The three weeks of training passed
quickly and Carty had won his fight, a favorable augury
for the camp of Flynn. Jerry worked hard, too
hard it almost seemed for flesh and blood to endure,
but he seemed tireless. He had lost weight, of
course, and his face was haggard and drawn, but he
ate and slept well and though a little irritable at
times, seemed cheerful enough. Marcia came frequently,
always with Miss Gore, and the word was passed around
that Jim Robinson’s “chicken” was
staying in the village. I think Jerry’s
wooing prospered. There were no Channing Lloyds
at Briar Hills now. To all appearances the girl
was with him heart and soul and when Jerry rested
on the terrace in a reclining chair wrapped in blankets,
Marcia sat beside him, talking in subdued tones.
Sometimes I heard their voices raised, but whatever
their differences they were not such as to cause a
breach between them. They were hardly ever entirely
alone and for purposes of endearment the terrace was
not the most secluded spot that could have been found.
Flynn’s word was law and his eye constantly
watchful. If he had been paid to make Jerry win
this fight, he was going to earn his money, he said,
and anyone who interfered with the training would
be put out and kept out of the grounds. Whatever
her own wishes, the girl recognized Flynn’s
authority, and came and went at fixed times which
could not interfere with the rigid rules. Jerry
rose at five and took to the road with Flynn on horseback
and either O’Halloran or Sagorski afoot.
When he came in he had his shower, rubdown and then
breakfast. After a rest, Flynn boxed four or five
rounds with him, after which came rope jumping, and
exercises with the machines to strengthen his arms
and wrists. In this way the morning passed and
after the midday meal came the real work-out of the
day with his training-partners, where real blows were
exchanged and blood often flowed. Jerry had improved
immeasurably. Even I, tyro as I was, could see
that his encounters with these professionals had rubbed
off all signs of the amateur. He had always been
a good judge of distance, Flynn had said, but he had
been schooled recently to make every movement count to
“waste nothing.” In spite of myself,
the excitement of the game was getting into my blood.
If for the while Jerry was to be a beast, why should
he not be the best beast of them all? Stories
came to us from the camp of the Terrible Sailor, who
was training down on the Jersey shore. He was
“coming” fast, they said, and was strong
and confident. The newspapers followed him carefully
and sent their reporters to Horsham Manor, one of
whom, denied entrance at the Lodge, climbed over the
wall and even reached the gymnasium where Jerry was
boxing with O’Halloran, to be put out at my orders
(as Jeremiah Benham) before he got a fact for his
pains. The result of this of course was an account
full of misstatements about the millionaire Jeremiah
Benham and his protege which brought a protest in the
mails from Ballard the elder who, fortunately for
Jerry, hadn’t gotten at the truth of the matter.
Once or twice I had been on the point
of going to Ballard’s office and making a clean
breast of Jerry’s plans, hoping that Clancy might
be bought off and the match canceled. But I could
not bring myself, even now, to the point of betraying
the boy. I am not a fatalist by profession or
philosophy, but Miss Gore had made me pause and I had
resolved to see the thing through, trying to believe
as she believed that Jerry could only be toughened
to the usages of life by the rigor of circumstance.
And so I was silent.
On the morning of the great event
I found myself, instead of properly censorious, intensely
eager for the night to come. Jerry had been brought
secretly to town the day before in a closed machine
and was resting under the care of Flynn at Jerry’s
own house uptown. It was at Jerry’s request
that Jack Ballard and I stayed away from him, and so
the day passed slowly enough in speculations as to
the possibility of overtraining and as to Jerry’s
ability to stand punishment. Of his pluck there
was no question between us. Both of us had had
too many proofs of it to doubt, but there was always
the chance of the unlucky blow early in the battle
which might mean defeat where victory seemed the only
thing possible. I believed that Jerry would win.
I think that I actually believed him to be invulnerable.
I knew that Flynn was confident, and that Sagorski,
Spatola and O’Halloran had put their money
on him. Of course he would win. There was
no man in the world who could stand up against Jerry
when he meant to do a thing. No one knew better
than I what victory meant to Jerry. Money, championship
laurels of course they were nothing.
However much or little Marcia’s theories as
to the superman meant to Jerry, he was committed to
her and she, I suspected, to him. His
laurels were in the touch of her rosy fingers, the
flash of her dark eyes, the gleam of her small white
teeth when she smiled. Those were his reward,
all that he had worked for all that he
prized. She expected him to win. He couldn’t
lose.
The day passed slowly. I visited
the gymnasium with Jack. Flynn was still with
Jerry, but confidence reigned. There was a story
going the rounds of the press that Clancy had gone
stale, that he had strained a tendon, that he had
broken a finger, that his mother had just died.
“Buncombe!” said Jack,
who knew the game. “They want to worry the
odds down a bit. He’s fit as a fiddle.
You can be sure of that.”
The early afternoon papers contained
the first hint that Jim Robinson was not what he was
supposed to be. A heading on the sporting page
caught my eyes. I have kept it among my papers
and give it verbatim.
PUGILIST SOCIETY MAN
JIM ROBINSON, THE HEAVY WEIGHT,
A
MASQUERADER.
I read the type below hurriedly:
A story is going the rounds that Jim
Robinson, the heavyweight, who goes against Sailor
Clancy in the principal event at the Garden tonight,
is not Robinson at all, but a well-known society man
and millionaire. From the hour when this match
was made in May last there has been a mystery attached
to the personality of this fighter never before heard
of in Fistiana in New York. Flynn, his backer
and trainer, could not be found to deny or affirm
the rumor, and his sparring partners at Flynn’s
Gymnasium, of course, denied it, but every circumstance,
including the size of the purse, now believed to be
five thousand dollars, would indicate that Flynn’s
Unknown, unless a well-known Westerner in disguise,
is a man of more than usual ability or
else a millionaire sport, bent on enriching the hard-fisted
sailor, who thinks he sees a chance of picking up some
easy money besides his share of the gate. Whoever
Jim Robinson is, we welcome him cordially.
But we also warn him that New York
is tired of ring fakes and that nothing but a good
mill will justify the prices asked.
I showed the thing to Ballard, who
read it through eagerly, his lips emitting a thin
whistle.
“Ph-ew! They’re getting
‘warm,’ Pope. Somebody’s leaked.”
“But who ?”
“May be the management to
draw the crowd.” And then, looking at the
front page, “That’s only the twelve o’clock
edition. Perhaps ”
He paused and rang the bell (we were
at his rooms again), instructing his man to go out
on the street and buy copies of the latest editions
of all the afternoon papers.
“It would be the deuce if they followed that
up.”
He walked to and fro while we waited
impatiently. And in a short while our worst fears
were realized, for when the papers came we saw the
dreadful facts in scare heads on the first page of
the yellowest of them. I give the item here:
JEREMIAH
BENHAM PRIZE FIGHTER.
MULTI-MILLIONAIRE SEEKS LAURELS
IN RING.
FLYNN’S MYSTERIOUS UNKNOWN
REVEALED
IN PERSON OF MILLIONAIRE
SPORTSMAN.
Jack Ballard swore softly, but I read
on over his shoulder, breathlessly:
The latest mystery of the prize ring
has been revealed by a reporter of the Despatch,
who proves here conclusively that the so-called
Jim Robinson, matched to fight Sailor Clancy in the
big event at the Garden tonight, is no less a person
than Jeremiah Benham, son of the late John Benham,
Railroad and Steamship King. Last month
it will be recalled that this paper sent a reporter
up to Horsham Manor, the magnificent Benham estate
in Greene County, where the so-called Jim Robinson
was finishing his training at the invitation
of Mr. Benham, who was supposed to take a warm
sportsman’s interest in the ring. Horsham
Manor, one of the wonders of the State, is surrounded,
as is well known, by a wall of solid masonry,
and much secrecy was observed in the training
of the so-called Robinson, all visitors being
denied admittance at the lodge gates. The reporter,
however, managed to gain admittance and reached Mr.
Benham’s gymnasium, a palatial affair, fully
equipped with all the latest paraphernalia, where
the so-called Robinson was boxing with one of
his partners. But a person who represented himself
to be Mr. Benham immediately gave orders to have the
reporter shown out of the grounds.
The life of the younger Benham has
been shrouded in mystery, but this morning after
some difficulty the reporter succeeded in finding
the photographer who made the picture of Robinson
printed herewith, who at last confessed that it
was faked. Further investigation among members
of an uptown club revealed the fact that Jeremiah
Benham has just passed his twenty-first year
and could therefore not be the slender, rather crusty,
sandy-haired gentleman impersonating the owner
of Horsham Manor, who was at least thirty-five.
“Slender rather crusty!”
muttered Ballard. “You! D n
the fellow!”
In order to verify the suspicion [I
read on], the Despatch reporter went to
the office of the New York and Southwestern Railroad
and obtained without difficulty from several sources
a description of the person of Mr. Benham, which
coincides in all particulars with the so-called
Jim Robinson, whom the reporter saw at work at
Horsham Manor.
There is no Jim Robinson, except in
name. The opponent of Sailor Clancy in tonight’s
fight is no less a person than young Jerry Benham,
multi-millionaire and sportsman. It is a matter
of regret, since Mr. Benham chose, for personal
reasons, to hide his identity under another name,
that the Despatch could not keep the matter
secret, but the Despatch is in the business
of supplying news to its patrons, news not presented
in other journals, and so important an item as
this, of course, could not be suppressed.
The murder was out. We searched
the other papers. Nothing.
“A beat!” muttered Jack.
“I’d like to show the fellow what a beating
is.”
Jack Ballard was merely angry.
I was bewildered into a state of helplessness.
What should we do? What could we do?
The damage was done. Telling Jerry wouldn’t
help matters and might unnerve him. We disconnected
the telephone and dined at the apartment, making a
pretense of eating, nervously awaiting the hour when
we should go to the Garden. We had reached the
coffee, of which we were much in need, when there
was a ring at the bell and Ballard Senior came into
the room, a copy of the Despatch in his hand.
“Have you seen this?” he snapped.
“We have,” said Jack with an assumption
of calmness.
“It’s a lie?”
“No. It’s the truth.”
The old man raged the length of the room and turned.
“Do you mean that you’ve
let this thing go on without trying to stop it without
letting me know ”
“We did try to stop it.
There was no use in letting you know. Jerry’s
mind was made up.”
“Jerry! The fool is ruining
himself and us. The thing must be
stopped at once.”
Jack smiled coolly. “I
don’t see how you’re going to do that.”
The father stamped the length of the
room again. “I’ll show you. Where
is Clancy?”
“I don’t know. You’ll
find him at Madison Square Garden about ten.”
“But where is he now?” he snapped.
Jack shrugged. “I don’t know.”
“Well, you must come with me. I’ve
got to find him.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Buy him off. This match can’t take
place.”
“Do you mean that?” asked Jack with a
smile.
“Did you ever know me to waste words? Come!”
However lenient Henry Ballard had
been to his son, at that moment the parental word
was law, and Jack obeyed, taking up his hat and gloves,
and laying a pink ticket on the table.
“Yours, Pope. I’ll see you later.”
And they went out hastily, the old
man from beginning to end having ignored me completely.
I sank in a chair, my gaze shifting from the ticket
to the brandy bottle and cigarettes. I wanted
to do something I didn’t know what.
I hadn’t drunk or smoked for twelve years, but
that’ night I did both. The brandy steadied,
the cigarette quieted my nerves. I sat there
alone over the half-cleared dinner table, resolutely
impelling calmness. The ticket stared at me, a
symbol of Jerry’s destiny.... My thought
shifted curiously to the placid Miss Gore. Whatever
Fate had in store for Jerry, this phase of his life
would pass as she had said, the mind would survive.
Something told me that tonight would mark a turning
point in Jerry’s career how or what
I could not know, but for the first time I realized
how deeply I was committed to Jerry’s plans.
I wanted the bout to take place. I wanted to
see it win or lose I was committed to it
and to Jerry.
It had grown dark outside. I
rose, slowly putting the ticket in my pocket, and
went out. The night was sultry. It would
be hot there in the ring but it would be
hot for both of them. Muscle for muscle and tissue
for tissue, Jerry could stand what another could.
I glanced at my watch. It was now nine.
The preliminary bouts would be beginning, but I had
no interest in these. I walked down town, purposely
delaying my steps, but found my footsteps hurrying
in spite of me, and it was only half after nine when
I entered the building.
I remembered a six-day bicycle race
that I had witnessed there years ago, but I was not
prepared for the sight of the crowd that had gathered
under the enormous roof. The match had been well
advertised and the article in the Despatch
must have lent an added spice to the attraction.
The heated air was already a blue fog of tobacco smoke,
through which beyond the glare of the ring, tiny spots
of light flared and disappeared like glow-worms where
in the gallery the smokers lighted their tobacco.
As I entered I scanned the crowd. Eager, stupid
or brutal faces, the washed and the unwashed, the gloved
and the ungloved, cheek by jowl, all talking, smoking,
cheering, jeering or waiting calmly for the expected
thrill. They had paid their money to see blood,
and as I found my seat I realized the inevitableness
of Jerry’s appearance. He could not disappoint
these people now.
My seat was in a box, in the second
row of boxes, the first row being just back of the
press seats which were along the sides of the ring.
In this vast crowd I would be lost to Jerry and I was
thankful not to be directly under the ring where the
sight of my anxious face might have diverted him.
A bout was in progress now, of six rounds, between
two lightweights, a rapid affair which drew to a conclusion
none too quickly for me. The final bout was to
take place at ten, but I knew from the long intervals
between these preliminaries that the hour would be
much later. I thought for a moment of going out
and walking the streets for awhile, but realized that
I should be even more unhappy there than here; so
I sat quietly absorbing the scene, listening to the
conversation of my neighbors in the next box, who
seemed to have their money on the sailor. One
of their comments aroused my ire.
“What’s this goldfish
their feedin’ to the sea lion? Say, that
story ain’t straight about young Benham bein’
Robinson?”
“Sure thing. Clancy will
eat him alive eat him alive,”
the man repeated, slowly and with unction.
I glanced at the speaker. Squat,
stout, heavy jowled with a neck that pushed
over the back of his collar a follower of
the ring, smug, assertive, confident. A prophet?
I was not ready to admit that.
After the third bout three women and
three men, following an usher, passed along the aisle
just in front of me. I recognized her instantly
in spite of the dark suit, large hat and heavy veil,
for her walk betrayed her. One of the women was
Marcia Van Wyck. Followed by the gaze of the
men nearest them, they went to a box in the second
tier just around the corner of the ring where I could
see the girl distinctly. The other women of the
party or the men I did not recognize, but Marcia attracted
the attention of my neighbors.
“Some dame, that,” said
one of them admiringly. “Know her, Charlie?”
“Naw,” replied the stout
man. “Swells, I reckon, friends of the
goldfish.”
As the bout on the boards proceeded
and the attention of those nearest her was diverted,
the girl settled into her seat and coolly removed
her veil, watching the fight calmly, now and then exchanging
a word with her companions. She was beautiful,
distinguished looking, but in this moment of restraint,
cold and unfeeling almost to the point of cruelty.
She looked across the space that separated us, caught
my gaze and held it, challenging, defying with
no other sign of recognition and presently
looked away.
The preliminaries ended, there was
a rustle and stir of expectation. Men were rushing
back and forth from the dressing rooms to the ring
and whispering to the master of ceremonies between
his introductions of various pugilists in a great
variety of street clothes, who claimed the right to
challenge the winner of the night’s heavyweight
event. I had heard many of their names during
the past three weeks at the Manor, and knowing something
of the customs of the ring, was not surprised to see
Tim O’Halloran and Sagorski. It was a little
free advertising which meant much to these gentlemen
and cost little. O’Halloran grinned toothlessly,
at the plaudits that greeted his name, shuffled his
feet awkwardly and bobbed down. Sagorski was not
so popular, but the crowd received him good-naturedly
enough, and amid cries of “Clancy” and
“Bring on the Sailor” the Jew ungracefully
retired.
I glanced at the girl; she was smiling
up into the faces of these men as at old acquaintances.
If there was any regret in her any revulsion
at the vulgarity of this scene into which she had plunged
Jerry Benham she gave no sign of it.
It seemed to me that she was in her element; as though
in this adventure, the most unusual she had perhaps
ever attempted, she had found the very acme, the climax
of her experience.
When the introductions were finished,
the hubbub began anew. Had Henry Ballard succeeded
in buying Clancy off? I hoped and I feared it.
Men came from the dressing-rooms and whispered in
the ear of the announcer who sent them back hurriedly.
The crowd was becoming impatient. There were
no more pugilists to introduce and the man in the ring
walked to and fro mopping his perspiring brow.
At last when the sounds from the crowd became one
muffled roar, he clambered down through the ropes and
went himself to the dressing-rooms, returning in a
while with the referee of the match whom he presented.
The new referee looked at his watch and announced
that there was a slight delay and begged the crowd
to be patient a few moments longer.
But when the moments were no longer
few and there were no signs from the dressing-room
doors the people in the rear seats rose howling in
a body. There were cries of “Fake”
and “Give us our money” and the man in
the ring, Diamond Joe Gannon, held up his hands in
vain for silence. For awhile it looked as though
there would be a riot. Had Ballard Senior succeeded?
Suddenly the howling was hushed and
merged into shouts of acclaim. “Good boy,
Kid! Here he comes,” and, rising with the
others, I saw coming down the aisle from the dressing-rooms
“Kid” Spatola, the bootblack champion.
He carried a bucket, sponges and towels and after
a word with the clamorous reporters clambered up into
the ring, followed by a colored man, in whom I recognized
Danny Monroe, the Swedish negro. He wore suspenders
over his undershirt and carried several bottles which
he placed in the corner of the ring beside the bucket.
The eyes of the crowd were focused upon the door from
which Spatola had emerged. I saw two figures
come out, one grim and silent who made his way toward
the street doors, the other who came quickly down
the aisle Ballard Senior and Jack.
The latter questioned an usher and was shown directly
to my box, by his prominence investing both himself
and me with immediate publicity. I felt the gaze
of our neighbors upon us, but Jack seated himself
coolly and lighted a cigarette.
“What happened?” I questioned in a whisper.
“They’re going to fight,” he returned.
“Your father ?”
He smiled a little. “Mad as a hornet.
Jerry blocked the game.”
“How ?”
“Dad offered Clancy five thousand
and his share of the gate money to quit.”
“Clancy refused?”
“He was very white about it. He sent the
message over to Jerry.”
“And Jerry?”
“The boy doubled any amount
dad offered if Clancy would go on. Clancy stands
to win fifteen thousand. Dad quit. I told
him Jerry had made up his mind. He realizes it
now.”
“Fifteen thousand! Clancy will work for
it.”
Jack smiled grimly. “I think Jerry wants
him to.”
The boy was mad clean mad.