<SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XII. </h3>
<h3> WON IN THE NINTH. </h3>
<p>The cheer captain was leading them with wildly waving arms. "Grant!"
they thundered. "Rah! rah! rah! Grant! Grant! Grant!"</p>
<p>"That sure was some lucky," said Rod, walking toward the bench.</p>
<p>"Lucky!" rejoiced Cooper, jogging at his side. "It was ball playing!
It was pitching!"</p>
<p>"You pulled me through by that catch and double play," said the young
Texan modestly. "That put me on my pins. I'm sorry Phil got his."</p>
<p>Springer looked disconsolate enough as Rod took a seat beside him on
the bench. "Don't worry, old partner," begged Rodney. "It happens to
every pitcher sometimes. The best of them get it occasionally.
Perhaps I won't last."</p>
<p>"If you don't," returned Springer, "the game is a goner. There's no
one else to put in. I gave it away when I lost my control. Queer I
couldn't get the ball over."</p>
<p>"I saw that we couldn't keep you in any longer, Phil," said Eliot. "I
had to take you out."</p>
<p>"Oh, that's all right," muttered the unhappy fellow. "That's baseball."</p>
<p>With the score tied, Barville showed a disposition to fight grimly for
the game. Piper fell a victim to the wiles of Sanger; Nelson's
scorching grounder was scooped by Roberts; and away out in left garden
Dingley made a brilliant running catch of Barker's splendid long drive.
The sixth inning opened with the two teams on even terms and Grant
pitching for Oakdale.</p>
<p>Rodney's most effective ball was his drop, but Eliot, knowing it would
be poor judgment if the pitcher should use that particular ball too
often, called for it only in emergencies. The emergency rose when,
with only one man out, Sanger singled and stole second, Nelson dropping
Roger's throw. With Sanger playing well off the sack, there was a
chance for him to score if Cline banged out a long safety, so Eliot,
consulting hastily with Grant, urged Rod to use the drop every time he
put the ball over. Cline finally managed to hit one of those drops,
but he simply rolled a weak grounder into the diamond, and gave up the
ghost on his way to first, Sanger taking third on the throw.</p>
<p>Ready to bat, Len Roberts' gaze wandered toward the spectators back of
the ropes near first base; but, if he hoped to receive any
encouragement from Herbert Rackliff, he was disappointed, as Bunk
Lander, true to his promise, was keeping within arms' length of the
irritated and uneasy city youth. Rackliff, having surveyed Bunk's
stocky figure from head to foot and taken a good look at the fellow's
grim, homely mug, smoked cigarettes and uttered no sound save an
occasional suppressed cough.</p>
<p>It would be hard to describe the feelings of Roy Hooker. He had been
elated by Springer's misfortune and the success of Barville in tying
the score, but the failure of the visitors to get a lead left him still
worried and anxious. Especially was this true as he watched Rodney
Grant pitch with surprising steadiness and hold the crimson players
down.</p>
<p>"But he can't keep it up," thought Roy; "it's impossible. They'll fall
on him the way they did on Springer."</p>
<p>Roberts, who had hitherto batted with an air of confidence, now fell
into his old trick of waiting, the result being that two strikes were
called on him before he removed the bat from his shoulder. Then he bit
at a wide one, and was out.</p>
<p>Tuttle, hitting in Springer's place, was a snap for Sanger, who
polished him off with three high, swift, straight ones. For the third
time in the game, Stone showed his mettle and went to first on a
safety. As one man was out, Eliot, thinking to test Copley's throwing,
signaled for Ben to steal. There was nothing the matter with Copley's
wing, for he nailed Stone fully five feet from the second sack.</p>
<p>Roger batted a sizzler to the left of Sanger, who shot out his gloved
hand and deflected the ball straight into the waiting fingers of
Larkins at first.</p>
<p>Grant pitched fairly well in the seventh, but it needed the errorless
support he received to prevent the enemy from scoring, Barville pushing
a runner round to third before being forced to give up.</p>
<p>Sanger, working hard, disposed of Crane on strikes, forced Grant to pop
to the infield, and led Cooper into lifting an easy foul for Copley.
The red-headed catcher continued to talk to the batters, but, warned by
Eliot, they made no retort, and, seemingly, did not hear him. Since
the affair with Piper he had not, however, again offered to deflect a
bat.</p>
<p>It was a great game to watch, a game in which those high school boys,
keyed to a keen tension, were really outdoing themselves, performing
more than once feats which would have been creditable to professionals.
It was the kind of baseball that makes the blood tingle, the heart
throb, and leaves many an enthusiastic spectator husky from howling.
The strain was so great that it seemed an assured thing that something
must give way. Oakdale had saved herself temporarily by changing
pitchers, but shortly after the opening of the eighth inning it began
to look as if the fatal downfall of the home team had simply been
delayed.</p>
<p>Larkins led off by batting a dust scorcher against Cooper's shins, and
once more Chipper marred his record by booting the ball and throwing
wild to first when he finally got hold of it. This let the runner romp
easily to second.</p>
<p>Copley was seen to whisper something in Sanger's ear as the Barville
captain rose from the bench, bat in hand. Then Lee walked into the box
and bunted beautifully along the line toward first. He was thrown out
by Grant, but his purpose had been accomplished, and Larkins was on
third, with only one man down.</p>
<p>Fearing an attempted squeeze play, Eliot signaled for Rod to keep the
ball high and close on Cline. Roger had made no mistake in judgment,
and, despite the Texan's effort to baffle the hitter, Cline managed to
bump a roller into the diamond. Cooper, charging in, scooped the
sphere and snapped it underhand to Eliot; for Larkins, having started
to dig gravel with the first motion of Grant's arm, was doing his
utmost to score.</p>
<p>"Slide!" shrieked the coachers.</p>
<p>Larkins obeyed, and there might have been some dispute over the
umpire's decision had not the ball slipped out of Roger's fingers just
as he poked it onto the prostrate fellow.</p>
<p>"Safe!" announced the umpire, with a downward motion of his outspread
hand.</p>
<p>The coachers capered wildly, while Copley, leaping forward, met
Larkins, who had risen, and ostentatiously assisted in brushing some of
the dirt from his clothes. The Barville crowd behaved like a bunch
from a lunatic asylum. Roy Hooker told himself that Grant must surely
go to pieces now. "If Eliot had given me a show," he whispered to
himself, "I might go in there now and stop the slaughter."</p>
<p>Apparently the Texan was confused, seeing which, Cline attempted to
purloin the sack behind his back, only to be caught easily when Rod
turned and snapped the ball to Nelson.</p>
<p>This cheered the sympathizers with the home team, who were heartened
still more as, a few moments later, the amazingly calm Texan took the
crooked-nosed Roberts in hand and struck him out.</p>
<p>"Now, let's play ball and hold this lead, fellows," shouted Copley.
"It's easy enough. We've got the game nailed."</p>
<p>Sanger had no trouble in fanning Piper, and again Oakdale's hope ebbed,
as Nelson, who had not made a safety for the day, was sent by the whiff
route to join Sleuth on the mourners' bench.</p>
<p>With two gone, Berlin Barker got his first hit. There rose a groan,
however, when it was seen that roly-poly Chub Tuttle was the next
sticker. Tuttle justified the hopeless ones by popping a dinky little
fly into Sanger's hands.</p>
<p>"It's all off! It's all over!" crowed Copley, tossing the catching
mask spinning aside. "You've only got to get three more, cap. The way
you're pitching, it'll be like picking ripe fruit."</p>
<p>"But let's get some more tallies if we can," urged Sanger.</p>
<p>This, however, was not possible; for Grant gave his prettiest
exhibition in the ninth, striking out three fellows in succession with
that perplexing drop, which apparently he had mastered.</p>
<p>"This is our last chance, boys," said Eliot, as the locals gathered at
the bench. "One run is a small margin, and no game is lost until it's
won."</p>
<p>Ben Stone, his face as grim as that of a graven image, stood forth and
waited. Two balls he ignored, one of which was called a strike; and
then, seeming to get one to his liking, he planted the club against the
leather with a sharp, snapping swing. As in practice on the day Hooker
had pitched to him, Stone laced the ball straight over the center-field
fence for a home run, and pandemonium broke loose and continued while
he jogged slowly over the bases.</p>
<p>The score was again tied.</p>
<p>Roy Hooker had not been fully at ease, and his face turned almost ashen
as he saw the ball disappearing beyond the fence. He took no part in
the crazy demonstration of his schoolmates, declining even when some
one caught him by the shoulders and shouted in his ear, asking why he
did not cheer.</p>
<p>At the bench Stone was surrounded and congratulated by his delighted
teammates. Even the disconsolate Springer aroused himself enough to
speak a word of praise.</p>
<p>"We want another one—only one more," said Eliot, as he found a bat and
turned toward the plate.</p>
<p>Without seeking to "kill" Sanger's speed, Roger did his best to poke
out a safety, and would have succeeded only for a surprising one-handed
stop by Roberts, who got the ball to first for an unquestioned put-out.</p>
<p>"It's only a matter of an extra inning," cried Copley. "They've had
all their luck; it's over."</p>
<p>Crane, following Eliot, made the mistake of trying for a long hit, and
Sanger fanned him.</p>
<p>Grant came up with two men out.</p>
<p>"Here's the great cowboy twirler, cap," sneered Copley. "Put the iron
to him. Burn your brand deep."</p>
<p>"Get a hit, Grant—do get a hit!" came the entreaty from the Oakdale
crowd.</p>
<p>"If you do," muttered Copley, close under the bat, "I'll swallow the
ball."</p>
<p>A moment later Rod swung at a corner cutter, whirled all the way round,
and sprang at Copley, a look of such blazing wrath in his eyes that the
red-headed catcher retreated with ludicrous haste.</p>
<p>"You onery, sheep-herding skunk!" rasped the Texan. "If you touch my
bat again, I'll grease the ground with you! They'll sure carry you
home on a stretcher, and you can bet your life on that!"</p>
<p>Again the umpire had not seen the interference, so cleverly had Copley
perpetrated the trick. Eliot dashed at Grant and seized him, shouting
for the Oakdale crowd to keep back; for at least twenty indignant
persons were moving toward the diamond. There was a temporary delay,
during which Roger spoke earnestly into Grant's ear.</p>
<p>"Don't lose your head now, old fellow," pleaded the Oakdale captain.
"That's what he wants you to do. He thinks you can't hit the ball if
you're mad."</p>
<p>"I reckon you're right," said Rodney, getting a grip on himself; "but
he'll sure have a broken head if he does it again."</p>
<p>Having seen that look of rage in the Texan's eyes, Newt Copley was not
at all disposed to repeat the trick with him. Apparently Grant's
nerves had been somewhat unstrung, for when the game was again resumed
he missed one of Sanger's shoots by something like a foot, and the
second strike was called by the umpire. Then Rod smiled; it was barely
a faint flicker, but Sanger saw it and wondered. His wonderment turned
to dismay when the Texan skillfully poked a safety through the infield
and went romping to first, cheered by the crowd.</p>
<p>"Never mind, cap," encouraged Copley; "the weak ones follow. You won't
have any trouble with this undersized accident." A remark which
inflamed Cooper, in spite of Chipper's pretense that he did not hear it.</p>
<p>On the very first ball handed up to the Oakdale shortstop, Grant,
having got a start, raced down the line to second, slid spikes first,
and was declared safe, Copley failing to get the ball to Roberts in
time for a put-out.</p>
<p>But the Texan did not stop there. With Sanger's next movement of his
regular delivery, Rodney, having got a lead behind the pitcher's back,
went darting toward third. Copley, who had complained that Roberts was
slow about tagging the runner, uttered a yell, took the ball as it came
high above Cooper's shoulders, and lost no time in throwing to third.</p>
<p>Pratt had not anticipated an immediate second effort to steal by the
runner, and he was a trifle slow about covering the sack. As a result,
he was forced to reach for the ball with his bare right hand, and he
dropped it.</p>
<p>The home crowd was on its feet now, shouting wildly as the umpire's
downward gesture with both hands proclaimed the daring Texan safe at
third.</p>
<p>Copley snarled at Pratt, and Sanger plainly showed that the performance
of Grant had put him on the anxious seat.</p>
<p>The cheering now was incessant from both sides of the field, and this
was not calculated to soothe the nerves of the worried pitcher.
Nevertheless, had not Berry lost his head and forgotten that two were
out, the game would have gone into extra innings. Cooper finally drove
one toward the Barville shortstop, and Berry, leaping forward to catch
the ball, saw Grant dashing toward the plate. Berry should have thrown
to first, but, with his mind temporarily fogged, his only thought was
to stop that run, and he hurled the ball to the plate. Copley was not
prepared for this manoeuvre, and he leaped to get the whistling sphere,
which, however, came high and wide, forcing him to reach for it.</p>
<p>The umpire had barely time to run forward a short distance ere he
stopped and crouched as Grant flung himself headlong in a slide.
Getting the ball, Copley swung back to tag the runner, but ere the
horsehide was brought down between Rod's shoulder-blades, his hand had
found the plate.</p>
<SPAN name="img-127"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-127.jpg" ALT="Ere the horsehide was brought down between Rod's shoulder-blades, his hand had found the plate." BORDER="2" WIDTH="414" HEIGHT="646">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 414px">
Ere the horsehide was brought down between Rod's<br/>
shoulder-blades, his hand had found the plate.
</h4>
</center>
<p>"Safe!" shouted the umpire.</p>
<p>And the game was won by the pitcher who had taken Springer's place in
the fifth inning.</p>
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