THE REDHEADED OUTFIELD AND OTHER BASEBALL STORIES
There was Delaney’s red-haired
trio Red Gilbat, left fielder; Reddy Clammer,
right fielder, and Reddie Ray, center fielder, composing
the most remarkable outfield ever developed in minor
league baseball. It was Delaney’s pride,
as it was also his trouble.
Red Gilbat was nutty and
his batting average was .371. Any student of
baseball could weigh these two facts against each other
and understand something of Delaney’s trouble.
It was not possible to camp on Red Gilbat’s
trail. The man was a jack-o’-lantern, a
will-o’-the-wisp, a weird, long-legged, long-armed,
red-haired illusive phantom. When the gong rang
at the ball grounds there were ten chances to one that
Red would not be present. He had been discovered
with small boys peeping through knotholes at the vacant
left field he was supposed to inhabit during play.
Of course what Red did off the ball
grounds was not so important as what he did on.
And there was absolutely no telling what under the
sun he might do then except once out of every three
times at bat he could be counted on to knock the cover
off the ball.
Reddy Clammer was a grand-stand player the
kind all managers hated and he was hitting .305. He made circus catches, circus stops, circus
throws, circus steals but particularly circus
catches. That is to say, he made easy plays
appear difficult. He was always strutting, posing,
talking, arguing, quarreling when he was
not engaged in making a grand-stand play. Reddy Clammer used every possible incident and artifice
to bring himself into the limelight.
Reddie Ray had been the intercollegiate
champion in the sprints and a famous college ball
player. After a few months of professional ball
he was hitting over .400 and leading the league both
at bat and on the bases. It was a beautiful
and a thrilling sight to see him run. He was
so quick to start, so marvelously swift, so keen of
judgment, that neither Delaney nor any player could
ever tell the hit that he was not going to get.
That was why Reddie Ray was a whole game in himself.
Delaney’s Rochester Stars and
the Providence Grays were tied for first place.
Of the present series each team had won a game.
Rivalry had always been keen, and as the teams were
about to enter the long homestretch for the pennant
there was battle in the New England air.
The September day was perfect.
The stands were half full and the bleachers packed
with a white-sleeved mass. And the field was
beautifully level and green. The Grays were practicing
and the Stars were on their bench.
“We’re up against it,”
Delaney was saying. “This new umpire, Fuller,
hasn’t got it in for us. Oh, no, not at
all! Believe me, he’s a robber. But
Scott is pitchin’ well. Won his last three
games. He’ll bother ’em. And
the three Reds have broken loose. They’re
on the rampage. They’ll burn up this place
today.”
Somebody noted the absence of Gilbat.
Delaney gave a sudden start. “Why, Gil
was here,” he said slowly.
“Lord! he’s about due for a
nutty stunt.”
Whereupon Delaney sent boys and players
scurrying about to find Gilbat, and Delaney went himself
to ask the Providence manager to hold back the gong
for a few minutes.
Presently somebody brought Delaney
a telephone message that Red Gilbat was playing ball
with some boys in a lot four blocks down the street.
When at length a couple of players marched up to the
bench with Red in tow Delaney uttered an immense sigh
of relief and then, after a close scrutiny of Red’s
face, he whispered, “Lock the gates!”
Then the gong rang. The Grays
trooped in. The Stars ran out, except Gilbat,
who ambled like a giraffe. The hum of conversation
in the grand stand quickened for a moment with the
scraping of chairs, and then grew quiet. The
bleachers sent up the rollicking cry of expectancy.
The umpire threw out a white ball with his stentorian
“Play!” and Blake of the Grays strode to
the plate.
Hitting safely, he started the game
with a rush. With Dorr up, the Star infield played
for a bunt. Like clockwork Dorr dumped the first
ball as Blake got his flying start for second base.
Morrissey tore in for the ball, got it on the run
and snapped it underhand to Healy, beating the runner
by an inch. The fast Blake, with a long slide,
made third base. The stands stamped. The
bleachers howled. White, next man up, batted
a high fly to left field. This was a sun field
and the hardest to play in the league. Red Gilbat
was the only man who ever played it well. He
judged the fly, waited under it, took a step hack,
then forward, and deliberately caught the ball in
his gloved hand. A throw-in to catch the runner
scoring from third base would have been futile, but
it was not like Red Gilbat to fail to try. He
tossed the ball to O’Brien. And Blake scored
amid applause.
“What do you know about that?”
ejaculated Delaney, wiping his moist face. “I
never before saw our nutty Redhead pull off a play
like that.”
Some of the players yelled at Red,
“This is a two-handed league, you bat!”
The first five players on the list
for the Grays were left-handed batters, and against
a right-handed pitcher whose most effective ball for
them was a high fast one over the outer corner they
would naturally hit toward left field. It was
no surprise to see Hanley bat a skyscraper out to
left. Red had to run to get under it. He
braced himself rather unusually for a fielder.
He tried to catch the ball in his bare right hand
and muffed it, Hanley got to second on the play while
the audience roared. When they got through there
was some roaring among the Rochester players.
Scott and Captain Healy roared at Red, and Red roared
back at them.
“It’s all off. Red
never did that before,” cried Delaney in despair.
“He’s gone clean bughouse now.”
Babcock was the next man up and he
likewise hit to left. It was a low, twisting
ball half fly, half liner and
a difficult one to field. Gilbat ran with great
bounds, and though he might have got two hands on
the ball he did not try, but this time caught it in
his right, retiring the side.
The Stars trotted in, Scott and Healy
and Kane, all veterans, looking like thunderclouds.
Red ambled in the last and he seemed very nonchalant.
“By Gosh, I’d ‘a’
ketched that one I muffed if I’d had time to
change hands,” he said with a grin, and he exposed
a handful of peanuts. He had refused to drop
the peanuts to make the catch with two hands.
That explained the mystery. It was funny, yet
nobody laughed. There was that run chalked up
against the Stars, and this game had to be won.
“Red, I I want to
take the team home in the lead,” said Delaney,
and it was plain that he suppressed strong feeling.
“You didn’t play the game, you know.”
Red appeared mightily ashamed.
“Del, I’ll git that run back,” he
said.
Then he strode to the plate, swinging
his wagon-tongue bat. For all his awkward position
in the box he looked what he was a formidable
hitter. He seemed to tower over the pitcher Red
was six feet one and he scowled and shook
his bat at Wehying and called, “Put one over you
wienerwurst!” Wehying was anything but red-headed,
and he wasted so many balls on Red that it looked
as if he might pass him. He would have passed
him, too, if Red had not stepped over on the fourth
ball and swung on it. White at second base leaped
high for the stinging hit, and failed to reach it.
The ball struck and bounded for the fence.
When Babcock fielded it in, Red was standing on third
base, and the bleachers groaned.
Whereupon Chesty Reddy Clammer proceeded
to draw attention to himself, and incidentally delay
the game, by assorting the bats as if the audience
and the game might gladly wait years to see him make
a choice.
“Git in the game!” yelled Delaney.
“Aw, take my bat, Duke of the
Abrubsky!” sarcastically said Dump Kane.
When the grouchy Kane offered to lend his bat matters
were critical in the Star camp.
Other retorts followed, which Reddy
Clammer deigned not to notice. At last he got
a bat that suited him and then, importantly,
dramatically, with his cap jauntily riding his red
locks, he marched to the plate.
Some wag in the bleachers yelled into
the silence, “Oh, Maggie, your lover has come!”
Not improbably Clammer was thinking
first of his presence before the multitude, secondly
of his batting average and thirdly of the run to be
scored. In this instance he waited and feinted
at balls and fouled strikes at length to work his
base. When he got to first base suddenly he bolted
for second, and in the surprise of the unlooked-for
play he made it by a spread-eagle slide. It
was a circus steal.
Delaney snorted. Then the look
of profound disgust vanished in a flash of light.
His huge face beamed.
Reddie Ray was striding to the plate.
There was something about Reddie Ray
that pleased all the senses. His lithe form
seemed instinct with life; any sudden movement was
suggestive of stored lightning. His position
at the plate was on the left side, and he stood perfectly
motionless, with just a hint of tense waiting alertness.
Dorr, Blake and Babcock, the outfielders for the
Grays, trotted round to the right of their usual position.
Delaney smiled derisively, as if he knew how futile
it was to tell what field Reddie Ray might hit into.
Wehying, the old fox, warily eyed the youngster,
and threw him a high curve, close in. It grazed
Reddie’s shirt, but he never moved a hair.
Then Wehying, after the manner of many veteran pitchers
when trying out a new and menacing batter, drove a
straight fast ball at Reddie’s head. Reddie
ducked, neither too slow nor too quick, just right
to show what an eye he had, how hard it was to pitch
to. The next was a strike. And on the next
he appeared to step and swing in one action.
There was a ringing rap, and the ball shot toward
right, curving down, a vicious, headed hit. Mallory,
at first base, snatched at it and found only the air.
Babcock had only time to take a few sharp steps,
and then he plunged down, blocked the hit and fought
the twisting ball. Reddie turned first base,
flitted on toward second, went headlong in the dust,
and shot to the base before White got the throw-in
from Babcock. Then, as White wheeled and lined
the ball home to catch the scoring Clammer, Reddie
Ray leaped up, got his sprinter’s start and,
like a rocket, was off for third. This time
he dove behind the base, sliding in a half circle,
and as Hanley caught Strickland’s perfect throw
and whirled with the ball, Reddie’s hand slid
to the bag.
Reddie got to his feet amid a rather
breathless silence. Even the coachers were quiet.
There was a moment of relaxation, then Wehying received
the ball from Hanley and faced the batter.
This was Dump Kane. There was
a sign of some kind, almost imperceptible, between
Kane and Reddie. As Wehying half turned in his
swing to pitch, Reddie Ray bounded homeward.
It was not so much the boldness of his action as the
amazing swiftness of it that held the audience spellbound.
Like a thunderbolt Reddie came down the line, almost
beating Wehying’s pitch to the plate. But
Kane’s bat intercepted the ball, laying it down,
and Reddie scored without sliding. Dorr, by sharp
work, just managed to throw Kane out.
Three runs so quick it was hard to
tell how they had come. Not in the major league
could there have been faster work. And the ball
had been fielded perfectly and thrown perfectly.
“There you are,” said
Delaney, hoarsely. “Can you beat it?
If you’ve been wonderin’ how the cripped
Stars won so many games just put what you’ve
seen in your pipe and smoke it. Red Gilbat gets
on Reddy Clammer gets on and
then Reddie Ray drives them home or chases them home.”
The game went on, and though it did
not exactly drag it slowed down considerably.
Morrissey and Healy were retired on infield plays.
And the sides changed. For the Grays, O’Brien
made a scratch hit, went to second on Strickland’s
sacrifice, stole third and scored on Mallory’s
infield out. Wehying missed three strikes.
In the Stars’ turn the three end players on
the batting list were easily disposed of. In
the third inning the clever Blake, aided by a base
on balls and a hit following, tied the score, and
once more struck fire and brimstone from the impatient
bleachers. Providence was a town that had to
have its team win.
“Git at ’em, Reds!” said Delaney
gruffly.
“Batter up!” called Umpire Fuller, sharply.
“Where’s Red? Where’s
the bug? Where’s the nut? Delaney,
did you lock the gates? Look under the bench!”
These and other remarks, not exactly elegant, attested
to the mental processes of some of the Stars.
Red Gilbat did not appear to be forthcoming.
There was an anxious delay Capt. Healy searched
for the missing player. Delaney did not say any
more.
Suddenly a door under the grand stand
opened and Red Gilbat appeared. He hurried for
his bat and then up to the plate. And he never
offered to hit one of the balls Wehying shot over.
When Fuller had called the third strike Red hurried
back to the door and disappeared.
“Somethin’ doin’,” whispered
Delaney.
Lord Chesterfield Clammer paraded
to the batter’s box and, after gradually surveying
the field, as if picking out the exact place he meant
to drive the ball, he stepped to the plate. Then
a roar from the bleachers surprised him.
“Well, I’ll be dog-goned!”
exclaimed Delaney. “Red stole that sure
as shootin’.”
Red Gilbat was pushing a brand-new
baby carriage toward the batter’s box.
There was a tittering in the grand stand; another
roar from the bleachers. Clammer’s face
turned as red as his hair. Gilbat shoved the
baby carriage upon the plate, spread wide his long
arms, made a short presentation speech and an elaborate
bow, then backed away.
All eyes were centered on Clammer.
If he had taken it right the incident might have
passed without undue hilarity. But Clammer became
absolutely wild with rage. It was well known
that he was unmarried. Equally well was it seen
that Gilbat had executed one of his famous tricks.
Ball players were inclined to be dignified about the
presentation of gifts upon the field, and Clammer,
the dude, the swell, the lady’s man, the favorite
of the baseball gods in his own estimation so
far lost control of himself that he threw his bat at
his retreating tormentor. Red jumped high and
the bat skipped along the ground toward the bench.
The players sidestepped and leaped and, of course,
the bat cracked one of Delaney’s big shins.
His eyes popped with pain, but he could not stop
laughing. One by one the players lay down and
rolled over and yelled. The superior Clammer
was not overliked by his co-players.
From the grand stand floated the laughter
of ladies and gentlemen. And from the bleachers that
throne of the biting, ironic, scornful fans pealed
up a howl of delight. It lasted for a full minute.
Then, as quiet ensued, some boy blew a blast of one
of those infernal little instruments of pipe and rubber
balloon, and over the field wailed out a shrill, high-keyed
cry, an excellent imitation of a baby. Whereupon
the whole audience roared, and in discomfiture Reddy
Clammer went in search of his bat.
To make his chagrin all the worse
he ingloriously struck out. And then he strode
away under the lea of the grand-stand wall toward right
field.
Reddie Ray went to bat and, with the
infield playing deep and the outfield swung still
farther round to the right, he bunted a little teasing
ball down the third-base line. Like a flash of
light he had crossed first base before Hanley got
his hands on the ball. Then Kane hit into second
base, forcing Reddie out.
Again the game assumed less spectacular
and more ordinary play. Both Scott and Wehying
held the batters safely and allowed no runs.
But in the fifth inning, with the Stars at bat and
two out, Red Gilbat again electrified the field.
He sprang up from somewhere and walked to the plate,
his long shape enfolded in a full-length linen duster.
The color and style of this garment might not have
been especially striking, but upon Red it had a weird
and wonderful effect. Evidently Red intended
to bat while arrayed in his long coat, for he stepped
into the box and faced the pitcher. Capt.
Healy yelled for him to take the duster off.
Likewise did the Grays yell.
The bleachers shrieked their disapproval.
To say the least, Red Gilbat’s crazy assurance
was dampening to the ardor of the most blindly confident
fans. At length Umpire Fuller waved his hand,
enjoining silence and calling time.
“Take it off or I’ll fine you.”
From his lofty height Gilbat gazed
down upon the little umpire, and it was plain what
he thought.
“What do I care for money!” replied Red.
“That costs you twenty-five,” said Fuller.
“Cigarette change!” yelled Red.
“Costs you fifty.”
“Bah! Go to an eye doctor,” roared
Red.
“Seventy-five,” added Fuller, imperturbably.
“Make it a hundred!”
“It’s two hundred.”
“Rob-B-ber!” bawled Red.
Fuller showed willingness to overlook
Red’s back talk as well as costume, and he called,
“Play!”
There was a mounting sensation of
prophetic certainty. Old fox Wehying appeared
nervous. He wasted two balls on Red; then he put
one over the plate, and then he wasted another.
Three balls and one strike! That was a bad
place for a pitcher, and with Red Gilbat up it was
worse. Wehying swung longer and harder to get
all his left behind the throw and let drive.
Red lunged and cracked the ball. It went up
and up and kept going up and farther out, and as the
murmuring audience was slowly transfixed into late
realization the ball soared to its height and dropped
beyond the left-field fence. A home run!
Red Gilbat gathered up the tails of
his duster, after the manner of a neat woman crossing
a muddy street, and ambled down to first base and
on to second, making prodigious jumps upon the bags,
and round third, to come down the home-stretch wagging
his red head. Then he stood on the plate, and,
as if to exact revenge from the audience for the fun
they made of him, he threw back his shoulders and bellowed:
“Haw! Haw! Haw!”
Not a handclap greeted him, but some
mindless, exceedingly adventurous fan yelled:
“Redhead! Redhead! Redhead!”
That was the one thing calculated
to rouse Red Gilbat. He seemed to flare, to
bristle, and he paced for the bleachers.
Delaney looked as if he might have
a stroke. “Grab him! Soak him with
a bat! Somebody grab him!”
But none of the Stars was risking
so much, and Gilbat, to the howling derision of the
gleeful fans, reached the bleachers. He stretched
his long arms up to the fence and prepared to vault
over. “Where’s the guy who called
me redhead?” he yelled.
That was heaping fuel on the fire.
From all over the bleachers, from everywhere, came
the obnoxious word. Red heaved himself over the
fence and piled into the fans. Then followed
the roar of many voices, the tramping of many feet,
the pressing forward of line after line of shirt-sleeved
men and boys. That bleacher stand suddenly assumed
the maelstrom appearance of a surging mob round an
agitated center. In a moment all the players
rushed down the field, and confusion reigned.
“Oh! Oh! Oh!” moaned Delaney.
However, the game had to go on.
Delaney, no doubt, felt all was over. Nevertheless
there were games occasionally that seemed an unending
series of unprecedented events. This one had
begun admirably to break a record. And the Providence
fans, like all other fans, had cultivated an appetite
as the game proceeded. They were wild to put
the other redheads out of the field or at least out
for the inning, wild to tie the score, wild to win
and wilder than all for more excitement. Clammer
hit safely. But when Reddie Ray lined to the
second baseman, Clammer, having taken a lead, was
doubled up in the play.
Of course, the sixth inning opened
with the Stars playing only eight men. There
was another delay. Probably everybody except
Delaney and perhaps Healy had forgotten the Stars
were short a man. Fuller called time.
The impatient bleachers barked for action.
Capt. White came over to Delaney
and courteously offered to lend a player for the remaining
innings. Then a pompous individual came out
of the door leading from the press boxes he
was a director Delaney disliked.
“Guess you’d better let
Fuller call the game,” he said brusquely.
“If you want to as
the score stands now in our favor,” replied Delaney.
“Not on your life! It’ll
be ours or else we’ll play it out and beat you
to death.”
He departed in high dudgeon.
“Tell Reddie to swing over a
little toward left,” was Delaney’s order
to Healy. Fire gleamed in the manager’s
eye.
Fuller called play then, with Reddy
Clammer and Reddie Ray composing the Star outfield.
And the Grays evidently prepared to do great execution
through the wide lanes thus opened up. At that
stage it would not have been like matured ball players
to try to crop hits down into the infield.
White sent a long fly back of Clammer.
Reddy had no time to loaf on this hit. It was
all he could do to reach it and he made a splendid
catch, for which the crowd roundly applauded him.
That applause was wine to Reddy Clammer. He
began to prance on his toes and sing out to Scott:
“Make ’em hit to me, old man! Make
’em hit to me!” Whether Scott desired
that or not was scarcely possible to say; at any rate,
Hanley pounded a hit through the infield. And
Clammer, prancing high in the air like a check-reined
horse, ran to intercept the ball. He could have
received it in his hands, but that would never have
served Reddy Clammer. He timed the hit to a
nicety, went down with his old grand-stand play and
blocked the ball with his anatomy. Delaney swore.
And the bleachers, now warm toward the gallant outfielder,
lustily cheered him. Babcock hit down the right-field
foul line, giving Clammer a long run. Hanley
was scoring and Babcock was sprinting for third base
when Reddy got the ball. He had a fine arm and
he made a hard and accurate throw, catching his man
in a close play.
Perhaps even Delaney could not have
found any fault with that play. But the aftermath
spoiled the thing. Clammer now rode the air;
he soared; he was in the clouds; it was his inning
and he had utterly forgotten his team mates, except
inasmuch as they were performing mere little automatic
movements to direct the great machinery in his direction
for his sole achievement and glory.
There is fate in baseball as well
as in other walks of life. O’Brien was
a strapping fellow and he lifted another ball into
Clammer’s wide territory. The hit was
of the high and far-away variety. Clammer started
to run with it, not like a grim outfielder, but like
one thinking of himself, his style, his opportunity,
his inevitable success. Certain it was that
in thinking of himself the outfielder forgot his surroundings.
He ran across the foul line, head up, hair flying,
unheeding the warning cry from Healy. And, reaching
up to make his crowning circus play, he smashed face
forward into the bleachers fence. Then, limp
as a rag, he dropped. The audience sent forth
a long groan of sympathy.
“That wasn’t one of his
stage falls,” said Delaney. “I’ll
bet he’s dead.... Poor Reddy! And
I want him to bust his face!”
Clammer was carried off the field
into the dressing room and a physician was summoned
out of the audience.
“Cap., what’d it do to him?”
asked Delaney.
“Aw, spoiled his pretty mug,
that’s all,” replied Healy, scornfully.
“Mebee he’ll listen to me now.”
Delaney’s change was characteristic
of the man. “Well, if it didn’t kill
him I’m blamed glad he got it.... Cap,
we can trim ’em yet. Reddie Ray’ll
play the whole outfield. Give Reddie a chance
to run! Tell the boy to cut loose. And
all of you git in the game. Win or lose, I won’t
forget it. I’ve a hunch. Once in
a while I can tell what’s comin’ off.
Some queer game this! And we’re goin’
to win. Gilbat lost the game; Clammer throwed
it away again, and now Reddie Ray’s due to win
it.... I’m all in, but I wouldn’t
miss the finish to save my life.”
Delaney’s deep presaging sense
of baseball events was never put to a greater test.
And the seven Stars, with the score tied, exhibited
the temper and timber of a championship team in the
last ditch. It was so splendid that almost instantly
it caught the antagonistic bleachers.
Wherever the tired Scott found renewed
strength and speed was a mystery. But he struck
out the hard-hitting Providence catcher and that made
the third out. The Stars could not score in their
half of the inning. Likewise the seventh inning
passed without a run for either side; only the infield
work of the Stars was something superb. When
the eighth inning ended, without a tally for either
team, the excitement grew tense. There was Reddy
Ray playing outfield alone, and the Grays with all
their desperate endeavors had not lifted the ball
out of the infield.
But in the ninth, Blake, the first
man up, lined low toward right center. The hit
was safe and looked good for three bases. No
one looking, however, had calculated on Reddie’s
Ray’s fleetness. He covered ground and
dove for the bounding ball and knocked it down.
Blake did not get beyond first base. The crowd
cheered the play equally with the prospect of a run.
Dorr bunted and beat the throw. White hit one
of the high fast balls Scott was serving and sent it
close to the left-field foul line. The running
Reddie Ray made on that play held White at second
base. But two runs had scored with no one out.
Hanley, the fourth left-handed hitter,
came up and Scott pitched to him as he had to the
others high fast balls over the inside corner
of the plate. Reddy Ray’s position was
some fifty yards behind deep short, and a little toward
center field. He stood sideways, facing two-thirds
of that vacant outfield. In spite of Scott’s
skill, Hanley swung the ball far round into right
field, but he hit it high, and almost before he actually
hit it the great sprinter was speeding across the green.
The suspense grew almost unbearable
as the ball soared in its parabolic flight and the
red-haired runner streaked dark across the green.
The ball seemed never to be coming down. And
when it began to descend and reached a point perhaps
fifty feet above the ground there appeared more distance
between where it would alight and where Reddie was
than anything human could cover. It dropped
and dropped, and then dropped into Reddie Ray’s
outstretched hands. He had made the catch look
easy. But the fact that White scored from second
base on the play showed what the catch really was.
There was no movement or restlessness
of the audience such as usually indicated the beginning
of the exodus. Scott struck Babcock out.
The game still had fire. The Grays never let
up a moment on their coaching. And the hoarse
voices of the Stars were grimmer than ever. Reddie
Ray was the only one of the seven who kept silent.
And he crouched like a tiger.
The teams changed sides with the Grays
three runs in the lead. Morrissey, for the Stars,
opened with a clean drive to right. Then Healy
slashed a ground ball to Hanley and nearly knocked
him down. When old Burns, by a hard rap to short,
advanced the runners a base and made a desperate,
though unsuccessful, effort to reach first the Providence
crowd awoke to a strange and inspiring appreciation.
They began that most rare feature in baseball audiences a
strong and trenchant call for the visiting team to
win.
The play had gone fast and furious.
Wehying, sweaty and disheveled, worked violently.
All the Grays were on uneasy tiptoes. And the
Stars were seven Indians on the warpath. Halloran
fouled down the right-field line; then he fouled over
the left-field fence. Wehying tried to make
him too anxious, but it was in vain. Halloran
was implacable. With two strikes and three balls
he hit straight down to white, and was out.
The ball had been so sharp that neither runner on
base had a chance to advance.
Two men out, two on base, Stars wanting
three runs to tie, Scott, a weak batter, at the plate!
The situation was disheartening. Yet there sat
Delaney, shot through and through with some vital compelling
force. He saw only victory. And when the
very first ball pitched to Scott hit him on the leg,
giving him his base, Delaney got to his feet, unsteady
and hoarse.
Bases full, Reddie Ray up, three runs to tie!
Delaney looked at Reddie. And
Reddie looked at Delaney. The manager’s
face was pale, intent, with a little smile. The
player had eyes of fire, a lean, bulging jaw and the
hands he reached for his bat clutched like talons.
“Reddie, I knew it was waitin’
for you,” said Delaney, his voice ringing.
“Break up the game!”
After all this was only a baseball
game, and perhaps from the fans’ viewpoint a
poor game at that. But the moment when that lithe,
redhaired athlete toed the plate was a beautiful one.
The long crash from the bleachers, the steady cheer
from the grand stand, proved that it was not so much
the game that mattered.
Wehying had shot his bolt; he was
tired. Yet he made ready for a final effort.
It seemed that passing Reddie Ray on balls would have
been a wise play at that juncture. But no pitcher,
probably, would have done it with the bases crowded
and chances, of course, against the batter.
Clean and swift, Reddie leaped at
the first pitched ball. Ping! For a second
no one saw the hit. Then it gleamed, a terrific
drive, low along the ground, like a bounding bullet,
straight at Babcock in right field. It struck
his hands and glanced viciously away to roll toward
the fence.
Thunder broke loose from the stands.
Reddie Ray was turning first base. Beyond first
base he got into his wonderful stride. Some
runners run with a consistent speed, the best they
can make for a given distance. But this trained
sprinter gathered speed as he ran. He was no
short-stepping runner. His strides were long.
They gave an impression of strength combined with
fleetness. He had the speed of a race horse,
but the trimness, the raciness, the delicate legs were
not characteristic of him. Like the wind he
turned second, so powerful that his turn was short.
All at once there came a difference in his running.
It was no longer beautiful. The grace was gone.
It was now fierce, violent. His momentum was
running him off his legs. He whirled around
third base and came hurtling down the homestretch.
His face was convulsed, his eyes were wild.
His arms and legs worked in a marvelous muscular velocity.
He seemed a demon a flying streak.
He overtook and ran down the laboring Scott, who had
almost reached the plate.
The park seemed full of shrill, piercing
strife. It swelled, reached a highest pitch,
sustained that for a long moment, and then declined.
“My Gawd!” exclaimed Delaney,
as he fell back. “Wasn’t that a finish?
Didn’t I tell you to watch them redheads!”