a little of
+what was coming to him. He half rose from the
+bench, his face livid; and then he realized that all
+around him a wild uproar had arisen. Men yelled
+and cheered themselves purple; they stamped and
+shouted and waved their hats.</p>
+
+<p>Pell’s hand caught Wilmerding by the arm and
+dragged him down, but not before the angry man
+had caught a glimpse of the line of athletes in
+their immaculate uniforms, leaving the shadow of
+the distant bleachers and trotting briskly into the
+brilliant April sunshine on the field.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL<br>
+<small>THE SURPRISE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Amid the roaring of the crowd, the Hornets
+made their way across the diamond.
+Brennan was in the lead, with Cy Russell
+beside him; and, at moments when the scurrying
+phalanx of photographers permitted, the manager
+talked to his star pitcher in low tones.</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better keep your arm limbered, Cy,” he
+said. “I shall send you in if they get to Elgin.
+The gink Kennedy’s going to open with ought to
+be soft for us.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who is he?” Russell asked curiously.</p>
+
+<p>The manager paused until a camera had been
+snapped and the reporter had retreated to a little
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>“Some busher,” he explained. “Ken seems to
+think he’s a find, but I’ve seen them kind before.
+Grist’ll take his place when we bat him out, and we
+want to get away to a flying start.”</p>
+
+<p>As they neared the bench, the fans gave a yell
+for Russell, and several newspaper men came up
+to inquire perfunctorily whether it was not true<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
+that he was to go on the slab first for the Hornets.</p>
+
+<p>“You boys’ll find that out in time,” Brennan returned
+evasively. “Don’t you know that I ain’t
+the kind to give out that information before the
+announcer? Chase yourselves.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned to Bert Elgin, who was standing not
+far away, looking as cool and nonchalant as if he
+had never played on anything but a Big League
+team, and proceeded to give him a few last bits of
+advice.</p>
+
+<p>While this was going on, another cheer went up
+from the stands as the Blue Stockings’ contingent
+appeared and rapidly crossed the field.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan’s back was towards them, and he was
+consequently surprised to see Elgin give a sudden
+start and stare fixedly at the approaching squad.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant Elgin’s face remained fixed; then
+into his eyes there leaped an expression of such
+utter astonishment, mingled with hate, that the
+manager’s words ceased abruptly, and he grasped
+the young pitcher by one arm.</p>
+
+<p>“What is the matter with you?” he asked
+sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin swallowed hard, and his face, which had
+turned slightly pale, now flamed crimson.</p>
+
+<p>“Look there!” he said hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span></p>
+
+<p>Brennan whirled and stared at the approaching
+players. For a second he saw only the line of
+blue-stockinged men, headed by Jack Kennedy.
+Then, as his eyes focused on the tall, lithe, graceful
+figure walking beside Spider Grant, the famous
+first baseman of the rival organization, his jaw
+dropped.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll—be—hanged!” he gasped. “Tom Locke!”</p>
+
+<p>It was Lefty, browner than he had been a month
+ago, and with, if possible, an easier swing in his
+carriage. His face glowed with health. His teeth
+gleamed as he smiled at some sally of his companion.
+He showed no trace of the awkwardness or
+embarrassment which one might naturally expect
+at his first encounter with the team from which he
+had been dropped in such disgrace. True, his
+brown eyes flashed a single questioning glance at
+one man among the Hornets, but it was seen by no
+one save that man, who leaped forward as if propelled
+from a catapult.</p>
+
+<p>“Lefty, you old lobster!” he cried, as he gripped
+both of the southpaw’s hands in his. “What you
+deserve is a good larruping; and I’d like to hand
+it to you right now.”</p>
+
+<p>There was an odd expression on Lefty’s face as
+he grasped Fargo’s big fists firmly. For an instant
+he did not speak.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t make good, Buck—honest I didn’t,”
+he said at length in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>“G’wan!” retorted the backstop. “What you
+giving us? Ain’t you with the Blue Stockings?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; but I’ve been with them only two days.
+Kennedy farmed me with the Badgers, down
+South. I never knew what he thought of me, or
+what he meant to do, till I got a wire telling me to
+come on at once. I had a streak of great luck down
+there, and I suppose—”</p>
+
+<p>“Luck be hanged!” interrupted Fargo forcibly.
+“You made good, just as you would have with us
+if that miserable sneak— Say! You ain’t going
+into the game to-day?”</p>
+
+<p>Locke hesitated an instant, and then nodded.
+“Yes,” he said, lowering his voice. “Kennedy’s
+going to give me a chance.”</p>
+
+<p>Fargo grinned. “Glory be! The old man’s going
+to put Elgin on the slab. You’ll be up against
+him at last; and, if you don’t make him look like
+a rotten lemon, it’s all up between you and me.”</p>
+
+<p>For a second Locke stood looking at his friend,
+with sparkling eyes and swiftly reddening cheeks.
+His face took on a look of firm, indomitable purpose.
+Unconsciously both brown, muscular hands,
+hanging straight down at his sides, clenched themselves
+until the knuckles showed white through the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
+skin. Then he pulled himself together with an effort,
+and laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a hot ball player to talk like that,” he
+joshed. “You sure don’t want your own pitcher
+to fall down, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not keen about losing the game,” Fargo
+returned. “But I shouldn’t shed tears if Elgin
+was hammered out of the box.”</p>
+
+<p>Up on the reporters’ bench a telegraph instrument
+had suddenly ceased clicking, and a rush and
+bustle followed as a slim fellow in a long tan coat
+and rakish soft hat pushed hurriedly past his fellow
+reporters.</p>
+
+<p>He paid no heed to their comments and questions,
+but, reaching one of the gates, thrust it open,
+and hastened out upon the field. A moment later
+he, too, was shaking hands with Lefty and upbraiding
+him in unmeasured terms.</p>
+
+<p>Presently several more of the Hornets’ players
+strolled up and joined the little group about the
+young twirler. The fans, realizing that something
+was doing which they did not understand,
+gave vent to caustic comments and various sarcastic
+remarks about the folly of delaying the game.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan, still scowling, called peremptorily to
+his men, and sent them loping on to the diamond
+for preliminary practice. Locke took a position<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
+over to one side, and commenced warming up.
+The field was soon a picture of animated motion.</p>
+
+<p>“What kind of a game is this you’re giving me,
+Ken?” Brennan inquired tartly as Kennedy
+strolled up a moment later. “You told me you’d
+thrown down that fellow Locke when he applied
+for a job.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I didn’t, Jim,” retorted the Blue Stockings’
+manager mildly, a faint twinkle in his dark
+eyes. “I said he didn’t stay with me long. He
+didn’t. I let the Badgers have him. Hadn’t time
+to bother with him myself, so I shipped him to
+them for a try-out, with one of my scouts to keep
+an eye on him. The boy won every game he
+pitched, and did such brainy work that I pulled
+him in. The reason I didn’t tell you his name was
+because he asked me this morning not to say anything
+about him to any of your crowd.”</p>
+
+<p>“Humph!” growled Brennan. “Thought he
+was goin’ to jar me, I suppose. So this is the bush
+wonder you were telling me about. I wish you
+joy with that quitter. Better have an anchor
+ready to hitch to him about the third inning.
+You’ll need it.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll see if you’re right,” smiled Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan turned away, grumbling incoherently.
+Evidently he was still feeling somewhat sore.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
+The gingery fielding practice continued to the delight
+of the spectators, who applauded every
+snappy throw or pretty catch.</p>
+
+<p>When the Blue Stockings took their places on
+the diamond their efforts were cheered almost as
+much as had been those of the home team. The
+great crowd seemed to be in a jovial, good-natured
+mood; though, when the practice was over and the
+batteries for the day announced, there was a concerted
+growl at the discovery that two unknowns
+were to take the slab instead of the old favorites.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, there was no great amount of
+kicking. The game was about to begin; that was
+the main thing. Besides, it would be rather interesting
+to see which of these cubs proved himself
+the better man.</p>
+
+<p>The photographers were shooed away and the
+field cleared. The Hornets pranced out upon the
+diamond like a lot of colts, eager for the fray.
+Elgin got a cheer all to himself for the cool, confident,
+and business-like way in which he took the
+slab. The umpires got into position, one of them
+tossing out a clean, new ball to the young pitcher.
+The fans yelled again, just for the sake of letting
+off steam.</p>
+
+<p>Then came a tense, breathless hush as they
+waited for the first ball to be pitched.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI<br>
+<small>THE BEGINNING OF THE GAME</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Rufe Hyland, the visitors’ right fielder
+and one of their crack hitters, stood at
+the pan, calm and smiling, swinging his
+stick with a short, gentle motion, which seemed to
+denote tense muscles and a brain alert and ready
+to take advantage of any pitched ball that should
+nick the platter.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his seeming coolness, Bert Elgin had
+really never been more nervous in his life. He
+took his time, even after Fargo had given the signal,
+and, as he dug away the soil near the pitcher’s
+rubber with his copper toe, he heard his teammates
+coaching behind him.</p>
+
+<p>He was heartened by the sound of their friendly
+voices; but, nevertheless, the straight, low one he
+sent over seemed to lack his usual cannon-ball
+speed. Hyland lashed it out in a manner which
+sent the pitcher’s heart down into his boots. For
+an instant he thought it a two-bagger, at least.
+Then, as he whirled round, he saw that Dutch
+Siegrist, sprinting at full speed, had scooped it
+right off the blades of grass.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span></p>
+
+<p>The superb catch brought a yell of delight from
+the Hornets’ rooters, and seemed to brace Elgin
+amazingly. He took a long breath, and his nerves
+ceased to flutter as he surveyed the next batter.
+He felt a new confidence in himself in the realization
+that the team was behind him, ready to back
+him up with their wonderfully perfect organization.
+He lost instantly that sense of isolation he
+had been conscious of at first—the feeling that
+the entire weight and responsibility of the game
+lay on his shoulders. The boys were there, ready
+to cover any blunder or mistake he might make;
+and, though this did not bring about laxness in
+his pitching, it was infinitely consoling.</p>
+
+<p>Again he took the signal from the big backstop,
+but this time the ball he put over had burning
+speed, and a little jump to it which completely
+fooled Pink Dalton, the Blue Stockings’ second
+baseman.</p>
+
+<p>It was followed by an incurve that cut the corner
+of the plate.</p>
+
+<p>Dalton fouled back of the pan.</p>
+
+<p>Then came a couple of teasers which the batter
+ignored; and finally, with two and two, the Blue
+Stockings’ man hoisted a high fly into left field,
+which was easily caught by the guardian of that
+pasture.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span></p>
+
+<p>The roaring approval of the crowd caused the
+blood to tingle in Elgin’s veins. Before the end
+of the game he meant to have them shouting his
+name as loudly as they had yelled for Russell, or
+Pop Jennings, or any other of the old favorites,
+on the opening day. It wasn’t such a hard matter,
+after all, to pitch in a Big League contest.</p>
+
+<p>By carefully following Fargo’s signals, he struck
+out Brock, the visitors’ center fielder, and then
+walked toward the bench with a little, unconscious
+swagger. One or two of his fellow players told
+him how well he’d done. Brennan, even, added
+his approval.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin fancied that he had made a very good
+start, indeed, and that there wasn’t a doubt of his
+form improving as the game progressed. He was
+quite satisfied with his cleverness in letting only
+three batters oppose him. He gave no thought to
+how much the man behind the pan had contributed
+to this result. Neither he nor any one else had the
+least conception of the fight which had gone on in
+Buck Fargo’s mind between loyalty to his team
+and the contempt and hatred he felt for the pitcher
+his brains and experience were helping so greatly.</p>
+
+<p>The caustic comment and jeering criticism which
+had greeted Elgin’s appearance were as nothing to
+the disparaging chorus that arose when Lefty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
+walked out into the diamond. Baseball fans are
+extremely partizan, and the supporters of the Hornets
+outnumbered those of their opponents ten to
+one.</p>
+
+<p>The southpaw could not help being a bit affected
+by the unflattering remarks hurled at him from
+the bleachers and grandstand, even though he
+knew how little such things counted and how fickle
+the average rooter is. He felt, too, and rather
+painfully, the lack of encouragement from his own
+team. He knew he was not one of them. They
+had shown him that only too plainly. With the
+exception of one or two, they had made him perfectly
+aware of the fact that they regarded him
+as a man who had yet to win his spurs, and on
+whom the honor of opening the first game with the
+Hornets had devolved more by accident, or through
+a whim of their manager, than from any real worth
+or proven merit. Their silence as he toed the
+slab was in vivid contrast to the behavior of their
+opponents in the first half of the inning.</p>
+
+<p>It made him set his teeth and resolve desperately
+to make good; to show them that he had
+something in him; to vindicate Jack Kennedy’s
+judgment; incidentally, to prove to the latter how
+grateful he was for having been given this chance.</p>
+
+<p>For a second he waited for his catcher’s signal,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
+but none came. Dirk Nelson seemed to be occupied
+in settling down behind the pan and making
+sure that his mitt was in place. Lefty wondered
+whether the backstop’s well-known chumminess
+with Pete Grist, the popular Blue Stockings’
+twirler, had anything to do with this unusual state
+of absent-mindedness. Grist had shown unmistakable
+signs of ill humor on discovering that he
+was not to start on the slab to-day.</p>
+
+<p>There was but a momentary hesitation. Bill
+Hagin was at bat, and Lefty had played too many
+practice games against the capable outfielder not
+to know pretty well his strong and weak points.
+Unfortunately the latter were few. The southpaw
+was satisfied, however, when he finally got Nelson’s
+belated signal. A slow floater was what he handed
+up for a starter.</p>
+
+<p>Hagin, doting on speed, could not restrain himself,
+and struck too soon. Lefty then tried a
+curve. The batter swung at it, making connections
+and bumping a slow grounder towards short.</p>
+
+<p>Eddie Lewis made the mistake of waiting for the
+ball, and was then forced to throw hastily in order
+to get it across the diamond in time. That hasty
+throw was wide, and Spider Grant had to leap off
+the cushion. Hagin was safe because of bad judgment
+and an error.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
+
+<p>The crowd cheered, and urged Dutch Siegrist to
+carry on the good work.</p>
+
+<p>The first baseman of the Hornets took no
+chances. In spite of Lefty’s efforts to prevent it,
+he managed to lay down a bunt which corkscrewed
+along the base line, ever threatening to roll foul,
+but in the end coming to rest a couple of inches
+on the right side. Locke snatched it up and lined
+it to Grant, but the delay had made it possible for
+the German to reach the sack in safety.</p>
+
+<p>Jim Brennan smiled significantly. He had
+watched Locke closely and expectantly, waiting
+for signs of the yellow streak to show. With two
+men on bases and none out, it looked very much as
+if the southpaw’s first inning would be his last.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ve got him going,” the manager of the
+Hornets muttered jubilantly. “Ken’ll have to
+yank him sudden. I reckon he’ll have more faith
+in my judgment after this.”</p>
+
+<p>When Nolan, his left fielder, presently sent a
+foul back of first and was put out by Grant’s
+wonderful sprinting and equally amazing catch,
+Brennan’s conviction was in no wise altered.
+This was pure luck, helped on by the skill of the
+first baseman, and reflected no credit on Locke.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Fargo was advancing to the plate, too,
+which boded well for the Hornets.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You know what to do, Buck,” the manager
+said, in a low tone, as the backstop passed him.
+“We’ve got this green portsider on the run already.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a curious situation. The two men facing
+each other were friends. Fargo’s sympathy for
+the young pitcher was such that he wanted him to
+make good almost more than he desired a victory
+for his own team. The big backstop could help
+very materially, if he wished, without any risk to
+himself; and he realized that this was a crucial
+moment in the inning when a hit might mean a run,
+while an out would go far toward killing the Hornet’s
+chances for scoring.</p>
+
+<p>To his honor, he walked to the pan with the fixed
+determination to forget that Lefty was pitching,
+and to give his manager the very best that was in
+him.</p>
+
+<p>And now Locke realized that the thing which
+had hitherto been in his favor was going to work
+the other way. If he knew intimately the likes
+and dislikes, the batting strength and weakness of
+each member of the opposing team, the man who
+faced him now was in a position to know quite
+as much, or more, about himself.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s face was a shade less brown as he toed
+the rubber, but his nerves were quite steady, his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
+courage unabated. He would do his best; no man
+could do more.</p>
+
+<p>The cheering and comments in the stands had
+ceased. Even the murmur of voices died away
+as the spectators bent forward in breathless suspense.</p>
+
+<p>The first one was not over, and Fargo refused
+to go after it.</p>
+
+<p>“Ba-a-ll!” drawled the umpire.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll put it over now,” thought Fargo, swinging
+his stick gently. He had ceased to think of
+Lefty as his friend; he was now simply the pitcher
+of the rival team.</p>
+
+<p>He was mistaken, however. Though it seemed
+to be Locke’s intention to cut the pan, Fargo saw
+the ball break for a curve which would carry it
+just outside, and again he refrained from swinging.</p>
+
+<p>“Two-oo!” said the umpire.</p>
+
+<p>In the silence of the breathless crowd some one
+was heard to say:</p>
+
+<p>“He’s afraid of him. He don’t dare let him
+hit it.”</p>
+
+<p>These words did not reach the southpaw’s ears.
+The latter, however, had no intention of pitching
+himself into a hole if he could help it. He bent
+over a sizzler.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span></p>
+
+<p>Fargo swung and missed, although he almost
+fancied that he felt the bat lightly touch the whistling
+ball. A murmur rose from the Blue Stockings’
+rooters.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, Lefty shot the ball back with a
+quick return, and, though he was not taken off his
+guard, the batter missed again.</p>
+
+<p>The murmur rose.</p>
+
+<p>Then Locke tried that slow, lingering ball which
+he could so cleverly deliver after going through
+movements which seemed to promise great speed.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately Fargo had seen him try that same
+trick more than once, and he refused to be fooled.
+Watching the horsehide as it came up and dropped
+toward the ground, he let it settle into the catcher’s
+hands without having moved his stick.</p>
+
+<p>The Hornets’ fans had a chance to yell, but
+their uproar was swiftly cut short. Now was the
+moment of greatest suspense. The next ball delivered
+would be decisive.</p>
+
+<p>After what seemed an eternity, but which was,
+in reality, the briefest sort of pause, the southpaw
+pitched.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo met the sphere on the trademark and
+sent it humming out on a line with the speed of a
+bullet.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII<br>
+<small>THE TRUTH AT LAST</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Like a flash, thousands of fans were on
+their feet. The roar which reverberated
+back and forth in the great inclosure was
+enough to shake the row of eagles ornamenting the
+roof of the grandstand. Hagin was off like a
+rocket. Siegrist was not far behind. Fargo himself
+showed that backstopping was not his only
+strong point.</p>
+
+<p>As for Lefty, after that first awful moment of
+sinking which had followed the fatal crack of
+leather meeting wood, he brought himself together
+with a jerk, and whirled round.</p>
+
+<p>Rufe Hyland, in right field, had not wasted an
+instant. Covering the ground with tremendous
+strides, he scooped the ball cleanly, spun around,
+and threw even while still in motion. It was
+meant to be a straight throw to the plate, but in a
+second Lefty saw that the fielder’s forced turn
+had lost him every particle of body motion which
+might have helped out his arm, and knew the
+sphere would fall short.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
+
+<p>Like a flash, the southpaw darted to one side,
+leaped into the air, and forked the ball with one
+hand. As he did so, Hagin, running like a racehorse,
+flung himself feet foremost to the ground,
+and slid over the plate.</p>
+
+<p>Siegrist had raced down to second, and crossed
+the sack at full speed. When he saw Lefty intercept
+the ball and whirl toward third, he sought to
+turn back. Locke whipped the sphere straight
+into the hands of Pink Dalton, who was covering
+the second anchorage; and the latter, after jabbing
+it on to the lunging German, snapped it to first
+with a lightninglike motion, not even taking the
+time to straighten up.</p>
+
+<p>It was one of the most surprising double plays
+ever seen on the New Grounds. Fargo, having
+rounded the sack and seen the ball speeding apparently
+toward the plate, naturally did not halt
+until he was nearly halfway to the second hassock.
+Even then he might have got back safely had it
+not been for the extraordinary accuracy of Dalton’s
+throw. As it was, the finish of the play was
+close. The keen-eyed umpire declared Fargo out.</p>
+
+<p>The applause of the Hornets’ rooters suddenly
+ceased. It was followed by the cheers of their
+rivals. The home team had made a run, to be
+sure, but this abrupt and unexpected ending of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
+inning rather took the wind out of their sails.
+They gave vent to their annoyance by heaping
+abuse on the umpire.</p>
+
+<p>As Lefty walked to the bench his eyes sought
+the face of his manager questioningly. He felt no
+doubt that only for the success of this last play he
+would have been taken out of the game at once.
+Only one hit had been made off him, to be sure,
+but he knew that a pitcher is frequently removed
+when the game is going wrong through no fault
+of his own. Jack Kennedy showed no such intention,
+however.</p>
+
+<p>“That was a heady play of yours, Lefty,” he
+said. “I saw the ball would fall short the minute
+it left Hyland’s hand. If you hadn’t had your
+thinker working, we’d likely have had more than
+one tally to buck against.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was Dalton who put a kibosh on them,”
+Locke returned. “That was some throw of his
+to first.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure. But you used your nut and made it
+possible. One minute, Grant. You’d better—”</p>
+
+<p>His voice dropped to a whisper, and Lefty
+walked away, his face slightly flushed, his eyes
+bright. Jack Kennedy was a manager who never
+hesitated about blowing up his men, and he could
+do it in a cutting, caustic manner much more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
+thorough than mere loud-mouthed ranting. He
+had also the much rarer trait of judicious praise,
+which was, perhaps, one of the reasons why he
+was so popular with his players.</p>
+
+<p>The second inning presented no such spectacular
+features as had appeared in its predecessor.
+Elgin, cool, confident, and a little cocky, did not
+let a man pass second. The fans were beginning
+to yell rough pleasantries at him, and reporters
+who had been with the Hornets through the spring
+training harked back to the prophecies they had
+sent home regarding this youngster’s exceptional
+ability.</p>
+
+<p>Locke, on the other hand, was touched up for two
+singles, and had men on first and third with only
+one out. One of these was caught while trying to
+steal second, and put out by Nelson’s beautiful
+throwing. The other was cantering toward the
+home plate, with the full expectation of scoring,
+when he discovered that the southpaw had reached
+forth a bare hand and plucked the batted ball out
+of the air, thus spoiling a base hit and ending the
+inning.</p>
+
+<p>“Great work,” chuckled Jack Stillman, up at
+the reporters’ table, as he reached for his tobacco
+pouch.</p>
+
+<p>“Great luck, I should say,” retorted the newspaper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
+man next to him. “Looks to me like a
+fine case of horseshoes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not so sure about that,” put in the sporting
+editor of the <cite>Blade</cite>, who sat on Stillman’s
+other side. “The boy seems to have a little gray
+matter, and there’s a bulldog expression about his
+mouth and chin which makes me think he’ll stand
+the pace longer than this Elgin, who’s beginning
+to strut a little already. You saw quite a little of
+him down at Ashland, didn’t you, Jack?”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman did not answer. With the leather
+pouch, he had pulled from his pocket a crumpled
+envelope bearing the postmark of that very Texas
+town. For a second he stared at it in a puzzled
+way. Then he remembered. The hotel clerk had
+handed it to him just as he was leaving for the
+game with a bunch of fellows, and he had put it
+aside, intending to read it later, only to forget
+its existence completely.</p>
+
+<p>With a swift jerk of one finger, he tore the envelope
+open. There was a long letter in the
+cramped, laborious handwriting of William Bowers,
+the ex-sergeant, but that was not what his
+eyes were fixed on with such curious intentness.
+He had received many of those letters in the past
+month, and all to no purpose. What he had never
+had before was this inclosure, an affidavit bearing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
+the seal of a notary public and signed by one
+Edward Black, and several witnesses.</p>
+
+<p>With a swift-drawn breath, Stillman fairly
+raced through the document, his face flushing, his
+eyes snapping, an expression of the most intense
+satisfaction swiftly overspreading his countenance.</p>
+
+<p>“By Jove!” he breathed, when he had finished.
+“He’s got him at last! I knew that cur Elgin was
+responsible, and this proves it.”</p>
+
+<p>He half rose from his seat, only to drop back
+into it again as he realized the impossibility of
+reaching Brennan now.</p>
+
+<p>“Afterward will do as well,” he muttered. “If
+this doesn’t blow the scoundrel clean out of water,
+I’m a lobster!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII<br>
+<small>THE LUCKY SEVENTH</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Unconscious of the gathering storm,
+Bert Elgin continued his fine work. Inning
+after inning he held the visitors
+down, rising to his highest pitch of excellence in
+the fifth by striking out the opposing batters in
+one, two, three order.</p>
+
+<p>His rival was equally successful so far as results
+went, but his methods were not as spectacular.
+He seemed not to exert himself until forced
+to the wall, and then, as likely as not, his manner
+of getting out of the hole was such that the bulk of
+spectators put it down to luck or the wonderful
+support back of him.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it was that, while the metropolitan fans
+were howling themselves hoarse with praises for
+Elgin, the Blue Stockings’ supporters could never
+be quite sure that the southpaw was not on the
+verge of “blowing up,” and their rooting was
+more for the team as a body than for the man on
+the slab.</p>
+
+<p>There were a few in the vast crowd, more observant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
+than their neighbors, who realized the
+truth. Elgin was clever, to be sure, but little by
+little they saw how much of his success on the
+mound was due to the knowledge and experience
+of his fellow players.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Fargo was a born backstop. Absolutely
+perfect in the mechanical side of his position, he
+was able to give his whole attention to the batter
+and, therefore, seemed to possess, almost uncannily,
+the power of sensing the sort of ball which
+would be, at any particular moment, most distasteful.
+Happily for Elgin, the pitcher had the
+sense to follow his catcher’s signals implicitly.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to this, the others of the team were
+in thorough sympathy with their pitcher. He had
+been one of them from the beginning of the season,
+and had deported himself with cleverness that won
+the liking of not a few. There were no jealousies
+and heartburnings to combat. They were
+beginning, also, to feel a certain measure of confidence
+in him, and their support was of the
+finished Big League sort, plus enthusiasm, which
+was a joy to see.</p>
+
+<p>It was quite the contrary with their opponents.
+Though they might not realize it, the majority
+were still sore at having this busher put on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
+slab for such an important game. They had no
+confidence in his ability to pull out successfully,
+and, though their playing was mechanically perfect,
+their support was that of men who are thinking
+of themselves and their averages.</p>
+
+<p>During the last of the sixth the Hornets scored
+another tally on an error of the opposing shortstop,
+and the fans sat back comfortably, assured
+that the game was safe.</p>
+
+<p>With the opening of the seventh, there was a
+sudden billowing up of the crowd throughout the
+entire circle of stands and bleachers. They
+stretched themselves and stamped their feet until
+the noise was like the deafening rattle of stage
+thunder. The visitors, though fearful of defeat,
+nevertheless raised the stentorian cry of “Lucky
+seventh! Lucky seventh! Here’s where we do
+it!”</p>
+
+<p>Eddie Lewis, the Blue Stockings’ shortstop, was
+the first man up. Elgin eyed him critically, and,
+remembering that he had caught the man with an
+inshoot once before, decided to repeat the trick.
+He had been growing more and more cocksure as
+the game progressed, so, when Fargo called for a
+straight, fast high ball, Elgin responded with his
+own views on the subject. It was time, he decided,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
+that he cut loose from the backstop’s apron-strings.
+He had been hitched to them too long
+already.</p>
+
+<p>Fargo repeated his signal, but Elgin shook his
+head obstinately. Finally he got the signal he
+wanted. Lewis stepped swiftly back; there was
+a ringing crack; the horsehide whizzed straight at
+Elgin, who—ducked!</p>
+
+<p>He had never done such a thing before, but
+the total unexpectedness of the hit, and the fact
+that the sphere was humming straight at his head
+with the speed of a cannon ball, deprived him for
+a second of reason, and made his act instinctive.</p>
+
+<p>Lewis got to first easily. The entire Hornets’
+infield made various caustic comments. From the
+stands the fickle crowd showered insults which
+brought the color flaming into Elgin’s face and
+made him drop the ball when he received it from
+the outfielder.</p>
+
+<p>The incident so disturbed him that he proceeded
+to present Nelson with a free pass, which brought
+loud cheers from the Blue Stockings’ rooters, and
+more unflattering comments from the upholders of
+the home team.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s going up! He’s going up!” chanted the
+visiting fans, grasping at a straw. “Send him to
+the stable! Put the blanket on him!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span></p>
+
+<p>Elgin gritted his teeth and faced Jack Daly as he
+toed the scratch, bland and smiling. Men were
+yelling advice to the batter; others flinging taunts
+at the man on the mound. The tumult was increasing
+steadily. Fargo, catching a glimpse of
+Elgin’s face, dropped on one knee and deliberately
+adjusted his shoe-lace.</p>
+
+<p>Daly let a wide one pass, and then banged out a
+grounder which, but for splendid fielding, would
+have been a hit. As it was, Dirk Nelson, forced
+from the initial sack, was put out at second by a
+hair. Daly reached first safely, and Eddie Lewis
+executed an impromptu jig on third.</p>
+
+<p>By this time a perfect pandemonium had broken
+forth all over the stands. The visiting rooters,
+seeing hope for the first time, seemed trying to
+rattle the pitcher, while the fickle metropolitan
+fans howled at the unfortunate twirler they had
+been cheering so vociferously a short time before.</p>
+
+<p>“Take him out! Take him out!” they bawled.
+“Russell! We—want—Cy!”</p>
+
+<p>Amid this turmoil, Lefty Locke approached the
+pan, his heart pounding unevenly and his face
+glowing dully under the tan. So far he had shown
+little ability with the stick; nevertheless, the hopeful
+Blue Stockings’ adherents greeted him uproariously.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Kill it, Locke!” was the stentorian cry. “Kill
+it, old boy!”</p>
+
+<p>The sound of their voices thrilled the southpaw.
+Only an abnormally cold-blooded youngster would
+have felt no thrill. It exalted him and made him
+confident that he could hit anything Elgin ventured
+to whip over.</p>
+
+<p>There was a momentary pause as Fargo hurried
+into the diamond and spoke a few reassuring
+words to the white-faced twirler.</p>
+
+<p>While he waited, leaning on his stick, Lefty cast
+a casual glance along the wide sweep of stands
+and boxes crowded with yelling, cheering humanity.
+The next instant his heart stood still. He
+was staring fixedly at an upper box that was filled
+with a gay party of men and women. As Lefty
+gazed with unbelieving wonder, a woman suddenly
+arose, straight and slim and girlish, her face flushing
+and her eyes bright. Smiling down at him, she
+waved a tiny handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>It was Janet Harting!</p>
+
+<p>His face crimson, Lefty pulled off his cap a little
+awkwardly. How she happened to be there
+he had no idea. Who she was with he did not
+know—or care. She was watching him pitch his
+first Big League game, watching his trial by fire,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
+and she believed in him. He toed the slab, believing
+more than ever in himself.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s face was still pale and set. A moment
+before he had caught a glimpse of Brennan talking
+earnestly with Cy Russell, after which the pitcher
+peeled off his sweater and loped across the turf,
+beckoning to the second catcher. It looked as if
+the end were in sight.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he ground his teeth and scowled
+fiercely at the hated Locke. He must get him—he
+must! The words rang dully through the
+pitcher’s brain until he wondered whether he was
+speaking them aloud. He paused, looking beseechingly
+at Fargo, who repeated the signal.</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly Elgin wound up and pitched.</p>
+
+<p>The southpaw’s bat met the horsehide with a
+smash that sent it flying over Nolan’s head toward
+the left field bleachers.</p>
+
+<p>With a mingled cry of anguish and joy, the spectators
+leaped to their feet and followed the progress
+of the flying sphere with straining eyes.
+For a moment it looked as if the fielder might get
+it by fast sprinting, and Lewis halted an instant on
+third, head twisted, gauging the rapidly falling dot
+of white.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was seen that Nolan must fail to make<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
+the catch, and the runner was sent home with a
+rush, while voices accelerated Daly’s flying progress
+from first. The latter rounded second without
+a pause just as the fielder made a beautiful
+recovery and lined the ball to third. There were
+frantic shrieks of “Slide! slide!” which Daly
+obeyed without hesitation, skimming over the
+ground amid a cloud of dust, to hook the hassock
+with his foot as the sphere smacked into Monte
+Harris’ mitt.</p>
+
+<p>The latter sent it humming back to second, for
+Lefty was coming down the line with the speed
+of a racehorse. But he, too, slid safely; and the
+breathless stillness was rent by the loud rejoicings
+of the great crowd of Blue Stockings’ admirers
+who had come over from the neighboring city to
+watch their team open against the Hornets.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you Locke!” they shrieked fondly.
+“What’s the matter with Lefty? He’s—all—right!”</p>
+
+<p>When the thunder of their accompanying stamping
+had died away, they turned their attention
+to Elgin, calling for airships and the like, until
+their voices were drowned by the howls of the disappointed
+opposition:</p>
+
+<p>“Take him out! Take him out! Take-him-out!
+He’s yellow!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span></p>
+
+<p>The pitcher, white-faced, beads of perspiration
+besprinkling his forehead, stood shifting about
+near the slab, with downcast eyes and lips which
+trembled in spite of his efforts to steady them.
+Once he cast a swift glance toward the manager,
+but received no hoped-for sign.</p>
+
+<p>He wanted to be taken out. He was afraid.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV<br>
+<small>THE LEADING RUN</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Brennan’s reason for not doing at once
+the thing which was inevitable was not
+quite apparent. He had an obstinate
+streak in his make-up, and no doubt it went very
+much against the grain to see the man he had depended
+on and boasted about fall down so disastrously,
+though ordinarily that would have made no
+difference.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, he held his hand, and it cost him
+another run. Rufe Hyland landed on the second
+ball pitched, and sent out a long fly to right field.
+The moment Johnny Burns caught the ball Daly
+darted for the plate.</p>
+
+<p>There was a momentary lull in the excitement as
+Burns made a great throw to Buck Fargo. Then
+the racket broke loose again as Daly slid over the
+dish in the nick of time; for Fargo had made a
+fruitless sweep of the hand to tag him.</p>
+
+<p>With the score tied and Locke on third, the
+visiting fans yelled without interruption as Pink
+Dalton came to the plate. Fargo again tried to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
+brace Elgin up, but with poor success; and it was
+no credit to the pitcher that Red Pollock scooped
+up a red-hot grounder and lined it, sizzling, to the
+sack in time to end the inning and prevent further
+scoring.</p>
+
+<p>A storm of hoots and catcalls greeted Elgin as
+he walked slowly and dejectedly toward the bench.
+Brennan said nothing, but the look he cast at the
+twirler was more expressive than many spoken
+words could have been. Elgin, his face as flaming
+now as it had been pale, hurried past him, and
+slunk thankfully to the obscurity of the bench.</p>
+
+<p>When Lefty took his place on the slab, a roar of
+applause greeted him. He shot a glance at that
+upper box, and was even further heartened by
+the wave he received in return. His form was
+so perfect, and the support of his backers so full
+of new life and snap, that he retired the Hornets
+without letting a man reach second.</p>
+
+<p>A lull followed. Cy Russell, in splendid shape
+and aching to retrieve the blunders made by his
+predecessor, easily disposed of the batters who
+faced him during the eighth and ninth innings.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was equally fortunate; and the tenth inning
+opened with the spectators on tiptoe with excitement,
+and some of them so hoarse they could
+scarcely speak above a whisper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span></p>
+
+<p>Again it was Eddie Lewis who came up first,
+and the sympathizers with the Blue Stockings
+seemed to take it as a good omen. All around the
+field the visiting rooters were waving hats and
+yelling like demons. Russell put the first ball
+squarely over for a strike, and followed it with
+another. Lewis cracked the third one to left field
+for a two-bagger.</p>
+
+<p>With a concerted yell, every fan leaped to his
+feet. When Lewis made second safely they
+seemed to forget to sit down, so great was their
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>“Lay down a bunt, Dirk,” Kennedy said quietly,
+as Nelson came up.</p>
+
+<p>The catcher obeyed the injunction to the letter.
+He bunted the ball within two yards of the plate
+just as Lewis started for third. Russell was on
+the alert and ready, and, rushing swiftly toward
+the horsehide, he snatched it up and shot it with
+the speed of a bullet into Harris’ hands. Lewis
+beat the throw, however, and was called safe, while
+Nelson reached first without difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s the run! Here’s the game!” came
+from the crowd as Jack Daly walked coolly to the
+plate. “Lewis will score!”</p>
+
+<p>A safe hit or a long fly meant victory, if Locke
+continued his fine work and shut out the home<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
+team in the last half of the inning. Lefty, swinging
+two bats to make one seem lighter when he
+should hit, felt his heart thudding like a trip-hammer.</p>
+
+<p>On all sides men were waving their arms wildly
+and making a tremendous tumult. If only Daly
+could do it! Locke followed Daly, and he
+wondered vaguely whether he could make good if
+the third baseman failed.</p>
+
+<p>Russell’s first ball went wide of the plate. Another
+one came across waist high, and Daly fell on
+it with all his might. There was a twist on the
+sphere, however, and, instead of a smashing line
+drive, a short fly to right field resulted.</p>
+
+<p>Burns called out that he would take it, and Russell
+raced behind Fargo to back up a throw to the
+plate. Burns made the catch easily, and was
+ready to throw Lewis out if he attempted to score.</p>
+
+<p>The Blue Stockings’ fielder was taking no
+chances, however. He stuck to third, waiting for
+something safer to take him home.</p>
+
+<p>The witnesses who favored the Hornets applauded
+the catch, while the opposition strained
+their lungs rooting for Locke.</p>
+
+<p>The latter felt a queer tightening of his throat
+as he toed the line. Again the opportunity had
+come for him to show what he could do.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
+
+<p>Russell had never been cooler or less flurried.
+He worked skillfully until two strikes and as many
+balls had been called. The fear came to Lefty that
+he was going to whiff, and he set his teeth, watching
+the pitcher like a hawk.</p>
+
+<p>Russell took his time. As the sphere left his
+fingers, Locke suddenly remembered a certain fast
+curve he had seen the Hornet man working up
+down in Texas, but which he had not used thus far
+in this game. The conviction flashed into his mind
+that it was being used now, and in an instant he
+had taken a single step forward, bringing his bat
+around with a powerful swing as he did so.</p>
+
+<p>The connection was perfect, and the ball went
+curving out toward the left wing of the grandstand,
+looking for a second or two like a home run.
+It was too high for that, however, and fell in front
+of the stand a couple of yards inside the foul
+line.</p>
+
+<p>The fielder got under it and smothered it effectually,
+making a long, powerful throw to the plate,
+toward which Lewis had sprinted the instant the
+catch was made. The ball went wide, however,
+and Lewis slid across the rubber in safety with
+the leading run.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV<br>
+<small>LEFTY’S TRIUMPH</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Again the crowd cheered and yelled like
+lunatics, shouting Locke’s name over and
+over as he walked toward the bench. His
+teammates surrounded him, patting him on the
+back and uttering brief, friendly words of praise.
+He was one of them now. He had won his spurs
+and fairly earned the right to their esteem.</p>
+
+<p>But the game was not over. Russell fanned the
+next batter with swift precision, and the Blue
+Stockings took the field. Their supporters in the
+stands urged the southpaw, in frantic terms, to
+“Hold ’em!”</p>
+
+<p>The Hornets’ sympathizers were equally vehement
+in their entreaties to the home team to “Get
+in there and smash it out!” The uproar was
+deafening. It subsided only when Ed Nolan
+walked up and squared himself at the plate.
+There were a few last shouts of encouragement,
+and then silence, tense and absolute, fell upon the
+vast inclosure.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty knew that the Hornets’ fielder was a man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
+to fear. He could hit almost any kind of ball with
+ease. In fact, the southpaw, in spite of his having
+played so many practice games against the
+fellow, had never yet fathomed his hitting weakness.
+He wished that almost any other man in the
+batting list could have been the one to face him
+now, but there was no use pining for the impossible,
+so he proceeded to send over a tempting
+feeler.</p>
+
+<p>But Nolan declined to be fooled. He disdained
+the first two balls, and the crowd began to shout
+for a free pass.</p>
+
+<p>Then Lefty whipped over a good one, following
+it with a whizzer with a perplexing jump just before
+it reached the pan. But the batter was there
+with the goods, and, though he did not strike the
+horsehide quite squarely, he lashed it out between
+second and short.</p>
+
+<p>Lewis lunged for it, and his fingers almost
+touched the sphere, but not quite. Nolan rounded
+first to the accompaniment of much joyful
+clamor.</p>
+
+<p>And now came Fargo, the man who knew
+Locke’s methods better than any other on the team.
+The southpaw worked him with the utmost care,
+pitching as he had never pitched before; and
+then, just as he fancied he had the backstop in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
+hole, Buck suddenly and unexpectedly bunted,
+sending the ball rolling slowly toward first.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty got the sphere, but secured it in bad
+position to throw. Without attempting to
+straighten up, he jerked it past Fargo, who was
+making the final long strides for the sack.</p>
+
+<p>Grant should have caught it, for the throw was
+good. Perhaps he was too confident. Perhaps
+there was no excuse at all, for even Big League
+players make errors of that sort now and then.
+At all events, he dropped the ball. The spectators
+fairly made the stands shake with their raucous
+joy.</p>
+
+<p>“Hit it out!” they shrieked. “Smash it on the
+nose! Here’s where we get two runs and the
+game!”</p>
+
+<p>Pollock did his best, but only succeeded in sending
+up a high fly into short center which the fielder
+secured with ease. Then Johnny Burns hurried
+up, eager to help things along, and confident that
+he could do it.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty felt that the man was positively itching
+to hit. He could read it in the fellow’s face and
+manner, and he determined to play upon the batter’s
+eagerness. A high drop across Burns’
+shoulder deceived him, but did not shake his confidence.
+It was followed by another high ball,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
+which was, however, an inshoot, and again the
+Hornet fielder missed.</p>
+
+<p>“Hit it, Johnny!” pleaded the local fans.
+“Don’t let him fool you. Smash it out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Fan him!” shrieked the Blue Stockings’ supporters
+wildly, their hopes beginning to rise again.
+“Fan him, Lefty! You’ve got to do it.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty hesitated a second, his face cool and impenetrable,
+the muscles of his jaw sharply defined.
+He felt that the batter would expect him to try
+a coaxer; for, with no balls called, most pitchers
+would feel that they could afford to waste one or
+two.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced round, his foot on the slab. When
+he turned back, he pitched without the slightest
+preliminary swing, sending over a high, straight,
+speedy ball. It had been his object to catch Burns
+unprepared, and he succeeded. The batter struck
+a second too late, and the ball spanked into Nelson’s
+glove.</p>
+
+<p>“Out!” called the umpire.</p>
+
+<p>But the word was not heard because of the
+deafening roar which rose from the delighted
+visitors.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was scarcely conscious of the turmoil. It
+sounded faint and far away, like the beating of
+breakers on a rocky coast, and mingled insensibly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
+with the words <a href="#i_frontis">he was saying</a> over and over <a href="#i_frontis">to
+himself:</a></p>
+
+<p><a href="#i_frontis">“One more! Only one more! I must get him—I’ve
+got to!”</a></p>
+
+<p>He dared not risk a glance at that upper box.
+The moment was too tense. And yet in his mind
+he pictured the girl leaning breathlessly over the
+railing, her tiny gloved hands clasped rigidly together,
+her face a little pale, her violet eyes wide
+open and almost black with excitement. She must
+not be disappointed—she should not!</p>
+
+<p>How Sandy Rollins missed the first ball he
+reached for was something he never understood.
+When he struck, he felt absolutely certain that he
+would meet it full upon the trademark. His
+failure brought a ludicrous expression of surprise
+to his face.</p>
+
+<p>The Blue Stockings’ rooters yelled madly.
+Most of them were on their feet now, staring down
+into the diamond. The opposing fans, beginning
+to lose hope, divided their efforts between hurling
+caustic comments at the batter and trying to break
+the pitcher up.</p>
+
+<p>In this latter attempt they were unsuccessful.
+Locke paid absolutely no attention to them. It
+is doubtful whether he was conscious of their
+presence. He was not faltering now. He was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
+wasting no time, yet he did not hurry. He put
+over an erratic curve that fooled Rollins even more
+than had the first one. Indeed, the ball seemed
+actually to dodge the bat as the Hornets’ baseman
+slashed at it.</p>
+
+<p>Another roar went up which drowned the umpire’s
+voice. Nolan, quivering with eagerness,
+held himself ready to run, working off third.
+Lefty drove him back.</p>
+
+<p>A hush settled upon the field. It almost seemed
+as if each little human atom of the thousands
+which overflowed the wide sweep of stand and
+bleacher had ceased to breathe. Even the coachers
+were silent for the instant—and Locke pitched.</p>
+
+<p>Rollins’ judgment told him that the ball would
+cut a corner when it broke. He was not mistaken.
+It came over; but, instead of crossing the
+outside corner, as he expected, it took such a sharp,
+amazing shoot over the inside that the batter
+missed cleanly.</p>
+
+<p>“Out!” shouted the umpire, flinging up one
+hand.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI<br>
+<small>HOW IT ALL HAPPENED</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Cheer after cheer went up from the throng
+of visiting fans. Hats and canes and
+newspapers were thrown into the air with
+careless abandon. Men brought their fists down
+on shoulders and heads of persons they had never
+seen before; and these persons merely pushed out
+the tops of crushed derbies, and grinned.</p>
+
+<p>Down from the stands they poured like a cataract,
+yelling Locke’s name. They caught and
+surrounded him before he could flee to the shelter
+of the clubhouse.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Stillman was one of the first to reach the
+field. Though he longed to hurry over to Lefty
+and shake his friend’s hand, there was something
+more important which must be done first. He
+headed straight for Brennan, who, with gloomy
+countenance, was about to leave the field.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait a second, Jim,” the reporter called
+swiftly. “I’ve got something to tell you. You
+fired Lefty Locke because you thought he was a
+quitter,” he went on when they came together.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You needn’t rub it in,” snapped the sorely
+tried manager. “If that’s all you’ve got to
+say—”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t,” returned Stillman quickly. “Locke
+said he never wrote that fake telegram which called
+him away from Ashland the day of the game he
+was to pitch. He told the truth. It was sent by
+one of his own teammates, who hated him and
+wanted to put him in bad.”</p>
+
+<p>“What?” exploded the stocky manager. “I
+don’t believe it!”</p>
+
+<p>The reporter pulled a folded paper from his
+pocket and handed it to Brennan. “There’s the
+proof,” he said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>The manager jerked it open and cast his eyes
+hurriedly down the sheet. Wrath clouded his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>“Elgin!” he growled throwing back his head.
+“Where is he? Just let me— Hey, you Elgin!
+Come here!”</p>
+
+<p>His voice and manner had drawn several curious
+players near, among them Buck Fargo. The disgruntled
+pitcher, hearing his name uttered in that
+tone, came reluctantly over, expecting a call-down
+for his work on the slab. What followed was
+totally unexpected.</p>
+
+<p>“You can pack!” Brennan snapped, eying the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span>
+fellow with a look of scathing contempt. “I’m
+going to send you down to the ‘Lobsters.’ They
+want a pitcher, and they can have you—for keeps,
+if I can’t sell you.” The Lobsters were a much
+scoffed-at minor league club.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin’s jaw dropped and his face flamed scarlet.
+“You’re going to send me down to the—the Lobsters?”
+he stammered.</p>
+
+<p>“I am. I’ve found out the dirty trick you
+played on Locke in Ashland, and I wouldn’t have
+a scoundrel like you on my team if you was the
+best pitcher in the country—which you ain’t, by a
+long shot.”</p>
+
+<p>For an instant the pitcher stood staring at him,
+an indescribable expression on his face. He cast
+a single swift glance at the players standing
+around. Then, without a word, he turned and
+walked hastily away through the gathering crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“Good riddance!” growled Brennan.</p>
+
+<p>He stood chewing meditatively on the stub of an
+unlighted cigar. After a moment he shrugged his
+shoulders and pushed his way through the crowd
+to where Lefty and a few of the Blue Stockings
+were hemmed in by the throng.</p>
+
+<p>“You did a fine job, kid,” he said gruffly, thrusting
+out a square, stubby hand. “Shake!”</p>
+
+<p>Without hesitation Lefty gripped his fingers.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
+Brennan’s treatment had caused him some bitter
+hours, but this was no time to harbor resentment.
+The short manager turned to Kennedy, his mouth
+twisted in a wry smile.</p>
+
+<p>“You can kick me good and hard, Ken,” he said.
+“I sure fell flat on this deal.” His eyes twinkled,
+and the smile broadened to a grin. “I sort of
+think this boy belongs to me. I had the first rights
+to him, and I reckon I’ll pull him back now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not if I know it!” laughed Kennedy. “You
+were thick enough to release him unconditionally.
+He belongs to me now, and you bet he’s going to
+stay.”</p>
+
+<p>But old Jack could not foresee the approaching
+wave of change that was to leave him stranded as
+a baseball manager. Nor was Lefty Locke, in
+spite of the splendid beginning he had made, to
+find it all fair sailing in the Big League. With
+Kennedy retired and Lefty missing, following his
+suspension by the new manager, the Blue Stockings
+were destined to have their troubles in the
+fight for the pennant. How old Jack and the
+young southpaw star returned to the field of battle
+barely in time to save the day is dramatically
+told in “Lefty o’ the Blue Stockings,” the third
+volume of The Big League Series.</p>
+
+<p>Brennan chuckled a little over Kennedy’s retort,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
+and then turned to Lefty, his face suddenly
+serious.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve found out about that fake telegram,” he
+said, in a low tone. “Jack Stillman ferreted out
+the truth, and the Hornets won’t have any further
+use for Elgin.”</p>
+
+<p>He walked away without waiting for a reply,
+leaving Lefty almost bewildered at the events
+which were coming so thick and fast. In the midst
+of everything, however, he kept thinking of Janet
+and wondering whether there was any possible
+chance of her coming down upon the field.</p>
+
+<p>The question was swiftly answered by the appearance
+of Jack Stillman, elbowing his way
+through the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>“Some pitching for a starter in the Big League,
+old man,” he laughed, his face glowing; “you
+were pretty fair! I can’t keep you now, though;
+there’s somebody over by the stand who wants a
+word with you. See you in the clubhouse, later.”</p>
+
+<p>Taking his friend by the arm, he piloted him
+through the throng, now beginning to stream toward
+the gates, to a point from which he could
+see the girl he had been thinking about so much.
+She stood near one of the lower boxes of the center
+stand, a slim, graceful figure in a blue tailor-made
+gown. At a little distance her friends were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
+gathered, watching the animated scene interestedly.</p>
+
+<p>Janet herself was talking earnestly to Buck
+Fargo, but her eyes were quick to spy out Lefty
+as he approached. The glad smile she gave him
+was something to be treasured long in his memory.</p>
+
+<p>“Lefty!” she exclaimed, in a low voice, which
+vibrated with emotion. She took a quick step forward;
+their hands met. “I can’t tell you how
+glad and proud I am—and sorry.”</p>
+
+<p>The man held her hands for an instant. His
+face was puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>“Sorry?” he repeated. “What have I done to
+make you sorry?”</p>
+
+<p>Her lovely eyes were fixed earnestly on his.
+Fargo had slipped away.</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing,” she returned hastily. “What you
+have done is splendid—wonderful! It’s what I
+did that makes me sorry. Mr. Fargo has just told
+me everything, and I hate myself when I think
+how I—liked that dreadful Mr. Elgin—and tried
+to make you friends, and—and—”</p>
+
+<p>She stopped abruptly and bit her lip. Lefty
+looked around. Never before had he detested
+a crowd with such intensity. His eyes flashed
+back to hers, and something in their expression<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
+brought a vivid rush of crimson flaming to her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>“You mustn’t think about it,” he urged softly.
+“You weren’t to blame, and, anyway, it’s all over
+now. Everything’s turned out right. Please forget
+it.”</p>
+
+<p>His fingers tightened about hers. Her lids
+drooped. They had forgotten the crowd pouring
+out of the field. The clatter and tramp in the
+swiftly thinning stands, the last few cheers from
+the departing rooters, fell upon deaf ears. In that
+single moment they were conscious of nothing else
+in the whole wide world but just each other.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2 noic">THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap">
+<div class="tnote">
+<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">Inconsistent hyphenation and compound words were made
+ consistent only when a predominant form was found.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75250 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75250 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75250)