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"Try another one, Ripley!"
The young man moistened his fingers, placing the ball carefully.
Of a sudden his arm shot out. Again the coach struck for what looked a fair ball, yet once more Mr. Luce fanned air and the catcher straightened up, ball in hand.
Pumph! The lazily thrown ball landed in Ripley's outstretched left. He moistened his fingers, wet the ball, and let drive almost instantly. For the third time Mr. Luce fanned out.
Then Fred spoke, in a tone of satisfied self-importance:
"Coach, that's all I'll do this afternoon, if you don't mind."
"Right," nodded Mr. Luce. "You don't want to strain your work before you've really begun it any other candidates for pitching want to have a try now?"
As the boys of the squad waited for an answer, a low laugh began to ripple around the gym. The very idea of any fellow trying after Ripley had made his wonderful showing was wholly funny!
Coach Luce called out the names of another small squad to scatter over the gym. and to throw the ball to anyone he named. Except for the few who were in this forced work, no attention was paid to the players.
Fred Ripley had walked complacently to one side of the gym. A noisy, gleeful group formed around him.
"Rip, where did you ever learn that great work?"
"Who taught you?"
"Say, how long have you been hiding that thousand-candle-power light under a bushel?"
"Rip, it was the greatest work I ever saw a boy do."
"Will you show me---after the nine has been made up, of course?"
"How did you ever get it down so slick?"
This was all meat to the boy who had long been unpopular.
"I always was a pretty fair pitcher, wasn't I?" asked Fred.
"Yes; but never anything like the pitcher you showed us to-day,"
glowed eager Parkinson.
"I've been doing a good deal of practicing and study since the close of last season," Fred replied importantly. "I've studied out a lot of new things. I shan't show them all, either, until the real season begins."
Fred's glance, in roaming around, took in d.i.c.k & Co. For once, these six very popular soph.o.m.ores had no one else around them.
"Whew! I think I've taken some wind out of the sails of Mr.
Self-satisfied Prescott," Fred told himself jubilantly. "We shan't hear so much about d.i.c.k & Co. for a few months!"
"Well, anyway, d.i.c.k," said Tom Reade, "you and Dave needn't feel too badly. If Ripley turns out to be the nine's crack pitcher, the nine also carries two relief pitchers. You and Dave have a chance to be the relief pitchers. _That_ will make the nine for you both, anyway. But, then, that spitball may be the only thing Ripley knows."
"Don't fool yourself," returned Prescott, shaking his head. "If Ripley can do that one so much like a veteran, then he knows other styles of tossing, too. I'm glad for Gridley High School---mighty glad. I wouldn't mind on personal grounds, either, if only---if-----"
"If Fred Ripley were only a half decent fellow," Harry Hazelton finished for him.
Coach Luce soon dismissed the squad for the day. A few minutes later the boys left the gym. in groups. Of course the pitching they had seen was the sole theme. Ripley didn't have to walk away alone to-day. Coach Luce and a dozen of the boys stepped along with him in great glee.
"It's Rip! Old Rip will be the most talked about fellow in any High School league this year," Parkinson declared, enthusiastically.
Even the fellows who actually despised Fred couldn't help their jubilation. Gridley was strong in athletics just because of the real old Gridley High School spirit. Gridley's boys always played to win. They made heroes of the fellows who could lead them to victory after victory.
Fred was far on his way home ere the last boy had left him.
"I'll get everything in sight now," Ripley told himself, in ecstasy, as he turned in at the gateway to his home. "Why, even if Prescott does get into the relief box, I can decide when he shall or shall not pitch. I'll never see him get a _big_ game to pitch in.
Oh, but this blow to-day has hurt d.i.c.k Prescott worse than a blow over the head with an iron stake could. I've wiped him up and put him down again. I've made him feel sick and ashamed of his puny little inshoot! Prescott, you're mine to do as I please with on this year's nine---if you can make it at all!"
In truth, though young Prescott kept a smiling face, and talked cheerily, he could hardly have been more cast down than he was.
d.i.c.k always went into any sport to win and lead, and he had set his heart on being Gridley's best man in the box. But now-----
d.i.c.k & Co. all felt that they needed the open air after the grilling and the surprise at the gym. So they strolled, together, on Main Street, for nearly an hour ere they parted and went home to supper.
The next day the talk at school was mostly about Ripley, or "Rip,"
as he was now more intimately called.
Even the girls took more notice of him. Formerly Fred hadn't been widely popular among them. But now, as the coming star of the High School nine, and a new wonder in the school firmament, he had a new interest for them.
Half the girls, or more, were "sincere fans" at the ball games.
Baseball was so much of a craze among them that these girls didn't have to ask about the points of the game. They knew the diamond and most of its rules.
Incense was sweet to the boy to whom it had so long been denied, but of course it turned "Rip's" head.
CHAPTER XI
THE THIRD PARTY'S AMAZEMENT
Eleven o'clock pealed out from the steeple of the nearest church.
The night was dark. Rain or snow was in the air.
In a shadow across the street hung Tip Scammon. His shabby cap was pulled down over his eyes, his hands thrust deep into the pockets of his ragged reefer. Tip's eyes were turned toward the Ripley home opposite.
"To think o' that feller in a fine, warm, soft bed nights, an'
all the swell stuff to eat at table!" muttered Tip, enviously.
"And then me, out in the cold, wearing a tramp's clothes! Never sure whether to-morrer has a meal comin' with it! But, anyway, I can make that Ripley kid dance when I pull the string! He dances pretty tolerable frequent, too! He's got to do it to-night, an'
he'd better hurry up some!"
Soon after the sound of the striking clock had died away, Tip's keen eyes saw a figure steal around one side of the house from the rear.
"Here comes Rip, now. He's on time," thought Tip. "Huh! It's a pity---fer---him that he wouldn't take a new think an' chase me. But he's like most pups that hire other folks to do their tough work---they hain't 't got no nerve o' their own."