“He’s got a new manager.
Watch him pitch now!” That was what Nan Brown
said to me about Rube Hurtle, my great pitcher, and
I took it as her way of announcing her engagement.
My baseball career held some proud
moments, but this one, wherein I realized the success
of my matchmaking plans, was certainly the proudest
one. So, entirely outside of the honest pleasure
I got out of the Rube’s happiness, there was
reason for me to congratulate myself. He was
a transformed man, so absolutely renewed, so wild with
joy, that on the strength of it, I decided the pennant
for Worcester was a foregone conclusion, and, sure
of the money promised me by the directors, Milly and
I began to make plans for the cottage upon the hill.
The Rube insisted on pitching Monday’s
game against the Torontos, and although poor fielding
gave them a couple of runs, they never had a chance.
They could not see the ball. The Rube wrapped
it around their necks and between their wrists and
straight over the plate with such incredible speed
that they might just as well have tried to bat rifle
bullets.
That night I was happy. Spears,
my veteran captain, was one huge smile; Radbourne
quietly assured me that all was over now but the shouting;
all the boys were happy.
And the Rube was the happiest of all.
At the hotel he burst out with his exceeding good
fortune. He and Nan were to be married upon the
Fourth of July!
After the noisy congratulations were
over and the Rube had gone, Spears looked at me and
I looked at him.
“Con,” said he soberly,
“we just can’t let him get married on the
Fourth.”
“Why not? Sure we can.
We’ll help him get married. I tell you
it’ll save the pennant for us. Look how
he pitched today! Nan Brown is our salvation!”
“See here, Con, you’ve
got softenin’ of the brain, too. Where’s
your baseball sense? We’ve got a pennant
to win. By July Fourth we’ll be close
to the lead again, an’ there’s that three
weeks’ trip on the road, the longest an’
hardest of the season. We’ve just got to
break even on that trip. You know what that
means. If the Rube marries Nan what
are we goin’ to do? We can’t leave
him behind. If he takes Nan with us why
it’ll be a honeymoon! An’ half the
gang is stuck on Nan Brown! An’ Nan Brown
would flirt in her bridal veil! ... Why Con,
we’re up against a worse proposition than ever.”
“Good Heavens! Cap.
You’re right,” I groaned. “I
never thought of that. We’ve got to postpone
the wedding.... How on earth can we? I’ve
heard her tell Milly that. She’ll never
consent to it. Say, this’ll drive me to
drink.”
“All I got to say is this, Con.
If the Rube takes his wife on that trip it’s
goin’ to be an all-fired hummer. Don’t
you forget that.”
“I’m not likely to.
But, Spears, the point is this will the
Rube win his games?”
“Figurín’ from his
work today, I’d gamble he’ll never lose
another game. It ain’t that. I’m
thinkin’ of what the gang will do to him an’
Nan on the cars an’ at the hotels. Oh!
Lord, Con, it ain’t possible to stand for that
honeymoon trip! Just think!”
“If the worst comes to the worst,
Cap, I don’t care for anything but the games.
If we get in the lead and stay there I’ll stand
for anything.... Couldn’t the gang be coaxed
or bought off to let the Rube and Nan alone?”
Not on your life! There aint enough love or money on
earth to stop them. Itll be awful. Mind, Im not responsible.
Dont you go holdin me responsible. In all my years of baseball I never
went on a trip with a bride in the game. Thats new on me, an I never
heard of it. Id be bad enough if he wasnt a rube an if she wasnt a
crazy girl-fan an a flirt to boot, an with half the boys in love with her, but
as it is
Spears gave up and, gravely shaking
his head, he left me. I spent a little while
in sober reflection, and finally came to the conclusion
that, in my desperate ambition to win the pennant,
I would have taken half a dozen rube pitchers and
their baseball-made brides on the trip, if by so doing
I could increase the percentage of games won.
Nevertheless, I wanted to postpone the Rube’s
wedding if it was possible, and I went out to see
Milly and asked her to help us. But for once
in her life Milly turned traitor.
“Connie, you don’t want
to postpone it. Why, how perfectly lovely! ...
Mrs. Stringer will go on that trip and Mrs. Bogart....
Connie, I’m going too!”
She actually jumped up and down in
glee. That was the woman in her. It takes
a wedding to get a woman. I remonstrated and
pleaded and commanded, all to no purpose. Milly
intended to go on that trip to see the games, and
the fun, and the honeymoon.
She coaxed so hard that I yielded.
Thereupon she called up Mrs. Stringer on the telephone,
and of course found that young woman just as eager
as she was. For my part, I threw anxiety and
care to the four winds, and decided to be as happy
as any of them. The pennant was mine!
Something kept ringing that in my ears. With
the Rube working his iron arm for the edification
of his proud Nancy Brown, there was extreme likelihood
of divers shut-outs and humiliating defeats for some
Eastern League teams.
How well I calculated became a matter
of baseball history during that last week of June.
We won six straight games, three of which fell to
the Rube’s credit. His opponents scored
four runs in the three games, against the nineteen
we made. Upon July 1, Radbourne beat Providence
and Cairns won the second game. We now had a
string of eight victories. Sunday we rested,
and Monday was the Fourth, with morning and afternoon
games with Buffalo.
Upon the morning of the Fourth, I
looked for the Rube at the hotel, but could not find
him. He did not show up at the grounds when the
other boys did, and I began to worry. It was
the Rube’s turn to pitch and we were neck and
neck with Buffalo for first place. If we won
both games we would go ahead of our rivals.
So I was all on edge, and kept going to the dressing-room
to see if the Rube had arrived. He came, finally,
when all the boys were dressed, and about to go out
for practice. He had on a new suit, a tailor-made
suit at that, and he looked fine. There was about
him a kind of strange radiance. He stated simply
that he had arrived late because he had just been
married. Before congratulations were out of
our mouths, he turned to me.
“Con, I want to pitch both games today,”
he said.
“What! Say, Whit, Buffalo
is on the card today and we are only three points
behind them. If we win both we’ll be leading
the league once more. I don’t know about
pitching you both games.”
“I reckon we’ll be in
the lead tonight then,” he replied, “for
I’ll win them both.”
I was about to reply when Dave, the
ground-keeper, called me to the door, saying there
was a man to see me. I went out, and there stood
Morrisey, manager of the Chicago American League team.
We knew each other well and exchanged greetings.
“Con, I dropped off to see you
about this new pitcher of yours, the one they call
the Rube. I want to see him work. I’ve
heard he’s pretty fast. How about it?”
“Wait till you see
him pitch,” I replied. I could scarcely
get that much out, for Morrisey’s presence meant
a great deal and I did not want to betray my elation.
“Any strings on him?”
queried the big league manager, sharply.
“Well, Morrisey, not exactly.
I can give you the first call. You’ll
have to bid high, though. Just wait till you see
him work.”
“I’m glad to hear that.
My scout was over here watching him pitch and says
he’s a wonder.”
What luck it was that Morrisey should
have come upon this day! I could hardly contain
myself. Almost I began to spend the money I would
get for selling the Rube to the big league manager.
We took seats in the grand stand, as Morrisey did
not want to be seen by any players, and I stayed there
with him until the gong sounded. There was a big
attendance. I looked all over the stand for Nan,
but she was lost in the gay crowd. But when
I went down to the bench I saw her up in my private
box with Milly. It took no second glance to see
that Nan Brown was a bride and glorying in the fact.
Then, in the absorption of the game,
I became oblivious to Milly and Nan; the noisy crowd;
the giant fire-crackers and the smoke; to the presence
of Morrisey; to all except the Rube and my team and
their opponents. Fortunately for my hopes, the
game opened with characteristic Worcester dash.
Little McCall doubled, Ashwell drew his base on four
wide pitches, and Stringer drove the ball over the
right-field fence three runs!
Three runs were enough to win that
game. Of all the exhibitions of pitching with
which the Rube had favored us, this one was the finest.
It was perhaps not so much his marvelous speed and
unhittable curves that made the game one memorable
in the annals of pitching; it was his perfect control
in the placing of balls, in the cutting of corners;
in his absolute implacable mastery of the situation.
Buffalo was unable to find him at all. The
game was swift short, decisive, with the score 5 to
0 in our favor. But the score did not tell all
of the Rube’s work that morning. He shut
out Buffalo without a hit, or a scratch, the first
no-hit, no-run game of the year. He gave no base
on balls; not a Buffalo player got to first base;
only one fly went to the outfield.
For once I forgot Milly after a game,
and I hurried to find Morrisey, and carried him off
to have dinner with me.
“Your rube is a wonder, and
that’s a fact,” he said to me several
times. “Where on earth did you get him?
Connelly, he’s my meat. Do you understand?
Can you let me have him right now?”
“No, Morrisey, I’ve got
the pennant to win first. Then I’ll sell
him.”
“How much? Do you hear?
How much?” Morrisey hammered the table with
his fist and his eyes gleamed.
Carried away as I was by his vehemence,
I was yet able to calculate shrewdly, and I decided
to name a very high price, from which I could come
down and still make a splendid deal.
“How much?” demanded Morrisey.
“Five thousand dollars,” I replied, and
gulped when I got the words out.
Morrisey never batted an eye.
“Waiter, quick, pen and ink and paper!”
Presently my hand, none too firm,
was signing my name to a contract whereby I was to
sell my pitcher for five thousand dollars at the close
of the current season. I never saw a man look
so pleased as Morrisey when he folded that contract
and put it in his pocket. He bade me good-bye
and hurried off to catch a train, and he never knew
the Rube had pitched the great game on his wedding
day.
That afternoon before a crowd that
had to be roped off the diamond, I put the Rube against
the Bisons. How well he showed the baseball
knowledge he had assimilated! He changed his
style in that second game. He used a slow ball
and wide curves and took things easy. He made
Buffalo hit the ball and when runners got on bases
once more let out his speed and held them down.
He relied upon the players behind him and they were
equal to the occasion.
It was a totally different game from
that of the morning, and perhaps one more suited to
the pleasure of the audience. There was plenty
of hard hitting, sharp fielding and good base running,
and the game was close and exciting up to the eighth,
when Mullaney’s triple gave us two runs, and
a lead that was not headed. To the deafening
roar of the bleachers the Rube walked off the field,
having pitched Worcester into first place in the pennant
race.
That night the boys planned their
first job on the Rube. We had ordered a special
Pullman for travel to Toronto, and when I got to the
depot in the morning, the Pullman was a white fluttering
mass of satin ribbons. Also, there was a brass
band, and thousands of baseball fans, and barrels
of old foot-gear. The Rube and Nan arrived in
a cab and were immediately mobbed. The crowd
roared, the band played, the engine whistled, the
bell clanged; and the air was full of confetti and
slippers, and showers of rice like hail pattered everywhere.
A somewhat dishevelled bride and groom boarded the
Pullman and breathlessly hid in a state room.
The train started, and the crowd gave one last rousing
cheer. Old Spears yelled from the back platform:
“Fellers, an’ fans, you
needn’t worry none about leavin’ the Rube
an’ his bride to the tender mercies of the gang.
A hundred years from now people will talk about this
honeymoon baseball trip. Wait till we come back an’
say, jest to put you wise, no matter what else happens,
we’re comin’ back in first place!”
It was surely a merry party in that
Pullman. The bridal couple emerged from their
hiding place and held a sort of reception in which
the Rube appeared shy and frightened, and Nan resembled
a joyous, fluttering bird in gray. I did not
see if she kissed every man on the team, but she kissed
me as if she had been wanting to do it for ages.
Milly kissed the Rube, and so did the other women,
to his infinite embarrassment. Nan’s effect
upon that crowd was most singular. She was sweetness
and caprice and joy personified.
We settled down presently to something
approaching order, and I, for one, with very keen
ears and alert eyes, because I did not want to miss
anything.
“I see the lambs a-gambolin’,”
observed McCall, in a voice louder than was necessary
to convey his meaning to Mullaney, his partner in the
seat.
“Yes, it do seem as if there
was joy aboundin’ hereabouts,” replied
Mul with fervor.
“It’s more spring-time
than summer,” said Ashwell, “an’
everything in nature is runnin’ in pairs.
There are the sheep an’ the cattle an’
the birds. I see two kingfishers fishin’
over here. An’ there’s a couple of
honey-bees makin’ honey. Oh, honey, an’
by George, if there ain’t two butterflies foldin’
their wings round each other. See the dandelions
kissin’ in the field!”
Then the staid Captain Spears spoke
up with an appearance of sincerity and a tone that
was nothing short of remarkable.
“Reggie, see the sunshine asleep
upon yon bank. Ain’t it lovely? An’
that white cloud sailin’ thither amid the blue how
spontaneous! Joy is a-broad o’er all this
boo-tiful land today Oh, yes! An loves wings hover o er the little
lambs an the bullfrogs in the pond an the dicky birds in the trees. What
sweetness to lie in the grass, the lap of bounteous earth, eatin apples in the
Garden of Eden, an chasin away the snakes an dreamin of Thee,
Sweet-h-e-a-r-t
Spears was singing when he got so
far and there was no telling what he might have done
if Mullaney, unable to stand the agony, had not jabbed
a pin in him. But that only made way for the
efforts of the other boys, each of whom tried to outdo
the other in poking fun at the Rube and Nan.
The big pitcher was too gloriously happy to note much
of what went on around him, but when it dawned upon
him he grew red and white by turns.
Nan, however, was more than equal
to the occasion. Presently she smiled at Spears,
such a smile! The captain looked as if he had
just partaken of an intoxicating wine. With
a heightened color in her cheeks and a dangerous flash
in her roguish eyes, Nan favored McCall with a look,
which was as much as to say that she remembered him
with a dear sadness. She made eyes at every
fellow in the car, and then bringing back her gaze
to the Rube, as if glorying in comparison, she nestled
her curly black head on his shoulder. He gently
tried to move her; but it was not possible. Nan
knew how to meet the ridicule of half a dozen old
lovers. One by one they buried themselves in
newspapers, and finally McCall, for once utterly beaten,
showed a white feather, and sank back out of sight
behind his seat.
The boys did not recover from that
shock until late in the afternoon. As it was
a physical impossibility for Nan to rest her head all
day upon her husband’s broad shoulder, the boys
toward dinner time came out of their jealous trance.
I heard them plotting something. When dinner
was called, about half of my party, including the bride
and groom, went at once into the dining-car.
Time there flew by swiftly. And later, when
we were once more in our Pullman, and I had gotten
interested in a game of cards with Milly and Stringer
and his wife, the Rube came marching up to me with
a very red face.
“Con, I reckon some of the boys
have stolen my our grips,” said he.
“What?” I asked, blankly.
He explained that during his absence
in the dining-car someone had entered his stateroom
and stolen his grip and Nan’s. I hastened
at once to aid the Rube in his search. The boys
swore by everything under and beyond the sun they
had not seen the grips; they appeared very much grieved
at the loss and pretended to help in searching the
Pullman. At last, with the assistance of a porter,
we discovered the missing grips in an upper berth.
The Rube carried them off to his stateroom and we
knew soon from his uncomplimentary remarks that the
contents of the suitcases had been mixed and manhandled.
But he did not hunt for the jokers.
We arrived at Toronto before daylight
next morning, and remained in the Pullman until seven
o’clock. When we got out, it was discovered
that the Rube and Nan had stolen a march upon us.
We traced them to the hotel, and found them at breakfast.
After breakfast we formed a merry sight-seeing party
and rode all over the city.
That afternoon, when Raddy let Toronto
down with three hits and the boys played a magnificent
game behind him, and we won 7 to 2, I knew at last
and for certain that the Worcester team had come into
its own again. Then next day Cairns won a close,
exciting game, and following that, on the third day,
the matchless Rube toyed with the Torontos. Eleven
straight games won! I was in the clouds, and
never had I seen so beautiful a light as shone in
Milly’s eyes.
From that day The Honeymoon Trip of
the Worcester Baseball Club, as the newspapers heralded
it was a triumphant march. We won
two out of three games at Montreal, broke even with
the hard-fighting Bisons, took three straight from
Rochester, and won one and tied one out of three with
Hartford. It would have been wonderful ball playing
for a team to play on home grounds and we were doing
the full circuit of the league.
Spears had called the turn when he
said the trip would be a hummer. Nan Hurtle had
brought us wonderful luck.
But the tricks they played on Whit
and his girl-fan bride!
Ashwell, who was a capital actor,
disguised himself as a conductor and pretended to
try to eject Whit and Nan from the train, urging that
love-making was not permitted. Some of the team
hired a clever young woman to hunt the Rube up at
the hotel, and claim old acquaintance with him.
Poor Whit almost collapsed when the young woman threw
her arms about his neck just as Nan entered the parlor.
Upon the instant Nan became wild as a little tigress,
and it took much explanation and eloquence to reinstate
Whit in her affections.
Another time Spears, the wily old
fox, succeeded in detaining Nan on the way to the
station, and the two missed the train. At first
the Rube laughed with the others, but when Stringer
remarked that he had noticed a growing attachment
between Nan and Spears, my great pitcher experienced
the first pangs of the green-eyed monster. We
had to hold him to keep him from jumping from the
train, and it took Milly and Mrs. Stringer to soothe
him. I had to wire back to Rochester for a special
train for Spears and Nan, and even then we had to play
half a game without the services of our captain.
So far upon our trip I had been fortunate
in securing comfortable rooms and the best of transportation
for my party. At Hartford, however, I encountered
difficulties. I could not get a special Pullman,
and the sleeper we entered already had a number of
occupants. After the ladies of my party had
been assigned to berths, it was necessary for some
of the boys to sleep double in upper berths.
It was late when we got aboard, the
berths were already made up, and soon we had all retired.
In the morning very early I was awakened by a disturbance.
It sounded like a squeal. I heard an astonished
exclamation, another squeal, the pattering of little
feet, then hoarse uproar of laughter from the ball
players in the upper berths. Following that came
low, excited conversation between the porter and somebody,
then an angry snort from the Rube and the thud of his
heavy feet in the aisle. What took place after
that was guess-work for me. But I gathered from
the roars and bawls that the Rube was after some of
the boys. I poked my head between the curtains
and saw him digging into the berths.
“Where’s McCall?” he yelled.
Mac was nowhere in that sleeper, judging
from the vehement denials. But the Rube kept
on digging and prodding in the upper berths.
“I’m a-goin’ to
lick you, Mac, so I reckon you’d better show
up,” shouted the Rube.
The big fellow was mad as a hornet.
When he got to me he grasped me with his great fence-rail
splitting hands and I cried out with pain.
“Say! Whit, let up! Mac’s
not here.... What’s wrong?”
“I’ll show you when I
find him.” And the Rube stalked on down
the aisle, a tragically comic figure in his pajamas.
In his search for Mac he pried into several upper
berths that contained occupants who were not ball
players, and these protested in affright. Then
the Rube began to investigate the lower berths.
A row of heads protruded in a bobbing line from between
the curtains of the upper berths.
“Here, you Indian! Don’t
you look in there! That’s my wife’s
berth!” yelled Stringer.
Bogart, too, evinced great excitement.
“Hurtle, keep out of lower eight or I’ll
kill you,” he shouted.
What the Rube might have done there
was no telling, but as he grasped a curtain, he was
interrupted by a shriek from some woman assuredly not
of our party.
“Get out! you horrid wretch! Help!
Porter! Help! Conductor!”
Instantly there was a deafening tumult
in the car. When it had subsided somewhat, and
I considered I would be safe, I descended from my
berth and made my way to the dressing room. Sprawled
over the leather seat was the Rube pommelling McCall
with hearty good will. I would have interfered,
had it not been for Mac’s demeanor. He
was half frightened, half angry, and utterly unable
to defend himself or even resist, because he was laughing,
too.
“Dog-gone it! Whit I
didn’t do it! I swear it was
Spears! Stop thumpin’ me now or
I’ll get sore.... You hear me! It
wasn’t me, I tell you. Cheese it!”
For all his protesting Mac received
a good thumping, and I doubted not in the least that
he deserved it. The wonder of the affair, however,
was the fact that no one appeared to know what had
made the Rube so furious. The porter would not
tell, and Mac was strangely reticent, though his smile
was one to make a fellow exceedingly sure something
out of the ordinary had befallen. It was not until
I was having breakfast in Providence that I learned
the true cause of Rube’s conduct, and Milly
confided it to me, insisting on strict confidence.
“I promised not to tell,”
she said. “Now you promise you’ll
never tell.”
“Well, Connie,” went on
Milly, when I had promised, “it was the funniest
thing yet, but it was horrid of McCall. You see,
the Rube had upper seven and Nan had lower seven.
Early this morning, about daylight, Nan awoke very
thirsty and got up to get a drink. During her
absence, probably, but any way some time last night,
McCall changed the number on her curtain, and when
Nan came back to number seven of course she almost
got in the wrong berth.”
“No wonder the Rube punched
him!” I declared. “I wish we were
safe home. Something’ll happen yet on
this trip.”
I was faithful to my promise to Milly,
but the secret leaked out somewhere; perhaps Mac told
it, and before the game that day all the players knew
it. The Rube, having recovered his good humor,
minded it not in the least. He could not have
felt ill-will for any length of time. Everything
seemed to get back into smooth running order, and the
Honeymoon Trip bade fair to wind up beautifully.
But, somehow or other, and about something
unknown to the rest of us, the Rube and Nan quarreled.
It was their first quarrel. Milly and I tried
to patch it up but failed.
We lost the first game to Providence
and won the second. The next day, a Saturday,
was the last game of the trip, and it was Rube’s
turn to pitch. Several times during the first
two days the Rube and Nan about half made up their
quarrel, only in the end to fall deeper into it.
Then the last straw came in a foolish move on the part
of wilful Nan. She happened to meet Henderson,
her former admirer, and in a flash she took up her
flirtation with him where she had left off.
“Don’t go to the game
with him, Nan,” I pleaded. “It’s
a silly thing for you to do. Of course you don’t
mean anything, except to torment Whit. But cut
it out. The gang will make him miserable and
we’ll lose the game. There’s no
telling what might happen.”
“I’m supremely indifferent
to what happens,” she replied, with a rebellious
toss of her black head. “I hope Whit gets
beaten.”
She went to the game with Henderson
and sat in the grand stand, and the boys spied them
out and told the Rube. He did not believe it
at first, but finally saw them, looked deeply hurt
and offended, and then grew angry. But the gong,
sounding at that moment, drew his attention to his
business of the day, to pitch.
His work that day reminded me of the
first game he ever pitched for me, upon which occasion
Captain Spears got the best out of him by making him
angry. For several innings Providence was helpless
before his delivery. Then something happened
that showed me a crisis was near. A wag of a
fan yelled from the bleachers.
“Honeymoon Rube!”
This cry was taken up by the delighted
fans and it rolled around the field. But the
Rube pitched on, harder than ever. Then the knowing
bleacherite who had started the cry changed it somewhat.
“Nanny’s Rube!” he yelled.
This, too, went the rounds, and still
the Rube, though red in the face, preserved his temper
and his pitching control. All would have been
well if Bud Wiler, comedian of the Providence team,
had not hit upon a way to rattle Rube.
“Nanny’s Goat!”
he shouted from the coaching lines. Every Providence
player took it up.
The Rube was not proof against that.
He yelled so fiercely at them, and glared so furiously,
and towered so formidably, that they ceased for the
moment. Then he let drive with his fast straight
ball and hit the first Providence batter in the ribs.
His comrades had to help him to the bench.
The Rube hit the next batter on the leg, and judging
from the crack of the ball, I fancied that player would
walk lame for several days. The Rube tried to
hit the next batter and sent him to first on balls.
Thereafter it became a dodging contest with honors
about equal between pitcher and batters. The
Providence players stormed and the bleachers roared.
But I would not take the Rube out and the game went
on with the Rube forcing in runs.
With the score a tie, and three men
on bases one of the players on the bench again yelled
“Nanny’s Goat!”
Straight as a string the Rube shot
the ball at this fellow and bounded after it.
The crowd rose in an uproar. The base runners
began to score. I left my bench and ran across
the space, but not in time to catch the Rube.
I saw him hit two or three of the Providence men.
Then the policemen got to him, and a real fight brought
the big audience into the stamping melee. Before
the Rube was collared I saw at least four blue-coats
on the grass.
The game broke up, and the crowd spilled
itself in streams over the field. Excitement
ran high. I tried to force my way into the mass
to get at the Rube and the officers, but this was
impossible. I feared the Rube would be taken
from the officers and treated with violence, so I
waited with the surging crowd, endeavoring to get nearer.
Soon we were in the street, and it seemed as if all
the stands had emptied their yelling occupants.
A trolley car came along down the
street, splitting the mass of people and driving them
back. A dozen policemen summarily bundled the
Rube upon the rear end of the car. Some of these
officers boarded the car, and some remained in the
street to beat off the vengeful fans.
I saw some one thrust forward a frantic
young woman. The officers stopped her, then
suddenly helped her on the car, just as I started.
I recognized Nan. She gripped the Rube with
both hands and turned a white, fearful face upon the
angry crowd.
The Rube stood in the grasp of his
wife and the policemen, and he looked like a ruffled
lion. He shook his big fist and bawled in far-reaching
voice:
“I can lick you all!”
To my infinite relief, the trolley
gathered momentum and safely passed out of danger.
The last thing I made out was Nan pressing close to
the Rube’s side. That moment saw their
reconciliation and my joy that it was the end of the
Rube’s Honeymoon.