“Fellows, it’s this way.
You’ve got to win today’s game.
It’s the last of the season and means the pennant
for Worcester. One more hard scrap and we’re
done! Of all the up-hill fights any bunch ever
made to land the flag, our has been the best.
You’re the best team I ever managed, the gamest
gang of ball players that ever stepped in spikes.
We’ve played in the hardest kind of luck all
season, except that short trip we called the Rube’s
Honeymoon. We got a bad start, and sore arms
and busted fingers, all kinds of injuries, every accident
calculated to hurt a team’s chances, came our
way. But in spite of it all we got the lead
and we’ve held it, and today we’re still
a few points ahead of Buffalo.”
I paused to catch my breath, and looked
round on the grim, tired faces of my players.
They made a stern group. The close of the season
found them almost played out. What a hard chance
it was, after their extraordinary efforts, to bring
the issue of the pennant down to this last game!
“If we lose today, Buffalo,
with three games more to play at home, will pull the
bunting,” I went on. “But they’re
not going to win! I’m putting it up to
you that way. I know Spears is all in; Raddy’s
arm is gone; Ash is playing on one leg; you’re
all crippled. But you’ve got one more
game in you, I know. These last few weeks the
Rube has been pitching out of turn and he’s
about all in, too. He’s kept us in the
lead. If he wins today it’ll be Rube’s
Pennant. But that might apply to all of you.
Now, shall we talk over the play today? Any
tricks to pull off? Any inside work?”
“Con, you’re pretty much
upset an’ nervous,” replied Spears, soberly.
“It ain’t no wonder. This has been
one corker of a season. I want to suggest that
you let me run the team today. I’ve talked
over the play with the fellers. We ain’t
goin’ to lose this game, Con. Buffalo has
been comin’ with a rush lately, an’ they’re
confident. But we’ve been holdin’
in, restin’ up as much as we dared an’
still keep our lead. Mebbee it’ll surprise
you to know we’ve bet every dollar we could get
hold of on this game. Why, Buffalo money is everywhere.”
“All right, Spears, I’ll
turn the team over to you. We’ve got the
banner crowd of the year out there right now, a great
crowd to play before. I’m more fussed up
over this game than any I remember. But I have
a sort of blind faith in my team.... I guess
that’s all I want to say.”
Spears led the silent players out
of the dressing room and I followed; and while they
began to toss balls to and fro, to limber up cold,
dead arms, I sat on the bench.
The Bisons were prancing about the
diamond, and their swaggering assurance was not conducive
to hope for the Worcesters. I wondered how many
of that vast, noisy audience, intent on the day’s
sport, even had a thought of what pain and toil it
meant to my players. The Buffalo men were in
good shape; they had been lucky; they were at the top
of their stride, and that made all the difference.
At any rate, there were a few faithful
little women in the grand stand Milly and
Nan and Rose Stringer and Kate Bogart who
sat with compressed lips and hoped and prayed for
that game to begin and end.
The gong called off the practice,
and Spears, taking the field, yelled gruff encouragement
to his men. Umpire Carter brushed off the plate
and tossed a white ball to Rube and called: “Play!”
The bleachers set up an exultant, satisfied shout
and sat down to wait.
Schultz toed the plate and watched
the Rube pitch a couple. There seemed to be
no diminution of the great pitcher’s speed and
both balls cut the plate. Schultz clipped the
next one down the third-base Line. Bogart trapped
it close to the bag, and got it away underhand, beating
the speedy runner by a nose. It was a pretty
play to start with, and the spectators were not close-mouthed
in appreciation. The short, stocky Carl ambled
up to bat, and I heard him call the Rube something.
It was not a friendly contest, this deciding game between
Buffalo and Worcester.
“Bing one close to his swelled
nut!” growled Spears to the Rube.
Carl chopped a bouncing grounder through
short and Ash was after it like a tiger, but it was
a hit. The Buffalo contingent opened up.
Then Manning faced the Rube, and he, too, vented sarcasm.
It might not have been heard by the slow, imperturbable
pitcher for all the notice he took. Carl edged
off first, slid back twice, got a third start, and
on the Rube’s pitch was off for second base with
the lead that always made him dangerous. Manning
swung vainly, and Gregg snapped a throw to Mullaney.
Ball and runner got to the bag apparently simultaneously;
the umpire called Carl out, and the crowd uttered a
quick roar of delight.
The next pitch to Manning was a strike.
Rube was not wasting any balls, a point I noted with
mingled fear and satisfaction. For he might
have felt that he had no strength to spare that day
and so could not try to work the batters. Again
he swung, and Manning rapped a long line fly over
McCall. As the little left fielder turned at
the sound of the hit and sprinted out, his lameness
was certainly not in evidence. He was the swiftest
runner in the league and always when he got going
the crowd rose in wild clamor to watch him. Mac
took that fly right off the foul flag in deep left,
and the bleachers dinned their pleasure.
The teams changed positions.
“Fellers,” said Spears, savagely, “we
may be a bunged-up lot of stiffs, but, say!
We can hit! If you love your old captain sting
the ball!”
Vane, the Bison pitcher, surely had
his work cut out for him. For one sympathetic
moment I saw his part through his eyes. My Worcester
veterans, long used to being under fire, were relentlessly
bent on taking that game. It showed in many
ways, particularly in their silence, because they
were seldom a silent team. McCall hesitated a
moment over his bats. Then, as he picked up the
lightest one, I saw his jaw set, and I knew he intended
to bunt. He was lame, yet he meant to beat out
an infield hit. He went up scowling.
Vane had an old head, and he had a
varied assortment of balls. For Mac he used
an under hand curve, rising at the plate and curving
in to the left-hander. Mac stepped back and
let it go.
“That’s the place, Bo,”
cried the Buffalo infielders. “Keep ’em
close on the Crab.” Eager and fierce as
McCall was, he let pitch after pitch go by till he
had three balls and two strikes. Still the heady
Vane sent up another pitch similar to the others.
Mac stepped forward in the box, dropped his bat on
the ball, and leaped down the line toward first base.
Vane came rushing in for the bunt, got it and threw.
But as the speeding ball neared the baseman, Mac
stretched out into the air and shot for the bag.
By a fraction of a second he beat the ball.
It was one of his demon-slides. He knew that
the chances favored his being crippled; we all knew
that some day Mac would slide recklessly once too
often. But that, too, is all in the game and
in the spirit of a great player.
“We’re on,” said Spears; “now
keep with him.”
By that the captain meant that Mac
would go down, and Ashwell would hit with the run.
When Vane pitched, little McCall was
flitting toward second. The Bison shortstop
started for the bag, and Ash hit square through his
tracks. A rolling cheer burst from the bleachers,
and swelled till McCall overran third base and was
thrown back by the coacher. Stringer hurried
forward with his big bat.
“Oh! My!” yelled
a fan, and he voiced my sentiments exactly. Here
we would score, and be one run closer to that dearly
bought pennant.
How well my men worked together!
As the pitcher let the ball go, Ash was digging for
second and Mac was shooting plateward. They played
on the chance of Stringer’s hitting. Stringer
swung, the bat cracked, we heard a thud somewhere,
and then Manning, half knocked over, was fumbling
for the ball. He had knocked down a terrific
drive with his mitt, and he got the ball in time to
put Stringer out. But Mac scored and Ash drew
a throw to third base and beat it. He had a bad
ankle, but no one noticed it in that daring run.
“Watch me paste one!”
said Captain Spears, as he spat several yards.
He batted out a fly so long and high and far that,
slow as he was, he had nearly run to second base when
Carl made the catch. Ash easily scored on the
throw-in. Then Bogart sent one skipping over
second, and Treadwell, scooping it on the run, completed
a play that showed why he was considered the star
of the Bison infield.
“Two runs, fellers!” said
Spears. “That’s some! Push
’em over, Rube.”
The second inning somewhat quickened
the pace. Even the Rube worked a little faster.
Ellis lined to Cairns in right; Treadwell fouled two
balls and had a called strike, and was out; McKnight
hit a low fly over short, then Bud Wiler sent one
between Spears and Mullaney. Spears went for
it while the Rube with giant strides ran to cover first
base. Between them they got Bud, but it was only
because he was heavy and slow on his feet.
In our half of that inning Mullaney,
Gregg and Cairns went out in one, two, three order.
With Pannell up, I saw that the Rube
held in on his speed, or else he was tiring.
Pannell hit the second slow ball for two bases.
Vane sacrificed, and then the redoubtable Schultz
came up. He appeared to be in no hurry to bat.
Then I saw that the foxy Buffalo players were working
to tire the Rube. They had the situation figured.
But they were no wiser than old Spears.
“Make ’em hit, Rube.
Push ’em straight over. Never mind the
corners. We don’t care for a few runs.
We’ll hit this game out.”
Shultz flied to Mac, who made a beautiful
throw to the plate too late to catch Pannell.
Carl deliberately bunted to the right of the Rube
and it cost the big pitcher strenuous effort to catch
his man.
“We got the Rube waggin’!” yelled
a Buffalo player.
Manning tripled down the left foul
line a hit the bleachers called a screamer.
When Ellis came up, it looked like a tie score, and
when the Rube pitched it was plain that he was tired.
The Bisons yelled their assurance of this and the
audience settled into quiet. Ellis batted a
scorcher that looked good for a hit. But the
fast Ashwell was moving with the ball, and he plunged
lengthwise to get it square in his glove. The
hit had been so sharp that he had time to get up and
make the throw to beat the runner. The bleachers
thundered at the play.
“You’re up, Rube,”
called Spears. “Lam one out of the lot!”
The Rube was an uncertain batter.
There was never any telling what he might do, for
he had spells of good and bad hitting. But when
he did get his bat on the ball it meant a chase for
some fielder. He went up swinging his huge club,
and he hit a fly that would have been an easy home
run for a fast man. But the best Rube could do
was to reach third base. This was certainly
good enough, as the bleachers loudly proclaimed, and
another tally for us seemed sure.
McCall bunted toward third, another
of his teasers. The Rube would surely have scored
had he started with the ball, but he did not try and
missed a chance. Wiler, of course, held the ball,
and Mac got to first without special effort.
He went down on the first pitch. Then Ash lined
to Carl. The Rube waited till the ball was caught
and started for home. The crowd screamed, the
Rube ran for all he was worth and Carl’s throw
to the plate shot in low and true. Ellis blocked
the Rube and tagged him out.
It looked to the bleachers as if Ellis
had been unnecessarily rough, and they hissed and
stormed disapproval. As for me, I knew the Bisons
were losing no chance to wear out my pitcher.
Stringer fouled out with Mac on third, and it made
him so angry that he threw his bat toward the bench,
making some of the boys skip lively.
The next three innings, as far as
scoring was concerned, were all for Buffalo.
But the Worcester infield played magnificent ball,
holding their opponents to one run each inning.
That made the score 4 to 2 in favor of Buffalo.
In the last half of the sixth, with
Ash on first base and two men out, old Spears hit
another of his lofty flies, and this one went over
the fence and tied the score. How the bleachers
roared! It was full two minutes before they quieted
down. To make it all the more exciting, Bogart
hit safely, ran like a deer to third on Mullaney’s
grounder, which Wiler knocked down, and scored on
a passed ball. Gregg ended the inning by striking
out.
“Get at the Rube!” boomed
Ellis, the Bison captain. “We’ll
have him up in the air soon. Get in the game
now, you stickers!”
Before I knew what had happened, the
Bisons had again tied the score. They were indomitable.
They grew stronger all the time. A stroke of
good luck now would clinch the game for them.
The Rube was beginning to labor in the box; Ashwell
was limping; Spears looked as if he would drop any
moment; McCall could scarcely walk. But if the
ball came his way he could still run. Nevertheless,
I never saw any finer fielding than these cripped
players executed that inning.
“Ash Mac can
you hold out?” I asked, when they limped in.
I received glances of scorn for my question.
Spears, however, was not sanguine.
“I’ll stick pretty much
if somethin’ doesn’t happen,” he
said; “but I’m all in. I’ll
need a runner if I get to first this time.”
Spears lumbered down to first base
on an infield hit and the heavy Manning gave him the
hip. Old Spears went down, and I for one knew
he was out in more ways than that signified by Carter’s
sharp: “Out!”
The old war-horse gathered himself
up slowly and painfully, and with his arms folded
and his jaw protruding, he limped toward the umpire.
“Did you call me out?”
he asked, in a voice plainly audible to any one on
the field.
“Yes,” snapped Carter.
“What for? I beat the
ball, an’ Mannin’ played dirty with me gave
me the hip.”
“I called you out.”
“But I wasn’t out!”
“Shut up now! Get off the diamond!”
ordered Carter, peremptorily.
“What? Me? Say,
I’m captain of this team. Can’t I
question a decision?”
“Not mine. Spears, you’re delaying
the game.”
“I tell you it was a rotten
decision,” yelled Spears. The bleachers
agreed with him.
Carter grew red in the face.
He and Spears had before then met in field squabbles,
and he showed it.
“Fifty dollars!”
“More! You cheap-skate you piker!
More!”
“It’s a hundred!”
“Put me out of the game!” roared Spears.
“You bet! Hurry now skedaddle!”
“Rob-b-ber!” bawled Spears.
Then he labored slowly toward the
bench, all red, and yet with perspiration, his demeanor
one of outraged dignity. The great crowd, as
one man, stood up and yelled hoarsely at Carter, and
hissed and railed at him. When Spears got to
the bench he sat down beside me as if in pain, but
he was smiling.
“Con, I was all in, an’
knowin’ I couldn’t play any longer, thought
I’d try to scare Carter. Say, he was white
in the face. If we play into a close decision
now, he’ll give it to us.”
Bogart and Mullaney batted out in
short order, and once more the aggressive Bisons hurried
in for their turn. Spears sent Cairns to first
base and Jones to right. The Rube lobbed up his
slow ball. In that tight pinch he showed his
splendid nerve. Two Buffalo players, over-anxious,
popped up flies. The Rube kept on pitching the
slow curve until it was hit safely. Then heaving
his shoulders with all his might he got all the motion
possible into his swing and let drive. He had
almost all of his old speed, but it hurt me to see
him work with such desperate effort. He struck
Wiler out.
He came stooping into the bench, apparently
deaf to the stunning round of applause. Every
player on the team had a word for the Rube. There
was no quitting in that bunch, and if I ever saw victory
on the stern faces of ball players it was in that
moment.
“We haven’t opened up
yet. Mebbee this is the innin’. If
it ain’t, the next is,” said Spears.
With the weak end of the batting list
up, there seemed little hope of getting a run on Vane
that inning. He had so much confidence that he
put the ball over for Gregg, who hit out of the reach
of the infield. Again Vane sent up his straight
ball, no doubt expecting Cairns to hit into a double
play. But Cairns surprised Vane and everybody
else by poking a safety past first base. The
fans began to howl and pound and whistle.
The Rube strode to bat. The
infield closed in for a bunt, but the Rube had no
orders for that style of play. Spears had said
nothing to him. Vane lost his nonchalance and
settled down. He cut loose with all his speed.
Rube stepped out, suddenly whirled, then tried to
dodge, but the ball hit him fair in the back.
Rube sagged in his tracks, then straightened up,
and walked slowly to first base. Score 5 to 5,
bases full, no outs, McCall at bat. I sat dumb
on the bench, thrilling and shivering. McCall!
Ashwell! Stringer to bat!
“Play it safe! Hold the bags!” yelled
the coacher.
McCall fairly spouted defiance as he faced Vane.
“Pitch! It’s all off! An’
you know it!”
If Vane knew that, he showed no evidence
of it. His face was cold, unsmiling, rigid.
He had to pitch to McCall, the fastest man in the
league; to Ashwell, the best bunter; to Stringer, the
champion batter. It was a supreme test for a
great pitcher. There was only one kind of a
ball that McCall was not sure to hit, and that was
a high curve, in close. Vane threw it with all
his power. Carter called it a strike. Again
Vane swung and his arm fairly cracked. Mac fouled
the ball. The third was wide. Slowly,
with lifting breast, Vane got ready, whirled savagely
and shot up the ball. McCall struck out.
As the Buffalo players crowed and
the audience groaned it was worthy of note that little
McCall showed no temper. Yet he had failed to
grasp a great opportunity.
“Ash, I couldn’t see ’em,”
he said, as he passed to the bench. “Speed,
whew! look out for it. He’s been savin’
up. Hit quick, an’ you’ll get him.”
Ashwell bent over the plate and glowered at Vane.
“Pitch! It’s all off! An’
you know it!” he hissed, using Mac’s words.
Ashwell, too, was left-handed; he,
too, was extremely hard to pitch to; and if he had
a weakness that any of us ever discovered, it was a
slow curve and change of pace. But I doubted
if Vane would dare to use slow balls to Ash at that
critical moment. I had yet to learn something
of Vane. He gave Ash a slow, wide-sweeping sidewheeler,
that curved round over the plate. Ash always
took a strike, so this did not matter. Then Vane
used his deceptive change of pace, sending up a curve
that just missed Ash’s bat as he swung.
“Oh! A-h-h! hit!” wailed the bleachers.
Vane doubled up like a contortionist,
and shot up a lightning-swift drop that fooled Ash
completely. Again the crowd groaned. Score
tied, bases full, two out, Stringer at bat!
“It’s up to you, String,” called
Ash, stepping aside.
Stringer did not call out to Vane.
That was not his way. He stood tense and alert,
bat on his shoulder, his powerful form braced, and
he waited. The outfielders trotted over toward
right field, and the infielders played deep, calling
out warnings and encouragement to the pitcher.
Stringer had no weakness, and Vane knew this.
Nevertheless he did not manifest any uneasiness, and
pitched the first ball without any extra motion.
Carter called it a strike. I saw Stringer sink
down slightly and grow tenser all over. I believe
that moment was longer for me than for either the
pitcher or the batter. Vane took his time, watched
the base runners, feinted to throw to catch them, and
then delivered the ball toward the plate with the
limit of his power.
Stringer hit the ball. As long
as I live, I will see that glancing low liner.
Shultz, by a wonderful play in deep center, blocked
the ball and thereby saved it from being a home run.
But when Stringer stopped on second base, all the
runners had scored.
A shrill, shrieking, high-pitched
yell! The bleachers threatened to destroy the
stands and also their throats in one long revel of
baseball madness.
Jones, batting in place of Spears,
had gone up and fouled out before the uproar had subsided.
“Fellers, I reckon I feel easier,”
said the Rube. It was the only time I had ever
heard him speak to the players at such a stage.
“Only six batters, Rube,”
called out Spears. “Boys, it’s a grand
game, an’ it’s our’n!”
The Rube had enough that inning to
dispose of the lower half of the Buffalo list without
any alarming bids for a run. And in our half,
Bogart and Mullaney hit vicious ground balls that gave
Treadwell and Wiler opportunities for superb plays.
Carl, likewise, made a beautiful running catch of
Gregg’s line fly. The Bisons were still
in the game, still capable of pulling it out at the
last moment.
When Shultz stalked up to the plate
I shut my eyes a moment, and so still was it that
the field and stands might have been empty. Yet,
though I tried, I could not keep my eyes closed.
I opened them to watch the Rube. I knew Spears
felt the same as I, for he was blowing like a porpoise
and muttering to himself: “Mebee the Rube
won’t last an’ I’ve no one to put
in!”
The Rube pitched with heavy, violent
effort. He had still enough speed to be dangerous.
But after the manner of ball players Shultz and the
coachers mocked him.
“Take all you can,” called Ellis to Shultz.
Every pitch lessened the Rube’s
strength and these wise opponents knew it. Likewise
the Rube himself knew, and never had he shown better
head work than in this inning. If he were to
win, he must be quick. So he wasted not a ball.
The first pitch and the second, delivered breast
high and fairly over the plate, beautiful balls to
hit, Shultz watched speed by. He swung hard
on the third and the crippled Ashwell dove for it
in a cloud of dust, got a hand in front of it, but
uselessly, for the hit was safe. The crowd cheered
that splendid effort.
Carl marched to bat, and he swung
his club over the plate as if he knew what to expect.
“Come on, Rube!” he shouted. Wearily,
doggedly, the Rube whirled, and whipped his arm.
The ball had all his old glancing speed and it was
a strike. The Rube was making a tremendous effort.
Again he got his body in convulsive motion two
strikes! Shultz had made no move to run, nor
had Carl made any move to hit. These veterans
were waiting. The Rube had pitched five strikes could
he last?
“Now, Carl!” yelled Ellis,
with startling suddenness, as the Rube pitched again.
Crack! Carl placed that hit
as safely through short as if he had thrown it.
McCall’s little legs twinkled as he dashed over
the grass. He had to head off that hit and he
ran like a streak. Down and forward he pitched,
as if in one of his fierce slides, and he got his body
in front of the ball, blocking it, and then he rolled
over and over. But he jumped up and lined the
ball to Bogart, almost catching Shultz at third-base.
Then, as Mac tried to walk, his lame leg buckled under
him, and down he went, and out.
“Call time,” I called
to Carter. “McCall is done.... Myers,
you go to left an’ for Lord’s sake play
ball!”
Stringer and Bogart hurried to Mac
and, lifting him up and supporting him between them
with his arms around their shoulders, they led him
off amid cheers from the stands. Mac was white
with pain.
“Naw, I won’t go off the
field. Leave me on the bench,” he said.
“Fight ’em now. It’s our game.
Never mind a couple of runs.”
The boys ran back to their positions
and Carter called play. Perhaps a little delay
had been helpful to the Rube. Slowly he stepped
into the box and watched Shultz at third and Carl
at second. There was not much probability of
his throwing to catch them off the base, but enough
of a possibility to make them careful, so he held
them close.
The Rube pitched a strike to Manning,
then another. That made eight strikes square
over the plate that inning. What magnificent
control! It was equaled by the implacable patience
of those veteran Bisons. Manning hit the next
ball as hard as Carl had hit his. But Mullaney
plunged down, came up with the ball, feinted to fool
Carl, then let drive to Gregg to catch the fleeting
Shultz. The throw went wide, but Gregg got it,
and, leaping lengthwise, tagged Shultz out a yard from
the plate.
One out. Two runners on bases.
The bleachers rose and split their throats.
Would the inning never end?
Spears kept telling himself:
“They’ll score, but we’ll win.
It’s our game!”
I had a sickening fear that the strange
confidence that obsessed the Worcester players had
been blind, unreasoning vanity.
“Carl will steal,” muttered
Spears. “He can’t be stopped.”
Spears had called the play.
The Rube tried to hold the little base-stealer close
to second, but, after one attempt, wisely turned to
his hard task of making the Bisons hit and hit quickly.
Ellis let the ball pass; Gregg made a perfect throw
to third; Bogart caught the ball and moved like a
flash, but Carl slid under his hands to the bag.
Manning ran down to second. The Rube pitched
again, and this was his tenth ball over the plate.
Even the Buffalo players evinced eloquent appreciation
of the Rube’s defence at this last stand.
Then Ellis sent a clean hit to right,
scoring both Carl and Manning. I breathed easier,
for it seemed with those two runners in, the Rube had
a better chance. Treadwell also took those two
runners in, the Rube had a way those Bisons waited.
They had their reward, for the Rube’s speed
left him. When he pitched again the ball had
control, but no shoot. Treadwell hit it with
all his strength. Like a huge cat Ashwell pounced
upon it, ran over second base, forcing Ellis, and his
speedy snap to first almost caught Treadwell.
Score 8 to 7. Two out.
Runner on first. One run to tie.
In my hazy, dimmed vision I saw the
Rube’s pennant waving from the flag-pole.
“It’s our game!”
howled Spears in my ear, for the noise from the stands
was deafening. “It’s our pennant!”
The formidable batting strength of
the Bisons had been met, not without disaster, but
without defeat. McKnight came up for Buffalo
and the Rube took his weary swing. The batter
made a terrific lunge and hit the ball with a solid
crack It lined for center.
Suddenly electrified into action,
I leaped up. That hit! It froze me with
horror. It was a home-run. I saw Stringer
fly toward left center. He ran like something
wild. I saw the heavy Treadwell lumbering round
the bases. I saw Ashwell run out into center
field.
“Ah-h!” The whole audience
relieved its terror in that expulsion of suspended
breath. Stringer had leaped high to knock down
the ball, saving a sure home-run and the game.
He recovered himself, dashed back for the ball and
shot it to Ash.
When Ash turned toward the plate,
Treadwell was rounding third base. A tie score
appeared inevitable. I saw Ash’s arm whip
and the ball shoot forward, leveled, glancing, beautiful
in its flight. The crowd saw it, and the silence
broke to a yell that rose and rose as the ball sped
in. That yell swelled to a splitting shriek,
and Treadwell slid in the dust, and the ball shot
into Gregg’s hands all at the same instant.
Carter waved both arms upwards.
It was the umpire’s action when his decision
went against the base-runner. The audience rolled
up one great stentorian cry.
“Out!”
I collapsed and sank back upon the
bench. My confused senses received a dull roar
of pounding feet and dinning voices as the herald of
victory. I felt myself thinking how pleased Milly
would be. I had a distinct picture in my mind
of a white cottage on a hill, no longer a dream, but
a reality, made possible for me by the Rube’s
winning of the pennant.