It was about the sixth inning that
I suspected the Rube of weakening. For that matter
he had not pitched anything resembling his usual brand
of baseball. But the Rube had developed into
such a wonder in the box that it took time for his
let-down to dawn upon me. Also it took a tip
from Raddy, who sat with me on the bench.
“Con, the Rube isn’t himself
today,” said Radbourne. “His mind’s
not on the game. He seems hurried and flustered,
too. If he doesn’t explode presently,
I’m a dub at callin’ the turn.”
Raddy was the best judge of a pitcher’s
condition, physical or mental, in the Eastern League.
It was a Saturday and we were on the road and finishing
up a series with the Rochesters. Each team had
won and lost a game, and, as I was climbing close
to the leaders in the pennant race, I wanted the third
and deciding game of that Rochester series. The
usual big Saturday crowd was in attendance, noisy,
demonstrative and exacting.
In this sixth inning the first man
up for Rochester had flied to McCall. Then had
come the two plays significant of Rube’s weakening.
He had hit one batter and walked another. This
was sufficient, considering the score was three to
one in our favor, to bring the audience to its feet
with a howling, stamping demand for runs.
“Spears is wise all right,” said Raddy.
I watched the foxy old captain walk
over to the Rube and talk to him while he rested,
a reassuring hand on the pitcher’s shoulder.
The crowd yelled its disapproval and Umpire Bates
called out sharply:
“Spears, get back to the bag!”
“Now, Mister Umpire, ain’t
I hurrin’ all I can?” queried Spears as
he leisurely ambled back to first.
The Rube tossed a long, damp welt
of hair back from his big brow and nervously toed
the rubber. I noted that he seemed to forget the
runners on bases and delivered the ball without glancing
at either bag. Of course this resulted in a
double steal. The ball went wild almost
a wild pitch.
“Steady up, old man,”
called Gregg between the yells of the bleachers.
He held his mitt square over the plate for the Rube
to pitch to. Again the long twirler took his
swing, and again the ball went wild. Clancy
had the Rube in the hole now and the situation began
to grow serious. The Rube did not take half his
usual deliberation, and of the next two pitches one
of them was a ball and the other a strike by grace
of the umpire’s generosity. Clancy rapped
the next one, an absurdly slow pitch for the Rube
to use, and both runners scored to the shrill tune
of the happy bleachers.
I saw Spears shake his head and look
toward the bench. It was plain what that meant.
“Raddy, I ought to take the
Rube out,” I said, “but whom can I put
in? You worked yesterday Cairns’
arm is sore. It’s got to be nursed.
And Henderson, that ladies’ man I just signed,
is not in uniform.”
“I’ll go in,” replied Raddy, instantly.
“Not on your life.”
I had as hard a time keeping Radbourne from overworking
as I had in getting enough work out of some other players.
“I guess I’ll let the Rube take his medicine.
I hate to lose this game, but if we have to, we can
stand it. I’m curious, anyway, to see
what’s the matter with the Rube. Maybe
he’ll settle down presently.”
I made no sign that I had noticed
Spears’ appeal to the bench. And my aggressive
players, no doubt seeing the situation as I saw it,
sang out their various calls of cheer to the Rube
and of defiance to their antagonists. Clancy
stole off first base so far that the Rube, catching
somebody’s warning too late, made a balk and
the umpire sent the runner on to second. The
Rube now plainly showed painful evidences of being
rattled.
He could not locate the plate without
slowing up and when he did that a Rochester player
walloped the ball. Pretty soon he pitched as
if he did not care, and but for the fast fielding
of the team behind him the Rochesters would have scored
more than the eight runs it got. When the Rube
came in to the bench I asked him if he was sick and
at first he said he was and then that he was not.
So I let him pitch the remaining innings, as the
game was lost anyhow, and we walked off the field a
badly beaten team.
That night we had to hurry from the
hotel to catch a train for Worcester and we had dinner
in the dining-car. Several of my players’
wives had come over from Worcester to meet us, and
were in the dining-car when I entered. I observed
a pretty girl sitting at one of the tables with my
new pitcher, Henderson.
“Say, Mac,” I said to
McCall, who was with me, “is Henderson married?”
“Naw, but he looks like he wanted
to be. He was in the grand stand today with
that girl.”
“Who is she? Oh! a little peach!”
A second glance at Henderson’s
companion brought this compliment from me involuntarily.
“Con, you’ll get it as
bad as the rest of this mushy bunch of ball players.
We’re all stuck on that kid. But since
Henderson came she’s been a frost to all of
us. An’ it’s put the Rube in the
dumps.”
“Who’s the girl?”
“That’s Nan Brown.
She lives in Worcester an’ is the craziest girl
fan I ever seen. Flirt! Well, she’s
got them all beat. Somebody introduced the Rube
to her. He has been mooney ever since.”
That was enough to whet my curiosity,
and I favored Miss Brown with more than one glance
during dinner. When we returned to the parlor
car I took advantage of the opportunity and remarked
to Henderson that he might introduce his manager.
He complied, but not with amiable grace.
So I chatted with Nan Brown, and studied
her. She was a pretty, laughing, coquettish little
minx and quite baseball mad. I had met many
girl fans, but none so enthusiastic as Nan. But
she was wholesome and sincere, and I liked her.
Before turning in I sat down beside
the Rube. He was very quiet and his face did
not encourage company. But that did not stop
me.
“Hello, Whit; have a smoke before
you go to bed?” I asked cheerfully.
He scarcely heard me and made no move
to take the proffered cigar. All at once it
struck me that the rustic simplicity which had characterized
him had vanished.
“Whit, old fellow, what was
wrong today?” I asked, quietly, with my hand
on his arm.
“Mr. Connelly, I want my release,
I want to go back to Rickettsville,” he replied
hurriedly.
For the space of a few seconds I did
some tall thinking. The situation suddenly became
grave. I saw the pennant for the Worcesters fading,
dimming.
“You want to go home?”
I began slowly. “Why, Whit, I can’t
keep you. I wouldn’t try if you didn’t
want to stay. But I’ll tell you confidentially,
if you leave me at this stage I’m ruined.”
“How’s that?” he inquired, keenly
looking at me.
“Well, I can’t win the
pennant without you. If I do win it there’s
a big bonus for me. I can buy the house I want
and get married this fall if I capture the flag.
You’ve met Milly. You can imagine what
your pitching means to me this year. That’s
all.”
He averted his face and looked out
of the window. His big jaw quivered.
“If it’s that why,
I’ll stay, I reckon,” he said huskily.
That moment bound Whit Hurtle and
Frank Connelly into a far closer relation than the
one between player and manager. I sat silent
for a while, listening to the drowsy talk of the other
players and the rush and roar of the train as it sped
on into the night.
“Thank you, old chap,”
I replied. “It wouldn’t have been
like you to throw me down at this stage. Whit,
you’re in trouble?”
“Yes.”
“Can I help you in any way?"’
“I reckon not.”
“Don’t be too sure of
that. I’m a pretty wise guy, if I do say
it myself. I might be able to do as much for
you as you’re going to do for me.”
The sight of his face convinced me
that I had taken a wrong tack. It also showed
me how deep Whit’s trouble really was.
I bade him good night and went to my berth, where
sleep did not soon visit me. A saucy, sparkling-eyed
woman barred Whit Hurtle’s baseball career at
its threshold.
Women are just as fatal to ball players
as to men in any other walk of life. I had seen
a strong athlete grow palsied just at a scornful slight.
It’s a great world, and the women run it.
So I lay awake racking my brains to outwit a pretty
disorganizer; and I plotted for her sake. Married,
she would be out of mischief. For Whit’s
sake, for Milly’s sake, for mine, all of which
collectively meant for the sake of the pennant, this
would be the solution of the problem.
I decided to take Milly into my confidence,
and finally on the strength of that I got to sleep.
In the morning I went to my hotel, had breakfast,
attended to my mail, and then boarded a car to go out
to Milly’s house. She was waiting for
me on the porch, dressed as I liked to see her, in
blue and white, and she wore violets that matched the
color of her eyes.
“Hello, Connie. I haven’t
seen a morning paper, but I know from your face that
you lost the Rochester series,” said Milly, with
a gay laugh.
“I guess yes. The Rube
blew up, and if we don’t play a pretty smooth
game, young lady, he’ll never come down.”
Then I told her.
“Why, Connie, I knew long ago.
Haven’t you seen the change in him before this?”
“What change?” I asked blankly.
“You are a man. Well,
he was a gawky, slouchy, shy farmer boy when he came
to us. Of course the city life and popularity
began to influence him. Then he met Nan.
She made the Rube a worshipper. I first noticed
a change in his clothes. He blossomed out in
a new suit, white negligee, neat tie and a stylish
straw hat. Then it was evident he was making
heroic struggles to overcome his awkwardness.
It was plain he was studying and copying the other
boys. He’s wonderfully improved, but still
shy. He’ll always be shy. Connie,
Whit’s a fine fellow, too good for Nan Brown.”
“But, Milly,” I interrupted,
“the Rube’s hard hit. Why is he too
good for her?”
“Nan is a natural-born flirt,”
Milly replied. “She can’t help it.
I’m afraid Whit has a slim chance. Nan
may not see deep enough to learn his fine qualities.
I fancy Nan tired quickly of him, though the one
time I saw them together she appeared to like him very
well. This new pitcher of yours, Henderson,
is a handsome fellow and smooth. Whit is losing
to him. Nan likes flash, flattery, excitement.”
“McCall told me the Rube had
been down in the mouth ever since Henderson joined
the team. Milly, I don’t like Henderson
a whole lot. He’s not in the Rube’s
class as a pitcher. What am I going to do?
Lose the pennant and a big slice of purse money just
for a pretty little flirt?”
“Oh, Connie, it’s not
so bad as that. Whit will come around all right.”
“He won’t unless we can
pull some wires. I’ve got to help him win
Nan Brown. What do you think of that for a manager’s
job? I guess maybe winning pennants doesn’t
call for diplomatic genius and cunning! But
I’ll hand them a few tricks before I lose.
My first move will be to give Henderson his release.”
I left Milly, as always, once more
able to make light of discouragements and difficulties.
Monday I gave Henderson his unconditional
release. He celebrated the occasion by verifying
certain rumors I had heard from other managers.
He got drunk. But he did not leave town, and
I heard that he was negotiating with Providence for
a place on that team.
Radbourne pitched one of his gilt-edged
games that afternoon against Hartford and we won.
And Milly sat in the grand stand, having contrived
by cleverness to get a seat next to Nan Brown.
Milly and I were playing a vastly deeper game than
baseball a game with hearts. But we
were playing it with honest motive, for the good of
all concerned, we believed, and on the square.
I sneaked a look now and then up into the grand stand.
Milly and Nan appeared to be getting on famously.
It was certain that Nan was flushed and excited,
no doubt consciously proud of being seen with my affianced.
After the game I chanced to meet them on their way
out. Milly winked at me, which was her sign that
all was working beautifully.
I hunted up the Rube and bundled him
off to the hotel to take dinner with me. At
first he was glum, but after a while he brightened
up somewhat to my persistent cheer and friendliness.
Then we went out on the hotel balcony to smoke, and
there I made my play.
“Whit, I’m pulling a stroke
for you. Now listen and don’t be offended.
I know what’s put you off your feed, because
I was the same way when Milly had me guessing.
You’ve lost your head over Nan Brown.
That’s not so terrible, though I daresay you
think it’s a catastrophe. Because you’ve
quit. You’ve shown a yellow streak.
You’ve lain down.
“My boy, that isn’t the
way to win a girl. You’ve got to scrap.
Milly told me yesterday how she had watched your
love affairs with Nan, and how she thought you had
given up just when things might have come your way.
Nan is a little flirt, but she’s all right.
What’s more, she was getting fond of you.
Nan is meanest to the man she likes best. The
way to handle her, Whit, is to master her. Play
high and mighty. Get tragical. Then grab
her up in your arms. I tell you, Whit, it’ll
all come your way if you only keep your nerve.
I’m your friend and so is Milly. We’re
going out to her house presently and Nan
will be there.”
The Rube drew a long, deep breath
and held out his hand. I sensed another stage
in the evolution of Whit Hurtle.
“I reckon I’ve taken baseball
coachin’,” he said presently, “an’
I don’t see why I can’t take some other
kind. I’m only a rube, an’ things
come hard for me, but I’m a-learnin’.”
It was about dark when we arrived at the house.
“Hello, Connie. You’re
late. Good evening, Mr. Hurtle. Come right
in. You’ve met Miss Nan Brown? Oh,
of course; how stupid of me!”
It was a trying moment for Milly and
me. A little pallor showed under the Rube’s
tan, but he was more composed than I had expected.
Nan got up from the piano. She was all in white
and deliciously pretty. She gave a quick, glad
start of surprise. What a relief that was to
my troubled mind! Everything had depended upon
a real honest liking for Whit, and she had it.
More than once I had been proud of
Milly’s cleverness, but this night as hostess
and an accomplice she won my everlasting admiration.
She contrived to give the impression that Whit was
a frequent visitor at her home and very welcome.
She brought out his best points, and in her skillful
hands he lost embarrassment and awkwardness. Before
the evening was over Nan regarded Whit with different
eyes, and she never dreamed that everything had not
come about naturally. Then Milly somehow got
me out on the porch, leaving Nan and Whit together.
“Milly, you’re a marvel,
the best and sweetest ever,” I whispered.
“We’re going to win. It’s a
cinch.”
“Well, Connie, not that exactly,”
she whispered back demurely. “But it looks
hopeful.”
I could not help hearing what was said in the parlor.
“Now I can roast you,”
Nan was saying, archly. She had switched back
to her favorite baseball vernacular. “You
pitched a swell game last Saturday in Rochester, didn’t
you? Not! You had no steam, no control,
and you couldn’t have curved a saucer.”
“Nan, what could you expect?”
was the cool reply. “You sat up in the
stand with your handsome friend. I reckon I couldn’t
pitch. I just gave the game away.”
“Whit! Whit!
Then I whispered to Milly that it
might be discreet for us to move a little way from
the vicinity.
It was on the second day afterward
that I got a chance to talk to Nan. She reached
the grounds early, before Milly arrived, and I found
her in the grand stand. The Rube was down on
the card to pitch and when he started to warm up Nan
said confidently that he would shut out Hartford that
afternoon.
“I’m sorry, Nan, but you’re
way off. We’d do well to win at all, let
alone get a shutout.”
“You’re a fine manager!”
she retorted, hotly. “Why won’t we
win?”
Well, the Rubes not in good form. The Rube
“Stop calling him that horrid name.”
“Whit’s not in shape.
He’s not right. He’s ill or something
is wrong. I’m worried sick about him.”
“Why Mr. Connelly!” exclaimed
Nan. She turned quickly toward me.
I crowded on full canvas of gloom to my already long
face.
Im serious, Nan. The lads off, somehow. Hes
in magnificent physical trim, but he cant keep his mind on the game. He
has lost his head. Ive talked with him, reasoned with him, all to no
good. He only goes down deeper in the dumps. Something is terribly
wrong with him, and if he doesnt brace, Ill have to release
Miss Nan Brown suddenly lost a little
of her rich bloom. “Oh! you wouldn’t you
couldn’t release him!”
“I’ll have to if he doesn’t
brace. It means a lot to me, Nan, for of course
I can’t win the pennant this year without Whit
being in shape. But I believe I wouldn’t
mind the loss of that any more than to see him fall
down. The boy is a magnificent pitcher.
If he can only be brought around he’ll go to
the big league next year and develop into one of the
greatest pitchers the game has ever produced.
But somehow or other he has lost heart. He’s
quit. And I’ve done my best for him.
He’s beyond me now. What a shame it is!
For he’s the making of such a splendid man
outside of baseball. Milly thinks the world of
him. Well, well; there are disappointments we
can’t help them. There goes the gong.
I must leave you. Nan, I’ll bet you a
box of candy Whit loses today. Is it a go?”
“It is,” replied Nan,
with fire in her eyes. “You go to Whit Hurtle
and tell him I said if he wins today’s game
I’ll kiss him!”
I nearly broke my neck over benches
and bats getting to Whit with that message.
He gulped once.
Then he tightened his belt and shut
out Hartford with two scratch singles. It was
a great exhibition of pitching. I had no means
to tell whether or not the Rube got his reward that
night, but I was so happy that I hugged Milly within
an inch of her life.
But it turned out that I had been
a little premature in my elation. In two days
the Rube went down into the depths again, this time
clear to China, and Nan was sitting in the grand stand
with Henderson. The Rube lost his next game,
pitching like a schoolboy scared out of his wits.
Henderson followed Nan like a shadow, so that I had
no chance to talk to her. The Rube lost his
next game and then another. We were pushed out
of second place.
If we kept up that losing streak a
little longer, our hopes for the pennant were gone.
I had begun to despair of the Rube. For some
occult reason he scarcely spoke to me. Nan flirted
worse than ever. It seemed to me she flaunted
her conquest of Henderson in poor Whit’s face.
The Providence ball team came to town
and promptly signed Henderson and announced him for
Saturday’s game. Cairns won the first of
the series and Radbourne lost the second. It
was Rube’s turn to pitch the Saturday game and
I resolved to make one more effort to put the love-sick
swain in something like his old fettle. So I
called upon Nan.
She was surprised to see me, but received
me graciously. I fancied her face was not quite
so glowing as usual. I came bluntly out with
my mission. She tried to freeze me but I would
not freeze. I was out to win or lose and not
to be lightly laughed aside or coldly denied.
I played to make her angry, knowing the real truth
of her feelings would show under stress.
For once in my life I became a knocker
and said some unpleasant things albeit
they were true about Henderson. She
championed Henderson royally, and when, as a last
card, I compared Whit’s fine record with Henderson’s,
not only as a ball player, but as a man, particularly
in his reverence for women, she flashed at me:
“What do you know about it?
Mr. Henderson asked me to marry him. Can a
man do more to show his respect? Your friend
never so much as hinted such honorable intentions.
What’s more he insulted me!”
The blaze in Nan’s black eyes softened with
a film of tears. She looked hurt. Her
pride had encountered a fall.
“Oh, no, Nan, Whit couldn’t insult a lady,”
I protested.
“Couldn’t he? That’s
all you know about him. You know I I
promised to kiss him if he beat Hartford that day.
So when he came I I did. Then the
big savage began to rave and he grabbed me up in his
arms. He smothered me; almost crushed the life
out of me. He frightened me terribly.
When I got away from him the monster stood
there and coolly said I belonged to him. I ran
out of the room and wouldn’t see him any more.
At first I might have forgiven him if he had apologized said
he was sorry, but never a word. Now I never
will forgive him.”
I had to make a strenuous effort to
conceal my agitation. The Rube had most carefully
taken my fool advice in the matter of wooing a woman.
When I had got a hold upon myself,
I turned to Nan white-hot with eloquence. Now
I was talking not wholly for myself or the pennant,
but for this boy and girl who were at odds in that
strangest game of life love.
What I said I never knew, but Nan
lost her resentment, and then her scorn and indifference.
Slowly she thawed and warmed to my reason, praise,
whatever it was, and when I stopped she was again the
radiant bewildering Nan of old.
Take another message to Whit for me, she said, audaciously.
Tell him I adore ball players, especially pitchers. Tell him Im going to
the game today to choose the best one. If he loses the game
She left the sentence unfinished.
In my state of mind I doubted not in the least that
she meant to marry the pitcher who won the game, and
so I told the Rube. He made one wild upheaval
of his arms and shoulders, like an erupting volcano,
which proved to me that he believed it, too.
When I got to the bench that afternoon
I was tired. There was a big crowd to see the
game; the weather was perfect; Milly sat up in the
box and waved her score card at me; Raddy and Spears
declared we had the game; the Rube stalked to and
fro like an implacable Indian chief but
I was not happy in mind. Calamity breathed in
the very air.
The game began. McCall beat
out a bunt; Ashwell sacrificed and Stringer laced
one of his beautiful triples against the fence.
Then he scored on a high fly. Two runs!
Worcester trotted out into the field. The Rube
was white with determination; he had the speed of a
bullet and perfect control of his jump ball and drop.
But Providence hit and had the luck. Ashwell
fumbled, Gregg threw wild. Providence tied the
score.
The game progressed, growing more
and more of a nightmare to me. It was not Worcester’s
day. The umpire could not see straight; the boys
grumbled and fought among themselves; Spears roasted
the umpire and was sent to the bench; Bogart tripped,
hurting his sore ankle, and had to be taken out.
Henderson’s slow, easy ball baffled my players,
and when he used speed they lined it straight at a
Providence fielder.
In the sixth, after a desperate rally,
we crowded the bases with only one out. Then
Mullaney’s hard rap to left, seemingly good for
three bases, was pulled down by Stone with one hand.
It was a wonderful catch and he doubled up a runner
at second. Again in the seventh we had a chance
to score, only to fail on another double play, this
time by the infield.
When the Providence players were at
bat their luck not only held good but trebled and
quadrupled. The little Texas-league hits dropped
safely just out of reach of the infielders. My
boys had an off day in fielding. What horror
that of all days in a season this should be the one
for them to make errors!
But they were game, and the Rube was
the gamest of all. He did not seem to know what
hard luck was, or discouragement, or poor support.
He kept everlastingly hammering the ball at those
lucky Providence hitters. What speed he had!
The ball streaked in, and somebody would shut his
eyes and make a safety. But the Rube pitched,
on, tireless, irresistibly, hopeful, not forgetting
to call a word of cheer to his fielders.
It was one of those strange games
that could not be bettered by any labor or daring
or skill. I saw it was lost from the second inning,
yet so deeply was I concerned, so tantalizingly did
the plays reel themselves off, that I groveled there
on the bench unable to abide by my baseball sense.
The ninth inning proved beyond a shadow
of doubt how baseball fate, in common with other fates,
loved to balance the chances, to lift up one, then
the other, to lend a deceitful hope only to dash it
away.
Providence had almost three times
enough to win. The team let up in that inning
or grew over-confident or careless, and before we knew
what had happened some scratch hits, and bases on
balls, and errors, gave us three runs and left two
runners on bases. The disgusted bleachers came
out of their gloom and began to whistle and thump.
The Rube hit safely, sending another run over the
plate. McCall worked his old trick, beating
out a slow bunt.
Bases full, three runs to tie!
With Ashwell up and one out, the noise in the bleachers
mounted to a high-pitched, shrill, continuous sound.
I got up and yelled with all my might and could not
hear my voice. Ashwell was a dangerous man in
a pinch. The game was not lost yet. A
hit, anything to get Ash to first and then
Stringer!
Ash laughed at Henderson, taunted
him, shook his bat at him and dared him to put one
over. Henderson did not stand under fire.
The ball he pitched had no steam. Ash cracked
it square on the line into the shortstop’s
hands. The bleachers ceased yelling.
Then Stringer strode grimly to the
plate. It was a hundred to one, in that instance,
that he would lose the ball. The bleachers let
out one deafening roar, then hushed. I would
rather have had Stringer at the bat than any other
player in the world, and I thought of the Rube and
Nan and Milly and hope would not die.
Stringer swung mightily on the first
pitch and struck the ball with a sharp, solid bing!
It shot toward center, low, level, exceedingly swift,
and like a dark streak went straight into the fielder’s
hands. A rod to right or left would have made
it a home run. The crowd strangled a victorious
yell. I came out of my trance, for the game was
over and lost. It was the Rube’s Waterloo.
I hurried him into the dressing room
and kept close to him. He looked like a man
who had lost the one thing worth while in his life.
I turned a deaf ear to my players, to everybody,
and hustled the Rube out and to the hotel. I
wanted to be near him that night.
To my amaze we met Milly and Nan as
we entered the lobby. Milly wore a sweet, sympathetic
smile. Nan shone more radiant than ever.
I simply stared. It was Milly who got us all
through the corridor into the parlor. I heard
Nan talking.
“Whit, you pitched a bad game
but ” there was the old teasing, arch,
coquettishness “but you are the best
pitcher!”
“Nan!”
“Yes!”