“Fate has decreed more bad luck
for Salisbury in Saturday’s game with Bellville.
It has leaked out that our rivals will come over
strengthened by a ‘ringer,’ no less than
Yale’s star pitcher, Wayne. We saw him
shut Princeton out in June, in the last game of the
college year, and we are not optimistic in our predictions
as to what Salisbury can do with him. This appears
a rather unfair procedure for Bellville to resort
to. Why couldn’t they come over with their
regular team? They have won a game, and so have
we; both games were close and brilliant; the deciding
game has roused unusual interest. We are inclined
to resent Bellville’s methods as unsportsmanlike.
All our players can do is to go into this game on
Saturday and try the harder to win.”
Wayne laid down the Salisbury Gazette,
with a little laugh of amusement, yet feeling a vague,
disquieting sense of something akin to regret.
“Pretty decent of that chap
not to roast me,” he soliloquized.
Somewhere he had heard that Salisbury
maintained an unsalaried team. It was notorious
among college athletes that the Bellville Club paid
for the services of distinguished players. And
this in itself rather inclined Wayne to sympathize
with Salisbury. He knew something of the struggles
of a strictly amateur club to cope with its semi-professional
rivals.
As he was sitting there, idly tipped
back in a comfortable chair, dreaming over some of
the baseball disasters he had survived before his
college career, he saw a young man enter the lobby
of the hotel, speak to the clerk, and then turn and
come directly toward the window where Wayne was sitting.
“Are yon Mr. Wayne, the Yale
pitcher?” he asked eagerly. He was a fair-haired,
clean-cut young fellow, and his voice rang pleasantly.
“Guilty,” replied Wayne.
“My name’s Huling.
I’m captain of the Salisbury nine. Just
learned you were in town and are going to pitch against
us tomorrow. Won’t you walk out into the
grounds with me now? You might want to warm up
a little.”
“Thank you, yes, I will.
Guess I won’t need my suit. I’ll
just limber up, and give my arm a good rub.”
It struck Wayne before they had walked
far that Huling was an amiable and likable chap.
As the captain of the Salisbury nine, he certainly
had no reason to be agreeable to the Morristown “ringer,”
even though Wayne did happen to be a famous Yale pitcher.
The field was an oval, green as an
emerald, level as a billiard table and had no fences
or stands to obstruct the open view of the surrounding
wooded country. On each side of the diamond were
rows of wooden benches, and at one end of the field
stood a little clubhouse.
Wayne took off his coat, and tossed
a ball for a while to an ambitious youngster, and
then went into the clubhouse, where Huling introduced
him to several of his players. After a good rubdown,
Wayne thanked Huling for his courtesy, and started
out, intending to go back to town.
“Why not stay to see us practice?”
asked the captain. “We’re not afraid
you’ll size up our weaknesses. As a matter
of fact, we don’t look forward to any hitting
stunts tomorrow, eh, Burns? Burns, here, is
our leading hitter, and he’s been unusually noncommittal
since he heard who was going to pitch for Bellville.”
“Well, I wouldn’t give
a whole lot for my prospects of a home run tomorrow,”
said Burns, with a laugh.
Wayne went outside, and found a seat
in the shade. A number of urchins had trooped
upon the green field, and carriages and motors were
already in evidence. By the time the players
came out of the dressing room, ready for practice,
there was quite a little crowd in attendance.
Despite Wayne’s hesitation,
Huling insisted upon introducing him to friends, and
finally hauled him up to a big touring car full of
girls. Wayne, being a Yale pitcher, had seen
several thousand pretty girls, but the group in that
automobile fairly dazzled him. And the last one
to whom Huling presented him with the words:
“Dorothy, this is Mr. Wayne, the Yale pitcher,
who is to play with Bellville tomorrow; Mr. Wayne,
my sister” was the girl he had known
he would meet some day.
“Climb up, Mr. Wayne.
We can make room,” invited Miss Huling.
Wayne thought the awkwardness with
which he found a seat beside her was unbecoming to
a Yale senior. But, considering she was the girl
he had been expecting to discover for years, his clumsiness
bespoke the importance of the event. The merry
laughter of the girls rang in his ears. Presently,
a voice detached itself from the others, and came
floating softly to him.
“Mr. Wayne, so you’re
going to wrest our laurels from us?” asked Miss
Huling.
“I don’t know I’m not
infallible I’ve been beaten.”
“When? Not this season?”
she inquired quickly, betraying a knowledge of his
record that surprised and pleased him. “Mr.
Wayne, I was at the Polo Grounds on June fifteenth.”
Her white hand lightly touched the
Princeton pin at her neck. Wayne roused suddenly
out of his trance. The girl was a Princeton girl!
The gleam of her golden hair, the flash of her blue
eyes, became clear in sight.
“I’m very pleased to hear it,” he
replied.
“It was a great game, Mr. Wayne,
and you may well be proud of your part in winning
it. I shouldn’t be surprised if you treated
the Salisbury team to the same coat of whitewash.
We girls are up in arms. Our boys stood a fair
chance to win this game, but now there’s a doubt.
By the way, are you acquainted in Bellville?”
“No. I met Reed, the Bellville
captain, in New York this week. He had already
gotten an extra pitcher another ringer for
this game, but he said he preferred me, if it could
be arranged.”
While conversing, Wayne made note
of the fact that the other girls studiously left him
to Miss Huling. If the avoidance had not been
so marked, he would never have thought of it.
“Mr. Wayne, if your word is
not involved will you change your mind and
pitch tomorrow’s game for us instead of Bellville?”
Quite amazed, Wayne turned squarely
to look at Miss Huling. Instead of disarming
his quick suspicion, her cool, sweet voice, and brave,
blue eyes confirmed it. The charms of the captain’s
sister were to be used to win him away from the Bellville
nine. He knew the trick; it had been played
upon him before.
But never had any other such occasion
given him a feeling of regret. This case was
different. She was the girl. And she meant
to flirt with him, to use her eyes for all they were
worth to encompass the Waterloo of the rival team.
No, he had made a mistake, after all she
was not the real girl. Suddenly conscious of
a little shock of pain, he dismissed that dream girl
from his mind, and determined to meet Miss Huling half
way in her game. He could not flirt as well
as he could pitch; still, he was no novice.
“Well, Miss Huling, my word
certainly is not involved. But as to pitching
for Salisbury that depends.”
“Upon what?”
“Upon what there is in it.”
“Mr. Wayne, you mean money? Oh, I know. My
brother Rex told me how you college men are paid big sums. Our association
will not give a dollar, and, besides, my brother knows nothing of this.
But we girls are heart and soul on winning this game. Well
“Miss Huling, I didn’t
mean remuneration in sordid cash,” interrupted
Wayne, in a tone that heightened the color in her cheeks.
Wayne eyed her keenly with mingled
emotions. Was that rose-leaf flush in her cheeks
natural? Some girls could blush at will.
Were the wistful eyes, the earnest lips, only shamming?
It cost him some bitterness to decide that they were.
Her beauty fascinated, while it hardened him.
Eternally, the beauty of women meant the undoing of
men, whether they played the simple, inconsequential
game of baseball, or the great, absorbing, mutable
game of life.
The shame of the situation for him
was increasingly annoying, inasmuch as this lovely
girl should stoop to flirtation with a stranger, and
the same time draw him, allure him, despite the apparent
insincerity.
“Miss Huling, I’ll pitch
your game for two things,” he continued.
“Name them.”
“Wear Yale blue in place of that orange-and-black
Princeton pin.”
“I will.” She said
it with a shyness, a look in her eyes that made Wayne
wince. What a perfect little actress! But
there seemed just a chance that this was not deceit.
For an instant he wavered, held back by subtle, finer
intuition; then he beat down the mounting influence
of truth in those dark-blue eyes, and spoke deliberately:
“The other thing is if I win the
game a kiss.”
Dorothy Huling’s face flamed
scarlet. But this did not affect Wayne so deeply,
though it showed him his mistake, as the darkening
shadow of disappointment in her eyes. If she
had been a flirt, she would have been prepared for
rudeness. He began casting about in his mind
for some apology, some mitigation of his offense;
but as he was about to speak, the sudden fading of
her color, leaving her pale, and the look in her proud,
dark eyes disconcerted him out of utterance.
“Certainly, Mr. Wayne. I agree to your
price if you win the game.”
But how immeasurable was the distance
between the shy consent to wear Yale blue, and the
pale, surprised agreement to his second proposal!
Wayne experienced a strange sensation of personal loss.
While he endeavored to find his tongue,
Miss Huling spoke to one of the boys standing near,
and he started off on a run for the field. Presently
Huling and the other players broke for the car, soon
surrounding it in breathless anticipation.
“Wayne, is it straight?
You’ll pitch for us tomorrow?” demanded
the captain, with shining eyes.
“Surely I will. Bellville
don’t need me. They’ve got Mackay,
of Georgetown,” replied Wayne.
Accustomed as he was to being mobbed
by enthusiastic students and admiring friends, Wayne
could not but feel extreme embarrassment at the reception
accorded him now. He felt that he was sailing
under false colors. The boys mauled him, the
girls fluttered about him with glad laughter.
He had to tear himself away; and when he finally reached
his hotel, he went to his room, with his mind in a
tumult.
Wayne cursed himself roundly; then
he fell into deep thought. He began to hope
he could retrieve the blunder. He would win the
game; he would explain to her the truth; he would
ask for an opportunity to prove he was worthy of her
friendship; he would not mention the kiss. This
last thought called up the soft curve of her red lips
and that it was possible for him to kiss her made
the temptation strong.
His sleep that night was not peaceful
and dreamless. He awakened late, had breakfast
sent to his room, and then took a long walk out into
the country. After lunch he dodged the crowd
in the hotel lobby, and hurried upstairs, where he
put on his baseball suit. The first person he
met upon going down was Reed, the Bellville man.
“What’s this I hear, Wayne,
about your pitching for Salisbury today? I got
your telegram.”
“Straight goods,” replied Wayne.
“But I thought you intended to pitch for us?”
“I didn’t promise, did I?”
“No. Still, it looks fishy to me.”
“You’ve got Mackay, haven’t you?”
“Yes. The truth is, I intended to use
you both.”
“Well, I’ll try to win for Salisbury.
Hope there’s no hard feeling.”
“Not at all. Only if I
didn’t have the Georgetown crack, I’d yell
murder. As it is, we’ll trim Salisbury
anyway.”
“Maybe,” answered Wayne,
laughing. “It’s a hot day, and my
arm feels good.”
When Wayne reached the ball grounds,
he thought he had never seen a more inspiring sight.
The bright green oval was surrounded by a glittering
mass of white and blue and black. Out along the
foul lines were carriages, motors, and tally-hos,
brilliant with waving fans and flags. Over the
field murmured the low hum of many voices.
“Here you are!” cried
Huling, making a grab for Wayne. “Where
were you this morning? We couldn’t find
you. Come! We’ve got a minute before
the practice whistle blows, and I promised to exhibit
you.”
He hustled Wayne down the first-base
line, past the cheering crowd, out among the motors,
to the same touring car that he remembered. A
bevy of white-gowned girls rose like a covey of ptarmigans,
and whirled flags of maroon and gray.
Dorothy Huling wore a bow of Yale
blue upon her breast, and Wayne saw it and her face
through a blur.
“Hurry, girls; get it over.
We’ve got to practice,” said the captain.
In the merry melee some one tied a
knot of ribbon upon Wayne. Who it was he did
not know; he saw only the averted face of Dorothy Huling.
And as he returned to the field with a dull pang, he
determined he would make her indifference disappear
with the gladness of a victory for her team.
The practice was short, but long enough
for Wayne to locate the glaring weakness of Salisbury
at shortstop and third base. In fact, most of
the players of his team showed rather poor form; they
were overstrained, and plainly lacked experience necessary
for steadiness in an important game.
Burns, the catcher, however, gave
Wayne confidence. He was a short, sturdy youngster,
with all the earmarks of a coming star. Huling,
the captain, handled himself well at first base.
The Bellville players were more matured, and some
of them were former college cracks. Wayne saw
that he had his work cut out for him.
The whistle blew. The Bellville
team trotted to their position in the field; the umpire
called play, and tossed a ball to Mackay, the long,
lean Georgetown pitcher.
Wells, the first batter, fouled out;
Stamford hit an easy bounce to the pitcher, and Clews
put up a little Texas leaguer all going
out, one, two, three, on three pitched balls.
The teams changed from bat to field.
Wayne faced the plate amid vociferous cheering.
He felt that he could beat this team even without
good support. He was in the finest condition,
and his arm had been resting for ten days. He
knew that if he had control of his high inshoot, these
Bellville players would feel the whiz of some speed
under their chins.
He struck Moore out, retired Reed
on a measly fly, and made Clark hit a weak grounder
to second; and he walked in to the bench assured of
the outcome. On some days he had poor control;
on others his drop ball refused to work properly;
but, as luck would have it, he had never had greater
speed or accuracy, or a more bewildering fast curve
than on this day, when he meant to win a game for
a girl.
“Boys, I’ve got everything,”
he said to his fellow-players, calling them around
him. “A couple of runs will win for us.
Now, listen, I know Mackay. He hasn’t
any speed, or much of a curve. All he’s
got is a teasing slow ball and a foxy head. Don’t
be too anxious to hit. Make him put ’em
over.”
But the Salisbury players were not
proof against the tempting slow balls that Mackay
delivered. They hit at wide curves far off the
plate and when they did connect with the ball it was
only to send an easy chance to the infielders.
The game seesawed along, inning after
inning; it was a pitcher’s battle that looked
as if the first run scored would win the game.
Mackay toyed with the Salisbury boys; it was his
pleasure to toss up twisting, floating balls that
could scarcely be hit out of the diamond. Wayne
had the Bellville players utterly at his mercy; he
mixed up his high jump and fast drop so cleverly,
with his sweeping out-curve, that his opponents were
unable to gauge his delivery at all.
In the first of the seventh, Barr
for Bellville hit a ball which the third baseman should
have fielded. But he fumbled. The second
batter sent a fly to shortstop, who muffed it.
The third hitter reached his base on another error
by an infielder. Here the bases were crowded,
and the situation had become critical all in a moment.
Wayne believed the infield would go to pieces, and
lose the game, then and there, if another hit went
to short or third.
“Steady up, boys,” called
Wayne, and beckoned for his catcher.
“Burns, it’s up to you
and me,” he said, in a low tone. “I’ve
got to fan the rest of these hitters. You’re
doing splendidly. Now, watch close for my drop.
Be ready to go down on your knees. When I let
myself out, the ball generally hits the ground just
back of the plate.”
“Speed ’em over!”
said Burns, his sweaty face grim and determined.
“I’ll get in front of ’em.”
The head of the batting list was up
for Bellville, and the whole Bellville contingent
on the side lines rose and yelled and cheered.
Moore was a left handed hitter, who
choked his bat up short, and poked at the ball.
He was a good bunter, and swift on his feet.
Wayne had taken his measure, as he had that of the
other players, earlier in the game; and he knew it
was good pitching to keep the ball in close to Moore’s
hands, so that if he did hit it, the chances were it
would not go safe.
Summoning all his strength, Wayne
took his long swing and shot the ball over the inside
corner with terrific speed.
One strike!
Wayne knew it would not do to waste
any balls if he wished to maintain that speed, so
he put the second one in the same place. Moore
struck too late.
Two strikes!
Then Burns signed for the last drop.
Wayne delivered it with trepidation, for it was a
hard curve to handle. Moore fell all over himself
trying to hit it. Little Burns dropped to his
knees to block the vicious curve. It struck
the ground, and, glancing, boomed deep on the breast
protector.
How the Salisbury supporters roared
their approval! One man out the bases
full with Reed, the slugging captain, at
bat!
If Reed had a weakness, Wayne had
not discovered it yet, although Reed had not hit safely.
The captain stood somewhat back from the plate, a
fact that induced Wayne to try him with the speedy
outcurve. Reed lunged with a powerful swing,
pulling away from the plate, and he missed the curve
by a foot.
Wayne did not need to know any more.
Reed had made his reputation slugging straight balls
from heedless pitchers. He chopped the air twice
more, and flung his bat savagely to the ground.
“Two out play the hitter!”
called Wayne to his team.
Clark, the third man up, was the surest
batter on the Bellville team. He looked dangerous.
He had made the only hit so far to the credit of
his team. Wayne tried to work him on a high,
fast ball close in. Clark swung freely and cracked
a ripping liner to left. Half the crowd roared,
and then groaned, for the beautiful hit went foul by
several yards. Wayne wisely decided to risk
all on his fast drop. Clark missed the first,
fouled the second.
Two strikes!
Then he waited. He cooly let
one, two, three of the fast drops go by without attempting
to hit them. Burns valiantly got his body in
front of them. These balls were all over the
plate, but too low to be called strikes. With
two strikes, and three balls, and the bases full, Clark
had the advantage.
Tight as the place was, Wayne did
not flinch. The game depended practically upon
the next ball delivered. Wayne craftily and daringly
decided to use another fast drop, for of all his assortment
that would be the one least expected by Clark.
But it must be started higher, so that in case Clark
made no effort to swing, it would still be a strike.
Gripping the ball with a clinched
hand, Wayne swung sharply, and drove it home with
the limit of his power. It sped like a bullet,
waist high, and just before reaching the plate darted
downward, as if it had glanced on an invisible barrier.
Clark was fooled completely and struck
futilely. But the ball caromed from the hard
ground, hit Burns with a resounding thud, and bounced
away. Clark broke for first, and Moore dashed
for home. Like a tiger the little catcher pounced
upon the ball, and, leaping back into line, blocked
the sliding Moore three feet from the plate.
Pandemonium burst loose among the
Salisbury adherents. The men bawled, the women
screamed, the boys shrieked, and all waved their hats
and flags, and jumped up and down, and manifested
symptoms of baseball insanity.
In the first of the eighth inning,
Mackay sailed up the balls like balloons, and disposed
of three batters on the same old weak hits to his
clever fielders. In the last of the eighth, Wayne
struck out three more Bellville players.
“Burns, you’re up,”
said Wayne, who, in his earnestness to win, kept cheering
his comrades. “Do something. Get your
base any way you can. Get in front of one.
We must score this inning.”
Faithful, battered Burns cunningly
imposed his hip over the plate and received another
bruise in the interests of his team. The opposing
players furiously stormed at the umpire for giving
him his base, but Burns’ trick went through.
Burnett bunted skilfully, sending Burns to second.
Cole hit a fly to center. Then Huling singled
between short and third.
It became necessary for the umpire
to delay the game while he put the madly leaping boys
back off the coaching lines. The shrill, hilarious
cheering gradually died out, and the field settled
into a forced quiet.
Wayne hurried up to the plate and
took his position. He had always been a timely
hitter, and he gritted his teeth in his resolve to
settle this game. Mackay whirled his long arm,
wheeled, took his long stride, and pitched a slow,
tantalizing ball that seemed never to get anywhere.
But Wayne waited, timed it perfectly, and met it squarely.
The ball flew safely over short, and
but for a fine sprint and stop by the left fielder,
would have resulted in a triple, possibly a home run.
As it was, Burns and Huling scored; and Wayne, by a
slide, reached second base. When he arose and
saw the disorderly riot, and heard the noise of that
well-dressed audience, he had a moment of exultation.
Then Wells flew out to center ending the chances for
more runs.
As Wayne received the ball in the
pitcher’s box, he paused and looked out across
the field toward a white-crowned motor car, and he
caught a gleam of Dorothy Huling’s golden hair,
and wondered if she were glad.
For nothing short of the miraculous
could snatch this game from him now. Burns had
withstood a severe pounding, but he would last out
the inning, and Wayne did not take into account the
rest of the team. He opened up with no slackening
of his terrific speed, and he struck out the three
remaining batters on eleven pitched balls. Then
in the rising din he ran for Burns and gave him a
mighty hug.
“You made the gamest stand of
any catcher I ever pitched to,” he said warmly.
Burns looked at his quivering, puffed,
and bleeding hands, and smiled as if to say that this
was praise to remember, and reward enough. Then
the crowd swooped down on them, and they were swallowed
up in the clamor and surge of victory. When
Wayne got out of the thick and press of it, he made
a bee line for his hotel, and by running a gauntlet
managed to escape.
Resting, dressing, and dining were
matters which he went through mechanically, with his
mind ever on one thing. Later, he found a dark
corner of the porch and sat there waiting, thinking.
There was to be a dance given in honor of the team
that evening at the hotel. He watched the boys
and girls pass up the steps. When the music commenced,
he arose and went into the hall. It was bright
with white gowns, and gay with movement.
“There he is. Grab him, somebody,”
yelled Huling.
“Do something for me, quick,”
implored Wayne of the captain, as he saw the young
people wave toward him.
“Salisbury is yours tonight,” replied
Huling
“Ask your sister to save me one dance.”
Then he gave himself up. He
took his meed of praise and flattery, and he withstood
the battery of arch eyes modestly, as became the winner
of many fields. But even the reception after
the Princeton game paled in comparison with this impromptu
dance.
She was here. Always it seemed,
while he listened or talked or danced, his eyes were
drawn to a slender, graceful form, and a fair face
crowned with golden hair. Then he was making
his way to where she stood near one of the open windows.
He never knew what he said to her,
nor what reply she made, but she put her arm in his,
and presently they were gliding over the polished
floor. To Wayne the dance was a dream.
He led her through the hall and out upon the balcony,
where composure strangely came to him.
“Mr. Wayne, I have to thank
you for saving the day for us. You pitched magnificently.”
“I would have broken my arm
to win that game,” burst out Wayne. “Miss
Huling, I made a blunder yesterday. I thought
there was a conspiracy to persuade me to throw down
Bellville. I’ve known of such things, and
I resented it. You understand what I thought.
I humbly offer my apologies, and beg that you forget
the rude obligation I forced upon you.”
How cold she was! How unattainable
in that moment! He caught his breath, and rushed
on.
“Your brother and the management
of the club have asked me to pitch for Salisbury the
remainder of the season. I shall be happy to if
“If what?” She was all
alive now, flushing warmly, dark eyes alight, the
girl of his dreams.
“If you will forgive me if
you will let me be your friend if Miss
Huling, you will again wear that bit of Yale blue.”
“If, Mr. Wayne, you had very
sharp eyes you would have noticed that I still wear
it!”