summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorpgww <pgww@lists.pglaf.org>2025-07-28 23:22:03 -0700
committerpgww <pgww@lists.pglaf.org>2025-07-28 23:22:03 -0700
commit5b922a70116cafb70535440911983a9d55ccabd2 (patch)
treeb72ec0326f103c6c29aeb944a9f6458f004b8cc1
Update for 76584HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--76584-0.txt7255
-rw-r--r--76584-h/76584-h.htm10077
-rw-r--r--76584-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 889955 bytes
-rw-r--r--76584-h/images/cover_sm.jpgbin0 -> 208789 bytes
-rw-r--r--76584-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpgbin0 -> 153728 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
8 files changed, 17348 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/76584-0.txt b/76584-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..11f39c4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76584-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7255 @@
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76584 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ LEFTY O’ THE BLUE STOCKINGS
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THERE WAS A SHARP, CLEAN CRACK, AND THE HORSEHIDE WENT
+HUMMING INTO THE OUTFIELD.]
+
+
+
+
+ LEFTY
+ O’ THE BLUE STOCKINGS
+
+ BY
+ BURT L. STANDISH
+ Author of “Lefty o’ the Bush,” “Lefty o’ the Big
+ League,” “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 THE UNLUCKY SEVENTH 11
+ II STOPPING A RALLY 19
+ III TIED IN THE EIGHTH 24
+ IV REAL PITCHING 33
+ V ONE FOR LEFTY 39
+ VI A SUMMONS FROM THE MANAGER 45
+ VII A GIRL AND THE GIRL 52
+ VIII AT THE THEATER 59
+ IX “IN BAD” 68
+ X THE GROUCH 78
+ XI ON THE RAW EDGE 85
+ XII UNCERTAINTY 90
+ XIII SUSPENSE 96
+ XIV A WILD HEAVE 102
+ XV THROWN AWAY 108
+ XVI HOT WORDS 113
+ XVII THE UNAPPROACHABLE LOCKE 120
+ XVIII UNDER A CLOUD 127
+ XIX THE STRANGER 136
+ XX THE RETIRED MANAGER 144
+ XXI BACK IN THE GAME 150
+ XXII BUILDING UP THE TEAM 155
+ XXIII THE MAN WHO DENIED HIMSELF 161
+ XXIV PERPLEXED 167
+ XXV STRANGER GETS A JOB 173
+ XXVI MIGHTY QUEER 179
+ XXVII DID HE REMEMBER? 184
+ XXVIII A NEW PITCHER 192
+ XXIX AT THE FIELD 199
+ XXX BASEBALL LUCK 206
+ XXXI PITCHERS’ WATERLOO 212
+ XXXII FILLING THE BREACH 218
+ XXXIII THE MAN ON THE MOUND 222
+ XXXIV THE OTHER PITCHER 227
+ XXXV THE STEAL HOME 233
+ XXXVI STRANGER IS ANNOYED 238
+ XXXVII THE DOCTOR’S DOUBTS 244
+ XXXVIII FIRST POSITION 249
+ XXXIX A TROUBLED MIND 256
+ XL THE REPORTER 262
+ XLI THE MAN WHO KNEW 266
+ XLII FAILURE 271
+ XLIII THE COME-BACK 274
+ XLIV BACK TO HIS OWN 280
+ XLV THE GIRLS IN THE BOX 287
+ XLVI THE GAME OF HIS LIFE 292
+
+
+
+
+ LEFTY
+ O’ THE BLUE STOCKINGS
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ THE UNLUCKY SEVENTH
+
+
+It was “Bush” Aldrich, of the Specters, who started the trouble by
+smashing out a two-base hit in the seventh. Bush was one of the latest
+acquisitions of that hard-hitting, snappy, scrappy aggregation of Big
+League talent which had fought its way into the first division, and was
+giving last season’s pennant winners, the Blue Stockings, a decidedly
+uncomfortable time holding their all too scanty lead.
+
+Bush had already shown his ability to stay with fast company by
+getting two clean singles off Grist, the Blue Stocking twirler, but
+fine fielding had prevented either bingle from being effective. Now,
+however, with one out, and a man on first and third, either through
+luck or cleverness, he hit again at the psychological moment to cause a
+break in the hard-fought game.
+
+Grist, sure that he had fathomed the youngster’s weakness, tried
+his sharp outdrop, which had pulled the right fielder more than once
+before. This time, however, Aldrich was ready for it. Poising a bat
+that was a bit longer than any he had used before, he stepped in as the
+ball curved and smote it a crack which brought half the spectators in
+the crowded stands to their feet with a concerted gasp of dismay.
+
+As the sphere whistled out on a line, Larry Dalton, the Blue Stocking
+second baseman, flung up his hands in a ludicrous gesture of despair.
+Brock, the slim, speedy center fielder, had already turned his back on
+the home plate, and was flying toward the fence like a deer that has
+heard the whistling whine of a hunter’s bullet. Unfortunately, the ball
+held up better than he expected, and, though he strained every nerve,
+he saw that there was little chance to make the catch.
+
+With a last desperate spurt, he launched himself through the air like a
+catapult, both hands outstretched. The horsehide struck the ends of his
+fingers, and a despairing groan rose from the staring fans as it fell
+to the ground and rolled to one side.
+
+Brock snatched it up, and whipped it back into the diamond. Bugs
+Murray was just jogging over the plate. Logie, the Specter shortstop,
+had rounded second, and was flying toward third, urged on by staccato
+promptings from the coaching line. Aldrich was fairly tearing up the
+ground between first and second. As the sphere came whirling toward the
+waiting Dalton’s eager hands, Bush slid.
+
+The umpire, squatting to watch the play, put his hand out, palm
+downward; and another groan arose from the stands, punctuated, by
+protesting yells and bitter comment.
+
+“They’re gone!” shouted the Specter captain joyously. “They’re up in
+the air! Hit her on the nose, Rowdy; you can do it!”
+
+Kenyon, the visitors’ clever second baseman, pranced, grinning, to
+the plate, seemingly inspired with new life. Grist caught the ball
+deftly, apparently undisturbed by the unfortunate break. As he paused
+to drive Logie back to third, however, he discovered that Carson, the
+new manager, had left the coaching line and returned to the bench, from
+which he could get an accurate view of the entire field.
+
+“He needn’t worry,” muttered the pitcher to himself, as he turned back
+to face the smiling batter. “We’re still one run to the good, and this
+little flurry is going to have the kibosh put on it right here and now.”
+
+He had little fear of Kenyon doing anything; so far Rowdy’s hitting had
+been of a decidedly negligible quality. Perhaps it was this touch of
+unconscious carelessness which proved Pete Grist’s undoing; perhaps it
+was due simply to the mysterious hitting streak which comes at the most
+unexpected times, and without apparent reason. At all events, after
+playing the waiting game to the last moment, Kenyon finally smashed a
+sizzler through the short field, scoring Logie, and himself reaching
+first by a great sprint.
+
+Instantly the entire Specter visiting team began openly to rejoice:
+
+“Up in a balloon!” “Got him going!” “Here’s where we lock it up in a
+valise!” “Murder it, Ted, old man!” “Laminate it! Only one down, you
+know.”
+
+A low, concerted growl began to sound from the spectators who crowded
+the stands. Ready to shout themselves hoarse for a man pitching a
+winning game, their displeasure was even more swift, and quite without
+mercy. Here and there a shrill voice bawled admonition and biting
+criticism, which sounded above the barking chorus of the Blue Stocking
+infield:
+
+“Get into him, Pete, old man!”
+
+“Kill him, old boy! You can do it!”
+
+“Warp ’em round his neck!”
+
+A spot of red glowed dully in each tanned cheek as Grist dug his copper
+toe clip into the earth and cuddled the ball under his chin. The sudden
+yelping from his teammates told the pitcher that they were not sure
+of him. They were seeking to brace him up, as if he had been a raw
+recruit instead of the bright particular star of the Blue Stocking
+pitching staff. Moreover his quick eye had not failed to notice the
+hasty appearance of two men from the sheltered players’ bench, who
+loped off to the right, shedding sweaters as they went.
+
+There are times when it takes very little to upset the equilibrium of
+the most seasoned twirler, and apparently this was one of them. For six
+innings Grist had pitched an almost errorless game, and there was every
+reason why he should do his best to finish it.
+
+Dillon was laid up, Bill Orth had a bad shoulder, and both Reilly and
+Lumley were notoriously independable at a moment like this. There
+was Lefty Locke, to be sure, but the thought of this brilliant young
+southpaw who had, in a few short months, pushed his way upward until
+he rivaled Grist himself in the esteem of players and fans alike, made
+the older pitcher squirm inwardly, and brought a dogged, determined
+expression to his face.
+
+A moment later there was a crack, a yell of joy from the Specters,
+a groan from the despairing fans. In spite of his self-control,
+a smothered gasp of dismay burst from Grist’s lips. Knowing Red
+Callahan’s impetuosity, he had tried to tempt him with a teasing
+outdrop. That he managed to connect with it was probably quite as much
+a surprise to the sorrel-topped third baseman as to anyone; but connect
+he did in beautiful style, smashing out a single which sent Aldrich
+across the rubber with the leading run.
+
+Above the uproar of hoots and yells and catcalls from the stands, the
+new manager, half rising to signal Orth to go into the box, heard a
+sound he had rather been expecting for the past few minutes:
+
+“Carson! One moment!”
+
+It was the sharp, incisive voice of the Blue Stockings’ owner, who sat
+with his daughter in one of the boxes just behind the bench, and there
+was an imperative note in it which brought the manager hurrying in that
+direction.
+
+“Did you call me, Mr. Collier?” he asked, as he reached the box.
+
+The tall, broad-shouldered, keen-faced man bent swiftly over the
+railing.
+
+“I did,” he replied, in a low tone. “Grist is going to pieces. Why
+don’t you take him out?”
+
+“I was just going to. I’ve had Orth warming up for three or four
+minutes.”
+
+Charles Collier frowned. “Orth!” he exclaimed. “But his shoulder’s
+lame. This is no time to put in a cripple. Why don’t you use your
+southpaw, Locke?”
+
+“He pitched a hard game yesterday and――”
+
+“And won it,” interrupted the owner swiftly.
+
+“Quite so; but my idea was not to work him too hard,” returned the
+manager suavely. “Of course, if you wish it――”
+
+“I do. In my opinion he’s the only man who can stop the break and pull
+things together. He’s got the measure of every one of these fellows. I
+don’t think you need worry about three innings hurting his arm.”
+
+“Very well,” said Carson. “I’ll send him out there at once.”
+
+His expression was bland and pleasant, but the instant his back was
+turned he frowned. “Butting in as soon as this, are you?” he muttered,
+striding toward the bench. “Picked a favorite already, too. I s’pose
+Pete’ll be sore as a crab, but it can’t be helped. Locke!”
+
+There was a quick movement, and from the players’ bench appeared a
+tall, lithe, cleanly built, long-armed youngster of twenty-three or
+so, his cap pushed back on a mass of heavy, dark brown hair, a look of
+inquiry in his keen, brown eyes.
+
+“Want me?”
+
+“Yes,” said Carson sharply. “Get into the box as quick as you can. I
+meant to use Orth, but his shoulder’s bad. You’ll have to go in without
+warming up. And hold ’em, kid. We can’t afford to lose this game, you
+know.”
+
+Lefty had already yanked off his sweater. Even as the manager finished,
+he caught the glove tossed out by the second catcher.
+
+“I’ll do my best,” he returned, jerking his cap forward over his eyes.
+
+An instant later he was walking out upon the diamond with a lithe,
+springy stride which told of splendid muscles under perfect control.
+And as he came into view of the grandstand, the hoots and yells
+lessened swiftly, merging with amazing abruptness into a shout of
+delight, accompanied by a thunderous stamping of feet.
+
+“Oh, you Lefty!” shrieked the fans fondly. “Oh, you kiddo! Kill ’em!
+Eat ’em alive! Nothin’ doin’ now, Specters. Good night for yours!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ STOPPING A RALLY
+
+
+By dint of playing for time, and putting over a couple of wide ones,
+Pete Grist had prevented Forbes, the Specter left fielder, from adding
+to the damage already done. Knowing that he would be taken out, he had
+the wit to seize every possible chance to delay the game, and thus run
+no risk of making any further errors.
+
+He supposed, however, that his successor would be Orth, whom he had
+seen start to warm up a few minutes before. When Lefty appeared on the
+field amid the delighted roars of the spectators, Grist’s face turned
+a brick red, and for a second or two he looked as if he could have
+committed murder with the greatest possible enjoyment.
+
+It is provoking enough, in all conscience, for a pitcher to have to
+leave the box on account of bad control. But to be superseded by a
+youngster whose Big League experience is limited to a few months, yet
+who, in that time, had set the fans yelling for him as if he were a
+Mathewson, is sufficiently humiliating to stir the mildest man to
+wrath.
+
+Mildness was not Pete Grist’s long suit, nor was this the first time
+he had writhed in the grip of the green-eyed monster. As Locke reached
+him his face was like a thundercloud. He fairly flung the ball at the
+southpaw, and, without a word, turned on his heel and strode toward the
+bench.
+
+Lefty stood for an instant staring after him, a touch of sympathy in
+his eyes. He knew from experience precisely how it felt to be benched
+under such circumstances.
+
+“Tough luck,” he murmured, as he mounted the hill. “I don’t blame him
+for being sore. I would myself.”
+
+Directly, however, he had thrust the disgruntled pitcher from his mind,
+and was bringing all his skill and cunning to bear on the task before
+him. He knew the importance of winning the game to-day. It was one of
+those close seasons, with three teams fighting like bulldogs for first
+place.
+
+At first the struggle had seemed to lie between the Blue Stockings
+and their old-time rivals, the Hornets. Well into July these two
+organizations had it nip and tuck, and the Blue Stockings had no sooner
+forged definitely ahead than they were menaced by the speedy Specters,
+who were playing this year as they had never played before. Back and
+forth they zigzagged, until at length the Blue Stockings, thanks in no
+small measure to the astonishing work of their young southpaw wonder,
+managed to accumulate a scanty lead, and hold it by the skin of their
+teeth.
+
+If they could only manage to pull through this series in good shape,
+they could afford to lose a game or two of the return series, and still
+enter on the last Western circuit with a slight advantage.
+
+Lefty lined a few to Dirk Nelson, and, having found the plate, nodded
+to the batter, who stepped up to the rubber again. The Blue Stockings’
+owner had been right in saying that Locke had taken the measure of the
+opposing team. The ability to size up swiftly and accurately a batter’s
+strong and weak points, likes and dislikes, was something which had
+contributed much to the southpaw’s extraordinary success. He believed
+he knew the sort of ball Forbes could not hit safely; and promptly,
+though without any appearance of haste, he proceeded to hand it up.
+
+To the delight of the fans, the batter missed. The second one he
+fouled. Then he let two go by. Finally he missed again, having been
+fooled at last by a sudden change of pace and a slow drop when
+he expected speed. As he sauntered toward the bench in elaborate
+affectation of indifference, the spectators chortled gleefully, while
+a ripple of returning confidence swept over the Blue Stocking players.
+
+“Never mind that!” cried Murray, the visitors’ captain, from the
+coaching line. “Get off that hassock, Rowdy. On your toes! Now, Jim,
+let’s have one of the old-timers mother used to make.”
+
+Donovan, the famous Specter twirler, was also a clever stickman. During
+the past season his hitting average had been little short of the
+three-hundred mark, and he was especially noted for helping along a
+streak of luck. He walked up to the plate, bat swinging nonchalantly,
+on his face that confident grin which annoys many a pitcher who
+pretends that he is not disturbed.
+
+Lefty eyed him coolly for an instant; then his eyes dropped to where
+Nelson crouched, giving a signal. He shook his head. With some slight
+reluctance, the catcher responded by calling for another ball, and
+shifted his position the barest trifle. A second later the sphere came
+whistling, with a slight inswerve, across the batter’s shoulders.
+Forbes’ bat found nothing but empty air.
+
+“Str-r-rike!” called the umpire, flinging up his right hand.
+
+“Look out for those, Jim,” called Murray. “Make ’em be good!”
+
+Donovan let the next one pass. It was a ball. Then followed a slow
+one, delivered with a swing and snap that fooled the batter into
+striking before the lingering, tantalizing horsehide was within reach.
+
+Donovan frowned and regained his balance, annoyed slightly by the burst
+of raucous delight from the stands. When he faced the pitcher again the
+grin still curved his lips, but it had grown somewhat thin.
+
+Silence settled over the field. Ten thousand straining eyes were turned
+anxiously on the quiet figure in the pitcher’s box.
+
+Lefty’s hand drew back slowly, cuddling the ball for a second as he
+poised himself on one foot. Then, like a flash, his long left arm swung
+flail like through the air.
+
+The ball was high――almost too high, it seemed at first. But suddenly
+it flashed downward past Donovan’s shoulders, and across his breast.
+Too late the batter saw it drop, and tried weakly to hit. There was a
+swish, a plunk, and――
+
+“Batter’s out!” bawled the umpire.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ TIED IN THE EIGHTH
+
+
+“Pretty work,” commented a blond young man on the reporter’s bench,
+pushing back his rakish green hat. “There’s one thing about Locke, you
+can always bank on his using his head. He certainly stopped that rally
+in great shape.”
+
+“Huh!” grunted the stout, bald man beside him. “I can’t see anything
+very wonderful in that.” He took off his glasses, and began to polish
+them. “It don’t take any extraordinary amount of skill to outguess
+Forbes, and Donovan’s never very dangerous to a pitcher who knows him.”
+
+“Oh, come now, Eckstein,” protested the blond reporter. “Jim’s no
+slouch at the bat, and you know it. What have you got against Locke,
+anyhow?”
+
+Eckstein replaced his glasses, and yawned. “Nothing special, Dyer,” he
+drawled. “I’ve been too long in the business, though, to lose my head
+over every infant phenom who butts into the Big League. More than half
+of ’em can’t keep up the pace they set themselves at first.”
+
+“I’ll bet Locke does,” Dyer said energetically. “He’s got too much
+sense to use himself up the way some of the cubs do. He plays the
+game for all there is in it, but he plays it with his head even more
+than with that corking portside hooker of his. Anyhow, he’s the Blue
+Stockings’ one best bet this season, take it from me, Eck. Only for him
+they’d be in the second division, with all this monkey business of new
+owner and new manager right in the middle of the season. That plays hob
+with a team even if the old manager’s a bum, which Jack Kennedy wasn’t,
+by a long shot. By the way, Eck, where’s he gone?”
+
+“Who? Kennedy?” grunted the stout man, his eyes fixed on the diamond.
+“Back to his farm, I reckon. He’s got one somewhere in the Middle
+West.――Pretty work, Jim. That’s the way to pull ’em.”
+
+With a sudden flush at the realization that he had missed a trick,
+the young reporter hastily subsided, and turned his attention to the
+diamond. Whatever might be said of Jim Donovan’s hitting ability, no
+fault could be found with his skill in the box. Encouraged by the
+success of the last inning, he evidently realized that it was up to him
+to see that the Specters kept their lead of one run, and the result
+was an exhibition of clever pitching.
+
+Dirk Nelson, the Blue Stocking backstop, was beguiled into popping
+to second. Jack Daly, unsurpassed as a third baseman, but an erratic
+stickman, fanned ignominiously. It looked as if Lefty would follow
+Daly’s example, but, with two and two called, he connected with a
+tricky drop, and beat the ball to first by a hair. Taking a good lead,
+he went down on the second ball pitched to Spider Grant. It was effort
+wasted, however, for the Blue Stocking first baseman presently fouled
+out back of third. This brought the inning to an abrupt termination,
+amid much rejoicing on the part of the visitors, and low grumbling from
+the disappointed fans.
+
+“Well,” said Dyer defensively, “it was the tail end of the list.
+Anyhow, Locke got a hit.”
+
+Eckstein chuckled. It amused the veteran newspaper man to note the
+violent fancies and prejudices of callow cub reporters.
+
+“Still harping on the virtues of your miraculous southpaw?” he smiled.
+“I’ll ask you just one question, Dyer: If he’s such a triple-plated
+wonder, how did Jim Brennan, of the Hornets, come to release him
+outright? I never yet knew the hard-headed old vet to let any
+ten-thousand-dollar beauties slip through his fingers.”
+
+“Still something to learn, Eck, strange as that may seem,” drawled a
+voice, before Dyer had time to answer. “Squeeze up a bit, and give a
+chap some room.”
+
+A leg was thrust over the back of the seat, followed swiftly by
+another, and, as Eckstein’s eyes lighted upon the tanned and freckled
+face of the newcomer, his own face expanded in a fat smile.
+
+“Well, well, well!” he chuckled, thrusting out a plump hand. “Back to
+the treadmill, eh? Have a good vacation?”
+
+“Fine!” returned Jack Stillman, settling down between the two. “How are
+you, Dyer? Spent ten days up in the woods about a thousand miles away
+from anywhere, and then I began to get worried for fear this understudy
+of mine wasn’t sending the dope in right. How about it, kid? Old man
+have any kicks?”
+
+“A few,” grunted the cub reporter. “He’d kick if he had the Angel
+Gabriel writing up games.”
+
+“You bet he would!” laughed Stillman. “Swell lot Gabriel knows about
+baseball. Did I hear you running down my friend Locke?” he went on,
+turning to Eckstein. “Oh, I know you didn’t mean anything personal.
+It’s just your pessimistic mind, that can’t see anything good in a
+youngster. Well, let me tell you what Jim Brennan said the last time
+I saw him, which was about three weeks ago. ‘Jack,’ he said――it was
+after that last game of the series with the Blue Stockings when the
+Hornets got the pants licked off ’em――‘Jack,’ he said, ‘don’t send this
+to your paper, but if ever there was a dumb one manhandling a baseball
+team I’m it. I’d give two of my best men to have Lefty Locke back
+again. If I hadn’t been such a thick-headed dope as to let him go, the
+Hornets wouldn’t be where they are to-day. No, sir! They’d be at the
+top of the heap, with that position just about nailed. That boy’s a
+wonder. It makes me sick at the stomach every time I think he might be
+on my payroll to-day just as well as not.’ That’s going pretty strong
+for old sorrel-top, isn’t it?”
+
+“A trifle,” Eckstein returned. “Well, why did he let him go? There must
+have been some mighty good reason.”
+
+“There was. A rotten sneak named Elgin――a Princeton man, by the way,
+and a disgrace to the college――had it in for Lefty, and turned every
+dirty trick he could think of to put Locke in bad with Brennan. He
+succeeded temporarily, but he got his at last. After Brennan released
+him Lefty went to the Blue Stockings, and of course the first time Jim
+ran up against them he realized how he’d been fooled. It all came out,
+and he sent Elgin back into Class C with the Lobsters. I’ve heard Elgin
+didn’t even stay there, but is pitching back in the bush, which, if
+true, is good enough for him.
+
+“By Jove! See that drop? Fooled him nicely, didn’t it?”
+
+If Donovan was on his mettle, the opposing southpaw was in equally fine
+trim. In the first of the eighth only four men faced him, in spite of
+the fact that the heavy hitters were coming up again.
+
+“Don’t seem to have lost any of his cunning,” smiled Stillman, as the
+Blue Stockings romped in from the field like colts. “Things appear to
+have been didding while I was gone,” he went on in a lower tone to
+Eckstein. “I knew Collier was dickering for the team, but I thought
+he’d hold off till the end of the season. And what in thunder does he
+mean by canning a manager like Jack Kennedy?”
+
+The stout man shrugged his shoulders. “Collier got the idea that the
+team wasn’t pulling well. He seemed to think that was Kennedy’s fault.”
+
+“Bah!” snapped Stillman. “What could Kennedy do with his hands
+tied? I know for a fact that when he wanted to get rid of a certain
+trouble-maker who was keeping the boys riled up all the time, Beach,
+the old owner, put his foot down, and wouldn’t let him. And what’s Al
+Carson ever done, anyhow, that he should supersede an experienced man
+like Kennedy?”
+
+“Not much,” admitted Eckstein.
+
+“Nor ever will. He’s one of those promising characters who’s always
+promising and never making good. Collier has sure picked a lemon this
+time, and it wouldn’t surprise me a lot if it cost him dear.
+
+“Now, fellows, get busy, and hammer out a couple of runs. Only need one
+to tie, and two to win.”
+
+All over the great stands men were rooting for runs――begging, pleading,
+crying for them. As Donovan stepped into his box a perfect bedlam of
+hoots and catcalls arose, but he was too old a bird to be affected in
+the least by this sort of thing. To win the game it was only necessary
+to hold the Blue Stockings for this inning and the next, and the clever
+Specter twirler looked as if shutting out his opponents was, at this
+precise moment, merely a matter of time with him.
+
+In baseball, as in many other things, it never pays to discount the
+future; which is just as well, for otherwise a good deal of thrill
+and excitement would be lost. The best players are certain sometimes
+to make mistakes, and countless games have been won or lost by little
+slips, so small as to pass unnoticed by the majority of spectators.
+
+Rufe Hyland, well known as a “waiter,” was the first man up. In spite
+of the frantic urgings of the excited fans to “Slug it out!” he
+delayed until he had three and two on him. Finally he hit between
+first and second. He should have been an easy victim at first, but,
+for some unaccountable reason, Rowdy Kenyon juggled the ball, and then
+threw low, dragging Murray off the sack.
+
+For a moment or two the entire infield resounded with sulphurous
+comment. When Donovan faced the next batter he was still flushed with
+irritation. He took revenge by fanning Larry Dalton, but during that
+process Hyland managed to steal second, a proceeding which did not tend
+to increase the pitcher’s good humor.
+
+Nevertheless, he retained a perfect grip on his feelings, and exerted
+his skill so well that Herman Brock whiffed fruitlessly at three balls
+in succession.
+
+It happened, however, that Joe Welsh, who followed, was one of the most
+dependable hitters in the Blue Stocking organization. His specialty was
+neither home runs nor three-baggers, but his skill at placing the ball
+had long been a source of comfort to his fellow-players. As he faced
+the plate, Hyland edged off second as far as he dared, and when Joe
+connected with the third ball pitched Rufe shot down the line like a
+streak.
+
+Due, no doubt, to Donovan’s skill, this was one of the rare occasions
+that Welsh slipped up. He had intended to dump the pill into the
+diamond by a bunt, but he succeeded only in sending it spinning
+erratically just inside the third-base line.
+
+Like a flash the Specter backstop raced out, snatched at it, fumbled
+horribly, and then, in an effort to get Hyland, threw four feet over
+the third baseman’s head. By the time the left fielder, slow in backing
+up, had secured the sphere, and lined it back to the plate, Hyland
+had one foot on the rubber. And the delirious fans were shrieking
+themselves speechless.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ REAL PITCHING
+
+
+“Talk about horseshoes!” grinned Stillman, when the first mad uproar
+had begun to lessen. “That’s the greatest ever. Looks as if the boys
+had a mighty good chance of cinching the game now.”
+
+Manager Carson had emerged from the obscurity of the bench, and was on
+the coaching line again. Over by first base Captain Grant was capering
+about, a broad grin on his face.
+
+“Going up, going up, going up!” he chanted to the air of a popular
+ditty. “Tied her nicely, but we won’t stop there. You know what to do,
+Kid. Beat it off that cushion, Joe!”
+
+Kid Lewis hustled to the plate, and Welsh pranced away from the sack,
+ready to go down on the first slim chance. Unfortunately for the
+Blue Stockings, Donovan seemed unaffected by the two blazing errors
+which had permitted the locals to even up the tally. Instead of going
+to pieces, he tightened up wonderfully, holding Welsh at first, and
+fanning the batter with swiftness and dispatch.
+
+As the Blue Stockings took the field for the opening of the ninth the
+fans were on tiptoe with excitement. If Lefty could hold the visitors
+down, there remained a chance for the home team to break the deadlock
+in the last half. Could he hold them?
+
+Bush Aldrich was the first man up. The crowd remembered vividly what
+Bush had done to Pete Grist. Besides, the batters who followed were
+none of them slouches. As Locke walked briskly across the diamond the
+stands echoed with encouraging, beseeching shouts. Then a sudden, tense
+silence fell upon the great inclosure.
+
+Calm and steady, Lefty stepped into the box. He paused a second, his
+eyes on the batter, and then handed up a high one. Aldrich started to
+strike, but checked himself, and a ball was called. Then the southpaw
+tried an outcurve. Bush still declined to bite.
+
+“That’s right, Bush,” cried Murray. “Make him put ’em over. He’s got
+to.”
+
+An elusive drop followed, which Aldrich barely missed. The next ball
+looked good, and he hit it. It was a line drive to right, which Rufe
+Hyland should have taken with ease, instead of muffing. Aldrich
+stretched himself, and reached the initial sack a second before the
+ball, quickly recovered and thrown by the discomfited fielder, spanked
+into Spider Grant’s mitt.
+
+There was a groan from the fans, a spasm of joy from the Specter
+coachers. Rowdy Kenyon hurried to the plate. True to his record as a
+waiter, he prolonged the agony till the last moment, during which time
+Aldrich, upholding the reputation of his team for being “ghosts on the
+bases,” got down to second. Finally the visiting infielder hit a weak
+scratch between second and short, on which he reached first by great
+sprinting. A wave of tense uneasiness swept over the field.
+
+Lefty’s eyes narrowed the least bit; his jaw seemed to tighten. In a
+few minutes, through no fault of his, the situation had changed from
+easy security to uncertain hazard. With none out, and a man on third,
+every bit of judgment and skill he possessed was needed to save the
+day. Driving Aldrich back with a threatening motion, he turned his
+attention to Callahan, and the impetuous Specter Irishman, after
+fouling twice, failed to touch a speedy shoot that clipped a corner.
+
+A gasp of relief came from the stands, but lapsed swiftly into tense
+silence; for this was an admirable opportunity to try the squeeze play,
+and evidently from the way John Forbes held his bat he meant to do his
+part.
+
+The infield crept into the diamond, balancing on their toes, alert and
+ready. Lefty pitched, and almost as soon as the ball left his hand he
+was on the jump. Forbes shortened his bat, and chopped one down the
+foul line straight into the flying pitcher’s glove on the first bound.
+Lefty Locke flashed it to third. But, for some reason, Aldrich had
+faltered, and now he dove back to the sack in time to save himself.
+
+“Safe!” bawled the umpire, his flat hand extended.
+
+The decision brought an avalanche of hoots and yells and taunting
+insults down upon his head, but he stuck to it; and when the fans
+settled back to take count their hearts sank within them. With the
+bases full and only one out, the situation was not exactly hopeful.
+
+Lefty made short work of Donovan. The visiting pitcher did not
+touch the ball once, missing the last bender by more than a foot.
+As he strolled back to the bench, however, there were few sounds of
+rejoicing. The end of the batting list had been reached. The bases were
+still densely populated, and Dutch Schwartz, the mighty hitter whose
+average the year before had come close to equaling that of the amazing
+Wagner, was sauntering out with his war club.
+
+Apparently he had no weaknesses with the stick, and his ability to
+outguess pitchers had made him a terror throughout the Big League.
+Cautious twirlers usually walked him when it was possible to do so at
+a dangerous time without forcing a run; but, even had he wished to do
+it, such a course was not open to Lefty now.
+
+Whatever anxiety the southpaw might have been feeling, he faced the
+batter without a tremor. The first ball was a trifle close, and
+Schwartz let it pass without suffering a penalty. The next, delivered
+with a long side swing, came over at an odd angle. The batter fouled
+it, evening up the score.
+
+Lefty then tried an underhanded delivery that was productive of another
+foul. Then the big Specter center fielder refused to nibble at a
+coaxer, which evened things once more.
+
+“Two and two,” muttered Stillman on the reporters’ bench. “I wonder if
+he’ll do it? By Jove! He’s got to!”
+
+With anxious, admiring eyes he watched his friend’s cool, deliberate,
+yet not in the least dragging, work. Lefty’s perfect control enabled
+him to bend the ball over the rubber from any angle.
+
+Foul after foul resulted with a nerve-racking regularity which brought
+the fans to the edges of their seats in tense, breathless suspense.
+
+Three balls were called, but the struggle continued. With each swing
+of the southpaw’s long arm, Schwartz swung his bat, and the ball
+caromed off in a foul. One could almost have heard a pin drop in the
+vast inclosure. Even the raucous voices of the coachers had been
+momentarily stilled.
+
+The end came at last, suddenly. When it seemed almost certain that
+Locke had exhausted every trick at his command, the pitcher, with his
+toe on one end of the slab, stepped straight out to one side with the
+other foot, and brought his arm over. The ball left his fingers at the
+moment when his hand seemed to be extended at full reach above his
+head. Apparently it was not a curve he threw, but from his extended
+fingers the sphere shot downward on a slant, to cross the outside
+corner of the plate.
+
+Schwartz struck at it with a sharp, vicious snap――and missed!
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ ONE FOR LEFTY
+
+
+The roar which went up fairly shook the stands, and testified to a
+sudden slackening of the tension which had been gripping thousands of
+loyal fans for the past few minutes. Jack Stillman leaned back in his
+seat and reached for his cigarette case.
+
+“Pretty smooth,” he said, proffering the case to his companions.
+“That’s what I call pitching out of a hole, and Phil can sure do it to
+beat the cars.”
+
+“Phil?” queried the cub reporter quickly. “Oh, you mean Locke. I keep
+forgetting that isn’t his real name.”
+
+“So do I, to tell the truth,” returned Stillman, drawing in a lungful
+of smoke. “He took it on account of his father’s prejudice against
+baseball when he started pitching in the bush last year. When I ran
+into him this spring in the Hornets’ training camp it was hard as
+the mischief at first to get used to hearing him called anything but
+Hazelton. I got over that mighty quick, though, and now it’s just the
+other way. Well,” he went on, glancing at Eckstein, “if this doesn’t
+stir the boys up enough to make them hammer out at least one run,
+they’re not the crowd I take them for.”
+
+From the way things started, it looked very much as if the newspaper
+man had gauged the Blue Stockings correctly. After having two strikes
+called, Dirk Nelson reached for one of Donovan’s wide slants, and
+caught it on the end of his bat for a nice single. The crowd roared,
+the coachers chattered, and Jack Daly pranced to the plate with every
+apparent intention of carrying on the good work.
+
+Unfortunately for him, the Specter twirler was not quite ready for the
+stable. Coolly, and with the consummate skill for which he was famous,
+he lured Daly into swinging at a deceptive bender, fooled him with a
+wonderful inshoot, and then, when the batter, grown wary, refused to
+bite at the doubtful ones, Donovan wound himself up and sent over a
+curve which cut the heart of the plate.
+
+With two and three called, Daly swung, with all his might. There was a
+sharp crack, and the ball sailed high in the air, foul back of third
+base. Dillingham jerked off his mask, and started for it, but Red
+Callahan’s spikes were already drumming the turf as he raced to get
+under it. Heedless of the shrill taunts and yells with which the fans
+sought to make him fumble, he fairly flew over the ground. He made the
+catch while stretching himself to the utmost, and Daly, flinging down
+his stick with a muttered exclamation of disgust, slouched toward the
+bench.
+
+“Never mind that!” cried Grant optimistically. “Only one down, boys.
+Now, Lefty, old man, get into him! We need a hit. Get off, Dirk! Get
+going! Drift away from that sack, man! On your toes, now!”
+
+During Daly’s turn at bat Nelson had stolen second, beating the
+catcher’s throw by a hair, and now he pranced off the hassock, taking
+every bit of lead he dared. Twice Kenyon darted behind him, compelling
+the runner to dive back to the cushion, but each time he was up and off
+again the instant the ball was returned to Donovan.
+
+Lefty stepped up to the plate and stood swinging his bat gently back
+and forth. The shouts of the excited fans seemed faint and far away. In
+reality he heard them clearly, and was young enough to be stimulated a
+little by this evidence of faith in his ability. But he showed nothing
+of this. His mind was occupied solely in trying to fathom what Donovan
+would be likely to hand him.
+
+The first was an outcurve, and he let it pass. The second was high;
+evidently Donovan was trying to prevent a bunt. The third also seemed
+high at first, but Lefty’s quick eyes saw it begin to drop as it
+neared the plate, and he swung at it.
+
+In spite of his swiftness, however, he was a fraction of a second too
+late. The ball hit his bat glancingly and caromed at right angles. It
+struck Locke’s head with force sufficient to make him stagger backward,
+the stick slipping out of his relaxed fingers.
+
+A sharp, hissing intake of concern swept over the crowded stands. As
+Lefty reeled, catcher and umpire both leaped forward with outstretched
+arms; but their aid was unnecessary. The southpaw was conscious of a
+single brief instant of blackness, which passed like a lightning flash,
+leaving him a bit dizzy, but otherwise quite himself.
+
+“I’m all right, Spider,” he said quickly, as the Blue Stocking captain
+rushed up and slipped an arm about him. “It was only a glancing tap.”
+
+“Are you sure?” persisted Grant anxiously. “Hadn’t you better lay off,
+and let me run someone else in to bat for you?”
+
+Lefty laughed aloud, and took his stick from Dillingham. “Not on your
+life!” he retorted emphatically. “Think I’m going to quit _now_?”
+
+As if to prove that the accident amounted to nothing, he shook off the
+captain’s detaining hand, stepping quickly back to the rubber. The
+fans shouted their relief and their appreciation of Lefty’s nerve.
+Donovan’s face wore a slightly strained look. Though no stretching of
+the imagination could have laid a shred of blame upon his shoulders,
+the hitting of a batter often disturbs a pitcher’s nerve. This may have
+had some effect on his next delivery, or may not. At all events, when
+Locke swung at the ball in fine shape, there was a sharp, clean crack,
+and the horsehide went humming into the outfield midway between Aldrich
+and Schwartz.
+
+With a concerted roar, which eclipsed every sound that had gone before,
+the great mass of people crowding the stands leaped to their feet, and
+followed with straining eyes the progress of the tiny sphere of white.
+Away it sped to the right of deep center, both fielders racing like mad
+to get under it.
+
+Having a big lead to start with, Nelson was off like a streak of light
+for third. He had crossed the base, and was being urged on down the
+home stretch before Schwartz snatched up the horsehide, whirled, and
+sent it whizzing straight toward the plate, with that wonderful sweep
+of his powerful arm for which he was famous.
+
+It was a perfect throw. For a second or two thousands of hearts stood
+still, fearing it would be successful. Locke’s brain and muscle had
+done its work well, however. An instant before the ball plunked into
+the catcher’s waiting mitt Nelson flung himself across the rubber in a
+cloud of dust, and the umpire shouted:
+
+“Safe!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ A SUMMONS FROM THE MANAGER
+
+
+Lefty, having rounded first, pulled himself up abruptly, and trotted
+toward the clubhouse, the whoops and yells of many thousand delirious
+baseball “bugs” ringing in his ears. A wave of white-clad players
+surged after him, but Locke had almost reached the gate before the
+crest of it overtook him. An expression of happy contentment illumined
+most of the faces. “Laughing” Larry Dalton, the happy-go-lucky,
+brown-eyed second baseman, was grinning broadly as he flung one arm
+over the southpaw’s shoulder.
+
+“Pretty punk to-day,” he chuckled. “Can’t hit, or put the ball over――or
+anything.”
+
+“Perfectly rotten, he is,” chimed in Dirk Nelson, still breathing a bit
+unevenly from his rapid sprint to the plate. “Carson oughta tie the can
+on him for the rest of the season.”
+
+Lefty chaffed back, and the whole crowd, laughing and joshing like a
+lot of kids, pushed into the clubhouse. As they stripped off their
+soggy uniforms, and scrapped good-naturedly for the showers, they
+whistled and sang light-heartedly, living over the excitement of those
+last three innings.
+
+There were one or two exceptions. Some of the Blue Stockings’ old guard
+had viewed Locke’s swift rise from the ranks with anything but favor.
+In their opinion it was up to the busher to scrape along in meek and
+lowly insignificance for a season or two before he leaped into such
+scintillating prominence in the galaxy of stars. According to them, to
+“ripen” and acquire baseball sense he should spend some months sitting
+on the bench and watching the work of the veterans.
+
+Lefty had upset every precedent. At each added laurel won by the
+southpaw the old-timers shook their heads dubiously, declaring that
+such a pace could never last, that success would swell the youngster’s
+head, and making a dozen other pessimistic prophecies, none of which as
+yet showed signs of coming true.
+
+With the bulk of players Lefty was on the best of terms. He found them
+a clean, decent crowd of young men, much in love with their profession,
+somewhat addicted to draw poker and craps as a pastime, but temperate
+as a rule in most things, generous to a fault, and very likable. Three
+of them could write letters after their names as well as before, if
+they chose――which they did not. Some of the others were a bit rough on
+the surface, perhaps, but deep down underneath were made of the right
+stuff.
+
+The long, grilling struggle, which began with the opening of the
+season, had brought them all very close together; and when a crowd of
+men are fighting shoulder to shoulder day after day, having the same
+goal, each giving the best that is in him to attain that end, they size
+up one another’s good points and failings with a thoroughness possible
+under few other conditions.
+
+The new southpaw stood the test well. In spite of his six generous feet
+of lithe, well-muscled frame, he was still very much of a boy at heart,
+with a boy’s adaptability for making friends and a boy’s light-hearted,
+fun-loving nature.
+
+This did not mean that he lacked the capacity for taking things
+seriously when the need arose, but he believed thoroughly in relaxing
+between whiles, and in extracting all possible enjoyment out of life.
+This trait, helped by a fine baritone voice, quick wit, the ability
+to “put it over” any member of the club with eight-ounce gloves, and
+almost as great a skill in coaxing popular airs from the strings of a
+banjo, made him, within a month, the life of the bunch in Pullmans and
+hotels on the road, no less than at odd moments of relaxation in the
+clubhouse at home.
+
+All this was, of course, of small importance compared with his
+performance on the diamond. After he had proved his efficiency there,
+however, by snatching victory from defeat in three or four close
+contests, the majority of his teammates accepted him without question
+as one who would “do.” The only exceptions were Pete Grist, whose fame
+as the most reliable member of the Blue Stockings’ pitching staff Lefty
+was rapidly dimming, and three or four old-timers who formed a little
+clique among themselves.
+
+“Pipe the old crab!” commented Larry Dalton, as he and Lefty raced in
+from the showers, and began to get into their street clothes. “Some
+grouch there, believe me!”
+
+Laughing Larry had stepped from a fresh-water college into professional
+baseball three years before. Being a natural player, he did not stay
+long with the minors. In Locke he found a kindred spirit, and the
+southpaw had not been more than two weeks with the Blue Stockings
+before the two were chumming it as if they had known each other since
+the bottle days of infancy.
+
+At his friend’s remark, Lefty glanced sideways at the scowling pitcher,
+who was dragging on his clothes in taciturn silence.
+
+“Can’t blame him much,” he murmured. “If there’s anything that makes a
+fellow feel rottener than getting the hook in a game, it hasn’t come my
+way yet.”
+
+“Especially if the man who’s put in happens to be a guy that’s made
+good in the same way before,” Dalton grinned.
+
+“Rot!” snorted Lefty, buttoning his shirt. “When Grist’s right he can
+pitch the pants off any man in the club.”
+
+“Maybe.” Larry’s tone was decidedly skeptical. “I haven’t noticed him
+putting anything much over you the last month or more. Trouble with
+him, he’s worrying for fear he’ll lose his reputation of being the one
+and only genuine old reliable; and when a guy starts in with that sort
+of ragtime, you can be pretty blamed sure―― Well, Colonel, what’s on
+your mind?”
+
+“Colonel” George Washington Jones, the Blue Stockings’ negro rubber and
+general handy man, showed his ivories in a glistening smile.
+
+“Mist’ Carson says he done laik to see Mist’ Locke in his office right
+smart, suh,” he explained.
+
+“All right, Colonel,” Lefty returned briefly from where he was
+struggling with a refractory collar button. “I’ll be there in about
+three minutes.”
+
+“Some class there,” Dalton murmured, as the darky hurried away.
+“When Jack wanted a man he’d stick his head in the door and make the
+fact known. Nothing like that for this bird, though. First thing you
+know he’ll be having a bell boy in brass buttons, and one of those
+‘Private-no-admission-except-by-appointment’ signs on the door.”
+
+From which it may be gathered that the new manager and his methods had
+not scored a great hit.
+
+Lefty nodded agreement, and went on tying his scarf. From the first
+Carson had not appealed to him. The man knew baseball from the ground
+up――there was no questioning that fact. His ability at handling men,
+however, was much more doubtful.
+
+Most professional ball players have to be managed with infinite tact
+and judgment, and, though he kept his mouth shut on the subject, Lefty
+held the opinion that the qualities which had made Jack Kennedy so
+successful were lacking to a conspicuous degree in his successor. So
+far the players had betrayed no signs of a let-down, but Locke had
+noticed a number of insignificant straws, some no greater than the
+remark of Laughing Larry, which pointed the direction of the wind
+pretty accurately.
+
+“I’ll wait for you,” Dalton said, as Locke slipped into his coat and
+gave it a settling shake. “Cut it as short as you can. Don’t forget
+we’ve got tickets for the theater to-night.”
+
+Nodding, the southpaw picked up his hat and left the dressing room. As
+he walked briskly toward the manager’s office he was wondering with no
+little curiosity what was wanted. Carson could scarcely mean to put him
+into the box to-morrow, after having pitched him ten innings yesterday
+and three to-day; and aside from that Lefty could think of nothing
+which would require a special interview.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ A GIRL AND THE GIRL
+
+
+Pushing open the door in response to a crisp invitation in the
+manager’s familiar voice, Lefty stopped on the threshold, an expression
+of surprise in his brown eyes. Then he removed his hat, with a swift,
+graceful movement.
+
+Carson was not alone. The owner of the club, himself, leaned easily
+against one side of the desk. Seated in a chair on the other side of
+the room was one of the prettiest girls the young pitcher had ever seen.
+
+Lefty had only time to see that she was very blond and very tiny, with
+a pair of wonderful deep-blue eyes, which were fixed on his face from
+the moment the door opened. Then Charles Collier stepped forward, his
+hand outstretched.
+
+“I want to thank you, Mr. Locke,” he said heartily, “for pulling us out
+of a hole this afternoon. It was especially nervy to keep on at the bat
+after being hit by that ball.”
+
+Lefty smiled as he shook the magnate’s hand. “That little knock didn’t
+amount to anything,” he protested, in his low, pleasant voice. “It
+only staggered me for a second.”
+
+“That was lucky,” said Collier. He hesitated, and the pitcher saw
+his glance flash for a second to the girl in the chair. “This is my
+daughter,” he went on quickly. “Virginia, this is Mr. Locke, whose
+pitching you were so enthusiastic about.”
+
+Lefty, turning swiftly to acknowledge the introduction, saw that the
+girl had risen to her feet and was holding out her hand impulsively.
+
+“I’m glad indeed to meet you, Mr. Locke,” she said, in a pleasant
+voice, which held an undercurrent of earnestness in it. “I suppose you
+get very tired of being told how splendid your pitching is, but I can’t
+help it this time.” She smiled charmingly. “If you could have any idea
+how utterly thrilled I was during those last three innings, I’m sure
+you wouldn’t blame me.”
+
+Her eyes, with their long, curling lashes, were really very wonderful,
+and there was a trace of something in their depths which brought a
+touch of color glowing under Locke’s healthy tan.
+
+“You’re more than kind, Miss Collier,” he returned. “I don’t think
+any man really minds being told that he’s done well, but in this case
+I didn’t deserve much credit. You see, Grist held them down for six
+innings, and when I came in fresh at the seventh we were only one run
+to the bad. It was still anybody’s game.”
+
+“How about yesterday?” asked the girl quickly. “I wasn’t here, but they
+tell me you won the game in spite of a lot of errors made by your team.”
+
+Lefty shrugged his shoulders. “Oh, that was different. I hadn’t pitched
+before in a week. So I was ready to sail in and massacre them.”
+
+Miss Collier shook her head, laughing deliciously. “I’m afraid you’re
+altogether too modest. After this I’ll have to trust to someone else
+for the real facts. All right, dad. I suppose it _is_ time we were
+going. Well, good-by, Mr. Locke. I shall probably see you again. Now
+that I’m back in town, I don’t mean to miss a game.”
+
+Lefty murmured his pleasure in courteous, well-bred terms, shook hands
+with her father, and, when they had disappeared into the corridor,
+stood for a second staring after them. When he turned suddenly back
+to the manager he surprised on that person’s face an expression of
+distinct annoyance, mingled with disapproval.
+
+“Is that all you wanted?” the southpaw asked briefly.
+
+“Yes,” retorted Carson, almost snappily. He hesitated for an instant,
+and then went on abruptly, his lips curling the least bit: “I s’pose
+after this you’ll go around swelled out of all human form.”
+
+There was a decidedly sneering undercurrent in his voice, rasping
+Locke’s sensibilities, and making it difficult for him to keep from
+flinging back a sarcastic retort.
+
+“Do you?” he murmured, with tantalizing coolness, as he paused for a
+second in the doorway. “Perhaps I will. After all, you couldn’t blame
+me very much, you know.”
+
+Dalton, waiting in the dressing room, at once asked for details of
+what had happened in the manager’s office. More for sport than any
+other reason, Lefty kept him on the anxious seat all the way back to
+the hotel, fully intending to tell him while they were having dinner
+together. That thought, as well as every other, was driven out of his
+head, however, by a penciled message the desk clerk handed him as he
+passed through the lobby.
+
+“Call Miss Harting, at 10224 Morris,” it read; and the six commonplace
+words brought a rush of vivid crimson to the pitcher’s face, a sparkle
+of amazed delight into his eyes.
+
+“Janet in town!” he muttered, as he eagerly sought a telephone booth,
+leaving Dalton to stare blankly after him. “Well, wouldn’t that get
+you! Not a word about it in her last letter. I suppose she wanted to
+work a surprise. She’s sure put one over, all right.”
+
+Hurriedly giving the operator the number, he entered the booth, and, a
+few minutes later, heard the familiar tones of the “only girl in the
+world” clearly over the wire.
+
+Just what they said is neither here nor there. The door of the booth
+was tightly closed, and if the operator listened she did not betray
+the fact by a sign. Lefty and Janet Harting, who lived with her
+father in a thriving New England town, had been very good friends
+indeed for something more than a year. Though they corresponded with
+extreme regularity, their positions made actual meetings tantalizingly
+infrequent. Given these premises, the reader may reconstruct their
+conversation to suit himself.
+
+Suffice it to say that Janet had come on to the city for a two
+weeks’ visit to an aunt, leaving her father, who was better than he
+had been in a good many years, in the care of a distant cousin, who
+had volunteered that office so that the daughter might take a brief
+vacation. After retailing this information, Miss Harting hinted
+delicately that she would be at home all evening.
+
+“I’ll be there with my hair in a braid!” Lefty returned promptly. Then
+he stopped abruptly, stung by sudden recollection.
+
+“Sh!” reproved Janet, as a sibilant vibration reached her attentive
+ears. “On the ’phone, too! What’s the matter? Have you thought of an
+engagement?”
+
+“Beg pardon,” apologized Lefty contritely. “It slipped out. Why, yes.
+You see, some of the boys planned a little theater party to-night to
+see ‘The Girl from Madrid,’ and they’ve got the tickets. It doesn’t
+matter a bit, though. I’ll just tell ’em I can’t go.”
+
+“You’ll do nothing of the sort.” Miss Harting’s tone was emphatic.
+“I’m not going to have you breaking engagements and throwing over
+your friends for me. There’s plenty of time. You can come and see me
+to-morrow.”
+
+The young man protested vehemently, but Janet remained quite firm.
+In the end she had her way, though she compromised to some extent by
+saying that Lefty could come up the next day and take her out to lunch.
+
+With this the young pitcher had to be content, and, when he came to
+think it over, he was not wholly sorry. The dinner and theater party
+had been planned a week before to celebrate Larry Dalton’s birthday,
+and, considering Dalton’s peculiar sensitiveness, Lefty would have
+disliked being reckoned a quitter on account of “a skirt.” Besides,
+Janet would be in town long enough for him to see her many times.
+
+Comforted by this reflection, Locke paid the triple call, made a
+bee-line for the elevator, and five minutes later was hurrying into his
+evening clothes.
+
+“Moonlights?” Laughing Larry had chuckled, when the question of
+clothes was broached that morning. “You bet! We’ll show this bunch of
+city rounders how things ought to be done, eh?”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ AT THE THEATER
+
+
+When the quartet piled into a taxi about half past six, and started
+for an exclusive downtown restaurant, their appearance would have been
+a revelation to those who picture a professional ball player as a
+pugnacious, rough-mannered individual who fits in well enough on the
+diamond but is quite out of his element when he attempts anything in
+the social line.
+
+It would have been difficult, in fact, to find four finer-looking
+specimens of manhood anywhere. Their faces glowing with perfect health
+and physical well-being, they showed not the slightest signs of being
+awkward or ill at ease in their evening togs. Add to this the fact
+that two of them, Lefty Locke and Billy Orth, were men of unusual good
+looks, and it is small wonder that their arrival at the restaurant
+caused a little stir of interest among the diners already present.
+
+They were swiftly recognized, of course, and the stir increased to a
+bustle; for even society doesn’t often have a chance of studying two
+pitchers, the catcher, and second baseman of a national organization at
+close range. The four athletes, however, paid scant attention to the
+interest they were exciting. They were too well accustomed to that sort
+of thing to let it interfere with their enjoyment. They were out for a
+good time, and meant to have it, regardless of rubbernecks.
+
+There was nothing in the least boisterous in their behavior. They
+laughed and talked and joshed one another, to be sure, but their
+manner was not a whit different from that of a dozen other parties
+about them. They consumed the well-ordered dinner――conspicuous by the
+absence of anything to drink――leisurely. Then, it being close on to
+eight, they paid the sizable check, tipped the waiters, and departed,
+having shown from the beginning a breeding and a refreshing lack of
+self-consciousness which opened the eyes of not a few observers.
+
+The theater being only a few blocks away, they walked, arriving in the
+lobby just as the overture was beginning. There was the usual crowd
+jostling to get in. As the four friends stood waiting for an usher to
+take their checks, Lefty heard his name called in a slightly familiar
+voice.
+
+For a second he stared around in a puzzled way, failing to locate the
+owner of that voice in the crowd. Dalton’s elbow dug into his ribs,
+and Dalton’s voice whispered in his ear:
+
+“The Big Chief! Get busy, kid.”
+
+Then it was that Lefty discovered Charles Collier, the
+distinguished-looking owner of the Blue Stockings, standing near the
+wall at a little distance; and beside him, more charming than ever in
+her evening gown of shimmering white, was his daughter, Virginia.
+
+“You’re just the man I’m looking for,” Collier said, as Lefty stepped
+swiftly over and bowed his greetings. “See here, boy, is it possible
+that you’re a son of the Reverend Paul Hazelton, who went through
+Dartmouth and the New York Theological Seminary, and has a parish
+somewhere out in Jersey?”
+
+Lefty’s eyes brightened. “Quite possible,” he smiled. “He’s been in
+Summit for the last twelve years. Do you know him?”
+
+“Know him?” echoed Collier emphatically. “I should say I did! Why,
+we were chums at college, and kept up our friendship for a number of
+years afterward. I must have been wool-gathering. I knew your name
+was Hazelton, but somehow the connection never occurred to me till my
+daughter suggested it at dinner to-night. I suppose it was because I
+couldn’t associate Paul’s son with baseball.”
+
+“Yes; Dad has a perfect horror of the game. He had a friend who was
+killed while――”
+
+“Yes, of course. Poor Brandon! It was in our junior year. Your father
+could never bear even to see a game after that. I must have a chat with
+you about him soon. Just now I’m――”
+
+He paused abruptly, his eyes roving over the immaculate figure of the
+young man, and then veering swiftly to his daughter’s face.
+
+“By Jove, Virginia!” he exclaimed. “I don’t see why Hazelton can’t help
+us out.”
+
+Miss Collier’s color deepened a trifle and she made a quick, protesting
+gesture with her white-gloved hands. “How absurd, Dad! Mr. Hazelton is
+here with friends. I couldn’t think of asking such a thing.”
+
+“Nonsense!” chuckled the older man. “I don’t believe he’ll mind shaking
+them for a little while.” He turned to Locke. “I’ve just had a message
+from a real-estate man,” he explained, “whom I expected to see in
+the morning. He’s got to take the midnight back to Boston, and it’s
+essential that I should talk to him before he goes. Virginia can’t very
+well stay here alone, but if you would take my place――”
+
+“I should be delighted,” Lefty said swiftly, as the older man paused
+questioningly. “The fellows I’m with are just three men from the team.”
+
+In reality he was very far from being overjoyed, but he was much too
+courteous and well-bred to allow any sign of this to appear in his face
+or manner. Having given up an evening with Janet to keep his previous
+engagement, he did not particularly fancy spending it with even so
+charming a person as Virginia Collier.
+
+Under the circumstances, however, there was nothing to do but accept
+with the best possible grace the situation forced on him; and, though
+she was watching him closely, the girl saw nothing in his face but
+ready acquiescence and well-simulated pleasure.
+
+Collier breathed a sigh of relief, handed over the seat coupons, and
+departed hastily, with the assurance that he would be back before the
+performance was ended. Still giving his clever imitation of one in the
+throes of unalloyed bliss, Lefty explained to his friends, and then
+escorted Miss Collier down the aisle, conscious as he passed the eighth
+row of the concentrated stare of three pair of observing eyes. He did
+not glance round, however, and he was settled in the third-row aisle
+seat when the curtain began to rise.
+
+Few men can resist a thoroughly charming woman when she sets out
+deliberately to make herself agreeable. Lefty was not one of the few.
+Of course, he did not realize that Miss Collier’s manner with him was a
+bit different from what it might have been with any other man.
+
+The girl was much too clever to let him see that. But there are
+ways _and_ ways, most of them too subtle for the clumsy masculine
+intellect to grasp, which are part of every woman’s mental equipment.
+The result of their application in the present instance was the swift
+transformation of Lefty’s pose of enjoyment into one of reality.
+
+It must not be supposed for an instant that Virginia Collier’s manner
+showed a trace of vulgar coquetry; quite the contrary. Apparently there
+was no particle of sentimentality in her make-up. She talked mainly of
+baseball, tennis, motoring, and kindred subjects, in a way which showed
+that she was more than familiar with her ground; and the contrast
+between her daintily feminine appearance and her evident liking for
+almost every sort of sport was very taking――as, no doubt, the young
+woman fully appreciated.
+
+By the end of the first intermission Lefty felt as if they were old
+friends. Before the third act had commenced he found himself discussing
+the baseball situation almost as if she had been “one of the fellows.”
+One did not have to do much explaining. Her grasp on conditions was
+surprising, her judgment almost flawless. Yet, underneath it all, and
+ever present as the oft-recurring theme of a symphony, was the lure of
+feminine personality, stronger, perhaps, for its very subtlety.
+
+Lefty felt its pull, but did not realize the nature of the attraction.
+He told himself that he had never before met anyone quite like Virginia
+Collier. She was like a good pal, a chum to whom one could talk almost
+as one talked to another man. She was a good sport in the best sense of
+the word, and he was vaguely glad that the real-estate man from Boston
+had appeared when he did.
+
+Just before the final curtain an usher appeared with a note which Lefty
+was able to read by the light from the stage. It was hastily scrawled
+from a near-by club, and in it Charles Collier――explaining that he was
+still in conference with his business man――requested that Locke escort
+his daughter home, and then send the car back for him.
+
+“It really isn’t a bit necessary,” the girl protested, as she glanced
+at the paper. “If you’ll find the motor and put me in, I can manage the
+rest quite well.”
+
+“Then why didn’t your father ask me to do just that?” Lefty asked.
+
+“Because he’s foolishly silly about my going about at night alone,
+even in our own machine.” Miss Collier paused an instant, and then
+dimpled charmingly. “You mustn’t judge him by his behavior to-night.
+He’s usually annoyingly strict with me. I’m quite sure if you hadn’t
+happened to be the son of an old college chum I should have been taken
+home without seeing the play.”
+
+The young pitcher laughed. “I’m awfully glad I happened to have the
+proper credentials, and I think we’d better follow out Mr. Collier’s
+wishes. Besides, if I take you home it will give us a chance to finish
+that discussion about Marquard’s work in the box this year.”
+
+“Since you put it that way, I’ll give in,” the girl said, as she arose
+to let him place the opera cloak carefully about her shoulders.
+
+Lefty slipped on his coat, secured hat and gloves, and stepped into the
+aisle. There was the usual crush of people to block the way, and as
+they moved slowly forward he half turned to make a laughing remark to
+his companion.
+
+The jesting words were never spoken; the very smile froze on the young
+man’s lips as his eyes fell on the face of a girl in the sixth row over
+near the boxes.
+
+It was Janet Harting, and there was something about her expression
+which held Lefty stupidly silent for a second or two. Then he bowed
+eagerly, and smiled. There was absolutely no response.
+
+For an appreciable moment Miss Harting stared at him, her chin
+uptilted, her color a little high, perhaps, but her gaze as coldly
+impersonal as if he had been an utter stranger. She gazed at him, over
+him, _through_ him, without the quiver of an eyelash. Then she rose
+leisurely, deliberately turned her back, and began to help her older
+companion into a coat.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ “IN BAD”
+
+
+Lefty’s face turned a dull red, for in a flash he had realized how
+intolerable the whole affair must seem to Janet Harting. He had assured
+her that his engagement at the theater that night was with some of his
+teammates, yet here she found him the only escort of a very charming
+young woman, of whose identity she could naturally have no idea.
+
+Moreover, Lefty’s being in full dress did not savor altogether of a
+stag party. Worst of all, the young man remembered, with a sickening
+sense of irritation, how swiftly he and Miss Collier had come to be
+on almost chummy terms. An onlooker would never have supposed their
+acquaintance to be only a few hours old, and Janet had been sitting
+near enough to miss nothing.
+
+All this passed through Lefty’s mind with a rush. For an instant he
+had an almost uncontrollable impulse to push his way through to Miss
+Harting’s side and explain the innocent facts, which must have looked
+so condemning. Then he realized how impossible was the time and place
+for explanations, and, pulling himself together, moved slowly on toward
+the entrance.
+
+Miss Collier could scarcely have missed the little incident, swiftly
+as it had taken place; but apparently she was possessed of tact, along
+with a number of other good qualities, for she made not the slightest
+reference to it. During the ride uptown she chatted unconcernedly on
+various topics, but it must be confessed that she had to uphold the
+burden of conversation; about nine-tenths of Lefty’s mind was taken up
+with a consideration of his predicament, and with planning a way out of
+it.
+
+“Thank you a thousand times, Mr. Locke,” Miss Collier said, when the
+car had stopped and he had helped her out. “I’ve had a perfectly
+splendid evening.”
+
+“It’s been corking,” Lefty returned, trying to force a little
+enthusiasm into his voice. “I’m the one who should be thanking you.”
+
+“I don’t believe it,” smiled the girl, holding out her hand. “Have
+Pagdon drive you wherever you want to go. Dad won’t want him yet, I’m
+sure. Come and see me some time when you haven’t anything better to do.
+We’ll finish our talk about Marquard. Good night.”
+
+Without giving him time to answer she ran lightly up the steps to
+the already open door, which closed quickly upon her slim, graceful
+figure, leaving Locke to return slowly to the limousine, give the
+address of his hotel to the chauffeur, and step frowningly in.
+
+“What a thundering jackass I am!” he muttered, leaning back against
+the leather cushions. “Why in Heaven’s name didn’t I cut out the party
+and go see Janet in spite of everything? How the deuce did I know that
+Collier was going to rope me into a game like that, though――or that
+Janet would be there to misconstrue everything? I s’pose she went to
+get a glimpse of me. Well, the sooner I chase up there and explain
+things to her the better. I wonder if it’s too late to go to-night?”
+
+He glanced at his watch. It was decidedly too late.
+
+“I’ll hike up the first thing in the morning,” he thought. “She’ll
+understand that I couldn’t do anything else under the circumstances.”
+
+There was some comfort in the reflection that Janet had plenty of sound
+common sense in that shapely little head of hers. Nevertheless, the
+more he thought of it, the more Lefty realized what a scurvy trick fate
+had played him.
+
+“It certainly must have looked bad,” he admitted to himself as the car
+stopped before the hotel. “I wouldn’t blame any girl for getting up on
+her ear.”
+
+In the lobby he was met by his three deserted companions, who instantly
+let fly a Gatling fire of comment.
+
+“Horning in with the management, are you?” grinned Nelson. “Just the
+same, I like your taste, kid. Some class there, all right!”
+
+“You bet!” chimed in Billy Orth. “What do you want to be such a hog
+for, though? Might have given somebody else a chance with one of ’em.”
+
+“Spilled the beans that time, old man,” Dalton added significantly.
+“Hard luck, boy. Who’d ever have thought the other one would turn up
+that way, and pinch you――”
+
+“Oh, go to blazes, the lot of you!” snapped Lefty, his face crimson.
+
+Without another word he strode toward the elevator, leaving Dalton――who
+had met Miss Harting in Boston, and shrewdly guessed that there was
+something more than passing friendship between the two――eying his
+companions with lifted brows.
+
+“Our genial southpaw seems somewhat peeved,” Larry murmured. “Have we
+touched upon a raw spot unawares?”
+
+Orth yawned. “Must be in a pretty bad way,” he commented. “I never knew
+him to give up like that without a word to say. Let’s hit the hay; I’m
+sleepy.”
+
+Rather silently the others followed him toward the elevator. Though
+there were no further remarks on the subject, they were all wondering
+what had happened to make the usually quick-witted, even-tempered
+Locke flare up the way he had at a little good-natured joshing, which
+ordinarily would have brought forth nothing more than a grin and a
+retort in kind.
+
+The object of their solicitude was thinking pretty much the same thing.
+He had scarcely set foot in the elevator before he regretted that silly
+burst of temper.
+
+“Looks as if I was bound to make a fool of myself to-night,” he
+thought. “I reckon I’m in bad all around.”
+
+He did not sleep well, and was up early. Having hurried through his
+breakfast, he dawdled around with a newspaper until eight o’clock, and
+then sought the telephone booth. A woman’s voice――Janet’s aunt, no
+doubt――answered his call.
+
+“Is Miss Harting in?” he asked quickly.
+
+“Who is this, please?”
+
+“Mr. Hazelton. I won’t keep her for more――”
+
+“I’m sorry,” interrupted the voice, with a curt, crisp intonation
+which belied the words, “but Miss Harting is too busy to come to the
+telephone.”
+
+“Will she be at home―― Hang it all! She’s cut off.”
+
+Lefty slammed up the receiver, and sat scowling for a moment at the
+instrument.
+
+“Might think I’d committed a crime,” he growled at last. “Won’t even
+give me a chance to say a word in my own defense.” His jaw squared
+stubbornly. “I’ll make her listen to me,” he went on. “I’ll go up there
+and see her, whether she’s at home or not. I’ll go now, too.”
+
+This was easier said than done. Emerging from the booth, Lefty was
+waylaid by Spider Grant, captain of the team, who wasted a good half
+hour in desultory discussion of their chances for winning the third
+game of the series from the Specters that afternoon. It might have
+continued for an hour and a half had not Locke departed unceremoniously
+in the very midst of one of Spider’s most elaborate arguments.
+
+“If hot air would win the game, we wouldn’t need to go out to the
+park,” he muttered grumpily as he leaped aboard an open car.
+
+Of course there was a block; equally of course, Lefty fretted and fumed
+and wasted his good energy and invention in uncomplimentary remarks
+about the road and its operators. He was compelled to walk the last
+twelve blocks. When he at last arrived at the apartment house his
+mental condition was far from enviable.
+
+“Not at home,” said the maid, with cool brevity.
+
+As she started to close the door Lefty placed one foot over the sill,
+with apparent carelessness. His earnestness of purpose was dimming the
+brightness of his manners.
+
+“Are you sure?” he asked suspiciously. “I only want to see Miss Harting
+for a minute.”
+
+“Indeed!” sniffed the girl. “Well, you’ll have to wait some time before
+you get the chance. She and Mrs. Manning are leaving on the night train
+for the Adirondacks.”
+
+“The Adirondacks!” gasped Lefty. “To-night!” He stood staring at the
+maid for a moment in utter dismay. “But I _must_ see them before they
+go. Haven’t you any idea where they are now?”
+
+“No more’n a fly,” returned the girl, evidently softened a little by
+his distress. “They went right after the trunks was took――shoppin’, I
+s’pose. Anyhow, Mrs. Manning said they wouldn’t be back.”
+
+How Lefty went through the rest of the morning he did not know. What
+had been started by a trivial trick of chance seemed to be growing more
+serious every moment. Evidently Janet believed the worst of him. It
+was equally evident that she was determined to give him no opportunity
+to explain the mix-up. Her behavior hurt Lefty desperately. It seemed
+unfair and unjust that she should have so little faith in him, in spite
+of appearances.
+
+For several hours he wandered about the shopping district, in the
+vague hope that somehow he might run across the girl. Failing in that,
+he lunched in gloomy solitude, then made his way to the ball park.
+
+For six innings he sat on the bench in grim silence while “Slick”
+Lumley held down the Specters to a shut-out score. Slick was one of
+those pitchers who are unsurpassed when they are good, but who seldom
+last through an entire game. Evidently Carson did not propose to run
+any chances of his blowing up this time, for at the beginning of the
+seventh, with Lumley showing sudden wildness, he took him off the mound
+and substituted Billy Orth.
+
+It was during that inning that Lefty got up from the bench to stretch
+his legs, and became aware for the first time of the presence of Miss
+Collier in the box with her father. She nodded cordially, and it seemed
+only natural for him to step up and say a few words to her.
+
+The few words lengthened into a prolonged conversation. The club owner
+had a good many questions to ask about Lefty’s father, and Virginia
+herself was so bright and cheery and interesting that the young pitcher
+was raised from the depths of despondency in spite of himself.
+
+For three innings he stood leaning against the rail of the box. Toward
+the end he was talking and laughing almost as if he hadn’t a thing on
+his mind to worry him. Several times his glance wandered back into the
+stands to where sat a young man of about his own age, who seemed much
+more interested in the party in the box than in the game. The fellow’s
+expression was so bitter, and he stared so fixedly at the famous
+southpaw, that Lefty wondered if he had ever met the chap before, or
+whether it was simply one of those curious dislikes certain fans seem
+to take to a player every once in a while.
+
+Locke was still wondering when Orth struck out the last man, winning
+the game by a score of two to one, and the crowd began to pour out of
+their seats to jam the aisles and runways.
+
+The next second Lefty gave a start, and the color drained swiftly from
+his face. He had caught a brief, fleeting glimpse of a girl who had
+been seated well back in the lower stand. Her face had been invisible
+all through the game, but now, as she arose and stepped into the aisle,
+he saw it clearly for an instant before she was swallowed up in the
+mob. It was the face of the girl he had been seeking all day in vain.
+
+Before he realized what he was doing, he had leaped for the nearest
+gate, and swung it open. Then he stopped, with a groan. It would be
+like hunting a needle in a haystack to try and find her in this crush.
+She might leave at any of a dozen exits before he could reach even one
+of them.
+
+For a moment he stood there, a scowl on his face, bitterness in his
+heart. Why had she come to the grounds at all? Was it to see him
+without the chance of being seen? Well, she had accomplished her
+purpose with a vengeance; she had beheld him chatting and laughing
+intimately with the same girl she supposed he had taken to the theater
+last night.
+
+With a groan of disappointment and mental pain, Lefty whirled around
+and tramped sullenly across the field toward the clubhouse. He did not
+give a single backward glance at the charming Miss Collier. He had
+forgotten her very existence in the irritation and trouble which this
+new complication had brought upon him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ THE GROUCH
+
+
+A modern Big League team is very much like an overgrown family. The men
+are together every day, and all day. At intervals they spend long hours
+cooped up in Pullman cars, always putting up at the same hotels while
+on the road, and frequently the majority of players belonging to a club
+stop at one particularly favored place at home. They miss little going
+on about them. As a result of this intimacy it was not long before
+Locke’s altered demeanor became a topic of discussion among the Blue
+Stockings.
+
+“I’d like to know what’s worrying the boy,” remarked Spider Grant early
+one afternoon in the dressing room. “He’s been going round for three or
+four days with a face a mile long.”
+
+He paused in his leisurely preparations for the game, and glanced
+inquiringly from one to another of the half dozen men who lounged about
+the room in various stages of undress.
+
+“He’s sure got a grouch,” agreed Rufe Hyland, intent on the adjustment
+of his sliding pads. “Ain’t seen him crack a smile in so long I’ve
+forgot what he looks like grinnin’. Mebbe he’s peeved at the way
+Carson’s been runnin’ him in at the tail end of games to pull us out of
+holes. Bein’ a life-saver an’ gettin’ no credit’s enough to get any man
+raw.”
+
+“That’s true enough,” agreed Grant. “He hasn’t had a whack at a
+straight game for over a week. Still, that wouldn’t turn a decent
+fellow like Lefty into a chronic grouch; he’s got too much sense. No,
+he acts to me like he was in love, and his girl had given him the
+double cross or something. How about that, Larry? You ought to know.”
+
+Dalton, wearing little more than his usual smile, shrugged his muscular
+shoulders and bustled among the contents of his locker.
+
+“Wouldn’t wonder if you’d hit it, Spider,” he returned, straightening
+up with a flannel shirt in his hands. “He has got a girl――regular
+peacherino, too――and I’ve got an idea that she has cross-signaled him
+lately. He spends half his time writing letters, and tears most of ’em
+up. That’s a bad sign, you know.”
+
+“Huh!” growled Hyland. “This skirt business makes me sick. There
+ain’t a thing in it. I’ve been hitched twice, and divorced the
+same number――an’ never again. I wouldn’t make sheep’s eyes at the
+best-lookin’ dame in this town, believe me. They git a fellow so
+fussed that he don’t know whether he’s afoot or horseback. If some
+female’s throwed the kid down, an’ that’s what he’s grouchin’ about,
+take it from me he’ll be bustin’ up on the mound one of these days――an’
+then where’ll he come off at?”
+
+“Where’ll _we_ come off, you mean,” retorted Grant, with a frown. “He’s
+the best all-round flinger in this outfit, and if he goes to seed then
+go-o-od night post-season series.”
+
+There being no other pitchers present, the statement passed
+uncontradicted. Grant slipped out of his street trousers, carefully
+folded them, and turned again to Dalton.
+
+“Can’t you find out if that’s it, Larry?” he asked. “If it is, we ought
+to do something to――”
+
+“Cheese! Cheese!” warned Kid Lewis. “Here he comes.”
+
+A moment later the young southpaw entered the dressing room, curtly
+responded to jovial greetings――somewhat forced――from the other men, and
+strode over to his locker. His forehead was corrugated by the frown
+which had become habitual of late. His eyes were somber. He made no
+attempt whatever to join in the conversation which swiftly started up
+again, seeming, in fact, to be almost oblivious to what was going on.
+He answered two or three direct questions in monosyllables, stripped
+off his clothes with an absent sort of haste, got into his uniform in
+much the same manner, and departed, wrapped in gloom, without having
+volunteered a single remark.
+
+As he disappeared into the corridor, the other players eyed each other
+significantly.
+
+“I never thought to see Lefty Locke with a face like that on him,”
+commented Dirk Nelson mournfully. “Why, the boy used to be the life of
+the whole crowd.”
+
+“If it _is_ a girl who’s responsible,” growled Hyland viciously, “she’d
+ought to be massecreed. There ain’t a woman livin’ that’s worth makin’
+all that fuss about.”
+
+Spider Grant finished lacing his shoes, and stood up, stamping.
+
+“Try if you can’t get wise to the game, Larry,” he said abruptly. “I
+don’t know as we can do anything, but it’ll be something to be sure.
+He’ll loosen up to you sooner’n to any of the rest of us.”
+
+Dalton agreed, but without any great exhibition of confidence. He had
+noticed a marked reserve on the part of Lefty Locke lately, which did
+not augur well for the extraction of confidences. There was a little
+more talk on the subject, but it ceased with the arrival of Pete Grist
+and his bunch of cronies. Soon afterward they all sauntered out to the
+diamond.
+
+The game that day was the last of a series with the Hornets, and the
+last which would be played on the home grounds for some time. That
+night would see the Blue Stockings bound for the territory of their
+greatest rivals, the Specters, after which would follow the final
+Western circuit.
+
+Either the home club had weakened, or the Hornets improved noticeably
+since their last encounter. The Blue Stockings had won every game, to
+be sure, but they had won them only by the hardest kind of work; and on
+two occasions the phenomenal pitching of Locke, put into the box for
+two and four innings respectively, was all that saved the day.
+
+To the fans it seemed a certainty that the young southpaw would start
+off on the mound to-day, and a murmur of surprise arose when the umpire
+announced “Pink” Dillon’s name.
+
+Dillon was, at times, a brilliant pitcher, but he had been on the sick
+list for some weeks; and the manager’s mistaken judgment was proved by
+the fact that he lasted for just two innings, during the last of which
+the Hornets succeeded in pounding out three runs.
+
+In spite of vociferous yells for Locke on the part of the bleacherites,
+Carson sent Grist into the box. He lasted until the end of the seventh.
+Then, owing in part, perhaps, to the carping criticism from a group
+of leather-lunged fans, to whom nobody but Lefty Locke looked good,
+he made a sudden and pyrotechnic ascension which let in several more
+tallies.
+
+Lefty was hurried into the gap with the score eight to three against
+the home team, and, though the portsider kept the Hornets from further
+scoring, the Blue Stockings were able to get only two more runners
+across the rubber. Therefore the game was lost by a tally of eight to
+five.
+
+The tramp and thunder of departing thousands had been going on for
+several minutes, yet Miss Collier still sat in a box, her eyes fixed on
+the throng of white-clad players just disappearing through the fence on
+the farther side of the field. All afternoon the young southpaw had not
+so much as glanced in her direction, yet to-night he was leaving the
+city, to be gone for several weeks. It seemed as if he might at least
+have said good-by.
+
+“I wouldn’t take it so hard if I were you,” smiled Mr. Collier, turning
+away from the friend with whom he had been chatting. “We can afford to
+lose this game, you know. The boys will make it up when they meet the
+Specters.”
+
+The girl arose leisurely and turned her back on the field.
+
+“I wasn’t thinking of that,” she said quietly. She paused for a second,
+her slim, gloved hands straightening her hat. “Doesn’t it seem a
+little odd to you, Dad, that Mr. Locke pitches so few games?”
+
+“Few!” repeated the magnate in amazement. “Why, he’s been in the box
+twice this week, and twice last!”
+
+Miss Collier shrugged her shoulders gracefully. “Precisely,” she
+returned calmly. “He’s been in the box for anywhere from two to four
+innings. Three times out of those four he won games some other pitcher
+tried to lose. He pitched a full game the day before I got home. Since
+then he’s been doing the most thankless sort of relief work. You see my
+point?”
+
+Mr. Collier’s jaw dropped. “Well, I’ll be hanged!” he exclaimed. “You
+certainly put one over on me that time, Virginia――or was it Locke who
+put you wise?”
+
+“Certainly _not_,” the girl retorted emphatically. “He isn’t that sort
+at all.”
+
+“Hum! No, of course not. I’m very glad you mentioned this, my dear.
+Such a thing is neither fair to the boy nor good judgment. I’ll see
+Carson before he leaves to-night, and tell him a little something.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ ON THE RAW EDGE
+
+
+The train had been in motion for twenty minutes or so, and the
+occupants of the Blue Stocking special car were beginning to settle
+down for the evening when Al Carson appeared in the doorway of his
+stateroom. For a moment or two he stood there, frowning, his glance
+passing indifferently over the brisk poker game with its several
+interested onlookers which was going on near him, past the lounging
+players engaged in idle talk or immersed in newspapers. There was a
+sudden tightening of his lips, however, as his eyes finally came to
+rest on the sprawling figure of Lefty Locke, hunched in the corner of a
+seat well forward. A moment later the manager stood looking down on the
+southpaw, with narrowing lids.
+
+“Been whining around a petticoat, have you?” he sneered.
+
+Lefty’s eyes veered suddenly from the window to the manager’s face.
+
+“What’s that?” he snapped.
+
+“I said you’d been whining around a skirt, complaining that I was
+using favoritism with the pitchers. You weren’t man enough to put up
+your kick to me; you had to go bawling about it to Collier’s daughter,
+so she’d work her father――”
+
+“That’s a lie!” rasped Locke, his face crimson. “A lie, and you know
+it!”
+
+His eyes were flashing, his fists were doubled; every muscle of his big
+frame had suddenly become tense and hard as a panther’s crouching for
+a spring. The manager himself turned suddenly livid with anger. For a
+moment, to the three or four players sitting near enough to observe
+what was going on, it looked as if another second would bring about a
+rough-and-tumble scrap.
+
+Just in time, however, Carson, realizing the danger of the situation,
+managed to get control of his temper.
+
+“_Is_ that so?” he sneered. “Perhaps you can explain how Miss Collier
+came to draw the old man’s attention to the fact that you hadn’t
+pitched a straight game in over a week.”
+
+“Not being a fool,” Lefty snapped back, “it’s quite possible she
+discovered it by simple observation. Everybody else is wise to the fact
+that ever since you took hold of the team you’ve been using me to win
+games for the precious pitcher you’re so stuck on.”
+
+Carson caught his breath swiftly and turned white with rage. “What the
+deuce――” he blustered. “Who――”
+
+“You know well enough who I mean,” retorted Locke. “If you don’t, then
+ask any man on the team, and you’ll find out quick. I’m not kicking;
+I’m simply stating facts. You’re manager of this team, and you’ve got
+the right to run it any way you choose. But there’s just this, _Mister_
+Carson: in future we’ll dispense with any more talk about my currying
+favor with the owner, either through his daughter or in any other way.
+When I’m ready to kick about anything, I’ll come to you and do it.
+Believe me, you’ll know it!”
+
+“What do you mean by such talk?” frothed Carson, his face purple. “I’ll
+fine you――”
+
+“Fine and be hanged!” defied Locke. “Only shut up! You started this,
+not I. You asked a question, and I answered, so cut out the hot air and
+leave me alone. I’m sick of the sound of your voice.”
+
+For a second or two the manager stared in dazed fury at the scowling
+face of the young pitcher, and then――he wilted. Lefty’s remarks had hit
+the nail on the head only too accurately, and Carson knew it. He and
+Pete Grist had been on friendly terms for a number of years, and Grist
+had been favored by the manager at every opportunity, though Carson
+flattered himself that it had been done too skillfully to be obvious.
+The shock of discovering the contrary, and also the realization that
+Locke was apparently in a state of mind which necessitated handling
+with gloves, caused the official to back water. With a snappy retort or
+two, and a very fierce expression, he turned on his heel and sought the
+seclusion of his stateroom.
+
+The slamming of the door was followed by a hush more eloquent than many
+words. The altercation had been conducted with no soft pedal on, and
+almost every word had been audible the entire length of the car. For
+a few minutes even the poker game was in abeyance, as the men glanced
+significantly at one another with lifted eyebrows, shaking their heads.
+
+“He’s sure enough sore,” whispered Kid Lewis. “Maybe it isn’t the girl,
+after all.”
+
+“Mebbe,” agreed Rufe Hyland, glancing at his cards again. “Lucky
+Grist’s in the smoker, or there’d be a rough-house for fair.”
+
+“What he said was nothing but gospel,” protested Nelson. “Carson’s been
+favoring Pete every chance he got. Lefty won two games for him within a
+week, and didn’t get any credit; for Grist, going to the bad, was drawn
+with us leadin’ by a run.”
+
+“Oh, sure! I know that. But Petie’s a peppery gink, and no fellow
+likes to hear that kind of truth blabbed out in so many words.”
+
+Of course, Grist heard all about it before many hours had passed. In
+the dressing room on the Specter grounds, next afternoon, he made some
+sneering remarks on the subject in a loud tone, which could not help
+reaching Locke’s ears. Instantly Lefty retorted savagely. Grist snapped
+back viciously, and but for the swift interference of the other men,
+there would have been a fight then and there.
+
+Five minutes later Carson appeared and curtly informed the southpaw
+that he was to start the game.
+
+It was in this mental condition that Lefty received instructions to
+pitch. He made no comment beyond a surly nod, but his teammates glanced
+dubiously at one another, and shook their heads.
+
+One and all were conscious of an unpleasant feeling of suspense and
+unrest. It was as if they were walking on the thin crust of a volcano
+which was likely at any moment to burst into violent eruption.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ UNCERTAINTY
+
+
+Contrary to the fears of a good many Blue Stockings, Lefty still seemed
+to be “there with the goods.” To be sure, he stalked out to the mound
+with a gloomy face and wrinkled brow, which was the very antithesis
+of his usual cheerful, good-humored expression; but when it came to
+bending them over, he showed every bit of his old-time skill for the
+first three innings.
+
+It was in the fourth that Larry Dalton, who had been watching his
+friend closely, began to notice a change. Red Callahan, an uncertain
+hitter, was at the bat. The southpaw pulled him with a pretty outcurve,
+following with a clever drop; and then, with two strikes and only
+one ball called, he whipped over a fast, straight ball, which would
+have cut the heart of the plate had not Red fallen upon it joyfully,
+smashing it out for a canter to first.
+
+It was not a very bad slip; pitchers fail every day through
+underestimation of a poor hitter. But carelessness had never been one
+of Lefty’s faults, and Dalton’s eyes widened with surprise as the
+Specter infielder romped down to the initial sack, and stood there
+grinning.
+
+The look of surprise deepened on Larry’s face when Locke gave the next
+batter three balls in succession, meanwhile allowing Callahan to steal
+second.
+
+“That’s the game!” barked the Specter coachers jubilantly. “Make him
+put ’em over, Jack. He ain’t such a wonder, after all. Too bad, Lefty,
+old boy. Losing your control?”
+
+“Make those dubs shut up!” snapped Locke, turning to the umpire. “They
+can talk to their own men, but not to me.”
+
+The coachers received a perfunctory warning, and naturally, when they
+saw that the pitcher objected to their remarks, they redoubled their
+efforts, simply altering the person.
+
+Dalton could scarcely believe his ears. To think of Lefty Locke
+being bothered by a little hot air! Ordinarily he simply grinned
+aggravatingly, or gave an excellent imitation of a deaf mute. It seemed
+incredible, and a furrow of anxiety flashed into place between Larry’s
+brown eyes.
+
+Lefty managed to pull out of the hole, but the mere fact that he had
+allowed himself to get into it was enough to cause his teammates to
+worry.
+
+The fifth inning passed with the score still one to one――both runs
+had been made at the very beginning of the game. In the sixth the Blue
+Stockings scored another tally, a lead which they held in spite of the
+desperate efforts of their opponents in the final half of the inning.
+
+During the seventh and eighth Lefty’s pitching came near giving a
+number of people heart failure. It was by turns mediocre to a degree,
+and superbly brilliant. He would get himself into holes by inexcusable
+carelessness, and then, when he seemed on the point of blowing up, he
+would steady down and make the spectators shout joyous approval.
+
+Throughout this erratic performance Billy Orth sat on the bench,
+watching the work of the grim, frowning portsider with alternate
+dismay, delight, and wonderment.
+
+“Good Lord!” Billy muttered to himself. “I never saw him so shifty.
+First he’s careless and wild as a hawk, then, just when he seems going
+up for fair, he tightens like a drumhead. He’s got Carson squirming.”
+
+True, the manager of the Blue Stockings was squirming. Even when Locke
+fanned dangerous hitters in the pinches Carson, though showing some
+relief, did not look wholly happy. At no time was the angry frown wiped
+clean from his face. For through it all he was troubled by a nagging
+conviction that the man on the mound was playing on his feelings as
+well as toying with the opposing batters.
+
+It really seemed that Lefty invited and sought threatening
+situations――in any of which the slightest slip would give the Specters
+what they desired――in order that he might make a display of his skill
+by balking the enemy when they were almost grasping the coveted
+prize. A pitcher who could “monkey” in such a manner, with the result
+of a single game meaning so much, was not worthy of trust under any
+circumstances. Had Carson felt absolutely assured that Locke was doing
+this, he would have braved the wrath of the owner by benching the man
+in one of those tense, threatening moments.
+
+But Carson was not sure. Much as he disliked Lefty for certain reasons,
+he could not bring himself to believe that a youngster with Locke’s
+promise in the Big League would, through malice or spite, toy inanely
+with his future prospects.
+
+Nevertheless, even when Lefty succeeded in pulling himself out of the
+holes, and came to the bench amid the approving uproar of the great
+crowd, the manager could not bring himself to give the grim and sullen
+man a word of encouragement and approval. True it was that Locke did
+not invite anything of the sort, and actually seemed, by his cold and
+distant manner, to repel the advances of his own friends and intimates
+on the team. In every way he was thoroughly unlike the open, jovial,
+likable youngster he had seemed to be earlier in the season.
+
+Even Laughing Larry, than whom no one had been more intimate with the
+young southpaw, wore an expression of troubled anxiety each time he
+came to the bench following those pinches.
+
+Billy Orth saw this, and signaled for the perspiring, disturbed Dalton
+to sit beside him in the pit.
+
+“What’s the matter with Lefty, Dalt?” asked Orth guardedly. “Do you
+think――”
+
+“Dunno what to think,” muttered Larry, in a perplexed way; “but I don’t
+believe he’s right. The whole team feels it, too; and, with our slim
+margin of one run, it wouldn’t take only the smallest break to put the
+bunch off their feet.”
+
+“Of course you’ve noticed how queer he’s been acting the last few days?”
+
+“Huh! Couldn’t help noticing it. A blind man or a fool could see that.
+He seems to be sore with himself and the whole world generally. That
+quarrel with Carson didn’t improve his condition any. He’s in bad
+there.”
+
+“But he stands well with the skirt, and she seems to be the real power
+behind the machine.”
+
+“The skirt? Oh, you mean Collier’s daughter?”
+
+“Sure! She seems to be running things.”
+
+Dalton shook his head soberly. “And that’s unfortunate. Women may vote,
+hold office, and go to war if they want to, but baseball is one thing
+they’d better keep their noses out of. No team ever did well with a
+female monkeying with it.”
+
+“Do you know,” murmured Billy, “I’ve got an idea that I can locate
+Lefty Locke’s weak spot. It’s skirts. We all have our failings, and
+that’s his.”
+
+“Perhaps you’re right,” nodded Larry. “I’ve always thought he had a
+level block, till lately. Now he’s mixed up with two dames, and――”
+
+“Why don’t you talk to him, Larry? You’re the one to do it. He ought to
+listen to you.”
+
+“Maybe he ought to listen, but he won’t. Once I wouldn’t have
+hesitated, but now I can’t open my face to him without his being ready
+to jump down my throat. I confess it has made me a bit raw, too. Once
+he had plenty of friends, but if he keeps on he will lose the sympathy
+of everybody.”
+
+“I’m afraid you’re right,” admitted Billy sadly. “I’ve been figuring to
+get my fingers on some of that post-season money, but if Locke goes to
+pieces now we won’t be in the running at the wind-up. Let’s hope for
+the best.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ SUSPENSE
+
+
+The Specter twirler having become practically unhittable, the ninth
+inning gave the Blue Stockings nothing further than their slim lead
+of one tally. The final half opened with Dutch Schwartz, leading the
+Specter’s list, the first man to face Locke.
+
+“Whiff him, Lefty!” begged a few fans. “You can do it! Oh, you Lefty!
+You’re the boy!”
+
+With an expression of mingled determination and disdain for these
+pleading rooters, Schwartz planted himself at the plate, having first
+knocked the dirt out of his spikes with the butt of his heavy club.
+
+“Take it easy, son,” called Spider Grant, getting into position to
+cover plenty of territory in the vicinity of first. “You know him. If
+you can get him to start with, it will be as good as two down.”
+
+Locke gave his captain a cold stare, and his lips moved. It seemed that
+he muttered some sullen retort, but Grant could not distinguish the
+words.
+
+So long did the pitcher stand in that position, gazing straight at
+Spider, that the tense crowd began to wonder, and the umpire called
+“Play” twice. Finally, lifting his “meat hand” with the soiled
+horsehide gripped in his fingers, Lefty turned his eyes on Nelson, who
+crouched promptly, and signaled.
+
+Wagging his bat loosely, almost lightly, Dutch Schwartz was in position
+to step into anything handed up. Possibly delaying in an effort to get
+the batter’s nerve, Lefty made no further move until he provoked a
+protest from the Specter captain. Then, like one awaking from a half
+trance, the pitcher balanced himself on one foot, swung far back,
+brought his body over and forward, and made the delivery. Never had
+anyone present witnessed a wilder pitch. It was a wonder that the ball
+did not go clean over the top of the grandstand.
+
+“Oh, oh, oh!” shouted the coachers, while the startled crowd broke into
+exclamations. “Look a’ that! Get a scaling ladder, Schwartzy.”
+
+The Dutchman grinned and tapped the pentagon with the end of his bat.
+
+A boy recovered the ball and threw it to Nelson, who made a pretense of
+looking it over before he tossed it to Locke.
+
+On the bench the watchful Billy Orth, actually shivering, whispered
+to himself: “Now, I wonder if he did that on purpose――I wonder. It
+doesn’t seem likely. If he did, he’s getting to be a good subject for
+the foolish factory.”
+
+Others beside Billy were wondering. While they were thus engaged Locke
+pitched again. This time he whipped a smoker over, and Schwartz fouled
+it against the right-field bleachers.
+
+“That makes you even, old boy!” called Grant, ere he turned to receive
+the ball from the fielder who had chased it down. But, somehow, his
+voice seemed to lack the ring of genuine cheerfulness.
+
+Even the least astute spectator could see that the Blue Stockings were
+all keyed up to a point of tension little short of snapping. Something
+in the very air seemed to presage a break. And that meant――disaster.
+
+It was such a situation, however, as provides one of the intense
+thrills of the game, the sort of a thrill and suspense which makes it
+so fascinating to its thousands upon thousands of followers. It is
+the desire to feel just this keen distress and uncertainty, intensely
+delicious in its poignant pain, that lures a fan to the ball park day
+after day to witness dead and uninteresting games, hoping always for
+the pinch that will set them swallowing hard to keep their hearts from
+choking them.
+
+Frowning, Lefty pitched again. The ball seemed to make a yellow streak
+through the air, and Nelson, though he held it, was actually set back
+the least fraction by the terrific impact of the sphere in his big mitt.
+
+Schwartz had struck again――and missed.
+
+“Smoke! Smoke!” shouted Dalton, laughing suddenly in his old-time way.
+“He couldn’t see it, my boy! Once more, and you’ve got him!”
+
+Indeed, Laughing Larry had suddenly decided that the pitcher he had
+doubted might be playing a clever game, even though the wisdom of
+it could be questioned. Nor was Larry the only one with confidence
+suddenly revived.
+
+“Such speed!” muttered Billy Orth. “And his control was perfect――that
+time.”
+
+“That’s two on him!” howled an excited man from the middle stand. “He’s
+your meat, Lefty! You never did fail us!”
+
+Nelson gave his tingling bare hand a shake and returned the ball to
+Locke, who seemed to perceive it just in time to thrust out his gloved
+right and catch it a bit awkwardly. They saw him shake his head from
+side to side with a queer motion and pass the back of his left hand
+across his sweat-moistened forehead. His face was drawn into hard,
+set lines, which seemed like lines of pain. Before looking again for
+Nelson’s signal, he walked all the way around the slab, staring down
+at the ground as if seeking for something he had dropped. And these
+queer movements brought the uncertainty leaping back into the heart of
+Laughing Larry and others.
+
+There was speed in the next one――speed enough, it is true; but Schwartz
+could not have reached it had his bat measured two feet more than
+it did. It went past Nelson, and clean to the stand, from which it
+rebounded.
+
+“Wait it out, Dutch,” urged a coacher. “He’ll hand you a pass yet.”
+
+Schwartz knew how to wait, as he proved by ignoring the next pitch,
+which barely failed to cut a corner. Three balls were called――three
+balls and two strikes.
+
+Again Lefty gave his head that queer, side-swaying shake. His teeth
+were set and his lips drawn back. Receiving the ball, he held it
+gripped tightly in both hands beneath his chin, while he leaned forward
+to get the catcher’s sign.
+
+Upon the crowd fell a great hush, in the midst of which the voices of
+Locke’s teammates, calling encouragement, could be distinctly heard.
+Schwartz, his confidence apparently unmarred, waited, sturdily alert.
+
+Lefty nodded, swung backward, swung forward, slashed the air with his
+arm――pitched. It was a hook-curve, sharp, and breaking toward the
+outside corner. Schwartz swung his bat as if it weighed no more than a
+toothpick. But, marvelous hitter though he was, that curve fooled him,
+and he was out.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ A WILD HEAVE
+
+
+Championship prospects for the Blue Stockings had led an unusual number
+of rooters for the team to follow it around on the short jumps, and
+now, with the fanning of Schwartz, they made a tremendous racket. The
+following batters might be equally dangerous, but, with the sturdy
+Dutchman disposed of, the prospect of holding the threatening Specters
+was bright indeed. Not a few felt, like Larry Dalton, that to get
+Schwartz at this time was as good as disposing of two men.
+
+As Bugs Murray took Schwartz’s place, however, the great bulk of the
+gathering howled for a safety.
+
+“Get a hit! Get a hit!” was the cry. “Put us in the game, Bugs!”
+
+“He’s just as easy, Lefty, old boy,” chuckled Dalton. “Sew it up right
+here. This game counts. We need it.”
+
+By no visible sign did Locke show that the words of his friend reached
+his ears. On the other hand, the rooting of the immense crowd in
+the stands seemed to annoy him in a most unusual way. And when one
+individual, with a voice like a locomotive whistle, shrieked that he
+was “wild,” “no good,” “easy,” and “punk,” he remained for some moments
+staring at the spot from which the cries seemed to come.
+
+“Don’t mind that, old man,” pleaded Grant. “You know what you can do.
+Bugs is your next victim. Mow him down.”
+
+Again the troubled pitcher seemed to lack control, for he handed up two
+wild ones that made Nelson stretch himself to pull them down. Again the
+coachers prophesied that he would be obliging enough to give the hitter
+a walk. It is likely Murray thought there was a good prospect of such
+a thing, for he held back when Locke, after a seeming struggle to pull
+himself together, shot one down the groove.
+
+“Strike-ah!” called the umpire, flinging up his hand.
+
+“Why, of course, of course!” whooped Dalton. “You’ve got him
+hypnotized, Lefty. No free passes this inning.”
+
+But Laughing Larry was mistaken. With Murray waiting confidently, the
+laboring southpaw was unable to find the pan again, and four balls sent
+Bugs capering with elephantine grace to first.
+
+“Going up! going up!” he whooped, doing a dance on the sack. “Wait it
+out, Dil. He’s all shot to pieces.”
+
+After glancing toward his manager for a signal, Dillingham dropped one
+of the two bats he had been swinging, and hastened to put himself into
+position to do a little business with the other one.
+
+Logie, fourth on the list, and therefore a most reliable club swinger,
+followed Dillingham. And Logie was the only man who, all through the
+game, had shown the ability to fathom anything Locke put within his
+reach. With this fact in mind, the Specter manager felt that, even
+though two should be down, and a runner on second, with Logie batting
+it meant an even chance to get the run which would tie the score.
+
+“If we can tie it up now,” he thought, “we’ve got that left-hander’s
+goat. He’s barely been holding himself together, and a tie score in
+this inning would scatter him all over the lot.”
+
+So Dillingham was given the signal to sacrifice, and he passed the sign
+to Murray, who ceased his capering and made ready to tear up the chalk
+line on the way to second.
+
+Like the shouting of the crowd, the antics of Murray had seemed to
+disturb Lefty, and when he threw once to drive Bugs back to the initial
+sack he made such a wild heave that Spider Grant pulled the ball down
+only by a most amazing leap into the air.
+
+“Wow! wow!” laughed the coacher at that base. “He made you stretch,
+Spider. He can’t even throw to the sacks. What’s the matter with
+him――struck by ’stigmatism?”
+
+There really seemed that there was something the matter with Locke’s
+eyes, for again and again he passed his hand across them, like one
+brushing away cobwebs.
+
+The restored confidence of his teammates was ebbing again. Several
+times during the game Grant had wondered why Carson sent no other
+twirler out to warm up, and now the puzzling question once more flashed
+through his mind. With the former manager at the helm, the captain
+would have suggested such a precaution, but Carson was not popular with
+Spider.
+
+“He knows so much about the inside game,” thought Grant, “let him run
+things all by his lonesome. I’ll handle my end on the field, but I’m
+not going to give him a chance to call me by proposing something he
+ought to be wise to himself.”
+
+And only for what he had heard from Collier, Carson would have replaced
+Locke with another pitcher long ere this. With such feelings governing
+the “powers,” there was really small chance for the Blue Stockings
+to snatch the coveted championship. Indeed, it was just this sort
+of childishness that had prevented Carson from becoming a pennant
+contender on the occasions when he had managed other Big League teams.
+The thoroughly successful manager never permits personal feelings or
+whims to influence his judgment.
+
+Although Lefty’s first pitch to Dillingham would have been called a
+ball, the batter reached across and met it, with his club loosely held,
+rolling a soggy bunt into the diamond.
+
+Murray had started with the swing of the pitcher’s arm, and therefore
+there was no chance to get him at second. It was Locke’s ball to field,
+and he should have nailed Dillingham at first by twelve or fifteen
+feet. Somehow, he seemed to hesitate before starting after the rolling
+sphere, and then, when he did get it, with barely enough time to pinch
+the runner at the initial sack, he threw all the way into deep right.
+
+A sudden roar went up. The coacher at first shrieked for Dillingham to
+keep on. The one at third howled and waved his arms at Murray.
+
+Lettering one gasping snarl, Rufe Hyland chased that wild peg down,
+got it on the rebound from the face of the bleachers, and whipped it
+back into the diamond in time to hold Murray at third. At second Dalton
+fooled Dillingham into sliding by pretending that he was going to take
+a throw.
+
+The Blue Stocking fans were silent and appalled, but the stands seemed
+to rock with the tremendous uproar made by the sympathizers with the
+Specters. With second and third occupied, only one down, and Logie the
+hitter, it seemed a three-to-one shot that Lefty Locke had thrown away
+the game.
+
+“If we only had Grist or Orth or _anybody_ to go in now!” muttered
+Grant. “They’re all cold. There’s no time for ’em to warm up. Oh, this
+is fine management, and I’ll have to shoulder a big part of the blame!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ THROWN AWAY
+
+
+In the Blue Stocking pit Carson sat gritting his teeth and muttering,
+but he gave no orders that would tend to relieve the situation.
+
+Nelson, standing on the plate with the ball in his hands, motioned
+repeatedly before Locke saw him and came forward. They met a few feet
+in front of the pan.
+
+“What’s the trouble, old man?” questioned Dirk. “Are you sick?”
+
+“Sick? No,” growled the southpaw. “Gimme the ball.”
+
+“Wait a minute. There’s something wrong. You’re not right.”
+
+“Nothing the matter with me. I’ll get Logie. They won’t score. Hear
+that infernal bunch howl! They make me sick!”
+
+His angry eyes once more swept the tumultuous stands, where the crowd
+was jeering and hooting and shouting for the Blue Stockings to play
+ball.
+
+“You’re paying too much attention to the crowd, or something,” said
+Nelson. “You’re not pitching in form.”
+
+“Bah! I’ve got speed, haven’t I?”
+
+“Yes, but――”
+
+“And curves, too?”
+
+“But your control is bad. If they score now they’ll take this game,
+best we can do.”
+
+“I tell you they won’t score. Haven’t I made good in every pinch
+to-day? Well, stop carping, and leave it to me. Just you give me the
+signs, and do your part of the work; that’s all that’s necessary.”
+
+“All right,” said the catcher, trying to seem as confident and cheerful
+as possible. “But don’t let Bugs reach the rubber――don’t, for the love
+of goodness! Keep steady now, and we’ll hold ’em yet.”
+
+He handed Lefty the ball, and Locke walked back to the mound, watching
+Murray, who was capering off third in an effort to draw a throw.
+
+“Come on, come on!” coaxed Bugs. “Heave it. You can’t get me. Heave it!”
+
+But the pitcher refrained from throwing, and took his position on the
+slab. The moment he squared away to pitch Dillingham ran far up from
+second, ready to try to get home on any sort of a promising single.
+
+That Locke had speed enough no one could deny, and now, to the
+surprise of his friends and his opponents alike, he seemed suddenly to
+have recovered his control. Doubtless Logie did not figure on this
+recovery, for he stood up to the pan, without swinging, and permitted
+two smokers to cut the inside corner, both being called strikes.
+Annoyed, he gripped his bat and waited for the next one. It proved
+to be one of Locke’s amazing hooks, all of which seemed due to cut
+the pan until they “broke.” On the break that particular ball would
+shoot downward and outward beyond the corner. It did so now, and Logie
+pounded the air.
+
+Laughing Larry’s joyous yell sounded high and clear above the delighted
+shouts of the little gathering of Blue Stocking “bugs” in the watching
+throng.
+
+“All right――it’s all right,” sang Dalton. “You’re fooling ’em some
+to-day, Lefty, my bucko.”
+
+On the bench Billy Orth mopped his pale, perspiring face. “Great
+scissors!” he breathed. “I believe he’s going to pull out now. If he
+does, I’ll own up that I don’t know when a man has gone to the bad.”
+
+The crowd implored Aldrich as they saw him advancing to take the place
+of the thoroughly disgusted Logie. The game hung by a thread, ready to
+drop into the laps of the Specters. Could Bush cut that thread?
+
+“You’re there, all right, Lefty,” said Nelson, grinning through the
+wires of his mask. “If they wait for you to hand ’em the game, they’re
+fooled.”
+
+Locke made no retort. In position to pitch, he faced Grant and looked
+to see if the captain gave him a signal to throw to third. But,
+remembering the wild heave to first, even though Murray was taking a
+perilous lead, Spider withheld the signal.
+
+“Get Aldrich,” he said. “That’s all you have to do.”
+
+Locke’s first pitch to Aldrich was high, and the batter, after starting
+to swing, checked himself in time to get the benefit of a called ball.
+
+Nelson returned the sphere promptly. Lefty muffed the toss, brushed his
+hand across his eyes, picked the ball up, and toed the plate.
+
+There was a sudden wild yell of warning. Murray, spurred by desperation,
+securing a good lead off third, had started on the jump for the plate.
+It was an attempt to steal home.
+
+“Here, here!” shouted Nelson, leaping forward to take the ball.
+
+To the dismay of the Blue Stockings, Locke turned to look toward third
+before throwing. Apparently he was surprised and dazed by failing to
+perceive Murray anywhere in the vicinity of that sack. Nor did he at
+that time seem to see Dillingham coming up from second as fast as he
+could leg it.
+
+“The plate! Put it home!” shrieked Larry Dalton.
+
+Locke swung back slowly, almost heavily. At that moment Bugs was
+flinging himself for the slide to the pan, and it was too late to stop
+him. That steal had tied the score.
+
+Then Lefty did what would have been a foolish thing had he made a
+perfect throw. Swinging back, he pegged the ball to third, although
+Dillingham was within ten feet of the sack when the sphere left the
+pitcher’s fingers.
+
+Leaping high, and reaching as far as he could, Jack Daly felt the ball
+barely graze the end of his gloved fingers. Away it went toward the
+left-field bleachers, and the coacher sent Dillingham on to the plate.
+
+Joe Welch got the ball, and lined it to the pan in a hopeless attempt
+to stop that second run. The throw was a bit wide; and when Nelson,
+lunging with the ball, tagged Dillingham, the umpire spread out his
+open hands, palms downward.
+
+The game was over! Locke had thrown it away at last.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ HOT WORDS
+
+
+In a small, bare room of the clubhouse Al Carson waited, his face dark
+as a storm cloud. At times he muttered to himself. From the adjoining
+quarters of the defeated players there came no sounds of joshing or
+laughter. The loss of this game was a disagreeable pill for either
+management or men to swallow.
+
+After a time a heavy step sounded outside, the door opened, and Lefty
+Locke appeared before the manager. He was pale now beneath his healthy
+tan, but still his once handsome, good-natured face wore a sullen,
+defiant expression, and his flinty eyes met Carson’s withering look
+without wavering.
+
+“Well,” he said, his voice strangely harsh, “you sent for me.”
+
+For a moment Carson felt that he was going to blow up like a
+firecracker, but, somehow, he managed to control himself in a measure.
+
+“Yes, I sent for you,” he said. “I want to hear what you have to say
+for yourself.”
+
+“I’m not going to say anything.”
+
+“Oh, you’re not! You’re not going to say anything after handing the
+Specters that game on a platter? You’re not going to say a word after
+an exhibition that would make a jackass weep?”
+
+“I don’t see any tears in your eyes.”
+
+Then Carson did go up. “You infernal, insolent, swell-headed cub!” he
+shouted. “You think you can talk to me that fashion just because you
+happen to have a pull with――” Barely in time he bit the sentence short.
+His breast heaving, his nostrils distended, he announced: “I’ll show
+you! I’ll teach you that you can’t deliberately throw a game!”
+
+“Any man who says I ever deliberately threw a game is a liar!”
+
+Rarely in his baseball career had a player talked to Carson like that.
+The manager could scarcely believe the evidence of his ears, and for a
+moment he choked, his face purple, in an effort to articulate.
+
+“I oughter beat your head off!” he finally ground forth.
+
+“Try it!” invited Locke.
+
+The manager knew better than to try it. That tall, compact, finely
+built man looked like a thorough athlete, and just now the expression
+on his face seemed to betoken that he would gladly welcome a
+hand-to-hand scrap with anyone.
+
+“I won’t maul you,” panted Carson.
+
+“I’m sorry,” regretted the southpaw.
+
+“But I’ll teach you something, just the same. You’re fined twenty-five
+and suspended.”
+
+For a moment or two Lefty was silent. “Perhaps you think you can make
+that penalty stick,” he said presently. “Perhaps you think, simply
+because I lost a game――I’m not denying I lost it――you can call me into
+a private room and browbeat me, and fine me when I fail to cower and
+eat humble pie.”
+
+“I’m fining you for your rotten work on the field. I’d fined you then
+and there if I’d got hold of you before you loped off.”
+
+“You’re fining me from pure malicious revenge, nothing else. As a
+manager you play your favorites, and I don’t happen to be one of them.”
+
+“Shut up!” roared Carson. “Shut up, or I’ll double it!”
+
+“Double and be――hanged! I don’t have to play baseball for a living. You
+can suspend me as long as you please. I’m getting tired of the game,
+anyway, and thinking about quitting.”
+
+“Oh, you’re a quitter, all right. I reckon old Brennan, of the Hornets,
+had you sized up about right in the first place.” Carson’s total lack
+of diplomacy was amazing. Had he tried, with deliberate forethought, to
+create an unbridgable breach between himself and the left-hander, he
+could not have chosen a surer course. “The yellow streak always crops
+up sooner or later in any man who has it,” he went on. “You can pitch,
+with everything breaking for you, but you lack heart. A little streak
+of success swelled you up till you began to think yourself a king-pin.
+You had an idea that you were a better man than Pete Grist, and now――”
+
+“Have you finished?” interrupted Lefty, his voice quivering strangely.
+“I think I’d better go. In about ten seconds more I’ll do something
+that will put me liable to a fine for assault and battery.”
+
+His attitude was that of a man about to attack another when the door
+opened and Charles Collier entered, followed by a clean-looking, tall
+young man. Both stopped and stared in astonishment at the tableau.
+
+“What――what’s the matter here?” spluttered the owner of the Blue
+Stockings. “What’s the trouble, Carson?”
+
+“Oh, nothing,” answered the manager. “Nothing, only this fellow
+threatens me with assault when I give him a call-down for his
+wooden-headed work in that last inning.”
+
+“Really, Locke, I’m astonished,” said Collier, beginning to show a
+touch of anger himself. “You must know Mr. Carson has a right to feel
+sore.”
+
+“But he hasn’t a right to blackguard me. He can do that with other
+men, perhaps, but he can’t put it over on me.”
+
+“I’m simply telling him the cold facts,” the manager hastened to
+assert. “He thinks himself so high and mighty that no one has a right
+to say a thing to him. He’s been coddled and spoiled. There’s no surer
+way to spoil a cub than to feed him taffy. It’s his first season out of
+the bush, and he’s beginning to reckon himself a second Walter Johnson.”
+
+“You’re both excited,” said Collier, in an attempt to be soothing. “Of
+course, there’s a good reason, the game to-day meaning so much, but
+it’s better to talk these things over in cold blood. Let’s calm down a
+little, all of us.”
+
+His effort to cast oil on the troubled waters was partly successful, as
+far as Carson was concerned; for the manager did not wish the magnate
+to think him a person to lose his temper unreasonably in dealing with
+any player.
+
+“I called him in to talk it over decently,” he said; “but he became
+nasty right off the reel.”
+
+“Any man can talk to me decently,” muttered Lefty, though the resentful
+light still lingered in his eyes.
+
+“That’s right, my boy; that’s the way to feel,” said Collier, rubbing
+his hands. “It’s too bad we lost the game, but we’ll simply have to
+fight the harder for the rest of the series. If we break even, we’ll
+still have it on the Specters. Perhaps Hazelton has been working too
+hard. I understand Kennedy used him a great deal. Perhaps he needs a
+rest.”
+
+“Maybe he does,” growled Carson. “Anyhow, I’m going to give him one.”
+
+“It’s likely a few days will put him back into form. My daughter is a
+good judge of baseball players, and she has confidence in Lefty.”
+
+The young man who had entered with the owner moved his shoulders
+uneasily, and bit his lip. Suddenly Collier seemed to remember him.
+
+“Mr. Carson,” he said, “let me introduce a man who wanted to meet you.
+A friend of myself and daughter――Mr. Parlmee. Shake hands with Carson,
+Franklin.”
+
+“I’m very glad to meet you, Mr. Carson,” said Parlmee, as he gave the
+manager his hand.
+
+“And Mr. Hazelton, too,” said the magnate, with a wave toward the
+southpaw. “Son of an old friend of mine. Unfortunately, his father has
+a prejudice against baseball, so he’s playing under the name of Locke.”
+
+For the first time since the appearance of the club owner and his
+companion, Lefty’s eyes rested on the face of the latter. In a moment
+he was vaguely aware that he had seen the man before, but not until
+Parlmee had bowed coldly, without an attempt to shake hands, did Locke
+recall the occasion. Then he remembered how in the last home game with
+the Specters, while he was talking with Virginia Collier, he had seen
+a young man watching him gloweringly from the stand. This was the same
+man, and between the two there existed a singular feeling of antipathy,
+as yet unaccounted for in the pitcher’s mind.
+
+Suddenly it seemed to Lefty that everything was against him, the whole
+world――fate, even.
+
+“If there’s nothing more,” he said, his voice cold and harsh, “I think
+I’ll be going.”
+
+“Sullen dog,” said Parlmee, when the door had closed behind the
+departing man.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ THE UNAPPROACHABLE LOCKE
+
+
+“Men go stale on college teams,” said Charles Collier apologetically.
+“Perhaps that’s the trouble with Locke.”
+
+“He ain’t stale,” asserted Carson. “That ain’t the trouble with him.
+Look how he pitched when he wanted to.”
+
+“He seemed very erratic to me,” put in Parlmee. “I’ve seen plenty of
+pitchers like him. They’re never to be depended on.”
+
+“But you haven’t seen him at his best,” said the club owner. “This
+is the first full game you’ve ever seen him pitch. He certainly was
+reliable enough earlier in the season.”
+
+“The only trouble with him is in that swelled bean of his,” declared
+Carson. “Under Kennedy he was petted and coddled and made to believe he
+was the real thing, spelled with capitals. As soon as he gets the same
+deal from me that every other man is getting, and is handled on his
+merits, he turns ugly.”
+
+“I suppose,” observed Collier, “he has an idea that you rate Grist at
+the top of the list.”
+
+“Well, why shouldn’t I? Look at Grist’s record and experience. There’s
+more baseball in his little finger than this cub has learned yet. If
+we’d had old Peter on the mound to-day――”
+
+“Why didn’t you put him in when you saw the youngster wabbling?”
+
+“Put him in, and then have it said I gave Locke the hook without
+reason? Who could foresee the fellow was going to throw the game at
+the last minute? I know he threatened to blow up several times, but he
+always tightened. Two were gone when he let Murray steal home. Even
+then there’d been a chance, for I might have run in another man; but he
+followed his dumbness up with a fool heave to the left-field bleachers.
+There wasn’t a bit of sense in it, and, unless he was trying to pass
+over the game, I can’t understand why he did it.”
+
+“It was the silliest thing I ever saw a pitcher do,” asserted Franklin
+Parlmee.
+
+“I admit that it was crazy,” agreed Collier. “But he can pitch, and
+we need the best that’s in our twirling staff in order to keep first
+place this year. The loss of a single pitcher would be pretty sure to
+fix us now. You’ve got to use sober judgment, Carson, if you land the
+championship, and doing that means something to you, as well as myself.
+The old burg will support a winning team and make it a money-maker, but
+it hasn’t much stomach for losers.”
+
+“You can bank on it, Mr. Collier,” said Carson, “that I’m going to
+do my level best to land on top. I’m not in the game, any more than
+you are, for the fun there is in it. If you hadn’t reckoned I knew my
+business, I wouldn’t be where I am now.”
+
+“Surely not,” agreed the owner. “Kennedy did a good turn last season,
+and I’d not thought of displacing him if he’d shown an ability to keep
+the bunch united. Jealousy and cliques on a ball team always put it to
+the bad. It’s up to you to smooth things out, and I’m afraid you’re not
+succeeding. But for internal troubles, the Blue Stockings’ lead now
+would make it practically impossible for the Specters or any other team
+to head ’em.”
+
+Al Carson was not at all pleased by the criticism of his employer, but
+he had sufficient good sense to repress open resentment. He made the
+plea that he should be given time to “smooth out the wrinkles.”
+
+“If I’m going to be given full swing,” he said, “I think I should have
+it. I let Locke go the limit to-day because of criticism in my handling
+of him. Give me the proper rope, Mr. Collier, and I’ll deliver the
+goods; but no manager can do that unless he’s unhampered.”
+
+“It has never been my intention to interfere in a way to hamper you,”
+returned Collier a bit tartly. “Naturally, I presume I have the right
+to talk things over with you.”
+
+Half apologetically Carson hastened to state that it was not his
+intention to question that point.
+
+“Leave me to handle this grouchy man,” he promised, “and I’ll bring him
+into harness. I know we need him to do a certain amount of pitching,
+but he’s got to understand that there’s such a thing as discipline. He
+ought to know he can’t be sassy to his manager.”
+
+While this talk was in progress Lefty’s teammates, starting for their
+hotel in a motor bus, wondered what had become of him. It was Rufe
+Hyland who announced that he had seen Locke taking a trolley car all by
+himself.
+
+“S’pose he feels rotten,” said Rufe, “and so he sneaked.”
+
+“There was something doing ’tween him and the old man,” said Kid
+Lewis. “Carson called him for a private confab, and I heard sounds of
+fireworks.”
+
+“It’s a shame,” said Laughing Larry, looking strangely doleful, “a
+beastly shame he had that spasm in the ninth.”
+
+“Spasm?” growled Herman Brock. “Looked to me more like a trance. What
+ailed him, anyhow?”
+
+“What’s been ailing him for some days?” questioned Jack Daly. “He
+don’t eat, and I happen to know he ain’t sleeping well.”
+
+Dalton knew this also, although he had said nothing about it. Suddenly,
+to the surprise of the others, Grist, who had taken no part in the
+conversation, spoke up.
+
+“The boy must be off his feed,” said Pete. “Any youngster is apt to
+have a slump. Give him time and he’ll come round.”
+
+Now this was particularly generous of Grist, who at other times, with
+Lefty going at his best, had shown a disposition to belittle the
+southpaw’s fine work. Promptly Dalton’s heart warmed toward the old
+veteran.
+
+“You’re right, Pete,” he said, “and mebbe you’re the very one to put
+him back on his pins.”
+
+“Me?” grunted Grist.
+
+“Yes, you.”
+
+“How y’ mean?”
+
+“By talking to him. By encouraging him.”
+
+“Huh!” grunted the old twirler. “He wouldn’t listen to me.”
+
+“I believe he would, Pete. Lefty’s a ripping fine fellow when he’s
+right――the finest ever. He’s generous and whole-souled, without a touch
+of jealousy in his make-up. All of a sudden he’s gone wrong, and nobody
+can account for it. His particular friends can’t talk to him. They’ve
+tried.”
+
+“Then I dunno why I should waste my breath,” said Grist slowly. “Likely
+he’d jump on me and sink his spikes to the sole leather.”
+
+“I don’t believe it,” protested Larry earnestly. “He acts like he’d
+somehow got a fool notion that everybody’s sore on him. Now, if he saw
+that you didn’t feel that way――”
+
+“All right,” snapped Grist shortly. “Leave it to me; I’ll talk to him
+like a father to a wayward son.”
+
+“But be careful,” cautioned Dalton. “Handle him right.”
+
+“Leave it to me, I tell yer,” advised Grist once more.
+
+That night Lefty ate alone at the hotel, shunning his teammates. He
+picked at his food like a man insulting his appetite, if he had one.
+When he left the dining room and walked out through the lobby without
+looking to the right or left, Grist followed him.
+
+Ten minutes later Grant, Hyland, and Dalton, chatting in a front
+window, were startled to see old Peter appear before them, his face the
+picture of anger and disgust.
+
+“Say,” snorted the veteran twirler, “when anybody gets me to try
+anything like that again he’ll know it. Why, that dub would slap his
+grandmother’s face if she peeped to him. I overtook him by chance on
+the street and tried to talk decent. What did I get? He seemed to
+think I was trying to rub something into him, and I couldn’t argue it
+out of his dumb noddle. The more I said the dirtier he got. I just had
+to give it up and quit sudden before I forgot myself and handed him a
+bunch of fives. Anybody that wants to talk to him hereafter can do so.
+_Excuse me!_”
+
+“He wouldn’t listen?” asked Dalton in deep disappointment. “Did you
+make him understand that your motives were friendly?”
+
+“Dunno. I tried hard enough. ’Twan’t no good. If anybody else’d met me
+that way, I’d soaked him. Now I’m done with Lefty Locke.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ UNDER A CLOUD
+
+
+Sometimes it takes very little to upset the poise of a Big League
+team. Even when a winning organization is running smoothly, an injury
+to a single player may throw the whole machinery out of mesh. To an
+outsider――a mere spectator who has not studied the peculiarities of
+baseball at close range――this often seems unaccountable. To him, in
+a club with first-class substitutes waiting to fill the position of
+any man, there seems to be no reason why the loss of a regular player
+should make such a remarkable difference in the work of the entire
+outfit.
+
+Few outsiders realize how evenly matched the clubs often are in the
+first division. Many times the action of an astute manager in replacing
+a player who seems to be doing splendid work in his position with
+another player, apparently no better, has turned a losing club into
+a winner, the secret of this being that the man substituted fitted
+in more nicely with the fine adjustment of the great machine, like a
+perfectly made pinion in the works of a watch.
+
+It is not drawing it too fine to compare a first-class Big League team
+to a high-grade watch. Time after time the spectators wonder at the
+clockwork precision of the living machine upon the field. Now and then,
+at rare intervals, of course, this piece of machinery temporarily goes
+wrong; but a little oiling or adjusting puts it right again, and it
+once more resumes its accurate, methodical, mechanical course.
+
+The pitching staff may be likened to the mainspring of the watch.
+Without pitchers of the highest grade any club, no matter how strong it
+may be in other departments, is badly handicapped; with such a staff it
+often happens that a team of otherwise inferior caliber makes no end
+of trouble and worriment for the leaders. And, despite his ill-advised
+handling of Lefty Locke, no one knew this better than Al Carson.
+
+When it became known that Lefty had been fined and suspended, some of
+his teammates attempted to condole with him in a cheerful, joshing
+way, but not one of them repeated such advances; for he cut them short
+with such snappy, savage abruptness that they were justified in their
+resentment of his manner.
+
+The second game of the series between the Specters and the Blue
+Stockings proved to be a slugging match, in which each team used three
+pitchers. Pink Dillon, starting for the visitors, was pounded off the
+mound in the second inning and replaced by Orth. He lasted until the
+seventh, and then gave way to Grist, who took up the burden with the
+locals leading by one run. Even “Old Reliable” was not respected by
+the Specters, who slashed his slants mercilessly. Nevertheless, by a
+great batting rally in the ninth, the Blue Stockings tied up the score.
+But Grist was forced to work like a horse for three more long innings
+before his teammates got to Jim Donovan and hammered out the run which
+finally gave them the game fourteen to thirteen.
+
+The newspaper reporters called it a “swat fest.” In his wire to the
+_Blade_, Jack Stillman, on the road for his paper with the Blue
+Stockings, vaguely hinted at future trouble for Carson on account of
+the condition of his pitching staff. Besides Carson himself, no one
+realized better than Stillman the peril of this crucial period in the
+great struggle.
+
+Under suspension, Lefty Locke was not on the bench with his teammates.
+Stillman, who had twice tried to get an interview with Lefty, saw him
+soberly watching the struggle from a portion of the stand near the
+reporters’ section, and wondered what really had happened to change
+this fine, open-hearted fellow into a gloomy grouch.
+
+“I’ll get at him again,” thought the reporter. “He’s got to talk to
+me. He can’t stand me off like an iceberg.”
+
+But after the game Locke disappeared with the crowd that disappointedly
+melted away, and Stillman was compelled to postpone his interview.
+
+With his ears open for everything connected with his business, the
+newspaper man that night heard something which sent him in search of
+Carson for confirmation. However, he obtained little satisfaction from
+the manager. Then, remembering his desire to have another talk with
+Locke, he tried to find Lefty, and failed. The southpaw was not in his
+room, and none of the players seemed to know where he could be located.
+
+In Dirk Nelson’s room Stillman found Kid Lewis and Jack Daly lounging
+and talking things over with the catcher. Being well liked by the
+entire team, he was invited to join them.
+
+“We was just figgerin’ on our chances to-morrer,” said Daly. “We’ve got
+to have another one of the games here to keep us afloat on the roller.”
+
+“If the Specters play the way they did to-day,” said Stillman, “you
+ought to cop one more, anyhow.”
+
+“Huh!” grunted the Kid, twisting off a chew of tobacco with his square
+teeth, “seems to me we didn’t shine like stars of the first magnitude
+this P.M. Why, with old Peter on the firing line we was barely able to
+rake in the plum by one measly run.”
+
+“And the way Grist had to go, he won’t be in any shape to-morrow,” said
+Nelson. “Neither Orth nor Dillon can hold this bunch of sack swipers,
+and, besides pitching yesterday, Locke’s suspended. We’ve got a couple
+of reserves, but Handy’s arm is broke in the middle, and Carney has
+been sick for a month. Excuse my tears.”
+
+“I wish you’d tell me,” said Stillman, “what’s the matter with Locke,
+anyhow.”
+
+“Tell _us_,” invited the trio in chorus.
+
+The reporter shook his head. “I’ve tried to find out, but he won’t talk
+to me. Anybody would think,” he added in an injured way, “that I was
+his worst enemy; and I was about the only news man who pulled hard for
+him all the way after he joined the Hornets in the South last spring.”
+
+“He’s sick,” cried Nelson, thumping his knee. “If he ain’t, he’s crazy,
+and oughter be shut up somewhere with the rest of the bugs. Think of
+him going wrong just now! Wouldn’t it make a parson use bad language!”
+
+“I heard something to-night,” said Stillman. “I wonder if you fellows
+have got wind of it? There’s a rumor that Carson has a deal on.”
+
+“What sort of a deal?” asked Daly.
+
+“A trade. They say he got busy on the wire this morning, and that he’s
+trying to make arrangements to trade Locke off for another pitcher.”
+
+“Who says so?” snapped Lewis.
+
+“I don’t believe it!” shouted Daly.
+
+“Thunder!” breathed Nelson.
+
+“You know I can’t go round blowing the source of my information,” said
+Stillman, “but it seemed to come straight enough.”
+
+“Perhaps it is straight,” said Nelson. “Carson ain’t never took to
+Locke. But who’s the man he’s after?”
+
+“You couldn’t guess,” said the reporter. “I won’t prolong your agony.
+If the report is true, it’s Chick O’Brien, of the Wolves.”
+
+Even with the warning he had given them, this statement seemed to
+strike them like a bursting bombshell. The Wolves, although in the
+second division, had harried the leaders all through the season, mainly
+by the marvelous work of O’Brien, and it was generally agreed that with
+a first-division team behind him Chick would show himself one of the
+great pitchers in the business.
+
+“Sufferin’ snakes!” cried Lewis, his face glowing and his eyes
+snapping. “If we could get Chick now, I’d begin right away planning how
+to spend my post-season money.”
+
+“Me, too,” agreed Daly.
+
+“There’s nothing to it,” announced Nelson. “You couldn’t pry O’Brien
+away from the Wolves with a twenty-thousand dollar lever. Old Frazer
+wouldn’t let him go for _two_ youngsters like Locke and a barrel of
+money to boot. Every manager in the league has been after him, and
+Frazer’s held on with the grip of death, knowing the Wolves would go
+plumb into the sub-cellar without Chick.”
+
+“Collier’s got the dough to buy almost anything, and he’s a plunger
+when he gets started,” said Stillman. “I reckon he’d be willing to
+lose money this season to cop the championship again. Anyhow, Carson
+wouldn’t deny that he was trying to put such a deal across. He wouldn’t
+say anything about it.”
+
+“Whether it’s true or not, the story is bad for Locke,” said Nelson;
+“and if it gets to his ears it’s going to make him worse than he is.”
+
+“Or brace him up,” put in Daly. “Mebbe it will do that.”
+
+Of course, the rumor spread swiftly, and in short order every man on
+the team had heard of it, save Locke himself. For reasons, no one told
+Lefty.
+
+The fears of the Blue Stockings seemed justified when the Specters
+walked away with the third game of the series by a score of eight to
+two. Such a defeat, instead of disheartening them, seemed to fire
+them with desperation, and the fourth and final game proved to be
+another terrific battle, in which the two teams seesawed from start to
+finish, resorting to every legitimate device and trick as opportunities
+arose. Nevertheless, only for a fluke in the eighth inning, the locals
+doubtless would have taken the game.
+
+With two down and two on the cushions, Herman Brock banged the ball
+into deep left, and it went bounding to the fence, with Forbes in hot
+pursuit. The fielder had been playing deep, knowing Brock’s menace
+as a slugger, and, but for an unforeseen freak of fate, he doubtless
+would have secured the ball and held the enemy to a single run. It
+happened, however, that close to the ground there was a small hole in
+the fence――a hole barely large enough to push an ordinary baseball
+through; and never before had the sphere sought out that little opening
+hidden by a thin fringe of grass. Now, with seeming perverseness, it
+went straight through the hole, giving Brock a homer and putting the
+visitors again in the lead.
+
+Orth had been wabbling, and Carson had wisely kept Dillon warming up
+all through the game. Now, when the Specters came to bat again, the
+manager took a chance and sent Pink to the hillock.
+
+Strange as it seemed, the slants and benders of this second-string
+pitcher, which had been so easy for the locals to fathom two days
+before, now proved tremendously puzzling. And, though the fighting
+“ghosts” became menacing in both the eighth and ninth, they could not
+quite succeed in pushing a runner round the course.
+
+Therefore, for all of the tattered condition of their pitching staff,
+the Blue Stockings broke even in the series with their most dangerous
+rivals.
+
+But they were now to invade the territory of the Terriers, always to be
+feared, and the dark cloud swung lower.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ THE STRANGER
+
+
+The train was swinging along through open, rolling country when Locke,
+now being left severely to himself on account of his churlishness by
+his resentful teammates, tired of gazing dully at the flying landscape,
+rose and passed down the aisle of the special car. Scarcely anyone
+seemed to observe him, and he noticed no one. When he had disappeared,
+however, Billy Orth shook his head and turned to Larry Dalton.
+
+“Thundering shame, Larry,” he said in a low tone. “Do you know, I think
+I’ve solved the trouble.”
+
+“Then you’re wiser than the rest of us.”
+
+“It’s the girl business, to begin with.”
+
+“Oh, we’ve all guessed that much, but being thrown down by a girl isn’t
+enough to put an ordinary well-balanced chap, same as Lefty seemed
+to be, all to the punk. Of course, it might affect a fellow, but it
+wouldn’t turn him from a fine, jolly soul into a sour, nasty-tempered,
+unreasoning grump. You’ve got to go farther, Billy.”
+
+“I have been,” asserted the other with assurance.
+
+“What way?”
+
+“He’s taken to hitting the booze.”
+
+“No!” breathed Laughing Larry incredulously. “Why, he never drank. He’d
+take a glass of beer now and then, to be sure, but you couldn’t drive a
+drink of hard stuff into him. You’re wrong, Orth.”
+
+“When a man gets double crossed in love he’s liable to do any freakish
+thing, and lots of ’em affiliate with the jag juice.”
+
+“But Locke hasn’t been full. No one has seen him under the influence.”
+
+“Perhaps he’s under the influence right now. Perhaps he’s keeping about
+so much redeye in his skin all the time. Maybe that’s why he herds
+by himself so much. He sure has had plenty of chance to drink by his
+lonesome lately.”
+
+“Yes, but―― Oh, say, you’ve got to have something better than mere
+supposition to base this on.”
+
+“I have.”
+
+“What?”
+
+“Saw him coming out of a saloon last night. Couldn’t believe my eyes at
+first, but it was Lefty, sure. You know firewater works in peculiar
+ways with some men. Occasionally it turns a jolly good fellow into an
+ugly dog. Lefty hasn’t hit it up enough to stagger or show the usual
+signs, but in his effort to drown his sorrow he’s taken just enough to
+change him completely. Something ought to be done. But when a fellow is
+absolutely unapproachable, what can you do?”
+
+“What can you?” echoed Larry.
+
+In the meantime, passing through the train, Lefty had entered the
+ordinary smoker, which chanced to be so well filled that nearly every
+seat was taken. Through a blue haze of smoke he peered in search of
+a seat as he walked along the aisle. Suddenly a young man took a
+brierwood pipe from his mouth, stared hard at the pitcher, and rose to
+his feet.
+
+“By Jove! Phil Hazelton!” he exclaimed. “Why, how are you, old man?”
+
+Lefty stared, unsmiling, at the speaker, apparently failing to notice
+the extended hand.
+
+“Pardon me,” he said; “I don’t remember you.”
+
+“Don’t remember me?” cried the other incredulously. “Great Scott! Have
+I changed so much? I know I’m threatened with premature baldness, but
+still it can’t be that in such a short time you’ve forgotten Walt
+Hetner.”
+
+“Hetner?” said Locke, frowning and shaking his head in a puzzled way.
+“I don’t have the slightest recollection of you.”
+
+“Cæsar’s ghost! I knew you at Princeton. We were college mates.”
+
+“Princeton?” said Lefty. “Yes, I was at Princeton, I believe.”
+
+“You pitched for the varsity nine. Your old man didn’t like it, and
+was pretty sore. I’ve heard lately that you’ve gone into professional
+baseball. Don’t get a chance to see many games myself nowadays, but the
+report is that you’re _some pitcher_ for the Blue Stockings.”
+
+“I have been pitching for them,” admitted Locke slowly. “Sorry I don’t
+remember you.”
+
+His pride hurt, Hetner sank back into his seat, and Lefty passed on.
+The rebuffed man turned to his companion, who was an old acquaintance
+he had met on the train.
+
+“Well, wouldn’t that frost you some, Wilson?” he exclaimed, his face
+flushed. “Why, I knew that fellow at college as well as I know you, and
+he’s the last man I’d expect to hand out anything of that sort.”
+
+“Do you think he didn’t recognize you, Doctor?”
+
+“Recognize me? Of course he did. That’s what makes me hot. I don’t know
+why he should play the cad. It’s beyond me. Perhaps he’s ashamed of
+the fact that he’s playing professional baseball under a fake name.”
+
+“Still,” said Wilson, “he might be decent, at least.”
+
+Lefty came to a seat in which a slender, pallid, sad-eyed young man sat
+alone.
+
+“I beg your pardon, stranger,” he said; “is this seat taken?”
+
+The young man started a bit, glanced up, and smiled faintly.
+
+“No, it isn’t taken, pal,” he answered. “But how the dickens did you
+happen to know my name?”
+
+“Your name?” said Lefty, sinking down, a puzzled frown plowing a deep
+furrow between his eyes.
+
+“Yes. You called me Stranger. That’s my monacker――Robert Stranger; Bob
+for short.”
+
+“Oh, I get you,” said Lefty, failing to return the young man’s engaging
+smile. “It was just by chance that I called you that.”
+
+“Well, for a moment I thought you knew me. It’s mighty lonesome taking
+this jaunt without anybody to chin to, and I’m glad you came along.
+Traveling alone yourself?”
+
+“In a way I am,” answered Lefty, betraying a willingness to talk to
+this chance acquaintance which would have surprised his antagonized
+friends in the special car. “I’m a ball player, but I ducked to get
+away from the rest of the bunch. They’re on this train.”
+
+“Oh, a ball player!” murmured Mr. Stranger. “Professional? Big League?”
+
+“The Blue Stockings.”
+
+“They’re some,” beamed the man by the car window. “Of course I hear
+plenty of baseball talk. Can’t help it. But I never did take to the
+game much. It may sound like bunk to you, but I never saw a real game
+in my life.”
+
+“Really?” said Lefty, in an expressionless way. “That is rather odd.”
+
+“S’pose I’m a crank,” laughed the other; “but all the guff I hear and
+see in the newspapers about baseball makes me weary; it sure does.
+Seems like ninety per cent. of the population has gone dippy about the
+game. Once on a time I was mistook for a pitcher I happened to look
+like. A gent blew up and called me by that ball tosser’s name and asked
+me how I was coming on at it. He didn’t believe me when I told him I’d
+never pitched a ball in my life. Why, I don’t know a curve from a wedge
+of restaurant pie.”
+
+“You’re a rare bird,” said Lefty.
+
+“I am, pal, and I’m rather proud of it.”
+
+“What’s your business, if it’s not too personal?”
+
+The young man hesitated and coughed behind his hand.
+
+“I’m a――a diamond cutter,” he answered. “That is, I have been, but I’ve
+had to give it up on account of my health. Too confining, you know. I’m
+not much on being confined,” he continued oddly. “You can see it has
+rather taken hold of me. My health isn’t just what it should be.”
+
+“I noticed you were unusually pale.”
+
+“That comes from confinement. A pill slinger told me it would be a good
+thing for me to get out into the country and find a job somewhere in
+the open air. I’m looking for work on a farm. The rural life for mine,
+far from the lure of high-cut swinging doors. Between us, pal, I’ve
+hit it up a bit too hard in my day. I always was a wild one,” he went
+on garrulously. “Even when I was a boy I touched too many of the high
+spots. I’ve been a mark, too. Ever play poker? Well, I’ve been the
+easiest dub you ever saw at that game. But I like it. Can’t seem to
+keep away from it. Every time I get a roll on hand I go searching for a
+game and someone to pass the velvet over to. Even now I’ve got a little
+wad of long green that’s burning in my pocket. Before you came along I
+was thinking I’d like to find three or four good sports and get up a
+little game.”
+
+“I don’t play poker――for blood,” said Lefty. “A bunch on the team are
+at it every chance they get; though, of course, they only play a
+little game.”
+
+“Oh, that would suit me. I don’t want to really gamble, you know. I’m a
+minister’s son.”
+
+Lefty refrained from saying that he was another.
+
+“Brought up in a straight-laced family,” Stranger went on. “My old
+man thought cards the tools of Satan. And my mother”――a cloud seemed
+to come to his face and his smile faded――“it broke her heart when she
+found out I was playing penny ante with a bunch of game lads. Mebbe
+that’s what finished her. The old gent didn’t last long after she was
+put away under the daisies.”
+
+“Then your father and mother are both dead?”
+
+“Both gone. But come, what’s the use to talk of things like that?
+Let’s see if we can’t find a couple of lonesome travelers looking for
+amusement. Let’s start something. A little game of poker to pass away――”
+
+The sentence never was finished. At this moment there came a sudden
+jarring, grinding, crashing sound. A broken rail had given way on a
+curve, and it shot half the train from the track to strew it into a
+splintered mass of wreckage along the foot of the embankment.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ THE RETIRED MANAGER
+
+
+Throughout his baseball career it had been the object of old Jack
+Kennedy to quit the game voluntarily with honors and retire to his
+little Ohio farm in the town of Deering. Being of a somewhat frugal
+turn, he had saved from his earnings while in the game enough to
+pay for the farm to the last dollar, which was a matter of no small
+satisfaction to him when Charles Collier, the new owner of the Blue
+Stockings, dropped him from the management of the team in order to give
+Al Carson that position.
+
+Without egotism, Kennedy knew himself to be more capable than Carson;
+but still he made no protest, and, in spite of his evident regret over
+bidding the players good-by, he succeeded very well in hiding the sore
+spot.
+
+“I’m done with baseball, boys,” he said. “Henceforth it’s the rural
+life for me, raising corn and pumpkins and garden sass in general. If
+any of you ever come through my way, don’t forget where I live. You’ll
+make a hit with me if you take my wigwam for the home plate and squat
+on the bench at my fireside.”
+
+Kennedy knew full well the real trouble with the Blue Stockings, and
+it had been his object to break up the cliques and smooth out the
+wrinkles on the team in his own level-headed way. He knew also that
+Carson was due to have his troubles, and, like the generous man he was,
+he had approached the new manager and attempted to put him wise. These
+advances, however, were not pleasing to Carson, who had cut him short
+in a way that caused Kennedy to bottle up abruptly.
+
+“All right,” old Jack had muttered to himself. “All right, my wise
+gink. Go your way and see where you land. I’m betting it won’t be on
+top.”
+
+Despite the fact that he had said he was done with baseball, it was
+no more than natural that he should keep track of the career of the
+Blue Stockings under the new management, and the sporting department
+of the big daily newspaper he received regularly by mail was the
+first page examined. Each day he drove a mile and a half into town to
+get the two o’clock mail, and the letters he received never seemed
+to have much attraction for him until he had ripped off the cover of
+his paper, glanced at the percentage of the Big League teams, and
+perused the report of the last contest in which the Blue Stockings had
+participated. While he was doing this his face was a study. Sometimes
+he would smile, but more often he frowned and shook his head, and
+occasionally he muttered to himself. Once a man, standing near, was
+startled to hear him suddenly exclaim:
+
+“What’s the matter with the boy, anyhow? Either he’s slumped or
+Carson’s handing him a rotten deal.”
+
+Of course he was speaking of Lefty Locke, and when, later, he saw a
+printed reference to the southpaw’s poor form, he puzzled still more
+over the matter. For Kennedy had realized the need of new blood on the
+pitching staff of the Blue Stockings, and had banked a good deal on the
+ability of Locke to aid in holding the team in first place.
+
+With an excellent overseer on his farm, old Jack did not labor hard
+enough to hurt himself. The truth was, he found it difficult to step
+directly from the baseball harness into something so wholly different
+and so decidedly tame and monotonous by comparison. At times he fretted
+a little, although he did his best to overcome the restless spells that
+assailed him.
+
+“When an old race horse is turned out to pasture,” he told himself,
+“it’s a good thing for him to realize that his track days are over.”
+
+Now it chanced that the town of Deering supported one of the teams
+which composed a four-cornered bush league, and, although the loyal
+citizens had put their hands deep into their pockets to finance the
+club, the “Deers,” as the local organization was known, were running
+a rather bad third in the race. This fact was the cause of no small
+dissatisfaction to Peter McLaughlin, proprietor of the Central House,
+the principal hotel, and one of the most generous contributors to the
+fund. In the old days McLaughlin had played baseball a little himself,
+and he was confident now that he knew just where the trouble with the
+local club lay.
+
+“It’s in the management,” he told the other members of the board of
+directors. “Sperry made a record as manager for a little jerkwater
+college club, therefore he thinks he knows all about it. But I tell you
+he’s no match for old Hank Bristol, of the Buccaneers, to say nothing
+of Hi Pelty, who’s handling the Stars. Last year, this time, the
+Buccaneers were in third place, where we are now, and we was banging
+away trying to get ahead of the Stars. This year we’re down next to the
+Boobs in the basement, and unless something’s done even that bunch of
+dummies will get ahead of us. Sperry better throw up his job as manager
+and stick to his regular business drawing sody water at Folsom’s drug
+store.”
+
+“If he did that,” said Lawyer Gange, secretary of the baseball
+association, “who’d we get to fill his place? Nobody else wants the
+job――unless you do, Peter.”
+
+“Excuse me,” said McLaughlin. “I’ve got my own business to look after.
+I’ve coughed up a hundred bucks to back the team, and I’m ready to put
+in another hundred if necessary, but I couldn’t waste my time trying to
+run the outfit, even if I knew how.”
+
+“Well, that’s the way with the rest of us, so what are we going to do?”
+
+“I’ve got an idea. There’s Jack Kennedy home on his farm, and he knows
+more baseball in a minute than anybody in this town, or in the whole
+league, for that matter, except possibly old Hank Bristol. If we could
+get Kennedy to――”
+
+“_If_ we could,” exclaimed Rufe Manning, the treasurer. “There’s that
+if. You don’t s’pose Kennedy would monkey with a little bush team like
+ours after being manager of Big League champs, do yer?”
+
+“No tellin’. Perhaps he might.”
+
+“He won’t,” said the lawyer. “He told me himself that he was done with
+baseball. Why, he hasn’t even had interest enough since coming home to
+see one of our games, though he’s been invited to do so.”
+
+“No tellin’ what can be done with him,” persisted the hotel proprietor.
+“He ought to have enough local pride to want to see his own town stand
+well in this league. If somebody could prick that pride a little, mebbe
+he’d take holt. I don’t reckon he’s workin’ himself to death on his
+farm. He’s got the time.”
+
+“Well, you’re the man to try him,” said Gange. “It’s up to you, Peter.”
+
+“All right,” agreed Peter. “Leave it to me and I’ll see what I can do.
+We’re going up against Bristol’s bunch of Buccaneers this afternoon,
+and I’ll look out for Kennedy if he comes in for his mail same as
+usual.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ BACK IN THE GAME
+
+
+When he cornered old Jack at the post office, half an hour before
+the game was to start, McLaughlin’s proposition failed to arouse the
+retired manager’s interest.
+
+“I’m done with the game, Peter,” said Kennedy. “I’m just a plain farmer
+now. As long as I don’t mean to get mixed up with it again, it’s best
+that I should keep away from the field.”
+
+“Do you know, Jack,” said the hotel man, “folks around here say you’ve
+got a grouch. They say you’re sore on baseball ’cause you was turned
+down. We’ve been rather proud of you in this town. When you come home
+twice after winning the championship we gave you a blow-out both times.
+You seem to have forgot that.”
+
+“No, I haven’t forgot it, Peter. But when a man has quit a certain line
+of business, and quit it for good, he’d better cease to monkey with it.
+With me baseball was a business for a good many years. I own up that I
+was rather proud of my record at it.”
+
+“And you was so proud of being manager of Big League champs that
+now you won’t even ask how the little fellers are doing in your own
+home town. You used to set round my office winters and talk it over
+with the boys and give them points, but this time you’re changed so
+folks scarcely know you. Why, there’s Hank Bristol, manager of the
+Buccaneers, who’s asked for you every time he hit Deering, saying as
+how he used to know you well and he’d like to put his blinkers on you
+again. He was some baseball player once himself, and he’s pretty clever
+at it yet, as fur as our sort of baseball goes. I should think you’d
+like to see him operate around second base. He’s up to the field right
+now with his bunch, and he says he’s goin’ to drive another nail in our
+coffin. His team ain’t only a few points behind the Stars, and Hank
+reckons the pennant’s as good as nailed.”
+
+“Bristol always did talk a lot with his mouth,” said Kennedy. “If he
+can’t win any other way, he’ll bluff out a victory.”
+
+It was the sore spot not yet healed which had caused Kennedy to avoid
+Bristol; for Jack, knowing old Hank would ask questions, was far from
+eager to furnish explanations regarding his sudden release by Collier.
+
+“Oh, well, do as you’re a mind to,” said McLaughlin, with pretended
+indifference. “I’ve done some personal favors for you. When we give
+you that banquet at the hotel last year――”
+
+Flushing, Kennedy interrupted. “If you’re going to put it up to me that
+way, Peter,” he said, “I’ll go out and watch the game to-day. Perhaps I
+can give your manager some tips that will help him.”
+
+In this manner it came about that Kennedy saw the struggle that
+afternoon between the Deers and the Buccaneers and warned the manager
+of the former team, in the midst of the game, that Bristol’s players
+had the signals of the locals and were, therefore, forewarned and
+prepared for every method of attack. This warning, however, was not
+sufficient to prevent the Buccaneers from winning. In the eighth inning
+they secured a lead of two runs through their disposition to take
+chances on the paths, and the failure of the Deering pitcher to hold
+the runners close to the cushions, and at the end of the ninth they
+were still one tally to the good, although outbatted and outfielded.
+With a supercilious, confident grin adorning his homely face, Bristol
+encountered Kennedy after the clash was over.
+
+“You see how easy it is out here in the bush, Ken, old hoss,” he
+chuckled. “It’s a reg’lar cinch to make a winning team if you’ve got
+any mater’al to work with. Before next week’s over we’ll be leadin’.
+I took it easy to-day. Saved my best pill slinger for the Stars
+to-morrow. Your poor little Deers are due to find a resting place in a
+deep, dark hole.”
+
+“Don’t call them _my_ Deers, Hank,” remonstrated Kennedy. “I ain’t got
+nothing to do with them. If I had――”
+
+“It would be just the same, Jack, old boy. You had a streak with the
+Blue Stockings, I own up; but it was broke before they put Carson in
+your place. I reckon you lost your rabbit’s foot. If I’d ever had your
+chance――”
+
+“You’ve had chances enough in your day,” cut in Kennedy a trifle
+warmly. “I was about ready to quit baseball, anyhow; that’s why I
+bought my farm here.”
+
+“Oh, you was always a clever gink holding on to the dollars and salting
+’em away,” returned Bristol.
+
+In truth, he was jealous of Kennedy’s success, although he endeavored
+to disguise the fact beneath a joshing exterior. Such joshing, however,
+was not calculated to please.
+
+“Let me tell you something, Hank,” said Kennedy. “If the manager of
+this Deering bunch knew his business he could eat you up. It wasn’t
+much of a trick to swipe such a simple code of signals, and any sort
+of runners could steal on a pitcher with a movement like Corey’s. Don’t
+get so chesty.”
+
+“Old hoss,” retorted the Buccaneer manager, “if you had the Deers it
+would be just the same, believe me.”
+
+“Perhaps so,” said Kennedy.
+
+Twenty minutes later he was talking with Peter McLaughlin in a private
+room at the hotel.
+
+“What was that proposition you made to me, Peter?” he asked. “Did you
+say the town generally thought Sperry inefficient as a manager and
+wanted someone else?”
+
+“That’s what I said,” answered the landlord. “We’ve talked it over, and
+you’re the man we’d like to have. Sperry would get out willingly, too.
+He’s got about enough of it, with everybody kickin’ at him.”
+
+“If you’re giving it to me straight,” said Kennedy, “I’ll stand. You
+may tell the association that.”
+
+At a meeting of the directors, called that night, Sperry resigned as
+manager of the Deering baseball team and Jack Kennedy was chosen to
+fill the position vacated.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ BUILDING UP THE TEAM
+
+
+With the season three-quarters over, it was no cinch for anybody to
+whip into winning form a bush team like the Deers, and Jack Kennedy
+soon realized that he had a real problem on his hands. Having
+shouldered the responsibility, however, he went at it with the same
+conscientious earnestness he would have devoted to a Big League
+organization, and the bushers, who had been taking things easy and
+“soldiering” under Sperry, quickly learned that there would be no
+loafing or fooling with the new manager. Whenever possible there was
+regular forenoon practice, and when this could not be secured it was
+necessary for the team to appear on the playing field for a long
+warming-up before any league game.
+
+The code of signals arranged and put into use by Sperry and Toots
+Kilgore, second baseman and captain of the Deers, was promptly cast
+into the discard. In place of these incomplete and rather simple
+signals, old Jack introduced a new code, at which the men were
+drilled on the field and off, the requirement being that every one of
+them should become so familiar with the signs that there could be no
+possible misunderstanding, doubt, or hesitation in any event.
+
+Of course, Kennedy secured a suit for himself, which enabled him not
+only to sit on the bench and direct his men, but to go on to the
+coaching lines or take the place of another player as a pinch hitter or
+upon the field. The loose ends were quickly gathered up, and the former
+hit-or-miss style of going after a game was abandoned for something
+bearing a genuine resemblance to inside baseball.
+
+Nor did it take old Jack long to perceive that the arrangement of the
+team, as well as the batting order, needed doctoring. His first move,
+of course was to line up the batters so that their individual work in
+offense would become as effective as possible in securing runs. Almost
+simultaneously he called to the bench the regular center fielder,
+although that individual had established a record in the league for
+his great ground covering, sureness on flies, and splendidly accurate
+long throws to the sacks or the plate. It was Kennedy’s theory that
+all outfielders should be hitters, and the man benched had the lowest
+batting average on the team. The former first baseman was sent out into
+the middle garden, where he soon demonstrated that he had the making
+of an outfielder.
+
+The regular third baseman did not handle hot grounders to Kennedy’s
+satisfaction, but in all other ways he could cover the sack well,
+therefore the manager switched him round to first, where he would not
+get so many sizzling grass clippers. This move proved to be a piece
+of wisdom, but it left the third station vacant, and for some time
+Kennedy was bothered to plug the hole. The first person tried was Tim
+Coffin, the utility man, who had been kept on the bench, but Coffin
+had the same trouble with sharp ground hits. Nevertheless, at bat he
+was certain to get one clean, hard bingle a game, and his average was
+nearly two, which created in Kennedy’s breast a strong desire to keep
+him regularly at work.
+
+“Have you ever done any backstopping, Coffin?” asked the manager.
+
+“A little,” was the reply. “I started out to be a catcher.”
+
+“You’ve got a good whip,” said old Jack. “We’ll try you behind the pan
+to-day. Brinkley will have a go at third.”
+
+Behind the pan Coffin did a splendid turn, being far more successful
+than Brinkley in stopping base pilfering. Brinkley was one of those
+backstops who could handle almost any sort of pitching and rarely let
+a wild heave get past him if there was any possible way of touching
+it, but his base throwing was erratic. The players of every other team
+in the league knew this, but they soon found that they could not reap
+the advantage of a wild throw off Coffin at a critical time, and their
+first efforts to do so cost them dearly.
+
+But Brinkley was no third baseman, and Kennedy kept the wires hot with
+distress signals in his efforts to fill that position.
+
+In response to one of those signals, Joe Digg blew into Deering. Digg
+had come up from the sand lots through the minors to the Big League,
+where, after creating a sensation in the early part of one season, he
+passed away in a blaze of red fire. Drink had sent Joe back to the
+minors and thence down into temporary oblivion. Kennedy knew him as a
+crackajack third sacker and a terror to pitchers when he was sober and
+in condition. Old Jack met the new man at the station.
+
+“Hello, Joe,” he said cordially, shaking Digg’s hand. “Glad to see you.”
+
+“Hello, Jack,” returned Digg, with equal cordiality. “I’m glad to see
+you, but I never expected it would be managing a bunch of bushers.”
+
+“Oh, this is just a little matter of sport,” explained Kennedy. “I’m
+out of the game, you know. I’m a farmer now. But it happened that they
+had a team here in this burg that was getting walloped because of bad
+management, and my friends in town drafted me into service. I want you
+to come out with me to the farm to-night, and we’ll have a little chat.”
+
+They did have a chat that night after supper on Kennedy’s veranda.
+In his bluff, open way, which seldom caused offense or produced
+resentment, the manager came to the point without beating around the
+bush.
+
+“Joe,” he said, “you ought to be drawing a fancy salary to-day in the
+Big League, and it’s your own fault that you ain’t.”
+
+“Tell me something I don’t know,” returned Digg, flushing.
+
+“Booze has downed many a good man besides yourself. Are you going to
+let it keep you down?”
+
+“I dunno. Seems like I’m such a thunderin’ fool that I can’t help it.”
+
+“Rot! You can help it. Keep away from jag hunters and you’ll be all
+right. As I said, I’m out of Big League baseball for good, but I reckon
+my judgment and my influence would count for something with a number
+of managers who are still in the game. If I should say to one of them
+that I had a player who ought to be given a trial, that man would get a
+show, even if he had been canned after one fizzle. You get me?”
+
+“I get you, Jack,” nodded Digg, a gleam of excitement in his eyes. “If
+you can work me back into the game you’ll do me a turn I’ll never
+forget.”
+
+“But you know I wouldn’t try such a thing unless I was satisfied that
+you had really turned over a new leaf and meant to cut drink out for
+good and all. You’ve got to show me, Joe.”
+
+“It’s a go!” exclaimed Digg. “If you ever catch me drinking anything
+stronger than water, put the tag on me.”
+
+In the first two games in which Digg played third for the Deers he
+accepted eleven chances, three of them of the most sensational order,
+without an error, and batted .400.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ THE MAN WHO DENIED HIMSELF
+
+
+His pitching staff gave Kennedy the most trouble. No matter how
+efficient a team may be in other departments, it cannot aspire to
+championship honors unless it has a capable staff of twirlers. Curley,
+Sullivan, and Heines, the three mound men for the Deers, each and all
+had some weakness which was a drawback.
+
+Curley was erratic and never to be depended on. One day he might pitch
+a splendid game, and follow it on his next turn with wretched work.
+Sullivan had a long swing which gave base runners a big lead and made
+it almost impossible for the best throwing catcher to keep them from
+stealing. Nor could old Jack break the man of this swing, for when he
+tried to do so Sullivan’s short-arm delivery proved to be “pie” for the
+opposing stickers. Heines had an arm that was good for four or five
+innings, then broke like the most brittle glass.
+
+In one pinch, with Heines’ wing failing in the fifth and the Deers
+having a lead of three runs, Kennedy actually went on to the mound
+himself. Curley had pitched the day before, and old Jack knew
+Sullivan’s delivery would hand the game over to the enemy. Never in his
+life had Kennedy attempted to pitch in anything resembling a league
+game, and he was not the possessor of as much as one little dinky
+curve. Yet, using from start to finish an underhanded ball, delivered
+from the knee and shot upward close across the batter’s shoulder, he
+managed to pull the game out of the fire by a margin of one lonesome
+tally.
+
+When the Deering fans hailed him as a pitcher Kennedy laughed them to
+scorn.
+
+“That was the greatest case of horseshoes ever,” he declared. “I
+couldn’t do it again against a bunch of grammar-school kids. Heines had
+the Stars dizzy by his speed, and when I handed them up that subway
+rise they simply broke their backs trying to hit it. If I’d begun the
+game I wouldn’t have lasted an inning.”
+
+All this time, of course, he was trying to get hold of other pitchers,
+and, most of all, he desired a left-hander to use against the
+Buccaneers, who had five left-handed batters. Somehow he got hold of a
+southpaw by the name of Billy Winkle, who seemed to have speed, curves,
+and control. His lack of head might have been balanced by the good
+judgment of Coffin, who was steadily and swiftly improving behind the
+bat, but Winkle lacked heart as well as head; and in the breaks the
+uproar of the rooters, combined with Billy’s fear of what was going to
+happen, invariably cut the guy ropes.
+
+About this time, still eagerly following the career of the Blue
+Stockings, Kennedy was startled one day when he opened his newspaper
+and read some black headlines on the first page which told of a
+railroad disaster in which the Big League team was involved. In the
+smash seven persons had been killed and twenty-one more or less
+seriously injured. By rare good fortune the special car containing the
+ball players had shot down the embankment on its wheels and remained
+in an upright position after plowing deep into a boggy place at the
+roadside. It had not been smashed, and, save for a shaking up and a few
+bruises, not one of the men in that car had been hurt.
+
+Having read to this point, Kennedy drew a deep breath of relief. A
+moment later, however, he uttered a smothered exclamation of dismay,
+for the next paragraph stated that one of the players, Lefty Locke, had
+not been in the car and was missing since the catastrophe. He was not
+among those killed or injured, and all efforts to find him had proved
+fruitless.
+
+“Well, I’ll be――jiggered!” muttered Kennedy. “Wasn’t in the car! Hasn’t
+been found! Well, what’s become of the boy? He was under suspension.
+I’m afraid――”
+
+He did not state what he was afraid of, but the serious, troubled face
+which he wore, and his eagerness for further details concerning the
+disaster, indicated that anxiety over the fate of Lefty remained in his
+mind.
+
+One evening, two days later, shortly after the arrival of the seven
+o’clock train in Deering, Kennedy sought Landlord McLaughlin in the
+Central House to consult with him regarding some matter concerning the
+team. As old Jack entered the office he saw a man at the desk in the
+act of registering. There was something strangely familiar about this
+man’s back, and when the new arrival made inquiries for a room with
+bath the sound of his voice caused the manager of the Deers to step
+forward quickly to get a look at his face.
+
+As the clerk was fishing a big brass key from a pigeonhole the guest
+leaned his left elbow on the edge of the desk and swung part way round,
+thus bringing himself face to face with Kennedy. The latter gasped, and
+let out something like a shout.
+
+“Holy smoke!” he cried delightedly. “As I live, it’s Lefty Locke! How
+are you, son?”
+
+To Kennedy’s astonishment, no light of recognition rose into the man’s
+eyes, and he made no move to shake the extended hand. Instead, he
+surveyed the old manager in a puzzled, doubting way, and slowly shook
+his head.
+
+“I think you’ve made a mistake, pal,” he said. “My name is
+Stranger――Robert Stranger.”
+
+His mouth open, Kennedy slowly permitted his hand to drop at his side.
+For something like half a minute he stared steadily at the person who
+had denied his acquaintance. Suddenly he laughed.
+
+“What’s the joke, Lefty?” he asked. “Put me wise.”
+
+“Really, there’s no joke,” was the grave assertion. “You’ve got me
+wrong.”
+
+“What’s that?” rasped old Jack. “Do you mean to say you don’t recognize
+John Kennedy, your old manager?”
+
+Something like an annoyed frown crept into the somber, handsome face of
+the younger man.
+
+“I tell you,” he said a trifle warmly, “you’ve got me wrong. To my
+knowledge I never heard of you in all my life. You call me Locke, but
+my name is Stranger. That’s my monacker――Robert Stranger, Bob for
+short.”
+
+Kennedy pinched himself. “I’m awake,” he muttered. “There can’t be two
+men so much alike in the whole world. Besides, he wrote his name on the
+register with his left hand.”
+
+Suddenly he began to feel a touch of anger. “See here,” he said
+harshly, “maybe your right name ain’t Locke, but you can’t deny that
+it’s Hazelton. You can’t deny that you’re a baseball pitcher and that
+you were under my management on the Blue Stockings.”
+
+“The Blue Stockings?” said the other. “They’re some. I hear plenty of
+baseball talk. Can’t help it. But I never did take to the game any.
+Perhaps it sounds like bunk to you, but I never saw a real game in my
+life.”
+
+“Help!” cried Kennedy. “I’m loony, or he is!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ PERPLEXED
+
+
+The brazen, barefaced manner in which Lefty Locke denied his identity
+and professed that he had never even seen a game of baseball was simply
+staggering. For old Jack still refused to believe the man could be any
+one save Locke himself.
+
+What was Lefty’s object? Surely he ought to know that he could not fool
+his old manager by such a silly subterfuge and barefaced falsehood.
+That he was trying to “put over” a puerile joke did not appear
+possible, and certainly there was no twinkle of mirth in his steady
+eyes, no smile upon his sober face.
+
+There was something behind the young pitcher’s denial of his identity
+which Kennedy could not understand, something which confused as well
+as annoyed him. He was mustering his wits to begin all over again when
+suddenly the new arrival said:
+
+“I trust you’ll excuse me, pal. I’ll have to wash up before supper,
+which I see is in progress now.” He glanced in the direction of the
+open doors to the dining room and turned to the clerk. “Can I have my
+room now?” he asked.
+
+“Your luggage?” questioned the clerk significantly.
+
+“I haven’t any. I’ll pay a day in advance. How much?”
+
+“Three dollars.”
+
+Producing a roll of bills, the man peeled off a two and a one and
+shoved them across the desk, whereupon the clerk handed the key over to
+a boy, who invited the guest to follow him.
+
+They had not disappeared before Kennedy was surveying the register, on
+which he found written: “Robert Stranger, N. Y.”
+
+“Well, wouldn’t that freeze you stiff!” he muttered.
+
+He was still muttering to himself when Landlord McLaughlin appeared.
+
+“What’s the matter now, Jack?” inquired the sporting proprietor of the
+Central House. “You’re growlin’ like a dog with a sore ear. Same old
+trouble ’bout pitchers, I s’pose?”
+
+“I came in to consult with you about that southpaw, Mercer, we’ve been
+trying to get holt of for a week. I’ve got him to state his terms at
+last.”
+
+“Good,” said McLaughlin.
+
+“Bad,” said Kennedy. “He wants sixty a week and board. We can’t afford
+it, Peter, in this little crossroads town. It’ll take us over our
+salary limit, too.”
+
+“We’ve got to have a fust-class pitcher at any price. You said so
+yourself. Ain’t there no way to hire him and keep under the salary
+limit?”
+
+“Only one way. We can release one of our other pitchers, along with
+the utility man we’re keeping on the bench for emergencies. If a pinch
+comes I can go into the game myself.”
+
+“Your plan seems all right to me, and I’m for it. We can get along
+without Heines. Three pitchers is all we’ve had, anyhow, and they’re
+enough. I say, nail Mercer. We’ve got to have somebody quick. I just
+heard to-night that Bristol’s signed a new twirler for the Buccaneers.
+You see, Hank don’t propose to let you git the bulge on him.”
+
+“Did you hear the name of Bristol’s new pitcher?”
+
+“Yep, but it sorter slipped me. It was Eagan or Elywin, or something
+like that. I’ll bet he’s a ripper.”
+
+“He’s probably a good man if Hank’s signed him at this late day.”
+
+“Well, you see where that puts us. You see what we’re up against. We
+can’t expect to get no Big League pitcher now.”
+
+“I don’t know ’bout that,” returned Kennedy in a low tone, his eyes on
+a man who was descending the stairs, and who turned at once toward the
+dining room. “There goes one.”
+
+“Hey? What?” spluttered the landlord.
+
+“There goes one of the cleverest young portside pitchers it has been my
+luck to see work in a game in the last three years.”
+
+“Hey?” spluttered Peter once more. “That feller there? The one just
+goin’ into the dining room?”
+
+“That’s the man.”
+
+“What you giving me, Jack?”
+
+“Straight facts.”
+
+“Why, what’s he doin’ round here?”
+
+“I dunno. That’s what gets me.”
+
+“Who is he?”
+
+“He registered as Robert Stranger, but he played under me with the Blue
+Stockings, using the name of Tom Locke. He was generally called Lefty.”
+
+Landlord McLaughlin was in a sudden sweat of excitement.
+
+“Played under you? Then you know all about him.”
+
+“I reckoned I knew a lot about him,” said Kennedy; “but in the last ten
+minutes I’ve sorter changed my mind. Brennan, of the Hornets, got him
+through a scout early in the season, but Brennan sized him up wrong
+and let him go unconditionally. I’d been after him before that, and
+I gave him a try-out. He was there with the goods. When I quit, with
+the exception of Grist, he was the most dependable pitcher the team
+had. Since then something has happened to him. I dunno what ’tis, but
+I could tell by the papers that he was goin’ wrong. He was in that
+railroad smash the other day. After the smash he wasn’t to be found.
+Now he’s here.”
+
+“Well, if you have a talk with him he’ll clear things up, of course.
+He’ll explain it all.”
+
+“I’ve had a talk with him. Instead of explaining, he pretended he
+didn’t know me. Peter, he denied that he was Lefty Locke and claimed
+his name was Stranger, under which he has registered here.”
+
+“Jerusalem!” breathed McLaughlin. “That’s mighty funny. How do you
+figger it?”
+
+“I can’t get only one solution. It must be he didn’t pull well with the
+new manager. I know Carson, and he’s rough on a man he don’t cotton to.
+Lefty was suspended shortly before that railroad smash-up. When that
+came he improved his opportunity to duck. Fool thing to do, but it must
+be just what he done, Peter. Mebbe he plans to lay low until Carson
+gets in a hole and needs him desperate. Then, perhaps, he’ll wire
+Carson and try to make terms. It don’t seem to me that the Lefty Locke
+I knew would try any such jinks as that, but you never can tell what a
+man will do.”
+
+“By goudy!” said Peter. “If that’s what he’s up to, mebbe we can get
+him to do some pitching for us while he’s waitin’ to pull the thing
+off. We’d make Bristol go some. Why don’t you try it, Jack? You oughter
+be able to make a deal with him, if anybody can.”
+
+Kennedy shook his head. “I dunno,” he growled, “I dunno ’bout that.
+Why, he just said not only that he’d never played, but that he’d never
+as much as seen a game. He’s got me guessing. I’m afraid I can’t make a
+deal with him.”
+
+“Then _I’ll_ try,” announced Landlord McLaughlin. “Wait till he comes
+out from supper. Leave it to me.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ STRANGER GETS A JOB
+
+
+When the new guest reappeared from the dining room, having finished his
+supper, Landlord McLaughlin met him with an engaging manner.
+
+“Welcome to our town,” said Peter. “We’re always glad to see strangers
+drift in. Smoke?”
+
+He tendered a cigar, which the other accepted in a somewhat hesitating
+manner. Peter nipped off the end of another cigar and struck a match,
+which he held for the young man to light up before lighting his own.
+
+“It’s rather dry,” said the landlord.
+
+“Is it?” said the one who called himself Stranger, taking the cigar
+from his mouth and looking at it doubtfully.
+
+“I mean the weather. We ain’t had much rain lately. Rather bad for
+crops, though it’s good for baseball, and we’re interested in that
+round here.”
+
+The young man made no reply, but took another uncertain whiff or two at
+the cigar. Suddenly he said:
+
+“I don’t believe I smoke. I don’t care for it, anyhow. If you don’t
+mind, I won’t smoke this one.”
+
+To McLaughlin it seemed a bit odd that any man shouldn’t know whether
+he smoked or not, but he made no comment as the other tossed the cigar
+into a cuspidor.
+
+“How’s things the way you come from?” he asked. “We always like to meet
+folks from the big town. Say, won’t you come into the writing room and
+set down for a little chat?”
+
+“I don’t mind. I’m a bit tired, but it’s rather early to turn in.”
+
+Kennedy was watching them from behind a newspaper in a distant corner.
+He saw them enter the writing room, where the landlord placed a chair
+for the guest in such a manner that the latter’s back would be turned
+toward the door. Almost immediately Jack rose, and, paper in hand,
+walked quietly toward the writing room.
+
+“What’s your business, if it ain’t too inquisitive of me?” McLaughlin
+was saying as Kennedy reached the door.
+
+“I’m a――a diamond cutter,” was the somewhat hesitating answer. “But I
+had to give it up on account of my health. You can see it has taken
+hold of me.”
+
+Old Peter gave his husky-looking companion a quizzical, sidelong
+glance.
+
+“Mebbe so,” he half chuckled; “but I’d never noticed it if you hadn’t
+spoke. What are you planning to do?”
+
+“A pill slinger suggested that I ought to get out into the country and
+find a job somewhere in the open air. I’m looking for work on a farm.”
+
+“On a farm, hey?”
+
+“Yes, the rural life for mine. Between us, pal, I’ve hit it up some in
+my day. Even when I was a boy I was a high flier.”
+
+“You don’t say so!”
+
+The landlord knew that Kennedy had taken a seat in the room some
+distance behind them, but he did not look round.
+
+“I always was a wild chap,” the young man went on. “When I was a boy
+I touched plenty of high spots. Cards have tripped me, too. Ever play
+poker?”
+
+“Ho! Sometimes winters we have a little sociable game of penny ante
+round here just to pass away the time.”
+
+“I’ve been an easy mark at the game, but I like it. Can’t keep away.
+Every time I get a roll I go searching for trouble. I’ve got a little
+wad of long green right now that’s burning in my pocket. I’d like to
+find three or four good sports and get up a game.”
+
+“I don’t cal’late you can kick up one this season o’ the year,” said
+Peter. “’Sides that, we generally play among ourselves, not caring to
+gamble in the reg’ler sense of the word. The strait-laced people round
+here think that Satan’s got a strangle hold on anybody that plays cards
+for money.”
+
+“I was brought up in a strait-laced family, pal. My old man thought
+cards the tools of Satan. It broke my mother’s heart when she found I
+was playing penny ante with a bunch of youngsters. Maybe that’s what
+finished her. But come, what’s the use to talk of things like that?”
+
+“Yep, what’s the use? Baseball’s the game in the summertime hereabouts.
+We’ve got a pretty hot team, I tell you. All we need now is a rattlin’
+good pitcher.”
+
+“The guff I hear and see in the newspapers about baseball makes me
+tired, bo. Seems like ninety per cent. of the population has gone
+bug-house about the game.”
+
+“Well, that don’t hurt ’em. Folks has got to have something for
+recreation. All work and no play is bad policy. Don’t s’pose you know
+where we could get holt of a good pitcher, a left-hander?”
+
+Locke seemed to meditate a moment as if seeking to recall something,
+then in a queer way he answered:
+
+“One time I was mistook for a pitcher I happened to look like. A gent
+blew up and called me by that ball tosser’s name and asked me how I
+was doing at it. Really, he didn’t believe me when I told him I’d never
+pitched a ball in my life and that I didn’t know a curve from a――from a
+wedge of――restaurant pie.”
+
+Old Peter cleared his throat with a rasping sound and shoved round his
+chair till he could glance at Kennedy, who made a quick, cautioning
+gesture.
+
+“Then if that’s the case,” floundered the landlord helplessly, “I
+don’t s’pose you can help us none. I’m sorry. I didn’t take you for a
+minister’s son.”
+
+“I am,” was the prompt assurance. “If I can’t help you, perhaps you
+know where I can get a job on a farm.”
+
+“You say you’ve never done no farm work, but, still, green hands ain’t
+to be sneezed at when help is short.”
+
+Kennedy rose and stepped forward.
+
+“I’m a farmer,” he said, “and I need a man.”
+
+The new arrival in Deering looked up with a slight frown.
+
+“You’re the man I met when I first came in,” he said. “Well, if you
+need a laborer on your farm perhaps we can talk business, bo.”
+
+“You don’t look like a sick man to me.”
+
+“My business has been too confining. You can see it has affected me. I
+don’t like confinement.”
+
+“I’ll give you all the outdoor work you want,” announced Jack, “and if
+you’re any good I’ll pay you twenty-five dollars a month and keep.”
+
+“That suits me. It’s a deal.”
+
+“All right,” said Kennedy; “I’ll be in town to-morrow afternoon and
+take you out to my farm. My name, as I told you before, is Kennedy.”
+
+“And mine, as I told you before,” said the other, “is Stranger.”
+
+“‘Stranger’ goes,” returned Kennedy. “You can call yourself anything
+you blame please. It’s none of my business.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ MIGHTY QUEER
+
+
+Kennedy wanted an opportunity to meditate quietly upon the peculiar
+behavior of Lefty Locke, with the hope of hitting on a reasonable
+solution of the problem. For a problem it now appeared to the old
+manager.
+
+“There’s just one thing I’m afraid of,” he said to McLaughlin after
+Lefty had bidden them good night and ascended to his room. “He didn’t
+expect to run across me here in Deering. It must have been a jolt to
+him, though he managed to hide it mighty clever. Now, he may take a
+notion to sneak sudden and give us the shake. ’Twouldn’t surprise me if
+you woke up to-morrer to find your late guest missing.”
+
+“He’ll have some trouble gittin’ out of town before the first train in
+the morning,” declared Peter. “If you think it’s worth while, Jack,
+I’ll have Skedge, the boy, set up all night right here to see that he
+don’t sneak out.”
+
+“Anything would be worth while if we could only get him to pitch a few
+games for us.”
+
+But if Skedge remained awake and on guard all night in the office of
+the Central House, he wasted his time. Apparently the new guest had
+no idea of slipping away, and when he appeared at breakfast the next
+morning everything seemed to indicate that he had passed a restful
+night.
+
+Kennedy came in early for forenoon practice at the ball park, but his
+suggestion that the new farm hand should go out to the grounds with him
+was not received favorably.
+
+“If you don’t mind, pal,” said Lefty, “I’ll wait for you right here
+at the hotel till you get ready to take me out to your farm. Baseball
+doesn’t interest me at all.”
+
+Jack frowned a bit over that word “pal.” It was not like Lefty Locke,
+and he had noticed that at times since his appearance in Deering the
+fellow spoke with a touch of slang that seemed quite unnatural and
+different from his usual manner of speech. There was in it, however, no
+trace of the slang of the baseball field.
+
+At noon Kennedy, coming back from the park, decided to lunch with
+Locke at the hotel. During the meal, however, he had little success in
+drawing the man into conversation.
+
+“Keep bottled up if you can,” thought old Jack resentfully; “I’ll trip
+you yet.”
+
+The Boobs came in on the two o’clock train, and made straight for the
+field. Kennedy lingered at the post office to get his daily paper, and
+stopped at the hotel on his way out to the park. McLaughlin was waiting
+for him.
+
+“Tell you what,” said the landlord, “this southpaw o’ yourn don’t
+propose to earn his twenty-five a month playin’ baseball. I’ve been
+tryin’ to get him out to the game, but he won’t budge.”
+
+“Let me handle this case, Peter,” urged Kennedy, spreading out his
+newspaper. “I don’t quite get his drift yet, but I will. Take a look
+at this! Here’s something more about the unexplained disappearance of
+Lefty Locke. They can’t seem to trace him. Some think he was killed
+in the smash, but all save one of the dead were identified, and the
+description of that one don’t agree at all with the description of
+Locke. He was a slim, slender, blue-eyed chap who looked like he was
+in bad health. That accident, together with the loss of Locke, seems
+to have knocked the starch out of the Blue Stockings, for the Terriers
+are eating ’em up in the series. The wise guys think it’s going to be a
+cinch from now on for the Specters to get away with the championship.”
+
+“Mebbe that’ll interest our friend here,” suggested McLaughlin. “He’s
+in the writin’ room, watchin’ people on the street through the window.
+That’s all he seems to do――jest set around and watch folks.”
+
+Kennedy found Locke in the writing room. “I say, Stranger,” he said,
+“here’s a daily paper that may help you to pass away the time till I
+get back after the game. Just look it over.”
+
+He put the paper in the man’s hand with the item regarding Locke and
+the Blue Stockings folded out; but, after a nod and a casual glance at
+that page, Lefty turned to another part of it.
+
+Old Jack rejoined McLaughlin, growling, and together they hastened to
+the field.
+
+About two hours later Kennedy drove up in front of the hotel with his
+rig, and asked for Mr. Stranger. The latter seemed to be waiting, for
+he came forth at once, the landlord following closely.
+
+“Well, Stranger,” said McLaughlin, as the man got into the carriage, “I
+hope you take to your job out on Kennedy’s farm.”
+
+“Thanks, bo,” was the reply, as old Jack drove away.
+
+Kennedy had an excellent farm under a fine state of cultivation.
+Besides the overseer, he kept a stout, hulking boy, and at times, when
+needed, extra hands were hired. All the buildings were in perfect
+repair, and painted a clean white. The house was a big, square,
+old-fashioned affair, with fireplaces and a wide veranda. Kennedy’s
+sister, a widow by the name of Malone, was the housekeeper.
+
+“I’m going to let you take a day or two to get the hang of things
+around the place,” said Kennedy, as he showed Locke into a big, square
+corner chamber with four windows, two of which opened toward the east.
+“There’s no hurry about your striking in to work, as it’s a bit slack
+just now.”
+
+The new man muttered his thanks, standing in the middle of the room and
+looking around in a manner which seemed to indicate slight surprise
+over this sort of treatment, which, perhaps, was scarcely what he had
+expected. Through the open door, as he departed, Jack saw him seat
+himself by one of the windows, and, with his head resting on his hand,
+look out at the softly rustling trees, the broad fields beyond, and the
+little lake on which the afternoon sunshine was shimmering. There was
+something pathetic and lonely in his pose and manner, and to himself,
+as he descended the stairs, Jack muttered:
+
+“Queer――mighty queer!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ DID HE REMEMBER?
+
+
+After a hearty supper, at which the new hand met Mrs. Malone, Kennedy
+invited him out onto the veranda, where they sat while Jack puffed at
+his pipe.
+
+“You don’t smoke?” said Kennedy.
+
+“I don’t think so,” was the reply.
+
+“Drink?”
+
+“I don’t know. I’ve been a wild one in my day, pal. Hit the high
+places, and hit ’em hard. Cards were my trouble. I was thinking I’d
+like to find three or four good sports and get up a little game.”
+
+“Well, you won’t find them round here,” growled old Jack, puffing
+savagely at his pipe. “Nothing doing, Left――er――Stranger.”
+
+The other betrayed no disappointment.
+
+“We’ll just sit and talk things over comfortable like,” said Kennedy,
+glancing at him sidewise. “How’d you get the notion you wanted to go to
+farming?”
+
+“It wasn’t my notion; it was the pill slinger’s.”
+
+“You don’t look like there’s been anything the matter with your health.”
+
+“I’m pale. That comes from confinement.”
+
+“You’re brown as an Injun――or a baseball player.”
+
+Lefty rubbed his head. “I know what I’ve been told,” he said, with a
+slight touch of resentment.
+
+“Well, don’t swaller everything the doctors hand out to you. How do you
+like my ranch?”
+
+“It’s very comfortable. I like it here, only I seem to miss something.
+It’s quiet.”
+
+“That’s the way I feel. You see, when a man has been in the hot of Big
+League baseball year after year, it’s a big change to settle down this
+fashion. But we all have to take up something after we’ve had our day
+at the game. If I’d ever married it might ’a’ seemed different.”
+
+“You never married?”
+
+“No,” said old Jack, a trifle sadly; “slipped up on that play. Made an
+error, and another fellow fanned me out. You know, it’s mighty easy to
+lose in a game like that if you don’t keep on your toes all the time. I
+don’t often talk about it, but I don’t mind telling you how it was.”
+
+Lefty said nothing, and the old manager continued:
+
+“She was the only dame I ever got really smashed on, a little,
+dark-eyed Irish girl by the name of Madge. Met her after a game in
+which I was pretty near the whole show, having made two homers, a
+three-bagger, and a single. She was just bubbling over with enthusiasm,
+and when she turned them eyes of hern on me, and handed me a smile with
+her teeth shining like polished chinyware, I just felt that it was all
+up with me. I was like a busher in his first Big League game, all cold
+and hot and shaky and queer clean down to my toes. I knew in a jiffy
+that she was the one for me.
+
+“Well, there ain’t no need to string the story out,” he went on. “I
+rushed her for all I was worth when the team was playin’ to home.
+Things went along swimmin’, and we had it arranged somehow before I
+ever knowed just how it come round that we would play the big game
+together on the same team. That is, we was going to get spliced some
+time, and I didn’t care how soon the job was done. She had another guy
+that was rushing her, too, before I hove in on the horizon; but I had
+his groove, and he was fanning every time he stepped up to the plate.
+
+“Now, listen to me, and hear how the whole game went wrong in the
+ninth inning. My sister Kitty comes on to see me unexpected, and, of
+course, I spreads myself to give her a good time. Madge didn’t know
+nothing ’bout it, and she sees me blowin’ Kit off to cabs and theaters
+and feeds, and a-kissin’ her good-by when I had to send her home one
+night sudden on account of an unexpected turn. What did that little
+hot-headed, black-eyed girl do? She just writ me a red-hot letter,
+tellin’ me what she thought of a deceivin’, heart-breakin’, double-dyed
+wretch like I was, and announcin’ that she was leavin’ town. She
+didn’t leave no address, either. At first I took it as a kind of joke,
+thinkin’ I could straighten things out all right with Madge. But next
+thing I heard, within a week, she was hooked to the other guy, and I
+was down and out in the series.
+
+“I ain’t never struck one like Madge since, and I ain’t likely to; so,
+you see, here I am――an old bach. It’s tough on a man when a girl throws
+him that fashion, with no chance to explain; but I’ve always tried to
+console myself by sayin’ that one who’d do such a thing would likely
+keep a guy in hot water the most of the time when she got him. It’s
+poor consolation, but it’s all I’ve got.”
+
+Lefty was frowning as he gazed through the faint purple shadows toward
+the little lake, on which the afterglow of the sunset was reflected,
+and he stirred uneasily, passing a hand across his forehead. After some
+moments of silence, he said:
+
+“Seems to me I’ve heard of a similar case.”
+
+“I s’pose there’s lot of similar cases,” replied Kennedy, giving a pull
+at his pipe, which had gone out during the narration. “I was young,
+and it broke me up bad. I played so rotten that my manager got sore,
+and put me on the bench. I took to hittin’ the bottle, too. Drank
+altogether too much until a friend gave me a talking to and showed me
+what a dumb fool I was. Then I tried to forget it and get back into
+form again. I succeeded, too, and I’ve stuck to baseball steady, saving
+my dollars, with the idea of having something to live on when my days
+at the game was finished. I am out of it now, though I’m managin’ this
+little Deering team. Kinder got pulled into that. I wouldn’t if it
+hadn’t been for Hank Bristol, who’s managin’ the Buccaneers. He sorter
+rubbed me the wrong way, and it’s my object now to beat him out if
+there’s any way to do it. To beat him, I’ve got to have another A-one
+pitcher, and I need a left-hander.” Lefty was silent.
+
+“I know the very man I’d like to have,” Kennedy went on musingly. “He
+come out of the bush this year. Brennan, of the Hornets, had him in
+the South to start with; but Brennan also had another promisin’ young
+slabman by the name of Bert Elgin. It seems that the left-hander and
+Elgin had some sort of a mix-up at college, and they didn’t cotton to
+each other a great deal. Elgin put up some sort of a dirty job on the
+other chap, and made him look like a quitter and a useless pup. Brennan
+was fooled, and dropped him.
+
+“I’d been after him before that, and he comes to me after being handed
+the can by Brennan. I sent him out into the bush with a team from which
+I could pull him in any time I wanted to, and he made good out there.
+My pitchers started cold, and didn’t get into the game just right, so
+I sent out a hurry call for the southpaw, and he joined the team just
+in time to pitch in our first game against the Hornets. I took a chance
+on spoiling him by shovin’ him into that game. Had to do it, you know,
+though I hated to. The proper way to break in a pitcher is to work him
+against a weak team, and give him confidence by a good chance to pull
+off a win to start with. It was hard on him, rammin’ him into that game
+against the Hornets, but he come through with flying colors, and he
+pitched against Bert Elgin, too.
+
+“There was a reporter named Stillman who had it in his noddle that
+Elgin was responsible for what my left-hander got from Brennan, and he
+chased the thing down and got the proof, which he hands out to Brennan
+hisself. That was Mr. Elgin’s finish in Big League company. Brennan
+sent him down into class C company, but he didn’t last even there.
+Nobody seemed to have much use for him, and I dunno where he’s faded to.
+
+“Now,” continued old Jack, squaring round until he could watch his
+companion without turning his head, “if I just had that left-handed man
+of mine for about two weeks I’d bury the Buccaneers. We beat the Boobs
+to-day, but they’re the weakest bunch in this league. After the game
+I heard that the Bucks had beat the Stars, and gone into first place
+by a small margin. We play Bristol’s team in Hatfield to-morrow. I’ve
+figgered the percentage out to-night, and if we could take a fall out
+of ’em we’d be tied with ’em to-morrow night.”
+
+“I presume that’s all very interesting to you,” said Lefty, unmoved;
+“but, having never cared in the slightest for baseball, you’ll pardon
+me if I don’t enthuse.”
+
+Kennedy made a queer sound in his throat. “Look a’ here,” he snapped,
+“was you ever in a railroad smash-up?”
+
+“Never,” was the slow answer, coming after a moment or two of breathless
+silence.
+
+Old Jack dropped his pipe, and groped for it.
+
+“Why do you ask?” questioned the other.
+
+“Oh, nothing――nothing,” mumbled Kennedy. “I’m going to turn in pretty
+soon. You can go to bed any time you want to. We get up ruther early
+here on the farm.”
+
+“Think I’ll turn in now,” said the other, rising.
+
+In his chamber, half an hour later, having made sure that Lefty had
+really gone to bed, Kennedy paced up and down a while, his forehead
+corrugated by a deep frown.
+
+“It gets me!” he finally exclaimed, beginning to undress. “I can’t
+quite make up my mind whether he’s faking or really don’t remember. If
+that last is the case, he ought to have treatment by a doctor.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ A NEW PITCHER
+
+
+Although there was an early breakfast on Kennedy’s farm, when old Jack
+arose his sister surprised him by stating that the new man had been up
+and wandering about the place for an hour or more.
+
+“I wonder if he didn’t sleep well?” said Kennedy.
+
+“I asked him,” returned Mrs. Malone, “and he said he slept like a log.
+He’s a fine-looking fellow, Jack, but he ain’t no farmer. If you took
+him for one you got bunkoed.”
+
+Kennedy gave her a laughing, knowing wink. “Leave it to me, Kit,”
+he said. “I know my business, whether I’m hirin’ farm hands or ball
+players.”
+
+“I’m thinking you’d be much more successful picking the latter,” she
+replied. “You may call yourself a farmer, but it’s baseball that’s
+still got the hook on ye.”
+
+“Mebbe you’re right, Kitty,” he agreed. “Mebbe that’s why I decided to
+taper off with this bush league bunch. Perhaps I’m like a man that’s
+been drinking hard and finds he’s got to quit, but it’ll kill him if he
+stops all to once. When the baseball bug gets into a man’s blood for
+fair he never is quite cured. It’s a disease, my girl.”
+
+“If you’d had a square deal you’d be at it now.”
+
+“Don’t let that worry you. I knew it was coming some time. Where’s this
+man of mine?”
+
+“I wouldn’t wonder if you found him out viewin’ the scenery. There’s
+something sort of sad and lonesome about him. He acts like he’s lost
+his last friend on earth. But he’s a handsome feller, Jack.”
+
+“Now, Kitty, don’t be sentimental. I thought you was done with the men?”
+
+“So I am,” she retorted, flushing almost like a girl. “Stop your
+joshing. Me day is over, but I can tell the kind that git the girls
+as well as I ever could. Breakfast will be ready in less than five
+minutes.”
+
+Laughing, Kennedy went out to search for Locke, whom he found on the
+veranda. Lefty rose at once when Jack appeared.
+
+“Good morning,” he said. “You told me to look around, and I’ve been
+doing so.”
+
+“Right-o! You’re an early bird, all right. It’s an appetite you should
+have for breakfast.”
+
+“I haven’t any working clothes,” said the other. “I’ve been trying to
+think what became of my outfit. Can’t seem to remember.”
+
+“Don’t worry about it. I’ve got old clothes enough, and they’ll do when
+you want ’em, which won’t be to-day. Come in to breakfast.”
+
+At the table Lefty was silent, but, whatever else could be said of
+him, his appetite was healthy enough. He seemed wholly unaware of the
+occasional glances of interest from the blue eyes of Mrs. Kitty Malone.
+In every movement he proclaimed himself a person of refinement, and it
+was only in occasional lapses of speech when he seemed almost trying to
+remember something, or repeating a lesson that had been learned, that
+there was the slightest suggestion of anything different.
+
+After breakfast Kennedy gave his foreman some instructions, and later
+he found Locke waiting for him. Old Jack appeared with a soiled
+baseball and a glove.
+
+“I may have to get into the game myself to-day,” he said cheerfully,
+“and I’m a bit out of practice. As long as you’re not going to work
+until to-morrow, mebbe you’d throw me a few?”
+
+Lefty frowned, but did not refuse.
+
+“Pull off your coat,” directed the old manager, as he paced off and
+marked the regular pitching distance in the yard. “Here’s a flat stone
+for you to put ’em over. I’ll be the catcher.”
+
+If he had prepared a trap, the other walked into it without hesitation.
+Taking his place on the mark indicated, he caught the ball which Jack
+tossed him, and squared away.
+
+“Take it easy at first,” suggested Kennedy, in full remembrance of the
+smoking speed with which Lefty Locke had dazzled the best batters in
+the Big League. “As long as you’re green, you’ll hurt your whip if you
+start in by wallopin’ ’em.”
+
+Lefty complied to the letter, and the old manager’s eyes glittered with
+the secret triumph he felt as the young man began putting the ball over
+with perfect control and apparently without effort. Gradually Kennedy
+urged him to speed up, and the change made no difference. Wherever Jack
+held his hands behind that flat rock――high, low, behind the inside or
+the outside corner――Lefty Locke winged the ball straight into them, so
+that it was scarcely necessary to make the slightest movement to catch
+it.
+
+“Say,” cried Kennedy suddenly, “I thought you didn’t know anything
+about this business?”
+
+“I don’t,” was the instant declaration. “Don’t think I ever handled
+a baseball before in all my life.” But there was a strange flush in
+his face and a peculiar light of aroused interest in his eyes, all of
+which the former Blue Stockings’ manager observed with unspeakable
+gratification.
+
+“Well, if you’re a greenhorn, certainly you’re a wonder,” said
+Kennedy, still careful to follow the other’s lead. “Say, throw me a
+drop.”
+
+Locke shook his head. “I don’t know how.”
+
+“Easiest thing you ever tried. Here, I’ll show you.”
+
+He jogged forward, took the ball, and demonstrated how it should be
+held and in what manner it should be released with the proper whirling
+motion to make it drop.
+
+“Now try it that way,” he said, returning to his position.
+
+Three times Lefty threw the ball without the slightest indication of a
+drop, but with the fourth throw, into which he put a bit more speed,
+the sphere, coming breast-high, took a sudden shoot toward the ground
+just before reaching the stone which served for a plate. Kennedy,
+scooping it from the turf, whooped.
+
+“That’s it!” he shouted. “Great smoke! That was a peach! It would have
+had Logie, of the Specters, breakin’ his back.”
+
+For the first time since his arrival in Deering, something like a faint
+smile flitted across the young man’s face.
+
+“Queer,” he said. “I didn’t know I could do that. Pitching can’t be so
+difficult to learn.”
+
+“It isn’t for some men,” assured Kennedy. “Give me another.”
+
+He snapped the ball wide and high to Locke, who carelessly thrust up
+his right hand, stopped it, and permitted it to drop into his left, a
+movement so familiar to old Jack that he nearly whooped again.
+
+“Give me one just like the last,” invited Kennedy, “and burn it. Let it
+come smoking.”
+
+It was like the last, and with only his small fielder’s glove to aid
+him Kennedy lost it.
+
+“Oh, some speed, son――some speed!” he rejoiced. “The left-hander I told
+you about last night used to have a duplicate of Walter Johnson’s hook
+curve, only it took the opposite twist toward the inside corner for a
+right-hand batter, and so was a heap worse to hit. Let me show you how
+he threw it, if I can remember.”
+
+Again he demonstrated, and again Locke apparently tried to follow
+directions. This time he threw the hook with the first effort, and old
+Jack bit his tongue to hold himself in check.
+
+“That’s it!” he cried. “Why, I could make a pitcher out of you――I sure
+could! And there’s more money in it than working on a farm. It’s good,
+healthy business, too. Just what your doctor’d ordered if he’d knowed
+you could do it.”
+
+“How could he know, if I didn’t know myself?” was the good-natured
+question, all the somberness seeming gone from Locke’s face――temporarily
+at least. In every movement he was now a pitcher, the same young wonder
+who had made such a record under Kennedy with the Blue Stockings; the
+same jovial-appearing, resolute, reliable boxman who had made a host of
+friends and admirers, and had come to be feared and respected by
+opposing batsmen.
+
+“You throw ’em any way you’re a mind to now, and let ’em come,” said
+Kennedy. “You’re giving me some practice, all right.”
+
+There was life, ginger, fire, and marvelous control in every delivery.
+The whistlers that left Locke’s fingers made old Jack set his teeth
+and grin painfully as, one after another, they nearly lifted him off
+his feet. In a few moments the old manager, unprotected by a big mitt,
+found that he was getting more than enough.
+
+“That will do!” he shouted, dropping the ball, and blowing on his
+smarting right hand. “Perhaps you never saw a ball game, but, believe
+me, you can pitch――and I know pitchers.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ AT THE FIELD
+
+
+When Manager Kennedy rode into town to take the ten-ten train for
+Hatfield with his players, Mr. Robert Stranger came with him. Old Jack
+stopped at the Central House, and found Landlord McLaughlin on the
+point of leaving for the station.
+
+“Howdy, Jack,” said Peter. “I see you’ve got your new farm hand with
+ye.”
+
+“’Sh!” breathed Kennedy. “I’ve induced him to go over with us to see
+the game, and I’m takin’ along an extra suit of mine――one I wore with
+the Blue Stockings, with the letters cut off.”
+
+“You don’t mean to say――” gasped Peter.
+
+“I don’t mean to say anything now.”
+
+“But he ain’t owned up?”
+
+“Not a word. It’s the queerest thing I ever bumped against――it sure is.
+We’ve got to catch that train, so let’s be movin’. On the way over I’ll
+tell you about it.”
+
+Locke accompanied them to the station, where Kilgore was waiting with
+his teammates. Some eighteen or twenty Deering fans who could get away
+had purchased round-trip tickets, while at least fifty more were on
+hand to give the Deers a send-off. Kennedy bought tickets, after which
+he introduced Locke to the players who gathered around them.
+
+“Shake hands with Bob Stranger, boys,” he said, calling one after
+another by name. “He’s a friend of mine going along with us to-day.”
+
+The locomotive was whistling in the distance when Captain Kilgore
+pulled at Kennedy’s sleeve, and whispered, his back toward Locke:
+
+“Say, Jack, who is this guy?”
+
+The manager made a warning gesture. “Not a word,” he cautioned. “It’s a
+secret. He’s a southpaw pitcher, and if necessary I may use him in the
+game against the Bucks to-day.”
+
+Toots Kilgore grinned. “Take it from me, it’s likely to be necessary,”
+he said. “It’s going to be _the_ game. They’ll fight us like blazes on
+their own field, and they’ve got a new man to put against us. Curley
+won’t last; they can steal right and left on Reddy Sullivan, and
+Heines’ whip is broke. You better start your new man on the hill.”
+
+“Leave that to me,” returned old Jack reprovingly, “and keep your face
+closed about him. I’ll tell the boys anything they ought to know. Don’t
+even hint to him that you think he’s a pitcher.”
+
+“Oh, I see!” said Kilgore. “You’re planning to spring a surprise. Maybe
+he’s some real gun in the game. Maybe his name ain’t Stranger at all.”
+
+“That’s the name he goes by――now,” said the manager of the Deers, as
+the train roared up to the station and stopped.
+
+The crowd cheered them as they got aboard, carrying grips, bat bags,
+and other paraphernalia.
+
+“Git this game, Jack――you’ve got to git it!” cried a big man on the
+platform. “We need it, and we depend on you.”
+
+Kennedy’s only reply was a nod, which brought another cheer from the
+crowd, who continued to make a demonstration until the train pulled out.
+
+Old Jack saw to it that Lefty Locke was seated in the midst of the
+players, where he remained during the journey to Hatfield, listening
+with a strange sort of interest to their chatter about the game and the
+standing of the teams, which to them seemed quite as vital as a Big
+League race. At times Locke evinced more than usual interest as some
+chance phrase fell on his ear with a familiar ring, and for the time
+being the shadow in his eyes was dispelled. Although he had little to
+say, his manner was that of one who again found himself with his own
+people, and felt once more the vital throb and thrill of life which is
+experienced daily by the man who has found the vocation for which he is
+best adapted.
+
+Kennedy missed none of this, although he took pains not to give Locke
+the impression that he was being watched.
+
+“Got him going,” mused the old manager, with deep satisfaction. “He
+tried to duck the game, but the germ is in his blood, and he can’t keep
+away from it. If I need him, I’ll have him pitching before the game is
+finished this afternoon.”
+
+Hatfield was a thriving, prosperous place――nearly a young city――in
+rather strong contrast to the quiet, almost sleepy town of Deering.
+It seemed presumptuous that a somnolent village like Deering should
+presume to the championship in a bush league represented by Hatfield,
+for surely the latter had the advantage, in the way of backing,
+population, attendance, and general resources.
+
+From the station, Kennedy led his men to Tower’s Hotel, which gave them
+special rates, and furnished the most satisfactory table.
+
+An hour’s rest followed dinner; then, as two o’clock approached, the
+Deers gathered up their trappings, and set forth for the park, toward
+which the early fans were already turning their faces.
+
+Reaching the field, they entered a dressing room, and began stripping
+down to don their playing togs. Still with them, Lefty watched and
+listened after the manner of one to which all this seemed familiar, yet
+as an outsider.
+
+“There’s an extra suit,” said Kennedy, placing his grip on a shelf,
+and being sure that Locke saw and heard. “Everything a man needs, down
+to shoes. Perhaps it won’t be used to-day, but if anyone should happen
+to want it, it can be found right there.”
+
+Kilgore wondered why old Jack’s new pitcher did not get into that suit
+at once; but, having no small respect for the manager’s cleverness, and
+thinking he knew the sort of game he was playing, the captain of the
+Deers made no remark.
+
+“There’s no rules here to prevent you from sitting on the bench with
+us, Stranger,” explained the manager, as the players were ready to
+leave for the field. “It will give you a chance to watch the game from
+close range.”
+
+The Deers followed their manager and captain to the field. The
+Buccaneers had not yet appeared, so the visitors had everything to
+themselves.
+
+They began practice by “fungo” batting and the catching of liners
+and flies, cheered only by the little group of Deering fans who had
+followed them and were waiting to give them encouragement. Those
+cheers were not the only sounds to greet them, some of the more rabid
+local partisans shamelessly hissing or groaning. For out in the bush
+baseball rivalry is almost always intense, and there is little of the
+fair-minded impartiality among the spectators which sometimes, in a
+place like New York, leads the home crowd to applaud famous players of
+opposing nines.
+
+In less than ten minutes the Buccaneers came forth with a dash, Hank
+Bristol at their head. In appearance they justified their name, for
+their blue suits were almost black, and the dash of crimson upon their
+caps, together with their crimson stockings, gave them a somber,
+awesome appearance, which was heightened by the husky build of almost
+every man, and the mocking savageness of their faces. If ever a
+baseball nine was calculated to win from the awe it would inspire in
+the breasts of opponents, the Bucks were that organization.
+
+With an assumption of cordiality, Hank Bristol shook hands with Jack
+Kennedy.
+
+“Sorry for you, old hoss,” he grinned, “but you should have known
+better than to let ’em coax you into the game again.”
+
+“Save your sympathy till I need it, Hank,” returned the manager of the
+Deers. “You’re old enough and wise enough to know one never can tell
+what’s going to happen in this game.”
+
+“I know what’s going to happen to-day. We’re going to put another
+nail in your coffin. You’re a dead one, Jack, but you don’t know it.
+Why, you don’t worry us at all. We’re not even going to start our new
+pitcher against you, and I don’t believe we’ll need him. Jewett ought
+to find you easy picking.”
+
+“Where’s your new man?” asked Kennedy.
+
+“There he goes, walking by your bench now,” answered Bristol, pointing.
+
+At this moment a ball, thrown from the field, went bounding past them
+into the bench of the visitors, where Lefty Locke sat. Immediately he
+secured it, and stepped forth to throw it to the signaling batter.
+
+The Buccaneers’ new pitcher stopped short, and stared in astonishment
+at Lefty, who did not seem to observe him.
+
+“Well, I’ll be hanged!” exclaimed the surprised man, his eyes fastened
+on Locke. “It’s you, is it? You didn’t last so long in big company,
+did you?” He finished with a sneering laugh full of unspeakable
+satisfaction and joy.
+
+Lefty looked him over blankly. “Speaking to me?” he asked.
+
+“Who did you think I was speaking to?” retorted the other as he passed
+on, still laughing.
+
+Frowning, Locke stared after him.
+
+“Who’s that man?” he asked, a few seconds later, as old Jack came to
+the bench.
+
+“That man?” repeated Kennedy. “He’s the Buccaneers’ new pitcher. His
+name is Bert Elgin.”
+
+“Queer,” said Lefty. “He seemed to have an idea he knew me, but I’ve
+never seen him before.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ BASEBALL LUCK
+
+
+The words were uttered in such a sincere manner that they came near
+dispelling Kennedy’s last doubt. “He’d be a fool to try to keep up a
+bluff like that,” thought the manager, “and Lefty Locke never was no
+fool.”
+
+Aloud he said: “That’s the cub I was tellin’ you ’bout who put up a job
+on my southpaw pitcher when he was gettin’ a try-out with the Hornets.
+He can pitch, but he’s got a yaller streak, and he’s about as mean as
+dirt.”
+
+“Will he pitch to-day?” asked Lefty.
+
+“Dunno. Perhaps so. Bristol won’t use him ’less he has to. I see he’s
+goin’ to warm up with the others. Keep your eye on him.
+
+“Somethin’s gone wrong with the man,” he muttered, as he turned away.
+“It’s no bluff. His noddle is twisted.”
+
+From the bench, Locke watched the two teams take turns at practice,
+but for the most part his interest seemed to center in the opposing
+pitchers, who were warming up. Having been told all about the crippled
+condition of the Deers’ staff, he realized the probable advantage of
+the home team with a new man ready to jump on to the slab if needed――a
+man considered by Bristol a star of the first magnitude.
+
+The critical nature of this game turned out a crowd which filled the
+bleachers and packed the stands――a crowd bubbling with enthusiasm for
+the locals, who could obtain an added grip on first position by taking
+this contest.
+
+And more than nine-tenths of the assemblage seemed to believe such a
+result a foregone conclusion.
+
+In warming up, Elgin attracted the most attention, for nearly everyone
+had heard of Bristol’s new man. Knowing the eyes of the crowd were upon
+him, he posed vainly, and finished limbering his flinger by whipping
+three or four speedy ones to the catcher which caused many witnesses to
+gasp.
+
+The time for the game to start came at last, and the clang of a bell
+called the visitors to their bench, while the locals took the field.
+Then one of the umpires, with a megaphone, announced:
+
+“Battrees to-day: For Deering, Curley and Coffin. For Hatfield, Jewett
+and Yapp.”
+
+At this there was a murmur from those who had wished to see the new
+man pitch. Elgin, hearing this murmur and understanding, laughed to
+himself.
+
+Chick Collins, the Deers’ right fielder, was the first man to face
+Jewett, and, as Collins had the reputation of being a man who “waited
+it out” and made a pitcher put them over, Jewett started in by cutting
+the pan with the first ball delivered.
+
+To his surprise, Chick did not take one; instead, he met that straight
+ball on the trade-mark, and cracked it safely into right, which caused
+the little bunch of Deering fans to give a howl of joy.
+
+“That’s the stuff!” sounded the voice of Peter McLaughlin. “He won’t
+last an inning at that rate. Go to him, Truly!”
+
+Hen Truly, familiarly known as “Yours Truly,” followed Collins to the
+plate, fully instructed by Kennedy. Jewett, a bit nervous, threw three
+times to first to hold the runner close. Then he wasted two while
+Truly waited and grinned. Having put the twirler in a hole the batter
+signaled to Collins that he would bunt the next ball pitched, and the
+runner was off for second with the swing of Jewett’s arm.
+
+Truly dropped a bunt in front of the plate, and stretched himself
+for first. Jewett fell over himself trying to field the ball, and
+the attempted sacrifice was turned into a scratch hit when his throw
+reached first a second too late.
+
+“Where’s your new pitcher?” cried Landlord McLaughlin. “You better put
+him in right away.”
+
+Bristol remained apparently unmoved upon the bench; but Jewett,
+glancing toward his manager, knew that he was on the verge of getting
+the hook.
+
+Joe Digg was the next hitter――Digg, the formidable, who still had the
+highest batting average among the visitors. Jewett feared Digg; yet to
+pass him now would fill the corners, with no one down, and Hallett, a
+man almost as dangerous, followed. In this dilemma, wabbling in the
+effort to get his pins under him, the Buccaneer flinger sought to coax
+Digg into reaching.
+
+On the first ball pitched, Truly, seeming to forget that second was
+occupied, shot down the line. Instantly Yapp winged the ball to first,
+and even as he did so Collins stretched himself for third. Seeing this,
+the first baseman attempted to cut Collins off by a throw across, and
+Truly went on to second. By a fine slide, Collins shot under the third
+baseman, who made a sweeping, ineffectual jab at him, and then threw to
+second to stop the crafty Truly. Truly was there ahead of the ball, and
+had the baseman not been alive to the situation, which led him to whip
+the sphere to the plate without an instant’s delay, Collins would have
+tried to score. As it was, he got back to third a second ahead of the
+ball, and the delayed double steal was a complete success. With second
+and third occupied, a long single in the right quarter would give the
+visitors a start of two runs.
+
+Out of the corner of his mouth, Hank Bristol spoke to Bert Elgin.
+
+“Take Putnam,” he said, “and go down into a corner, and keep your arm
+warm. I may want you any minute.”
+
+Jewett saw the new pitcher and the change catcher leave the bench, and
+knew what it meant. Desperate, he whipped over a jumper to Digg, who
+attempted to lace it out, and simply hoisted a short fly to second.
+
+Leaving the bench, Kennedy took Tom Boyd’s place on the coaching line,
+Boyd being the batter who followed Hallett.
+
+“Got ’em going!” grinned old Jack. “Hit it a mile, Hallett! Give
+’em a chance to use their new wizard right away.” While apparently
+encouraging Hallett to smash the ball, he gave the signal for the
+squeeze play, which doubtless would be unexpected at this moment, when
+everything seemed to indicate the immediate downfall of the unsteady
+pitcher.
+
+Jewett handed up another. With the first hint of his movement Collins
+started like a shot for the plate. Hallett lifted his bat, held it
+slack, and bunted. Instead of falling to the ground, the ball rebounded
+in a little fly, which was caught by Jewett without moving from his
+tracks.
+
+Collins, warned by a shout, tried to stop. He saw Jewett with the ball,
+and realized what had happened. The pitcher, elated, laughed at him;
+and the sphere was tossed to third for a double play, which put an
+abrupt end to the fine start the Deers had promised to make. It also
+let Jewett out of a bad hole through a streak of great luck.
+
+Nevertheless it was probable Bristol would use the new man with the
+coming inning; and far out in a corner of the field Elgin, working
+easily with the change catcher, awaited the call.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ PITCHERS’ WATERLOO
+
+
+Although Bristol said nothing to Jewett, it was sheer luck which kept
+the pitcher from receiving a call-down by his manager. It was also
+luck, combined with poor work on the part of Curley, that gave Jewett
+an opportunity to reclaim himself in the second inning; for the locals
+got after Curley with such effect that two runs had been secured
+through hits and errors, with only one man down, when Kennedy pulled
+the twirler from the mound, and sent Sullivan out. On Sullivan’s long
+swing another run came in before the home team was retired. With this
+comfortable lead of three tallies, Bristol decided to save his new man
+for a tight pinch or some other game.
+
+“It’s uphill work now, boys,” said Kennedy to his players; “but a bunch
+that can’t fight an uphill game is no good. Get after that easy mark,
+and force Bristol to show us what he’s got out there in the offing.
+Make him use his new colt.”
+
+Already the wise old war horse had sent Heines out to keep his flipper
+oiled, fearing that Sullivan would prove meat for the Bucks. Despite
+Jack’s urging, which possibly made the youngsters of his team a bit too
+eager, Jewett got away with it in the first of the second, only one man
+threatening from third before the side was retired without cutting down
+that lead of three.
+
+“Now,” said Spider Hogan, field captain of the Buccaneers, “it’s up to
+us to put the wood to Sullivan. That old soup bone of his can’t keep
+this bunch in check. Every man that gets on first steals on his swing.
+Don’t forget.”
+
+Kennedy also had his fears for Sullivan’s “soup bone.” He spoke to
+Lefty Locke, who was watching the progress of the struggle with the
+keenest interest.
+
+“Reddy can’t hold ’em,” he said; “nor Heines, either. If I had that
+left-handed youngster of mine to put in here now the boys would support
+him, and perhaps they’d tie this thing up sudden before Bristol got
+cagy and shoved his new man on to the slab. You’re left-handed, and
+you’ve found out that you can handle a baseball.”
+
+“You don’t mean――” muttered Locke.
+
+“You know where that grip of mine is containing an old suit. There’s
+everything in it but a left-handed glove, and Collins is left-handed.
+He’d let you have his fielder’s glove. He could get along without it
+out in right.”
+
+“You don’t mean――” repeated Lefty.
+
+“I can’t tell you any plainer what I mean. Which had you rather do,
+pitch baseball for me at fifty a week and keeps, or work on a farm at
+twenty-five a month?”
+
+“If I thought――” Locke still hesitated.
+
+“Let me do the thinking for you,” urged Kennedy. “Get into that suit,
+and watch your chance to take Heines’ place warmin’ up the minute I
+have to use him. You can reach the dressing room by going round this
+side of the field.”
+
+“I’ll try it,” said Lefty, rising; “but don’t blame me――”
+
+“There won’t be any kicks comin’,” promised Kennedy, elated. “I’m
+taking the chance. You haven’t made any profession of being a ball
+tosser. Go to it.”
+
+Thus encouraged, while Sullivan was trying to hold the Buccaneers in
+check, and getting away with the inning by allowing them only one run,
+Locke sauntered to the dressing room, found Kennedy’s old uniform, and
+got into it. As he passed Heines, the little pitcher gave him a look,
+and called:
+
+“It’s about time you got into gear if Jack’s going to use you to-day.
+He’s worked the rest of us stiff, and the Bucks have grabbed the game
+already.”
+
+Lefty made no retort. Having prepared himself for the field, he waited,
+watching Heines.
+
+In the third inning the visitors, steadied by their manager, again
+bumped Jewett, and this time old Jack’s form of attack was not defeated
+by a streak of luck. Jewett, sweating and worried after the first two
+men had hit safely, lost his control, passed another, hit the fourth
+with a pitched ball, and forced a run. Still Bristol delayed, and the
+next Deer, slashing out a clean two-bagger, drove two more runners
+across the pan before Hank gave his pitcher the hook. Elgin came
+trotting in from the far corner, and ascended the hillock.
+
+He was greeted by a roar from the great crowd, which brought a smile to
+his face, and caused him to touch his cap proudly.
+
+“I knew he’d have to do it,” bellowed Peter McLaughlin, when the
+ovation died down. “Go right after him, boys. You can get his alley,
+too.”
+
+Elgin glanced in the direction from which the landlord’s voice came,
+and shrugged his shoulders disdainfully.
+
+“Give that calf more rope, or he’ll bellow his head off,” he said; at
+which would-be witticism the local crowd in the vicinity of McLaughlin
+broke into a chorus of jeers and catcalls.
+
+“A pitcher who talks back,” muttered the hotel proprietor, “has a goat
+to let. We’ll get his before the game’s done, or I’m no judge.”
+
+Elgin found the plate with a couple of pitches, and nodded to the
+batter, who stepped into his place. Behind the pan, Yapp, signaling,
+spoke only for the hitter’s ear:
+
+“He’s got awful speed. He kills ’em sometimes. Look out for his bean
+ball.”
+
+Following the signal, Elgin whipped a scorcher straight at the head of
+the batter, who gasped, and ducked barely in time.
+
+“Look out!” cried the pitcher even as the sphere left his fingers.
+And then, as Yapp handled it and returned it promptly, he said
+apologetically: “I haven’t pitched for a week, and I may be a little
+wild.”
+
+That was enough for that hitter, whose three swings failed to touch
+anything more solid than the ozone.
+
+“So that’s his game in the bush, is it?” growled Kennedy. “Don’t let
+him drive you away from the plate. Everybody stand up and hit the ball.”
+
+No one, however, seemed to care to be hit by Elgin’s speed, and the
+new man stopped the Deers in their tracks; which brought him another
+ovation from the local crowd.
+
+Sullivan started badly by handing one to the first Buccaneer who faced
+him in the third which the hitter slashed into right for a single.
+Remembering Bristol’s instructions, the runner went down to second on
+Sullivan’s first swing, from which anchorage it would be possible for
+him to score on the right kind of a safety. Then Sullivan dealt out
+a pass, which brought Kennedy to his feet, and caused Heines to come
+trotting slowly and reluctantly toward the mound.
+
+Lefty Locke, joining the spare catcher, began to warm up.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ FILLING THE BREACH
+
+
+Like Jewett in the first two innings, Heines was lucky, and the change
+enabled the Deers to hold the locals, despite their savage efforts to
+increase the lead.
+
+“Keep after them!” urged Kennedy, as the players came to the bench.
+“There are six more innings to follow. If you can hit this fellow Elgin
+at all, and we can hold them where they are, we’ll be neck and neck
+with them to-night, or I’ve never seen a game of baseball. Elgin has
+got a jinx, and he’ll show up before long. Don’t let him put the Injun
+sign on you with his bean ball.”
+
+But, in spite of old Jack’s attempt to encourage his batters, Elgin
+seemed to have the “Injun sign” on the Deers.
+
+“You can’t hit him,” Yapp told the three batters who faced Buck’s
+pitcher in the first of the fourth. “If you did you’d never get farther
+than first, for you’d see him tighten like a bowstring. You never could
+hit a real pitcher, anyhow.”
+
+He made them believe it, too. And when a batter thinks he cannot hit a
+pitcher it is only by the most remarkable bull luck that he ever gets
+as much as a scratch single. So Elgin had it easy, striking out two men
+and fielding the weak roller which the third sent his way.
+
+“Gods of war!” growled Kennedy. “I’ll have to get out there myself, and
+show them how to hit this gink. If they ever fell on him he’d take a
+sail. Where’s Locke? Oh, there he is――at it.”
+
+Old Jack watched the work of Heines like a hawk, waiting for the first
+show of wabbling; for by this time Locke had loosened his wing, and
+could come to the rescue. Just what he could do against Bert Elgin,
+Kennedy believed he knew. The old manager remembered that first game
+with the Hornets, when the two youngsters had faced each other in
+the Big League; remembered that Elgin had gone down to defeat and
+disgrace, while Lefty Locke made his reputation under the most trying
+circumstances a new man could possibly meet. Just now, as on that other
+occasion, with the great mass of spectators favoring him, Elgin seemed
+invincible; but with the first cry of “Take him out!” Kennedy believed
+the yellow streak would show. Would the break in the game lead the
+local crowd to shout for his removal? While he was going strong the
+little bunch of Deering fans might howl themselves black in the face
+without effect.
+
+Peter McLaughlin kept up his efforts to get Elgin’s goat, even though
+by so doing he was inviting personal injury from rabid Hatfielders
+within reach of him. And when a scrap starts out in the bush it
+is liable to make Ty Cobb’s whipping of an insolent fan look like
+fisticuffs between kittens at play. McLaughlin, however, had a mouth,
+and he was not afraid to use it in Hatfield or at home.
+
+“Shut up, you old toad,” commanded an angry spectator, “or somebody
+will hand you a wallop on the ear!”
+
+“When you come to Deering,” old Peter flung back, “you can talk and
+holler all you please, and anybody that tries to stop you will get into
+trouble with me. You can’t muzzle me here.”
+
+Those who knew him were aware that nothing save a sleep jab or a gag
+would keep him still, and some there were who found amusement in his
+apparently futile efforts to jar Elgin.
+
+Two more outfield catches promised to let Heines get away with another
+inning, but, with every man hitting the ball when he put it near the
+plate, it was his support that saved him to that point. Two safeties,
+however, landed runners on first and second, and a successful double
+steal caused Kennedy to shove out the hook again. Then the change
+catcher told Locke that his turn had come. The crowd watched the
+southpaw jogging to the slab; only McLaughlin and the Deering fans
+cheered him. Following that cheer, Elgin, on the coaching line, called
+to Pop Doyle, the man at bat:
+
+“Here’s a portsider with a straight ball and a prayer. He’ll put one
+over in your groove if you wait, and then you’ll show ’em why he isn’t
+pitching in the Big League now.”
+
+Doyle, a left-handed hitter, did not like southpaw pitchers, but Elgin
+had told every man on the team that the fellow who called himself
+Stranger was a frost; and the batter grinned like a wolf while Locke
+got the range of the pan with two or three throws, after Coffin had
+told him the signals.
+
+“There’s the fence, Pop!” cried Bristol, swinging two bats, with the
+expectation of following Doyle. “Get another pair of shoes by putting
+it over. You’ve won enough footwear to last you five years already. You
+can start a little retail store of your own when the season’s over.
+Make Kennedy’s new man contribute to your stock.”
+
+“You can’t get his goat that way,” howled McLaughlin. “He’s your jinx,
+and you know it. Give him a cheer, boys!”
+
+The bunch of Deering rooters responded lustily, but their cheer was
+drowned by the crowd roaring for Doyle to lace it out.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ THE MAN ON THE MOUND
+
+
+Pop Doyle rapped the rubber and squared away like a man who believed
+he could drop another one over the fence any time he wished. This was
+the time to do it, too. This was the time to break the new pitcher’s
+heart before he could get his feet under him. This was the pinch in the
+game, with the temporarily faltering tide threatening to flow on and
+overwhelm the Deers.
+
+Nor was the sympathy of all the visitors with the new pitcher. Curley,
+Sullivan, and Heines knew that the success of Stranger might mean that
+at least one of them would receive his release, and, together on the
+bench, they nursed their ineffective whips, waiting and hoping to see
+Doyle do things to the southpaw.
+
+What passed in Lefty Locke’s mind as he toed the slab and took Coffin’s
+signal not even Kennedy could know. Did he remember other occasions
+when he had faced batters more formidable than Doyle and felt no tremor
+of apprehension, or was the past a forgotten blank? Was he at that
+moment the Phil Hazelton who had made good under Kennedy with the
+majors, or was he Bob Stranger, now pitching for the first time in a
+game of baseball? Did he remember Elgin, whose trickery had so nearly
+ended his Big League prospects, or was his present rival and former foe
+absolutely unknown to him? Whatever he thought at that moment, his face
+revealed nothing. It was as impassive as a mask; the grim, determined
+mask of one who knew his task and was ready to meet it.
+
+Coffin, having signaled, put up his glove behind Doyle’s shoulder,
+and, as he had thrown at old Jack’s hands in the morning, Lefty Locke
+whipped the ball past the batter’s chin and into the pocket of that
+yawning mitt. There was no attempt to drive the batter back from the
+pan, yet Doyle, jerking his head away, heard the umpire declare a
+strike. Instantly he kicked on the decision, and Hank Bristol flung
+one of his two bats high into the air. The local fans roared their
+disapproval, encouraged by these movements of the batter and the
+manager.
+
+“Robbery!” shouted Bristol.
+
+“Robbery! Robbery!” came from the crowd. “That was a ball!”
+
+Coffin, laughing, snapped the sphere back to Lefty, who stopped it with
+his gloved right hand, and permitted it to drop into his bare left, the
+old movement which was so familiar to Kennedy.
+
+“That’s him!” whispered old Jack to himself. “That’s Lefty, sure. Let
+him get squared away, and they’re through scoring. If they don’t make
+another run this inning, it’s all off, and we’ve got ’em going.”
+
+Lefty gave little heed to the anxious base runners. He had selected
+Doyle for his victim, and it was easier and safer to keep after him
+than to take the chance of throwing to the sacks when it was not
+necessary to drive the runners back.
+
+Having made his kick, Doyle was satisfied, though Bristol kept it up
+until warned by the umpire that he would be chased from the game. The
+next one pitched by Lefty was wide. When it was called a ball, the
+crowd sarcastically howled at the umpire, and asked him if he was sure
+it was not a strike.
+
+Peter McLaughlin found it almost impossible to remain on his seat.
+“You’ve got him!” the old man shouted. “He can’t hit ye, Stranger! He
+can’t see your fast ones. Give him a curve now, and see what he can do
+with it.”
+
+Without looking in the direction of the excited hotel proprietor, Lefty
+nodded and smiled.
+
+“I’m going to try you with a curve, Doyle,” he told the batter. “Let’s
+see if you can win any shoes off it.”
+
+Coffin called for another straight one across Doyle’s shoulder, but
+Locke shook his head.
+
+“I told him I was going to pitch a curve,” he said. “Mr. Kennedy showed
+me one or two this morning. I wonder if I’ve forgotten how to use them?”
+
+“Lay one over anywhere,” invited Doyle, “and I’ll break the fence.”
+
+Even as he spoke, Locke pitched, starting the ball high, and making it
+take a break across the batter’s shoulders. Whereupon Doyle pounded the
+air for a second strike.
+
+“Told you you had him foul!” whooped McLaughlin. “How can he hit ’em?
+He can’t.”
+
+“Make him put ’em across, Pop,” urged Bristol. “Don’t let him fool you
+again.”
+
+Now, Lefty had deceived Doyle completely by telling him just what he
+was going to pitch, for the batter had looked for something entirely
+different.
+
+“Try another,” he entreated. “Give me another like that, and see it go
+out of the lot.”
+
+“Well,” said Lefty, “I’ll do it, if you’ll agree to swing.”
+
+“Look out for the straight one now!” shouted Elgin from the coaching
+line. “I know his pitching. That’s the way he mixes ’em――a curve and
+a straight one. That’s why he didn’t last in the Big League. They got
+wise to him. Meet it, Pop――meet it!”
+
+But, to the surprise of Elgin, although Lefty swung his arm as if about
+to waft over a smoker, he made such a beautiful change of pace that
+Doyle barely saved himself by holding the bat back on the swing. The
+slow ball dropped to the ground six inches in front of the plate, and
+Coffin gathered it on the bound.
+
+“That’s two and two,” said Elgin. “It takes only one to hit it.”
+
+Lefty rubbed his bare hand on the hip of Kennedy’s old Blue Stocking
+pants. “I’ve got another curve,” he observed thoughtfully. “Let me see
+if I can remember that one.”
+
+He threw it a moment later, the hook which dropped and twisted to
+the far side of the plate beyond Doyle; and again the batter checked
+himself on the swing, rejoicing when the umpire’s decision made it
+three to two.
+
+“Now,” he said, “you’ve got to put it over or hand me a walk. You don’t
+dare put it across!”
+
+“I’m going to put it across,” promised Lefty; “and of course I’ll have
+to use a straight one.”
+
+In such a hole some pitchers would have found it necessary to use the
+straight one. Apparently Locke pitched with that intention. Doyle tried
+to meet the ball and hoist it over the fence. It was another of those
+baffling “Johnson hooks” to the outside corner, and he missed by inches.
+
+“You’re out!” cried the umpire; and Peter McLaughlin had a fit then and
+there.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ THE OTHER PITCHER
+
+
+Old Jack Kennedy’s lips were pressed together, not a word coming
+from them as Lefty Locke strode to the bench; but in the depths of
+the manager’s eyes there was a wonderful glow, and he could feel his
+usually steady pulse pounding with an erratic throb.
+
+“Here’s the boy who could have pitched the Blue Stockings to a
+pennant,” he thought; “and Al Carson didn’t know a good thing when he
+had it. He didn’t know how to handle the lad.”
+
+“Did I get away with that all right?” asked Lefty, with surprising
+simplicity.
+
+“Huh!” grunted Kennedy. “They didn’t score, did they? You ain’t heard
+anybody kickin’, have you?”
+
+“He’s some pitcher――he really is,” murmured Coffin, slipping into place
+between Sullivan and Curley.
+
+“Oh, wait,” muttered the big red-headed pitcher. “He’s only had to face
+one man, and I didn’t see that he showed so much.”
+
+“The Bucks will size him up in about two innings,” prophesied Curley,
+“and when they do――good night, Mr. Stranger!”
+
+“They’ve got a real pitcher in that fellow Elgin,” said Sullivan. “He
+struts like a peacock, sure; but he’s got speed and slants, and he
+knows where to put ’em.”
+
+“It’s my opinion,” said Coffin, “that Bob Stranger has got a little
+smoke himself, and that queer, twisting drop of his would fool old
+Honus Wagner.”
+
+“Yes, it would!” scoffed Curley. “It fooled Doyle once, but wait till
+next time, Coff――just you wait!”
+
+Even while this brief conversation was taking place, Elgin, still
+graceful, confident, and filled with ginger by the applause of the
+crowd, retired Captain Kilgore by the pop-fly route, and took on Buster
+Brown. Coffin, who followed Brown, began looking around for his pet bat.
+
+“You look to me like a blowed-up bladder,” said Brown, addressing
+Elgin. “Put one across, and see me nail it. But look out you don’t blow
+all to pieces when the bladder’s pricked.”
+
+“Get his goat! Get his goat!” howled Peter McLaughlin from the stand.
+“You can get it!”
+
+Elgin gave Brown a contemptuous smile. “Why,” he said, “you couldn’t
+hit me if I told you what I was going to throw. This will be a spitter.
+You never could hit a spitter.”
+
+Holding the ball covered by both hands, his head went back with a
+motion which seemed to indicate that he pasted one side of the ball
+with saliva. Then he actually threw the spitter to Brown, and Brown
+missed.
+
+“I’ll give you another, you big dub!” said Elgin. “Another just like
+that. Now, go ahead with your puncturing.”
+
+As good as his word, he threw another spitter, and again Brown fanned.
+
+“Say,” said the batter, “you’re copying the style of Kennedy’s new
+left-hander, ain’t you, telling the batter what you’re going to throw?
+You’re nothing but a plain copy, anyhow.”
+
+Somehow this touched Elgin, and his face burned. “If I was going to
+copy anybody,” he retorted, “I’d take a real pitcher for a model.”
+
+“Keep him chewin’ the rag,” bellowed McLaughlin. “You’ll git that goat
+yet.”
+
+Indeed, Elgin was so exasperated that he made a tremendously wild
+pitch, and, seeing it coming, Brown took a chance, and pretended that
+he was trying to hit it. With the swing, he let his bat fly to one
+side, and was off toward first, which he reached before the disgusted
+Yapp could recover the ball and stop him.
+
+“Oh, wow, wow!” laughed Buster mockingly. “It’s a good thing the stand
+was behind Yapp. They’d never found that wild heave if it hadn’t been.
+Keep on shooting your face off, peacock. We like it.”
+
+“You’d never get to first any other way,” said Elgin. “Congratulate
+yourself.”
+
+“Never mind him,” called Yapp, as the catcher for the Deers walked out
+to the plate. “Put a nail in this Coffin. You can do that just as well
+as you can Kilgore.”
+
+“Why, you’re a real wit, Yappy,” said Coffin. “Why don’t you get his
+umps to call time while you laugh at your own jokes?”
+
+“Speaking about jokes,” returned Yapp, “you’re one. I heard Kennedy
+kept you in the game and put you behind the bat for your hitting. Well,
+you won’t fat your average off Elgin.”
+
+Now, Yapp really knew Coffin’s weakness, and, with Elgin’s perfect
+control, the man was worked for a strike-out, although Brown stole
+second while this was taking place.
+
+“Don’t exert yourself,” said Elgin, looking around at Buster; “’twon’t
+be necessary.”
+
+Lefty Locke was the hitter now, and Elgin seemed to have little doubt
+in his mind as to what he could do with him.
+
+“You thought you was something when you made the Blue Stockings, didn’t
+you?” said Elgin, as Lefty took his place in the box.
+
+“I beg your pardon,” returned Locke. “I think you’ve got me mixed with
+some other man.”
+
+“Oh, you do, eh?” sneered Bert. “Call yourself Stranger now, eh? I sure
+don’t blame you at all.”
+
+“Why don’t you pitch instead of talking so much?” demanded Lefty
+impatiently.
+
+“Oh, I’ll pitch in a minute,” returned the other, nodding to Yapp to
+signal. “You seem in a big hurry to strike out.”
+
+Lefty made no further remark, but waited in position to swing easily
+at anything the pitcher might put over. Nevertheless, two strikes
+were called on him, and he had not attempted to hit one, much to the
+amusement of the great crowd, before he finally got what he wanted. The
+ring of wood meeting leather brought a gasp from the crowd. It was a
+line drive straight over the head of Berlin, who jumped vainly for it.
+
+Now, at Elgin’s suggestion, the fielders had all been switched round
+to the left; for, despite the fact that he was a left-hander, Locke
+frequently hit hard into left field. This movement had brought the
+right fielder almost in line with that tremendous drive; otherwise he
+could not have touched it. The change enabled him to make a marvelous
+running bare-handed catch which robbed Lefty of a three-bagger, at
+least, and prevented Brown from tying up the score.
+
+“Oh, dear, dear!” sighed Peter McLaughlin, sinking back into his seat.
+“What a crack! What luck! Why, that fellow can hit ’em――he just can.”
+
+Brown, swinging toward home after crossing third, and being told that
+it was useless to run, twisted his mug at Bert Elgin.
+
+“Luck saved you that time, Mr. Pouter Pigeon,” he said. “You’re due to
+get yours good and plenty before the day is over.”
+
+Although he shrugged and sneered, away down deep in his heart Elgin
+felt a touch of apprehension lest the words of Buster Brown were
+prophetic.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ THE STEAL HOME
+
+
+The game, which had started out so loosely, and threatened to become
+wretched at any moment, was now turned into a pitchers’ battle, with
+Locke and Elgin working against each other. Settling down, Lefty
+became silent, attending strictly to business. At no time, save in the
+threatening moments, did he seem exerting himself to his utmost. The
+uproar of the crowd, calculated to disturb his coolness, seemed no more
+effective than the murmur of a summer breeze.
+
+“If they think they can rattle him in this little one-horse burg,”
+Kennedy whispered to himself, “they should have seen him pitchin’
+before thirty thousand howlin’ fans in the Big League. Why, he’s just
+monkeyin’ with that bunch. With him, we can walk away with the bunting,
+sure as fate.”
+
+With him! But what right had he to keep Lefty Locke, under contract
+with the Blue Stockings? What right had he to hold this man, the
+lack of whose pitching might prevent the Blue Stockings from taking
+the championship? Was it not his duty to notify Al Carson as soon as
+possible that the missing pitcher had turned up in Deering?
+
+“But Lefty’s under suspension,” thought Kennedy. “They wouldn’t be
+using him now if they had him. Oh, I’ve got to talk it over with him,
+and talk straight. It’s the only way.”
+
+There was little time for thoughts like these. The locals still held
+that one-run lead, and Elgin, pitching like a man with life at stake,
+refused in the sixth and seventh innings to let one of the Deers as
+much as threaten to tie it up. On the other hand, in both of those
+innings the Bucks got a runner to second with only one out, whereupon,
+however, Locke tightened promptly, and there was nothing further doing.
+
+The eighth opened with Brown leading off, and he talked to Elgin a blue
+streak until the pitcher finally fanned him.
+
+“Go sit down, and close up that hot-air vent,” said Bert.
+
+Coffin picked a slant, and smashed it like a bullet straight into the
+hands of the shortstop for the second out.
+
+Then, again, Lefty Locke stepped forth, and Peter McLaughlin shrieked:
+
+“Here’s the man to hit him! Here’s the boy! It’s all off now! He’ll tie
+it up.”
+
+Once more, away down in Elgin’s heart, he felt that throb of
+apprehension. This was the man who had ruined his chances in the Big
+League, the man who had seemed favored in everything by luck――Lucky
+Locke he should be called, Elgin thought. And only for the chance that
+had brought Hartford over nearly into center field, Locke would have
+scored Brown on a clean drive the last time up.
+
+“I’ll pass him,” declared Elgin suddenly. “I’ll pretend I’m trying to
+put the ball over, but I’ll pass him.”
+
+It was the weak spot, the yellow streak coming to the surface. With two
+out and no one on the sacks, there was really little danger that Locke
+could make a home run; yet Elgin was afraid. From over at one side, in
+the midst of the little knot of Deering fans, Peter McLaughlin seemed
+to realize Elgin’s purpose by the time Bert had handed up the second
+wide one.
+
+“He’s scat!” yelled the old hotel man. “Yaller――yaller! He don’t dare
+put one over! He’s quittin’!”
+
+The coachers took up the cry of “Yellow,” and Elgin viciously bit his
+under lip.
+
+“I’ll just put one bender over,” he decided. “I’ll show them that I’m
+not afraid to slant one across.”
+
+Using his curve, he put the ball over; but it never reached the waiting
+hands of Yapp. Again Lefty met it fairly, and again it went whistling
+out on a line. This time, however, neither infielder nor outfielder
+could touch it. Only for a long rebound from the fence into the hands
+of a player, who promptly returned the sphere to the diamond, Locke,
+covering ground like a deer, would have turned the hit into a homer.
+
+McLaughlin and the Deering bunch were howling themselves purple in the
+face. Old Jack Kennedy, on the coaching line, flapped his arms and
+laughed at Elgin, whose face was pale as a sheet of paper.
+
+“Why, he knows how to hit you, Elgin. He can do it every time,” said
+the old manager. “If the head of the list wasn’t up now, I’d go in
+myself and pound him across. Collins,” he snapped, as Chick came out
+from the bench with a bat, “if you dodge a bean ball this time I’ll
+fine you a week’s pay. Take it on the nut if he throws it.”
+
+“If he――if he does,” muttered Elgin hoarsely, “you’ll carry him home in
+a box.”
+
+“Oh, no――oh, no!” derided old Jack. “Why, you couldn’t crack a pane of
+glass with your swift one. Get hit, Chick, if he throws at you――get
+hit.”
+
+“All right,” grinned Collins. “Let her come.”
+
+Elgin pitched only once to Collins before something happened. Yapp
+snapped the ball back, and Bert, catching it with one hand, was kicking
+a pebble out of the pitching box when a sudden wild yell arose. He
+turned in surprise, and saw Locke racing down from third, actually
+attempting to tie the score by stealing home. And that with the head
+of the batting order up! The astounding unexpectedness of such a thing
+took away Elgin’s breath, and made him hesitate for a fraction of a
+second.
+
+Yapp, leaping forward to block the runner off, shrieked for Elgin to
+throw the ball. Awaking suddenly, Bert threw it. In his haste, however,
+he whipped it wide, and Yapp was forced to reach in the wrong direction.
+
+Lefty Locke hit the dirt feet first, shot under the Buccaneers’
+catcher, and scraped one foot across the rubber.
+
+“Safe!” shouted the umpire, his hands outspread.
+
+The great crowd was silent――all save a little bunch led by Peter
+McLaughlin, who were yelling like lunatics. Elgin, ghastly white, was
+dumb. It had happened, after all――the thing he feared; this fellow
+Locke had snatched the opportunity to make him ridiculous before a
+bush-league crowd. Like poison fire, hatred burned and seethed in
+Elgin’s heart. He did not hear Bristol raging at him from first. His
+eyes followed Locke as the latter, rising, pounded the dust out of
+Kennedy’s Blue Stocking uniform, and turned toward the bench as calmly
+as if stealing home was a common thing with him.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ STRANGER IS ANNOYED
+
+
+“Gods of our fathers!” said Buster Brown as Locke reached the bench.
+“You done it, old boy, and you done it slick. I’ll bet that man Elgin
+goes up so far you can’t see him with the Lick telescope.”
+
+As for Elgin, he spent some minutes in an apparent endeavor to steady
+himself; then, when he pitched again to Collins, Chick smashed out a
+safe drive.
+
+The fusillade of singles and doubles and triples which followed gave
+the Deers four more runs before Bristol came to realize that Elgin was
+wholly gone, and sent another man to the mound.
+
+“Got his goat! I knew we would!” rejoiced Landlord McLaughlin. “It’s
+all over but the shouting. Nobody is afeared of the Buccaneers now.”
+
+Appalled and silenced by the sudden turn of the game and the amazing
+and unexpected downfall of their pitching hero, many of the disgusted
+local spectators crept out of the stand and stole away before the
+Buccaneers went down to defeat in the last of the ninth, vainly
+seeking up to the finish to fathom the delivery of Kennedy’s southpaw.
+
+When it was all over, Locke lost not a moment in dashing away toward
+the dressing room――an action which seemed instinctive or born of
+baseball experience in other days. He was pursued by the shrill
+cheering of the little bunch of delighted Deering fans.
+
+Elgin had vanished. Crushed, bitter, unspeakably humiliated, after
+his removal from the box he had lost no time in leaving the field. He
+could not realize that retribution had reached forth its iron hand and
+touched him again, as it will any and all of us who do wrong and have a
+conscience that must cause us to suffer.
+
+Reaching the dressing room, Lefty had peeled off the old uniform, and
+was ready for a hasty shower before his teammates arrived. They came in
+rejoicing, with the possible exception of the jealous pitchers who had
+failed in the early stages of the game.
+
+“Stranger, of the southpaw!” cried Kilgore, as Locke seized a towel
+and began rubbing himself dry. “You were there when the hour struck.
+That steal home broke Elgin’s heart. Never saw a man blow up so sudden
+before. Couldn’t touch him before that; everybody hit him afterward.”
+
+Old Jack Kennedy came in. “Let me massage that portside flinger of
+yours, Stranger,” he urged. “We’ve no regular rubber to look after it,
+so I’ll have to give it what it needs.”
+
+Lefty submitted to the massaging of his strong, free-swinging left arm
+and shoulder.
+
+“How did you happen to try that steal to the plate?” asked Kennedy, as
+he worked over the man’s arm.
+
+“I don’t know,” was the answer. “Seems to me I’ve done it before, but
+of course I haven’t, never having played baseball.”
+
+“You have played baseball――take it from me,” said Kennedy. “Perhaps
+you’ve forgotten about it, but you’ve played the game aplenty.”
+
+“Anyhow,” said Locke, “something told me to go home when I saw Elgin
+getting a bit careless in the box. I knew it would tie things up if I
+scored, and it might put him off his pins. If I failed, we’d still have
+another chance in the first of the ninth inning. Before I knew it I was
+streaking to the plate. Of course it was luck.”
+
+“Of course there was some luck about it,” agreed old Jack; “but it took
+nerve and judgment. If you’d failed, everybody would have handed you
+the laugh.”
+
+“That wouldn’t have disturbed me,” said Locke. “A man can’t do much if
+he’s never going to try anything for fear he’ll be laughed at if he
+fails. Sometimes a sense of humor helps; other times it hurts.”
+
+“That’s philosophy,” said Kennedy. “Now you’re talking like yourself,
+son.”
+
+Indeed, at that moment Locke appeared like the fine, forceful, jovial
+fellow Kennedy had known him to be, having lost much of his shadowy
+gloom and all that peculiar style of talk which had bothered old Jack
+not a little.
+
+Locke was fully dressed and ready to leave when a prematurely corpulent
+young man arrived at the dressing-room door and inquired for Phil
+Hazelton.
+
+“Nobody by that name here,” he was told.
+
+“Wait a minute,” called Kennedy, who had heard the words. “Who’s that?
+The young doctor who follows up the Bucks? I’ve seen him over in
+Deering.”
+
+“My name is Hetner,” said the man at the door. “I’m Doctor Wallace
+Hetner, and I’d like to have just a word with my old college friend,
+Hazelton. Perhaps he doesn’t call himself by that name in baseball.
+Perhaps he calls himself Locke. And I see by the score sheet that he
+was down to-day as Stranger.”
+
+Lefty turned and stepped to the door to face the speaker.
+
+“You must mean me,” he said. “I’m the Stranger who pitched for the
+Deers.”
+
+“And you’re Phil Hazelton,” said Doctor Hetner. “I wondered what had
+become of you, Hazelton. You were on the train with me when the smash
+came. You were on that very smoking car. I spoke to you a short time
+before the car jumped the track. Don’t you remember?”
+
+Locke shook his head.
+
+“It’s a singular thing,” he said, “but people get me mixed up with
+someone else. They persist in thinking I’m some other person. My name
+is Robert Stranger, pal. I’m a diamond cutter by trade. My health ain’t
+just what it should be, and a pill slinger advised me to get outdoors
+somewhere and work on a farm. That’s how I happen to be here.”
+
+Hetner’s jaw dropped, and he stared hard at the speaker. At the same
+time, behind Locke’s back, Kennedy clenched his right fist, and his
+eyes narrowed as he listened to this sudden change in the young
+left-hander’s style of speech.
+
+“That’s right, doctor,” he said suddenly. “Folks seem to think that
+Stranger, here, is someone else. Even I made that mistake. It annoys
+him.”
+
+“Do you mean to tell me,” persisted Doctor Hetner, his eyes fastened on
+Locke, “that you weren’t on that train when a broken rail sent us into
+the ditch? I looked for you among the injured or killed, but couldn’t
+find you.”
+
+“I never was in a train wreck in my life,” said Lefty.
+
+Baffled, the doctor turned away, mumbling an excuse, although not at
+all satisfied.
+
+“I wish they’d quit that,” said Lefty, brushing a hand across his
+forehead. “I wish they’d stop taking me for some other person. It’s
+infernally annoying.”
+
+“It must be,” agreed Kennedy, turning to Toots Kilgore. “Toots,” he
+said, in a low tone, “take the boys to the hotel and get supper. If I’m
+not there, I’ll meet you at the train.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ THE DOCTOR’S DOUBTS
+
+
+“Yes,” said Doctor Hetner, sitting in his office, facing Manager
+Kennedy, “of course it’s possible for such a thing to happen. Of
+course, the man’s mind may be affected, and he may not remember his
+former life and friends. At the same time, he may be suffering under a
+delusion, which has led him to take a new name and assume a different
+character. Such instances, although rare, are well known to medical
+science.”
+
+“What brings them about?” inquired Kennedy eagerly.
+
+“Overstudy, overwork, a diseased condition of the body or mind, a
+sudden shock――oh, numerous things. It has almost a thousand different
+forms. Psychologists and physicians who make a study of the subject
+recognize many of the symptoms.”
+
+“Have you made a study of it, doc?”
+
+“Not what you might call a thorough study, although, of course, among
+my books I have many which deal with neurasthenia and its allied forms.
+Still, I’ll give you my word that I never for a moment recognized the
+symptoms in Hazelton. It seemed to me that the fellow, when he met me
+on the train, was simply declining to acknowledge an old acquaintance
+for reasons of pride or something of that sort. That it was aphasia
+didn’t occur to me. It’s likely you know how he happened to go into
+baseball under a fake name?”
+
+“But there ain’t no disgrace playing baseball these days,” growled the
+old manager. “There’s as clean a set of fellers in the game as you can
+find anywhere.”
+
+“Nevertheless, prejudice exists in the minds of many old-fashioned
+persons, such as Phil Hazelton’s father must be. To them, playing
+baseball is a great deal like taking part in a circus performance.
+They can’t see that it has become an honorable, legitimate, recognized
+profession, followed by hundreds upon hundreds of clean, honest young
+men. You understand why I doubt this being a genuine case of loss of
+identity? I believe Hazelton is trying to hide himself under an assumed
+name and personality.”
+
+Old Jack shook his head.
+
+“He ain’t no fool, doctor; he can’t help knowing that I know him and
+you know him. Elgin knows him, too. If he was a simple-minded idiot, he
+might continue to try to keep up the bluff. I tell you, that boy has
+gone wrong in his garret, and something ought to be done for him. I
+don’t know just how to do it.”
+
+“Well, now, look here,” said the doctor; “I’m coming over to Deering
+in a day or two, Kennedy. In the meantime, I want you to try to trip
+Hazelton. Lead him into some sort of a give-away, an admission, then
+nail him. Tell him it isn’t any use to stick to the bluff.”
+
+“And have him get red-headed and tell me to go straight to――well, you
+know where.”
+
+“Never mind that.”
+
+“But I do mind. With him pitching for the Deers, we can put ourselves
+into first place in two weeks’ time. I know just what he can do. Talk
+about John Coombs, the iron man, or ‘Cy’ Young in his palmy days――why,
+Lefty Locke is as good as either of them. He can pitch three days
+running, if necessary; and two or three games a week, with a day
+between each, is like loafing for him, especially in this bush league.
+Oh, I don’t want him to quit me!”
+
+“I don’t blame you,” said Hetner, laughing; “but I don’t believe he’ll
+quit. Yet, if he belongs to the Blue Stockings, and they’re in need of
+him――”
+
+Kennedy growled. “Then it’s up to me, if I’m decent, to let ’em know
+where they can find him. No matter how I feel about the way I was
+treated, it’s up to me just the same.”
+
+“Still,” said the physician, “if the man isn’t right in his head,
+it would be wrong for him to go on pitching baseball without any
+treatment whatever.”
+
+“Treatment?” said Kennedy. “Does treatment always cure ’em?”
+
+“Sometimes it won’t do a blessed bit of good. Nothing cures them but a
+long rest, and, perhaps, a sudden accidental occurrence which flashes
+back into their brain the realization of their true identity. Sometimes
+a situation may be successfully planned to bring this about; more often
+the most skillful planning results in absolute failure. But remember, I
+haven’t stated that Hazelton is a victim of such a delusion.”
+
+“We’ll find out whether he is or not, doctor,” said the old manager,
+rising. “If he’s fooling, I’ll catch him at it. I’ll let you know right
+away if I trip him somehow. So long, doc.”
+
+Kennedy had time to snatch a bite at the hotel and accompany the team
+to the station to take the train for Deering. Arriving at the latter
+place, they were welcomed by a gathering at the station, for the whole
+town had learned by telephone the result of the game in Hatfield.
+
+“Where’s your new pitcher, Jack――where is he?” they shouted. “He ought
+to be all right.”
+
+“He is,” assured Kennedy, waiting on the car platform until Lefty was
+forced to appear. “He didn’t let the Bucks have a run after he mounted
+the slab. Here’s Bob Stranger, gents, and, believe me, he’s the man
+I’ve been looking for to win the pennant with. If I can keep him, we’ll
+nail it.”
+
+“Keep him!” yelled one of the crowd. “If you let him get away, your
+life won’t be safe around these parts!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ FIRST POSITION
+
+
+Of course, Locke went out to the farm with old Jack, and again they sat
+on the veranda, this time watching the moon coming up over the eastern
+horizon. For a long time Kennedy was silent as he smoked, and Locke
+also seemed busied with his thoughts. The moonlight, creeping beneath
+the veranda, fell upon Lefty’s face, making it seem strangely handsome
+and strangely sad. Suddenly the old manager burst out laughing.
+
+“Wonder if Bert Elgin will get his release the way he did the first
+time you went up against him with the Blue Stockings behind you, son?”
+he said. “You remember what Brennan done to Elgin after that game was
+over?”
+
+Locke swung round and faced the speaker.
+
+“I don’t remember anything at all,” he said, “because, as far as I’m
+concerned, it never happened. Like the others, Mr. Kennedy, you’ve got
+me mixed up with another man.”
+
+“Mebbe so,” said old Jack; “but I don’t believe it. Look here, if you
+ain’t Lefty Locke, the boy who pitched for me when I was handling the
+Blue Stockings the first of the season, how does it happen that you can
+go into a game same as you did to-day and pitch like a veteran?”
+
+“That’s one thing I can’t answer,” was the confession. “Of course, you
+gave me some practice here in the morning, but――”
+
+Kennedy snapped his fingers. “All I gave you didn’t amount to that,
+unless you knew how to pitch before,” he declared. “No matter how
+much you remembered, it was what you didn’t seem to remember that was
+telling you what to do in that game. That’s how you could go in there
+and win for us. I don’t know where you picked up the name of Stranger,
+but――”
+
+“I’ve always had that name. I’m a diamond cutter, pal. My folks were
+rather strait-laced, and I was a wild one. They’re both gone, and I’m
+alone in the world.”
+
+“That sounds first-rate as fur as it goes,” said Kennedy; “but it don’t
+go fur. Where was you born, and where was you brung up? You’ve got
+plenty of folks who know about you, of course. Where be they?”
+
+“I was just trying to think,” said Locke. “Something has made me
+forget, but I’ll remember to-morrow, perhaps.”
+
+“Hope you do,” said Kennedy. “If you remember, you’ll get it
+straightened out that I was your manager. The new owner fired me, and
+Al Carson took my place. Something happened between you and Carson. You
+didn’t get along. I was watching things in the papers. You was fined
+and suspended. Then the team was mixed up in that railroad smash, an――”
+
+“Stop!” interrupted Locke, in mingled excitement and confusion. “I
+can’t follow you as fast as that. No use for me to try.”
+
+“But you remember――you remember now?” persisted Kennedy.
+
+“Not a thing,” was the reply. “I still think you’re mistaken.”
+
+The following morning Kennedy sent a telegram to Al Carson, of the Blue
+Stockings:
+
+ Can tell you where to find your missing pitcher, Locke.
+
+ JOHN KENNEDY.
+
+By noon he received an answer:
+
+ Don’t want to find him. He’s blacklisted for quitting.
+
+ CARSON.
+
+“Hooray!” said Kennedy, as he thrust the message into his pocket. “I’ve
+done my duty. They don’t want him. Now I can keep him――unless he gets
+cured of a sudden, and goes hustling back to them.”
+
+For a time the old manager felt nothing but keenest satisfaction over
+the situation. Gradually, however, having a conscience, he began to
+fret and worry. It was all wrong, he told himself, and the fact
+that Carson was prejudiced and had given Locke a rotten deal did not
+excuse him for remaining silent under the circumstances and using the
+youngster to his advantage. If Locke’s mind was affected immediate
+treatment was what the young man needed――immediate attention by an
+expert in mental disorders; and Kennedy could not con himself into
+satisfaction by saying over and over that nothing could be better
+for Lefty than the peace and quiet of the country, together with an
+occasional game of baseball to keep awake his interest in a life of
+action.
+
+“But I’ll wait till Monday, when the Bucks come over here,” he told
+himself. “That young doctor likely will come along at the same time,
+and we can talk it over again. I’ve got to have advice.”
+
+In this manner he pacified his troublesome conscience for the time
+being.
+
+In the afternoon, playing the Stars upon Deering field, the Deers, with
+Curley on the hillock, had it pretty much their own way. Danger of
+release had spurred Curley to do his level best, and in all the pinches
+he pitched with a skill which made his performance one of the finest
+exhibitions he had ever given in that bush league.
+
+Furthermore, the snatching of the game from the Buccaneers had inspired
+the Deers with new hope and fire, and they backed Curley up in an
+errorless manner, and hit well. Not only that, but both Sullivan and
+Heines, before the game started, had asked to pitch.
+
+Kennedy knew what that meant. The work of Locke, and the probability
+that some one of the others would get his release, had put them all on
+their mettle.
+
+“Got ’em now,” thought old Jack; “got ’em where I want ’em. They’ll
+all work till they drop in the harness, and it’s only up to me to keep
+watch that I don’t push ’em beyond the limit.”
+
+On the other hand, the Stars were nervous and fearful and altogether
+too eager. They seemed to realize that the Deers, unless beaten
+right away, would eventually leap into first place and clinch the
+championship. A day or two earlier they had feared the Buccaneers most,
+but the victory of the Deers over the Bucks had brought a new menace
+to the front; and the former champions, having endured the strain to
+the seventh inning, went to pieces generally, handing the locals a
+well-earned but rather staggering victory.
+
+Lefty Locke sat on the bench, again wearing Kennedy’s Blue Stocking
+uniform. He had warmed up a little, although the manager had scarcely
+a thought of putting him in under any circumstances; and the visitors
+had watched him with the utmost interest. For surely an unknown twirler
+thrown into a game at Hatfield by Kennedy, and able to stop the fierce
+Buccaneers in their tracks, was a real pitcher.
+
+“I wonder who he really is?” the bushers asked one another.
+“Stranger――that ain’t his name, never!”
+
+After the game was over, Kennedy, outwardly calm, but inwardly
+chuckling with satisfaction, made his way to the Central House, where
+he found Landlord McLaughlin ready to set out the cigars for everybody.
+
+“Well, say, Jack,” called the proprietor, as Kennedy strolled in,
+mopping his perspiring face, “things have turned our way, sartain. I
+knowed you could do it if we could only get you to take holt of the
+team. That there championship is as good as ourn.”
+
+“Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched, Peter,” advised
+Kennedy. “You’ll find the Buccaneers and Hank Bristol still in the
+game. Of course, they put the Boobs to the mat to-day, but our winning
+from the Stars keeps us neck and neck with ’em, and ready to step into
+fust place before we go under the wire at the finish. To-morrow we’ll
+have a crack at the Boobs, and Monday we get another swing at the Bucks
+right here to home. Monday I’ll pitch Stranger again. Watch him trim
+them, if the boys back him up the way they did Curley to-day.”
+
+“Say, Jack,” chuckled the old man behind the cigar counter, as he put
+forth box after box, “this town is sartain red-hot baseball crazy right
+now. Talk about Deering being dead! Why, it’s the liveliest little burg
+between the two oceans. Mark me, next Monday we’ll have out the best
+crowd that has ever seen a baseball game in these parts.”
+
+From a near-by booth came a sharp call of the telephone bell.
+
+“Mebbe that’s the report of the game at Somerset,” said McLaughlin,
+leaving the cigars for anybody who wanted them to take one or a
+handful, and turning toward the booth. “I’ll just see if ’tis, and find
+out how bad the Buccaneers beat the Boobs.”
+
+He entered the booth, and closed the door. Those outside heard him
+shouting into the receiver a few minutes later: “What? What’s that? Say
+it over. Ain’t you got that wrong end to? Well, I swan to man! Good-by.”
+
+The minute he could push open the door and stick his head out, he cried:
+
+“The Bucks have gone up! The Boobs beat ’em four to two. We’re at the
+head of the league. Hooray!”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ A TROUBLED MIND
+
+
+A person who has never had any experience with baseball in the bush
+can scarcely realize the effect upon Deering of the knowledge that
+the local team had jumped into the lead and stood more than a fair
+prospect, managed by Kennedy, of winning the championship. The place,
+which ordinarily seemed rather sleepy and lifeless, suddenly seethed.
+Almost everyone, save crabbed old men or cranks prejudiced against the
+game, talked baseball, praised Kennedy, and speculated concerning his
+new left-handed wonder, who had beaten the dangerous Buccaneers.
+
+On Saturday afternoon the crowd that came streaming out to the field
+gladdened the hearts of the team’s backers by the manner in which
+they forked over their quarters at the box office. A flow of silver
+poured in, and the Deers, who had once seemed likely to end the season
+several hundred dollars in debt, saw a prospect of coming out ahead in
+finances――a prospect which made everyone rejoice.
+
+Of course Lefty Locke was the hero of the day. Everyone stared at
+him. The girls whispered and giggled as they looked in his direction,
+and even young married women discreetly ventured to say that they
+considered him a very handsome man. There was something about his
+reserved bearing, the melancholy touch in his face, and the somber
+shadow in his eyes which seemed poetical and fascinating to those of
+the fair sex who observed him.
+
+In some manner, stories about him began to be whispered around. It was
+suggested that he had a broken heart, caused by some foolish girl, who
+had thrown him over for another man. Another story was that he was
+mourning for his sweetheart, who had died. The one humorous yarn of the
+lot was that he was a married man and the father of several children.
+
+But no matter what baseless speculation was circulated, each and every
+one of these stories simply made him seem all the more fascinating and
+attractive to the young women of Deering.
+
+But Lefty favored not one of them with more than a passing glance, and
+never in his eyes was there as much as a twinkling light.
+
+They had a chance to see Locke in action in the ninth inning, when,
+after pitching a great game to that point, Sullivan let down a little,
+and the Boobs, scampering over the sacks as they chose, threatened to
+snatch victory from defeat.
+
+Old Jack was watching every turn like a hawk, and promptly he pulled
+Sullivan from the mound, and sent out Locke, who had warmed up once
+before and once during the game, but was now cold.
+
+With one man down, Lefty took the next two batters in hand, and buried
+the whooping, aggressive Boobs in short order. The first man he fanned,
+and the next he forced into putting up a little pop foul back of first
+base, which ended the game.
+
+Coming down from the park, half an hour later, Locke was surrounded and
+pursued by at least twenty youngsters, who openly discussed him for his
+own ears to hear, all agreeing that as a pitcher Christy Mathewson had
+nothing on this great southpaw.
+
+Ordinarily this would have provided no small amount of amusement for
+Lefty; now, however, he scarcely seemed to hear or see any of them as
+he strode along, his expression one of troubled thought.
+
+Was it possible that he was beginning to realize that his name was
+not Robert Stranger, and that, for all his protestations that he had
+never played baseball before coming to Deering, he had a past upon
+the diamond? At any rate, he moved like a shadow among those admiring
+people of Deering――among them, but not of them.
+
+Sunday followed――Sunday on Kennedy’s farm. Old Jack made a suggestion
+about church, but Locke shook his head, saying he did not care to
+attend. And all day long he wandered restlessly about the farm, or
+sat idly on the veranda, declining to read, apparently striving to
+think――to think.
+
+“The poor boy’s worried, Jack,” said Mrs. Kitty Malone. “It upsets me
+complete to see him this way.”
+
+“Kit, I never thought the sight of any man would upset you again,”
+returned her brother. “I thought you’d had enough of them.”
+
+“So I have. But this is different――this case. He’s only a boy. I feel
+like a mother toward him.”
+
+“Yes, you do!” laughed Kennedy. “Oh, yes, you do――not. Why, you’re not
+so much older, Kit――not more than ten year, and he really is almost a
+boy.”
+
+“But ten year,” she said sadly. “If ’twere t’other way ’twould be
+different. Do you know what’s on his mind, Jack?”
+
+“I’m not sure,” he replied; “but mebbe I could make a guess. He had a
+girl once, if I remember right.”
+
+“Once!” she exclaimed. “I’m jealous this minute. But, then, I don’t see
+how he could help having twenty of them. What’s become of her?”
+
+Kennedy shook his head. “Ask me!” he said. “There’s a whole lot about
+Lefty Locke that I’m guessin’ at.”
+
+“Lefty Locke? He calls himself Stranger.”
+
+“A man can call himself anything he pleases; there’s no law against it.”
+
+“It’s a real pitcher he is, Jack?”
+
+“Sis, you should have seen him pitch against Bristol’s Bucks! If you
+want to, you’ll have a chance to see him pitch against them Monday.
+I’m going to put him in. You should have seen him pitch for the Blue
+Stockings. They lost the best man on the staff when they lost him, but
+Al Carson is such a pig-headed chump that he won’t acknowledge it. He’d
+rather lose the pennant than own up that he’d made a mistake.”
+
+“And that’s the man they threw you down for, Jack, is it――after you’d
+won the championship twice before? It’s always the way in this world.
+The one who delivers the goods is thrown down for another who’s got the
+cheek to crowd himself in.”
+
+“Not always the way, sis,” contradicted Kennedy, shaking his head. “It
+sometimes happens so, and when it does pessimists are inclined to say
+it always happens.”
+
+“What are these pessimists ye speak of?” she asked quickly. “I don’t
+think I ever met one of them.”
+
+“You were a bit inclined to be one yourself,” he replied, “until Robert
+Stranger came to the farm.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ THE REPORTER
+
+
+Everyone had heard that Locke would pitch again on Monday, and, having
+seen him wind up the game for Sullivan, their curiosity and interest
+was whetted to the highest point. Doubtless Bristol would be fierce
+and determined to get back into the running by downing the Deers, and
+perhaps he would use again his wonderful new pitcher, who had held the
+Deers scoreless until Stranger stole home on him in the eighth inning.
+Naturally that man would be more than eager to retrieve himself in
+another struggle against Locke.
+
+Kennedy was on the steps of the Central House when Bristol, accompanied
+by two or three of his players, came hustling up from the railroad
+station.
+
+“Hello, Hank!” said old Jack, in a friendly way. “Glad to see you.”
+
+“Hello!” growled Bristol. “I s’pose you are. I’d be, if I was in your
+place. Say, you’ve been having luck, ain’t yer? You put the jinx on us,
+all right. Think of it, being beat by them Boobs! We’ve got to git
+back at you to-day, and we’re goin’ to come blame near doing it, too!”
+
+“That sounds interesting,” returned Kennedy. “I suppose you’ll pitch
+Elgin again?”
+
+“Elgin be――hanged!” rasped Bristol.
+
+“Why, what’s the matter?”
+
+“He’s quit.”
+
+“Quit?”
+
+“Yep. That feller was yaller all the way through. He went to pieces
+like a stick of dynamite. Didn’t even wait to collect the few dollars
+that was due him. Jumped a train and got out.”
+
+“Well, he _was_ a quitter,” agreed Kennedy. “I’m really sorry for you,
+Hank. It makes a man sore to be stung in his judgment of a pitcher that
+fashion.”
+
+“Don’t seem that you got stung much in that feller Stranger. Say,
+who is he, anyhow? You must ’a’ had him yarded out in the outlaws
+somewhere, or back in the bush, with a string on him, so you could yank
+him in any time you needed him.”
+
+“I had him with a string on him, all right,” confessed Kennedy.
+
+“I thought so. Well, we’re going after him to-day. He can’t repeat on
+us. All the boys are just itching to have another crack at him.”
+
+“You’d better buy some ointment for that itching, Hank. I judge
+they’ll still need it after the game’s over.”
+
+“Mebbe so,” said Bristol, walking on, “but I doubt it.”
+
+He was not twenty feet away when a young, clear-eyed man came hurrying
+toward Kennedy, who had turned to call McLaughlin from the hotel.
+
+“I beg your pardon, Jack, old man,” called a familiar voice.
+“Recognized you a block away. So this is the way you’re farming, is it?”
+
+Kennedy, whirling sharply, found himself gazing into the eyes of Jack
+Stillman, the _Blade_ reporter.
+
+“Hello, boy!” he exclaimed, grasping the newspaper man’s outstretched
+hand. “What are you doing here?”
+
+“Hush!” chuckled Stillman, making an extravagant gesture of caution.
+“I’m doing a little Sherlock Holmesing for the _Blade_. I’ve followed a
+trail that has led me right here to this town of Deering.”
+
+“You don’t say!”
+
+“Oh, yes, I do. I repeat.”
+
+“Who are you after?” Although Kennedy asked the question, he knew the
+answer in advance.
+
+“I suppose you’ve been reading the papers right along?” said Stillman.
+“Then you’ve seen all about the railroad smash, and how Lefty Locke
+hasn’t been found since that happened.”
+
+“I read about it.”
+
+“It was proved that he wasn’t among the killed or injured, so, of
+course, he simply improved that opportunity to fade away. You know, he
+and Carson didn’t seem to get along right well together. Carson favored
+Grist, and Grist had some feeling about Locke.”
+
+“I thought I had that pretty near cured before they took my scalp,”
+said Kennedy. “Grist was the veteran with the experience, but he
+was on the point of going backward. Locke was the youngster without
+experience, but he was coming like a whirlwind. Both had their
+supporters, and there were a few who tried to remain impartial. It
+affected the playing of the team, and I was working hard to restore
+harmony just when they handed me mine.”
+
+“Well, there’s not much harmony left now, and Locke’s gone,” said the
+reporter. “The Blue Stockings are getting it right and left, and only
+for the fact that the Specters have had a bad streak they would be out
+of the running already. The loss of Locke has put the whole team on the
+blink. Take it from me, Charles Collier is getting sore himself, and
+there’s liable to be something didding any day. Meantime, I am trying
+to locate Lefty Locke. Where is he, Kennedy?”
+
+“He’ll pitch for me this afternoon,” answered old Jack.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLI
+
+ THE MAN WHO KNEW
+
+
+“Calls himself Stranger, does he?” muttered Jack Stillman, as he
+watched the work of Locke from amid the crowd, having taken pains to
+keep away from the bench of the Deers. “Pretends he’s forgotten his
+right name or something like that, hey? The whole business is queer.
+But he can pitch――he can pitch as well as he ever could. If the Blue
+Stockings had him, with old Jack handling the team, they’d have the
+championship nailed already.”
+
+Besides Stillman, another man was an intensely interested spectator
+of Lefty Locke’s work on the mound. It was Doctor Wallace Hetner, of
+Hatfield, who, according to his promise to Kennedy, had come over with
+the team. As far as possible during the last few days, Hetner had spent
+time in meditating upon Locke’s singular behavior, and now he watched
+the man for some sign, some indication which would denote that he was
+actually the victim of a mental disorder.
+
+“He doesn’t look like a sick man,” decided the doctor. “He doesn’t
+show it. But there’s something decidedly wrong, or he’d not be calling
+himself Stranger. I wonder if Kennedy has succeeded in leading him into
+a give-away?”
+
+He found the old manager, and called him from the bench. With the game
+running all in favor of the Deers, Kennedy did not hesitate to answer
+Doctor Hetner’s call.
+
+“Oh, he’s Lefty Locke, all right,” he said. “Ain’t no question about
+that. No, couldn’t make him admit a thing, but I know what I’m talking
+about. Say, there’s another man here in town who knows him well――a
+reporter by the name of Stillman. You two ought to get together and
+talk it over. I’ll find Stillman, and introduce you after the game.”
+
+“Thanks,” said the doctor.
+
+Despite Bristol’s threat, the Buccaneers could do nothing with Lefty
+Locke; but in turn one of Bristol’s regular pitchers succeeded in
+holding the locals down to three hard-earned runs.
+
+Hetner, Stillman, Kennedy, and McLaughlin held a consultation in a
+private room of the Central House after the game was over.
+
+“I haven’t said a word to Lefty yet,” said the reporter. “I’ve kept
+away from him. Whatever his reason for ducking off the map, he’s
+certainly keeping himself in A-one pitching trim. I told Collier I’d
+find him.”
+
+“You told Collier so!” exclaimed Kennedy. “Didn’t he know where Locke
+was?”
+
+“No. How would he know?”
+
+“I wired Carson three days ago that I could tell him where to find
+his missing southpaw. He answered that he didn’t want to find him. I
+supposed he told Collier about my message.”
+
+“Don’t believe he chirped a word of it,” said the reporter. “Carson’s
+making a mess of the management. The team misses you, Jack――it
+certainly does.”
+
+“No bouquets,” protested Kennedy.
+
+“I’m not throwing any; I’m giving it to you straight. They miss you
+and Lefty Locke. I’ve been thinking of something odd. There was a man
+killed in that train wreck who passed sometimes under the name of Bob
+Stranger. He was a crook and general confidence man――Pink Kelly――who
+had just been released from the pen. For some time nobody recognized
+him, so his name was not given in the first newspaper reports of
+the identified. I was the one who finally recognized that gink. Bob
+Stranger! Locke calls himself that?”
+
+“That’s what he does,” replied Kennedy.
+
+The reporter struck the fist of his right hand into his open left palm.
+
+“I’ll bet you a thousand dollars,” he cried, “that Locke and that crook
+were talking together before the smash came. That smash must have
+knocked everything out of Locke’s head. He’d been going a bit wrong for
+some time before that, and that might be the very thing to put him all
+to the bad. Why, do you know, some of the fellows even thought he’d
+taken to drinking. I’ve an idea I really know what’s at the bottom of
+the whole trouble.”
+
+“Then you’ll be mighty valuable in straightening this mess out,” said
+Kennedy. “What was at the bottom of it?”
+
+Stillman then told them of Lefty’s deep interest in Janet Harting, and
+explained how the misunderstanding between them had been caused by
+Locke’s innocent attentions to the daughter of the new owner of the
+Blue Stockings.
+
+“I beg your pardon,” interrupted Doctor Hetner excitedly. “I think I
+can see a method of straightening the man out and bringing back his
+memory. If I had a picture of that girl――the one he’s really struck
+on――”
+
+“I’ve got it,” laughed the reporter. “Say, I scented a corking old
+news story in this affair, and so I just took care to get Miss Janet
+Harting’s photograph, as well as one of Miss Virginia Collier. By the
+way, there’s a fourth party mixed up in the business――a young man by
+the name of Franklin Parlmee. It seems that he had a case on Collier’s
+daughter, and they quarreled. It didn’t seem to shake her much, but he
+was raw as a flea-bitten pup, and he didn’t lose an opportunity to
+soak Locke to old man Collier.”
+
+“Something of a romance, I declare!” said Doctor Hetner. “You say you
+have Miss Harting’s photograph? Have you brought it with you?”
+
+“Sure!”
+
+“Will you let me have it?”
+
+“You bet, if you’ll return it. I wouldn’t lose it for anything. If I
+write the story――”
+
+“It’s an interesting story,” said the doctor, “and I suppose you’ll
+write it, anyhow, being a reporter.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLII
+
+ FAILURE
+
+
+Kennedy found Locke, and brought him to that room, where the young
+southpaw was met by Stillman, while the doctor and landlord looked on.
+
+“Of course you remember me,” said the reporter, wringing Locke’s
+unresponsive hand. “You know how I got the proof on Elgin, and showed
+him up to Brennan. I knew you’d make good in the Big League, and I
+never lost a chance to say so.”
+
+“It’s mighty good of you to talk like this,” returned Locke, “but you
+wouldn’t if you knew how you confuse me. If I’m the man you think me to
+be, how is it I only remember that my name is Robert Stranger, and that
+on account of my health I came out into the country to get a job on a
+farm?”
+
+“Pink Kelly, a card sharp, crook, and con man, was talking to you just
+before that railroad smash-up. Sometimes Kelly went by the name of Bob
+Stranger. He was killed, but you seemed to escape without as much as a
+scratch.”
+
+“I don’t remember it,” persisted Locke, shaking his head. “If I wasn’t
+hurt in that smash-up, what made me so twisted? For I’m twisted, or you
+are, every one of you.”
+
+“Perhaps,” said Doctor Hetner, “the railroad smash simply completed
+what was gradually taking place before that. I saw you on that smoking
+car. I spoke to you, but you didn’t recognize me. I thought you were
+lying. Now I’m inclined to believe you were honest.”
+
+“Thank you,” said Lefty, on whose forehead little beads of perspiration
+were standing thickly. “It’s a rotten thing for a man to get twisted
+the way I am. I’ve tried to remember, but the more I try the less I can
+recall.”
+
+“There are reasons,” said the doctor, “why you should strive to recall
+the past.”
+
+“The principal reason,” said the reporter, “is Miss Janet Harting.
+Don’t you remember her, Lefty?”
+
+Locke brushed his hand almost fiercely across his forehead. “No,” he
+answered, “I don’t remember her.”
+
+“I have a notion,” said Stillman, “that you are engaged to her, though
+there was a quarrel or something of the sort, brought about by your
+being seen with Virginia Collier――old man Collier’s swell daughter. I
+don’t know just how it came round, but Miss Harting failed to accept
+your explanations, if you made any. That broke you up. Now can’t you
+remember?”
+
+“No, not a single thing!” answered Lefty, in deep distress. “It’s all
+as if it never happened to me.”
+
+“If you saw the girl!” cried Stillman. “Doctor, where’s that photograph
+you took from me?”
+
+“Here it is,” said Hetner, handing it over.
+
+The reporter placed it in the hands of Locke, who gazed long and
+hard at the pictured likeness of one who had seemed to him the most
+beautiful of all girls.
+
+“It’s no use,” he declared, after some minutes of tense and breathless
+silence. “If I ever saw her, I have no recollection of it, and
+therefore I might as well never have seen her. It drives me desperate,
+trying to remember, and I must stop――”
+
+“That’s right,” said Doctor Hetner, who had been watching him closely.
+“It will do no good, this straining after what your mind refuses to
+recall. When it comes, if it does, it will come easily and suddenly,
+when you’re not trying to break down the wall that shuts you off from
+the past. Some day you’ll shake the identity and the name of the dead
+man, and become yourself again; and it’s both dangerous and useless to
+make further efforts until your mind is in condition to grasp the truth
+and revive the past.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+
+ THE COME-BACK
+
+
+Jack Stillman went in search of Janet Harting, while Lefty remained
+pitching for Jack Kennedy under the name of Stranger. As a mascot and
+a winning pitcher, he proved to be such a success that, with the close
+of the season a week away, the Deers were entrenched in first position
+beyond any possibility of dislodgment.
+
+Meanwhile, the Blue Stockings were being battered, and their lead cut
+down, until even old Pete Grist lost heart, and bewailed the missing
+southpaw.
+
+“Another week,” he groaned; “another week, and we’ve got to win four
+games out of six to home, with no pitchers. If we get two of them games
+we’ll do well. If we had Locke in trim we could take them. I’ll agree
+to win my share. Carson has failed, and the old man’s sore. After all,
+Kennedy was the best manager the Blue Stockings ever had.”
+
+To make matters worse, Carson and Collier quarreled violently.
+
+About this time Stillman, whose place had been filled by a cub for
+nearly two weeks, came back, and interviewed Charles Collier. Although
+the reporter had made his business a secret affair, more than one of
+the Blue Stockings guessed that he was searching for Lefty Locke. Daily
+the _Blade_ was scanned for some word which would indicate that the
+clever reporter-detective had made progress in this search, and daily
+those in looking for that word were disappointed. Stillman was taking
+the chance of being scooped in order to spring a big sensation at the
+most dramatic moment. He did not even dare tell his editor what he had
+learned.
+
+The almost hopeless fight of the Blue Stockings aroused the sympathy
+of the fans, even while the management of Al Carson was bitterly
+criticised, and also the judgment of Charles Collier in letting old
+Jack Kennedy go in order to fill his place with a man like Carson.
+
+Pete Grist had made good by winning two games of the last six. He even
+saved another game when three of the battered pitchers had been pounded
+out of the box. Then followed two defeats, and upon the day before the
+final and deciding game was to be played Stillman sprang his sensation
+in the _Blade_.
+
+He announced that Carson had been permanently shelved by the owner of
+the Blue Stockings, who had sent a distress call to the old manager,
+Jack Kennedy, receiving in reply the assurance that Kennedy would be on
+hand early in the morning, and would bring with him a cracking portside
+pitcher by the name of Stranger, who had been doing marvelous work out
+in the bushes.
+
+Stillman wrote, in conclusion:
+
+ I’ve seen this Stranger pitch, and, believe me, he’s able to
+ deliver the goods. He’s the equal of Lefty Locke when Locke
+ was at his best. If Stranger can pitch a winning game for the
+ Stockings to-morrow, the championship is ours after all, and
+ old Jack Kennedy will have saved the day at the last moment.
+
+Forty-eight hours before this article appeared in print, Lefty Locke,
+pitching for the Deers, had, while batting in the ninth inning, been
+hit full and fair on the head by a pitched ball delivered with all the
+speed the man on the slab could command.
+
+Locke sank to the ground without as much as a gasp. In a moment he was
+surrounded by a number of his teammates. Kennedy lifted the stunned
+man’s head, calling sharply for water.
+
+“He ought to have a doctor,” said someone. “Perhaps his skull is
+fractured.”
+
+“I don’t need a doctor,” declared Locke, suddenly sitting up. “I’m all
+right. A little tap like that never hurt anybody. Donovan hasn’t got
+much speed to-day.”
+
+“Donovan!” exclaimed Kennedy. “Why, that’s Colfax pitching.”
+
+Locke looked at the old manager queerly. “Colfax?” he muttered. “Who’s
+Colfax! Never heard of him. The Specters are ahead, aren’t they?”
+
+“Where do you think you are?” choked Kennedy, his excitement growing.
+“You’re playing the Semour Stars, out in the bush. You’re pitching for
+the Deers, of Deering.”
+
+It was Locke’s turn to appear bewildered. “I don’t think I get you
+right,” he muttered blankly. “What are you doing here, anyhow? Carson
+is managing the team now.”
+
+“Not this team, he ain’t,” retorted old Jack. “Look here, Lefty, has
+that bump on your bean put you right again? Who are you? What’s your
+name?”
+
+“Why, my name is Hazelton, though I’m playing the game as Tom Locke.
+What a blame fool question, Kennedy!”
+
+The old manager showed his satisfaction, and did a dance which caused
+the crowd to stare at him in wonderment.
+
+“You’re all right now, Lefty, old boy! You’ve got your noddle cleared
+up by that bean ball. I’ll bet you got one on the koko some other time,
+and that was what started you wrong to begin with.”
+
+“Wrong? What do you mean? How wrong?” asked Locke, gazing around in
+surprise at his strange and unfamiliar surroundings. “What am I doing
+here?”
+
+“Playing baseball. I told you a minute ago. You’re Bob Stranger.
+Anyhow, that’s what you called yourself when you came to me, and you
+swore you didn’t know how to pitch and had never seen a game of ball.”
+
+“Jack, you’re stringing me. I don’t remember how I got here, but――”
+
+“Play ball!” cried the umpire. “Shall we give you a runner, Stranger,
+or will you stick in the game?”
+
+“If you’re speaking to me,” returned Locke, “I’ll stick in the game.
+That tap on the head didn’t jar me a bit.”
+
+In proof of which, after jogging down to first, he stole second on the
+first ball pitched to the next batter, and came home with the winning
+run when a right-field single followed.
+
+That night Kennedy did his best to explain everything to the
+satisfaction of Locke.
+
+“I wonder what the team thinks of me?” murmured Lefty. “They must
+figure that I’m just about as yellow as Bert Elgin himself. I wouldn’t
+quit because I was suspended――not in my right mind, anyhow. I don’t
+blame Carson for being raw and letting me go.”
+
+Kennedy pulled a yellow envelope from his pocket, and produced the
+message it contained. “Carson’s done with the Blue Stockings, anyhow,”
+he said. “Here’s a wire from Collier, asking me to come back and take
+the management of the team. I can get there just in time for the last
+game. If we win that game we get the pennant. What do you say, Lefty?
+Will you pitch it?”
+
+“Will I!” cried Locke. “All I want is the chance!”
+
+“It’s yours,” declared Kennedy. “You’ll pitch, son.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+
+ BACK TO HIS OWN
+
+
+Not once in a thousand times does such a remarkable situation arise in
+Big League baseball. Not once in a thousand times would it happen that
+the two leading teams should be scheduled to play off the last three
+games of the season together, and have the championship depend upon the
+result of the final game, which would leave one or the other of those
+teams in the lead by a very small percentage.
+
+To down the Blue Stockings the Specters had to win three straight, and
+when they had taken the first two the entire baseball world was thrown
+into a great tumult of excitement, to say nothing of the home city of
+the Blue Stockings. That city was in a perfect panic, so that business
+generally was tremendously effected, and all one could hear talked
+anywhere he went was baseball, baseball, baseball.
+
+The newspapers were crammed with it. They were almost savage in their
+denouncement of the new owner and his judgment in displacing Jack
+Kennedy and filling the position with a manager like Al Carson.
+Half of them prophesied that the Specters would take the last
+three straight, and cop the pennant without difficulty. A few held
+desperately to the tattered border of hope, begging the Blue Stockings
+to brace up and save the day by winning the final game.
+
+But even as they did this, they confessed that the team’s staff of
+pitchers was all to the bad, with no one in condition save old Pete
+Grist, who had already won two games out of the double series of the
+final week, and was therefore unable to attempt to pitch another game.
+
+On the other hand, the Specters had Donovan in reserve, and during the
+season Donovan had made a record scarcely second to any Big League
+pitcher. The baseball “dope” in the papers was certainly interesting
+enough to a genuine fan, though it must have seemed maddening to a
+reader who cared nothing whatever for the game.
+
+Then came the sensation sprung by Stillman in the _Blade_. It made
+readers generally sit up and take notice. The other newspapers had been
+“scooped.” Stillman’s sense of the dramatic and his judgment regarding
+the psychological moment had stood him and his paper in good stead.
+
+And when, just as the game was beginning the following day, the
+_Blade_ appeared with the statement that the pitcher called Stranger,
+whom Kennedy had brought with him, was none other than Lefty Locke
+himself, following with a most cleverly written explanation of the
+cause of Lefty’s vanishing, a complete account of his chance meeting
+with Kennedy, and how he had pitched in the bush league, winning the
+championship for the Deers, the scoop was complete.
+
+Never in the history of the game in that city had such a crowd swarmed
+to the ball park. At daylight a dozen or more tired, sleepy-looking
+men and boys were seen in line at the bleacher gates, waiting in order
+that they might be the first to gain admittance and so secure favorable
+positions. Before eleven o’clock in the forenoon two or three hundred
+people were waiting at those gates, and the steady influx began when
+the gates were finally opened ahead of time at twelve-thirty.
+
+Fortunately the police department was on the job, and the crowds were
+handled beautifully outside the grounds. On the field, at least forty
+policemen found themselves busy when at last the stands and bleachers
+overflowed, and the people began to swarm into the field back of the
+ropes, which had been stretched in anticipation of this very occurrence.
+
+It was, however, a remarkably tractable crowd. Even those who had
+bought seats in the stand and found those seats occupied, as well as
+the bleachers packed――being compelled, therefore, to stand in the jam
+back of the ropes――were good-natured, few complaining.
+
+This was the day――the great day! Jack Kennedy had come back, and
+brought with him Lefty Locke. They were waiting for Kennedy and Locke
+to appear, and as they waited they choked down and held back the cheer
+which welled from their rejoicing hearts. Presently from the clubhouse
+the Specters came pushing through the gathering mass of people, and
+burst upon the field. They were given an ovation by their admirers.
+
+Two minutes later there was a tremendous stir all through the stands,
+running over the bleachers and into the group of standees. Escorted by
+six policemen, Kennedy and Locke were coming, with the Blue Stocking
+players at their heels. Other policemen fought the crowd back, and made
+a lane for them to pass through.
+
+And when they debouched from that lane upon the open space of the field
+inside the ropes, it seemed that every human being upon the bleachers
+and in the stands had risen and was howling like a maniac. Such a solid
+roar, such a tremendous burst of sound coming from human throats,
+perhaps never was heard save at some gladiatorial contest in the Roman
+Colosseum. It beat and reverberated upon the eardrums with painful
+fierceness, causing more than one person to protect himself from the
+staggering effect of it by clapping his hands over his ears. And it
+continued while old Jack, bareheaded, with Lefty Locke at his side,
+marched from the ropes to the bench, his face pale, his eyes shining,
+his lips smiling.
+
+“They’re glad to get you back, Jack,” shouted Lefty in the old man’s
+ear.
+
+“You blame fool!” yelled Kennedy in return. “They’re not cheering for
+me. It’s you, boy――you, the man who’s going to give the Blue Stockings
+another pennant. Pull off your cap――pull it off! Bow! Bow!”
+
+For a moment there was a blur over Lefty’s eyes. Through it he
+could dimly see the wildly tumultuous mass in the stands and on the
+bleachers. Mechanically he lifted his hand――his left hand――and touched
+his cap. And when he did so the great roar suddenly was intensified for
+an instant, although it had previously seemed that every person present
+was shouting as loudly as he could.
+
+When Locke had reached the shelter of the covered bench, into which
+he dived for a few moments as one seeking to escape a deadly hail of
+bullets, he laughed again――queerly, incredulously.
+
+“It can’t be for me,” he muttered. “Why, I’m――I’m only a cub
+yet――nothing but a busher.”
+
+Kennedy was at his side. “You’ll show whether you’re a busher or a Big
+League pitcher to-day, Lefty,” he said. “If you let this reception get
+your goat, then your name is Mud. But if you can go out there and pitch
+a winning game, nobody in fast company has got it on you.”
+
+“Give me two minutes,” said Locke, gripping himself; “give me two
+minutes, and I’ll show you.”
+
+“Good boy!” said old Jack. “Come out and warm up when you get ready.”
+
+He left Locke there, and went forth among his men, all of whom had
+greeted him on his return as rejoicing children might greet a beloved
+parent; and every one of whom had shaken the hand of Lefty Locke until
+Lefty’s arm seemed ready to come off. Not even Pete Grist had held
+back. Far from it. Old Pete was among the first to strike palms with
+the southpaw.
+
+“The prodigal son!” he cried. “The prodigal son back home! Welcome to
+our midst, Lefty. We’re going to let you kill the fatted calf this
+afternoon――the Specters, you know.”
+
+“That’s kind of you, Grist, old man,” said Locke. “I’ve brought my
+little butcher knife with me, and I’m going to sink it to the hilt if I
+can.”
+
+As old Jack came out again from beneath the bench roof, here and there
+friends in the crowd shouted at him, but now he seemed deaf to all this
+as he went at work amid his men, directing them as of old, keeping
+them on the jump, filling them with inspiration and confidence.
+
+“Hey, Jack! You’re the old man to do it!”
+
+“Kennedy, you can deliver the goods! You did it once, and you will
+again.”
+
+“Welcome to our city, Mr. Kennedy! We have missed you.”
+
+“Oh, say, Jack, old boy, you look good to me!”
+
+But these cries were faint compared with the renewed chorus of shouts
+which arose when Lefty Locke, flushed, yet steady and self-possessed,
+again stepped forth into view.
+
+“Oh, you Lefty! Oh, you southpaw!”
+
+“You’re the kiddo! You’re the Specter slayer!”
+
+“How’s your wing, Lefty?”
+
+“Got your batting eye with you?”
+
+“Lefty, don’t you dare ever leave us again. You’re home with your own
+family now.”
+
+Kennedy, glancing sidewise at Locke, to notice the effect of this
+revived demonstration, was well satisfied. Not by a flicker did the
+southpaw betray the emotion of satisfaction with which his heart must
+have been filled. He was steady as Gibraltar, and cool as polar ice.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLV
+
+ THE GIRLS IN THE BOX
+
+
+Still with a view to the dramatic, Stillman had planned something else.
+It was with the greatest difficulty that he had succeeded in keeping
+Lefty Locke and Janet Harting apart, for Janet was in the city, the
+guest of Virginia Collier. And when Lefty reappeared on that field and
+received that marvelous ovation, Janet sat in the owner’s box with
+Virginia, her gloved hands clasped with a fierceness that nearly burst
+the kid, her face by turns pale and flushed.
+
+All the way across the diamond her eyes followed that splendid
+figure――the figure of the man she loved. The Niagaralike roaring of the
+crowd she was conscious of in a vague way, and it thrilled her; and
+it seemed that she must draw his gaze by her intense effort to do so.
+When he suddenly dove to the shelter of the bench, she relaxed, with a
+little sigh of disappointment.
+
+Then for the first time she felt the arm of Virginia Collier about her.
+She heard Virginia’s voice in her ear:
+
+“Wasn’t it splendid? Did you ever know anyone to get such an ovation?”
+
+“Never,” answered Janet, “but he didn’t look――”
+
+“He will look,” assured Miss Collier. “Leave that to Jack Stillman.”
+
+“I owe a great deal to Mr. Stillman.”
+
+“So do I,” said Virginia, glancing over her shoulder at Franklin
+Parlmee. “Only for Mr. Stillman, we might all be playing at
+cross-purposes now. There he is. He’s speaking to Lefty.”
+
+Stillman had been pretty busy at his telegraph key, for he was one
+reporter who could do his own sending, and the events of the last few
+moments had caused him to sweat as he pounded out the Morse. He was
+athrill with the joy of it, like a stage manager who has planned a
+tremendous performance and seen it carried through successfully at the
+opening, and the crowd going wild over it.
+
+“Lefty!” he called; and Locke, passing, turned at the sound of the
+familiar voice.
+
+“Hello, Jack!” he returned.
+
+“There’s someone looking for you over in the manager’s box,” said
+Stillman.
+
+As if he suddenly realized who it was, Locke whirled like a flash and
+started in that direction with long, swinging strides. His bronzed
+face was flushed. Never had he looked handsomer than he did while
+Janet watched him drawing near.
+
+“You――you, Janet!” he cried, heedless of everyone. “I tried to find
+you, but you were gone. I couldn’t explain. Let me explain now.”
+
+“Hush, Phil!” she cautioned, pressing the gloved fingers of one hand
+to her lips, while, watched by thousands of eyes, she permitted him
+to hold the other hand. “You don’t have to explain. Miss Collier has
+explained everything, and I wish to ask your pardon for――”
+
+“Don’t!” he entreated. “How could you know? It must have seemed beastly
+of me. I told you I was going to the theater with some fellows from the
+team, and you saw me there with――”
+
+“Hasn’t Janet told you that everything has been explained, Mr.
+Hazelton?” cut in Virginia Collier. “Of course, I didn’t know about
+her, and just then I was somewhat peeved with Franklin. Oh, I think
+you’ve met Mr. Parlmee, haven’t you?”
+
+“Sure, we’ve met,” said Parlmee, putting forth a hand, which finally
+led Lefty reluctantly to release the gloved fingers of Janet. “How are
+you, Locke, old chap? If I was a bit rude when we were introduced,
+perhaps you’ll pardon me now, understanding the reason.”
+
+“Everybody seems eager to beg everybody’s pardon,” laughed Virginia
+Collier. “I wonder where father is? I know he was on hand to see you
+and Jack Kennedy when――”
+
+“He was in the clubhouse,” said Lefty. “I’ve seen him.”
+
+“Do you think you can win the game to-day?” asked Janet, apparently
+with a touch of anxiety.
+
+“What do _you_ think?” he questioned.
+
+“I’m sure you can.”
+
+“Then I’ll win it, Janet, if there’s any pitching left in my old south
+wing.”
+
+“You’ll have to pitch,” said Parlmee. “They’ve been saving Donovan up
+for this game. They want it as bad as we do.”
+
+“Perhaps so,” said Locke; “but we’ve got to have it.”
+
+Somehow, there was no touch of boasting in his manner, nor did there
+seem to be anything of the sort in his words. He was confident of
+himself, and his confidence had been redoubled by Janet’s assurance
+that she knew he would win.
+
+“When the game is over,” said Miss Collier, “you’ll find us waiting
+outside the clubhouse with the automobile. You’ll join us, won’t you?”
+
+Only for a fraction of a minute did Lefty hesitate. “The others――the
+boys,” he faltered. “If we win, they will――”
+
+“They’ll forgive you for deserting them this time, I’m sure,” she said
+quickly. “It only happens once in a lifetime, you know――and Janet will
+be there.”
+
+“So will I,” he promised instantly.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+
+ THE GAME OF HIS LIFE
+
+
+Never in his life had Lefty Locke pitched such a game of baseball.
+Never had that great crowd seen such splendid work upon the mound.
+Again master of himself in every respect, thrilled with life and vigor
+from toes to finger tips, the amazing southpaw of the Blue Stockings
+fought every inch of the way as if life and honor depended upon it.
+
+He knew _she_ was watching him. He could feel her eyes upon him; yet
+they did not distract him from the task to which he had set his hand,
+his brain, his very soul. Instead, they were his inspiration, making
+him as unfathomable to those desperately waiting Specter batters as
+would have been Mathewson at his best.
+
+In the whirl and thrill of the conflict, once or twice he thought of
+how a ball pitched by Donovan, his present opponent, glancing from
+his bat, had seemingly done him little damage, although it struck him
+squarely in the head; how that blow had presently brought about the
+entire loss of his own identity and the assumption of the name and, in
+some respects, the identity of another man killed at his side in the
+railroad smash. Vaguely he could now remember fighting to recall the
+truth concerning himself, while his mind remained an absolute blank as
+to the past. And the agony of his struggles caused him to shudder.
+
+But it was glorious to know that he was again restored to reason and
+to his normal condition. The shadow was gone from his mind――gone, he
+believed, never to return.
+
+And all the other shadows had been dispelled in the meanwhile. Janet
+was yonder in the box, trusting him, believing in him, sorry she had
+ever doubted.
+
+And so, while Jack Kennedy hugged himself on the bench, while Charles
+Collier gazed and marveled, while the great crowd cheered itself mad
+again and again, he cut the Specters down one after another as they
+faced him. Behind him his teammates waited, ready to give him their
+best support. Three times this great support prevented a Specter from
+getting a hit.
+
+And Donovan, also pitching the game of his career, twice pulled himself
+out of bad holes, and kept the Blue Stockings from scoring. Once he
+wabbled and it seemed that he was gone, but his manager made no move,
+and in time he rose to the emergency and saved himself.
+
+So the game continued, inning after inning, with neither side getting
+a tally, with not a single Specter reaching first; for thus far Lefty
+was pitching a no-hit, no-run game. To-morrow the newspapers would be
+full of it, and the name of Tom Locke would be chiseled forever on the
+baseball tablet of fame.
+
+No man present was happier than old Jack Kennedy, for he was the
+manager whose judgment had brought this young busher to the front and
+given him the opportunity through which in a single season he had risen
+higher than any bush-league pitcher ever rose before.
+
+“He’s my boy――my boy!” Kennedy whispered again and again as Lefty
+cut the Specters down with his burning speed, his bewildering change
+of pace, and his unhittable hook drop, delivered always when least
+expected. “I found him. I put him into the game after Brennan kicked
+him out. I thought I was done with baseball, but I’m back to die in
+harness, unless I’m fired again.”
+
+Without a single exception, Lefty’s teammates were elated. Yes, it is
+true that even the veteran, old Pete Grist, was supremely happy as he
+watched Locke work. If for an instant a pang of jealousy entered his
+heart, he thrust it out as one would thrust forth the devil himself.
+
+And Lefty’s chums, Billy Orth, Laughing Larry, and Dirk Nelson,
+rejoiced unspeakably. All through the game Dalton laughed as of old,
+while behind the pan Nelson crouched and signaled, sure that never
+once would Lefty fail to throw the curve called for and put it where
+he desired without the variation of an inch. Such control, such smoke,
+such headwork, Nelson had never before seen a pitcher display; and
+he afterward made the statement, regardless of the feelings of other
+twirlers who had worked with him.
+
+From the opening of the game till the last man was down, the Specters
+strove like fiends to get Lefty’s goat; but all their sneers, their
+tricks, and their baiting proved ineffectual. Apparently he was deaf,
+dumb, and blind to everything save the task in hand. The wild cheering
+of the tremendous crowd as he swept down batter after batter seemed to
+affect him no more than profound silence――perhaps not as much.
+
+One, two, three, four, five innings――not a hit off Locke! Six, seven,
+eight innings――not a hit; not a man had reached first base!
+
+“Shut ’em out!” pleaded the crowd. “Don’t let ’em touch you to-day,
+Lefty! You’ve got ’em killed!”
+
+Then in turn, when the Blue Stockings were at bat, that immense throng
+begged them to fall on Donovan and get a run.
+
+“One run will do it!” yelled an urchin with a voice like a calliope.
+“Dat’s all you want, fellers. It wins dis game.”
+
+One run! Donovan himself felt that it would be enough. Perspiration
+standing forth from every pore, his teeth set like the jaws of a vise,
+his eyes blazing, he whipped the ball across the corners. One run! Was
+he going to let this left-handed cub outpitch him in the struggle which
+would give the winning team the championship? Not if he ruined his arm
+then and there!
+
+Then came the eighth inning, and again the strain of the terrible pace
+told on Donovan. The first man up got a safety, and the next hitter,
+directed by Kennedy, sacrificed him to second. With one down, it was
+Jack Daly’s turn to bat, and Donovan laughed; for he had Jack’s alley,
+and knew he could keep him from hitting.
+
+But at this moment Kennedy suddenly came forth from the bench, bearing
+a bat. Kennedy, the old stager, the veteran, was going in as a pinch
+hitter.
+
+Donovan laughed. “He’s easier,” he thought. “Why don’t he send out
+Burchard?”
+
+Burchard was the Blue Stockings’ greatest batter, kept on the bench
+for just such emergencies as this; and a thousand others wondered that
+Kennedy should throw himself into the breach with big Burchard waiting
+and ready.
+
+But Kennedy was inspired. He had been watching Donovan’s work from the
+beginning of the game, and he believed he could find the man for a
+safety. As he walked to the plate, he gave the runner a signal which
+told him to be on his toes and ready to go when the ball was hit.
+
+Two balls Donovan pitched to Kennedy without finding the plate, and
+then he put one over. Old Jack let it pass, and heard a strike called.
+Donovan laughed at him, and Kennedy smiled back serenely.
+
+“Give me another just like that, Jim,” he invited. “I’ll hit the next
+one.”
+
+“All right,” returned the pitcher; “all right, Jack, old back number.
+Here you have it.”
+
+Kennedy knew Donovan was lying. He knew the man would pitch something
+entirely different, and perhaps wholly unexpected, but some inspiration
+told him just what it would be; and when Donovan put it across the
+inside corner, Kennedy fell back and met it on the trade-mark.
+
+It was a line drive into left. The runner on second tore across third
+and stretched himself for the plate, while the fielder made a great
+throw to the pan to stop the score.
+
+At the plate, Dillingham, the catcher, took that throw and jabbed the
+ball at the sliding runner, but nine men out of ten in the crowd saw
+that the prostrate man’s foot was on the rubber when Dillingham tagged
+him, and the outspread hands of the umpire declaring him safe was the
+only manner in which the decision reached them; for it seemed that
+thirty thousand maniacs filled the stands, the bleachers, and the
+outfield.
+
+Donovan, shaking visibly, and pale as a sheet, braced himself hard
+while that uproar pounded upon his ears. The game was lost, and he knew
+it. Between them, Lefty Locke and old Jack Kennedy had won it.
+
+It made little difference that, having apparently regained his control,
+Donovan grinned hard at Lefty when the latter came to bat, and told him
+he could not hit the ball. Calmly the young southpaw replied:
+
+“I don’t have to hit it, Jim; the damage is done.”
+
+It made no difference that Donovan struck Locke out. The Blue Stockings
+had scored, and when Lefty returned to the mound and the Specters faced
+him in the ninth, he mowed the last three down one after another, as if
+they were schoolboys.
+
+At this moment it seemed that Lefty had triumphed over all obstacles
+and conquered every foe, but, with the approach of the coming season,
+he encountered a rival pitcher far more persistent and dangerous than
+Bert Elgin; a strange and unfathomable character who changed, almost
+in the flash of an eye, from open-hearted friendship to deadly and
+vindictive enmity, and as quickly and unexpectedly changed back again;
+a person enshrouded in mystery, and seemingly the possessor of a dual
+nature that made him a veritable _Jekyll and Hyde_. The book in which
+this character, Nelson Savage, appears, is the fourth volume of the Big
+League Series, and it bears the title of “Lefty o’ the Training Camp.”
+
+Had he attempted to reach the clubhouse by crossing the field, Lefty
+could not have escaped the clutches of the madly exultant crowd. They
+waited for him, but discreetly, with old Jack Kennedy at his side, he
+ducked into a runway and disappeared beneath the stand even while the
+great throng was still cheering, and shrieking his name.
+
+“Well, some game to-day, kid, eh?” laughed old Jack, giving him a clap
+on the shoulder. “Some game, hey? I guess we’re back in it.”
+
+“I guess we are,” said Lefty. “If you don’t mind, I’m going to dust
+away as soon as I can get a shower and change my clothes. There’ll be
+someone waiting for me outside the gate.”
+
+“Go on, old man,” returned the veteran manager. “I don’t blame you a
+bit. She’s a dream.”
+
+
+ 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 76584 ***
diff --git a/76584-h/76584-h.htm b/76584-h/76584-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4089f07
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76584-h/76584-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,10077 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+
+ <title>
+ Lefty o’ the Blue Stockings | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
+
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+
+ <style>
+
+/* DACSoft styles */
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+/* General headers */
+h1 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+/* Chapter headers */
+h2 {
+ text-align: center;
+ font-weight: bold;
+ margin: .75em 0;
+}
+
+div.chapter {
+ page-break-before: always;
+}
+
+.nobreak {
+ page-break-before: avoid;
+}
+
+/* Indented paragraph */
+p {
+ margin-top: .51em;
+ margin-bottom: .49em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ text-indent: 1em;
+}
+
+/* Unindented paragraph */
+.noi {text-indent: 0em;}
+
+/* Centered unindented paragraph */
+.noic {
+ text-indent: 0em;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+/* Drop caps */
+p.cap {text-indent: 0em;}
+
+p.cap:first-letter {
+ float: left;
+ padding-right: 3px;
+ font-size: 250%;
+ line-height: 83%;
+}
+
+.x-ebookmaker p.cap:first-letter {
+ float: left;
+ padding-right: 3px;
+ font-size: 250%;
+ line-height: 83%;
+}
+
+/* Non-standard paragraph margins */
+.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
+
+.p6 {margin-top: 6em;}
+
+.sp2em {
+ padding-left: 2em;
+}
+
+/* Horizontal rules */
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: 33.5%;
+ margin-right: 33.5%;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+hr.chap {
+ width: 65%;
+ margin-left: 17.5%;
+ margin-right: 17.5%;
+}
+
+@media print {
+ hr.chap {
+ display: none;
+ visibility: hidden;
+ }
+}
+
+hr.r20 {
+ width: 20%;
+ margin-left: 40%;
+ margin-right: 40%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+}
+
+/* Tables */
+table {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+}
+
+td {
+ padding: .25em;
+}
+
+th {
+ padding: .25em;
+ font-weight: normal;
+}
+
+/* Table cell alignments */
+.tdl {
+ text-align: left;
+}
+
+.tdrb {
+ text-align: right;
+ vertical-align: bottom;
+}
+
+.tdrt {
+ text-align: right;
+ padding-right: 0.75em;
+ vertical-align: top;
+}
+
+.pr {
+ padding-right: .5em;
+}
+
+/* Physical book page and line numbers */
+.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ right: 3%;
+/* left: 92%; */
+ font-size: x-small;
+ font-style: normal;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ font-variant: normal;
+ text-align: right;
+ color: gray;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+/* Blockquotes */
+.blockquot {
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+}
+
+/* Alignment */
+.right {text-align: right;}
+
+/* Text appearance */
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.allsmcap {
+ text-transform: lowercase;
+ font-variant: small-caps;
+}
+
+/* Small fonts and lowercase small-caps */
+.smfont {
+ font-size: .8em;
+}
+
+.smfontr {
+ font-size: .75em;
+ text-align: right;
+}
+
+/* Illustration caption */
+.caption {
+ font-size: .75em;
+ font-weight: bold;
+}
+
+/* Images */
+img {
+ max-width: 100%; /* no image to be wider than screen or containing div */
+ height:auto; /* keep height in proportion to width */
+}
+
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+ page-break-inside: avoid;
+ max-width: 90%; /* div no wider than screen, even when screen is narrow */
+}
+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+.tnote {
+ background-color: #E6E6FA;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ padding: 0.5em;
+}
+
+.tntitle {
+ font-size: 1.25em;
+ font-weight: bold;
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+/* Title page borders and content. */
+.title {
+ font-size: 1.75em;
+ font-weight: bold;
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+.halftitle {
+ font-size: 1.5em;
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+.author {
+ font-size: 1.25em;
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+.works {
+ font-size: .75em;
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+/* Advertisement formatting. */
+.adauthor {
+ font-size: 1.25em;
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+ </style>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76584 ***</div>
+
+
+<figure class="figcenter x-ebookmaker-drop" id="cover_sm">
+ <img class="x-ebookmaker-drop" 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 BLUE STOCKINGS</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<figure class="figcenter" id="i_frontispiece">
+ <img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" title="">
+ <figcaption class="caption">
+ <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_43">THERE WAS A SHARP, CLEAN CRACK, AND THE HORSEHIDE
+WENT HUMMING INTO THE OUTFIELD.</a></p>
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1>LEFTY<br>
+O’ THE BLUE STOCKINGS</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 Big<br>
+League,” “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">The Unlucky Seventh</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">11</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">II</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">Stopping a Rally</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">19</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">III</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">Tied In the Eighth</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">24</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">IV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">Real Pitching</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">33</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">V</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">One For Lefty</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">39</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">VI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">A Summons from the Manager</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">45</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">VII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">A Girl and the Girl</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">52</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">VIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">At the Theater</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">59</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">IX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">“In Bad”</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">68</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">X</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">The Grouch</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">78</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">On the Raw Edge</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">85</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">Uncertainty</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">90</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">Suspense</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">96</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">A Wild Heave</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">102</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">Thrown Away</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">108</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">Hot Words</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">113</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XVII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">The Unapproachable Locke</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">120</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XVIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">Under a Cloud</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">127</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XIX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">The Stranger</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">136</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">The Retired Manager</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">144</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">Back In the Game</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">150</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">Building Up the Team</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">155</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">The Man Who Denied Himself</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">161</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">Perplexed</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">167</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">Stranger Gets a Job</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">173</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">Mighty Queer</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">179</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXVII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">Did He Remember?</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">184</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXVIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">A New Pitcher</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">192</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXIX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">At the Field</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">199</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">Baseball Luck</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">206</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">Pitchers’ Waterloo</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">212</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">Filling the Breach</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">218</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">The Man on the Mound</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">222</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">The Other Pitcher</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">227</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">The Steal Home</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">233</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">Stranger Is Annoyed</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">238</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXVII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">The Doctor’s Doubts</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">244</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXVIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">First Position</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">249</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XXXIX</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">A Troubled Mind</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">256</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XL</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">The Reporter</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">262</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">The Man Who Knew</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">266</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">Failure</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">271</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLIII</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">The Come-back</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">274</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLIV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">Back to His Own</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">280</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLV</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">The Girls In the Box</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">287</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdrt">XLVI</td>
+ <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">The Game of His Life</a></td>
+ <td class="tdrb">292</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 BLUE STOCKINGS</p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br>
+<small>THE UNLUCKY SEVENTH</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">It was “Bush” Aldrich, of the Specters, who
+started the trouble by smashing out a two-base
+hit in the seventh. Bush was one of
+the latest acquisitions of that hard-hitting,
+snappy, scrappy aggregation of Big League talent
+which had fought its way into the first division,
+and was giving last season’s pennant
+winners, the Blue Stockings, a decidedly uncomfortable
+time holding their all too scanty lead.</p>
+
+<p>Bush had already shown his ability to stay with
+fast company by getting two clean singles off
+Grist, the Blue Stocking twirler, but fine fielding
+had prevented either bingle from being effective.
+Now, however, with one out, and a man on first
+and third, either through luck or cleverness, he
+hit again at the psychological moment to cause a
+break in the hard-fought game.</p>
+
+<p>Grist, sure that he had fathomed the youngster’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
+weakness, tried his sharp outdrop, which
+had pulled the right fielder more than once before.
+This time, however, Aldrich was ready for it.
+Poising a bat that was a bit longer than any he
+had used before, he stepped in as the ball curved
+and smote it a crack which brought half the spectators
+in the crowded stands to their feet with a
+concerted gasp of dismay.</p>
+
+<p>As the sphere whistled out on a line, Larry Dalton,
+the Blue Stocking second baseman, flung up
+his hands in a ludicrous gesture of despair.
+Brock, the slim, speedy center fielder, had already
+turned his back on the home plate, and was flying
+toward the fence like a deer that has heard the
+whistling whine of a hunter’s bullet. Unfortunately,
+the ball held up better than he expected,
+and, though he strained every nerve, he saw that
+there was little chance to make the catch.</p>
+
+<p>With a last desperate spurt, he launched himself
+through the air like a catapult, both hands
+outstretched. The horsehide struck the ends of
+his fingers, and a despairing groan rose from the
+staring fans as it fell to the ground and rolled to
+one side.</p>
+
+<p>Brock snatched it up, and whipped it back into
+the diamond. Bugs Murray was just jogging
+over the plate. Logie, the Specter shortstop, had
+rounded second, and was flying toward third,
+urged on by staccato promptings from the coaching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
+line. Aldrich was fairly tearing up the
+ground between first and second. As the sphere
+came whirling toward the waiting Dalton’s eager
+hands, Bush slid.</p>
+
+<p>The umpire, squatting to watch the play, put
+his hand out, palm downward; and another groan
+arose from the stands, punctuated, by protesting
+yells and bitter comment.</p>
+
+<p>“They’re gone!” shouted the Specter captain
+joyously. “They’re up in the air! Hit her on
+the nose, Rowdy; you can do it!”</p>
+
+<p>Kenyon, the visitors’ clever second baseman,
+pranced, grinning, to the plate, seemingly inspired
+with new life. Grist caught the ball deftly, apparently
+undisturbed by the unfortunate break.
+As he paused to drive Logie back to third, however,
+he discovered that Carson, the new manager,
+had left the coaching line and returned to
+the bench, from which he could get an accurate
+view of the entire field.</p>
+
+<p>“He needn’t worry,” muttered the pitcher to
+himself, as he turned back to face the smiling batter.
+“We’re still one run to the good, and this
+little flurry is going to have the kibosh put on it
+right here and now.”</p>
+
+<p>He had little fear of Kenyon doing anything;
+so far Rowdy’s hitting had been of a decidedly
+negligible quality. Perhaps it was this touch
+of unconscious carelessness which proved Pete<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
+Grist’s undoing; perhaps it was due simply to
+the mysterious hitting streak which comes at the
+most unexpected times, and without apparent reason.
+At all events, after playing the waiting
+game to the last moment, Kenyon finally smashed
+a sizzler through the short field, scoring Logie,
+and himself reaching first by a great sprint.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the entire Specter visiting team began
+openly to rejoice:</p>
+
+<p>“Up in a balloon!” “Got him going!”
+“Here’s where we lock it up in a valise!” “Murder
+it, Ted, old man!” “Laminate it! Only one
+down, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>A low, concerted growl began to sound from
+the spectators who crowded the stands. Ready
+to shout themselves hoarse for a man pitching a
+winning game, their displeasure was even more
+swift, and quite without mercy. Here and there
+a shrill voice bawled admonition and biting criticism,
+which sounded above the barking chorus of
+the Blue Stocking infield:</p>
+
+<p>“Get into him, Pete, old man!”</p>
+
+<p>“Kill him, old boy! You can do it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Warp ’em round his neck!”</p>
+
+<p>A spot of red glowed dully in each tanned cheek
+as Grist dug his copper toe clip into the earth
+and cuddled the ball under his chin. The sudden
+yelping from his teammates told the pitcher that
+they were not sure of him. They were seeking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
+to brace him up, as if he had been a raw recruit
+instead of the bright particular star of the Blue
+Stocking pitching staff. Moreover his quick eye
+had not failed to notice the hasty appearance of
+two men from the sheltered players’ bench, who
+loped off to the right, shedding sweaters as they
+went.</p>
+
+<p>There are times when it takes very little to upset
+the equilibrium of the most seasoned twirler,
+and apparently this was one of them. For six innings
+Grist had pitched an almost errorless game,
+and there was every reason why he should do his
+best to finish it.</p>
+
+<p>Dillon was laid up, Bill Orth had a bad shoulder,
+and both Reilly and Lumley were notoriously independable
+at a moment like this. There was
+Lefty Locke, to be sure, but the thought of this
+brilliant young southpaw who had, in a few short
+months, pushed his way upward until he rivaled
+Grist himself in the esteem of players and fans
+alike, made the older pitcher squirm inwardly,
+and brought a dogged, determined expression to
+his face.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later there was a crack, a yell of joy
+from the Specters, a groan from the despairing
+fans. In spite of his self-control, a smothered
+gasp of dismay burst from Grist’s lips. Knowing
+Red Callahan’s impetuosity, he had tried to
+tempt him with a teasing outdrop. That he managed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
+to connect with it was probably quite as
+much a surprise to the sorrel-topped third baseman
+as to anyone; but connect he did in beautiful
+style, smashing out a single which sent Aldrich
+across the rubber with the leading run.</p>
+
+<p>Above the uproar of hoots and yells and catcalls
+from the stands, the new manager, half rising
+to signal Orth to go into the box, heard a
+sound he had rather been expecting for the past
+few minutes:</p>
+
+<p>“Carson! One moment!”</p>
+
+<p>It was the sharp, incisive voice of the Blue
+Stockings’ owner, who sat with his daughter in
+one of the boxes just behind the bench, and there
+was an imperative note in it which brought the
+manager hurrying in that direction.</p>
+
+<p>“Did you call me, Mr. Collier?” he asked, as
+he reached the box.</p>
+
+<p>The tall, broad-shouldered, keen-faced man
+bent swiftly over the railing.</p>
+
+<p>“I did,” he replied, in a low tone. “Grist is
+going to pieces. Why don’t you take him out?”</p>
+
+<p>“I was just going to. I’ve had Orth warming
+up for three or four minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>Charles Collier frowned. “Orth!” he exclaimed.
+“But his shoulder’s lame. This is no
+time to put in a cripple. Why don’t you use your
+southpaw, Locke?”</p>
+
+<p>“He pitched a hard game yesterday and—”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
+
+<p>“And won it,” interrupted the owner swiftly.</p>
+
+<p>“Quite so; but my idea was not to work him too
+hard,” returned the manager suavely. “Of
+course, if you wish it—”</p>
+
+<p>“I do. In my opinion he’s the only man who
+can stop the break and pull things together. He’s
+got the measure of every one of these fellows. I
+don’t think you need worry about three innings
+hurting his arm.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” said Carson. “I’ll send him out
+there at once.”</p>
+
+<p>His expression was bland and pleasant, but the
+instant his back was turned he frowned. “Butting
+in as soon as this, are you?” he muttered,
+striding toward the bench. “Picked a favorite
+already, too. I s’pose Pete’ll be sore as a crab,
+but it can’t be helped. Locke!”</p>
+
+<p>There was a quick movement, and from the
+players’ bench appeared a tall, lithe, cleanly built,
+long-armed youngster of twenty-three or so, his
+cap pushed back on a mass of heavy, dark brown
+hair, a look of inquiry in his keen, brown eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Want me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” said Carson sharply. “Get into the
+box as quick as you can. I meant to use Orth, but
+his shoulder’s bad. You’ll have to go in without
+warming up. And hold ’em, kid. We can’t afford
+to lose this game, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty had already yanked off his sweater.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
+Even as the manager finished, he caught the glove
+tossed out by the second catcher.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll do my best,” he returned, jerking his cap
+forward over his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>An instant later he was walking out upon the
+diamond with a lithe, springy stride which told
+of splendid muscles under perfect control. And
+as he came into view of the grandstand, the hoots
+and yells lessened swiftly, merging with amazing
+abruptness into a shout of delight, accompanied
+by a thunderous stamping of feet.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you Lefty!” shrieked the fans fondly.
+“Oh, you kiddo! Kill ’em! Eat ’em alive!
+Nothin’ doin’ now, Specters. Good night for
+yours!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br>
+<small>STOPPING A RALLY</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">By dint of playing for time, and putting
+over a couple of wide ones, Pete Grist had
+prevented Forbes, the Specter left fielder,
+from adding to the damage already done. Knowing
+that he would be taken out, he had the wit to
+seize every possible chance to delay the game,
+and thus run no risk of making any further errors.</p>
+
+<p>He supposed, however, that his successor would
+be Orth, whom he had seen start to warm up a
+few minutes before. When Lefty appeared on
+the field amid the delighted roars of the spectators,
+Grist’s face turned a brick red, and for a
+second or two he looked as if he could have committed
+murder with the greatest possible enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p>It is provoking enough, in all conscience, for
+a pitcher to have to leave the box on account of
+bad control. But to be superseded by a youngster
+whose Big League experience is limited to a few
+months, yet who, in that time, had set the fans
+yelling for him as if he were a Mathewson, is sufficiently<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
+humiliating to stir the mildest man to
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>Mildness was not Pete Grist’s long suit, nor
+was this the first time he had writhed in the grip
+of the green-eyed monster. As Locke reached
+him his face was like a thundercloud. He fairly
+flung the ball at the southpaw, and, without a
+word, turned on his heel and strode toward the
+bench.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty stood for an instant staring after him,
+a touch of sympathy in his eyes. He knew from
+experience precisely how it felt to be benched under
+such circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>“Tough luck,” he murmured, as he mounted
+the hill. “I don’t blame him for being sore. I
+would myself.”</p>
+
+<p>Directly, however, he had thrust the disgruntled
+pitcher from his mind, and was bringing all
+his skill and cunning to bear on the task before
+him. He knew the importance of winning the
+game to-day. It was one of those close seasons,
+with three teams fighting like bulldogs for first
+place.</p>
+
+<p>At first the struggle had seemed to lie between
+the Blue Stockings and their old-time rivals, the
+Hornets. Well into July these two organizations
+had it nip and tuck, and the Blue Stockings had
+no sooner forged definitely ahead than they were
+menaced by the speedy Specters, who were playing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
+this year as they had never played before.
+Back and forth they zigzagged, until at length
+the Blue Stockings, thanks in no small measure
+to the astonishing work of their young southpaw
+wonder, managed to accumulate a scanty lead,
+and hold it by the skin of their teeth.</p>
+
+<p>If they could only manage to pull through this
+series in good shape, they could afford to lose a
+game or two of the return series, and still enter
+on the last Western circuit with a slight advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty lined a few to Dirk Nelson, and, having
+found the plate, nodded to the batter, who stepped
+up to the rubber again. The Blue Stockings’
+owner had been right in saying that Locke had
+taken the measure of the opposing team. The
+ability to size up swiftly and accurately a batter’s
+strong and weak points, likes and dislikes, was
+something which had contributed much to the
+southpaw’s extraordinary success. He believed
+he knew the sort of ball Forbes could not hit
+safely; and promptly, though without any appearance
+of haste, he proceeded to hand it up.</p>
+
+<p>To the delight of the fans, the batter missed.
+The second one he fouled. Then he let two go
+by. Finally he missed again, having been fooled
+at last by a sudden change of pace and a slow
+drop when he expected speed. As he sauntered
+toward the bench in elaborate affectation of indifference,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
+the spectators chortled gleefully, while
+a ripple of returning confidence swept over the
+Blue Stocking players.</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind that!” cried Murray, the visitors’
+captain, from the coaching line. “Get off
+that hassock, Rowdy. On your toes! Now, Jim,
+let’s have one of the old-timers mother used to
+make.”</p>
+
+<p>Donovan, the famous Specter twirler, was also
+a clever stickman. During the past season his
+hitting average had been little short of the three-hundred
+mark, and he was especially noted for
+helping along a streak of luck. He walked up to
+the plate, bat swinging nonchalantly, on his face
+that confident grin which annoys many a pitcher
+who pretends that he is not disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty eyed him coolly for an instant; then his
+eyes dropped to where Nelson crouched, giving a
+signal. He shook his head. With some slight reluctance,
+the catcher responded by calling for
+another ball, and shifted his position the barest
+trifle. A second later the sphere came whistling,
+with a slight inswerve, across the batter’s shoulders.
+Forbes’ bat found nothing but empty air.</p>
+
+<p>“Str-r-rike!” called the umpire, flinging up his
+right hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Look out for those, Jim,” called Murray.
+“Make ’em be good!”</p>
+
+<p>Donovan let the next one pass. It was a ball.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
+Then followed a slow one, delivered with a swing
+and snap that fooled the batter into striking before
+the lingering, tantalizing horsehide was
+within reach.</p>
+
+<p>Donovan frowned and regained his balance, annoyed
+slightly by the burst of raucous delight
+from the stands. When he faced the pitcher
+again the grin still curved his lips, but it had
+grown somewhat thin.</p>
+
+<p>Silence settled over the field. Ten thousand
+straining eyes were turned anxiously on the quiet
+figure in the pitcher’s box.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s hand drew back slowly, cuddling the
+ball for a second as he poised himself on one foot.
+Then, like a flash, his long left arm swung flail
+like through the air.</p>
+
+<p>The ball was high—almost too high, it seemed
+at first. But suddenly it flashed downward past
+Donovan’s shoulders, and across his breast. Too
+late the batter saw it drop, and tried weakly to
+hit. There was a swish, a plunk, and—</p>
+
+<p>“Batter’s out!” bawled the umpire.</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>TIED IN THE EIGHTH</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Pretty work,” commented a blond
+young man on the reporter’s bench,
+pushing back his rakish green hat.
+“There’s one thing about Locke, you can always
+bank on his using his head. He certainly stopped
+that rally in great shape.”</p>
+
+<p>“Huh!” grunted the stout, bald man beside
+him. “I can’t see anything very wonderful in
+that.” He took off his glasses, and began to polish
+them. “It don’t take any extraordinary
+amount of skill to outguess Forbes, and Donovan’s
+never very dangerous to a pitcher who
+knows him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, come now, Eckstein,” protested the blond
+reporter. “Jim’s no slouch at the bat, and you
+know it. What have you got against Locke, anyhow?”</p>
+
+<p>Eckstein replaced his glasses, and yawned.
+“Nothing special, Dyer,” he drawled. “I’ve
+been too long in the business, though, to lose my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
+head over every infant phenom who butts into
+the Big League. More than half of ’em can’t
+keep up the pace they set themselves at first.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll bet Locke does,” Dyer said energetically.
+“He’s got too much sense to use himself up the
+way some of the cubs do. He plays the game for
+all there is in it, but he plays it with his head
+even more than with that corking portside hooker
+of his. Anyhow, he’s the Blue Stockings’ one
+best bet this season, take it from me, Eck. Only
+for him they’d be in the second division, with all
+this monkey business of new owner and new manager
+right in the middle of the season. That
+plays hob with a team even if the old manager’s a
+bum, which Jack Kennedy wasn’t, by a long shot.
+By the way, Eck, where’s he gone?”</p>
+
+<p>“Who? Kennedy?” grunted the stout man,
+his eyes fixed on the diamond. “Back to his farm,
+I reckon. He’s got one somewhere in the Middle
+West.—Pretty work, Jim. That’s the way to pull
+’em.”</p>
+
+<p>With a sudden flush at the realization that he
+had missed a trick, the young reporter hastily
+subsided, and turned his attention to the diamond.
+Whatever might be said of Jim Donovan’s
+hitting ability, no fault could be found with
+his skill in the box. Encouraged by the success
+of the last inning, he evidently realized that it was
+up to him to see that the Specters kept their lead<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
+of one run, and the result was an exhibition of
+clever pitching.</p>
+
+<p>Dirk Nelson, the Blue Stocking backstop, was
+beguiled into popping to second. Jack Daly, unsurpassed
+as a third baseman, but an erratic
+stickman, fanned ignominiously. It looked as if
+Lefty would follow Daly’s example, but, with two
+and two called, he connected with a tricky drop,
+and beat the ball to first by a hair. Taking a good
+lead, he went down on the second ball pitched to
+Spider Grant. It was effort wasted, however,
+for the Blue Stocking first baseman presently
+fouled out back of third. This brought the inning
+to an abrupt termination, amid much rejoicing
+on the part of the visitors, and low grumbling
+from the disappointed fans.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Dyer defensively, “it was the tail
+end of the list. Anyhow, Locke got a hit.”</p>
+
+<p>Eckstein chuckled. It amused the veteran
+newspaper man to note the violent fancies and
+prejudices of callow cub reporters.</p>
+
+<p>“Still harping on the virtues of your miraculous
+southpaw?” he smiled. “I’ll ask you just
+one question, Dyer: If he’s such a triple-plated
+wonder, how did Jim Brennan, of the Hornets,
+come to release him outright? I never yet knew
+the hard-headed old vet to let any ten-thousand-dollar
+beauties slip through his fingers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still something to learn, Eck, strange as that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
+may seem,” drawled a voice, before Dyer had
+time to answer. “Squeeze up a bit, and give a
+chap some room.”</p>
+
+<p>A leg was thrust over the back of the seat, followed
+swiftly by another, and, as Eckstein’s eyes
+lighted upon the tanned and freckled face of
+the newcomer, his own face expanded in a fat
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, well, well!” he chuckled, thrusting out
+a plump hand. “Back to the treadmill, eh?
+Have a good vacation?”</p>
+
+<p>“Fine!” returned Jack Stillman, settling down
+between the two. “How are you, Dyer? Spent
+ten days up in the woods about a thousand miles
+away from anywhere, and then I began to get
+worried for fear this understudy of mine wasn’t
+sending the dope in right. How about it, kid?
+Old man have any kicks?”</p>
+
+<p>“A few,” grunted the cub reporter. “He’d
+kick if he had the Angel Gabriel writing up
+games.”</p>
+
+<p>“You bet he would!” laughed Stillman.
+“Swell lot Gabriel knows about baseball. Did I
+hear you running down my friend Locke?” he
+went on, turning to Eckstein. “Oh, I know you
+didn’t mean anything personal. It’s just your
+pessimistic mind, that can’t see anything good
+in a youngster. Well, let me tell you what
+Jim Brennan said the last time I saw him, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
+was about three weeks ago. ‘Jack,’ he said—it
+was after that last game of the series with the
+Blue Stockings when the Hornets got the pants
+licked off ’em—‘Jack,’ he said, ‘don’t send this
+to your paper, but if ever there was a dumb one
+manhandling a baseball team I’m it. I’d give
+two of my best men to have Lefty Locke back
+again. If I hadn’t been such a thick-headed dope
+as to let him go, the Hornets wouldn’t be where
+they are to-day. No, sir! They’d be at the top
+of the heap, with that position just about nailed.
+That boy’s a wonder. It makes me sick at the
+stomach every time I think he might be on my
+payroll to-day just as well as not.’ That’s going
+pretty strong for old sorrel-top, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>“A trifle,” Eckstein returned. “Well, why
+did he let him go? There must have been some
+mighty good reason.”</p>
+
+<p>“There was. A rotten sneak named Elgin—a
+Princeton man, by the way, and a disgrace to
+the college—had it in for Lefty, and turned every
+dirty trick he could think of to put Locke in
+bad with Brennan. He succeeded temporarily,
+but he got his at last. After Brennan released
+him Lefty went to the Blue Stockings, and of
+course the first time Jim ran up against them he
+realized how he’d been fooled. It all came out,
+and he sent Elgin back into Class C with the
+Lobsters. I’ve heard Elgin didn’t even stay<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
+there, but is pitching back in the bush, which, if
+true, is good enough for him.</p>
+
+<p>“By Jove! See that drop? Fooled him nicely,
+didn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p>If Donovan was on his mettle, the opposing
+southpaw was in equally fine trim. In the first
+of the eighth only four men faced him, in spite of
+the fact that the heavy hitters were coming up
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t seem to have lost any of his cunning,”
+smiled Stillman, as the Blue Stockings romped
+in from the field like colts. “Things appear to
+have been didding while I was gone,” he went on
+in a lower tone to Eckstein. “I knew Collier was
+dickering for the team, but I thought he’d hold
+off till the end of the season. And what in thunder
+does he mean by canning a manager like Jack
+Kennedy?”</p>
+
+<p>The stout man shrugged his shoulders. “Collier
+got the idea that the team wasn’t pulling well.
+He seemed to think that was Kennedy’s fault.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bah!” snapped Stillman. “What could Kennedy
+do with his hands tied? I know for a fact
+that when he wanted to get rid of a certain trouble-maker
+who was keeping the boys riled up all
+the time, Beach, the old owner, put his foot down,
+and wouldn’t let him. And what’s Al Carson
+ever done, anyhow, that he should supersede an
+experienced man like Kennedy?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Not much,” admitted Eckstein.</p>
+
+<p>“Nor ever will. He’s one of those promising
+characters who’s always promising and never
+making good. Collier has sure picked a lemon
+this time, and it wouldn’t surprise me a lot if it
+cost him dear.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, fellows, get busy, and hammer out a
+couple of runs. Only need one to tie, and two to
+win.”</p>
+
+<p>All over the great stands men were rooting for
+runs—begging, pleading, crying for them. As
+Donovan stepped into his box a perfect bedlam of
+hoots and catcalls arose, but he was too old a bird
+to be affected in the least by this sort of thing.
+To win the game it was only necessary to hold the
+Blue Stockings for this inning and the next, and
+the clever Specter twirler looked as if shutting
+out his opponents was, at this precise moment,
+merely a matter of time with him.</p>
+
+<p>In baseball, as in many other things, it never
+pays to discount the future; which is just as well,
+for otherwise a good deal of thrill and excitement
+would be lost. The best players are certain sometimes
+to make mistakes, and countless games have
+been won or lost by little slips, so small as to pass
+unnoticed by the majority of spectators.</p>
+
+<p>Rufe Hyland, well known as a “waiter,” was
+the first man up. In spite of the frantic urgings
+of the excited fans to “Slug it out!” he delayed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
+until he had three and two on him. Finally he
+hit between first and second. He should have
+been an easy victim at first, but, for some unaccountable
+reason, Rowdy Kenyon juggled the ball,
+and then threw low, dragging Murray off the sack.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment or two the entire infield resounded
+with sulphurous comment. When Donovan
+faced the next batter he was still flushed
+with irritation. He took revenge by fanning
+Larry Dalton, but during that process Hyland
+managed to steal second, a proceeding which
+did not tend to increase the pitcher’s good humor.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he retained a perfect grip on his
+feelings, and exerted his skill so well that Herman
+Brock whiffed fruitlessly at three balls in
+succession.</p>
+
+<p>It happened, however, that Joe Welsh, who followed,
+was one of the most dependable hitters in
+the Blue Stocking organization. His specialty
+was neither home runs nor three-baggers, but his
+skill at placing the ball had long been a source of
+comfort to his fellow-players. As he faced the
+plate, Hyland edged off second as far as he dared,
+and when Joe connected with the third ball pitched
+Rufe shot down the line like a streak.</p>
+
+<p>Due, no doubt, to Donovan’s skill, this was one
+of the rare occasions that Welsh slipped up. He
+had intended to dump the pill into the diamond<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
+by a bunt, but he succeeded only in sending it
+spinning erratically just inside the third-base line.</p>
+
+<p>Like a flash the Specter backstop raced out,
+snatched at it, fumbled horribly, and then, in an
+effort to get Hyland, threw four feet over the
+third baseman’s head. By the time the left
+fielder, slow in backing up, had secured the sphere,
+and lined it back to the plate, Hyland had one
+foot on the rubber. And the delirious fans were
+shrieking themselves speechless.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br>
+<small>REAL PITCHING</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Talk about horseshoes!” grinned Stillman,
+when the first mad uproar had begun
+to lessen. “That’s the greatest
+ever. Looks as if the boys had a mighty good
+chance of cinching the game now.”</p>
+
+<p>Manager Carson had emerged from the obscurity
+of the bench, and was on the coaching line
+again. Over by first base Captain Grant was capering
+about, a broad grin on his face.</p>
+
+<p>“Going up, going up, going up!” he chanted
+to the air of a popular ditty. “Tied her nicely,
+but we won’t stop there. You know what to do,
+Kid. Beat it off that cushion, Joe!”</p>
+
+<p>Kid Lewis hustled to the plate, and Welsh
+pranced away from the sack, ready to go down
+on the first slim chance. Unfortunately for the
+Blue Stockings, Donovan seemed unaffected by
+the two blazing errors which had permitted the
+locals to even up the tally. Instead of going to
+pieces, he tightened up wonderfully, holding
+Welsh at first, and fanning the batter with swiftness
+and dispatch.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
+
+<p>As the Blue Stockings took the field for the
+opening of the ninth the fans were on tiptoe with
+excitement. If Lefty could hold the visitors
+down, there remained a chance for the home team
+to break the deadlock in the last half. Could he
+hold them?</p>
+
+<p>Bush Aldrich was the first man up. The crowd
+remembered vividly what Bush had done to Pete
+Grist. Besides, the batters who followed were
+none of them slouches. As Locke walked briskly
+across the diamond the stands echoed with encouraging,
+beseeching shouts. Then a sudden,
+tense silence fell upon the great inclosure.</p>
+
+<p>Calm and steady, Lefty stepped into the box.
+He paused a second, his eyes on the batter, and
+then handed up a high one. Aldrich started to
+strike, but checked himself, and a ball was called.
+Then the southpaw tried an outcurve. Bush still
+declined to bite.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right, Bush,” cried Murray. “Make
+him put ’em over. He’s got to.”</p>
+
+<p>An elusive drop followed, which Aldrich barely
+missed. The next ball looked good, and he hit it.
+It was a line drive to right, which Rufe Hyland
+should have taken with ease, instead of muffing.
+Aldrich stretched himself, and reached the initial
+sack a second before the ball, quickly recovered
+and thrown by the discomfited fielder, spanked
+into Spider Grant’s mitt.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
+
+<p>There was a groan from the fans, a spasm of
+joy from the Specter coachers. Rowdy Kenyon
+hurried to the plate. True to his record as a
+waiter, he prolonged the agony till the last moment,
+during which time Aldrich, upholding the
+reputation of his team for being “ghosts on the
+bases,” got down to second. Finally the visiting
+infielder hit a weak scratch between second
+and short, on which he reached first by great
+sprinting. A wave of tense uneasiness swept over
+the field.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes narrowed the least bit; his jaw
+seemed to tighten. In a few minutes, through no
+fault of his, the situation had changed from easy
+security to uncertain hazard. With none out, and
+a man on third, every bit of judgment and skill
+he possessed was needed to save the day. Driving
+Aldrich back with a threatening motion, he
+turned his attention to Callahan, and the impetuous
+Specter Irishman, after fouling twice, failed
+to touch a speedy shoot that clipped a corner.</p>
+
+<p>A gasp of relief came from the stands, but
+lapsed swiftly into tense silence; for this was an
+admirable opportunity to try the squeeze play,
+and evidently from the way John Forbes held his
+bat he meant to do his part.</p>
+
+<p>The infield crept into the diamond, balancing
+on their toes, alert and ready. Lefty pitched, and
+almost as soon as the ball left his hand he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
+on the jump. Forbes shortened his bat, and
+chopped one down the foul line straight into the
+flying pitcher’s glove on the first bound. Lefty
+Locke flashed it to third. But, for some reason,
+Aldrich had faltered, and now he dove back to the
+sack in time to save himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Safe!” bawled the umpire, his flat hand extended.</p>
+
+<p>The decision brought an avalanche of hoots and
+yells and taunting insults down upon his head, but
+he stuck to it; and when the fans settled back to
+take count their hearts sank within them. With
+the bases full and only one out, the situation was
+not exactly hopeful.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty made short work of Donovan. The visiting
+pitcher did not touch the ball once, missing
+the last bender by more than a foot. As he
+strolled back to the bench, however, there were
+few sounds of rejoicing. The end of the batting
+list had been reached. The bases were still
+densely populated, and Dutch Schwartz, the
+mighty hitter whose average the year before had
+come close to equaling that of the amazing Wagner,
+was sauntering out with his war club.</p>
+
+<p>Apparently he had no weaknesses with the stick,
+and his ability to outguess pitchers had made him
+a terror throughout the Big League. Cautious
+twirlers usually walked him when it was possible
+to do so at a dangerous time without forcing a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
+run; but, even had he wished to do it, such a
+course was not open to Lefty now.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever anxiety the southpaw might have
+been feeling, he faced the batter without a tremor.
+The first ball was a trifle close, and Schwartz let
+it pass without suffering a penalty. The next,
+delivered with a long side swing, came over at an
+odd angle. The batter fouled it, evening up the
+score.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty then tried an underhanded delivery that
+was productive of another foul. Then the big
+Specter center fielder refused to nibble at a
+coaxer, which evened things once more.</p>
+
+<p>“Two and two,” muttered Stillman on the reporters’
+bench. “I wonder if he’ll do it? By
+Jove! He’s got to!”</p>
+
+<p>With anxious, admiring eyes he watched his
+friend’s cool, deliberate, yet not in the least dragging,
+work. Lefty’s perfect control enabled him
+to bend the ball over the rubber from any
+angle.</p>
+
+<p>Foul after foul resulted with a nerve-racking
+regularity which brought the fans to the edges
+of their seats in tense, breathless suspense.</p>
+
+<p>Three balls were called, but the struggle continued.
+With each swing of the southpaw’s long
+arm, Schwartz swung his bat, and the ball caromed
+off in a foul. One could almost have heard a pin
+drop in the vast inclosure. Even the raucous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
+voices of the coachers had been momentarily
+stilled.</p>
+
+<p>The end came at last, suddenly. When it
+seemed almost certain that Locke had exhausted
+every trick at his command, the pitcher, with his
+toe on one end of the slab, stepped straight out
+to one side with the other foot, and brought his
+arm over. The ball left his fingers at the moment
+when his hand seemed to be extended at full reach
+above his head. Apparently it was not a curve
+he threw, but from his extended fingers the sphere
+shot downward on a slant, to cross the outside
+corner of the plate.</p>
+
+<p>Schwartz struck at it with a sharp, vicious snap—and
+missed!</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br>
+<small>ONE FOR LEFTY</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The roar which went up fairly shook the
+stands, and testified to a sudden slackening
+of the tension which had been gripping
+thousands of loyal fans for the past few
+minutes. Jack Stillman leaned back in his seat
+and reached for his cigarette case.</p>
+
+<p>“Pretty smooth,” he said, proffering the case
+to his companions. “That’s what I call pitching
+out of a hole, and Phil can sure do it to beat the
+cars.”</p>
+
+<p>“Phil?” queried the cub reporter quickly. “Oh,
+you mean Locke. I keep forgetting that isn’t his
+real name.”</p>
+
+<p>“So do I, to tell the truth,” returned Stillman,
+drawing in a lungful of smoke. “He took it on
+account of his father’s prejudice against baseball
+when he started pitching in the bush last year.
+When I ran into him this spring in the Hornets’
+training camp it was hard as the mischief at first
+to get used to hearing him called anything but
+Hazelton. I got over that mighty quick, though,
+and now it’s just the other way. Well,” he went<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
+on, glancing at Eckstein, “if this doesn’t stir
+the boys up enough to make them hammer out at
+least one run, they’re not the crowd I take them
+for.”</p>
+
+<p>From the way things started, it looked very
+much as if the newspaper man had gauged the
+Blue Stockings correctly. After having two
+strikes called, Dirk Nelson reached for one of
+Donovan’s wide slants, and caught it on the end of
+his bat for a nice single. The crowd roared, the
+coachers chattered, and Jack Daly pranced to the
+plate with every apparent intention of carrying
+on the good work.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for him, the Specter twirler was
+not quite ready for the stable. Coolly, and with
+the consummate skill for which he was famous, he
+lured Daly into swinging at a deceptive bender,
+fooled him with a wonderful inshoot, and then,
+when the batter, grown wary, refused to bite at
+the doubtful ones, Donovan wound himself up and
+sent over a curve which cut the heart of the plate.</p>
+
+<p>With two and three called, Daly swung, with all
+his might. There was a sharp crack, and the ball
+sailed high in the air, foul back of third base.
+Dillingham jerked off his mask, and started for
+it, but Red Callahan’s spikes were already drumming
+the turf as he raced to get under it. Heedless
+of the shrill taunts and yells with which the
+fans sought to make him fumble, he fairly flew<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
+over the ground. He made the catch while
+stretching himself to the utmost, and Daly, flinging
+down his stick with a muttered exclamation
+of disgust, slouched toward the bench.</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind that!” cried Grant optimistically.
+“Only one down, boys. Now, Lefty, old man, get
+into him! We need a hit. Get off, Dirk! Get
+going! Drift away from that sack, man! On
+your toes, now!”</p>
+
+<p>During Daly’s turn at bat Nelson had stolen
+second, beating the catcher’s throw by a hair,
+and now he pranced off the hassock, taking every
+bit of lead he dared. Twice Kenyon darted behind
+him, compelling the runner to dive back to
+the cushion, but each time he was up and off again
+the instant the ball was returned to Donovan.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty stepped up to the plate and stood swinging
+his bat gently back and forth. The shouts of
+the excited fans seemed faint and far away. In
+reality he heard them clearly, and was young
+enough to be stimulated a little by this evidence
+of faith in his ability. But he showed nothing
+of this. His mind was occupied solely in trying
+to fathom what Donovan would be likely to hand
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The first was an outcurve, and he let it pass.
+The second was high; evidently Donovan was
+trying to prevent a bunt. The third also seemed
+high at first, but Lefty’s quick eyes saw it begin<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
+to drop as it neared the plate, and he swung at
+it.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his swiftness, however, he was a
+fraction of a second too late. The ball hit his
+bat glancingly and caromed at right angles. It
+struck Locke’s head with force sufficient to make
+him stagger backward, the stick slipping out of his
+relaxed fingers.</p>
+
+<p>A sharp, hissing intake of concern swept over
+the crowded stands. As Lefty reeled, catcher and
+umpire both leaped forward with outstretched
+arms; but their aid was unnecessary. The southpaw
+was conscious of a single brief instant of
+blackness, which passed like a lightning flash,
+leaving him a bit dizzy, but otherwise quite himself.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m all right, Spider,” he said quickly, as the
+Blue Stocking captain rushed up and slipped an
+arm about him. “It was only a glancing tap.”</p>
+
+<p>“Are you sure?” persisted Grant anxiously.
+“Hadn’t you better lay off, and let me run someone
+else in to bat for you?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty laughed aloud, and took his stick from
+Dillingham. “Not on your life!” he retorted
+emphatically. “Think I’m going to quit <em>now</em>?”</p>
+
+<p>As if to prove that the accident amounted to
+nothing, he shook off the captain’s detaining hand,
+stepping quickly back to the rubber. The fans<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
+shouted their relief and their appreciation of
+Lefty’s nerve. Donovan’s face wore a slightly
+strained look. Though no stretching of the imagination
+could have laid a shred of blame upon
+his shoulders, the hitting of a batter often disturbs
+a pitcher’s nerve. This may have had some
+effect on his next delivery, or may not. At all
+events, when Locke swung at the ball in fine
+shape, <a href="#i_frontispiece">there was a sharp, clean crack, and the
+horsehide went humming into the outfield</a> midway
+between Aldrich and Schwartz.</p>
+
+<p>With a concerted roar, which eclipsed every
+sound that had gone before, the great mass of
+people crowding the stands leaped to their feet,
+and followed with straining eyes the progress
+of the tiny sphere of white. Away it sped to
+the right of deep center, both fielders racing like
+mad to get under it.</p>
+
+<p>Having a big lead to start with, Nelson was
+off like a streak of light for third. He had
+crossed the base, and was being urged on down
+the home stretch before Schwartz snatched up the
+horsehide, whirled, and sent it whizzing straight
+toward the plate, with that wonderful sweep of
+his powerful arm for which he was famous.</p>
+
+<p>It was a perfect throw. For a second or two
+thousands of hearts stood still, fearing it would
+be successful. Locke’s brain and muscle had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
+done its work well, however. An instant before
+the ball plunked into the catcher’s waiting mitt
+Nelson flung himself across the rubber in a cloud
+of dust, and the umpire shouted:</p>
+
+<p>“Safe!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br>
+<small>A SUMMONS FROM THE MANAGER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty, having rounded first, pulled himself
+up abruptly, and trotted toward the clubhouse,
+the whoops and yells of many
+thousand delirious baseball “bugs” ringing in his
+ears. A wave of white-clad players surged after
+him, but Locke had almost reached the gate before
+the crest of it overtook him. An expression
+of happy contentment illumined most of the faces.
+“Laughing” Larry Dalton, the happy-go-lucky,
+brown-eyed second baseman, was grinning broadly
+as he flung one arm over the southpaw’s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“Pretty punk to-day,” he chuckled. “Can’t
+hit, or put the ball over—or anything.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perfectly rotten, he is,” chimed in Dirk Nelson,
+still breathing a bit unevenly from his rapid
+sprint to the plate. “Carson oughta tie the can
+on him for the rest of the season.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty chaffed back, and the whole crowd, laughing
+and joshing like a lot of kids, pushed into the
+clubhouse. As they stripped off their soggy uniforms,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
+and scrapped good-naturedly for the showers,
+they whistled and sang light-heartedly, living
+over the excitement of those last three innings.</p>
+
+<p>There were one or two exceptions. Some of the
+Blue Stockings’ old guard had viewed Locke’s
+swift rise from the ranks with anything but favor.
+In their opinion it was up to the busher to scrape
+along in meek and lowly insignificance for a season
+or two before he leaped into such scintillating
+prominence in the galaxy of stars. According to
+them, to “ripen” and acquire baseball sense he
+should spend some months sitting on the bench
+and watching the work of the veterans.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty had upset every precedent. At each
+added laurel won by the southpaw the old-timers
+shook their heads dubiously, declaring that such
+a pace could never last, that success would swell
+the youngster’s head, and making a dozen other
+pessimistic prophecies, none of which as yet
+showed signs of coming true.</p>
+
+<p>With the bulk of players Lefty was on the best
+of terms. He found them a clean, decent crowd
+of young men, much in love with their profession,
+somewhat addicted to draw poker and craps as
+a pastime, but temperate as a rule in most things,
+generous to a fault, and very likable. Three of
+them could write letters after their names as well
+as before, if they chose—which they did not.
+Some of the others were a bit rough on the surface,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
+perhaps, but deep down underneath were
+made of the right stuff.</p>
+
+<p>The long, grilling struggle, which began with the
+opening of the season, had brought them all very
+close together; and when a crowd of men are fighting
+shoulder to shoulder day after day, having
+the same goal, each giving the best that is in him
+to attain that end, they size up one another’s good
+points and failings with a thoroughness possible
+under few other conditions.</p>
+
+<p>The new southpaw stood the test well. In spite
+of his six generous feet of lithe, well-muscled
+frame, he was still very much of a boy at heart,
+with a boy’s adaptability for making friends and
+a boy’s light-hearted, fun-loving nature.</p>
+
+<p>This did not mean that he lacked the capacity
+for taking things seriously when the need arose,
+but he believed thoroughly in relaxing between
+whiles, and in extracting all possible enjoyment
+out of life. This trait, helped by a fine baritone
+voice, quick wit, the ability to “put it over” any
+member of the club with eight-ounce gloves, and
+almost as great a skill in coaxing popular airs
+from the strings of a banjo, made him, within
+a month, the life of the bunch in Pullmans and
+hotels on the road, no less than at odd moments
+of relaxation in the clubhouse at home.</p>
+
+<p>All this was, of course, of small importance
+compared with his performance on the diamond.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
+After he had proved his efficiency there, however,
+by snatching victory from defeat in three or four
+close contests, the majority of his teammates accepted
+him without question as one who would
+“do.” The only exceptions were Pete Grist,
+whose fame as the most reliable member of the
+Blue Stockings’ pitching staff Lefty was rapidly
+dimming, and three or four old-timers who formed
+a little clique among themselves.</p>
+
+<p>“Pipe the old crab!” commented Larry Dalton,
+as he and Lefty raced in from the showers, and
+began to get into their street clothes. “Some
+grouch there, believe me!”</p>
+
+<p>Laughing Larry had stepped from a fresh-water
+college into professional baseball three years before.
+Being a natural player, he did not stay
+long with the minors. In Locke he found a kindred
+spirit, and the southpaw had not been more
+than two weeks with the Blue Stockings before
+the two were chumming it as if they had known
+each other since the bottle days of infancy.</p>
+
+<p>At his friend’s remark, Lefty glanced sideways
+at the scowling pitcher, who was dragging on his
+clothes in taciturn silence.</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t blame him much,” he murmured. “If
+there’s anything that makes a fellow feel rottener
+than getting the hook in a game, it hasn’t come
+my way yet.”</p>
+
+<p>“Especially if the man who’s put in happens<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
+to be a guy that’s made good in the same way before,”
+Dalton grinned.</p>
+
+<p>“Rot!” snorted Lefty, buttoning his shirt.
+“When Grist’s right he can pitch the pants off
+any man in the club.”</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe.” Larry’s tone was decidedly skeptical.
+“I haven’t noticed him putting anything
+much over you the last month or more. Trouble
+with him, he’s worrying for fear he’ll lose his
+reputation of being the one and only genuine old
+reliable; and when a guy starts in with that sort
+of ragtime, you can be pretty blamed sure—
+Well, Colonel, what’s on your mind?”</p>
+
+<p>“Colonel” George Washington Jones, the Blue
+Stockings’ negro rubber and general handy man,
+showed his ivories in a glistening smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Mist’ Carson says he done laik to see
+Mist’ Locke in his office right smart, suh,” he explained.</p>
+
+<p>“All right, Colonel,” Lefty returned briefly
+from where he was struggling with a refractory
+collar button. “I’ll be there in about three minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>“Some class there,” Dalton murmured, as the
+darky hurried away. “When Jack wanted a man
+he’d stick his head in the door and make the fact
+known. Nothing like that for this bird, though.
+First thing you know he’ll be having a bell boy
+in brass buttons, and one of those ‘Private-no-admission-except-by-appointment’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
+signs on the
+door.”</p>
+
+<p>From which it may be gathered that the new
+manager and his methods had not scored a great
+hit.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty nodded agreement, and went on tying
+his scarf. From the first Carson had not appealed
+to him. The man knew baseball from the ground
+up—there was no questioning that fact. His
+ability at handling men, however, was much more
+doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>Most professional ball players have to be managed
+with infinite tact and judgment, and, though
+he kept his mouth shut on the subject, Lefty held
+the opinion that the qualities which had made
+Jack Kennedy so successful were lacking to a
+conspicuous degree in his successor. So far the
+players had betrayed no signs of a let-down, but
+Locke had noticed a number of insignificant
+straws, some no greater than the remark of
+Laughing Larry, which pointed the direction of
+the wind pretty accurately.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll wait for you,” Dalton said, as Locke
+slipped into his coat and gave it a settling shake.
+“Cut it as short as you can. Don’t forget we’ve
+got tickets for the theater to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>Nodding, the southpaw picked up his hat and
+left the dressing room. As he walked briskly
+toward the manager’s office he was wondering<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
+with no little curiosity what was wanted. Carson
+could scarcely mean to put him into the box to-morrow,
+after having pitched him ten innings yesterday
+and three to-day; and aside from that
+Lefty could think of nothing which would require
+a special interview.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br>
+<small>A GIRL AND THE GIRL</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Pushing open the door in response to a
+crisp invitation in the manager’s familiar
+voice, Lefty stopped on the threshold, an
+expression of surprise in his brown eyes. Then
+he removed his hat, with a swift, graceful movement.</p>
+
+<p>Carson was not alone. The owner of the club,
+himself, leaned easily against one side of the desk.
+Seated in a chair on the other side of the room
+was one of the prettiest girls the young pitcher
+had ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty had only time to see that she was very
+blond and very tiny, with a pair of wonderful
+deep-blue eyes, which were fixed on his face from
+the moment the door opened. Then Charles Collier
+stepped forward, his hand outstretched.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to thank you, Mr. Locke,” he said
+heartily, “for pulling us out of a hole this afternoon.
+It was especially nervy to keep on at the
+bat after being hit by that ball.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty smiled as he shook the magnate’s hand.
+“That little knock didn’t amount to anything,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
+he protested, in his low, pleasant voice. “It only
+staggered me for a second.”</p>
+
+<p>“That was lucky,” said Collier. He hesitated,
+and the pitcher saw his glance flash for a second
+to the girl in the chair. “This is my daughter,”
+he went on quickly. “Virginia, this is Mr. Locke,
+whose pitching you were so enthusiastic about.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty, turning swiftly to acknowledge the introduction,
+saw that the girl had risen to her feet
+and was holding out her hand impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m glad indeed to meet you, Mr. Locke,” she
+said, in a pleasant voice, which held an undercurrent
+of earnestness in it. “I suppose you get
+very tired of being told how splendid your pitching
+is, but I can’t help it this time.” She smiled
+charmingly. “If you could have any idea how
+utterly thrilled I was during those last three innings,
+I’m sure you wouldn’t blame me.”</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes, with their long, curling lashes, were
+really very wonderful, and there was a trace of
+something in their depths which brought a touch
+of color glowing under Locke’s healthy tan.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re more than kind, Miss Collier,” he returned.
+“I don’t think any man really minds
+being told that he’s done well, but in this case I
+didn’t deserve much credit. You see, Grist held
+them down for six innings, and when I came in
+fresh at the seventh we were only one run to the
+bad. It was still anybody’s game.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
+
+<p>“How about yesterday?” asked the girl quickly.
+“I wasn’t here, but they tell me you won the
+game in spite of a lot of errors made by your
+team.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty shrugged his shoulders. “Oh, that was
+different. I hadn’t pitched before in a week. So
+I was ready to sail in and massacre them.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Collier shook her head, laughing deliciously.
+“I’m afraid you’re altogether too modest.
+After this I’ll have to trust to someone else
+for the real facts. All right, dad. I suppose it <em>is</em>
+time we were going. Well, good-by, Mr. Locke.
+I shall probably see you again. Now that I’m
+back in town, I don’t mean to miss a game.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty murmured his pleasure in courteous, well-bred
+terms, shook hands with her father, and,
+when they had disappeared into the corridor, stood
+for a second staring after them. When he turned
+suddenly back to the manager he surprised on that
+person’s face an expression of distinct annoyance,
+mingled with disapproval.</p>
+
+<p>“Is that all you wanted?” the southpaw asked
+briefly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” retorted Carson, almost snappily. He
+hesitated for an instant, and then went on abruptly,
+his lips curling the least bit: “I s’pose
+after this you’ll go around swelled out of all human
+form.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a decidedly sneering undercurrent in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
+his voice, rasping Locke’s sensibilities, and making
+it difficult for him to keep from flinging back
+a sarcastic retort.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you?” he murmured, with tantalizing coolness,
+as he paused for a second in the doorway.
+“Perhaps I will. After all, you couldn’t blame
+me very much, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>Dalton, waiting in the dressing room, at once
+asked for details of what had happened in the
+manager’s office. More for sport than any other
+reason, Lefty kept him on the anxious seat all the
+way back to the hotel, fully intending to tell him
+while they were having dinner together. That
+thought, as well as every other, was driven out
+of his head, however, by a penciled message the
+desk clerk handed him as he passed through the
+lobby.</p>
+
+<p>“Call Miss Harting, at 10224 Morris,” it read;
+and the six commonplace words brought a rush
+of vivid crimson to the pitcher’s face, a sparkle
+of amazed delight into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Janet in town!” he muttered, as he eagerly
+sought a telephone booth, leaving Dalton to stare
+blankly after him. “Well, wouldn’t that get you!
+Not a word about it in her last letter. I suppose
+she wanted to work a surprise. She’s sure put
+one over, all right.”</p>
+
+<p>Hurriedly giving the operator the number, he
+entered the booth, and, a few minutes later, heard<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
+the familiar tones of the “only girl in the world”
+clearly over the wire.</p>
+
+<p>Just what they said is neither here nor there.
+The door of the booth was tightly closed, and if
+the operator listened she did not betray the fact
+by a sign. Lefty and Janet Harting, who lived
+with her father in a thriving New England town,
+had been very good friends indeed for something
+more than a year. Though they corresponded
+with extreme regularity, their positions made
+actual meetings tantalizingly infrequent. Given
+these premises, the reader may reconstruct their
+conversation to suit himself.</p>
+
+<p>Suffice it to say that Janet had come on to the
+city for a two weeks’ visit to an aunt, leaving her
+father, who was better than he had been in a good
+many years, in the care of a distant cousin, who
+had volunteered that office so that the daughter
+might take a brief vacation. After retailing this
+information, Miss Harting hinted delicately that
+she would be at home all evening.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll be there with my hair in a braid!” Lefty
+returned promptly. Then he stopped abruptly,
+stung by sudden recollection.</p>
+
+<p>“Sh!” reproved Janet, as a sibilant vibration
+reached her attentive ears. “On the ’phone, too!
+What’s the matter? Have you thought of an engagement?”</p>
+
+<p>“Beg pardon,” apologized Lefty contritely.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
+“It slipped out. Why, yes. You see, some of
+the boys planned a little theater party to-night to
+see ‘The Girl from Madrid,’ and they’ve got the
+tickets. It doesn’t matter a bit, though. I’ll just
+tell ’em I can’t go.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll do nothing of the sort.” Miss Harting’s
+tone was emphatic. “I’m not going to have
+you breaking engagements and throwing over
+your friends for me. There’s plenty of time.
+You can come and see me to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p>The young man protested vehemently, but Janet
+remained quite firm. In the end she had her way,
+though she compromised to some extent by saying
+that Lefty could come up the next day and take
+her out to lunch.</p>
+
+<p>With this the young pitcher had to be content,
+and, when he came to think it over, he was not
+wholly sorry. The dinner and theater party had
+been planned a week before to celebrate Larry
+Dalton’s birthday, and, considering Dalton’s peculiar
+sensitiveness, Lefty would have disliked being
+reckoned a quitter on account of “a skirt.”
+Besides, Janet would be in town long enough for
+him to see her many times.</p>
+
+<p>Comforted by this reflection, Locke paid the
+triple call, made a bee-line for the elevator, and
+five minutes later was hurrying into his evening
+clothes.</p>
+
+<p>“Moonlights?” Laughing Larry had chuckled,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
+when the question of clothes was broached that
+morning. “You bet! We’ll show this bunch of
+city rounders how things ought to be done, eh?”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br>
+<small>AT THE THEATER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">When the quartet piled into a taxi
+about half past six, and started for
+an exclusive downtown restaurant,
+their appearance would have been a revelation to
+those who picture a professional ball player as a
+pugnacious, rough-mannered individual who fits
+in well enough on the diamond but is quite out of
+his element when he attempts anything in the
+social line.</p>
+
+<p>It would have been difficult, in fact, to find four
+finer-looking specimens of manhood anywhere.
+Their faces glowing with perfect health and physical
+well-being, they showed not the slightest signs
+of being awkward or ill at ease in their evening
+togs. Add to this the fact that two of them, Lefty
+Locke and Billy Orth, were men of unusual good
+looks, and it is small wonder that their arrival
+at the restaurant caused a little stir of interest
+among the diners already present.</p>
+
+<p>They were swiftly recognized, of course, and
+the stir increased to a bustle; for even society
+doesn’t often have a chance of studying two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
+pitchers, the catcher, and second baseman of a
+national organization at close range. The four
+athletes, however, paid scant attention to the interest
+they were exciting. They were too well accustomed
+to that sort of thing to let it interfere
+with their enjoyment. They were out for a good
+time, and meant to have it, regardless of rubbernecks.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing in the least boisterous in
+their behavior. They laughed and talked and
+joshed one another, to be sure, but their manner
+was not a whit different from that of a dozen other
+parties about them. They consumed the well-ordered
+dinner—conspicuous by the absence of
+anything to drink—leisurely. Then, it being
+close on to eight, they paid the sizable check,
+tipped the waiters, and departed, having shown
+from the beginning a breeding and a refreshing
+lack of self-consciousness which opened the eyes
+of not a few observers.</p>
+
+<p>The theater being only a few blocks away, they
+walked, arriving in the lobby just as the overture
+was beginning. There was the usual crowd jostling
+to get in. As the four friends stood waiting
+for an usher to take their checks, Lefty heard his
+name called in a slightly familiar voice.</p>
+
+<p>For a second he stared around in a puzzled
+way, failing to locate the owner of that voice in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
+the crowd. Dalton’s elbow dug into his ribs, and
+Dalton’s voice whispered in his ear:</p>
+
+<p>“The Big Chief! Get busy, kid.”</p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Lefty discovered Charles
+Collier, the distinguished-looking owner of the
+Blue Stockings, standing near the wall at a little
+distance; and beside him, more charming than
+ever in her evening gown of shimmering white,
+was his daughter, Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re just the man I’m looking for,” Collier
+said, as Lefty stepped swiftly over and bowed his
+greetings. “See here, boy, is it possible that
+you’re a son of the Reverend Paul Hazelton, who
+went through Dartmouth and the New York Theological
+Seminary, and has a parish somewhere
+out in Jersey?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes brightened. “Quite possible,” he
+smiled. “He’s been in Summit for the last twelve
+years. Do you know him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Know him?” echoed Collier emphatically.
+“I should say I did! Why, we were chums at college,
+and kept up our friendship for a number of
+years afterward. I must have been wool-gathering.
+I knew your name was Hazelton, but somehow
+the connection never occurred to me till my
+daughter suggested it at dinner to-night. I suppose
+it was because I couldn’t associate Paul’s
+son with baseball.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Yes; Dad has a perfect horror of the game.
+He had a friend who was killed while—”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course. Poor Brandon! It was in
+our junior year. Your father could never bear
+even to see a game after that. I must have a chat
+with you about him soon. Just now I’m—”</p>
+
+<p>He paused abruptly, his eyes roving over the
+immaculate figure of the young man, and then
+veering swiftly to his daughter’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“By Jove, Virginia!” he exclaimed. “I don’t
+see why Hazelton can’t help us out.”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Collier’s color deepened a trifle and she
+made a quick, protesting gesture with her white-gloved
+hands. “How absurd, Dad! Mr. Hazelton
+is here with friends. I couldn’t think of asking
+such a thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nonsense!” chuckled the older man. “I don’t
+believe he’ll mind shaking them for a little while.”
+He turned to Locke. “I’ve just had a message
+from a real-estate man,” he explained, “whom I
+expected to see in the morning. He’s got to take
+the midnight back to Boston, and it’s essential
+that I should talk to him before he goes. Virginia
+can’t very well stay here alone, but if you
+would take my place—”</p>
+
+<p>“I should be delighted,” Lefty said swiftly, as
+the older man paused questioningly. “The fellows
+I’m with are just three men from the team.”</p>
+
+<p>In reality he was very far from being overjoyed,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
+but he was much too courteous and well-bred to
+allow any sign of this to appear in his face or
+manner. Having given up an evening with Janet
+to keep his previous engagement, he did not particularly
+fancy spending it with even so charming
+a person as Virginia Collier.</p>
+
+<p>Under the circumstances, however, there was
+nothing to do but accept with the best possible
+grace the situation forced on him; and, though
+she was watching him closely, the girl saw nothing
+in his face but ready acquiescence and well-simulated
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>Collier breathed a sigh of relief, handed over
+the seat coupons, and departed hastily, with the
+assurance that he would be back before the performance
+was ended. Still giving his clever imitation
+of one in the throes of unalloyed bliss, Lefty
+explained to his friends, and then escorted Miss
+Collier down the aisle, conscious as he passed the
+eighth row of the concentrated stare of three pair
+of observing eyes. He did not glance round, however,
+and he was settled in the third-row aisle seat
+when the curtain began to rise.</p>
+
+<p>Few men can resist a thoroughly charming
+woman when she sets out deliberately to make
+herself agreeable. Lefty was not one of the few.
+Of course, he did not realize that Miss Collier’s
+manner with him was a bit different from what it
+might have been with any other man.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
+
+<p>The girl was much too clever to let him see that.
+But there are ways <em>and</em> ways, most of them too
+subtle for the clumsy masculine intellect to grasp,
+which are part of every woman’s mental equipment.
+The result of their application in the
+present instance was the swift transformation of
+Lefty’s pose of enjoyment into one of reality.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be supposed for an instant that
+Virginia Collier’s manner showed a trace of vulgar
+coquetry; quite the contrary. Apparently
+there was no particle of sentimentality in her
+make-up. She talked mainly of baseball, tennis,
+motoring, and kindred subjects, in a way which
+showed that she was more than familiar with her
+ground; and the contrast between her daintily
+feminine appearance and her evident liking for
+almost every sort of sport was very taking—as,
+no doubt, the young woman fully appreciated.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of the first intermission Lefty felt
+as if they were old friends. Before the third act
+had commenced he found himself discussing the
+baseball situation almost as if she had been “one
+of the fellows.” One did not have to do much
+explaining. Her grasp on conditions was surprising,
+her judgment almost flawless. Yet, underneath
+it all, and ever present as the oft-recurring
+theme of a symphony, was the lure of feminine
+personality, stronger, perhaps, for its very
+subtlety.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
+
+<p>Lefty felt its pull, but did not realize the nature
+of the attraction. He told himself that he had
+never before met anyone quite like Virginia Collier.
+She was like a good pal, a chum to whom
+one could talk almost as one talked to another
+man. She was a good sport in the best sense of
+the word, and he was vaguely glad that the real-estate
+man from Boston had appeared when he
+did.</p>
+
+<p>Just before the final curtain an usher appeared
+with a note which Lefty was able to read by the
+light from the stage. It was hastily scrawled
+from a near-by club, and in it Charles Collier—explaining
+that he was still in conference with his
+business man—requested that Locke escort his
+daughter home, and then send the car back for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“It really isn’t a bit necessary,” the girl protested,
+as she glanced at the paper. “If you’ll
+find the motor and put me in, I can manage the
+rest quite well.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then why didn’t your father ask me to do just
+that?” Lefty asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Because he’s foolishly silly about my going
+about at night alone, even in our own machine.”
+Miss Collier paused an instant, and then dimpled
+charmingly. “You mustn’t judge him by his behavior
+to-night. He’s usually annoyingly strict
+with me. I’m quite sure if you hadn’t happened<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
+to be the son of an old college chum I should have
+been taken home without seeing the play.”</p>
+
+<p>The young pitcher laughed. “I’m awfully glad
+I happened to have the proper credentials, and I
+think we’d better follow out Mr. Collier’s wishes.
+Besides, if I take you home it will give us a
+chance to finish that discussion about Marquard’s
+work in the box this year.”</p>
+
+<p>“Since you put it that way, I’ll give in,” the
+girl said, as she arose to let him place the opera
+cloak carefully about her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty slipped on his coat, secured hat and
+gloves, and stepped into the aisle. There was the
+usual crush of people to block the way, and as
+they moved slowly forward he half turned to
+make a laughing remark to his companion.</p>
+
+<p>The jesting words were never spoken; the very
+smile froze on the young man’s lips as his eyes
+fell on the face of a girl in the sixth row over near
+the boxes.</p>
+
+<p>It was Janet Harting, and there was something
+about her expression which held Lefty stupidly
+silent for a second or two. Then he bowed
+eagerly, and smiled. There was absolutely no response.</p>
+
+<p>For an appreciable moment Miss Harting
+stared at him, her chin uptilted, her color a little
+high, perhaps, but her gaze as coldly impersonal
+as if he had been an utter stranger. She gazed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
+at him, over him, <em>through</em> him, without the quiver
+of an eyelash. Then she rose leisurely, deliberately
+turned her back, and began to help her older
+companion into a coat.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br>
+<small>“IN BAD”</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Lefty’s face turned a dull red, for in a
+flash he had realized how intolerable the
+whole affair must seem to Janet Harting.
+He had assured her that his engagement at the
+theater that night was with some of his teammates,
+yet here she found him the only escort of
+a very charming young woman, of whose identity
+she could naturally have no idea.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, Lefty’s being in full dress did not
+savor altogether of a stag party. Worst of all,
+the young man remembered, with a sickening
+sense of irritation, how swiftly he and Miss Collier
+had come to be on almost chummy terms.
+An onlooker would never have supposed their acquaintance
+to be only a few hours old, and Janet
+had been sitting near enough to miss nothing.</p>
+
+<p>All this passed through Lefty’s mind with a
+rush. For an instant he had an almost uncontrollable
+impulse to push his way through to Miss
+Harting’s side and explain the innocent facts,
+which must have looked so condemning. Then he
+realized how impossible was the time and place<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
+for explanations, and, pulling himself together,
+moved slowly on toward the entrance.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Collier could scarcely have missed the
+little incident, swiftly as it had taken place; but
+apparently she was possessed of tact, along with
+a number of other good qualities, for she made
+not the slightest reference to it. During the ride
+uptown she chatted unconcernedly on various
+topics, but it must be confessed that she had to
+uphold the burden of conversation; about nine-tenths
+of Lefty’s mind was taken up with a consideration
+of his predicament, and with planning
+a way out of it.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you a thousand times, Mr. Locke,”
+Miss Collier said, when the car had stopped and
+he had helped her out. “I’ve had a perfectly
+splendid evening.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s been corking,” Lefty returned, trying to
+force a little enthusiasm into his voice. “I’m
+the one who should be thanking you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe it,” smiled the girl, holding out
+her hand. “Have Pagdon drive you wherever you
+want to go. Dad won’t want him yet, I’m sure.
+Come and see me some time when you haven’t
+anything better to do. We’ll finish our talk about
+Marquard. Good night.”</p>
+
+<p>Without giving him time to answer she ran
+lightly up the steps to the already open door,
+which closed quickly upon her slim, graceful figure,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
+leaving Locke to return slowly to the limousine,
+give the address of his hotel to the chauffeur,
+and step frowningly in.</p>
+
+<p>“What a thundering jackass I am!” he muttered,
+leaning back against the leather cushions.
+“Why in Heaven’s name didn’t I cut out the party
+and go see Janet in spite of everything? How
+the deuce did I know that Collier was going to
+rope me into a game like that, though—or that
+Janet would be there to misconstrue everything?
+I s’pose she went to get a glimpse of me. Well,
+the sooner I chase up there and explain things to
+her the better. I wonder if it’s too late to go
+to-night?”</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at his watch. It was decidedly too
+late.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll hike up the first thing in the morning,” he
+thought. “She’ll understand that I couldn’t do
+anything else under the circumstances.”</p>
+
+<p>There was some comfort in the reflection that
+Janet had plenty of sound common sense in that
+shapely little head of hers. Nevertheless, the
+more he thought of it, the more Lefty realized
+what a scurvy trick fate had played him.</p>
+
+<p>“It certainly must have looked bad,” he admitted
+to himself as the car stopped before the
+hotel. “I wouldn’t blame any girl for getting
+up on her ear.”</p>
+
+<p>In the lobby he was met by his three deserted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
+companions, who instantly let fly a Gatling fire
+of comment.</p>
+
+<p>“Horning in with the management, are you?”
+grinned Nelson. “Just the same, I like your
+taste, kid. Some class there, all right!”</p>
+
+<p>“You bet!” chimed in Billy Orth. “What do
+you want to be such a hog for, though? Might
+have given somebody else a chance with one of
+’em.”</p>
+
+<p>“Spilled the beans that time, old man,” Dalton
+added significantly. “Hard luck, boy. Who’d
+ever have thought the other one would turn up
+that way, and pinch you—”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, go to blazes, the lot of you!” snapped
+Lefty, his face crimson.</p>
+
+<p>Without another word he strode toward the elevator,
+leaving Dalton—who had met Miss Harting
+in Boston, and shrewdly guessed that there
+was something more than passing friendship between
+the two—eying his companions with lifted
+brows.</p>
+
+<p>“Our genial southpaw seems somewhat
+peeved,” Larry murmured. “Have we touched
+upon a raw spot unawares?”</p>
+
+<p>Orth yawned. “Must be in a pretty bad way,”
+he commented. “I never knew him to give up
+like that without a word to say. Let’s hit the
+hay; I’m sleepy.”</p>
+
+<p>Rather silently the others followed him toward<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
+the elevator. Though there were no further remarks
+on the subject, they were all wondering
+what had happened to make the usually quick-witted,
+even-tempered Locke flare up the way he
+had at a little good-natured joshing, which ordinarily
+would have brought forth nothing more
+than a grin and a retort in kind.</p>
+
+<p>The object of their solicitude was thinking
+pretty much the same thing. He had scarcely
+set foot in the elevator before he regretted that
+silly burst of temper.</p>
+
+<p>“Looks as if I was bound to make a fool of myself
+to-night,” he thought. “I reckon I’m in bad
+all around.”</p>
+
+<p>He did not sleep well, and was up early. Having
+hurried through his breakfast, he dawdled
+around with a newspaper until eight o’clock, and
+then sought the telephone booth. A woman’s
+voice—Janet’s aunt, no doubt—answered his call.</p>
+
+<p>“Is Miss Harting in?” he asked quickly.</p>
+
+<p>“Who is this, please?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Hazelton. I won’t keep her for more—”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” interrupted the voice, with a curt,
+crisp intonation which belied the words, “but Miss
+Harting is too busy to come to the telephone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will she be at home— Hang it all! She’s
+cut off.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty slammed up the receiver, and sat scowling
+for a moment at the instrument.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Might think I’d committed a crime,” he
+growled at last. “Won’t even give me a chance
+to say a word in my own defense.” His jaw
+squared stubbornly. “I’ll make her listen to
+me,” he went on. “I’ll go up there and see her,
+whether she’s at home or not. I’ll go now, too.”</p>
+
+<p>This was easier said than done. Emerging
+from the booth, Lefty was waylaid by Spider
+Grant, captain of the team, who wasted a good
+half hour in desultory discussion of their chances
+for winning the third game of the series from the
+Specters that afternoon. It might have continued
+for an hour and a half had not Locke departed
+unceremoniously in the very midst of one of Spider’s
+most elaborate arguments.</p>
+
+<p>“If hot air would win the game, we wouldn’t
+need to go out to the park,” he muttered grumpily
+as he leaped aboard an open car.</p>
+
+<p>Of course there was a block; equally of course,
+Lefty fretted and fumed and wasted his good energy
+and invention in uncomplimentary remarks
+about the road and its operators. He was compelled
+to walk the last twelve blocks. When he at
+last arrived at the apartment house his mental
+condition was far from enviable.</p>
+
+<p>“Not at home,” said the maid, with cool brevity.</p>
+
+<p>As she started to close the door Lefty placed
+one foot over the sill, with apparent carelessness.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
+His earnestness of purpose was dimming the
+brightness of his manners.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you sure?” he asked suspiciously. “I
+only want to see Miss Harting for a minute.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed!” sniffed the girl. “Well, you’ll have
+to wait some time before you get the chance. She
+and Mrs. Manning are leaving on the night train
+for the Adirondacks.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Adirondacks!” gasped Lefty. “To-night!”
+He stood staring at the maid for a moment
+in utter dismay. “But I <em>must</em> see them before
+they go. Haven’t you any idea where they
+are now?”</p>
+
+<p>“No more’n a fly,” returned the girl, evidently
+softened a little by his distress. “They went
+right after the trunks was took—shoppin’, I
+s’pose. Anyhow, Mrs. Manning said they
+wouldn’t be back.”</p>
+
+<p>How Lefty went through the rest of the morning
+he did not know. What had been started by a
+trivial trick of chance seemed to be growing more
+serious every moment. Evidently Janet believed
+the worst of him. It was equally evident that she
+was determined to give him no opportunity to explain
+the mix-up. Her behavior hurt Lefty desperately.
+It seemed unfair and unjust that she
+should have so little faith in him, in spite of appearances.</p>
+
+<p>For several hours he wandered about the shopping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
+district, in the vague hope that somehow he
+might run across the girl. Failing in that, he
+lunched in gloomy solitude, then made his way to
+the ball park.</p>
+
+<p>For six innings he sat on the bench in grim silence
+while “Slick” Lumley held down the Specters
+to a shut-out score. Slick was one of those
+pitchers who are unsurpassed when they are good,
+but who seldom last through an entire game. Evidently
+Carson did not propose to run any chances
+of his blowing up this time, for at the beginning of
+the seventh, with Lumley showing sudden wildness,
+he took him off the mound and substituted
+Billy Orth.</p>
+
+<p>It was during that inning that Lefty got up
+from the bench to stretch his legs, and became
+aware for the first time of the presence of Miss
+Collier in the box with her father. She nodded
+cordially, and it seemed only natural for him to
+step up and say a few words to her.</p>
+
+<p>The few words lengthened into a prolonged conversation.
+The club owner had a good many questions
+to ask about Lefty’s father, and Virginia
+herself was so bright and cheery and interesting
+that the young pitcher was raised from the depths
+of despondency in spite of himself.</p>
+
+<p>For three innings he stood leaning against the
+rail of the box. Toward the end he was talking
+and laughing almost as if he hadn’t a thing on his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
+mind to worry him. Several times his glance wandered
+back into the stands to where sat a young
+man of about his own age, who seemed much more
+interested in the party in the box than in the game.
+The fellow’s expression was so bitter, and he
+stared so fixedly at the famous southpaw, that
+Lefty wondered if he had ever met the chap
+before, or whether it was simply one of those curious
+dislikes certain fans seem to take to a player
+every once in a while.</p>
+
+<p>Locke was still wondering when Orth struck
+out the last man, winning the game by a score of
+two to one, and the crowd began to pour out of
+their seats to jam the aisles and runways.</p>
+
+<p>The next second Lefty gave a start, and the
+color drained swiftly from his face. He had
+caught a brief, fleeting glimpse of a girl who had
+been seated well back in the lower stand. Her
+face had been invisible all through the game, but
+now, as she arose and stepped into the aisle, he saw
+it clearly for an instant before she was swallowed
+up in the mob. It was the face of the girl he had
+been seeking all day in vain.</p>
+
+<p>Before he realized what he was doing, he had
+leaped for the nearest gate, and swung it open.
+Then he stopped, with a groan. It would be like
+hunting a needle in a haystack to try and find her
+in this crush. She might leave at any of a dozen
+exits before he could reach even one of them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
+
+<p>For a moment he stood there, a scowl on his face,
+bitterness in his heart. Why had she come to the
+grounds at all? Was it to see him without the
+chance of being seen? Well, she had accomplished
+her purpose with a vengeance; she had beheld him
+chatting and laughing intimately with the same
+girl she supposed he had taken to the theater last
+night.</p>
+
+<p>With a groan of disappointment and mental
+pain, Lefty whirled around and tramped sullenly
+across the field toward the clubhouse. He did not
+give a single backward glance at the charming
+Miss Collier. He had forgotten her very existence
+in the irritation and trouble which this new complication
+had brought upon him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br>
+<small>THE GROUCH</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">A modern Big League team is very much
+like an overgrown family. The men are
+together every day, and all day. At intervals
+they spend long hours cooped up in Pullman
+cars, always putting up at the same hotels
+while on the road, and frequently the majority of
+players belonging to a club stop at one particularly
+favored place at home. They miss little going
+on about them. As a result of this intimacy
+it was not long before Locke’s altered demeanor
+became a topic of discussion among the Blue
+Stockings.</p>
+
+<p>“I’d like to know what’s worrying the boy,” remarked
+Spider Grant early one afternoon in the
+dressing room. “He’s been going round for three
+or four days with a face a mile long.”</p>
+
+<p>He paused in his leisurely preparations for the
+game, and glanced inquiringly from one to another
+of the half dozen men who lounged about the room
+in various stages of undress.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s sure got a grouch,” agreed Rufe Hyland,
+intent on the adjustment of his sliding pads.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
+“Ain’t seen him crack a smile in so long I’ve forgot
+what he looks like grinnin’. Mebbe he’s
+peeved at the way Carson’s been runnin’ him in
+at the tail end of games to pull us out of holes.
+Bein’ a life-saver an’ gettin’ no credit’s enough
+to get any man raw.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s true enough,” agreed Grant. “He
+hasn’t had a whack at a straight game for over a
+week. Still, that wouldn’t turn a decent fellow
+like Lefty into a chronic grouch; he’s got too much
+sense. No, he acts to me like he was in love, and
+his girl had given him the double cross or something.
+How about that, Larry? You ought to
+know.”</p>
+
+<p>Dalton, wearing little more than his usual smile,
+shrugged his muscular shoulders and bustled
+among the contents of his locker.</p>
+
+<p>“Wouldn’t wonder if you’d hit it, Spider,” he
+returned, straightening up with a flannel shirt in
+his hands. “He has got a girl—regular peacherino,
+too—and I’ve got an idea that she has cross-signaled
+him lately. He spends half his time writing
+letters, and tears most of ’em up. That’s a
+bad sign, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Huh!” growled Hyland. “This skirt business
+makes me sick. There ain’t a thing in it. I’ve
+been hitched twice, and divorced the same number—an’
+never again. I wouldn’t make sheep’s eyes
+at the best-lookin’ dame in this town, believe me.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
+They git a fellow so fussed that he don’t know
+whether he’s afoot or horseback. If some female’s
+throwed the kid down, an’ that’s what he’s
+grouchin’ about, take it from me he’ll be bustin’
+up on the mound one of these days—an’ then
+where’ll he come off at?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where’ll <em>we</em> come off, you mean,” retorted
+Grant, with a frown. “He’s the best all-round
+flinger in this outfit, and if he goes to seed then
+go-o-od night post-season series.”</p>
+
+<p>There being no other pitchers present, the statement
+passed uncontradicted. Grant slipped out
+of his street trousers, carefully folded them, and
+turned again to Dalton.</p>
+
+<p>“Can’t you find out if that’s it, Larry?” he
+asked. “If it is, we ought to do something to—”</p>
+
+<p>“Cheese! Cheese!” warned Kid Lewis. “Here
+he comes.”</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the young southpaw entered the
+dressing room, curtly responded to jovial greetings—somewhat
+forced—from the other men, and
+strode over to his locker. His forehead was corrugated
+by the frown which had become habitual of
+late. His eyes were somber. He made no attempt
+whatever to join in the conversation which
+swiftly started up again, seeming, in fact, to be almost
+oblivious to what was going on. He answered
+two or three direct questions in monosyllables,
+stripped off his clothes with an absent sort<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
+of haste, got into his uniform in much the same
+manner, and departed, wrapped in gloom, without
+having volunteered a single remark.</p>
+
+<p>As he disappeared into the corridor, the other
+players eyed each other significantly.</p>
+
+<p>“I never thought to see Lefty Locke with a
+face like that on him,” commented Dirk Nelson
+mournfully. “Why, the boy used to be the life
+of the whole crowd.”</p>
+
+<p>“If it <em>is</em> a girl who’s responsible,” growled
+Hyland viciously, “she’d ought to be massecreed.
+There ain’t a woman livin’ that’s worth
+makin’ all that fuss about.”</p>
+
+<p>Spider Grant finished lacing his shoes, and
+stood up, stamping.</p>
+
+<p>“Try if you can’t get wise to the game, Larry,”
+he said abruptly. “I don’t know as we
+can do anything, but it’ll be something to be sure.
+He’ll loosen up to you sooner’n to any of the rest
+of us.”</p>
+
+<p>Dalton agreed, but without any great exhibition
+of confidence. He had noticed a marked reserve
+on the part of Lefty Locke lately, which did not
+augur well for the extraction of confidences.
+There was a little more talk on the subject, but it
+ceased with the arrival of Pete Grist and his
+bunch of cronies. Soon afterward they all sauntered
+out to the diamond.</p>
+
+<p>The game that day was the last of a series<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
+with the Hornets, and the last which would be
+played on the home grounds for some time.
+That night would see the Blue Stockings bound
+for the territory of their greatest rivals, the Specters,
+after which would follow the final Western
+circuit.</p>
+
+<p>Either the home club had weakened, or the Hornets
+improved noticeably since their last encounter.
+The Blue Stockings had won every
+game, to be sure, but they had won them only by
+the hardest kind of work; and on two occasions
+the phenomenal pitching of Locke, put into the
+box for two and four innings respectively, was
+all that saved the day.</p>
+
+<p>To the fans it seemed a certainty that the
+young southpaw would start off on the mound
+to-day, and a murmur of surprise arose when
+the umpire announced “Pink” Dillon’s name.</p>
+
+<p>Dillon was, at times, a brilliant pitcher, but
+he had been on the sick list for some weeks; and
+the manager’s mistaken judgment was proved
+by the fact that he lasted for just two innings,
+during the last of which the Hornets succeeded
+in pounding out three runs.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of vociferous yells for Locke on the
+part of the bleacherites, Carson sent Grist into
+the box. He lasted until the end of the seventh.
+Then, owing in part, perhaps, to the carping criticism
+from a group of leather-lunged fans, to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
+whom nobody but Lefty Locke looked good, he
+made a sudden and pyrotechnic ascension which
+let in several more tallies.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was hurried into the gap with the score
+eight to three against the home team, and, though
+the portsider kept the Hornets from further scoring,
+the Blue Stockings were able to get only two
+more runners across the rubber. Therefore the
+game was lost by a tally of eight to five.</p>
+
+<p>The tramp and thunder of departing thousands
+had been going on for several minutes, yet Miss
+Collier still sat in a box, her eyes fixed on the
+throng of white-clad players just disappearing
+through the fence on the farther side of the field.
+All afternoon the young southpaw had not so
+much as glanced in her direction, yet to-night he
+was leaving the city, to be gone for several weeks.
+It seemed as if he might at least have said
+good-by.</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t take it so hard if I were you,”
+smiled Mr. Collier, turning away from the friend
+with whom he had been chatting. “We can afford
+to lose this game, you know. The boys will
+make it up when they meet the Specters.”</p>
+
+<p>The girl arose leisurely and turned her back
+on the field.</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t thinking of that,” she said quietly.
+She paused for a second, her slim, gloved hands
+straightening her hat. “Doesn’t it seem a little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
+odd to you, Dad, that Mr. Locke pitches so few
+games?”</p>
+
+<p>“Few!” repeated the magnate in amazement.
+“Why, he’s been in the box twice this week, and
+twice last!”</p>
+
+<p>Miss Collier shrugged her shoulders gracefully.
+“Precisely,” she returned calmly. “He’s been
+in the box for anywhere from two to four
+innings. Three times out of those four he won
+games some other pitcher tried to lose. He
+pitched a full game the day before I got home.
+Since then he’s been doing the most thankless
+sort of relief work. You see my point?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Collier’s jaw dropped. “Well, I’ll be
+hanged!” he exclaimed. “You certainly put one
+over on me that time, Virginia—or was it Locke
+who put you wise?”</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly <em>not</em>,” the girl retorted emphatically.
+“He isn’t that sort at all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hum! No, of course not. I’m very glad you
+mentioned this, my dear. Such a thing is neither
+fair to the boy nor good judgment. I’ll see Carson
+before he leaves to-night, and tell him a little
+something.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br>
+<small>ON THE RAW EDGE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The train had been in motion for twenty
+minutes or so, and the occupants of the
+Blue Stocking special car were beginning
+to settle down for the evening when Al Carson
+appeared in the doorway of his stateroom. For
+a moment or two he stood there, frowning, his
+glance passing indifferently over the brisk poker
+game with its several interested onlookers which
+was going on near him, past the lounging players
+engaged in idle talk or immersed in newspapers.
+There was a sudden tightening of his lips, however,
+as his eyes finally came to rest on the
+sprawling figure of Lefty Locke, hunched in the
+corner of a seat well forward. A moment later
+the manager stood looking down on the southpaw,
+with narrowing lids.</p>
+
+<p>“Been whining around a petticoat, have you?”
+he sneered.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty’s eyes veered suddenly from the window
+to the manager’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s that?” he snapped.</p>
+
+<p>“I said you’d been whining around a skirt,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
+complaining that I was using favoritism with the
+pitchers. You weren’t man enough to put up
+your kick to me; you had to go bawling about it
+to Collier’s daughter, so she’d work her father—”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a lie!” rasped Locke, his face crimson.
+“A lie, and you know it!”</p>
+
+<p>His eyes were flashing, his fists were doubled;
+every muscle of his big frame had suddenly become
+tense and hard as a panther’s crouching
+for a spring. The manager himself turned suddenly
+livid with anger. For a moment, to the
+three or four players sitting near enough to observe
+what was going on, it looked as if another
+second would bring about a rough-and-tumble
+scrap.</p>
+
+<p>Just in time, however, Carson, realizing the
+danger of the situation, managed to get control of
+his temper.</p>
+
+<p>“<em>Is</em> that so?” he sneered. “Perhaps you can
+explain how Miss Collier came to draw the old
+man’s attention to the fact that you hadn’t
+pitched a straight game in over a week.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not being a fool,” Lefty snapped back, “it’s
+quite possible she discovered it by simple observation.
+Everybody else is wise to the fact
+that ever since you took hold of the team you’ve
+been using me to win games for the precious
+pitcher you’re so stuck on.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
+
+<p>Carson caught his breath swiftly and turned
+white with rage. “What the deuce—” he blustered.
+“Who—”</p>
+
+<p>“You know well enough who I mean,” retorted
+Locke. “If you don’t, then ask any man on the
+team, and you’ll find out quick. I’m not kicking;
+I’m simply stating facts. You’re manager
+of this team, and you’ve got the right to run it
+any way you choose. But there’s just this, <em>Mister</em>
+Carson: in future we’ll dispense with any
+more talk about my currying favor with the
+owner, either through his daughter or in any
+other way. When I’m ready to kick about anything,
+I’ll come to you and do it. Believe me,
+you’ll know it!”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you mean by such talk?” frothed
+Carson, his face purple. “I’ll fine you—”</p>
+
+<p>“Fine and be hanged!” defied Locke. “Only
+shut up! You started this, not I. You asked a
+question, and I answered, so cut out the hot air
+and leave me alone. I’m sick of the sound of
+your voice.”</p>
+
+<p>For a second or two the manager stared in
+dazed fury at the scowling face of the young
+pitcher, and then—he wilted. Lefty’s remarks
+had hit the nail on the head only too accurately,
+and Carson knew it. He and Pete Grist had
+been on friendly terms for a number of years,
+and Grist had been favored by the manager at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
+every opportunity, though Carson flattered himself
+that it had been done too skillfully to be obvious.
+The shock of discovering the contrary,
+and also the realization that Locke was apparently
+in a state of mind which necessitated handling
+with gloves, caused the official to back water.
+With a snappy retort or two, and a very fierce expression,
+he turned on his heel and sought the seclusion
+of his stateroom.</p>
+
+<p>The slamming of the door was followed by a
+hush more eloquent than many words. The altercation
+had been conducted with no soft pedal
+on, and almost every word had been audible the
+entire length of the car. For a few minutes even
+the poker game was in abeyance, as the men
+glanced significantly at one another with lifted
+eyebrows, shaking their heads.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s sure enough sore,” whispered Kid
+Lewis. “Maybe it isn’t the girl, after all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe,” agreed Rufe Hyland, glancing at his
+cards again. “Lucky Grist’s in the smoker, or
+there’d be a rough-house for fair.”</p>
+
+<p>“What he said was nothing but gospel,” protested
+Nelson. “Carson’s been favoring Pete
+every chance he got. Lefty won two games for
+him within a week, and didn’t get any credit; for
+Grist, going to the bad, was drawn with us leadin’
+by a run.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, sure! I know that. But Petie’s a peppery<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
+gink, and no fellow likes to hear that kind
+of truth blabbed out in so many words.”</p>
+
+<p>Of course, Grist heard all about it before many
+hours had passed. In the dressing room on the
+Specter grounds, next afternoon, he made some
+sneering remarks on the subject in a loud tone,
+which could not help reaching Locke’s ears. Instantly
+Lefty retorted savagely. Grist snapped
+back viciously, and but for the swift interference
+of the other men, there would have been a fight
+then and there.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later Carson appeared and curtly
+informed the southpaw that he was to start the
+game.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this mental condition that Lefty received
+instructions to pitch. He made no comment
+beyond a surly nod, but his teammates
+glanced dubiously at one another, and shook their
+heads.</p>
+
+<p>One and all were conscious of an unpleasant
+feeling of suspense and unrest. It was as if they
+were walking on the thin crust of a volcano which
+was likely at any moment to burst into violent
+eruption.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br>
+<small>UNCERTAINTY</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Contrary to the fears of a good many
+Blue Stockings, Lefty still seemed to be
+“there with the goods.” To be sure, he
+stalked out to the mound with a gloomy face and
+wrinkled brow, which was the very antithesis of his
+usual cheerful, good-humored expression; but
+when it came to bending them over, he showed
+every bit of his old-time skill for the first three
+innings.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the fourth that Larry Dalton, who had
+been watching his friend closely, began to notice
+a change. Red Callahan, an uncertain hitter, was
+at the bat. The southpaw pulled him with a
+pretty outcurve, following with a clever drop;
+and then, with two strikes and only one ball called,
+he whipped over a fast, straight ball, which
+would have cut the heart of the plate had not Red
+fallen upon it joyfully, smashing it out for a canter
+to first.</p>
+
+<p>It was not a very bad slip; pitchers fail every
+day through underestimation of a poor hitter.
+But carelessness had never been one of Lefty’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
+faults, and Dalton’s eyes widened with surprise
+as the Specter infielder romped down to the initial
+sack, and stood there grinning.</p>
+
+<p>The look of surprise deepened on Larry’s face
+when Locke gave the next batter three balls in
+succession, meanwhile allowing Callahan to steal
+second.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the game!” barked the Specter coachers
+jubilantly. “Make him put ’em over, Jack.
+He ain’t such a wonder, after all. Too bad,
+Lefty, old boy. Losing your control?”</p>
+
+<p>“Make those dubs shut up!” snapped Locke,
+turning to the umpire. “They can talk to their
+own men, but not to me.”</p>
+
+<p>The coachers received a perfunctory warning,
+and naturally, when they saw that the pitcher objected
+to their remarks, they redoubled their efforts,
+simply altering the person.</p>
+
+<p>Dalton could scarcely believe his ears. To
+think of Lefty Locke being bothered by a little
+hot air! Ordinarily he simply grinned aggravatingly,
+or gave an excellent imitation of a deaf
+mute. It seemed incredible, and a furrow of
+anxiety flashed into place between Larry’s brown
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty managed to pull out of the hole, but the
+mere fact that he had allowed himself to get into
+it was enough to cause his teammates to worry.</p>
+
+<p>The fifth inning passed with the score still one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
+to one—both runs had been made at the very beginning
+of the game. In the sixth the Blue
+Stockings scored another tally, a lead which they
+held in spite of the desperate efforts of their
+opponents in the final half of the inning.</p>
+
+<p>During the seventh and eighth Lefty’s pitching
+came near giving a number of people heart
+failure. It was by turns mediocre to a degree,
+and superbly brilliant. He would get himself
+into holes by inexcusable carelessness, and then,
+when he seemed on the point of blowing up, he
+would steady down and make the spectators shout
+joyous approval.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout this erratic performance Billy
+Orth sat on the bench, watching the work of the
+grim, frowning portsider with alternate dismay,
+delight, and wonderment.</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord!” Billy muttered to himself. “I
+never saw him so shifty. First he’s careless and
+wild as a hawk, then, just when he seems going
+up for fair, he tightens like a drumhead. He’s
+got Carson squirming.”</p>
+
+<p>True, the manager of the Blue Stockings was
+squirming. Even when Locke fanned dangerous
+hitters in the pinches Carson, though showing
+some relief, did not look wholly happy. At no
+time was the angry frown wiped clean from his
+face. For through it all he was troubled by a
+nagging conviction that the man on the mound<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
+was playing on his feelings as well as toying with
+the opposing batters.</p>
+
+<p>It really seemed that Lefty invited and sought
+threatening situations—in any of which the
+slightest slip would give the Specters what they
+desired—in order that he might make a display
+of his skill by balking the enemy when they were
+almost grasping the coveted prize. A pitcher
+who could “monkey” in such a manner, with the
+result of a single game meaning so much, was not
+worthy of trust under any circumstances. Had
+Carson felt absolutely assured that Locke was doing
+this, he would have braved the wrath of the
+owner by benching the man in one of those tense,
+threatening moments.</p>
+
+<p>But Carson was not sure. Much as he disliked
+Lefty for certain reasons, he could not bring himself
+to believe that a youngster with Locke’s
+promise in the Big League would, through malice
+or spite, toy inanely with his future prospects.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, even when Lefty succeeded in
+pulling himself out of the holes, and came to the
+bench amid the approving uproar of the great
+crowd, the manager could not bring himself to
+give the grim and sullen man a word of encouragement
+and approval. True it was that Locke
+did not invite anything of the sort, and actually
+seemed, by his cold and distant manner, to repel
+the advances of his own friends and intimates<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
+on the team. In every way he was thoroughly
+unlike the open, jovial, likable youngster he had
+seemed to be earlier in the season.</p>
+
+<p>Even Laughing Larry, than whom no one had
+been more intimate with the young southpaw,
+wore an expression of troubled anxiety each time
+he came to the bench following those pinches.</p>
+
+<p>Billy Orth saw this, and signaled for the perspiring,
+disturbed Dalton to sit beside him in the
+pit.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter with Lefty, Dalt?” asked
+Orth guardedly. “Do you think—”</p>
+
+<p>“Dunno what to think,” muttered Larry, in a
+perplexed way; “but I don’t believe he’s right.
+The whole team feels it, too; and, with our slim
+margin of one run, it wouldn’t take only the
+smallest break to put the bunch off their feet.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you’ve noticed how queer he’s
+been acting the last few days?”</p>
+
+<p>“Huh! Couldn’t help noticing it. A blind
+man or a fool could see that. He seems to be
+sore with himself and the whole world generally.
+That quarrel with Carson didn’t improve his condition
+any. He’s in bad there.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he stands well with the skirt, and she
+seems to be the real power behind the machine.”</p>
+
+<p>“The skirt? Oh, you mean Collier’s daughter?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure! She seems to be running things.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
+
+<p>Dalton shook his head soberly. “And that’s
+unfortunate. Women may vote, hold office, and
+go to war if they want to, but baseball is one thing
+they’d better keep their noses out of. No team
+ever did well with a female monkeying with it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know,” murmured Billy, “I’ve got an
+idea that I can locate Lefty Locke’s weak spot.
+It’s skirts. We all have our failings, and that’s
+his.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps you’re right,” nodded Larry. “I’ve
+always thought he had a level block, till lately.
+Now he’s mixed up with two dames, and—”</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you talk to him, Larry? You’re
+the one to do it. He ought to listen to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe he ought to listen, but he won’t. Once
+I wouldn’t have hesitated, but now I can’t open
+my face to him without his being ready to jump
+down my throat. I confess it has made me a bit
+raw, too. Once he had plenty of friends, but if
+he keeps on he will lose the sympathy of everybody.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m afraid you’re right,” admitted Billy
+sadly. “I’ve been figuring to get my fingers on
+some of that post-season money, but if Locke goes
+to pieces now we won’t be in the running at the
+wind-up. Let’s hope for the best.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br>
+<small>SUSPENSE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The Specter twirler having become practically
+unhittable, the ninth inning gave
+the Blue Stockings nothing further than
+their slim lead of one tally. The final half
+opened with Dutch Schwartz, leading the Specter’s
+list, the first man to face Locke.</p>
+
+<p>“Whiff him, Lefty!” begged a few fans. “You
+can do it! Oh, you Lefty! You’re the boy!”</p>
+
+<p>With an expression of mingled determination
+and disdain for these pleading rooters, Schwartz
+planted himself at the plate, having first knocked
+the dirt out of his spikes with the butt of his
+heavy club.</p>
+
+<p>“Take it easy, son,” called Spider Grant, getting
+into position to cover plenty of territory in
+the vicinity of first. “You know him. If you
+can get him to start with, it will be as good as
+two down.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke gave his captain a cold stare, and his
+lips moved. It seemed that he muttered some
+sullen retort, but Grant could not distinguish the
+words.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
+
+<p>So long did the pitcher stand in that position,
+gazing straight at Spider, that the tense
+crowd began to wonder, and the umpire called
+“Play” twice. Finally, lifting his “meat hand”
+with the soiled horsehide gripped in his fingers,
+Lefty turned his eyes on Nelson, who crouched
+promptly, and signaled.</p>
+
+<p>Wagging his bat loosely, almost lightly, Dutch
+Schwartz was in position to step into anything
+handed up. Possibly delaying in an effort to get
+the batter’s nerve, Lefty made no further move
+until he provoked a protest from the Specter captain.
+Then, like one awaking from a half trance,
+the pitcher balanced himself on one foot, swung
+far back, brought his body over and forward, and
+made the delivery. Never had anyone present
+witnessed a wilder pitch. It was a wonder that
+the ball did not go clean over the top of the grandstand.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, oh, oh!” shouted the coachers, while the
+startled crowd broke into exclamations. “Look
+a’ that! Get a scaling ladder, Schwartzy.”</p>
+
+<p>The Dutchman grinned and tapped the pentagon
+with the end of his bat.</p>
+
+<p>A boy recovered the ball and threw it to Nelson,
+who made a pretense of looking it over before
+he tossed it to Locke.</p>
+
+<p>On the bench the watchful Billy Orth, actually
+shivering, whispered to himself: “Now, I wonder<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
+if he did that on purpose—I wonder. It
+doesn’t seem likely. If he did, he’s getting to be
+a good subject for the foolish factory.”</p>
+
+<p>Others beside Billy were wondering. While
+they were thus engaged Locke pitched again.
+This time he whipped a smoker over, and
+Schwartz fouled it against the right-field bleachers.</p>
+
+<p>“That makes you even, old boy!” called Grant,
+ere he turned to receive the ball from the fielder
+who had chased it down. But, somehow, his voice
+seemed to lack the ring of genuine cheerfulness.</p>
+
+<p>Even the least astute spectator could see that
+the Blue Stockings were all keyed up to a point
+of tension little short of snapping. Something
+in the very air seemed to presage a break. And
+that meant—disaster.</p>
+
+<p>It was such a situation, however, as provides
+one of the intense thrills of the game, the sort of
+a thrill and suspense which makes it so fascinating
+to its thousands upon thousands of followers.
+It is the desire to feel just this keen distress
+and uncertainty, intensely delicious in its
+poignant pain, that lures a fan to the ball park
+day after day to witness dead and uninteresting
+games, hoping always for the pinch that will set
+them swallowing hard to keep their hearts from
+choking them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
+
+<p>Frowning, Lefty pitched again. The ball
+seemed to make a yellow streak through the air,
+and Nelson, though he held it, was actually set
+back the least fraction by the terrific impact of
+the sphere in his big mitt.</p>
+
+<p>Schwartz had struck again—and missed.</p>
+
+<p>“Smoke! Smoke!” shouted Dalton, laughing
+suddenly in his old-time way. “He couldn’t see
+it, my boy! Once more, and you’ve got him!”</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, Laughing Larry had suddenly decided
+that the pitcher he had doubted might be playing
+a clever game, even though the wisdom of it could
+be questioned. Nor was Larry the only one with
+confidence suddenly revived.</p>
+
+<p>“Such speed!” muttered Billy Orth. “And
+his control was perfect—that time.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s two on him!” howled an excited man
+from the middle stand. “He’s your meat, Lefty!
+You never did fail us!”</p>
+
+<p>Nelson gave his tingling bare hand a shake and
+returned the ball to Locke, who seemed to perceive
+it just in time to thrust out his gloved right
+and catch it a bit awkwardly. They saw him
+shake his head from side to side with a queer motion
+and pass the back of his left hand across his
+sweat-moistened forehead. His face was drawn
+into hard, set lines, which seemed like lines of
+pain. Before looking again for Nelson’s signal,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
+he walked all the way around the slab, staring
+down at the ground as if seeking for something
+he had dropped. And these queer movements
+brought the uncertainty leaping back into the
+heart of Laughing Larry and others.</p>
+
+<p>There was speed in the next one—speed
+enough, it is true; but Schwartz could not have
+reached it had his bat measured two feet more
+than it did. It went past Nelson, and clean to
+the stand, from which it rebounded.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait it out, Dutch,” urged a coacher. “He’ll
+hand you a pass yet.”</p>
+
+<p>Schwartz knew how to wait, as he proved by
+ignoring the next pitch, which barely failed to cut
+a corner. Three balls were called—three balls
+and two strikes.</p>
+
+<p>Again Lefty gave his head that queer, side-swaying
+shake. His teeth were set and his lips
+drawn back. Receiving the ball, he held it
+gripped tightly in both hands beneath his chin,
+while he leaned forward to get the catcher’s
+sign.</p>
+
+<p>Upon the crowd fell a great hush, in the midst
+of which the voices of Locke’s teammates, calling
+encouragement, could be distinctly heard.
+Schwartz, his confidence apparently unmarred,
+waited, sturdily alert.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty nodded, swung backward, swung forward,
+slashed the air with his arm—pitched. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
+was a hook-curve, sharp, and breaking toward
+the outside corner. Schwartz swung his bat as
+if it weighed no more than a toothpick. But,
+marvelous hitter though he was, that curve fooled
+him, and he was out.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br>
+<small>A WILD HEAVE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Championship prospects for the Blue
+Stockings had led an unusual number of
+rooters for the team to follow it around
+on the short jumps, and now, with the fanning of
+Schwartz, they made a tremendous racket. The
+following batters might be equally dangerous,
+but, with the sturdy Dutchman disposed of, the
+prospect of holding the threatening Specters was
+bright indeed. Not a few felt, like Larry Dalton,
+that to get Schwartz at this time was as good as
+disposing of two men.</p>
+
+<p>As Bugs Murray took Schwartz’s place, however,
+the great bulk of the gathering howled for
+a safety.</p>
+
+<p>“Get a hit! Get a hit!” was the cry. “Put
+us in the game, Bugs!”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s just as easy, Lefty, old boy,” chuckled
+Dalton. “Sew it up right here. This game
+counts. We need it.”</p>
+
+<p>By no visible sign did Locke show that the
+words of his friend reached his ears. On the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
+other hand, the rooting of the immense crowd in
+the stands seemed to annoy him in a most unusual
+way. And when one individual, with a voice like
+a locomotive whistle, shrieked that he was “wild,”
+“no good,” “easy,” and “punk,” he remained
+for some moments staring at the spot from which
+the cries seemed to come.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t mind that, old man,” pleaded Grant.
+“You know what you can do. Bugs is your next
+victim. Mow him down.”</p>
+
+<p>Again the troubled pitcher seemed to lack control,
+for he handed up two wild ones that made
+Nelson stretch himself to pull them down. Again
+the coachers prophesied that he would be obliging
+enough to give the hitter a walk. It is likely
+Murray thought there was a good prospect of
+such a thing, for he held back when Locke, after
+a seeming struggle to pull himself together, shot
+one down the groove.</p>
+
+<p>“Strike-ah!” called the umpire, flinging up his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, of course, of course!” whooped Dalton.
+“You’ve got him hypnotized, Lefty. No free
+passes this inning.”</p>
+
+<p>But Laughing Larry was mistaken. With
+Murray waiting confidently, the laboring southpaw
+was unable to find the pan again, and four
+balls sent Bugs capering with elephantine grace
+to first.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Going up! going up!” he whooped, doing a
+dance on the sack. “Wait it out, Dil. He’s all
+shot to pieces.”</p>
+
+<p>After glancing toward his manager for a signal,
+Dillingham dropped one of the two bats he
+had been swinging, and hastened to put himself
+into position to do a little business with the other
+one.</p>
+
+<p>Logie, fourth on the list, and therefore a most
+reliable club swinger, followed Dillingham. And
+Logie was the only man who, all through the
+game, had shown the ability to fathom anything
+Locke put within his reach. With this fact in
+mind, the Specter manager felt that, even though
+two should be down, and a runner on second, with
+Logie batting it meant an even chance to get the
+run which would tie the score.</p>
+
+<p>“If we can tie it up now,” he thought, “we’ve
+got that left-hander’s goat. He’s barely been
+holding himself together, and a tie score in this
+inning would scatter him all over the lot.”</p>
+
+<p>So Dillingham was given the signal to sacrifice,
+and he passed the sign to Murray, who ceased his
+capering and made ready to tear up the chalk line
+on the way to second.</p>
+
+<p>Like the shouting of the crowd, the antics of
+Murray had seemed to disturb Lefty, and when
+he threw once to drive Bugs back to the initial
+sack he made such a wild heave that Spider Grant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
+pulled the ball down only by a most amazing leap
+into the air.</p>
+
+<p>“Wow! wow!” laughed the coacher at that
+base. “He made you stretch, Spider. He can’t
+even throw to the sacks. What’s the matter with
+him—struck by ’stigmatism?”</p>
+
+<p>There really seemed that there was something
+the matter with Locke’s eyes, for again and again
+he passed his hand across them, like one brushing
+away cobwebs.</p>
+
+<p>The restored confidence of his teammates was
+ebbing again. Several times during the game
+Grant had wondered why Carson sent no other
+twirler out to warm up, and now the puzzling
+question once more flashed through his mind.
+With the former manager at the helm, the captain
+would have suggested such a precaution, but
+Carson was not popular with Spider.</p>
+
+<p>“He knows so much about the inside game,”
+thought Grant, “let him run things all by his
+lonesome. I’ll handle my end on the field, but
+I’m not going to give him a chance to call me by
+proposing something he ought to be wise to himself.”</p>
+
+<p>And only for what he had heard from Collier,
+Carson would have replaced Locke with another
+pitcher long ere this. With such feelings governing
+the “powers,” there was really small chance
+for the Blue Stockings to snatch the coveted championship.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
+Indeed, it was just this sort of childishness
+that had prevented Carson from becoming
+a pennant contender on the occasions when
+he had managed other Big League teams. The
+thoroughly successful manager never permits
+personal feelings or whims to influence his judgment.</p>
+
+<p>Although Lefty’s first pitch to Dillingham
+would have been called a ball, the batter reached
+across and met it, with his club loosely held, rolling
+a soggy bunt into the diamond.</p>
+
+<p>Murray had started with the swing of the
+pitcher’s arm, and therefore there was no chance
+to get him at second. It was Locke’s ball to field,
+and he should have nailed Dillingham at first by
+twelve or fifteen feet. Somehow, he seemed to
+hesitate before starting after the rolling sphere,
+and then, when he did get it, with barely enough
+time to pinch the runner at the initial sack, he
+threw all the way into deep right.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden roar went up. The coacher at first
+shrieked for Dillingham to keep on. The one at
+third howled and waved his arms at Murray.</p>
+
+<p>Lettering one gasping snarl, Rufe Hyland
+chased that wild peg down, got it on the rebound
+from the face of the bleachers, and whipped it
+back into the diamond in time to hold Murray at
+third. At second Dalton fooled Dillingham into<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
+sliding by pretending that he was going to take
+a throw.</p>
+
+<p>The Blue Stocking fans were silent and appalled,
+but the stands seemed to rock with the
+tremendous uproar made by the sympathizers
+with the Specters. With second and third occupied,
+only one down, and Logie the hitter, it
+seemed a three-to-one shot that Lefty Locke had
+thrown away the game.</p>
+
+<p>“If we only had Grist or Orth or <em>anybody</em> to
+go in now!” muttered Grant. “They’re all cold.
+There’s no time for ’em to warm up. Oh, this
+is fine management, and I’ll have to shoulder a
+big part of the blame!”</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_XV">CHAPTER XV<br>
+<small>THROWN AWAY</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">In the Blue Stocking pit Carson sat gritting his
+teeth and muttering, but he gave no orders
+that would tend to relieve the situation.</p>
+
+<p>Nelson, standing on the plate with the ball in
+his hands, motioned repeatedly before Locke saw
+him and came forward. They met a few feet in
+front of the pan.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the trouble, old man?” questioned
+Dirk. “Are you sick?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sick? No,” growled the southpaw. “Gimme
+the ball.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wait a minute. There’s something wrong.
+You’re not right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nothing the matter with me. I’ll get Logie.
+They won’t score. Hear that infernal bunch
+howl! They make me sick!”</p>
+
+<p>His angry eyes once more swept the tumultuous
+stands, where the crowd was jeering and hooting
+and shouting for the Blue Stockings to play ball.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re paying too much attention to the
+crowd, or something,” said Nelson. “You’re not
+pitching in form.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Bah! I’ve got speed, haven’t I?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but—”</p>
+
+<p>“And curves, too?”</p>
+
+<p>“But your control is bad. If they score now
+they’ll take this game, best we can do.”</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you they won’t score. Haven’t I made
+good in every pinch to-day? Well, stop carping,
+and leave it to me. Just you give me the signs,
+and do your part of the work; that’s all that’s
+necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” said the catcher, trying to seem as
+confident and cheerful as possible. “But don’t
+let Bugs reach the rubber—don’t, for the love of
+goodness! Keep steady now, and we’ll hold ’em
+yet.”</p>
+
+<p>He handed Lefty the ball, and Locke walked
+back to the mound, watching Murray, who was
+capering off third in an effort to draw a throw.</p>
+
+<p>“Come on, come on!” coaxed Bugs. “Heave
+it. You can’t get me. Heave it!”</p>
+
+<p>But the pitcher refrained from throwing, and
+took his position on the slab. The moment he
+squared away to pitch Dillingham ran far up
+from second, ready to try to get home on any
+sort of a promising single.</p>
+
+<p>That Locke had speed enough no one could
+deny, and now, to the surprise of his friends and
+his opponents alike, he seemed suddenly to have
+recovered his control. Doubtless Logie did not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
+figure on this recovery, for he stood up to the
+pan, without swinging, and permitted two
+smokers to cut the inside corner, both being
+called strikes. Annoyed, he gripped his bat and
+waited for the next one. It proved to be one of
+Locke’s amazing hooks, all of which seemed due
+to cut the pan until they “broke.” On the break
+that particular ball would shoot downward and
+outward beyond the corner. It did so now, and
+Logie pounded the air.</p>
+
+<p>Laughing Larry’s joyous yell sounded high
+and clear above the delighted shouts of the little
+gathering of Blue Stocking “bugs” in the watching
+throng.</p>
+
+<p>“All right—it’s all right,” sang Dalton.
+“You’re fooling ’em some to-day, Lefty, my
+bucko.”</p>
+
+<p>On the bench Billy Orth mopped his pale, perspiring
+face. “Great scissors!” he breathed.
+“I believe he’s going to pull out now. If he does,
+I’ll own up that I don’t know when a man has
+gone to the bad.”</p>
+
+<p>The crowd implored Aldrich as they saw him
+advancing to take the place of the thoroughly disgusted
+Logie. The game hung by a thread, ready
+to drop into the laps of the Specters. Could
+Bush cut that thread?</p>
+
+<p>“You’re there, all right, Lefty,” said Nelson,
+grinning through the wires of his mask. “If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
+they wait for you to hand ’em the game, they’re
+fooled.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke made no retort. In position to pitch, he
+faced Grant and looked to see if the captain gave
+him a signal to throw to third. But, remembering
+the wild heave to first, even though Murray
+was taking a perilous lead, Spider withheld the
+signal.</p>
+
+<p>“Get Aldrich,” he said. “That’s all you have
+to do.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke’s first pitch to Aldrich was high, and the
+batter, after starting to swing, checked himself
+in time to get the benefit of a called ball.</p>
+
+<p>Nelson returned the sphere promptly. Lefty
+muffed the toss, brushed his hand across his eyes,
+picked the ball up, and toed the plate.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sudden wild yell of warning.
+Murray, spurred by desperation, securing a good
+lead off third, had started on the jump for the
+plate. It was an attempt to steal home.</p>
+
+<p>“Here, here!” shouted Nelson, leaping forward
+to take the ball.</p>
+
+<p>To the dismay of the Blue Stockings, Locke
+turned to look toward third before throwing.
+Apparently he was surprised and dazed by failing
+to perceive Murray anywhere in the vicinity
+of that sack. Nor did he at that time seem to
+see Dillingham coming up from second as fast as
+he could leg it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
+
+<p>“The plate! Put it home!” shrieked Larry
+Dalton.</p>
+
+<p>Locke swung back slowly, almost heavily. At
+that moment Bugs was flinging himself for the
+slide to the pan, and it was too late to stop him.
+That steal had tied the score.</p>
+
+<p>Then Lefty did what would have been a foolish
+thing had he made a perfect throw. Swinging
+back, he pegged the ball to third, although Dillingham
+was within ten feet of the sack when the
+sphere left the pitcher’s fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Leaping high, and reaching as far as he could,
+Jack Daly felt the ball barely graze the end of
+his gloved fingers. Away it went toward the left-field
+bleachers, and the coacher sent Dillingham
+on to the plate.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Welch got the ball, and lined it to the pan
+in a hopeless attempt to stop that second run.
+The throw was a bit wide; and when Nelson, lunging
+with the ball, tagged Dillingham, the umpire
+spread out his open hands, palms downward.</p>
+
+<p>The game was over! Locke had thrown it
+away at last.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br>
+<small>HOT WORDS</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">In a small, bare room of the clubhouse Al Carson
+waited, his face dark as a storm cloud.
+At times he muttered to himself. From the
+adjoining quarters of the defeated players there
+came no sounds of joshing or laughter. The loss
+of this game was a disagreeable pill for either
+management or men to swallow.</p>
+
+<p>After a time a heavy step sounded outside, the
+door opened, and Lefty Locke appeared before
+the manager. He was pale now beneath his
+healthy tan, but still his once handsome, good-natured
+face wore a sullen, defiant expression,
+and his flinty eyes met Carson’s withering look
+without wavering.</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” he said, his voice strangely harsh,
+“you sent for me.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Carson felt that he was going
+to blow up like a firecracker, but, somehow, he
+managed to control himself in a measure.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I sent for you,” he said. “I want to
+hear what you have to say for yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not going to say anything.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you’re not! You’re not going to say anything
+after handing the Specters that game on a
+platter? You’re not going to say a word after
+an exhibition that would make a jackass weep?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see any tears in your eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Carson did go up. “You infernal, insolent,
+swell-headed cub!” he shouted. “You
+think you can talk to me that fashion just because
+you happen to have a pull with—” Barely in
+time he bit the sentence short. His breast heaving,
+his nostrils distended, he announced: “I’ll
+show you! I’ll teach you that you can’t deliberately
+throw a game!”</p>
+
+<p>“Any man who says I ever deliberately threw
+a game is a liar!”</p>
+
+<p>Rarely in his baseball career had a player
+talked to Carson like that. The manager could
+scarcely believe the evidence of his ears, and
+for a moment he choked, his face purple, in an
+effort to articulate.</p>
+
+<p>“I oughter beat your head off!” he finally
+ground forth.</p>
+
+<p>“Try it!” invited Locke.</p>
+
+<p>The manager knew better than to try it. That
+tall, compact, finely built man looked like a thorough
+athlete, and just now the expression on his
+face seemed to betoken that he would gladly welcome
+a hand-to-hand scrap with anyone.</p>
+
+<p>“I won’t maul you,” panted Carson.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’m sorry,” regretted the southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>“But I’ll teach you something, just the same.
+You’re fined twenty-five and suspended.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment or two Lefty was silent. “Perhaps
+you think you can make that penalty stick,”
+he said presently. “Perhaps you think, simply
+because I lost a game—I’m not denying I lost it—you
+can call me into a private room and browbeat
+me, and fine me when I fail to cower and eat
+humble pie.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m fining you for your rotten work on the
+field. I’d fined you then and there if I’d got hold
+of you before you loped off.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re fining me from pure malicious revenge,
+nothing else. As a manager you play your favorites,
+and I don’t happen to be one of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shut up!” roared Carson. “Shut up, or I’ll
+double it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Double and be—hanged! I don’t have to
+play baseball for a living. You can suspend me
+as long as you please. I’m getting tired of the
+game, anyway, and thinking about quitting.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you’re a quitter, all right. I reckon old
+Brennan, of the Hornets, had you sized up about
+right in the first place.” Carson’s total lack of
+diplomacy was amazing. Had he tried, with deliberate
+forethought, to create an unbridgable
+breach between himself and the left-hander, he
+could not have chosen a surer course. “The yellow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
+streak always crops up sooner or later in
+any man who has it,” he went on. “You can
+pitch, with everything breaking for you, but you
+lack heart. A little streak of success swelled you
+up till you began to think yourself a king-pin.
+You had an idea that you were a better man than
+Pete Grist, and now—”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you finished?” interrupted Lefty, his
+voice quivering strangely. “I think I’d better
+go. In about ten seconds more I’ll do something
+that will put me liable to a fine for assault and
+battery.”</p>
+
+<p>His attitude was that of a man about to attack
+another when the door opened and Charles Collier
+entered, followed by a clean-looking, tall
+young man. Both stopped and stared in astonishment
+at the tableau.</p>
+
+<p>“What—what’s the matter here?” spluttered
+the owner of the Blue Stockings. “What’s the
+trouble, Carson?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, nothing,” answered the manager. “Nothing,
+only this fellow threatens me with assault
+when I give him a call-down for his wooden-headed
+work in that last inning.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really, Locke, I’m astonished,” said Collier,
+beginning to show a touch of anger himself.
+“You must know Mr. Carson has a right to feel
+sore.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he hasn’t a right to blackguard me. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
+can do that with other men, perhaps, but he can’t
+put it over on me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m simply telling him the cold facts,” the
+manager hastened to assert. “He thinks himself
+so high and mighty that no one has a right to
+say a thing to him. He’s been coddled and
+spoiled. There’s no surer way to spoil a cub
+than to feed him taffy. It’s his first season out
+of the bush, and he’s beginning to reckon himself
+a second Walter Johnson.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re both excited,” said Collier, in an attempt
+to be soothing. “Of course, there’s a good
+reason, the game to-day meaning so much, but
+it’s better to talk these things over in cold blood.
+Let’s calm down a little, all of us.”</p>
+
+<p>His effort to cast oil on the troubled waters
+was partly successful, as far as Carson was concerned;
+for the manager did not wish the magnate
+to think him a person to lose his temper unreasonably
+in dealing with any player.</p>
+
+<p>“I called him in to talk it over decently,” he
+said; “but he became nasty right off the reel.”</p>
+
+<p>“Any man can talk to me decently,” muttered
+Lefty, though the resentful light still lingered in
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right, my boy; that’s the way to feel,”
+said Collier, rubbing his hands. “It’s too bad
+we lost the game, but we’ll simply have to fight
+the harder for the rest of the series. If we break<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
+even, we’ll still have it on the Specters. Perhaps
+Hazelton has been working too hard. I understand
+Kennedy used him a great deal. Perhaps
+he needs a rest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Maybe he does,” growled Carson. “Anyhow,
+I’m going to give him one.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s likely a few days will put him back into
+form. My daughter is a good judge of baseball
+players, and she has confidence in Lefty.”</p>
+
+<p>The young man who had entered with the owner
+moved his shoulders uneasily, and bit his lip.
+Suddenly Collier seemed to remember him.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Carson,” he said, “let me introduce a
+man who wanted to meet you. A friend of myself
+and daughter—Mr. Parlmee. Shake hands
+with Carson, Franklin.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m very glad to meet you, Mr. Carson,” said
+Parlmee, as he gave the manager his hand.</p>
+
+<p>“And Mr. Hazelton, too,” said the magnate,
+with a wave toward the southpaw. “Son of an
+old friend of mine. Unfortunately, his father
+has a prejudice against baseball, so he’s playing
+under the name of Locke.”</p>
+
+<p>For the first time since the appearance of the
+club owner and his companion, Lefty’s eyes rested
+on the face of the latter. In a moment he was
+vaguely aware that he had seen the man before,
+but not until Parlmee had bowed coldly, without
+an attempt to shake hands, did Locke recall the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
+occasion. Then he remembered how in the last
+home game with the Specters, while he was talking
+with Virginia Collier, he had seen a young
+man watching him gloweringly from the stand.
+This was the same man, and between the two
+there existed a singular feeling of antipathy, as
+yet unaccounted for in the pitcher’s mind.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly it seemed to Lefty that everything
+was against him, the whole world—fate, even.</p>
+
+<p>“If there’s nothing more,” he said, his voice
+cold and harsh, “I think I’ll be going.”</p>
+
+<p>“Sullen dog,” said Parlmee, when the door had
+closed behind the departing man.</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_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br>
+<small>THE UNAPPROACHABLE LOCKE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Men go stale on college teams,” said
+Charles Collier apologetically. “Perhaps
+that’s the trouble with Locke.”</p>
+
+<p>“He ain’t stale,” asserted Carson. “That
+ain’t the trouble with him. Look how he pitched
+when he wanted to.”</p>
+
+<p>“He seemed very erratic to me,” put in Parlmee.
+“I’ve seen plenty of pitchers like him.
+They’re never to be depended on.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you haven’t seen him at his best,” said
+the club owner. “This is the first full game
+you’ve ever seen him pitch. He certainly was
+reliable enough earlier in the season.”</p>
+
+<p>“The only trouble with him is in that swelled
+bean of his,” declared Carson. “Under Kennedy
+he was petted and coddled and made to believe
+he was the real thing, spelled with capitals.
+As soon as he gets the same deal from me that
+every other man is getting, and is handled on his
+merits, he turns ugly.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose,” observed Collier, “he has an idea
+that you rate Grist at the top of the list.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, why shouldn’t I? Look at Grist’s record<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
+and experience. There’s more baseball in his
+little finger than this cub has learned yet. If
+we’d had old Peter on the mound to-day—”</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you put him in when you saw the
+youngster wabbling?”</p>
+
+<p>“Put him in, and then have it said I gave
+Locke the hook without reason? Who could
+foresee the fellow was going to throw the game
+at the last minute? I know he threatened to
+blow up several times, but he always tightened.
+Two were gone when he let Murray steal home.
+Even then there’d been a chance, for I might have
+run in another man; but he followed his dumbness
+up with a fool heave to the left-field bleachers.
+There wasn’t a bit of sense in it, and, unless
+he was trying to pass over the game, I can’t
+understand why he did it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was the silliest thing I ever saw a pitcher
+do,” asserted Franklin Parlmee.</p>
+
+<p>“I admit that it was crazy,” agreed Collier.
+“But he can pitch, and we need the best that’s
+in our twirling staff in order to keep first place
+this year. The loss of a single pitcher would be
+pretty sure to fix us now. You’ve got to use
+sober judgment, Carson, if you land the championship,
+and doing that means something to you,
+as well as myself. The old burg will support a
+winning team and make it a money-maker, but
+it hasn’t much stomach for losers.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You can bank on it, Mr. Collier,” said Carson,
+“that I’m going to do my level best to land on
+top. I’m not in the game, any more than you are,
+for the fun there is in it. If you hadn’t reckoned
+I knew my business, I wouldn’t be where I am
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Surely not,” agreed the owner. “Kennedy
+did a good turn last season, and I’d not thought
+of displacing him if he’d shown an ability to keep
+the bunch united. Jealousy and cliques on a ball
+team always put it to the bad. It’s up to you to
+smooth things out, and I’m afraid you’re not
+succeeding. But for internal troubles, the Blue
+Stockings’ lead now would make it practically impossible
+for the Specters or any other team to
+head ’em.”</p>
+
+<p>Al Carson was not at all pleased by the criticism
+of his employer, but he had sufficient good
+sense to repress open resentment. He made the
+plea that he should be given time to “smooth
+out the wrinkles.”</p>
+
+<p>“If I’m going to be given full swing,” he said,
+“I think I should have it. I let Locke go the
+limit to-day because of criticism in my handling
+of him. Give me the proper rope, Mr. Collier,
+and I’ll deliver the goods; but no manager can
+do that unless he’s unhampered.”</p>
+
+<p>“It has never been my intention to interfere in
+a way to hamper you,” returned Collier a bit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
+tartly. “Naturally, I presume I have the right
+to talk things over with you.”</p>
+
+<p>Half apologetically Carson hastened to state
+that it was not his intention to question that
+point.</p>
+
+<p>“Leave me to handle this grouchy man,” he
+promised, “and I’ll bring him into harness. I
+know we need him to do a certain amount of pitching,
+but he’s got to understand that there’s such
+a thing as discipline. He ought to know he can’t
+be sassy to his manager.”</p>
+
+<p>While this talk was in progress Lefty’s teammates,
+starting for their hotel in a motor bus,
+wondered what had become of him. It was Rufe
+Hyland who announced that he had seen Locke
+taking a trolley car all by himself.</p>
+
+<p>“S’pose he feels rotten,” said Rufe, “and so
+he sneaked.”</p>
+
+<p>“There was something doing ’tween him and
+the old man,” said Kid Lewis. “Carson called
+him for a private confab, and I heard sounds of
+fireworks.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a shame,” said Laughing Larry, looking
+strangely doleful, “a beastly shame he had that
+spasm in the ninth.”</p>
+
+<p>“Spasm?” growled Herman Brock. “Looked
+to me more like a trance. What ailed him, anyhow?”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s been ailing him for some days?”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
+questioned Jack Daly. “He don’t eat, and I happen
+to know he ain’t sleeping well.”</p>
+
+<p>Dalton knew this also, although he had said
+nothing about it. Suddenly, to the surprise of
+the others, Grist, who had taken no part in the
+conversation, spoke up.</p>
+
+<p>“The boy must be off his feed,” said Pete.
+“Any youngster is apt to have a slump. Give
+him time and he’ll come round.”</p>
+
+<p>Now this was particularly generous of Grist,
+who at other times, with Lefty going at his best,
+had shown a disposition to belittle the southpaw’s
+fine work. Promptly Dalton’s heart warmed
+toward the old veteran.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re right, Pete,” he said, “and mebbe
+you’re the very one to put him back on his pins.”</p>
+
+<p>“Me?” grunted Grist.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you.”</p>
+
+<p>“How y’ mean?”</p>
+
+<p>“By talking to him. By encouraging him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Huh!” grunted the old twirler. “He wouldn’t
+listen to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I believe he would, Pete. Lefty’s a ripping
+fine fellow when he’s right—the finest ever. He’s
+generous and whole-souled, without a touch of
+jealousy in his make-up. All of a sudden he’s
+gone wrong, and nobody can account for it. His
+particular friends can’t talk to him. They’ve
+tried.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Then I dunno why I should waste my breath,”
+said Grist slowly. “Likely he’d jump on me and
+sink his spikes to the sole leather.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe it,” protested Larry earnestly.
+“He acts like he’d somehow got a fool notion that
+everybody’s sore on him. Now, if he saw that you
+didn’t feel that way—”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” snapped Grist shortly. “Leave
+it to me; I’ll talk to him like a father to a wayward
+son.”</p>
+
+<p>“But be careful,” cautioned Dalton. “Handle
+him right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Leave it to me, I tell yer,” advised Grist once
+more.</p>
+
+<p>That night Lefty ate alone at the hotel, shunning
+his teammates. He picked at his food like a
+man insulting his appetite, if he had one. When
+he left the dining room and walked out through
+the lobby without looking to the right or left,
+Grist followed him.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later Grant, Hyland, and Dalton,
+chatting in a front window, were startled to see
+old Peter appear before them, his face the picture
+of anger and disgust.</p>
+
+<p>“Say,” snorted the veteran twirler, “when
+anybody gets me to try anything like that again
+he’ll know it. Why, that dub would slap his
+grandmother’s face if she peeped to him. I overtook
+him by chance on the street and tried to talk<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
+decent. What did I get? He seemed to think I
+was trying to rub something into him, and I
+couldn’t argue it out of his dumb noddle. The
+more I said the dirtier he got. I just had to
+give it up and quit sudden before I forgot myself
+and handed him a bunch of fives. Anybody that
+wants to talk to him hereafter can do so. <em>Excuse
+me!</em>”</p>
+
+<p>“He wouldn’t listen?” asked Dalton in deep
+disappointment. “Did you make him understand
+that your motives were friendly?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dunno. I tried hard enough. ’Twan’t no
+good. If anybody else’d met me that way, I’d
+soaked him. Now I’m done with Lefty Locke.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br>
+<small>UNDER A CLOUD</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Sometimes it takes very little to upset the
+poise of a Big League team. Even when
+a winning organization is running smoothly,
+an injury to a single player may throw the whole
+machinery out of mesh. To an outsider—a mere
+spectator who has not studied the peculiarities of
+baseball at close range—this often seems unaccountable.
+To him, in a club with first-class substitutes
+waiting to fill the position of any man,
+there seems to be no reason why the loss of a
+regular player should make such a remarkable
+difference in the work of the entire outfit.</p>
+
+<p>Few outsiders realize how evenly matched the
+clubs often are in the first division. Many times
+the action of an astute manager in replacing a
+player who seems to be doing splendid work in
+his position with another player, apparently no
+better, has turned a losing club into a winner, the
+secret of this being that the man substituted
+fitted in more nicely with the fine adjustment of
+the great machine, like a perfectly made pinion
+in the works of a watch.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span></p>
+
+<p>It is not drawing it too fine to compare a first-class
+Big League team to a high-grade watch.
+Time after time the spectators wonder at the
+clockwork precision of the living machine upon
+the field. Now and then, at rare intervals, of
+course, this piece of machinery temporarily goes
+wrong; but a little oiling or adjusting puts it
+right again, and it once more resumes its accurate,
+methodical, mechanical course.</p>
+
+<p>The pitching staff may be likened to the mainspring
+of the watch. Without pitchers of the
+highest grade any club, no matter how strong it
+may be in other departments, is badly handicapped;
+with such a staff it often happens that
+a team of otherwise inferior caliber makes no
+end of trouble and worriment for the leaders.
+And, despite his ill-advised handling of
+Lefty Locke, no one knew this better than Al
+Carson.</p>
+
+<p>When it became known that Lefty had been
+fined and suspended, some of his teammates attempted
+to condole with him in a cheerful, joshing
+way, but not one of them repeated such advances;
+for he cut them short with such snappy,
+savage abruptness that they were justified in
+their resentment of his manner.</p>
+
+<p>The second game of the series between the
+Specters and the Blue Stockings proved to be a
+slugging match, in which each team used three<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
+pitchers. Pink Dillon, starting for the visitors,
+was pounded off the mound in the second inning
+and replaced by Orth. He lasted until the seventh,
+and then gave way to Grist, who took up
+the burden with the locals leading by one run.
+Even “Old Reliable” was not respected by the
+Specters, who slashed his slants mercilessly.
+Nevertheless, by a great batting rally in the
+ninth, the Blue Stockings tied up the score. But
+Grist was forced to work like a horse for three
+more long innings before his teammates got to
+Jim Donovan and hammered out the run which
+finally gave them the game fourteen to thirteen.</p>
+
+<p>The newspaper reporters called it a “swat
+fest.” In his wire to the <cite>Blade</cite>, Jack Stillman,
+on the road for his paper with the Blue Stockings,
+vaguely hinted at future trouble for Carson on
+account of the condition of his pitching staff.
+Besides Carson himself, no one realized better
+than Stillman the peril of this crucial period in
+the great struggle.</p>
+
+<p>Under suspension, Lefty Locke was not on the
+bench with his teammates. Stillman, who had
+twice tried to get an interview with Lefty, saw
+him soberly watching the struggle from a portion
+of the stand near the reporters’ section, and wondered
+what really had happened to change this
+fine, open-hearted fellow into a gloomy grouch.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll get at him again,” thought the reporter.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
+“He’s got to talk to me. He can’t stand me off
+like an iceberg.”</p>
+
+<p>But after the game Locke disappeared with the
+crowd that disappointedly melted away, and Stillman
+was compelled to postpone his interview.</p>
+
+<p>With his ears open for everything connected
+with his business, the newspaper man that night
+heard something which sent him in search of
+Carson for confirmation. However, he obtained
+little satisfaction from the manager. Then, remembering
+his desire to have another talk with
+Locke, he tried to find Lefty, and failed. The
+southpaw was not in his room, and none of the
+players seemed to know where he could be located.</p>
+
+<p>In Dirk Nelson’s room Stillman found Kid
+Lewis and Jack Daly lounging and talking things
+over with the catcher. Being well liked by the
+entire team, he was invited to join them.</p>
+
+<p>“We was just figgerin’ on our chances to-morrer,”
+said Daly. “We’ve got to have another
+one of the games here to keep us afloat on the
+roller.”</p>
+
+<p>“If the Specters play the way they did to-day,”
+said Stillman, “you ought to cop one more, anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Huh!” grunted the Kid, twisting off a chew
+of tobacco with his square teeth, “seems to me
+we didn’t shine like stars of the first magnitude
+this <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> Why, with old Peter on the firing line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
+we was barely able to rake in the plum by one
+measly run.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the way Grist had to go, he won’t be in
+any shape to-morrow,” said Nelson. “Neither
+Orth nor Dillon can hold this bunch of sack
+swipers, and, besides pitching yesterday, Locke’s
+suspended. We’ve got a couple of reserves, but
+Handy’s arm is broke in the middle, and Carney
+has been sick for a month. Excuse my tears.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish you’d tell me,” said Stillman, “what’s
+the matter with Locke, anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell <em>us</em>,” invited the trio in chorus.</p>
+
+<p>The reporter shook his head. “I’ve tried to
+find out, but he won’t talk to me. Anybody would
+think,” he added in an injured way, “that I was
+his worst enemy; and I was about the only news
+man who pulled hard for him all the way after
+he joined the Hornets in the South last spring.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s sick,” cried Nelson, thumping his knee.
+“If he ain’t, he’s crazy, and oughter be shut up
+somewhere with the rest of the bugs. Think of
+him going wrong just now! Wouldn’t it make a
+parson use bad language!”</p>
+
+<p>“I heard something to-night,” said Stillman.
+“I wonder if you fellows have got wind of it?
+There’s a rumor that Carson has a deal on.”</p>
+
+<p>“What sort of a deal?” asked Daly.</p>
+
+<p>“A trade. They say he got busy on the wire
+this morning, and that he’s trying to make arrangements<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
+to trade Locke off for another
+pitcher.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who says so?” snapped Lewis.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe it!” shouted Daly.</p>
+
+<p>“Thunder!” breathed Nelson.</p>
+
+<p>“You know I can’t go round blowing the source
+of my information,” said Stillman, “but it seemed
+to come straight enough.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps it is straight,” said Nelson. “Carson
+ain’t never took to Locke. But who’s the
+man he’s after?”</p>
+
+<p>“You couldn’t guess,” said the reporter. “I
+won’t prolong your agony. If the report is true,
+it’s Chick O’Brien, of the Wolves.”</p>
+
+<p>Even with the warning he had given them, this
+statement seemed to strike them like a bursting
+bombshell. The Wolves, although in the second
+division, had harried the leaders all through the
+season, mainly by the marvelous work of O’Brien,
+and it was generally agreed that with a first-division
+team behind him Chick would show himself
+one of the great pitchers in the business.</p>
+
+<p>“Sufferin’ snakes!” cried Lewis, his face glowing
+and his eyes snapping. “If we could get
+Chick now, I’d begin right away planning how to
+spend my post-season money.”</p>
+
+<p>“Me, too,” agreed Daly.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s nothing to it,” announced Nelson.
+“You couldn’t pry O’Brien away from the Wolves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
+with a twenty-thousand dollar lever. Old Frazer
+wouldn’t let him go for <em>two</em> youngsters like Locke
+and a barrel of money to boot. Every manager
+in the league has been after him, and Frazer’s
+held on with the grip of death, knowing the
+Wolves would go plumb into the sub-cellar without
+Chick.”</p>
+
+<p>“Collier’s got the dough to buy almost anything,
+and he’s a plunger when he gets started,”
+said Stillman. “I reckon he’d be willing to lose
+money this season to cop the championship again.
+Anyhow, Carson wouldn’t deny that he was trying
+to put such a deal across. He wouldn’t say anything
+about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whether it’s true or not, the story is bad for
+Locke,” said Nelson; “and if it gets to his ears
+it’s going to make him worse than he is.”</p>
+
+<p>“Or brace him up,” put in Daly. “Mebbe it
+will do that.”</p>
+
+<p>Of course, the rumor spread swiftly, and in
+short order every man on the team had heard of
+it, save Locke himself. For reasons, no one told
+Lefty.</p>
+
+<p>The fears of the Blue Stockings seemed justified
+when the Specters walked away with the
+third game of the series by a score of eight to
+two. Such a defeat, instead of disheartening
+them, seemed to fire them with desperation, and the
+fourth and final game proved to be another terrific<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
+battle, in which the two teams seesawed from
+start to finish, resorting to every legitimate device
+and trick as opportunities arose. Nevertheless,
+only for a fluke in the eighth inning, the locals
+doubtless would have taken the game.</p>
+
+<p>With two down and two on the cushions, Herman
+Brock banged the ball into deep left, and it
+went bounding to the fence, with Forbes in hot
+pursuit. The fielder had been playing deep,
+knowing Brock’s menace as a slugger, and, but
+for an unforeseen freak of fate, he doubtless
+would have secured the ball and held the enemy
+to a single run. It happened, however, that close
+to the ground there was a small hole in the fence—a
+hole barely large enough to push an ordinary
+baseball through; and never before had the sphere
+sought out that little opening hidden by a thin
+fringe of grass. Now, with seeming perverseness,
+it went straight through the hole, giving Brock a
+homer and putting the visitors again in the lead.</p>
+
+<p>Orth had been wabbling, and Carson had wisely
+kept Dillon warming up all through the game.
+Now, when the Specters came to bat again, the
+manager took a chance and sent Pink to the
+hillock.</p>
+
+<p>Strange as it seemed, the slants and benders of
+this second-string pitcher, which had been so easy
+for the locals to fathom two days before, now
+proved tremendously puzzling. And, though the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
+fighting “ghosts” became menacing in both the
+eighth and ninth, they could not quite succeed in
+pushing a runner round the course.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, for all of the tattered condition of
+their pitching staff, the Blue Stockings broke even
+in the series with their most dangerous rivals.</p>
+
+<p>But they were now to invade the territory of
+the Terriers, always to be feared, and the dark
+cloud swung lower.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br>
+<small>THE STRANGER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The train was swinging along through
+open, rolling country when Locke, now
+being left severely to himself on account
+of his churlishness by his resentful teammates,
+tired of gazing dully at the flying landscape, rose
+and passed down the aisle of the special car.
+Scarcely anyone seemed to observe him, and he
+noticed no one. When he had disappeared, however,
+Billy Orth shook his head and turned to
+Larry Dalton.</p>
+
+<p>“Thundering shame, Larry,” he said in a low
+tone. “Do you know, I think I’ve solved the
+trouble.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you’re wiser than the rest of us.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s the girl business, to begin with.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, we’ve all guessed that much, but being
+thrown down by a girl isn’t enough to put an
+ordinary well-balanced chap, same as Lefty
+seemed to be, all to the punk. Of course, it
+might affect a fellow, but it wouldn’t turn him
+from a fine, jolly soul into a sour, nasty-tempered,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
+unreasoning grump. You’ve got to go farther,
+Billy.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have been,” asserted the other with assurance.</p>
+
+<p>“What way?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s taken to hitting the booze.”</p>
+
+<p>“No!” breathed Laughing Larry incredulously.
+“Why, he never drank. He’d take a glass of
+beer now and then, to be sure, but you couldn’t
+drive a drink of hard stuff into him. You’re
+wrong, Orth.”</p>
+
+<p>“When a man gets double crossed in love he’s
+liable to do any freakish thing, and lots of ’em
+affiliate with the jag juice.”</p>
+
+<p>“But Locke hasn’t been full. No one has
+seen him under the influence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps he’s under the influence right now.
+Perhaps he’s keeping about so much redeye in his
+skin all the time. Maybe that’s why he herds by
+himself so much. He sure has had plenty of
+chance to drink by his lonesome lately.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, but— Oh, say, you’ve got to have something
+better than mere supposition to base this
+on.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have.”</p>
+
+<p>“What?”</p>
+
+<p>“Saw him coming out of a saloon last night.
+Couldn’t believe my eyes at first, but it was Lefty,
+sure. You know firewater works in peculiar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
+ways with some men. Occasionally it turns a
+jolly good fellow into an ugly dog. Lefty hasn’t
+hit it up enough to stagger or show the usual
+signs, but in his effort to drown his sorrow he’s
+taken just enough to change him completely.
+Something ought to be done. But when a fellow
+is absolutely unapproachable, what can you do?”</p>
+
+<p>“What can you?” echoed Larry.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, passing through the train,
+Lefty had entered the ordinary smoker, which
+chanced to be so well filled that nearly every seat
+was taken. Through a blue haze of smoke he
+peered in search of a seat as he walked along the
+aisle. Suddenly a young man took a brierwood
+pipe from his mouth, stared hard at the pitcher,
+and rose to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>“By Jove! Phil Hazelton!” he exclaimed.
+“Why, how are you, old man?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty stared, unsmiling, at the speaker, apparently
+failing to notice the extended hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Pardon me,” he said; “I don’t remember
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t remember me?” cried the other incredulously.
+“Great Scott! Have I changed so
+much? I know I’m threatened with premature
+baldness, but still it can’t be that in such a short
+time you’ve forgotten Walt Hetner.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hetner?” said Locke, frowning and shaking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
+his head in a puzzled way. “I don’t have the
+slightest recollection of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Cæsar’s ghost! I knew you at Princeton.
+We were college mates.”</p>
+
+<p>“Princeton?” said Lefty. “Yes, I was at
+Princeton, I believe.”</p>
+
+<p>“You pitched for the varsity nine. Your old
+man didn’t like it, and was pretty sore. I’ve
+heard lately that you’ve gone into professional
+baseball. Don’t get a chance to see many games
+myself nowadays, but the report is that you’re
+<em>some pitcher</em> for the Blue Stockings.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have been pitching for them,” admitted
+Locke slowly. “Sorry I don’t remember you.”</p>
+
+<p>His pride hurt, Hetner sank back into his seat,
+and Lefty passed on. The rebuffed man turned
+to his companion, who was an old acquaintance he
+had met on the train.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, wouldn’t that frost you some, Wilson?”
+he exclaimed, his face flushed. “Why, I knew
+that fellow at college as well as I know you, and
+he’s the last man I’d expect to hand out anything
+of that sort.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think he didn’t recognize you, Doctor?”</p>
+
+<p>“Recognize me? Of course he did. That’s
+what makes me hot. I don’t know why he should
+play the cad. It’s beyond me. Perhaps he’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
+ashamed of the fact that he’s playing professional
+baseball under a fake name.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” said Wilson, “he might be decent, at
+least.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty came to a seat in which a slender, pallid,
+sad-eyed young man sat alone.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon, stranger,” he said; “is
+this seat taken?”</p>
+
+<p>The young man started a bit, glanced up, and
+smiled faintly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, it isn’t taken, pal,” he answered. “But
+how the dickens did you happen to know my
+name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Your name?” said Lefty, sinking down, a
+puzzled frown plowing a deep furrow between his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. You called me Stranger. That’s my
+monacker—Robert Stranger; Bob for short.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I get you,” said Lefty, failing to return
+the young man’s engaging smile. “It was just
+by chance that I called you that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, for a moment I thought you knew me.
+It’s mighty lonesome taking this jaunt without
+anybody to chin to, and I’m glad you came along.
+Traveling alone yourself?”</p>
+
+<p>“In a way I am,” answered Lefty, betraying a
+willingness to talk to this chance acquaintance
+which would have surprised his antagonized
+friends in the special car. “I’m a ball player,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
+but I ducked to get away from the rest of the
+bunch. They’re on this train.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, a ball player!” murmured Mr. Stranger.
+“Professional? Big League?”</p>
+
+<p>“The Blue Stockings.”</p>
+
+<p>“They’re some,” beamed the man by the car
+window. “Of course I hear plenty of baseball
+talk. Can’t help it. But I never did take to the
+game much. It may sound like bunk to you, but I
+never saw a real game in my life.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really?” said Lefty, in an expressionless way.
+“That is rather odd.”</p>
+
+<p>“S’pose I’m a crank,” laughed the other; “but
+all the guff I hear and see in the newspapers about
+baseball makes me weary; it sure does. Seems
+like ninety per cent. of the population has gone
+dippy about the game. Once on a time I was mistook
+for a pitcher I happened to look like. A gent
+blew up and called me by that ball tosser’s name
+and asked me how I was coming on at it. He
+didn’t believe me when I told him I’d never
+pitched a ball in my life. Why, I don’t know a
+curve from a wedge of restaurant pie.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re a rare bird,” said Lefty.</p>
+
+<p>“I am, pal, and I’m rather proud of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s your business, if it’s not too personal?”</p>
+
+<p>The young man hesitated and coughed behind
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’m a—a diamond cutter,” he answered.
+“That is, I have been, but I’ve had to give it up
+on account of my health. Too confining, you
+know. I’m not much on being confined,” he continued
+oddly. “You can see it has rather taken
+hold of me. My health isn’t just what it should
+be.”</p>
+
+<p>“I noticed you were unusually pale.”</p>
+
+<p>“That comes from confinement. A pill slinger
+told me it would be a good thing for me to get
+out into the country and find a job somewhere in
+the open air. I’m looking for work on a farm.
+The rural life for mine, far from the lure of high-cut
+swinging doors. Between us, pal, I’ve hit it
+up a bit too hard in my day. I always was a
+wild one,” he went on garrulously. “Even when
+I was a boy I touched too many of the high spots.
+I’ve been a mark, too. Ever play poker? Well,
+I’ve been the easiest dub you ever saw at that
+game. But I like it. Can’t seem to keep away
+from it. Every time I get a roll on hand I go
+searching for a game and someone to pass the
+velvet over to. Even now I’ve got a little wad
+of long green that’s burning in my pocket. Before
+you came along I was thinking I’d like to
+find three or four good sports and get up a little
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t play poker—for blood,” said Lefty.
+“A bunch on the team are at it every chance they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
+get; though, of course, they only play a little
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that would suit me. I don’t want to
+really gamble, you know. I’m a minister’s son.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty refrained from saying that he was another.</p>
+
+<p>“Brought up in a straight-laced family,”
+Stranger went on. “My old man thought cards
+the tools of Satan. And my mother”—a cloud
+seemed to come to his face and his smile faded—“it
+broke her heart when she found out I was
+playing penny ante with a bunch of game lads.
+Mebbe that’s what finished her. The old gent
+didn’t last long after she was put away under the
+daisies.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then your father and mother are both dead?”</p>
+
+<p>“Both gone. But come, what’s the use to talk
+of things like that? Let’s see if we can’t find a
+couple of lonesome travelers looking for amusement.
+Let’s start something. A little game of
+poker to pass away—”</p>
+
+<p>The sentence never was finished. At this moment
+there came a sudden jarring, grinding,
+crashing sound. A broken rail had given way on
+a curve, and it shot half the train from the track
+to strew it into a splintered mass of wreckage
+along the foot of the embankment.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX<br>
+<small>THE RETIRED MANAGER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Throughout his baseball career it had
+been the object of old Jack Kennedy to
+quit the game voluntarily with honors
+and retire to his little Ohio farm in the town of
+Deering. Being of a somewhat frugal turn, he
+had saved from his earnings while in the game
+enough to pay for the farm to the last dollar,
+which was a matter of no small satisfaction to
+him when Charles Collier, the new owner of the
+Blue Stockings, dropped him from the management
+of the team in order to give Al Carson that
+position.</p>
+
+<p>Without egotism, Kennedy knew himself to be
+more capable than Carson; but still he made no
+protest, and, in spite of his evident regret over
+bidding the players good-by, he succeeded very
+well in hiding the sore spot.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m done with baseball, boys,” he said.
+“Henceforth it’s the rural life for me, raising
+corn and pumpkins and garden sass in general.
+If any of you ever come through my way, don’t
+forget where I live. You’ll make a hit with me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
+if you take my wigwam for the home plate and
+squat on the bench at my fireside.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy knew full well the real trouble with
+the Blue Stockings, and it had been his object to
+break up the cliques and smooth out the wrinkles
+on the team in his own level-headed way. He
+knew also that Carson was due to have his troubles,
+and, like the generous man he was, he had
+approached the new manager and attempted to
+put him wise. These advances, however, were not
+pleasing to Carson, who had cut him short in a
+way that caused Kennedy to bottle up abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” old Jack had muttered to himself.
+“All right, my wise gink. Go your way and see
+where you land. I’m betting it won’t be on top.”</p>
+
+<p>Despite the fact that he had said he was done
+with baseball, it was no more than natural that
+he should keep track of the career of the Blue
+Stockings under the new management, and the
+sporting department of the big daily newspaper
+he received regularly by mail was the first page
+examined. Each day he drove a mile and a half
+into town to get the two o’clock mail, and the letters
+he received never seemed to have much attraction
+for him until he had ripped off the cover
+of his paper, glanced at the percentage of the
+Big League teams, and perused the report of the
+last contest in which the Blue Stockings had participated.
+While he was doing this his face was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
+a study. Sometimes he would smile, but more
+often he frowned and shook his head, and occasionally
+he muttered to himself. Once a man,
+standing near, was startled to hear him suddenly
+exclaim:</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter with the boy, anyhow?
+Either he’s slumped or Carson’s handing him a
+rotten deal.”</p>
+
+<p>Of course he was speaking of Lefty Locke, and
+when, later, he saw a printed reference to the
+southpaw’s poor form, he puzzled still more over
+the matter. For Kennedy had realized the need
+of new blood on the pitching staff of the Blue
+Stockings, and had banked a good deal on the
+ability of Locke to aid in holding the team in first
+place.</p>
+
+<p>With an excellent overseer on his farm, old
+Jack did not labor hard enough to hurt himself.
+The truth was, he found it difficult to step directly
+from the baseball harness into something so
+wholly different and so decidedly tame and monotonous
+by comparison. At times he fretted a
+little, although he did his best to overcome the
+restless spells that assailed him.</p>
+
+<p>“When an old race horse is turned out to pasture,”
+he told himself, “it’s a good thing for him
+to realize that his track days are over.”</p>
+
+<p>Now it chanced that the town of Deering supported
+one of the teams which composed a four-cornered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
+bush league, and, although the loyal
+citizens had put their hands deep into their pockets
+to finance the club, the “Deers,” as the local
+organization was known, were running a rather
+bad third in the race. This fact was the cause
+of no small dissatisfaction to Peter McLaughlin,
+proprietor of the Central House, the principal
+hotel, and one of the most generous contributors
+to the fund. In the old days McLaughlin had
+played baseball a little himself, and he was confident
+now that he knew just where the trouble with
+the local club lay.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s in the management,” he told the other
+members of the board of directors. “Sperry
+made a record as manager for a little jerkwater
+college club, therefore he thinks he knows all about
+it. But I tell you he’s no match for old Hank
+Bristol, of the Buccaneers, to say nothing of Hi
+Pelty, who’s handling the Stars. Last year, this
+time, the Buccaneers were in third place, where
+we are now, and we was banging away trying to
+get ahead of the Stars. This year we’re down
+next to the Boobs in the basement, and unless
+something’s done even that bunch of dummies will
+get ahead of us. Sperry better throw up his job
+as manager and stick to his regular business drawing
+sody water at Folsom’s drug store.”</p>
+
+<p>“If he did that,” said Lawyer Gange, secretary
+of the baseball association, “who’d we get to fill<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
+his place? Nobody else wants the job—unless
+you do, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p>“Excuse me,” said McLaughlin. “I’ve got my
+own business to look after. I’ve coughed up a
+hundred bucks to back the team, and I’m ready to
+put in another hundred if necessary, but I couldn’t
+waste my time trying to run the outfit, even if I
+knew how.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that’s the way with the rest of us, so
+what are we going to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got an idea. There’s Jack Kennedy
+home on his farm, and he knows more baseball in
+a minute than anybody in this town, or in the
+whole league, for that matter, except possibly old
+Hank Bristol. If we could get Kennedy to—”</p>
+
+<p>“<em>If</em> we could,” exclaimed Rufe Manning, the
+treasurer. “There’s that if. You don’t s’pose
+Kennedy would monkey with a little bush team
+like ours after being manager of Big League
+champs, do yer?”</p>
+
+<p>“No tellin’. Perhaps he might.”</p>
+
+<p>“He won’t,” said the lawyer. “He told me
+himself that he was done with baseball. Why, he
+hasn’t even had interest enough since coming
+home to see one of our games, though he’s been
+invited to do so.”</p>
+
+<p>“No tellin’ what can be done with him,” persisted
+the hotel proprietor. “He ought to have
+enough local pride to want to see his own town<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
+stand well in this league. If somebody could
+prick that pride a little, mebbe he’d take holt. I
+don’t reckon he’s workin’ himself to death on his
+farm. He’s got the time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you’re the man to try him,” said Gange.
+“It’s up to you, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” agreed Peter. “Leave it to me
+and I’ll see what I can do. We’re going up
+against Bristol’s bunch of Buccaneers this afternoon,
+and I’ll look out for Kennedy if he comes in
+for his mail same as usual.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI<br>
+<small>BACK IN THE GAME</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">When he cornered old Jack at the post
+office, half an hour before the game
+was to start, McLaughlin’s proposition
+failed to arouse the retired manager’s interest.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m done with the game, Peter,” said Kennedy.
+“I’m just a plain farmer now. As long
+as I don’t mean to get mixed up with it again, it’s
+best that I should keep away from the field.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know, Jack,” said the hotel man,
+“folks around here say you’ve got a grouch.
+They say you’re sore on baseball ’cause you was
+turned down. We’ve been rather proud of you
+in this town. When you come home twice after
+winning the championship we gave you a blow-out
+both times. You seem to have forgot that.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I haven’t forgot it, Peter. But when a
+man has quit a certain line of business, and quit
+it for good, he’d better cease to monkey with it.
+With me baseball was a business for a good many
+years. I own up that I was rather proud of my
+record at it.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span></p>
+
+<p>“And you was so proud of being manager of
+Big League champs that now you won’t even ask
+how the little fellers are doing in your own home
+town. You used to set round my office winters
+and talk it over with the boys and give them
+points, but this time you’re changed so folks
+scarcely know you. Why, there’s Hank Bristol,
+manager of the Buccaneers, who’s asked for you
+every time he hit Deering, saying as how he used
+to know you well and he’d like to put his blinkers
+on you again. He was some baseball player once
+himself, and he’s pretty clever at it yet, as fur as
+our sort of baseball goes. I should think you’d
+like to see him operate around second base. He’s
+up to the field right now with his bunch, and he
+says he’s goin’ to drive another nail in our coffin.
+His team ain’t only a few points behind the Stars,
+and Hank reckons the pennant’s as good as
+nailed.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bristol always did talk a lot with his mouth,”
+said Kennedy. “If he can’t win any other way,
+he’ll bluff out a victory.”</p>
+
+<p>It was the sore spot not yet healed which had
+caused Kennedy to avoid Bristol; for Jack,
+knowing old Hank would ask questions, was
+far from eager to furnish explanations regarding
+his sudden release by Collier.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, well, do as you’re a mind to,” said McLaughlin,
+with pretended indifference. “I’ve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
+done some personal favors for you. When we
+give you that banquet at the hotel last year—”</p>
+
+<p>Flushing, Kennedy interrupted. “If you’re
+going to put it up to me that way, Peter,” he said,
+“I’ll go out and watch the game to-day. Perhaps
+I can give your manager some tips that will help
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>In this manner it came about that Kennedy saw
+the struggle that afternoon between the Deers
+and the Buccaneers and warned the manager of
+the former team, in the midst of the game, that
+Bristol’s players had the signals of the locals and
+were, therefore, forewarned and prepared for
+every method of attack. This warning, however,
+was not sufficient to prevent the Buccaneers from
+winning. In the eighth inning they secured a lead
+of two runs through their disposition to take
+chances on the paths, and the failure of the Deering
+pitcher to hold the runners close to the cushions,
+and at the end of the ninth they were still
+one tally to the good, although outbatted and outfielded.
+With a supercilious, confident grin adorning his
+homely face, Bristol encountered Kennedy after
+the clash was over.</p>
+
+<p>“You see how easy it is out here in the bush,
+Ken, old hoss,” he chuckled. “It’s a reg’lar cinch
+to make a winning team if you’ve got any mater’al<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
+to work with. Before next week’s over we’ll be
+leadin’. I took it easy to-day. Saved my best pill
+slinger for the Stars to-morrow. Your poor little
+Deers are due to find a resting place in a deep,
+dark hole.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t call them <em>my</em> Deers, Hank,” remonstrated
+Kennedy. “I ain’t got nothing to do with
+them. If I had—”</p>
+
+<p>“It would be just the same, Jack, old boy.
+You had a streak with the Blue Stockings, I own
+up; but it was broke before they put Carson in
+your place. I reckon you lost your rabbit’s foot.
+If I’d ever had your chance—”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve had chances enough in your day,” cut
+in Kennedy a trifle warmly. “I was about ready
+to quit baseball, anyhow; that’s why I bought my
+farm here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you was always a clever gink holding on
+to the dollars and salting ’em away,” returned
+Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, he was jealous of Kennedy’s success,
+although he endeavored to disguise the fact beneath
+a joshing exterior. Such joshing, however,
+was not calculated to please.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me tell you something, Hank,” said Kennedy.
+“If the manager of this Deering bunch
+knew his business he could eat you up. It wasn’t
+much of a trick to swipe such a simple code of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
+signals, and any sort of runners could steal on a
+pitcher with a movement like Corey’s. Don’t get
+so chesty.”</p>
+
+<p>“Old hoss,” retorted the Buccaneer manager,
+“if you had the Deers it would be just the same,
+believe me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps so,” said Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty minutes later he was talking with Peter
+McLaughlin in a private room at the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>“What was that proposition you made to me,
+Peter?” he asked. “Did you say the town generally
+thought Sperry inefficient as a manager and
+wanted someone else?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s what I said,” answered the landlord.
+“We’ve talked it over, and you’re the man we’d
+like to have. Sperry would get out willingly, too.
+He’s got about enough of it, with everybody
+kickin’ at him.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you’re giving it to me straight,” said Kennedy,
+“I’ll stand. You may tell the association
+that.”</p>
+
+<p>At a meeting of the directors, called that night,
+Sperry resigned as manager of the Deering baseball
+team and Jack Kennedy was chosen to fill
+the position vacated.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII<br>
+<small>BUILDING UP THE TEAM</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">With the season three-quarters over,
+it was no cinch for anybody to whip
+into winning form a bush team like
+the Deers, and Jack Kennedy soon realized that
+he had a real problem on his hands. Having
+shouldered the responsibility, however, he went
+at it with the same conscientious earnestness he
+would have devoted to a Big League organization,
+and the bushers, who had been taking things
+easy and “soldiering” under Sperry, quickly
+learned that there would be no loafing or fooling
+with the new manager. Whenever possible there
+was regular forenoon practice, and when this
+could not be secured it was necessary for the team
+to appear on the playing field for a long warming-up
+before any league game.</p>
+
+<p>The code of signals arranged and put into use
+by Sperry and Toots Kilgore, second baseman
+and captain of the Deers, was promptly cast into
+the discard. In place of these incomplete and
+rather simple signals, old Jack introduced a new<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
+code, at which the men were drilled on the field
+and off, the requirement being that every one
+of them should become so familiar with the signs
+that there could be no possible misunderstanding,
+doubt, or hesitation in any event.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, Kennedy secured a suit for himself,
+which enabled him not only to sit on the bench
+and direct his men, but to go on to the coaching
+lines or take the place of another player as a
+pinch hitter or upon the field. The loose ends
+were quickly gathered up, and the former hit-or-miss
+style of going after a game was abandoned
+for something bearing a genuine resemblance to
+inside baseball.</p>
+
+<p>Nor did it take old Jack long to perceive that
+the arrangement of the team, as well as the batting
+order, needed doctoring. His first move, of
+course was to line up the batters so that their individual
+work in offense would become as effective
+as possible in securing runs. Almost simultaneously
+he called to the bench the regular center
+fielder, although that individual had established
+a record in the league for his great ground covering,
+sureness on flies, and splendidly accurate
+long throws to the sacks or the plate. It was
+Kennedy’s theory that all outfielders should be
+hitters, and the man benched had the lowest batting
+average on the team. The former first baseman
+was sent out into the middle garden, where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
+he soon demonstrated that he had the making
+of an outfielder.</p>
+
+<p>The regular third baseman did not handle hot
+grounders to Kennedy’s satisfaction, but in all
+other ways he could cover the sack well, therefore
+the manager switched him round to first, where
+he would not get so many sizzling grass clippers.
+This move proved to be a piece of wisdom, but
+it left the third station vacant, and for some time
+Kennedy was bothered to plug the hole. The
+first person tried was Tim Coffin, the utility man,
+who had been kept on the bench, but Coffin had
+the same trouble with sharp ground hits. Nevertheless,
+at bat he was certain to get one clean,
+hard bingle a game, and his average was nearly
+two, which created in Kennedy’s breast a strong
+desire to keep him regularly at work.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you ever done any backstopping, Coffin?”
+asked the manager.</p>
+
+<p>“A little,” was the reply. “I started out to
+be a catcher.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve got a good whip,” said old Jack.
+“We’ll try you behind the pan to-day. Brinkley
+will have a go at third.”</p>
+
+<p>Behind the pan Coffin did a splendid turn, being
+far more successful than Brinkley in stopping
+base pilfering. Brinkley was one of those backstops
+who could handle almost any sort of pitching
+and rarely let a wild heave get past him if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
+there was any possible way of touching it, but
+his base throwing was erratic. The players of
+every other team in the league knew this, but they
+soon found that they could not reap the advantage
+of a wild throw off Coffin at a critical time,
+and their first efforts to do so cost them dearly.</p>
+
+<p>But Brinkley was no third baseman, and Kennedy
+kept the wires hot with distress signals in
+his efforts to fill that position.</p>
+
+<p>In response to one of those signals, Joe Digg
+blew into Deering. Digg had come up from the
+sand lots through the minors to the Big League,
+where, after creating a sensation in the early part
+of one season, he passed away in a blaze of red
+fire. Drink had sent Joe back to the minors and
+thence down into temporary oblivion. Kennedy
+knew him as a crackajack third sacker and a
+terror to pitchers when he was sober and in condition.
+Old Jack met the new man at the station.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, Joe,” he said cordially, shaking Digg’s
+hand. “Glad to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, Jack,” returned Digg, with equal cordiality.
+“I’m glad to see you, but I never expected
+it would be managing a bunch of bushers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, this is just a little matter of sport,” explained
+Kennedy. “I’m out of the game, you
+know. I’m a farmer now. But it happened that
+they had a team here in this burg that was getting
+walloped because of bad management, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
+my friends in town drafted me into service. I
+want you to come out with me to the farm to-night,
+and we’ll have a little chat.”</p>
+
+<p>They did have a chat that night after supper
+on Kennedy’s veranda. In his bluff, open way,
+which seldom caused offense or produced resentment,
+the manager came to the point without
+beating around the bush.</p>
+
+<p>“Joe,” he said, “you ought to be drawing a
+fancy salary to-day in the Big League, and it’s
+your own fault that you ain’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me something I don’t know,” returned
+Digg, flushing.</p>
+
+<p>“Booze has downed many a good man besides
+yourself. Are you going to let it keep you
+down?”</p>
+
+<p>“I dunno. Seems like I’m such a thunderin’
+fool that I can’t help it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Rot! You can help it. Keep away from jag
+hunters and you’ll be all right. As I said, I’m
+out of Big League baseball for good, but I reckon
+my judgment and my influence would count for
+something with a number of managers who are
+still in the game. If I should say to one of them
+that I had a player who ought to be given a trial,
+that man would get a show, even if he had been
+canned after one fizzle. You get me?”</p>
+
+<p>“I get you, Jack,” nodded Digg, a gleam of excitement
+in his eyes. “If you can work me back<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
+into the game you’ll do me a turn I’ll never forget.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you know I wouldn’t try such a thing unless
+I was satisfied that you had really turned
+over a new leaf and meant to cut drink out for
+good and all. You’ve got to show me, Joe.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a go!” exclaimed Digg. “If you ever
+catch me drinking anything stronger than water,
+put the tag on me.”</p>
+
+<p>In the first two games in which Digg played
+third for the Deers he accepted eleven chances,
+three of them of the most sensational order, without
+an error, and batted .400.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII<br>
+<small>THE MAN WHO DENIED HIMSELF</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">His pitching staff gave Kennedy the most
+trouble. No matter how efficient a
+team may be in other departments, it
+cannot aspire to championship honors unless it
+has a capable staff of twirlers. Curley, Sullivan,
+and Heines, the three mound men for the Deers,
+each and all had some weakness which was a
+drawback.</p>
+
+<p>Curley was erratic and never to be depended
+on. One day he might pitch a splendid game, and
+follow it on his next turn with wretched work.
+Sullivan had a long swing which gave base runners
+a big lead and made it almost impossible for
+the best throwing catcher to keep them from stealing.
+Nor could old Jack break the man of this
+swing, for when he tried to do so Sullivan’s short-arm
+delivery proved to be “pie” for the opposing
+stickers. Heines had an arm that was good for
+four or five innings, then broke like the most brittle
+glass.</p>
+
+<p>In one pinch, with Heines’ wing failing in the
+fifth and the Deers having a lead of three runs,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
+Kennedy actually went on to the mound himself.
+Curley had pitched the day before, and old Jack
+knew Sullivan’s delivery would hand the game
+over to the enemy. Never in his life had Kennedy
+attempted to pitch in anything resembling
+a league game, and he was not the possessor of
+as much as one little dinky curve. Yet, using
+from start to finish an underhanded ball, delivered
+from the knee and shot upward close across the
+batter’s shoulder, he managed to pull the game
+out of the fire by a margin of one lonesome tally.</p>
+
+<p>When the Deering fans hailed him as a pitcher
+Kennedy laughed them to scorn.</p>
+
+<p>“That was the greatest case of horseshoes
+ever,” he declared. “I couldn’t do it again
+against a bunch of grammar-school kids. Heines
+had the Stars dizzy by his speed, and when I
+handed them up that subway rise they simply
+broke their backs trying to hit it. If I’d begun
+the game I wouldn’t have lasted an inning.”</p>
+
+<p>All this time, of course, he was trying to get
+hold of other pitchers, and, most of all, he desired
+a left-hander to use against the Buccaneers,
+who had five left-handed batters. Somehow he
+got hold of a southpaw by the name of Billy
+Winkle, who seemed to have speed, curves, and
+control. His lack of head might have been balanced
+by the good judgment of Coffin, who was
+steadily and swiftly improving behind the bat,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
+but Winkle lacked heart as well as head; and in
+the breaks the uproar of the rooters, combined
+with Billy’s fear of what was going to happen,
+invariably cut the guy ropes.</p>
+
+<p>About this time, still eagerly following the
+career of the Blue Stockings, Kennedy was
+startled one day when he opened his newspaper
+and read some black headlines on the first page
+which told of a railroad disaster in which the
+Big League team was involved. In the smash
+seven persons had been killed and twenty-one
+more or less seriously injured. By rare good
+fortune the special car containing the ball players
+had shot down the embankment on its wheels and
+remained in an upright position after plowing
+deep into a boggy place at the roadside. It had
+not been smashed, and, save for a shaking up and
+a few bruises, not one of the men in that car had
+been hurt.</p>
+
+<p>Having read to this point, Kennedy drew a
+deep breath of relief. A moment later, however,
+he uttered a smothered exclamation of dismay,
+for the next paragraph stated that one of the
+players, Lefty Locke, had not been in the car and
+was missing since the catastrophe. He was not
+among those killed or injured, and all efforts to
+find him had proved fruitless.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll be—jiggered!” muttered Kennedy.
+“Wasn’t in the car! Hasn’t been found! Well,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
+what’s become of the boy? He was under suspension.
+I’m afraid—”</p>
+
+<p>He did not state what he was afraid of, but
+the serious, troubled face which he wore, and his
+eagerness for further details concerning the disaster,
+indicated that anxiety over the fate of Lefty
+remained in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, two days later, shortly after the
+arrival of the seven o’clock train in Deering,
+Kennedy sought Landlord McLaughlin in the
+Central House to consult with him regarding
+some matter concerning the team. As old Jack
+entered the office he saw a man at the desk in
+the act of registering. There was something
+strangely familiar about this man’s back, and
+when the new arrival made inquiries for a room
+with bath the sound of his voice caused the manager
+of the Deers to step forward quickly to get
+a look at his face.</p>
+
+<p>As the clerk was fishing a big brass key from
+a pigeonhole the guest leaned his left elbow on
+the edge of the desk and swung part way round,
+thus bringing himself face to face with Kennedy.
+The latter gasped, and let out something like a
+shout.</p>
+
+<p>“Holy smoke!” he cried delightedly. “As I
+live, it’s Lefty Locke! How are you, son?”</p>
+
+<p>To Kennedy’s astonishment, no light of recognition
+rose into the man’s eyes, and he made no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span>
+move to shake the extended hand. Instead, he
+surveyed the old manager in a puzzled, doubting
+way, and slowly shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>“I think you’ve made a mistake, pal,” he said.
+“My name is Stranger—Robert Stranger.”</p>
+
+<p>His mouth open, Kennedy slowly permitted his
+hand to drop at his side. For something like
+half a minute he stared steadily at the person
+who had denied his acquaintance. Suddenly he
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the joke, Lefty?” he asked. “Put
+me wise.”</p>
+
+<p>“Really, there’s no joke,” was the grave assertion.
+“You’ve got me wrong.”</p>
+
+<p>“What’s that?” rasped old Jack. “Do you
+mean to say you don’t recognize John Kennedy,
+your old manager?”</p>
+
+<p>Something like an annoyed frown crept into
+the somber, handsome face of the younger man.</p>
+
+<p>“I tell you,” he said a trifle warmly, “you’ve
+got me wrong. To my knowledge I never heard
+of you in all my life. You call me Locke, but my
+name is Stranger. That’s my monacker—Robert
+Stranger, Bob for short.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy pinched himself. “I’m awake,” he
+muttered. “There can’t be two men so much
+alike in the whole world. Besides, he wrote his
+name on the register with his left hand.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he began to feel a touch of anger.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
+“See here,” he said harshly, “maybe your right
+name ain’t Locke, but you can’t deny that it’s
+Hazelton. You can’t deny that you’re a baseball
+pitcher and that you were under my management
+on the Blue Stockings.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Blue Stockings?” said the other.
+“They’re some. I hear plenty of baseball talk.
+Can’t help it. But I never did take to the game
+any. Perhaps it sounds like bunk to you, but I
+never saw a real game in my life.”</p>
+
+<p>“Help!” cried Kennedy. “I’m loony, or he
+is!”</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_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV<br>
+<small>PERPLEXED</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The brazen, barefaced manner in which
+Lefty Locke denied his identity and professed
+that he had never even seen a game
+of baseball was simply staggering. For old Jack
+still refused to believe the man could be any one
+save Locke himself.</p>
+
+<p>What was Lefty’s object? Surely he ought to
+know that he could not fool his old manager by
+such a silly subterfuge and barefaced falsehood.
+That he was trying to “put over” a puerile joke
+did not appear possible, and certainly there was
+no twinkle of mirth in his steady eyes, no smile
+upon his sober face.</p>
+
+<p>There was something behind the young pitcher’s
+denial of his identity which Kennedy could
+not understand, something which confused as well
+as annoyed him. He was mustering his wits to
+begin all over again when suddenly the new arrival
+said:</p>
+
+<p>“I trust you’ll excuse me, pal. I’ll have to
+wash up before supper, which I see is in progress
+now.” He glanced in the direction of the open<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
+doors to the dining room and turned to the clerk.
+“Can I have my room now?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Your luggage?” questioned the clerk significantly.</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t any. I’ll pay a day in advance.
+How much?”</p>
+
+<p>“Three dollars.”</p>
+
+<p>Producing a roll of bills, the man peeled off a
+two and a one and shoved them across the desk,
+whereupon the clerk handed the key over to a
+boy, who invited the guest to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>They had not disappeared before Kennedy was
+surveying the register, on which he found written:
+“Robert Stranger, N. Y.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, wouldn’t that freeze you stiff!” he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>He was still muttering to himself when Landlord
+McLaughlin appeared.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s the matter now, Jack?” inquired the
+sporting proprietor of the Central House.
+“You’re growlin’ like a dog with a sore ear.
+Same old trouble ’bout pitchers, I s’pose?”</p>
+
+<p>“I came in to consult with you about that southpaw,
+Mercer, we’ve been trying to get holt of for
+a week. I’ve got him to state his terms at last.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good,” said McLaughlin.</p>
+
+<p>“Bad,” said Kennedy. “He wants sixty a
+week and board. We can’t afford it, Peter, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
+this little crossroads town. It’ll take us over our
+salary limit, too.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ve got to have a fust-class pitcher at any
+price. You said so yourself. Ain’t there no way
+to hire him and keep under the salary limit?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only one way. We can release one of our
+other pitchers, along with the utility man we’re
+keeping on the bench for emergencies. If a pinch
+comes I can go into the game myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Your plan seems all right to me, and I’m for
+it. We can get along without Heines. Three
+pitchers is all we’ve had, anyhow, and they’re
+enough. I say, nail Mercer. We’ve got to have
+somebody quick. I just heard to-night that Bristol’s
+signed a new twirler for the Buccaneers.
+You see, Hank don’t propose to let you git the
+bulge on him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you hear the name of Bristol’s new
+pitcher?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yep, but it sorter slipped me. It was Eagan
+or Elywin, or something like that. I’ll bet he’s
+a ripper.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s probably a good man if Hank’s signed
+him at this late day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you see where that puts us. You see
+what we’re up against. We can’t expect to get
+no Big League pitcher now.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know ’bout that,” returned Kennedy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
+in a low tone, his eyes on a man who was descending
+the stairs, and who turned at once toward the
+dining room. “There goes one.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hey? What?” spluttered the landlord.</p>
+
+<p>“There goes one of the cleverest young portside
+pitchers it has been my luck to see work in
+a game in the last three years.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hey?” spluttered Peter once more. “That
+feller there? The one just goin’ into the dining
+room?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the man.”</p>
+
+<p>“What you giving me, Jack?”</p>
+
+<p>“Straight facts.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, what’s he doin’ round here?”</p>
+
+<p>“I dunno. That’s what gets me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who is he?”</p>
+
+<p>“He registered as Robert Stranger, but he
+played under me with the Blue Stockings, using
+the name of Tom Locke. He was generally called
+Lefty.”</p>
+
+<p>Landlord McLaughlin was in a sudden sweat
+of excitement.</p>
+
+<p>“Played under you? Then you know all about
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I reckoned I knew a lot about him,” said Kennedy;
+“but in the last ten minutes I’ve sorter
+changed my mind. Brennan, of the Hornets, got
+him through a scout early in the season, but
+Brennan sized him up wrong and let him go unconditionally.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
+I’d been after him before that,
+and I gave him a try-out. He was there with
+the goods. When I quit, with the exception of
+Grist, he was the most dependable pitcher the
+team had. Since then something has happened to
+him. I dunno what ’tis, but I could tell by the
+papers that he was goin’ wrong. He was in that
+railroad smash the other day. After the smash
+he wasn’t to be found. Now he’s here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if you have a talk with him he’ll clear
+things up, of course. He’ll explain it all.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve had a talk with him. Instead of explaining,
+he pretended he didn’t know me. Peter, he
+denied that he was Lefty Locke and claimed his
+name was Stranger, under which he has registered
+here.”</p>
+
+<p>“Jerusalem!” breathed McLaughlin. “That’s
+mighty funny. How do you figger it?”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t get only one solution. It must be he
+didn’t pull well with the new manager. I know
+Carson, and he’s rough on a man he don’t cotton
+to. Lefty was suspended shortly before that railroad
+smash-up. When that came he improved his
+opportunity to duck. Fool thing to do, but it
+must be just what he done, Peter. Mebbe he
+plans to lay low until Carson gets in a hole and
+needs him desperate. Then, perhaps, he’ll wire
+Carson and try to make terms. It don’t seem to
+me that the Lefty Locke I knew would try any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
+such jinks as that, but you never can tell what a
+man will do.”</p>
+
+<p>“By goudy!” said Peter. “If that’s what
+he’s up to, mebbe we can get him to do some pitching
+for us while he’s waitin’ to pull the thing off.
+We’d make Bristol go some. Why don’t you try
+it, Jack? You oughter be able to make a deal
+with him, if anybody can.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy shook his head. “I dunno,” he
+growled, “I dunno ’bout that. Why, he just said
+not only that he’d never played, but that he’d
+never as much as seen a game. He’s got me
+guessing. I’m afraid I can’t make a deal with
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then <em>I’ll</em> try,” announced Landlord McLaughlin.
+“Wait till he comes out from supper.
+Leave it to me.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV<br>
+<small>STRANGER GETS A JOB</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">When the new guest reappeared from
+the dining room, having finished his
+supper, Landlord McLaughlin met
+him with an engaging manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Welcome to our town,” said Peter. “We’re
+always glad to see strangers drift in. Smoke?”</p>
+
+<p>He tendered a cigar, which the other accepted
+in a somewhat hesitating manner. Peter nipped
+off the end of another cigar and struck a match,
+which he held for the young man to light up before
+lighting his own.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s rather dry,” said the landlord.</p>
+
+<p>“Is it?” said the one who called himself
+Stranger, taking the cigar from his mouth and
+looking at it doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>“I mean the weather. We ain’t had much rain
+lately. Rather bad for crops, though it’s good
+for baseball, and we’re interested in that round
+here.”</p>
+
+<p>The young man made no reply, but took another
+uncertain whiff or two at the cigar. Suddenly
+he said:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t believe I smoke. I don’t care for it,
+anyhow. If you don’t mind, I won’t smoke this
+one.”</p>
+
+<p>To McLaughlin it seemed a bit odd that any
+man shouldn’t know whether he smoked or not,
+but he made no comment as the other tossed the
+cigar into a cuspidor.</p>
+
+<p>“How’s things the way you come from?” he
+asked. “We always like to meet folks from the
+big town. Say, won’t you come into the writing
+room and set down for a little chat?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t mind. I’m a bit tired, but it’s rather
+early to turn in.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy was watching them from behind a
+newspaper in a distant corner. He saw them
+enter the writing room, where the landlord placed
+a chair for the guest in such a manner that the
+latter’s back would be turned toward the door.
+Almost immediately Jack rose, and, paper in
+hand, walked quietly toward the writing room.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s your business, if it ain’t too inquisitive
+of me?” McLaughlin was saying as Kennedy
+reached the door.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a—a diamond cutter,” was the somewhat
+hesitating answer. “But I had to give it up on
+account of my health. You can see it has taken
+hold of me.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Peter gave his husky-looking companion a
+quizzical, sidelong glance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe so,” he half chuckled; “but I’d never
+noticed it if you hadn’t spoke. What are you
+planning to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“A pill slinger suggested that I ought to get
+out into the country and find a job somewhere in
+the open air. I’m looking for work on a farm.”</p>
+
+<p>“On a farm, hey?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, the rural life for mine. Between us, pal,
+I’ve hit it up some in my day. Even when I was
+a boy I was a high flier.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t say so!”</p>
+
+<p>The landlord knew that Kennedy had taken a
+seat in the room some distance behind them, but
+he did not look round.</p>
+
+<p>“I always was a wild chap,” the young man
+went on. “When I was a boy I touched plenty
+of high spots. Cards have tripped me, too.
+Ever play poker?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ho! Sometimes winters we have a little sociable
+game of penny ante round here just to pass
+away the time.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve been an easy mark at the game, but I
+like it. Can’t keep away. Every time I get a
+roll I go searching for trouble. I’ve got a little
+wad of long green right now that’s burning in my
+pocket. I’d like to find three or four good sports
+and get up a game.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t cal’late you can kick up one this season
+o’ the year,” said Peter. “’Sides that, we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
+generally play among ourselves, not caring to
+gamble in the reg’ler sense of the word. The
+strait-laced people round here think that Satan’s
+got a strangle hold on anybody that plays cards
+for money.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was brought up in a strait-laced family, pal.
+My old man thought cards the tools of Satan. It
+broke my mother’s heart when she found I was
+playing penny ante with a bunch of youngsters.
+Maybe that’s what finished her. But come, what’s
+the use to talk of things like that?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yep, what’s the use? Baseball’s the game in
+the summertime hereabouts. We’ve got a pretty
+hot team, I tell you. All we need now is a rattlin’
+good pitcher.”</p>
+
+<p>“The guff I hear and see in the newspapers
+about baseball makes me tired, bo. Seems like
+ninety per cent. of the population has gone bug-house
+about the game.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, that don’t hurt ’em. Folks has got to
+have something for recreation. All work and no
+play is bad policy. Don’t s’pose you know where
+we could get holt of a good pitcher, a left-hander?”</p>
+
+<p>Locke seemed to meditate a moment as if seeking
+to recall something, then in a queer way he
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>“One time I was mistook for a pitcher I happened
+to look like. A gent blew up and called<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
+me by that ball tosser’s name and asked me how
+I was doing at it. Really, he didn’t believe me
+when I told him I’d never pitched a ball in my
+life and that I didn’t know a curve from a—from
+a wedge of—restaurant pie.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Peter cleared his throat with a rasping
+sound and shoved round his chair till he could
+glance at Kennedy, who made a quick, cautioning
+gesture.</p>
+
+<p>“Then if that’s the case,” floundered the landlord
+helplessly, “I don’t s’pose you can help us
+none. I’m sorry. I didn’t take you for a minister’s
+son.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am,” was the prompt assurance. “If I can’t
+help you, perhaps you know where I can get a
+job on a farm.”</p>
+
+<p>“You say you’ve never done no farm work, but,
+still, green hands ain’t to be sneezed at when
+help is short.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy rose and stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m a farmer,” he said, “and I need a man.”</p>
+
+<p>The new arrival in Deering looked up with a
+slight frown.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re the man I met when I first came in,”
+he said. “Well, if you need a laborer on your
+farm perhaps we can talk business, bo.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t look like a sick man to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“My business has been too confining. You can
+see it has affected me. I don’t like confinement.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’ll give you all the outdoor work you want,”
+announced Jack, “and if you’re any good I’ll pay
+you twenty-five dollars a month and keep.”</p>
+
+<p>“That suits me. It’s a deal.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” said Kennedy; “I’ll be in town to-morrow
+afternoon and take you out to my farm.
+My name, as I told you before, is Kennedy.”</p>
+
+<p>“And mine, as I told you before,” said the
+other, “is Stranger.”</p>
+
+<p>“‘Stranger’ goes,” returned Kennedy. “You
+can call yourself anything you blame please. It’s
+none of my business.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI<br>
+<small>MIGHTY QUEER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Kennedy wanted an opportunity to
+meditate quietly upon the peculiar behavior
+of Lefty Locke, with the hope of
+hitting on a reasonable solution of the problem.
+For a problem it now appeared to the old manager.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s just one thing I’m afraid of,” he said
+to McLaughlin after Lefty had bidden them good
+night and ascended to his room. “He didn’t expect
+to run across me here in Deering. It must
+have been a jolt to him, though he managed to hide
+it mighty clever. Now, he may take a notion to
+sneak sudden and give us the shake. ’Twouldn’t
+surprise me if you woke up to-morrer to find your
+late guest missing.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll have some trouble gittin’ out of town
+before the first train in the morning,” declared
+Peter. “If you think it’s worth while, Jack, I’ll
+have Skedge, the boy, set up all night right here
+to see that he don’t sneak out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Anything would be worth while if we could
+only get him to pitch a few games for us.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span></p>
+
+<p>But if Skedge remained awake and on guard
+all night in the office of the Central House, he
+wasted his time. Apparently the new guest had
+no idea of slipping away, and when he appeared
+at breakfast the next morning everything seemed
+to indicate that he had passed a restful night.</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy came in early for forenoon practice
+at the ball park, but his suggestion that the new
+farm hand should go out to the grounds with him
+was not received favorably.</p>
+
+<p>“If you don’t mind, pal,” said Lefty, “I’ll wait
+for you right here at the hotel till you get ready
+to take me out to your farm. Baseball doesn’t
+interest me at all.”</p>
+
+<p>Jack frowned a bit over that word “pal.” It
+was not like Lefty Locke, and he had noticed that
+at times since his appearance in Deering the fellow
+spoke with a touch of slang that seemed
+quite unnatural and different from his usual manner
+of speech. There was in it, however, no trace
+of the slang of the baseball field.</p>
+
+<p>At noon Kennedy, coming back from the park,
+decided to lunch with Locke at the hotel. During
+the meal, however, he had little success in drawing
+the man into conversation.</p>
+
+<p>“Keep bottled up if you can,” thought old Jack
+resentfully; “I’ll trip you yet.”</p>
+
+<p>The Boobs came in on the two o’clock train, and
+made straight for the field. Kennedy lingered at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
+the post office to get his daily paper, and stopped
+at the hotel on his way out to the park. McLaughlin
+was waiting for him.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell you what,” said the landlord, “this
+southpaw o’ yourn don’t propose to earn his
+twenty-five a month playin’ baseball. I’ve been
+tryin’ to get him out to the game, but he won’t
+budge.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me handle this case, Peter,” urged Kennedy,
+spreading out his newspaper. “I don’t
+quite get his drift yet, but I will. Take a look
+at this! Here’s something more about the unexplained
+disappearance of Lefty Locke. They
+can’t seem to trace him. Some think he was killed
+in the smash, but all save one of the dead were
+identified, and the description of that one don’t
+agree at all with the description of Locke. He was
+a slim, slender, blue-eyed chap who looked like he
+was in bad health. That accident, together with
+the loss of Locke, seems to have knocked the
+starch out of the Blue Stockings, for the Terriers
+are eating ’em up in the series. The wise guys
+think it’s going to be a cinch from now on for the
+Specters to get away with the championship.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe that’ll interest our friend here,” suggested
+McLaughlin. “He’s in the writin’ room,
+watchin’ people on the street through the window.
+That’s all he seems to do—jest set around and
+watch folks.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
+
+<p>Kennedy found Locke in the writing room. “I
+say, Stranger,” he said, “here’s a daily paper
+that may help you to pass away the time till I
+get back after the game. Just look it over.”</p>
+
+<p>He put the paper in the man’s hand with the
+item regarding Locke and the Blue Stockings
+folded out; but, after a nod and a casual glance
+at that page, Lefty turned to another part of it.</p>
+
+<p>Old Jack rejoined McLaughlin, growling, and
+together they hastened to the field.</p>
+
+<p>About two hours later Kennedy drove up in
+front of the hotel with his rig, and asked for Mr.
+Stranger. The latter seemed to be waiting, for
+he came forth at once, the landlord following
+closely.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Stranger,” said McLaughlin, as the
+man got into the carriage, “I hope you take to
+your job out on Kennedy’s farm.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks, bo,” was the reply, as old Jack drove
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy had an excellent farm under a fine
+state of cultivation. Besides the overseer, he kept
+a stout, hulking boy, and at times, when needed,
+extra hands were hired. All the buildings were
+in perfect repair, and painted a clean white. The
+house was a big, square, old-fashioned affair, with
+fireplaces and a wide veranda. Kennedy’s sister,
+a widow by the name of Malone, was the housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to let you take a day or two to get
+the hang of things around the place,” said Kennedy,
+as he showed Locke into a big, square corner
+chamber with four windows, two of which
+opened toward the east. “There’s no hurry
+about your striking in to work, as it’s a bit slack
+just now.”</p>
+
+<p>The new man muttered his thanks, standing in
+the middle of the room and looking around in a
+manner which seemed to indicate slight surprise
+over this sort of treatment, which, perhaps, was
+scarcely what he had expected. Through the
+open door, as he departed, Jack saw him seat himself
+by one of the windows, and, with his head
+resting on his hand, look out at the softly rustling
+trees, the broad fields beyond, and the little lake
+on which the afternoon sunshine was shimmering.
+There was something pathetic and lonely in his
+pose and manner, and to himself, as he descended
+the stairs, Jack muttered:</p>
+
+<p>“Queer—mighty queer!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII<br>
+<small>DID HE REMEMBER?</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">After a hearty supper, at which the new
+hand met Mrs. Malone, Kennedy invited
+him out onto the veranda, where they sat
+while Jack puffed at his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t smoke?” said Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think so,” was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>“Drink?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know. I’ve been a wild one in my
+day, pal. Hit the high places, and hit ’em hard.
+Cards were my trouble. I was thinking I’d like
+to find three or four good sports and get up a little
+game.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you won’t find them round here,”
+growled old Jack, puffing savagely at his pipe.
+“Nothing doing, Left—er—Stranger.”</p>
+
+<p>The other betrayed no disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll just sit and talk things over comfortable
+like,” said Kennedy, glancing at him sidewise.
+“How’d you get the notion you wanted to go to
+farming?”</p>
+
+<p>“It wasn’t my notion; it was the pill slinger’s.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You don’t look like there’s been anything the
+matter with your health.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m pale. That comes from confinement.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re brown as an Injun—or a baseball
+player.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty rubbed his head. “I know what I’ve been
+told,” he said, with a slight touch of resentment.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, don’t swaller everything the doctors
+hand out to you. How do you like my ranch?”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s very comfortable. I like it here, only I
+seem to miss something. It’s quiet.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the way I feel. You see, when a man
+has been in the hot of Big League baseball year
+after year, it’s a big change to settle down this
+fashion. But we all have to take up something
+after we’ve had our day at the game. If I’d ever
+married it might ’a’ seemed different.”</p>
+
+<p>“You never married?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said old Jack, a trifle sadly; “slipped
+up on that play. Made an error, and another fellow
+fanned me out. You know, it’s mighty easy
+to lose in a game like that if you don’t keep on
+your toes all the time. I don’t often talk about
+it, but I don’t mind telling you how it was.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty said nothing, and the old manager continued:</p>
+
+<p>“She was the only dame I ever got really
+smashed on, a little, dark-eyed Irish girl by the
+name of Madge. Met her after a game in which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
+I was pretty near the whole show, having made
+two homers, a three-bagger, and a single. She
+was just bubbling over with enthusiasm, and when
+she turned them eyes of hern on me, and handed
+me a smile with her teeth shining like polished
+chinyware, I just felt that it was all up with me.
+I was like a busher in his first Big League game,
+all cold and hot and shaky and queer clean down
+to my toes. I knew in a jiffy that she was the
+one for me.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, there ain’t no need to string the story
+out,” he went on. “I rushed her for all I was
+worth when the team was playin’ to home.
+Things went along swimmin’, and we had it arranged
+somehow before I ever knowed just how
+it come round that we would play the big game
+together on the same team. That is, we was going
+to get spliced some time, and I didn’t care how
+soon the job was done. She had another guy that
+was rushing her, too, before I hove in on the horizon;
+but I had his groove, and he was fanning
+every time he stepped up to the plate.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, listen to me, and hear how the whole
+game went wrong in the ninth inning. My sister
+Kitty comes on to see me unexpected, and, of
+course, I spreads myself to give her a good time.
+Madge didn’t know nothing ’bout it, and she sees
+me blowin’ Kit off to cabs and theaters and feeds,
+and a-kissin’ her good-by when I had to send her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
+home one night sudden on account of an unexpected
+turn. What did that little hot-headed,
+black-eyed girl do? She just writ me a red-hot
+letter, tellin’ me what she thought of a deceivin’,
+heart-breakin’, double-dyed wretch like I was, and
+announcin’ that she was leavin’ town. She didn’t
+leave no address, either. At first I took it as a
+kind of joke, thinkin’ I could straighten things out
+all right with Madge. But next thing I heard,
+within a week, she was hooked to the other guy,
+and I was down and out in the series.</p>
+
+<p>“I ain’t never struck one like Madge since, and
+I ain’t likely to; so, you see, here I am—an old
+bach. It’s tough on a man when a girl throws him
+that fashion, with no chance to explain; but I’ve
+always tried to console myself by sayin’ that one
+who’d do such a thing would likely keep a guy in
+hot water the most of the time when she got him.
+It’s poor consolation, but it’s all I’ve got.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty was frowning as he gazed through the
+faint purple shadows toward the little lake, on
+which the afterglow of the sunset was reflected,
+and he stirred uneasily, passing a hand across his
+forehead. After some moments of silence, he
+said:</p>
+
+<p>“Seems to me I’ve heard of a similar case.”</p>
+
+<p>“I s’pose there’s lot of similar cases,” replied
+Kennedy, giving a pull at his pipe, which had gone
+out during the narration. “I was young, and it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
+broke me up bad. I played so rotten that my
+manager got sore, and put me on the bench. I
+took to hittin’ the bottle, too. Drank altogether
+too much until a friend gave me a talking to and
+showed me what a dumb fool I was. Then I tried
+to forget it and get back into form again. I succeeded,
+too, and I’ve stuck to baseball steady, saving
+my dollars, with the idea of having something
+to live on when my days at the game was finished.
+I am out of it now, though I’m managin’ this little
+Deering team. Kinder got pulled into that. I
+wouldn’t if it hadn’t been for Hank Bristol, who’s
+managin’ the Buccaneers. He sorter rubbed me
+the wrong way, and it’s my object now to beat him
+out if there’s any way to do it. To beat him, I’ve
+got to have another A-one pitcher, and I need a
+left-hander.” Lefty was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“I know the very man I’d like to have,” Kennedy
+went on musingly. “He come out of the
+bush this year. Brennan, of the Hornets, had him
+in the South to start with; but Brennan also had
+another promisin’ young slabman by the name of
+Bert Elgin. It seems that the left-hander and
+Elgin had some sort of a mix-up at college, and
+they didn’t cotton to each other a great deal. Elgin
+put up some sort of a dirty job on the other chap,
+and made him look like a quitter and a useless
+pup. Brennan was fooled, and dropped him.</p>
+
+<p>“I’d been after him before that, and he comes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
+to me after being handed the can by Brennan. I
+sent him out into the bush with a team from which
+I could pull him in any time I wanted to, and he
+made good out there. My pitchers started cold,
+and didn’t get into the game just right, so I sent
+out a hurry call for the southpaw, and he joined the
+team just in time to pitch in our first game against
+the Hornets. I took a chance on spoiling him by
+shovin’ him into that game. Had to do it, you
+know, though I hated to. The proper way to
+break in a pitcher is to work him against a weak
+team, and give him confidence by a good chance to
+pull off a win to start with. It was hard on him,
+rammin’ him into that game against the Hornets,
+but he come through with flying colors, and he
+pitched against Bert Elgin, too.</p>
+
+<p>“There was a reporter named Stillman who had
+it in his noddle that Elgin was responsible for
+what my left-hander got from Brennan, and he
+chased the thing down and got the proof, which he
+hands out to Brennan hisself. That was Mr. Elgin’s
+finish in Big League company. Brennan
+sent him down into class C company, but he
+didn’t last even there. Nobody seemed to have
+much use for him, and I dunno where he’s faded
+to.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” continued old Jack, squaring round until
+he could watch his companion without turning
+his head, “if I just had that left-handed man of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
+mine for about two weeks I’d bury the Buccaneers.
+We beat the Boobs to-day, but they’re the weakest
+bunch in this league. After the game I heard that
+the Bucks had beat the Stars, and gone into first
+place by a small margin. We play Bristol’s team
+in Hatfield to-morrow. I’ve figgered the percentage
+out to-night, and if we could take a fall out of
+’em we’d be tied with ’em to-morrow night.”</p>
+
+<p>“I presume that’s all very interesting to you,”
+said Lefty, unmoved; “but, having never cared in
+the slightest for baseball, you’ll pardon me if I
+don’t enthuse.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy made a queer sound in his throat.
+“Look a’ here,” he snapped, “was you ever in
+a railroad smash-up?”</p>
+
+<p>“Never,” was the slow answer, coming after a
+moment or two of breathless silence.</p>
+
+<p>Old Jack dropped his pipe, and groped for it.</p>
+
+<p>“Why do you ask?” questioned the other.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, nothing—nothing,” mumbled Kennedy.
+“I’m going to turn in pretty soon. You can go
+to bed any time you want to. We get up ruther
+early here on the farm.”</p>
+
+<p>“Think I’ll turn in now,” said the other, rising.</p>
+
+<p>In his chamber, half an hour later, having made
+sure that Lefty had really gone to bed, Kennedy
+paced up and down a while, his forehead corrugated
+by a deep frown.</p>
+
+<p>“It gets me!” he finally exclaimed, beginning to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
+undress. “I can’t quite make up my mind
+whether he’s faking or really don’t remember. If
+that last is the case, he ought to have treatment by
+a doctor.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII<br>
+<small>A NEW PITCHER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Although there was an early breakfast
+on Kennedy’s farm, when old Jack arose
+his sister surprised him by stating that
+the new man had been up and wandering about
+the place for an hour or more.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder if he didn’t sleep well?” said Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“I asked him,” returned Mrs. Malone, “and he
+said he slept like a log. He’s a fine-looking fellow,
+Jack, but he ain’t no farmer. If you took
+him for one you got bunkoed.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy gave her a laughing, knowing wink.
+“Leave it to me, Kit,” he said. “I know my
+business, whether I’m hirin’ farm hands or ball
+players.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m thinking you’d be much more successful
+picking the latter,” she replied. “You may call
+yourself a farmer, but it’s baseball that’s still got
+the hook on ye.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe you’re right, Kitty,” he agreed.
+“Mebbe that’s why I decided to taper off with this
+bush league bunch. Perhaps I’m like a man that’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
+been drinking hard and finds he’s got to quit, but
+it’ll kill him if he stops all to once. When the
+baseball bug gets into a man’s blood for fair he
+never is quite cured. It’s a disease, my girl.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you’d had a square deal you’d be at it
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t let that worry you. I knew it was coming
+some time. Where’s this man of mine?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t wonder if you found him out viewin’
+the scenery. There’s something sort of sad and
+lonesome about him. He acts like he’s lost his last
+friend on earth. But he’s a handsome feller,
+Jack.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now, Kitty, don’t be sentimental. I thought
+you was done with the men?”</p>
+
+<p>“So I am,” she retorted, flushing almost like a
+girl. “Stop your joshing. Me day is over, but
+I can tell the kind that git the girls as well as I
+ever could. Breakfast will be ready in less than
+five minutes.”</p>
+
+<p>Laughing, Kennedy went out to search for
+Locke, whom he found on the veranda. Lefty
+rose at once when Jack appeared.</p>
+
+<p>“Good morning,” he said. “You told me to
+look around, and I’ve been doing so.”</p>
+
+<p>“Right-o! You’re an early bird, all right.
+It’s an appetite you should have for breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t any working clothes,” said the other.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
+“I’ve been trying to think what became of my outfit.
+Can’t seem to remember.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t worry about it. I’ve got old clothes
+enough, and they’ll do when you want ’em, which
+won’t be to-day. Come in to breakfast.”</p>
+
+<p>At the table Lefty was silent, but, whatever
+else could be said of him, his appetite was healthy
+enough. He seemed wholly unaware of the occasional
+glances of interest from the blue eyes of
+Mrs. Kitty Malone. In every movement he proclaimed
+himself a person of refinement, and it was
+only in occasional lapses of speech when he
+seemed almost trying to remember something, or
+repeating a lesson that had been learned, that
+there was the slightest suggestion of anything different.</p>
+
+<p>After breakfast Kennedy gave his foreman some
+instructions, and later he found Locke waiting for
+him. Old Jack appeared with a soiled baseball
+and a glove.</p>
+
+<p>“I may have to get into the game myself to-day,”
+he said cheerfully, “and I’m a bit out of
+practice. As long as you’re not going to work
+until to-morrow, mebbe you’d throw me a few?”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty frowned, but did not refuse.</p>
+
+<p>“Pull off your coat,” directed the old manager,
+as he paced off and marked the regular pitching
+distance in the yard. “Here’s a flat stone for you
+to put ’em over. I’ll be the catcher.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
+
+<p>If he had prepared a trap, the other walked into
+it without hesitation. Taking his place on the
+mark indicated, he caught the ball which Jack
+tossed him, and squared away.</p>
+
+<p>“Take it easy at first,” suggested Kennedy, in
+full remembrance of the smoking speed with which
+Lefty Locke had dazzled the best batters in the
+Big League. “As long as you’re green, you’ll
+hurt your whip if you start in by wallopin’ ’em.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty complied to the letter, and the old manager’s
+eyes glittered with the secret triumph he
+felt as the young man began putting the ball over
+with perfect control and apparently without effort.
+Gradually Kennedy urged him to speed up, and the
+change made no difference. Wherever Jack held
+his hands behind that flat rock—high, low, behind
+the inside or the outside corner—Lefty Locke
+winged the ball straight into them, so that it was
+scarcely necessary to make the slightest movement
+to catch it.</p>
+
+<p>“Say,” cried Kennedy suddenly, “I thought
+you didn’t know anything about this business?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t,” was the instant declaration. “Don’t
+think I ever handled a baseball before in all my
+life.” But there was a strange flush in his face
+and a peculiar light of aroused interest in his eyes,
+all of which the former Blue Stockings’ manager
+observed with unspeakable gratification.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, if you’re a greenhorn, certainly you’re a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
+wonder,” said Kennedy, still careful to follow the
+other’s lead. “Say, throw me a drop.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke shook his head. “I don’t know how.”</p>
+
+<p>“Easiest thing you ever tried. Here, I’ll show
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>He jogged forward, took the ball, and demonstrated
+how it should be held and in what manner
+it should be released with the proper whirling
+motion to make it drop.</p>
+
+<p>“Now try it that way,” he said, returning to
+his position.</p>
+
+<p>Three times Lefty threw the ball without the
+slightest indication of a drop, but with the fourth
+throw, into which he put a bit more speed, the
+sphere, coming breast-high, took a sudden shoot
+toward the ground just before reaching the stone
+which served for a plate. Kennedy, scooping it
+from the turf, whooped.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s it!” he shouted. “Great smoke!
+That was a peach! It would have had Logie, of
+the Specters, breakin’ his back.”</p>
+
+<p>For the first time since his arrival in Deering,
+something like a faint smile flitted across the
+young man’s face.</p>
+
+<p>“Queer,” he said. “I didn’t know I could do
+that. Pitching can’t be so difficult to learn.”</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t for some men,” assured Kennedy.
+“Give me another.”</p>
+
+<p>He snapped the ball wide and high to Locke, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
+carelessly thrust up his right hand, stopped it,
+and permitted it to drop into his left, a movement
+so familiar to old Jack that he nearly whooped
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“Give me one just like the last,” invited Kennedy,
+“and burn it. Let it come smoking.”</p>
+
+<p>It was like the last, and with only his small
+fielder’s glove to aid him Kennedy lost it.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, some speed, son—some speed!” he rejoiced.
+“The left-hander I told you about last
+night used to have a duplicate of Walter Johnson’s
+hook curve, only it took the opposite twist toward
+the inside corner for a right-hand batter, and so
+was a heap worse to hit. Let me show you how he
+threw it, if I can remember.”</p>
+
+<p>Again he demonstrated, and again Locke apparently
+tried to follow directions. This time he
+threw the hook with the first effort, and old Jack
+bit his tongue to hold himself in check.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s it!” he cried. “Why, I could make a
+pitcher out of you—I sure could! And there’s
+more money in it than working on a farm. It’s
+good, healthy business, too. Just what your
+doctor’d ordered if he’d knowed you could do it.”</p>
+
+<p>“How could he know, if I didn’t know myself?”
+was the good-natured question, all the somberness
+seeming gone from Locke’s face—temporarily at
+least. In every movement he was now a pitcher,
+the same young wonder who had made such a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
+record under Kennedy with the Blue Stockings;
+the same jovial-appearing, resolute, reliable boxman
+who had made a host of friends and admirers,
+and had come to be feared and respected by opposing
+batsmen.</p>
+
+<p>“You throw ’em any way you’re a mind to now,
+and let ’em come,” said Kennedy. “You’re giving
+me some practice, all right.”</p>
+
+<p>There was life, ginger, fire, and marvelous control
+in every delivery. The whistlers that left
+Locke’s fingers made old Jack set his teeth and
+grin painfully as, one after another, they nearly
+lifted him off his feet. In a few moments the old
+manager, unprotected by a big mitt, found that he
+was getting more than enough.</p>
+
+<p>“That will do!” he shouted, dropping the ball,
+and blowing on his smarting right hand. “Perhaps
+you never saw a ball game, but, believe me,
+you can pitch—and I know pitchers.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX<br>
+<small>AT THE FIELD</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">When Manager Kennedy rode into
+town to take the ten-ten train for
+Hatfield with his players, Mr. Robert
+Stranger came with him. Old Jack stopped at
+the Central House, and found Landlord McLaughlin
+on the point of leaving for the station.</p>
+
+<p>“Howdy, Jack,” said Peter. “I see you’ve
+got your new farm hand with ye.”</p>
+
+<p>“’Sh!” breathed Kennedy. “I’ve induced him
+to go over with us to see the game, and I’m takin’
+along an extra suit of mine—one I wore with the
+Blue Stockings, with the letters cut off.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean to say—” gasped Peter.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t mean to say anything now.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he ain’t owned up?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not a word. It’s the queerest thing I ever
+bumped against—it sure is. We’ve got to catch
+that train, so let’s be movin’. On the way over
+I’ll tell you about it.”</p>
+
+<p>Locke accompanied them to the station, where
+Kilgore was waiting with his teammates. Some
+eighteen or twenty Deering fans who could get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
+away had purchased round-trip tickets, while at
+least fifty more were on hand to give the Deers a
+send-off. Kennedy bought tickets, after which
+he introduced Locke to the players who gathered
+around them.</p>
+
+<p>“Shake hands with Bob Stranger, boys,” he
+said, calling one after another by name. “He’s a
+friend of mine going along with us to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>The locomotive was whistling in the distance
+when Captain Kilgore pulled at Kennedy’s sleeve,
+and whispered, his back toward Locke:</p>
+
+<p>“Say, Jack, who is this guy?”</p>
+
+<p>The manager made a warning gesture. “Not
+a word,” he cautioned. “It’s a secret. He’s a
+southpaw pitcher, and if necessary I may use him
+in the game against the Bucks to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>Toots Kilgore grinned. “Take it from me, it’s
+likely to be necessary,” he said. “It’s going to
+be <em>the</em> game. They’ll fight us like blazes on their
+own field, and they’ve got a new man to put against
+us. Curley won’t last; they can steal right and
+left on Reddy Sullivan, and Heines’ whip is broke.
+You better start your new man on the hill.”</p>
+
+<p>“Leave that to me,” returned old Jack reprovingly,
+“and keep your face closed about him. I’ll
+tell the boys anything they ought to know. Don’t
+even hint to him that you think he’s a pitcher.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I see!” said Kilgore. “You’re planning
+to spring a surprise. Maybe he’s some real gun in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
+the game. Maybe his name ain’t Stranger at
+all.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the name he goes by—now,” said the
+manager of the Deers, as the train roared up to the
+station and stopped.</p>
+
+<p>The crowd cheered them as they got aboard,
+carrying grips, bat bags, and other paraphernalia.</p>
+
+<p>“Git this game, Jack—you’ve got to git it!”
+cried a big man on the platform. “We need it,
+and we depend on you.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy’s only reply was a nod, which brought
+another cheer from the crowd, who continued to
+make a demonstration until the train pulled out.</p>
+
+<p>Old Jack saw to it that Lefty Locke was seated
+in the midst of the players, where he remained
+during the journey to Hatfield, listening with a
+strange sort of interest to their chatter about the
+game and the standing of the teams, which to them
+seemed quite as vital as a Big League race. At
+times Locke evinced more than usual interest as
+some chance phrase fell on his ear with a familiar
+ring, and for the time being the shadow in his eyes
+was dispelled. Although he had little to say, his
+manner was that of one who again found himself
+with his own people, and felt once more the vital
+throb and thrill of life which is experienced daily
+by the man who has found the vocation for which
+he is best adapted.</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy missed none of this, although he took<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
+pains not to give Locke the impression that he was
+being watched.</p>
+
+<p>“Got him going,” mused the old manager, with
+deep satisfaction. “He tried to duck the game,
+but the germ is in his blood, and he can’t keep
+away from it. If I need him, I’ll have him pitching
+before the game is finished this afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>Hatfield was a thriving, prosperous place—nearly
+a young city—in rather strong contrast
+to the quiet, almost sleepy town of Deering. It
+seemed presumptuous that a somnolent village like
+Deering should presume to the championship in
+a bush league represented by Hatfield, for surely
+the latter had the advantage, in the way of backing,
+population, attendance, and general resources.</p>
+
+<p>From the station, Kennedy led his men to
+Tower’s Hotel, which gave them special rates,
+and furnished the most satisfactory table.</p>
+
+<p>An hour’s rest followed dinner; then, as two
+o’clock approached, the Deers gathered up their
+trappings, and set forth for the park, toward which
+the early fans were already turning their faces.</p>
+
+<p>Reaching the field, they entered a dressing room,
+and began stripping down to don their playing
+togs. Still with them, Lefty watched and listened
+after the manner of one to which all this seemed
+familiar, yet as an outsider.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s an extra suit,” said Kennedy, placing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
+his grip on a shelf, and being sure that Locke
+saw and heard. “Everything a man needs, down
+to shoes. Perhaps it won’t be used to-day, but if
+anyone should happen to want it, it can be found
+right there.”</p>
+
+<p>Kilgore wondered why old Jack’s new pitcher
+did not get into that suit at once; but, having no
+small respect for the manager’s cleverness, and
+thinking he knew the sort of game he was playing,
+the captain of the Deers made no remark.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s no rules here to prevent you from sitting
+on the bench with us, Stranger,” explained
+the manager, as the players were ready to leave
+for the field. “It will give you a chance to watch
+the game from close range.”</p>
+
+<p>The Deers followed their manager and captain
+to the field. The Buccaneers had not yet appeared,
+so the visitors had everything to themselves.</p>
+
+<p>They began practice by “fungo” batting and
+the catching of liners and flies, cheered only by the
+little group of Deering fans who had followed them
+and were waiting to give them encouragement.
+Those cheers were not the only sounds to greet
+them, some of the more rabid local partisans
+shamelessly hissing or groaning. For out in the
+bush baseball rivalry is almost always intense,
+and there is little of the fair-minded impartiality
+among the spectators which sometimes, in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
+place like New York, leads the home crowd to
+applaud famous players of opposing nines.</p>
+
+<p>In less than ten minutes the Buccaneers came
+forth with a dash, Hank Bristol at their head.
+In appearance they justified their name, for their
+blue suits were almost black, and the dash of crimson
+upon their caps, together with their crimson
+stockings, gave them a somber, awesome appearance,
+which was heightened by the husky build of
+almost every man, and the mocking savageness of
+their faces. If ever a baseball nine was calculated
+to win from the awe it would inspire in the breasts
+of opponents, the Bucks were that organization.</p>
+
+<p>With an assumption of cordiality, Hank Bristol
+shook hands with Jack Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“Sorry for you, old hoss,” he grinned, “but
+you should have known better than to let ’em
+coax you into the game again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Save your sympathy till I need it, Hank,”
+returned the manager of the Deers. “You’re old
+enough and wise enough to know one never can tell
+what’s going to happen in this game.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know what’s going to happen to-day. We’re
+going to put another nail in your coffin. You’re
+a dead one, Jack, but you don’t know it. Why,
+you don’t worry us at all. We’re not even going
+to start our new pitcher against you, and I don’t
+believe we’ll need him. Jewett ought to find you
+easy picking.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Where’s your new man?” asked Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“There he goes, walking by your bench now,”
+answered Bristol, pointing.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment a ball, thrown from the field,
+went bounding past them into the bench of the
+visitors, where Lefty Locke sat. Immediately he
+secured it, and stepped forth to throw it to the
+signaling batter.</p>
+
+<p>The Buccaneers’ new pitcher stopped short, and
+stared in astonishment at Lefty, who did not seem
+to observe him.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’ll be hanged!” exclaimed the surprised
+man, his eyes fastened on Locke. “It’s you, is it?
+You didn’t last so long in big company, did you?”
+He finished with a sneering laugh full of unspeakable
+satisfaction and joy.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty looked him over blankly. “Speaking to
+me?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Who did you think I was speaking to?” retorted
+the other as he passed on, still laughing.</p>
+
+<p>Frowning, Locke stared after him.</p>
+
+<p>“Who’s that man?” he asked, a few seconds
+later, as old Jack came to the bench.</p>
+
+<p>“That man?” repeated Kennedy. “He’s the
+Buccaneers’ new pitcher. His name is Bert Elgin.”</p>
+
+<p>“Queer,” said Lefty. “He seemed to have an
+idea he knew me, but I’ve never seen him before.”</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_XXX">CHAPTER XXX<br>
+<small>BASEBALL LUCK</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The words were uttered in such a sincere
+manner that they came near dispelling
+Kennedy’s last doubt. “He’d be
+a fool to try to keep up a bluff like that,” thought
+the manager, “and Lefty Locke never was no
+fool.”</p>
+
+<p>Aloud he said: “That’s the cub I was tellin’
+you ’bout who put up a job on my southpaw pitcher
+when he was gettin’ a try-out with the Hornets.
+He can pitch, but he’s got a yaller streak, and he’s
+about as mean as dirt.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will he pitch to-day?” asked Lefty.</p>
+
+<p>“Dunno. Perhaps so. Bristol won’t use him
+’less he has to. I see he’s goin’ to warm up with
+the others. Keep your eye on him.</p>
+
+<p>“Somethin’s gone wrong with the man,” he muttered,
+as he turned away. “It’s no bluff. His
+noddle is twisted.”</p>
+
+<p>From the bench, Locke watched the two teams
+take turns at practice, but for the most part his interest
+seemed to center in the opposing pitchers,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
+who were warming up. Having been told all
+about the crippled condition of the Deers’ staff,
+he realized the probable advantage of the home
+team with a new man ready to jump on to the slab
+if needed—a man considered by Bristol a star of
+the first magnitude.</p>
+
+<p>The critical nature of this game turned out a
+crowd which filled the bleachers and packed the
+stands—a crowd bubbling with enthusiasm for the
+locals, who could obtain an added grip on first
+position by taking this contest.</p>
+
+<p>And more than nine-tenths of the assemblage
+seemed to believe such a result a foregone conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>In warming up, Elgin attracted the most attention,
+for nearly everyone had heard of Bristol’s
+new man. Knowing the eyes of the crowd were
+upon him, he posed vainly, and finished limbering
+his flinger by whipping three or four speedy ones
+to the catcher which caused many witnesses to
+gasp.</p>
+
+<p>The time for the game to start came at last, and
+the clang of a bell called the visitors to their bench,
+while the locals took the field. Then one of the
+umpires, with a megaphone, announced:</p>
+
+<p>“Battrees to-day: For Deering, Curley and
+Coffin. For Hatfield, Jewett and Yapp.”</p>
+
+<p>At this there was a murmur from those who had
+wished to see the new man pitch. Elgin, hearing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
+this murmur and understanding, laughed to himself.</p>
+
+<p>Chick Collins, the Deers’ right fielder, was the
+first man to face Jewett, and, as Collins had the
+reputation of being a man who “waited it out”
+and made a pitcher put them over, Jewett started
+in by cutting the pan with the first ball delivered.</p>
+
+<p>To his surprise, Chick did not take one; instead,
+he met that straight ball on the trade-mark, and
+cracked it safely into right, which caused the little
+bunch of Deering fans to give a howl of joy.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s the stuff!” sounded the voice of Peter
+McLaughlin. “He won’t last an inning at that
+rate. Go to him, Truly!”</p>
+
+<p>Hen Truly, familiarly known as “Yours Truly,”
+followed Collins to the plate, fully instructed by
+Kennedy. Jewett, a bit nervous, threw three
+times to first to hold the runner close. Then he
+wasted two while Truly waited and grinned. Having
+put the twirler in a hole the batter signaled to
+Collins that he would bunt the next ball pitched,
+and the runner was off for second with the swing
+of Jewett’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>Truly dropped a bunt in front of the plate, and
+stretched himself for first. Jewett fell over himself
+trying to field the ball, and the attempted sacrifice
+was turned into a scratch hit when his throw
+reached first a second too late.</p>
+
+<p>“Where’s your new pitcher?” cried Landlord<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
+McLaughlin. “You better put him in right
+away.”</p>
+
+<p>Bristol remained apparently unmoved upon the
+bench; but Jewett, glancing toward his manager,
+knew that he was on the verge of getting the hook.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Digg was the next hitter—Digg, the formidable,
+who still had the highest batting average
+among the visitors. Jewett feared Digg; yet to
+pass him now would fill the corners, with no one
+down, and Hallett, a man almost as dangerous,
+followed. In this dilemma, wabbling in the effort
+to get his pins under him, the Buccaneer flinger
+sought to coax Digg into reaching.</p>
+
+<p>On the first ball pitched, Truly, seeming to forget
+that second was occupied, shot down the line.
+Instantly Yapp winged the ball to first, and even
+as he did so Collins stretched himself for third.
+Seeing this, the first baseman attempted to cut
+Collins off by a throw across, and Truly went on to
+second. By a fine slide, Collins shot under the
+third baseman, who made a sweeping, ineffectual
+jab at him, and then threw to second to stop the
+crafty Truly. Truly was there ahead of the ball,
+and had the baseman not been alive to the situation,
+which led him to whip the sphere to the plate
+without an instant’s delay, Collins would have
+tried to score. As it was, he got back to third a
+second ahead of the ball, and the delayed double
+steal was a complete success. With second and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
+third occupied, a long single in the right quarter
+would give the visitors a start of two runs.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the corner of his mouth, Hank Bristol
+spoke to Bert Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>“Take Putnam,” he said, “and go down into a
+corner, and keep your arm warm. I may want you
+any minute.”</p>
+
+<p>Jewett saw the new pitcher and the change
+catcher leave the bench, and knew what it meant.
+Desperate, he whipped over a jumper to Digg,
+who attempted to lace it out, and simply hoisted a
+short fly to second.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the bench, Kennedy took Tom Boyd’s
+place on the coaching line, Boyd being the batter
+who followed Hallett.</p>
+
+<p>“Got ’em going!” grinned old Jack. “Hit it
+a mile, Hallett! Give ’em a chance to use their
+new wizard right away.” While apparently encouraging
+Hallett to smash the ball, he gave the
+signal for the squeeze play, which doubtless would
+be unexpected at this moment, when everything
+seemed to indicate the immediate downfall of the
+unsteady pitcher.</p>
+
+<p>Jewett handed up another. With the first hint
+of his movement Collins started like a shot for
+the plate. Hallett lifted his bat, held it slack, and
+bunted. Instead of falling to the ground, the ball
+rebounded in a little fly, which was caught by
+Jewett without moving from his tracks.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
+
+<p>Collins, warned by a shout, tried to stop. He
+saw Jewett with the ball, and realized what had
+happened. The pitcher, elated, laughed at him;
+and the sphere was tossed to third for a double
+play, which put an abrupt end to the fine start the
+Deers had promised to make. It also let Jewett
+out of a bad hole through a streak of great luck.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless it was probable Bristol would use
+the new man with the coming inning; and far out
+in a corner of the field Elgin, working easily with
+the change catcher, awaited the call.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI<br>
+<small>PITCHERS’ WATERLOO</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Although Bristol said nothing to
+Jewett, it was sheer luck which kept the
+pitcher from receiving a call-down by
+his manager. It was also luck, combined with
+poor work on the part of Curley, that gave Jewett
+an opportunity to reclaim himself in the second
+inning; for the locals got after Curley with such
+effect that two runs had been secured through hits
+and errors, with only one man down, when Kennedy
+pulled the twirler from the mound, and sent
+Sullivan out. On Sullivan’s long swing another
+run came in before the home team was retired.
+With this comfortable lead of three tallies, Bristol
+decided to save his new man for a tight pinch
+or some other game.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s uphill work now, boys,” said Kennedy to
+his players; “but a bunch that can’t fight an uphill
+game is no good. Get after that easy mark,
+and force Bristol to show us what he’s got out
+there in the offing. Make him use his new colt.”</p>
+
+<p>Already the wise old war horse had sent Heines
+out to keep his flipper oiled, fearing that Sullivan<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
+would prove meat for the Bucks. Despite Jack’s
+urging, which possibly made the youngsters of his
+team a bit too eager, Jewett got away with it in the
+first of the second, only one man threatening from
+third before the side was retired without cutting
+down that lead of three.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” said Spider Hogan, field captain of the
+Buccaneers, “it’s up to us to put the wood to Sullivan.
+That old soup bone of his can’t keep this
+bunch in check. Every man that gets on first
+steals on his swing. Don’t forget.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy also had his fears for Sullivan’s
+“soup bone.” He spoke to Lefty Locke, who was
+watching the progress of the struggle with the
+keenest interest.</p>
+
+<p>“Reddy can’t hold ’em,” he said; “nor Heines,
+either. If I had that left-handed youngster of mine
+to put in here now the boys would support him, and
+perhaps they’d tie this thing up sudden before
+Bristol got cagy and shoved his new man on to the
+slab. You’re left-handed, and you’ve found out
+that you can handle a baseball.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean—” muttered Locke.</p>
+
+<p>“You know where that grip of mine is containing
+an old suit. There’s everything in it but a
+left-handed glove, and Collins is left-handed.
+He’d let you have his fielder’s glove. He could
+get along without it out in right.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t mean—” repeated Lefty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I can’t tell you any plainer what I mean.
+Which had you rather do, pitch baseball for me at
+fifty a week and keeps, or work on a farm at
+twenty-five a month?”</p>
+
+<p>“If I thought—” Locke still hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me do the thinking for you,” urged Kennedy.
+“Get into that suit, and watch your chance
+to take Heines’ place warmin’ up the minute I
+have to use him. You can reach the dressing room
+by going round this side of the field.”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll try it,” said Lefty, rising; “but don’t
+blame me—”</p>
+
+<p>“There won’t be any kicks comin’,” promised
+Kennedy, elated. “I’m taking the chance. You
+haven’t made any profession of being a ball
+tosser. Go to it.”</p>
+
+<p>Thus encouraged, while Sullivan was trying to
+hold the Buccaneers in check, and getting away
+with the inning by allowing them only one run,
+Locke sauntered to the dressing room, found Kennedy’s
+old uniform, and got into it. As he passed
+Heines, the little pitcher gave him a look, and
+called:</p>
+
+<p>“It’s about time you got into gear if Jack’s going
+to use you to-day. He’s worked the rest of
+us stiff, and the Bucks have grabbed the game already.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty made no retort. Having prepared himself
+for the field, he waited, watching Heines.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the third inning the visitors, steadied by their
+manager, again bumped Jewett, and this time old
+Jack’s form of attack was not defeated by a streak
+of luck. Jewett, sweating and worried after the
+first two men had hit safely, lost his control,
+passed another, hit the fourth with a pitched ball,
+and forced a run. Still Bristol delayed, and the
+next Deer, slashing out a clean two-bagger, drove
+two more runners across the pan before Hank
+gave his pitcher the hook. Elgin came trotting
+in from the far corner, and ascended the hillock.</p>
+
+<p>He was greeted by a roar from the great crowd,
+which brought a smile to his face, and caused him
+to touch his cap proudly.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew he’d have to do it,” bellowed Peter
+McLaughlin, when the ovation died down. “Go
+right after him, boys. You can get his alley, too.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin glanced in the direction from which the
+landlord’s voice came, and shrugged his shoulders
+disdainfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Give that calf more rope, or he’ll bellow his
+head off,” he said; at which would-be witticism
+the local crowd in the vicinity of McLaughlin broke
+into a chorus of jeers and catcalls.</p>
+
+<p>“A pitcher who talks back,” muttered the hotel
+proprietor, “has a goat to let. We’ll get his before
+the game’s done, or I’m no judge.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin found the plate with a couple of pitches,
+and nodded to the batter, who stepped into his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
+place. Behind the pan, Yapp, signaling, spoke
+only for the hitter’s ear:</p>
+
+<p>“He’s got awful speed. He kills ’em sometimes.
+Look out for his bean ball.”</p>
+
+<p>Following the signal, Elgin whipped a scorcher
+straight at the head of the batter, who gasped, and
+ducked barely in time.</p>
+
+<p>“Look out!” cried the pitcher even as the sphere
+left his fingers. And then, as Yapp handled it and
+returned it promptly, he said apologetically: “I
+haven’t pitched for a week, and I may be a little
+wild.”</p>
+
+<p>That was enough for that hitter, whose three
+swings failed to touch anything more solid than
+the ozone.</p>
+
+<p>“So that’s his game in the bush, is it?” growled
+Kennedy. “Don’t let him drive you away from
+the plate. Everybody stand up and hit the ball.”</p>
+
+<p>No one, however, seemed to care to be hit by
+Elgin’s speed, and the new man stopped the Deers
+in their tracks; which brought him another ovation
+from the local crowd.</p>
+
+<p>Sullivan started badly by handing one to the
+first Buccaneer who faced him in the third which
+the hitter slashed into right for a single. Remembering
+Bristol’s instructions, the runner
+went down to second on Sullivan’s first swing,
+from which anchorage it would be possible for
+him to score on the right kind of a safety. Then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
+Sullivan dealt out a pass, which brought Kennedy
+to his feet, and caused Heines to come trotting
+slowly and reluctantly toward the mound.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty Locke, joining the spare catcher, began
+to warm up.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII<br>
+<small>FILLING THE BREACH</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Like Jewett in the first two innings, Heines
+was lucky, and the change enabled the
+Deers to hold the locals, despite their
+savage efforts to increase the lead.</p>
+
+<p>“Keep after them!” urged Kennedy, as the
+players came to the bench. “There are six more
+innings to follow. If you can hit this fellow Elgin
+at all, and we can hold them where they are,
+we’ll be neck and neck with them to-night, or I’ve
+never seen a game of baseball. Elgin has got a
+jinx, and he’ll show up before long. Don’t let
+him put the Injun sign on you with his bean ball.”</p>
+
+<p>But, in spite of old Jack’s attempt to encourage
+his batters, Elgin seemed to have the “Injun
+sign” on the Deers.</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t hit him,” Yapp told the three batters
+who faced Buck’s pitcher in the first of the
+fourth. “If you did you’d never get farther than
+first, for you’d see him tighten like a bowstring.
+You never could hit a real pitcher, anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>He made them believe it, too. And when a batter
+thinks he cannot hit a pitcher it is only by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
+most remarkable bull luck that he ever gets as
+much as a scratch single. So Elgin had it easy,
+striking out two men and fielding the weak roller
+which the third sent his way.</p>
+
+<p>“Gods of war!” growled Kennedy. “I’ll have
+to get out there myself, and show them how to hit
+this gink. If they ever fell on him he’d take a
+sail. Where’s Locke? Oh, there he is—at it.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Jack watched the work of Heines like a
+hawk, waiting for the first show of wabbling; for
+by this time Locke had loosened his wing, and
+could come to the rescue. Just what he could do
+against Bert Elgin, Kennedy believed he knew.
+The old manager remembered that first game with
+the Hornets, when the two youngsters had faced
+each other in the Big League; remembered that
+Elgin had gone down to defeat and disgrace, while
+Lefty Locke made his reputation under the most
+trying circumstances a new man could possibly
+meet. Just now, as on that other occasion, with
+the great mass of spectators favoring him, Elgin
+seemed invincible; but with the first cry of “Take
+him out!” Kennedy believed the yellow streak
+would show. Would the break in the game lead
+the local crowd to shout for his removal? While
+he was going strong the little bunch of Deering
+fans might howl themselves black in the face without
+effect.</p>
+
+<p>Peter McLaughlin kept up his efforts to get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
+Elgin’s goat, even though by so doing he was inviting
+personal injury from rabid Hatfielders
+within reach of him. And when a scrap starts
+out in the bush it is liable to make Ty Cobb’s whipping
+of an insolent fan look like fisticuffs between
+kittens at play. McLaughlin, however, had a
+mouth, and he was not afraid to use it in Hatfield
+or at home.</p>
+
+<p>“Shut up, you old toad,” commanded an angry
+spectator, “or somebody will hand you a wallop
+on the ear!”</p>
+
+<p>“When you come to Deering,” old Peter flung
+back, “you can talk and holler all you please, and
+anybody that tries to stop you will get into trouble
+with me. You can’t muzzle me here.”</p>
+
+<p>Those who knew him were aware that nothing
+save a sleep jab or a gag would keep him still, and
+some there were who found amusement in his apparently
+futile efforts to jar Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>Two more outfield catches promised to let
+Heines get away with another inning, but, with
+every man hitting the ball when he put it near the
+plate, it was his support that saved him to that
+point. Two safeties, however, landed runners on
+first and second, and a successful double steal
+caused Kennedy to shove out the hook again.
+Then the change catcher told Locke that his turn
+had come. The crowd watched the southpaw jogging
+to the slab; only McLaughlin and the Deering<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
+fans cheered him. Following that cheer, Elgin,
+on the coaching line, called to Pop Doyle, the
+man at bat:</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s a portsider with a straight ball and a
+prayer. He’ll put one over in your groove if you
+wait, and then you’ll show ’em why he isn’t pitching
+in the Big League now.”</p>
+
+<p>Doyle, a left-handed hitter, did not like southpaw
+pitchers, but Elgin had told every man on the
+team that the fellow who called himself Stranger
+was a frost; and the batter grinned like a wolf
+while Locke got the range of the pan with two or
+three throws, after Coffin had told him the signals.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s the fence, Pop!” cried Bristol, swinging
+two bats, with the expectation of following
+Doyle. “Get another pair of shoes by putting it
+over. You’ve won enough footwear to last you
+five years already. You can start a little retail
+store of your own when the season’s over. Make
+Kennedy’s new man contribute to your stock.”</p>
+
+<p>“You can’t get his goat that way,” howled
+McLaughlin. “He’s your jinx, and you know it.
+Give him a cheer, boys!”</p>
+
+<p>The bunch of Deering rooters responded lustily,
+but their cheer was drowned by the crowd roaring
+for Doyle to lace it out.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII<br>
+<small>THE MAN ON THE MOUND</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Pop Doyle rapped the rubber and
+squared away like a man who believed he
+could drop another one over the fence
+any time he wished. This was the time to do it,
+too. This was the time to break the new pitcher’s
+heart before he could get his feet under him.
+This was the pinch in the game, with the temporarily
+faltering tide threatening to flow on and
+overwhelm the Deers.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was the sympathy of all the visitors with
+the new pitcher. Curley, Sullivan, and Heines
+knew that the success of Stranger might mean
+that at least one of them would receive his release,
+and, together on the bench, they nursed their ineffective
+whips, waiting and hoping to see Doyle do
+things to the southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>What passed in Lefty Locke’s mind as he toed
+the slab and took Coffin’s signal not even Kennedy
+could know. Did he remember other occasions
+when he had faced batters more formidable than
+Doyle and felt no tremor of apprehension, or was
+the past a forgotten blank? Was he at that moment<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
+the Phil Hazelton who had made good under
+Kennedy with the majors, or was he Bob Stranger,
+now pitching for the first time in a game of baseball?
+Did he remember Elgin, whose trickery had
+so nearly ended his Big League prospects, or was
+his present rival and former foe absolutely unknown
+to him? Whatever he thought at that moment,
+his face revealed nothing. It was as
+impassive as a mask; the grim, determined mask
+of one who knew his task and was ready to meet it.</p>
+
+<p>Coffin, having signaled, put up his glove behind
+Doyle’s shoulder, and, as he had thrown at old
+Jack’s hands in the morning, Lefty Locke whipped
+the ball past the batter’s chin and into the pocket
+of that yawning mitt. There was no attempt to
+drive the batter back from the pan, yet Doyle,
+jerking his head away, heard the umpire declare a
+strike. Instantly he kicked on the decision, and
+Hank Bristol flung one of his two bats high into
+the air. The local fans roared their disapproval,
+encouraged by these movements of the batter and
+the manager.</p>
+
+<p>“Robbery!” shouted Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>“Robbery! Robbery!” came from the crowd.
+“That was a ball!”</p>
+
+<p>Coffin, laughing, snapped the sphere back to
+Lefty, who stopped it with his gloved right hand,
+and permitted it to drop into his bare left, the old
+movement which was so familiar to Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
+
+<p>“That’s him!” whispered old Jack to himself.
+“That’s Lefty, sure. Let him get squared away,
+and they’re through scoring. If they don’t make
+another run this inning, it’s all off, and we’ve got
+’em going.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty gave little heed to the anxious base runners.
+He had selected Doyle for his victim, and
+it was easier and safer to keep after him than to
+take the chance of throwing to the sacks when it
+was not necessary to drive the runners back.</p>
+
+<p>Having made his kick, Doyle was satisfied,
+though Bristol kept it up until warned by the umpire
+that he would be chased from the game.
+The next one pitched by Lefty was wide. When
+it was called a ball, the crowd sarcastically howled
+at the umpire, and asked him if he was sure it was
+not a strike.</p>
+
+<p>Peter McLaughlin found it almost impossible
+to remain on his seat. “You’ve got him!” the
+old man shouted. “He can’t hit ye, Stranger!
+He can’t see your fast ones. Give him a curve
+now, and see what he can do with it.”</p>
+
+<p>Without looking in the direction of the excited
+hotel proprietor, Lefty nodded and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to try you with a curve, Doyle,” he
+told the batter. “Let’s see if you can win any
+shoes off it.”</p>
+
+<p>Coffin called for another straight one across
+Doyle’s shoulder, but Locke shook his head.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I told him I was going to pitch a curve,” he
+said. “Mr. Kennedy showed me one or two this
+morning. I wonder if I’ve forgotten how to use
+them?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lay one over anywhere,” invited Doyle, “and
+I’ll break the fence.”</p>
+
+<p>Even as he spoke, Locke pitched, starting the
+ball high, and making it take a break across the
+batter’s shoulders. Whereupon Doyle pounded
+the air for a second strike.</p>
+
+<p>“Told you you had him foul!” whooped McLaughlin.
+“How can he hit ’em? He can’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Make him put ’em across, Pop,” urged Bristol.
+“Don’t let him fool you again.”</p>
+
+<p>Now, Lefty had deceived Doyle completely by
+telling him just what he was going to pitch, for the
+batter had looked for something entirely different.</p>
+
+<p>“Try another,” he entreated. “Give me another
+like that, and see it go out of the lot.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Lefty, “I’ll do it, if you’ll agree
+to swing.”</p>
+
+<p>“Look out for the straight one now!” shouted
+Elgin from the coaching line. “I know his pitching.
+That’s the way he mixes ’em—a curve and
+a straight one. That’s why he didn’t last in the
+Big League. They got wise to him. Meet it, Pop—meet
+it!”</p>
+
+<p>But, to the surprise of Elgin, although Lefty
+swung his arm as if about to waft over a smoker,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
+he made such a beautiful change of pace that
+Doyle barely saved himself by holding the bat
+back on the swing. The slow ball dropped to the
+ground six inches in front of the plate, and Coffin
+gathered it on the bound.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s two and two,” said Elgin. “It takes
+only one to hit it.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty rubbed his bare hand on the hip of Kennedy’s
+old Blue Stocking pants. “I’ve got another
+curve,” he observed thoughtfully. “Let me
+see if I can remember that one.”</p>
+
+<p>He threw it a moment later, the hook which
+dropped and twisted to the far side of the plate
+beyond Doyle; and again the batter checked himself
+on the swing, rejoicing when the umpire’s decision
+made it three to two.</p>
+
+<p>“Now,” he said, “you’ve got to put it over or
+hand me a walk. You don’t dare put it across!”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m going to put it across,” promised Lefty;
+“and of course I’ll have to use a straight one.”</p>
+
+<p>In such a hole some pitchers would have found
+it necessary to use the straight one. Apparently
+Locke pitched with that intention. Doyle tried
+to meet the ball and hoist it over the fence. It
+was another of those baffling “Johnson hooks”
+to the outside corner, and he missed by inches.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re out!” cried the umpire; and Peter
+McLaughlin had a fit then and there.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV<br>
+<small>THE OTHER PITCHER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Old Jack Kennedy’s lips were pressed together,
+not a word coming from them as
+Lefty Locke strode to the bench; but in
+the depths of the manager’s eyes there was a
+wonderful glow, and he could feel his usually
+steady pulse pounding with an erratic throb.</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s the boy who could have pitched the
+Blue Stockings to a pennant,” he thought; “and
+Al Carson didn’t know a good thing when he had
+it. He didn’t know how to handle the lad.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did I get away with that all right?” asked
+Lefty, with surprising simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>“Huh!” grunted Kennedy. “They didn’t
+score, did they? You ain’t heard anybody kickin’,
+have you?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s some pitcher—he really is,” murmured
+Coffin, slipping into place between Sullivan and
+Curley.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, wait,” muttered the big red-headed
+pitcher. “He’s only had to face one man, and I
+didn’t see that he showed so much.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Bucks will size him up in about two innings,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
+prophesied Curley, “and when they do—good
+night, Mr. Stranger!”</p>
+
+<p>“They’ve got a real pitcher in that fellow Elgin,”
+said Sullivan. “He struts like a peacock,
+sure; but he’s got speed and slants, and he knows
+where to put ’em.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s my opinion,” said Coffin, “that Bob
+Stranger has got a little smoke himself, and that
+queer, twisting drop of his would fool old Honus
+Wagner.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it would!” scoffed Curley. “It fooled
+Doyle once, but wait till next time, Coff—just you
+wait!”</p>
+
+<p>Even while this brief conversation was taking
+place, Elgin, still graceful, confident, and filled
+with ginger by the applause of the crowd, retired
+Captain Kilgore by the pop-fly route, and took on
+Buster Brown. Coffin, who followed Brown, began
+looking around for his pet bat.</p>
+
+<p>“You look to me like a blowed-up bladder,” said
+Brown, addressing Elgin. “Put one across, and
+see me nail it. But look out you don’t blow all to
+pieces when the bladder’s pricked.”</p>
+
+<p>“Get his goat! Get his goat!” howled Peter
+McLaughlin from the stand. “You can get it!”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin gave Brown a contemptuous smile.
+“Why,” he said, “you couldn’t hit me if I told you
+what I was going to throw. This will be a spitter.
+You never could hit a spitter.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
+
+<p>Holding the ball covered by both hands, his head
+went back with a motion which seemed to indicate
+that he pasted one side of the ball with saliva.
+Then he actually threw the spitter to Brown, and
+Brown missed.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll give you another, you big dub!” said Elgin.
+“Another just like that. Now, go ahead
+with your puncturing.”</p>
+
+<p>As good as his word, he threw another spitter,
+and again Brown fanned.</p>
+
+<p>“Say,” said the batter, “you’re copying the
+style of Kennedy’s new left-hander, ain’t you, telling
+the batter what you’re going to throw?
+You’re nothing but a plain copy, anyhow.”</p>
+
+<p>Somehow this touched Elgin, and his face
+burned. “If I was going to copy anybody,” he
+retorted, “I’d take a real pitcher for a model.”</p>
+
+<p>“Keep him chewin’ the rag,” bellowed McLaughlin.
+“You’ll git that goat yet.”</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, Elgin was so exasperated that he made
+a tremendously wild pitch, and, seeing it coming,
+Brown took a chance, and pretended that he was
+trying to hit it. With the swing, he let his bat fly
+to one side, and was off toward first, which he
+reached before the disgusted Yapp could recover
+the ball and stop him.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, wow, wow!” laughed Buster mockingly.
+“It’s a good thing the stand was behind Yapp.
+They’d never found that wild heave if it hadn’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
+been. Keep on shooting your face off, peacock.
+We like it.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’d never get to first any other way,” said
+Elgin. “Congratulate yourself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind him,” called Yapp, as the catcher
+for the Deers walked out to the plate. “Put a nail
+in this Coffin. You can do that just as well as you
+can Kilgore.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, you’re a real wit, Yappy,” said Coffin.
+“Why don’t you get his umps to call time while
+you laugh at your own jokes?”</p>
+
+<p>“Speaking about jokes,” returned Yapp,
+“you’re one. I heard Kennedy kept you in the
+game and put you behind the bat for your hitting.
+Well, you won’t fat your average off Elgin.”</p>
+
+<p>Now, Yapp really knew Coffin’s weakness, and,
+with Elgin’s perfect control, the man was worked
+for a strike-out, although Brown stole second
+while this was taking place.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t exert yourself,” said Elgin, looking
+around at Buster; “’twon’t be necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty Locke was the hitter now, and Elgin
+seemed to have little doubt in his mind as to what
+he could do with him.</p>
+
+<p>“You thought you was something when you
+made the Blue Stockings, didn’t you?” said Elgin,
+as Lefty took his place in the box.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon,” returned Locke. “I
+think you’ve got me mixed with some other man.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you do, eh?” sneered Bert. “Call yourself
+Stranger now, eh? I sure don’t blame you at
+all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why don’t you pitch instead of talking so
+much?” demanded Lefty impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I’ll pitch in a minute,” returned the other,
+nodding to Yapp to signal. “You seem in a big
+hurry to strike out.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty made no further remark, but waited in position
+to swing easily at anything the pitcher
+might put over. Nevertheless, two strikes were
+called on him, and he had not attempted to hit
+one, much to the amusement of the great crowd,
+before he finally got what he wanted. The ring
+of wood meeting leather brought a gasp from the
+crowd. It was a line drive straight over the head
+of Berlin, who jumped vainly for it.</p>
+
+<p>Now, at Elgin’s suggestion, the fielders had all
+been switched round to the left; for, despite the
+fact that he was a left-hander, Locke frequently
+hit hard into left field. This movement had
+brought the right fielder almost in line with that
+tremendous drive; otherwise he could not have
+touched it. The change enabled him to make a
+marvelous running bare-handed catch which
+robbed Lefty of a three-bagger, at least, and prevented
+Brown from tying up the score.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, dear, dear!” sighed Peter McLaughlin,
+sinking back into his seat. “What a crack!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
+What luck! Why, that fellow can hit ’em—he just
+can.”</p>
+
+<p>Brown, swinging toward home after crossing
+third, and being told that it was useless to run,
+twisted his mug at Bert Elgin.</p>
+
+<p>“Luck saved you that time, Mr. Pouter Pigeon,”
+he said. “You’re due to get yours good and
+plenty before the day is over.”</p>
+
+<p>Although he shrugged and sneered, away down
+deep in his heart Elgin felt a touch of apprehension
+lest the words of Buster Brown were
+prophetic.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV<br>
+<small>THE STEAL HOME</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">The game, which had started out so loosely,
+and threatened to become wretched at any
+moment, was now turned into a pitchers’
+battle, with Locke and Elgin working against each
+other. Settling down, Lefty became silent, attending
+strictly to business. At no time, save in
+the threatening moments, did he seem exerting
+himself to his utmost. The uproar of the crowd,
+calculated to disturb his coolness, seemed no more
+effective than the murmur of a summer breeze.</p>
+
+<p>“If they think they can rattle him in this little
+one-horse burg,” Kennedy whispered to himself,
+“they should have seen him pitchin’ before thirty
+thousand howlin’ fans in the Big League. Why,
+he’s just monkeyin’ with that bunch. With him,
+we can walk away with the bunting, sure as fate.”</p>
+
+<p>With him! But what right had he to keep
+Lefty Locke, under contract with the Blue Stockings?
+What right had he to hold this man, the
+lack of whose pitching might prevent the Blue
+Stockings from taking the championship? Was
+it not his duty to notify Al Carson as soon as possible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
+that the missing pitcher had turned up in
+Deering?</p>
+
+<p>“But Lefty’s under suspension,” thought Kennedy.
+“They wouldn’t be using him now if they
+had him. Oh, I’ve got to talk it over with him,
+and talk straight. It’s the only way.”</p>
+
+<p>There was little time for thoughts like these.
+The locals still held that one-run lead, and Elgin,
+pitching like a man with life at stake, refused in
+the sixth and seventh innings to let one of the
+Deers as much as threaten to tie it up. On the
+other hand, in both of those innings the Bucks got
+a runner to second with only one out, whereupon,
+however, Locke tightened promptly, and there was
+nothing further doing.</p>
+
+<p>The eighth opened with Brown leading off, and
+he talked to Elgin a blue streak until the pitcher
+finally fanned him.</p>
+
+<p>“Go sit down, and close up that hot-air vent,”
+said Bert.</p>
+
+<p>Coffin picked a slant, and smashed it like a
+bullet straight into the hands of the shortstop for
+the second out.</p>
+
+<p>Then, again, Lefty Locke stepped forth, and
+Peter McLaughlin shrieked:</p>
+
+<p>“Here’s the man to hit him! Here’s the boy!
+It’s all off now! He’ll tie it up.”</p>
+
+<p>Once more, away down in Elgin’s heart, he felt
+that throb of apprehension. This was the man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
+who had ruined his chances in the Big League, the
+man who had seemed favored in everything by
+luck—Lucky Locke he should be called, Elgin
+thought. And only for the chance that had
+brought Hartford over nearly into center field,
+Locke would have scored Brown on a clean drive
+the last time up.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll pass him,” declared Elgin suddenly.
+“I’ll pretend I’m trying to put the ball over, but
+I’ll pass him.”</p>
+
+<p>It was the weak spot, the yellow streak coming
+to the surface. With two out and no one on the
+sacks, there was really little danger that Locke
+could make a home run; yet Elgin was afraid.
+From over at one side, in the midst of the little
+knot of Deering fans, Peter McLaughlin seemed
+to realize Elgin’s purpose by the time Bert had
+handed up the second wide one.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s scat!” yelled the old hotel man. “Yaller—yaller!
+He don’t dare put one over! He’s
+quittin’!”</p>
+
+<p>The coachers took up the cry of “Yellow,” and
+Elgin viciously bit his under lip.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll just put one bender over,” he decided.
+“I’ll show them that I’m not afraid to slant one
+across.”</p>
+
+<p>Using his curve, he put the ball over; but it
+never reached the waiting hands of Yapp. Again
+Lefty met it fairly, and again it went whistling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
+out on a line. This time, however, neither infielder
+nor outfielder could touch it. Only for a
+long rebound from the fence into the hands of a
+player, who promptly returned the sphere to the
+diamond, Locke, covering ground like a deer,
+would have turned the hit into a homer.</p>
+
+<p>McLaughlin and the Deering bunch were howling
+themselves purple in the face. Old Jack Kennedy,
+on the coaching line, flapped his arms and
+laughed at Elgin, whose face was pale as a sheet
+of paper.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, he knows how to hit you, Elgin. He can
+do it every time,” said the old manager. “If the
+head of the list wasn’t up now, I’d go in myself
+and pound him across. Collins,” he snapped, as
+Chick came out from the bench with a bat, “if you
+dodge a bean ball this time I’ll fine you a week’s
+pay. Take it on the nut if he throws it.”</p>
+
+<p>“If he—if he does,” muttered Elgin hoarsely,
+“you’ll carry him home in a box.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, no—oh, no!” derided old Jack. “Why,
+you couldn’t crack a pane of glass with your swift
+one. Get hit, Chick, if he throws at you—get hit.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” grinned Collins. “Let her come.”</p>
+
+<p>Elgin pitched only once to Collins before something
+happened. Yapp snapped the ball back, and
+Bert, catching it with one hand, was kicking a pebble
+out of the pitching box when a sudden wild yell
+arose. He turned in surprise, and saw Locke racing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
+down from third, actually attempting to tie
+the score by stealing home. And that with the
+head of the batting order up! The astounding
+unexpectedness of such a thing took away Elgin’s
+breath, and made him hesitate for a fraction of a
+second.</p>
+
+<p>Yapp, leaping forward to block the runner off,
+shrieked for Elgin to throw the ball. Awaking
+suddenly, Bert threw it. In his haste, however,
+he whipped it wide, and Yapp was forced to reach
+in the wrong direction.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty Locke hit the dirt feet first, shot under
+the Buccaneers’ catcher, and scraped one foot
+across the rubber.</p>
+
+<p>“Safe!” shouted the umpire, his hands outspread.</p>
+
+<p>The great crowd was silent—all save a little
+bunch led by Peter McLaughlin, who were yelling
+like lunatics. Elgin, ghastly white, was dumb. It
+had happened, after all—the thing he feared;
+this fellow Locke had snatched the opportunity
+to make him ridiculous before a bush-league
+crowd. Like poison fire, hatred burned and
+seethed in Elgin’s heart. He did not hear Bristol
+raging at him from first. His eyes followed
+Locke as the latter, rising, pounded the dust out of
+Kennedy’s Blue Stocking uniform, and turned toward
+the bench as calmly as if stealing home was
+a common thing with him.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI<br>
+<small>STRANGER IS ANNOYED</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Gods of our fathers!” said Buster
+Brown as Locke reached the bench.
+“You done it, old boy, and you done
+it slick. I’ll bet that man Elgin goes up so far
+you can’t see him with the Lick telescope.”</p>
+
+<p>As for Elgin, he spent some minutes in an apparent
+endeavor to steady himself; then, when he
+pitched again to Collins, Chick smashed out a safe
+drive.</p>
+
+<p>The fusillade of singles and doubles and triples
+which followed gave the Deers four more runs before
+Bristol came to realize that Elgin was wholly
+gone, and sent another man to the mound.</p>
+
+<p>“Got his goat! I knew we would!” rejoiced
+Landlord McLaughlin. “It’s all over but the
+shouting. Nobody is afeared of the Buccaneers
+now.”</p>
+
+<p>Appalled and silenced by the sudden turn of the
+game and the amazing and unexpected downfall
+of their pitching hero, many of the disgusted local
+spectators crept out of the stand and stole away
+before the Buccaneers went down to defeat in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
+last of the ninth, vainly seeking up to the finish to
+fathom the delivery of Kennedy’s southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>When it was all over, Locke lost not a moment
+in dashing away toward the dressing room—an
+action which seemed instinctive or born of baseball
+experience in other days. He was pursued
+by the shrill cheering of the little bunch of delighted
+Deering fans.</p>
+
+<p>Elgin had vanished. Crushed, bitter, unspeakably
+humiliated, after his removal from the box
+he had lost no time in leaving the field. He could
+not realize that retribution had reached forth its
+iron hand and touched him again, as it will any
+and all of us who do wrong and have a conscience
+that must cause us to suffer.</p>
+
+<p>Reaching the dressing room, Lefty had peeled
+off the old uniform, and was ready for a hasty
+shower before his teammates arrived. They came
+in rejoicing, with the possible exception of the
+jealous pitchers who had failed in the early stages
+of the game.</p>
+
+<p>“Stranger, of the southpaw!” cried Kilgore, as
+Locke seized a towel and began rubbing himself
+dry. “You were there when the hour struck.
+That steal home broke Elgin’s heart. Never saw
+a man blow up so sudden before. Couldn’t touch
+him before that; everybody hit him afterward.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Jack Kennedy came in. “Let me massage
+that portside flinger of yours, Stranger,” he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
+urged. “We’ve no regular rubber to look after
+it, so I’ll have to give it what it needs.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty submitted to the massaging of his strong,
+free-swinging left arm and shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“How did you happen to try that steal to the
+plate?” asked Kennedy, as he worked over the
+man’s arm.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know,” was the answer. “Seems to
+me I’ve done it before, but of course I haven’t,
+never having played baseball.”</p>
+
+<p>“You have played baseball—take it from me,”
+said Kennedy. “Perhaps you’ve forgotten about
+it, but you’ve played the game aplenty.”</p>
+
+<p>“Anyhow,” said Locke, “something told me to
+go home when I saw Elgin getting a bit careless
+in the box. I knew it would tie things up if I
+scored, and it might put him off his pins. If I
+failed, we’d still have another chance in the first
+of the ninth inning. Before I knew it I was
+streaking to the plate. Of course it was luck.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course there was some luck about it,”
+agreed old Jack; “but it took nerve and judgment.
+If you’d failed, everybody would have handed you
+the laugh.”</p>
+
+<p>“That wouldn’t have disturbed me,” said
+Locke. “A man can’t do much if he’s never going
+to try anything for fear he’ll be laughed at if he
+fails. Sometimes a sense of humor helps; other
+times it hurts.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
+
+<p>“That’s philosophy,” said Kennedy. “Now
+you’re talking like yourself, son.”</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, at that moment Locke appeared like
+the fine, forceful, jovial fellow Kennedy had
+known him to be, having lost much of his shadowy
+gloom and all that peculiar style of talk which
+had bothered old Jack not a little.</p>
+
+<p>Locke was fully dressed and ready to leave when
+a prematurely corpulent young man arrived at the
+dressing-room door and inquired for Phil Hazelton.</p>
+
+<p>“Nobody by that name here,” he was told.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait a minute,” called Kennedy, who had
+heard the words. “Who’s that? The young doctor
+who follows up the Bucks? I’ve seen him over
+in Deering.”</p>
+
+<p>“My name is Hetner,” said the man at the door.
+“I’m Doctor Wallace Hetner, and I’d like to have
+just a word with my old college friend, Hazelton.
+Perhaps he doesn’t call himself by that name in
+baseball. Perhaps he calls himself Locke. And
+I see by the score sheet that he was down to-day
+as Stranger.”</p>
+
+<p>Lefty turned and stepped to the door to face
+the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>“You must mean me,” he said. “I’m the
+Stranger who pitched for the Deers.”</p>
+
+<p>“And you’re Phil Hazelton,” said Doctor Hetner.
+“I wondered what had become of you, Hazelton.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
+You were on the train with me when the
+smash came. You were on that very smoking
+car. I spoke to you a short time before the car
+jumped the track. Don’t you remember?”</p>
+
+<p>Locke shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a singular thing,” he said, “but people
+get me mixed up with someone else. They persist
+in thinking I’m some other person. My name is
+Robert Stranger, pal. I’m a diamond cutter by
+trade. My health ain’t just what it should be, and
+a pill slinger advised me to get outdoors somewhere
+and work on a farm. That’s how I happen
+to be here.”</p>
+
+<p>Hetner’s jaw dropped, and he stared hard at
+the speaker. At the same time, behind Locke’s
+back, Kennedy clenched his right fist, and his eyes
+narrowed as he listened to this sudden change in
+the young left-hander’s style of speech.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right, doctor,” he said suddenly.
+“Folks seem to think that Stranger, here, is someone
+else. Even I made that mistake. It annoys
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mean to tell me,” persisted Doctor
+Hetner, his eyes fastened on Locke, “that you
+weren’t on that train when a broken rail sent us
+into the ditch? I looked for you among the injured
+or killed, but couldn’t find you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never was in a train wreck in my life,” said
+Lefty.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span></p>
+
+<p>Baffled, the doctor turned away, mumbling an
+excuse, although not at all satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish they’d quit that,” said Lefty, brushing
+a hand across his forehead. “I wish they’d stop
+taking me for some other person. It’s infernally
+annoying.”</p>
+
+<p>“It must be,” agreed Kennedy, turning to Toots
+Kilgore. “Toots,” he said, in a low tone, “take
+the boys to the hotel and get supper. If I’m not
+there, I’ll meet you at the train.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII<br>
+<small>THE DOCTOR’S DOUBTS</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Yes,” said Doctor Hetner, sitting in his
+office, facing Manager Kennedy, “of
+course it’s possible for such a thing to
+happen. Of course, the man’s mind may be affected,
+and he may not remember his former life
+and friends. At the same time, he may be suffering
+under a delusion, which has led him to take
+a new name and assume a different character.
+Such instances, although rare, are well known to
+medical science.”</p>
+
+<p>“What brings them about?” inquired Kennedy
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“Overstudy, overwork, a diseased condition of
+the body or mind, a sudden shock—oh, numerous
+things. It has almost a thousand different forms.
+Psychologists and physicians who make a study
+of the subject recognize many of the symptoms.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you made a study of it, doc?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not what you might call a thorough study, although,
+of course, among my books I have many
+which deal with neurasthenia and its allied forms.
+Still, I’ll give you my word that I never for a moment
+recognized the symptoms in Hazelton. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
+seemed to me that the fellow, when he met me on
+the train, was simply declining to acknowledge an
+old acquaintance for reasons of pride or something
+of that sort. That it was aphasia didn’t
+occur to me. It’s likely you know how he happened
+to go into baseball under a fake name?”</p>
+
+<p>“But there ain’t no disgrace playing baseball
+these days,” growled the old manager. “There’s
+as clean a set of fellers in the game as you can find
+anywhere.”</p>
+
+<p>“Nevertheless, prejudice exists in the minds of
+many old-fashioned persons, such as Phil Hazelton’s
+father must be. To them, playing baseball
+is a great deal like taking part in a circus
+performance. They can’t see that it has become
+an honorable, legitimate, recognized profession,
+followed by hundreds upon hundreds of clean, honest
+young men. You understand why I doubt this
+being a genuine case of loss of identity? I believe
+Hazelton is trying to hide himself under an
+assumed name and personality.”</p>
+
+<p>Old Jack shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>“He ain’t no fool, doctor; he can’t help knowing
+that I know him and you know him. Elgin
+knows him, too. If he was a simple-minded idiot,
+he might continue to try to keep up the bluff. I
+tell you, that boy has gone wrong in his garret,
+and something ought to be done for him. I don’t
+know just how to do it.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Well, now, look here,” said the doctor; “I’m
+coming over to Deering in a day or two, Kennedy.
+In the meantime, I want you to try to trip Hazelton.
+Lead him into some sort of a give-away, an
+admission, then nail him. Tell him it isn’t any
+use to stick to the bluff.”</p>
+
+<p>“And have him get red-headed and tell me to
+go straight to—well, you know where.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind that.”</p>
+
+<p>“But I do mind. With him pitching for the
+Deers, we can put ourselves into first place in two
+weeks’ time. I know just what he can do. Talk
+about John Coombs, the iron man, or ‘Cy’ Young
+in his palmy days—why, Lefty Locke is as good
+as either of them. He can pitch three days running,
+if necessary; and two or three games a week,
+with a day between each, is like loafing for him, especially
+in this bush league. Oh, I don’t want
+him to quit me!”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t blame you,” said Hetner, laughing;
+“but I don’t believe he’ll quit. Yet, if he belongs
+to the Blue Stockings, and they’re in need of
+him—”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy growled. “Then it’s up to me, if I’m
+decent, to let ’em know where they can find him.
+No matter how I feel about the way I was treated,
+it’s up to me just the same.”</p>
+
+<p>“Still,” said the physician, “if the man isn’t
+right in his head, it would be wrong for him to go<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
+on pitching baseball without any treatment whatever.”</p>
+
+<p>“Treatment?” said Kennedy. “Does treatment
+always cure ’em?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sometimes it won’t do a blessed bit of good.
+Nothing cures them but a long rest, and, perhaps,
+a sudden accidental occurrence which flashes back
+into their brain the realization of their true identity.
+Sometimes a situation may be successfully
+planned to bring this about; more often the most
+skillful planning results in absolute failure. But
+remember, I haven’t stated that Hazelton is a victim
+of such a delusion.”</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll find out whether he is or not, doctor,”
+said the old manager, rising. “If he’s fooling,
+I’ll catch him at it. I’ll let you know right away
+if I trip him somehow. So long, doc.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy had time to snatch a bite at the hotel
+and accompany the team to the station to take the
+train for Deering. Arriving at the latter place,
+they were welcomed by a gathering at the station,
+for the whole town had learned by telephone the
+result of the game in Hatfield.</p>
+
+<p>“Where’s your new pitcher, Jack—where is
+he?” they shouted. “He ought to be all right.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is,” assured Kennedy, waiting on the car
+platform until Lefty was forced to appear. “He
+didn’t let the Bucks have a run after he mounted
+the slab. Here’s Bob Stranger, gents, and, believe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
+me, he’s the man I’ve been looking for to
+win the pennant with. If I can keep him, we’ll
+nail it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Keep him!” yelled one of the crowd. “If you
+let him get away, your life won’t be safe around
+these parts!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII<br>
+<small>FIRST POSITION</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Of course, Locke went out to the farm
+with old Jack, and again they sat on the
+veranda, this time watching the moon
+coming up over the eastern horizon. For a long
+time Kennedy was silent as he smoked, and Locke
+also seemed busied with his thoughts. The moonlight,
+creeping beneath the veranda, fell upon
+Lefty’s face, making it seem strangely handsome
+and strangely sad. Suddenly the old manager
+burst out laughing.</p>
+
+<p>“Wonder if Bert Elgin will get his release the
+way he did the first time you went up against him
+with the Blue Stockings behind you, son?” he said.
+“You remember what Brennan done to Elgin after
+that game was over?”</p>
+
+<p>Locke swung round and faced the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t remember anything at all,” he said,
+“because, as far as I’m concerned, it never happened.
+Like the others, Mr. Kennedy, you’ve got
+me mixed up with another man.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe so,” said old Jack; “but I don’t believe
+it. Look here, if you ain’t Lefty Locke, the boy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
+who pitched for me when I was handling the Blue
+Stockings the first of the season, how does it happen
+that you can go into a game same as you did
+to-day and pitch like a veteran?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s one thing I can’t answer,” was the
+confession. “Of course, you gave me some practice
+here in the morning, but—”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy snapped his fingers. “All I gave you
+didn’t amount to that, unless you knew how to
+pitch before,” he declared. “No matter how
+much you remembered, it was what you didn’t
+seem to remember that was telling you what to do
+in that game. That’s how you could go in there
+and win for us. I don’t know where you picked
+up the name of Stranger, but—”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve always had that name. I’m a diamond
+cutter, pal. My folks were rather strait-laced, and
+I was a wild one. They’re both gone, and I’m
+alone in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“That sounds first-rate as fur as it goes,” said
+Kennedy; “but it don’t go fur. Where was you
+born, and where was you brung up? You’ve got
+plenty of folks who know about you, of course.
+Where be they?”</p>
+
+<p>“I was just trying to think,” said Locke.
+“Something has made me forget, but I’ll remember
+to-morrow, perhaps.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hope you do,” said Kennedy. “If you remember,
+you’ll get it straightened out that I was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
+your manager. The new owner fired me, and Al
+Carson took my place. Something happened between
+you and Carson. You didn’t get along. I
+was watching things in the papers. You was fined
+and suspended. Then the team was mixed up in
+that railroad smash, an—”</p>
+
+<p>“Stop!” interrupted Locke, in mingled excitement
+and confusion. “I can’t follow you as fast
+as that. No use for me to try.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you remember—you remember now?”
+persisted Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“Not a thing,” was the reply. “I still think
+you’re mistaken.”</p>
+
+<p>The following morning Kennedy sent a telegram
+to Al Carson, of the Blue Stockings:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p class="noi">Can tell you where to find your missing pitcher, Locke.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">John Kennedy.</span><br></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>By noon he received an answer:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p class="noi">Don’t want to find him. He’s blacklisted for quitting.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Carson.</span><br></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Hooray!” said Kennedy, as he thrust the message
+into his pocket. “I’ve done my duty. They
+don’t want him. Now I can keep him—unless he
+gets cured of a sudden, and goes hustling back to
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>For a time the old manager felt nothing but
+keenest satisfaction over the situation. Gradually,
+however, having a conscience, he began to fret<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
+and worry. It was all wrong, he told himself, and
+the fact that Carson was prejudiced and had given
+Locke a rotten deal did not excuse him for remaining
+silent under the circumstances and using the
+youngster to his advantage. If Locke’s mind was
+affected immediate treatment was what the young
+man needed—immediate attention by an expert
+in mental disorders; and Kennedy could not con
+himself into satisfaction by saying over and over
+that nothing could be better for Lefty than the
+peace and quiet of the country, together with an
+occasional game of baseball to keep awake his interest
+in a life of action.</p>
+
+<p>“But I’ll wait till Monday, when the Bucks come
+over here,” he told himself. “That young doctor
+likely will come along at the same time, and we can
+talk it over again. I’ve got to have advice.”</p>
+
+<p>In this manner he pacified his troublesome conscience
+for the time being.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon, playing the Stars upon Deering
+field, the Deers, with Curley on the hillock,
+had it pretty much their own way. Danger of
+release had spurred Curley to do his level best,
+and in all the pinches he pitched with a skill which
+made his performance one of the finest exhibitions
+he had ever given in that bush league.</p>
+
+<p>Furthermore, the snatching of the game from
+the Buccaneers had inspired the Deers with new
+hope and fire, and they backed Curley up in an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
+errorless manner, and hit well. Not only that,
+but both Sullivan and Heines, before the game
+started, had asked to pitch.</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy knew what that meant. The work of
+Locke, and the probability that some one of the
+others would get his release, had put them all on
+their mettle.</p>
+
+<p>“Got ’em now,” thought old Jack; “got ’em
+where I want ’em. They’ll all work till they drop
+in the harness, and it’s only up to me to keep
+watch that I don’t push ’em beyond the limit.”</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the Stars were nervous and
+fearful and altogether too eager. They seemed
+to realize that the Deers, unless beaten right away,
+would eventually leap into first place and clinch
+the championship. A day or two earlier they had
+feared the Buccaneers most, but the victory of the
+Deers over the Bucks had brought a new menace to
+the front; and the former champions, having endured
+the strain to the seventh inning, went to
+pieces generally, handing the locals a well-earned
+but rather staggering victory.</p>
+
+<p>Lefty Locke sat on the bench, again wearing
+Kennedy’s Blue Stocking uniform. He had
+warmed up a little, although the manager had
+scarcely a thought of putting him in under any
+circumstances; and the visitors had watched him
+with the utmost interest. For surely an unknown
+twirler thrown into a game at Hatfield by Kennedy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
+and able to stop the fierce Buccaneers in
+their tracks, was a real pitcher.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder who he really is?” the bushers asked
+one another. “Stranger—that ain’t his name,
+never!”</p>
+
+<p>After the game was over, Kennedy, outwardly
+calm, but inwardly chuckling with satisfaction,
+made his way to the Central House, where he
+found Landlord McLaughlin ready to set out the
+cigars for everybody.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, say, Jack,” called the proprietor, as
+Kennedy strolled in, mopping his perspiring face,
+“things have turned our way, sartain. I knowed
+you could do it if we could only get you to take
+holt of the team. That there championship is as
+good as ourn.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t count your chickens before they’re
+hatched, Peter,” advised Kennedy. “You’ll find
+the Buccaneers and Hank Bristol still in the game.
+Of course, they put the Boobs to the mat to-day,
+but our winning from the Stars keeps us neck and
+neck with ’em, and ready to step into fust place
+before we go under the wire at the finish. To-morrow
+we’ll have a crack at the Boobs, and Monday
+we get another swing at the Bucks right here
+to home. Monday I’ll pitch Stranger again.
+Watch him trim them, if the boys back him up the
+way they did Curley to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Say, Jack,” chuckled the old man behind the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
+cigar counter, as he put forth box after box, “this
+town is sartain red-hot baseball crazy right now.
+Talk about Deering being dead! Why, it’s the
+liveliest little burg between the two oceans. Mark
+me, next Monday we’ll have out the best crowd
+that has ever seen a baseball game in these
+parts.”</p>
+
+<p>From a near-by booth came a sharp call of the
+telephone bell.</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe that’s the report of the game at Somerset,”
+said McLaughlin, leaving the cigars for anybody
+who wanted them to take one or a handful,
+and turning toward the booth. “I’ll just see if
+’tis, and find out how bad the Buccaneers beat the
+Boobs.”</p>
+
+<p>He entered the booth, and closed the door.
+Those outside heard him shouting into the receiver
+a few minutes later: “What? What’s that?
+Say it over. Ain’t you got that wrong end to?
+Well, I swan to man! Good-by.”</p>
+
+<p>The minute he could push open the door and
+stick his head out, he cried:</p>
+
+<p>“The Bucks have gone up! The Boobs beat
+’em four to two. We’re at the head of the league.
+Hooray!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX<br>
+<small>A TROUBLED MIND</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">A person who has never had any experience
+with baseball in the bush can
+scarcely realize the effect upon Deering
+of the knowledge that the local team had jumped
+into the lead and stood more than a fair prospect,
+managed by Kennedy, of winning the championship.
+The place, which ordinarily seemed rather
+sleepy and lifeless, suddenly seethed. Almost
+everyone, save crabbed old men or cranks prejudiced
+against the game, talked baseball, praised
+Kennedy, and speculated concerning his new left-handed
+wonder, who had beaten the dangerous
+Buccaneers.</p>
+
+<p>On Saturday afternoon the crowd that came
+streaming out to the field gladdened the hearts of
+the team’s backers by the manner in which they
+forked over their quarters at the box office. A
+flow of silver poured in, and the Deers, who had
+once seemed likely to end the season several hundred
+dollars in debt, saw a prospect of coming out
+ahead in finances—a prospect which made everyone
+rejoice.</p>
+
+<p>Of course Lefty Locke was the hero of the day.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
+Everyone stared at him. The girls whispered and
+giggled as they looked in his direction, and even
+young married women discreetly ventured to say
+that they considered him a very handsome man.
+There was something about his reserved bearing,
+the melancholy touch in his face, and the somber
+shadow in his eyes which seemed poetical and
+fascinating to those of the fair sex who observed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>In some manner, stories about him began to be
+whispered around. It was suggested that he had
+a broken heart, caused by some foolish girl, who
+had thrown him over for another man. Another
+story was that he was mourning for his sweetheart,
+who had died. The one humorous yarn of the lot
+was that he was a married man and the father
+of several children.</p>
+
+<p>But no matter what baseless speculation was
+circulated, each and every one of these stories
+simply made him seem all the more fascinating and
+attractive to the young women of Deering.</p>
+
+<p>But Lefty favored not one of them with more
+than a passing glance, and never in his eyes was
+there as much as a twinkling light.</p>
+
+<p>They had a chance to see Locke in action in the
+ninth inning, when, after pitching a great game to
+that point, Sullivan let down a little, and the
+Boobs, scampering over the sacks as they chose,
+threatened to snatch victory from defeat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
+
+<p>Old Jack was watching every turn like a hawk,
+and promptly he pulled Sullivan from the mound,
+and sent out Locke, who had warmed up once before
+and once during the game, but was now cold.</p>
+
+<p>With one man down, Lefty took the next two
+batters in hand, and buried the whooping, aggressive
+Boobs in short order. The first man he
+fanned, and the next he forced into putting up a
+little pop foul back of first base, which ended the
+game.</p>
+
+<p>Coming down from the park, half an hour later,
+Locke was surrounded and pursued by at least
+twenty youngsters, who openly discussed him for
+his own ears to hear, all agreeing that as a pitcher
+Christy Mathewson had nothing on this great
+southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>Ordinarily this would have provided no small
+amount of amusement for Lefty; now, however, he
+scarcely seemed to hear or see any of them as
+he strode along, his expression one of troubled
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>Was it possible that he was beginning to realize
+that his name was not Robert Stranger, and that,
+for all his protestations that he had never played
+baseball before coming to Deering, he had a past
+upon the diamond? At any rate, he moved like a
+shadow among those admiring people of Deering—among
+them, but not of them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span></p>
+
+<p>Sunday followed—Sunday on Kennedy’s farm.
+Old Jack made a suggestion about church, but
+Locke shook his head, saying he did not care to attend.
+And all day long he wandered restlessly
+about the farm, or sat idly on the veranda, declining
+to read, apparently striving to think—to
+think.</p>
+
+<p>“The poor boy’s worried, Jack,” said Mrs.
+Kitty Malone. “It upsets me complete to see him
+this way.”</p>
+
+<p>“Kit, I never thought the sight of any man
+would upset you again,” returned her brother.
+“I thought you’d had enough of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“So I have. But this is different—this case.
+He’s only a boy. I feel like a mother toward
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you do!” laughed Kennedy. “Oh, yes,
+you do—not. Why, you’re not so much older, Kit—not
+more than ten year, and he really is almost
+a boy.”</p>
+
+<p>“But ten year,” she said sadly. “If ’twere
+t’other way ’twould be different. Do you know
+what’s on his mind, Jack?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not sure,” he replied; “but mebbe I could
+make a guess. He had a girl once, if I remember
+right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Once!” she exclaimed. “I’m jealous this
+minute. But, then, I don’t see how he could help<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
+having twenty of them. What’s become of
+her?”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy shook his head. “Ask me!” he said.
+“There’s a whole lot about Lefty Locke that I’m
+guessin’ at.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lefty Locke? He calls himself Stranger.”</p>
+
+<p>“A man can call himself anything he pleases;
+there’s no law against it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s a real pitcher he is, Jack?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sis, you should have seen him pitch against
+Bristol’s Bucks! If you want to, you’ll have a
+chance to see him pitch against them Monday. I’m
+going to put him in. You should have seen him
+pitch for the Blue Stockings. They lost the best
+man on the staff when they lost him, but Al Carson
+is such a pig-headed chump that he won’t acknowledge
+it. He’d rather lose the pennant than own
+up that he’d made a mistake.”</p>
+
+<p>“And that’s the man they threw you down for,
+Jack, is it—after you’d won the championship
+twice before? It’s always the way in this world.
+The one who delivers the goods is thrown down
+for another who’s got the cheek to crowd himself
+in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not always the way, sis,” contradicted Kennedy,
+shaking his head. “It sometimes happens
+so, and when it does pessimists are inclined to
+say it always happens.”</p>
+
+<p>“What are these pessimists ye speak of?” she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
+asked quickly. “I don’t think I ever met one of
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“You were a bit inclined to be one yourself,”
+he replied, “until Robert Stranger came to the
+farm.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL<br>
+<small>THE REPORTER</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Everyone had heard that Locke would
+pitch again on Monday, and, having seen
+him wind up the game for Sullivan, their
+curiosity and interest was whetted to the highest
+point. Doubtless Bristol would be fierce and determined
+to get back into the running by downing
+the Deers, and perhaps he would use again his
+wonderful new pitcher, who had held the Deers
+scoreless until Stranger stole home on him in the
+eighth inning. Naturally that man would be more
+than eager to retrieve himself in another struggle
+against Locke.</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy was on the steps of the Central House
+when Bristol, accompanied by two or three of his
+players, came hustling up from the railroad station.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, Hank!” said old Jack, in a friendly
+way. “Glad to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hello!” growled Bristol. “I s’pose you are.
+I’d be, if I was in your place. Say, you’ve been
+having luck, ain’t yer? You put the jinx on us,
+all right. Think of it, being beat by them Boobs!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
+We’ve got to git back at you to-day, and we’re
+goin’ to come blame near doing it, too!”</p>
+
+<p>“That sounds interesting,” returned Kennedy.
+“I suppose you’ll pitch Elgin again?”</p>
+
+<p>“Elgin be—hanged!” rasped Bristol.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, what’s the matter?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s quit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Quit?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yep. That feller was yaller all the way
+through. He went to pieces like a stick of dynamite.
+Didn’t even wait to collect the few dollars
+that was due him. Jumped a train and got
+out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, he <em>was</em> a quitter,” agreed Kennedy.
+“I’m really sorry for you, Hank. It makes a man
+sore to be stung in his judgment of a pitcher that
+fashion.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t seem that you got stung much in that
+feller Stranger. Say, who is he, anyhow? You
+must ’a’ had him yarded out in the outlaws somewhere,
+or back in the bush, with a string on him,
+so you could yank him in any time you needed
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“I had him with a string on him, all right,” confessed
+Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought so. Well, we’re going after him
+to-day. He can’t repeat on us. All the boys are
+just itching to have another crack at him.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’d better buy some ointment for that itching,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
+Hank. I judge they’ll still need it after the
+game’s over.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe so,” said Bristol, walking on, “but I
+doubt it.”</p>
+
+<p>He was not twenty feet away when a young,
+clear-eyed man came hurrying toward Kennedy,
+who had turned to call McLaughlin from the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon, Jack, old man,” called a
+familiar voice. “Recognized you a block away.
+So this is the way you’re farming, is it?”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy, whirling sharply, found himself gazing
+into the eyes of Jack Stillman, the <cite>Blade</cite> reporter.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, boy!” he exclaimed, grasping the newspaper
+man’s outstretched hand. “What are you
+doing here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hush!” chuckled Stillman, making an extravagant
+gesture of caution. “I’m doing a little Sherlock
+Holmesing for the <cite>Blade</cite>. I’ve followed a
+trail that has led me right here to this town of
+Deering.”</p>
+
+<p>“You don’t say!”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes, I do. I repeat.”</p>
+
+<p>“Who are you after?” Although Kennedy
+asked the question, he knew the answer in advance.</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you’ve been reading the papers right
+along?” said Stillman. “Then you’ve seen all
+about the railroad smash, and how Lefty Locke
+hasn’t been found since that happened.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I read about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was proved that he wasn’t among the killed
+or injured, so, of course, he simply improved that
+opportunity to fade away. You know, he and
+Carson didn’t seem to get along right well together.
+Carson favored Grist, and Grist had some
+feeling about Locke.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thought I had that pretty near cured before
+they took my scalp,” said Kennedy. “Grist was
+the veteran with the experience, but he was on the
+point of going backward. Locke was the youngster
+without experience, but he was coming like a
+whirlwind. Both had their supporters, and there
+were a few who tried to remain impartial. It affected
+the playing of the team, and I was working
+hard to restore harmony just when they handed
+me mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, there’s not much harmony left now, and
+Locke’s gone,” said the reporter. “The Blue
+Stockings are getting it right and left, and only for
+the fact that the Specters have had a bad streak
+they would be out of the running already. The
+loss of Locke has put the whole team on the blink.
+Take it from me, Charles Collier is getting sore
+himself, and there’s liable to be something didding
+any day. Meantime, I am trying to locate Lefty
+Locke. Where is he, Kennedy?”</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll pitch for me this afternoon,” answered
+old Jack.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI<br>
+<small>THE MAN WHO KNEW</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">“Calls himself Stranger, does he?” muttered
+Jack Stillman, as he watched the
+work of Locke from amid the crowd,
+having taken pains to keep away from the bench
+of the Deers. “Pretends he’s forgotten his right
+name or something like that, hey? The whole
+business is queer. But he can pitch—he can pitch
+as well as he ever could. If the Blue Stockings
+had him, with old Jack handling the team, they’d
+have the championship nailed already.”</p>
+
+<p>Besides Stillman, another man was an intensely
+interested spectator of Lefty Locke’s work on the
+mound. It was Doctor Wallace Hetner, of Hatfield,
+who, according to his promise to Kennedy,
+had come over with the team. As far as possible
+during the last few days, Hetner had spent time in
+meditating upon Locke’s singular behavior, and
+now he watched the man for some sign, some indication
+which would denote that he was actually the
+victim of a mental disorder.</p>
+
+<p>“He doesn’t look like a sick man,” decided the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
+doctor. “He doesn’t show it. But there’s something
+decidedly wrong, or he’d not be calling himself
+Stranger. I wonder if Kennedy has succeeded
+in leading him into a give-away?”</p>
+
+<p>He found the old manager, and called him
+from the bench. With the game running all in
+favor of the Deers, Kennedy did not hesitate to
+answer Doctor Hetner’s call.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, he’s Lefty Locke, all right,” he said.
+“Ain’t no question about that. No, couldn’t make
+him admit a thing, but I know what I’m talking
+about. Say, there’s another man here in town
+who knows him well—a reporter by the name of
+Stillman. You two ought to get together and talk
+it over. I’ll find Stillman, and introduce you after
+the game.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks,” said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Despite Bristol’s threat, the Buccaneers could
+do nothing with Lefty Locke; but in turn one of
+Bristol’s regular pitchers succeeded in holding
+the locals down to three hard-earned runs.</p>
+
+<p>Hetner, Stillman, Kennedy, and McLaughlin
+held a consultation in a private room of the Central
+House after the game was over.</p>
+
+<p>“I haven’t said a word to Lefty yet,” said the
+reporter. “I’ve kept away from him. Whatever
+his reason for ducking off the map, he’s certainly
+keeping himself in A-one pitching trim. I told
+Collier I’d find him.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
+
+<p>“You told Collier so!” exclaimed Kennedy.
+“Didn’t he know where Locke was?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. How would he know?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wired Carson three days ago that I could tell
+him where to find his missing southpaw. He answered
+that he didn’t want to find him. I supposed
+he told Collier about my message.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t believe he chirped a word of it,” said the
+reporter. “Carson’s making a mess of the management.
+The team misses you, Jack—it certainly
+does.”</p>
+
+<p>“No bouquets,” protested Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m not throwing any; I’m giving it to you
+straight. They miss you and Lefty Locke. I’ve
+been thinking of something odd. There was a man
+killed in that train wreck who passed sometimes
+under the name of Bob Stranger. He was a crook
+and general confidence man—Pink Kelly—who
+had just been released from the pen. For some
+time nobody recognized him, so his name was not
+given in the first newspaper reports of the identified.
+I was the one who finally recognized that
+gink. Bob Stranger! Locke calls himself that?”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s what he does,” replied Kennedy.</p>
+
+<p>The reporter struck the fist of his right hand
+into his open left palm.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll bet you a thousand dollars,” he cried,
+“that Locke and that crook were talking together
+before the smash came. That smash must have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
+knocked everything out of Locke’s head. He’d
+been going a bit wrong for some time before that,
+and that might be the very thing to put him all to
+the bad. Why, do you know, some of the fellows
+even thought he’d taken to drinking. I’ve an idea
+I really know what’s at the bottom of the whole
+trouble.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you’ll be mighty valuable in straightening
+this mess out,” said Kennedy. “What was at
+the bottom of it?”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman then told them of Lefty’s deep interest
+in Janet Harting, and explained how the misunderstanding
+between them had been caused by
+Locke’s innocent attentions to the daughter of the
+new owner of the Blue Stockings.</p>
+
+<p>“I beg your pardon,” interrupted Doctor Hetner
+excitedly. “I think I can see a method of
+straightening the man out and bringing back his
+memory. If I had a picture of that girl—the one
+he’s really struck on—”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ve got it,” laughed the reporter. “Say, I
+scented a corking old news story in this affair, and
+so I just took care to get Miss Janet Harting’s
+photograph, as well as one of Miss Virginia
+Collier. By the way, there’s a fourth party mixed
+up in the business—a young man by the name of
+Franklin Parlmee. It seems that he had a case
+on Collier’s daughter, and they quarreled. It
+didn’t seem to shake her much, but he was raw as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
+a flea-bitten pup, and he didn’t lose an opportunity
+to soak Locke to old man Collier.”</p>
+
+<p>“Something of a romance, I declare!” said Doctor
+Hetner. “You say you have Miss Harting’s
+photograph? Have you brought it with you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure!”</p>
+
+<p>“Will you let me have it?”</p>
+
+<p>“You bet, if you’ll return it. I wouldn’t lose
+it for anything. If I write the story—”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s an interesting story,” said the doctor,
+“and I suppose you’ll write it, anyhow, being a
+reporter.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII<br>
+<small>FAILURE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Kennedy found Locke, and brought him
+to that room, where the young southpaw
+was met by Stillman, while the doctor and
+landlord looked on.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course you remember me,” said the reporter,
+wringing Locke’s unresponsive hand.
+“You know how I got the proof on Elgin, and
+showed him up to Brennan. I knew you’d make
+good in the Big League, and I never lost a chance
+to say so.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s mighty good of you to talk like this,” returned
+Locke, “but you wouldn’t if you knew how
+you confuse me. If I’m the man you think me to
+be, how is it I only remember that my name is
+Robert Stranger, and that on account of my
+health I came out into the country to get a job
+on a farm?”</p>
+
+<p>“Pink Kelly, a card sharp, crook, and con man,
+was talking to you just before that railroad smash-up.
+Sometimes Kelly went by the name of Bob
+Stranger. He was killed, but you seemed to escape
+without as much as a scratch.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span></p>
+
+<p>“I don’t remember it,” persisted Locke, shaking
+his head. “If I wasn’t hurt in that smash-up,
+what made me so twisted? For I’m twisted,
+or you are, every one of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps,” said Doctor Hetner, “the railroad
+smash simply completed what was gradually taking
+place before that. I saw you on that smoking
+car. I spoke to you, but you didn’t recognize me.
+I thought you were lying. Now I’m inclined to believe
+you were honest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you,” said Lefty, on whose forehead
+little beads of perspiration were standing thickly.
+“It’s a rotten thing for a man to get twisted the
+way I am. I’ve tried to remember, but the more I
+try the less I can recall.”</p>
+
+<p>“There are reasons,” said the doctor, “why you
+should strive to recall the past.”</p>
+
+<p>“The principal reason,” said the reporter, “is
+Miss Janet Harting. Don’t you remember her,
+Lefty?”</p>
+
+<p>Locke brushed his hand almost fiercely across
+his forehead. “No,” he answered, “I don’t remember
+her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have a notion,” said Stillman, “that you are
+engaged to her, though there was a quarrel or
+something of the sort, brought about by your being
+seen with Virginia Collier—old man Collier’s
+swell daughter. I don’t know just how it came
+round, but Miss Harting failed to accept your explanations,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
+if you made any. That broke you up.
+Now can’t you remember?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, not a single thing!” answered Lefty, in
+deep distress. “It’s all as if it never happened
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you saw the girl!” cried Stillman. “Doctor,
+where’s that photograph you took from me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Here it is,” said Hetner, handing it over.</p>
+
+<p>The reporter placed it in the hands of Locke,
+who gazed long and hard at the pictured likeness
+of one who had seemed to him the most beautiful
+of all girls.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s no use,” he declared, after some minutes
+of tense and breathless silence. “If I ever saw
+her, I have no recollection of it, and therefore I
+might as well never have seen her. It drives me
+desperate, trying to remember, and I must stop—”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right,” said Doctor Hetner, who had
+been watching him closely. “It will do no good,
+this straining after what your mind refuses to recall.
+When it comes, if it does, it will come easily
+and suddenly, when you’re not trying to break
+down the wall that shuts you off from the past.
+Some day you’ll shake the identity and the name
+of the dead man, and become yourself again; and
+it’s both dangerous and useless to make further
+efforts until your mind is in condition to grasp the
+truth and revive the past.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII<br>
+<small>THE COME-BACK</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Jack Stillman went in search of Janet
+Harting, while Lefty remained pitching
+for Jack Kennedy under the name of
+Stranger. As a mascot and a winning pitcher, he
+proved to be such a success that, with the close of
+the season a week away, the Deers were entrenched
+in first position beyond any possibility
+of dislodgment.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the Blue Stockings were being battered,
+and their lead cut down, until even old Pete
+Grist lost heart, and bewailed the missing southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>“Another week,” he groaned; “another week,
+and we’ve got to win four games out of six to
+home, with no pitchers. If we get two of them
+games we’ll do well. If we had Locke in trim we
+could take them. I’ll agree to win my share. Carson
+has failed, and the old man’s sore. After all,
+Kennedy was the best manager the Blue Stockings
+ever had.”</p>
+
+<p>To make matters worse, Carson and Collier
+quarreled violently.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
+
+<p>About this time Stillman, whose place had been
+filled by a cub for nearly two weeks, came back,
+and interviewed Charles Collier. Although the
+reporter had made his business a secret affair,
+more than one of the Blue Stockings guessed that
+he was searching for Lefty Locke. Daily the
+<cite>Blade</cite> was scanned for some word which would indicate
+that the clever reporter-detective had made
+progress in this search, and daily those in looking
+for that word were disappointed. Stillman was
+taking the chance of being scooped in order to
+spring a big sensation at the most dramatic moment.
+He did not even dare tell his editor what he
+had learned.</p>
+
+<p>The almost hopeless fight of the Blue Stockings
+aroused the sympathy of the fans, even while the
+management of Al Carson was bitterly criticised,
+and also the judgment of Charles Collier in letting
+old Jack Kennedy go in order to fill his place with
+a man like Carson.</p>
+
+<p>Pete Grist had made good by winning two games
+of the last six. He even saved another game when
+three of the battered pitchers had been pounded
+out of the box. Then followed two defeats, and
+upon the day before the final and deciding game
+was to be played Stillman sprang his sensation in
+the <cite>Blade</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>He announced that Carson had been permanently
+shelved by the owner of the Blue Stockings,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
+who had sent a distress call to the old manager,
+Jack Kennedy, receiving in reply the assurance
+that Kennedy would be on hand early in the morning,
+and would bring with him a cracking portside
+pitcher by the name of Stranger, who had been doing
+marvelous work out in the bushes.</p>
+
+<p>Stillman wrote, in conclusion:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>I’ve seen this Stranger pitch, and, believe me, he’s able to
+deliver the goods. He’s the equal of Lefty Locke when Locke
+was at his best. If Stranger can pitch a winning game for
+the Stockings to-morrow, the championship is ours after all,
+and old Jack Kennedy will have saved the day at the last
+moment.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Forty-eight hours before this article appeared
+in print, Lefty Locke, pitching for the Deers, had,
+while batting in the ninth inning, been hit full and
+fair on the head by a pitched ball delivered with all
+the speed the man on the slab could command.</p>
+
+<p>Locke sank to the ground without as much as a
+gasp. In a moment he was surrounded by a number
+of his teammates. Kennedy lifted the stunned
+man’s head, calling sharply for water.</p>
+
+<p>“He ought to have a doctor,” said someone.
+“Perhaps his skull is fractured.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t need a doctor,” declared Locke, suddenly
+sitting up. “I’m all right. A little tap like
+that never hurt anybody. Donovan hasn’t got
+much speed to-day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Donovan!” exclaimed Kennedy. “Why,
+that’s Colfax pitching.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
+
+<p>Locke looked at the old manager queerly. “Colfax?”
+he muttered. “Who’s Colfax! Never
+heard of him. The Specters are ahead, aren’t
+they?”</p>
+
+<p>“Where do you think you are?” choked Kennedy,
+his excitement growing. “You’re playing
+the Semour Stars, out in the bush. You’re pitching
+for the Deers, of Deering.”</p>
+
+<p>It was Locke’s turn to appear bewildered. “I
+don’t think I get you right,” he muttered blankly.
+“What are you doing here, anyhow? Carson is
+managing the team now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not this team, he ain’t,” retorted old Jack.
+“Look here, Lefty, has that bump on your bean
+put you right again? Who are you? What’s
+your name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, my name is Hazelton, though I’m playing
+the game as Tom Locke. What a blame fool question,
+Kennedy!”</p>
+
+<p>The old manager showed his satisfaction, and
+did a dance which caused the crowd to stare at
+him in wonderment.</p>
+
+<p>“You’re all right now, Lefty, old boy! You’ve
+got your noddle cleared up by that bean ball. I’ll
+bet you got one on the koko some other time, and
+that was what started you wrong to begin
+with.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wrong? What do you mean? How wrong?”
+asked Locke, gazing around in surprise at his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
+strange and unfamiliar surroundings. “What am
+I doing here?”</p>
+
+<p>“Playing baseball. I told you a minute ago.
+You’re Bob Stranger. Anyhow, that’s what you
+called yourself when you came to me, and you
+swore you didn’t know how to pitch and had never
+seen a game of ball.”</p>
+
+<p>“Jack, you’re stringing me. I don’t remember
+how I got here, but—”</p>
+
+<p>“Play ball!” cried the umpire. “Shall we give
+you a runner, Stranger, or will you stick in the
+game?”</p>
+
+<p>“If you’re speaking to me,” returned Locke,
+“I’ll stick in the game. That tap on the head
+didn’t jar me a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>In proof of which, after jogging down to first,
+he stole second on the first ball pitched to the next
+batter, and came home with the winning run when
+a right-field single followed.</p>
+
+<p>That night Kennedy did his best to explain
+everything to the satisfaction of Locke.</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder what the team thinks of me?” murmured
+Lefty. “They must figure that I’m just
+about as yellow as Bert Elgin himself. I wouldn’t
+quit because I was suspended—not in my right
+mind, anyhow. I don’t blame Carson for being
+raw and letting me go.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy pulled a yellow envelope from his
+pocket, and produced the message it contained.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
+“Carson’s done with the Blue Stockings, anyhow,”
+he said. “Here’s a wire from Collier, asking me
+to come back and take the management of the team.
+I can get there just in time for the last game. If
+we win that game we get the pennant. What do
+you say, Lefty? Will you pitch it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Will I!” cried Locke. “All I want is the
+chance!”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s yours,” declared Kennedy. “You’ll
+pitch, son.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV<br>
+<small>BACK TO HIS OWN</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Not once in a thousand times does such a
+remarkable situation arise in Big League
+baseball. Not once in a thousand times
+would it happen that the two leading teams should
+be scheduled to play off the last three games of the
+season together, and have the championship depend
+upon the result of the final game, which would
+leave one or the other of those teams in the lead by
+a very small percentage.</p>
+
+<p>To down the Blue Stockings the Specters had to
+win three straight, and when they had taken the
+first two the entire baseball world was thrown into
+a great tumult of excitement, to say nothing of
+the home city of the Blue Stockings. That city
+was in a perfect panic, so that business generally
+was tremendously effected, and all one could hear
+talked anywhere he went was baseball, baseball,
+baseball.</p>
+
+<p>The newspapers were crammed with it. They
+were almost savage in their denouncement of the
+new owner and his judgment in displacing Jack
+Kennedy and filling the position with a manager<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
+like Al Carson. Half of them prophesied that the
+Specters would take the last three straight, and
+cop the pennant without difficulty. A few held
+desperately to the tattered border of hope, begging
+the Blue Stockings to brace up and save the day
+by winning the final game.</p>
+
+<p>But even as they did this, they confessed that the
+team’s staff of pitchers was all to the bad, with
+no one in condition save old Pete Grist, who had
+already won two games out of the double series
+of the final week, and was therefore unable to
+attempt to pitch another game.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the Specters had Donovan in
+reserve, and during the season Donovan had made
+a record scarcely second to any Big League
+pitcher. The baseball “dope” in the papers was
+certainly interesting enough to a genuine
+fan, though it must have seemed maddening to
+a reader who cared nothing whatever for the
+game.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the sensation sprung by Stillman in
+the <cite>Blade</cite>. It made readers generally sit up and
+take notice. The other newspapers had been
+“scooped.” Stillman’s sense of the dramatic and
+his judgment regarding the psychological moment
+had stood him and his paper in good stead.</p>
+
+<p>And when, just as the game was beginning the
+following day, the <cite>Blade</cite> appeared with the statement
+that the pitcher called Stranger, whom Kennedy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
+had brought with him, was none other than
+Lefty Locke himself, following with a most cleverly
+written explanation of the cause of Lefty’s
+vanishing, a complete account of his chance meeting
+with Kennedy, and how he had pitched in the
+bush league, winning the championship for the
+Deers, the scoop was complete.</p>
+
+<p>Never in the history of the game in that city had
+such a crowd swarmed to the ball park. At daylight
+a dozen or more tired, sleepy-looking men
+and boys were seen in line at the bleacher gates,
+waiting in order that they might be the first to gain
+admittance and so secure favorable positions. Before
+eleven o’clock in the forenoon two or three
+hundred people were waiting at those gates, and
+the steady influx began when the gates were finally
+opened ahead of time at twelve-thirty.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately the police department was on the
+job, and the crowds were handled beautifully outside
+the grounds. On the field, at least forty
+policemen found themselves busy when at last the
+stands and bleachers overflowed, and the people
+began to swarm into the field back of the ropes,
+which had been stretched in anticipation of this
+very occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>It was, however, a remarkably tractable crowd.
+Even those who had bought seats in the stand and
+found those seats occupied, as well as the bleachers
+packed—being compelled, therefore, to stand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
+in the jam back of the ropes—were good-natured,
+few complaining.</p>
+
+<p>This was the day—the great day! Jack Kennedy
+had come back, and brought with him Lefty
+Locke. They were waiting for Kennedy and Locke
+to appear, and as they waited they choked down
+and held back the cheer which welled from their
+rejoicing hearts. Presently from the clubhouse
+the Specters came pushing through the gathering
+mass of people, and burst upon the field. They
+were given an ovation by their admirers.</p>
+
+<p>Two minutes later there was a tremendous stir
+all through the stands, running over the bleachers
+and into the group of standees. Escorted by six
+policemen, Kennedy and Locke were coming, with
+the Blue Stocking players at their heels. Other
+policemen fought the crowd back, and made a lane
+for them to pass through.</p>
+
+<p>And when they debouched from that lane upon
+the open space of the field inside the ropes, it
+seemed that every human being upon the bleachers
+and in the stands had risen and was howling like a
+maniac. Such a solid roar, such a tremendous
+burst of sound coming from human throats, perhaps
+never was heard save at some gladiatorial
+contest in the Roman Colosseum. It beat and
+reverberated upon the eardrums with painful
+fierceness, causing more than one person to protect
+himself from the staggering effect of it by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
+clapping his hands over his ears. And it continued
+while old Jack, bareheaded, with Lefty
+Locke at his side, marched from the ropes to the
+bench, his face pale, his eyes shining, his lips smiling.</p>
+
+<p>“They’re glad to get you back, Jack,” shouted
+Lefty in the old man’s ear.</p>
+
+<p>“You blame fool!” yelled Kennedy in return.
+“They’re not cheering for me. It’s you, boy—you,
+the man who’s going to give the Blue Stockings
+another pennant. Pull off your cap—pull it
+off! Bow! Bow!”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was a blur over Lefty’s
+eyes. Through it he could dimly see the wildly
+tumultuous mass in the stands and on the
+bleachers. Mechanically he lifted his hand—his
+left hand—and touched his cap. And when he did
+so the great roar suddenly was intensified for an
+instant, although it had previously seemed that
+every person present was shouting as loudly as he
+could.</p>
+
+<p>When Locke had reached the shelter of the covered
+bench, into which he dived for a few moments
+as one seeking to escape a deadly hail of bullets,
+he laughed again—queerly, incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>“It can’t be for me,” he muttered. “Why, I’m—I’m
+only a cub yet—nothing but a busher.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy was at his side. “You’ll show whether
+you’re a busher or a Big League pitcher to-day,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
+Lefty,” he said. “If you let this reception get
+your goat, then your name is Mud. But if you
+can go out there and pitch a winning game, nobody
+in fast company has got it on you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Give me two minutes,” said Locke, gripping
+himself; “give me two minutes, and I’ll show
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good boy!” said old Jack. “Come out and
+warm up when you get ready.”</p>
+
+<p>He left Locke there, and went forth among his
+men, all of whom had greeted him on his return
+as rejoicing children might greet a beloved parent;
+and every one of whom had shaken the hand
+of Lefty Locke until Lefty’s arm seemed ready to
+come off. Not even Pete Grist had held back.
+Far from it. Old Pete was among the first to
+strike palms with the southpaw.</p>
+
+<p>“The prodigal son!” he cried. “The prodigal
+son back home! Welcome to our midst, Lefty.
+We’re going to let you kill the fatted calf this
+afternoon—the Specters, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s kind of you, Grist, old man,” said
+Locke. “I’ve brought my little butcher knife
+with me, and I’m going to sink it to the hilt if I
+can.”</p>
+
+<p>As old Jack came out again from beneath the
+bench roof, here and there friends in the crowd
+shouted at him, but now he seemed deaf to all this
+as he went at work amid his men, directing them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
+as of old, keeping them on the jump, filling them
+with inspiration and confidence.</p>
+
+<p>“Hey, Jack! You’re the old man to do it!”</p>
+
+<p>“Kennedy, you can deliver the goods! You
+did it once, and you will again.”</p>
+
+<p>“Welcome to our city, Mr. Kennedy! We have
+missed you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, say, Jack, old boy, you look good to me!”</p>
+
+<p>But these cries were faint compared with the
+renewed chorus of shouts which arose when Lefty
+Locke, flushed, yet steady and self-possessed,
+again stepped forth into view.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you Lefty! Oh, you southpaw!”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re the kiddo! You’re the Specter slayer!”</p>
+
+<p>“How’s your wing, Lefty?”</p>
+
+<p>“Got your batting eye with you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lefty, don’t you dare ever leave us again.
+You’re home with your own family now.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy, glancing sidewise at Locke, to notice
+the effect of this revived demonstration, was well
+satisfied. Not by a flicker did the southpaw betray
+the emotion of satisfaction with which his
+heart must have been filled. He was steady as
+Gibraltar, and cool as polar ice.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV<br>
+<small>THE GIRLS IN THE BOX</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Still with a view to the dramatic, Stillman
+had planned something else. It
+was with the greatest difficulty that he had
+succeeded in keeping Lefty Locke and Janet Harting
+apart, for Janet was in the city, the guest of
+Virginia Collier. And when Lefty reappeared
+on that field and received that marvelous ovation,
+Janet sat in the owner’s box with Virginia, her
+gloved hands clasped with a fierceness that nearly
+burst the kid, her face by turns pale and flushed.</p>
+
+<p>All the way across the diamond her eyes followed
+that splendid figure—the figure of the man
+she loved. The Niagaralike roaring of the crowd
+she was conscious of in a vague way, and it
+thrilled her; and it seemed that she must draw his
+gaze by her intense effort to do so. When he
+suddenly dove to the shelter of the bench, she relaxed,
+with a little sigh of disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>Then for the first time she felt the arm of Virginia
+Collier about her. She heard Virginia’s
+voice in her ear:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Wasn’t it splendid? Did you ever know anyone
+to get such an ovation?”</p>
+
+<p>“Never,” answered Janet, “but he didn’t
+look—”</p>
+
+<p>“He will look,” assured Miss Collier. “Leave
+that to Jack Stillman.”</p>
+
+<p>“I owe a great deal to Mr. Stillman.”</p>
+
+<p>“So do I,” said Virginia, glancing over her
+shoulder at Franklin Parlmee. “Only for Mr.
+Stillman, we might all be playing at cross-purposes
+now. There he is. He’s speaking to
+Lefty.”</p>
+
+<p>Stillman had been pretty busy at his telegraph
+key, for he was one reporter who could do his own
+sending, and the events of the last few moments
+had caused him to sweat as he pounded out the
+Morse. He was athrill with the joy of it, like a
+stage manager who has planned a tremendous
+performance and seen it carried through successfully
+at the opening, and the crowd going wild
+over it.</p>
+
+<p>“Lefty!” he called; and Locke, passing, turned
+at the sound of the familiar voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, Jack!” he returned.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s someone looking for you over in the
+manager’s box,” said Stillman.</p>
+
+<p>As if he suddenly realized who it was, Locke
+whirled like a flash and started in that direction
+with long, swinging strides. His bronzed face<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
+was flushed. Never had he looked handsomer
+than he did while Janet watched him drawing
+near.</p>
+
+<p>“You—you, Janet!” he cried, heedless of everyone.
+“I tried to find you, but you were gone.
+I couldn’t explain. Let me explain now.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hush, Phil!” she cautioned, pressing the
+gloved fingers of one hand to her lips, while,
+watched by thousands of eyes, she permitted him
+to hold the other hand. “You don’t have to explain.
+Miss Collier has explained everything,
+and I wish to ask your pardon for—”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t!” he entreated. “How could you
+know? It must have seemed beastly of me. I
+told you I was going to the theater with some fellows
+from the team, and you saw me there
+with—”</p>
+
+<p>“Hasn’t Janet told you that everything has
+been explained, Mr. Hazelton?” cut in Virginia
+Collier. “Of course, I didn’t know about her,
+and just then I was somewhat peeved with Franklin.
+Oh, I think you’ve met Mr. Parlmee, haven’t
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure, we’ve met,” said Parlmee, putting forth
+a hand, which finally led Lefty reluctantly to release
+the gloved fingers of Janet. “How are you,
+Locke, old chap? If I was a bit rude when we
+were introduced, perhaps you’ll pardon me now,
+understanding the reason.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
+
+<p>“Everybody seems eager to beg everybody’s
+pardon,” laughed Virginia Collier. “I wonder where
+father is? I know he was on hand to see
+you and Jack Kennedy when—”</p>
+
+<p>“He was in the clubhouse,” said Lefty. “I’ve
+seen him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think you can win the game to-day?”
+asked Janet, apparently with a touch of anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>“What do <em>you</em> think?” he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure you can.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I’ll win it, Janet, if there’s any pitching
+left in my old south wing.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’ll have to pitch,” said Parlmee.
+“They’ve been saving Donovan up for this
+game. They want it as bad as we do.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps so,” said Locke; “but we’ve got to
+have it.”</p>
+
+<p>Somehow, there was no touch of boasting in his
+manner, nor did there seem to be anything of the
+sort in his words. He was confident of himself,
+and his confidence had been redoubled by Janet’s
+assurance that she knew he would win.</p>
+
+<p>“When the game is over,” said Miss Collier,
+“you’ll find us waiting outside the clubhouse with
+the automobile. You’ll join us, won’t you?”</p>
+
+<p>Only for a fraction of a minute did Lefty hesitate.
+“The others—the boys,” he faltered. “If
+we win, they will—”</p>
+
+<p>“They’ll forgive you for deserting them this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
+time, I’m sure,” she said quickly. “It only happens
+once in a lifetime, you know—and Janet
+will be there.”</p>
+
+<p>“So will I,” he promised instantly.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI<br>
+<small>THE GAME OF HIS LIFE</small></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="cap">Never in his life had Lefty Locke pitched
+such a game of baseball. Never had that
+great crowd seen such splendid work upon
+the mound. Again master of himself in every
+respect, thrilled with life and vigor from toes to
+finger tips, the amazing southpaw of the Blue
+Stockings fought every inch of the way as if life
+and honor depended upon it.</p>
+
+<p>He knew <em>she</em> was watching him. He could feel
+her eyes upon him; yet they did not distract him
+from the task to which he had set his hand, his
+brain, his very soul. Instead, they were his inspiration,
+making him as unfathomable to those
+desperately waiting Specter batters as would have
+been Mathewson at his best.</p>
+
+<p>In the whirl and thrill of the conflict, once or
+twice he thought of how a ball pitched by Donovan,
+his present opponent, glancing from his bat,
+had seemingly done him little damage, although
+it struck him squarely in the head; how that blow
+had presently brought about the entire loss of his
+own identity and the assumption of the name and,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
+in some respects, the identity of another man
+killed at his side in the railroad smash. Vaguely
+he could now remember fighting to recall the truth
+concerning himself, while his mind remained an
+absolute blank as to the past. And the agony of
+his struggles caused him to shudder.</p>
+
+<p>But it was glorious to know that he was again
+restored to reason and to his normal condition.
+The shadow was gone from his mind—gone, he
+believed, never to return.</p>
+
+<p>And all the other shadows had been dispelled
+in the meanwhile. Janet was yonder in the box,
+trusting him, believing in him, sorry she had ever
+doubted.</p>
+
+<p>And so, while Jack Kennedy hugged himself on
+the bench, while Charles Collier gazed and marveled,
+while the great crowd cheered itself mad
+again and again, he cut the Specters down one
+after another as they faced him. Behind him
+his teammates waited, ready to give him their
+best support. Three times this great support prevented
+a Specter from getting a hit.</p>
+
+<p>And Donovan, also pitching the game of his career,
+twice pulled himself out of bad holes, and
+kept the Blue Stockings from scoring. Once he
+wabbled and it seemed that he was gone, but his
+manager made no move, and in time he rose to the
+emergency and saved himself.</p>
+
+<p>So the game continued, inning after inning,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
+with neither side getting a tally, with not a single
+Specter reaching first; for thus far Lefty was
+pitching a no-hit, no-run game. To-morrow the
+newspapers would be full of it, and the name of
+Tom Locke would be chiseled forever on the baseball
+tablet of fame.</p>
+
+<p>No man present was happier than old Jack
+Kennedy, for he was the manager whose judgment
+had brought this young busher to the front
+and given him the opportunity through which in
+a single season he had risen higher than any bush-league
+pitcher ever rose before.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s my boy—my boy!” Kennedy whispered
+again and again as Lefty cut the Specters down
+with his burning speed, his bewildering change
+of pace, and his unhittable hook drop, delivered
+always when least expected. “I found him. I
+put him into the game after Brennan kicked him
+out. I thought I was done with baseball, but I’m
+back to die in harness, unless I’m fired again.”</p>
+
+<p>Without a single exception, Lefty’s teammates
+were elated. Yes, it is true that even the veteran,
+old Pete Grist, was supremely happy as
+he watched Locke work. If for an instant a pang
+of jealousy entered his heart, he thrust it out as
+one would thrust forth the devil himself.</p>
+
+<p>And Lefty’s chums, Billy Orth, Laughing
+Larry, and Dirk Nelson, rejoiced unspeakably.
+All through the game Dalton laughed as of old,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
+while behind the pan Nelson crouched and signaled,
+sure that never once would Lefty fail to
+throw the curve called for and put it where he desired
+without the variation of an inch. Such control,
+such smoke, such headwork, Nelson had never
+before seen a pitcher display; and he afterward
+made the statement, regardless of the feelings of
+other twirlers who had worked with him.</p>
+
+<p>From the opening of the game till the last man
+was down, the Specters strove like fiends to get
+Lefty’s goat; but all their sneers, their tricks, and
+their baiting proved ineffectual. Apparently he
+was deaf, dumb, and blind to everything save the
+task in hand. The wild cheering of the tremendous
+crowd as he swept down batter after batter
+seemed to affect him no more than profound silence—perhaps
+not as much.</p>
+
+<p>One, two, three, four, five innings—not a hit off
+Locke! Six, seven, eight innings—not a hit; not
+a man had reached first base!</p>
+
+<p>“Shut ’em out!” pleaded the crowd. “Don’t
+let ’em touch you to-day, Lefty! You’ve got ’em
+killed!”</p>
+
+<p>Then in turn, when the Blue Stockings were at
+bat, that immense throng begged them to fall on
+Donovan and get a run.</p>
+
+<p>“One run will do it!” yelled an urchin with a
+voice like a calliope. “Dat’s all you want, fellers.
+It wins dis game.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span></p>
+
+<p>One run! Donovan himself felt that it would
+be enough. Perspiration standing forth from every
+pore, his teeth set like the jaws of a vise, his
+eyes blazing, he whipped the ball across the corners.
+One run! Was he going to let this left-handed
+cub outpitch him in the struggle which
+would give the winning team the championship?
+Not if he ruined his arm then and there!</p>
+
+<p>Then came the eighth inning, and again the
+strain of the terrible pace told on Donovan. The
+first man up got a safety, and the next hitter, directed
+by Kennedy, sacrificed him to second.
+With one down, it was Jack Daly’s turn to bat,
+and Donovan laughed; for he had Jack’s alley,
+and knew he could keep him from hitting.</p>
+
+<p>But at this moment Kennedy suddenly came
+forth from the bench, bearing a bat. Kennedy,
+the old stager, the veteran, was going in as a pinch
+hitter.</p>
+
+<p>Donovan laughed. “He’s easier,” he thought.
+“Why don’t he send out Burchard?”</p>
+
+<p>Burchard was the Blue Stockings’ greatest batter,
+kept on the bench for just such emergencies
+as this; and a thousand others wondered that Kennedy
+should throw himself into the breach with
+big Burchard waiting and ready.</p>
+
+<p>But Kennedy was inspired. He had been
+watching Donovan’s work from the beginning of
+the game, and he believed he could find the man<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
+for a safety. As he walked to the plate, he gave
+the runner a signal which told him to be on his
+toes and ready to go when the ball was hit.</p>
+
+<p>Two balls Donovan pitched to Kennedy without
+finding the plate, and then he put one over.
+Old Jack let it pass, and heard a strike called.
+Donovan laughed at him, and Kennedy smiled
+back serenely.</p>
+
+<p>“Give me another just like that, Jim,” he invited.
+“I’ll hit the next one.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right,” returned the pitcher; “all right,
+Jack, old back number. Here you have it.”</p>
+
+<p>Kennedy knew Donovan was lying. He knew
+the man would pitch something entirely different,
+and perhaps wholly unexpected, but some inspiration
+told him just what it would be; and when
+Donovan put it across the inside corner, Kennedy
+fell back and met it on the trade-mark.</p>
+
+<p>It was a line drive into left. The runner on
+second tore across third and stretched himself
+for the plate, while the fielder made a great throw
+to the pan to stop the score.</p>
+
+<p>At the plate, Dillingham, the catcher, took that
+throw and jabbed the ball at the sliding runner,
+but nine men out of ten in the crowd saw that the
+prostrate man’s foot was on the rubber when Dillingham
+tagged him, and the outspread hands of
+the umpire declaring him safe was the only manner
+in which the decision reached them; for it seemed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>
+that thirty thousand maniacs filled the stands,
+the bleachers, and the outfield.</p>
+
+<p>Donovan, shaking visibly, and pale as a sheet,
+braced himself hard while that uproar pounded
+upon his ears. The game was lost, and he knew
+it. Between them, Lefty Locke and old Jack Kennedy
+had won it.</p>
+
+<p>It made little difference that, having apparently
+regained his control, Donovan grinned hard at
+Lefty when the latter came to bat, and told him
+he could not hit the ball. Calmly the young southpaw
+replied:</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t have to hit it, Jim; the damage is
+done.”</p>
+
+<p>It made no difference that Donovan struck
+Locke out. The Blue Stockings had scored, and
+when Lefty returned to the mound and the Specters
+faced him in the ninth, he mowed the last
+three down one after another, as if they were
+schoolboys.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment it seemed that Lefty had triumphed
+over all obstacles and conquered every
+foe, but, with the approach of the coming season,
+he encountered a rival pitcher far more persistent
+and dangerous than Bert Elgin; a strange
+and unfathomable character who changed, almost
+in the flash of an eye, from open-hearted friendship
+to deadly and vindictive enmity, and as
+quickly and unexpectedly changed back again; a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
+person enshrouded in mystery, and seemingly the
+possessor of a dual nature that made him a veritable
+<em>Jekyll and Hyde</em>. The book in which this
+character, Nelson Savage, appears, is the fourth
+volume of the Big League Series, and it bears the
+title of “Lefty o’ the Training Camp.”</p>
+
+<p>Had he attempted to reach the clubhouse by
+crossing the field, Lefty could not have escaped
+the clutches of the madly exultant crowd. They
+waited for him, but discreetly, with old Jack Kennedy
+at his side, he ducked into a runway and disappeared
+beneath the stand even while the great
+throng was still cheering, and shrieking his name.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, some game to-day, kid, eh?” laughed
+old Jack, giving him a clap on the shoulder.
+“Some game, hey? I guess we’re back in it.”</p>
+
+<p>“I guess we are,” said Lefty. “If you don’t
+mind, I’m going to dust away as soon as I can get
+a shower and change my clothes. There’ll be
+someone waiting for me outside the gate.”</p>
+
+<p>“Go on, old man,” returned the veteran manager.
+“I don’t blame you a bit. She’s a dream.”</p>
+
+
+<p class="p4 noic">THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap">
+<div class="tnote">
+<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
+
+<p class="smfont">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 76584 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
+
diff --git a/76584-h/images/cover.jpg b/76584-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ddbcff4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76584-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/76584-h/images/cover_sm.jpg b/76584-h/images/cover_sm.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e8c3457
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76584-h/images/cover_sm.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/76584-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg b/76584-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..452a6ba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76584-h/images/i_frontispiece.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f386aef
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #76584
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76584)