PHIL GETS HIS EYES OPEN
“Too bad little Herbie Rackliff
isn’t here to witness the fate of his chum,
the wonderful pitcher from Boston,” laughed Jack
Nelson.
“Where is Rackliff?” questioned Stone.
“Why, don’t you know?
He’s sick abed; just went down flat after reaching
this town, and had to have a doctor.”
With the bases full, Chipper Cooper
longed for a handsome clean drive; but fortune seemed
to favor Crowell, for when Chipper did hit the ball
he simply rolled it straight at the man on the slab,
who scooped it and snapped it back to the catcher
with Eliot only a little more than halfway down the
line from third. Taking the ball, with one foot
on the plate, the catcher hummed it past Cooper’s
ear to first, completing a double play.
Of course the downcast Wyndhamites
awoke and cheered, but the visitors, although disappointed
by the abrupt ending of their “streak,”
felt very well satisfied.
“Now keep steady and play the
game, boys,” called Eliot. “This
is the game we want to win.”
Springer, literally a-tingle with
joy over the turn the game had taken, watched Hooker,
who was given excellent support, pull through the fifth
without letting more than one man reach first base.
“I’m glad,” muttered
Phil. “I don’t care if it does cost
me seven dollars, for Wyndham deserves to be beaten.”
Eliot, removing his cage at the end
of the inning, looked for Springer and found him.
“Come here, Phil,” he called, beckoning.
Phil hesitated, more than half disposed
to pretend that he did not hear and to get away from
that locality at once; but, realizing he would find
it necessary to face Roger’s questions sooner
or later, he finally plucked up courage to answer
the summons. Greatly to his relief, the captain
of the nine did not question him then; instead of that,
Roger said:
“I’m much obliged to you,
old fellow, for putting me wise, although I’m
ashamed that I didn’t tumble to the fact myself.
I hope we can win this game now; we must win it somehow.
Grant is knocked out for some time to come, and there’s
only Hooker left to depend on. If anything happens
to Hook, it’s all off; there’s no one to
take his place.”
Suddenly Phil understood what Roger
was driving at, and his pale face flamed with color.
“If I can ” he began
eagerly, and then stopped, choking a bit.
“I thought so!” exclaimed
Roger, with great satisfaction; “I thought you
must be still loyal and true. I’ve got
to pay close attention to the run of the game.
Won’t you find Grant and ask him to let you
have his suit? Get into it as soon as you can,
and hurry back here; for Wyndham is liable to solve
Hook’s delivery any minute. Hustle, old
chap do.”
With this admonition, he turned to
give his attention to his players.
“Still loyal and true!”
muttered Phil. “If he only knew the truth!
Well, I suppose he’ll find out before long, for
Rackliff will blow on me. I’ll have to
face it, that’s all. I wonder wh-where
Grant is.”
A few moments later he found the fellow
he was seeking, the doctor having just finished bandaging
Rod’s injured fingers. Springer hesitated,
feeling that it was almost impossible for him to approach
the Texan, and, as he was wavering, Grant, still wearing
his playing suit, started for the Oakdale bench.
“I I bub-beg your
pardon,” stammered Phil as Rodney was passing.
“Oh!” exclaimed the young
Texan, stopping short. “Is it you Phil?
What’s the matter?”
“I want your suit.”
Springer could not meet Rod’s eyes, and he
could feel his cheeks burning; for over him had swept
a full and complete understanding of his own folly
in permitting jealousy to lead him into the course
he had been pursuing.
“My my suit?”
said Rod, as if he did not quite understand.
“You ”
“Eliot sus-sent me for
it,” Phil hastened to explain. “You
know he hasn’t a spare man on the bench now,
and if anything should happen to another pup-player ”
“Come on,” said Rod, turning
sharply. “The dressing room is over back
of the seats here.”
In the dressing room Grant got out
of the playing suit as quickly as possible, while
Springer stripped off his street clothes and unhesitatingly
donned each piece as it was tossed to him. Both
were silent, for the situation was such that neither
could seem to find words to fit it. However,
having put on Rod’s clothes down to the brass-clipped
pitching shoes and being on the point of leaving the
Texan struggling slowly into his everyday garments,
Phil stopped and half turned, after taking a step
toward the door.
“I’m sus-sorry you
got your fingers busted,” he stated in a low
tone.
“Thanks,” returned Rod, without looking
up.
“He despises me,” whispered
Springer, as soon as he was outside. “Well,
perhaps I deserve it.”
At the end of the tiered seats he
came upon Herbert Rackliff, who had just arrived at
the field. Herbert’s eyes widened on beholding
Springer in that suit. His face was pale save
for two burning spots upon his hollow cheeks.
“What the dickens does this
mean?” exclaimed Rackliff, his wondering eyes
flashing over Phil from head to heels.
“Nothing,” was the answer,
“only Grant’s hurt, and I’m going
onto the bub-bench as spare man at Eliot’s
request.”
An odd smile twisted Rackliff’s
lips. “Now wouldn’t that kill you
dead!” he coughed. “At Eliot’s
request! Ha! ha! ha! If he only knew!
But of course he doesn’t suspect, for I haven’t
given you away. Well, this is a joke!”
“I’m in a hurry, so I’ll hustle
along.”
“Wait a jiffy. I’ve
just got here. Sort of went to pieces after
landing in this town, and they stowed me in bed, with
a pill-slinger looking at my tongue, taking my pulse
and asking a lot of tiresome questions. He even
sounded my lungs, though I protested against it.
And then he told me I was to stay in bed, and left
a lot of nasty medicine for me to take. I stayed
in bed as long as I could, knowing this game was going
on. Now that I’m here, how does it stand?”
“Your great pup-pitcher, Newbert,
was batted out in the fifth inning.”
“What’s that? I don’t believe
it!”
“It’s a fact.”
“The score what’s the score?”
“It was four to three in Oakdale’s favor
at the end of the fifth.”
“Rotten!” snarled Herbert,
and a tempestuous burst of coughing shook him frightfully.
When Phil started away the still coughing
lad grasped his arm and restrained him.
“You you wait!”
gasped Rackliff. “Wyndham must win this
game she just must, that’s all.
Did you say Grant was hurt?”
“Yes.”
“How much?”
“Enough to knock him out; he
got two fingers busted by a liner hot from the bub-bat.”
“Good! Then I suppose that dub Hooker
is pitching now?”
“Yes.”
“Well, if I had any more money
I’d be willing to bet the limit that Wyndham
gets to him, all right. He’ll get his.”
“Perhaps not. He fuf-finished the fifth
in style.”
“He’ll get his,”
repeated Herbert positively. “Then you’ll
be run in. That’s why Eliot wants you.
That will fix things beautifully. You know
what to do.”
“Yes, I know what to do,”
said Phil slowly, “and I shall do it if I get
the chance.”
“That’s the talk!
You can do it cleverly enough so no one will suspect
that you’re throwing the game, and we’ll
win ”
“If I’m put in to pitch,”
said Springer, still uttering his words in that slow
and positive manner, “I shall do my level best
to hold Wyndham down and give Oakdale a chance to
win the game.”
“You you’ll
what?” spluttered Rackliff incredulously.
“Why, you’re joking! Your money,
seven dollars which you gave me, is bet on Wyndham.
If Oakdale wins you lose the seven.”
“If I could do anything to help
Oakdale win, I’d do it, even if I stood to lose
seven hundred dollars by it,” declared Phil.