Don Strong, Patrol Leader - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Come on, Don," called Ted Carter. "Ninth inning."
The first Chester batter doubled. Instantly all stray thoughts were swept from Don's mind. The next player fouled out. Then came a long fly to the right-fielder and the runner ran to third after the catch. Any kind of a d.i.n.ky hit would score the tying run.
Don pitched to the batter. Without s.h.i.+fting his position, Tim snapped the ball to third base. The runner, caught asleep, scrambled frantically for the bag.
"Out!" ruled the umpire.
The game was over. Don ran to the bench.
"Pretty work, Tim," he cried.
"I guess I don't need anybody to show me how to play baseball," said Tim.
Don paused in the act of reaching for his sweater. Tim's eyes met his, a bit uncertain, a bit defiant. Ted Carter, laughing and happy, romped in between them.
"You fellows are one sweet battery," he cried joyously. Other members of the team crowded around the bench. Tim, with his mitt under his arm, walked away.
Slowly Don b.u.t.toned his sweater. Tim's change of heart was a mystery no longer.
At the edge of the field he found Andy Ford waiting.
"Mackerel!" cried the a.s.sistant patrol leader; "wasn't that a corking game? When Tim made that throw--h.e.l.lo! What's the matter?"
"Tim's sore because of what Bobbie said."
"How do you know?"
Don related what had happened at the bench.
"Well, the big b.o.o.b!" Andy gave a snort of anger. "Doesn't he know any better than to pay attention to a kid like Bobbie?"
"Tim's always been that way," said Don. "He's sensitive."
"Sure; but he isn't sensitive about his patrol, is he?"
Don sighed. No; Tim wasn't very sensitive about that.
After supper he came out of the house and walked down to the fence. He had an idea that Andy would be around; and when presently the a.s.sistant patrol leader came down the dark street, he held open the gate. They sat on the gra.s.s and talked in low tones.
"I've doped it out," said Andy. "Why don't you s.h.i.+ft--you and Tim do the Morse instead of Tim and Alex?"
Don shook his head--slowly.
"Why not?" Andy demanded. "If you worked with him and let him do things his own way wouldn't he get over his grouch?"
"I don't know. Would he?"
"Sure he would. Suppose some day when we were all hanging around you asked him to show you how to do something."
"Gee!" cried Don. "That would get him, wouldn't it?"
Andy grinned. "I guess we'll tame that roughneck, what?"
Don always rested his arm after a game. He had not planned to go to the baseball field until Tuesday. But his business with Tim was too important to wait. Monday afternoon he put away his tools and his bird-houses, and went off to the village green.
"h.e.l.lo!" called Ted Carter. "What are you doing around here on a Monday?"
"I want to see Tim," Don answered. He took the catcher off to one side.
"We're making some changes," he said. "Alex will work with Ritter on semaph.o.r.e signaling."
Tim's eyes grew suspicious. "Who'll work with me on Morse?"
"I will," said Don.
Tim's eyes snapped. "So that's the game, is it?" he asked darkly. "What's the first order I get; practice tomorrow?"
"That's up to you," said Don. "When do you want to practice?"
Tim was taken aback. He had expected to be told, not asked; ordered, not consulted. He mumbled that tomorrow would do, and went back to practice.
He could not get his thoughts back on the work. Once, when the ball was traveling around the bases, his attention wandered, and when somebody threw the sphere home, it almost struck him in the head.
"Let's call it a day," cried Ted Carter, "before Tim gets killed."
Tim smiled absently. He looked around for Don. The patrol leader was gone. He walked away slowly, turning one question over and over in his puzzled mind. What new trick was this, anyway?
Next morning he went around to Don's house. He was still sure that something had been hidden, and that at the proper moment the surprise would be sprung. He was watchful and cautious.
The practice ran its course serenely. Barbara came out, and after watching awhile, wrote a four-word message and asked Tim to send it. Don received it without a mistake.
"Isn't that splendid?" she cried. "The Wolf patrol will surely win points in the signaling, won't it?"
"We'll give them a fight," said Don.
Tim said nothing. But the fire to be something more than the Wolf patrol failure began to burn again. When the last message had flashed back and forth, he handed Don his flag.
"We'll get down to real work after this," said the patrol leader.
Ah! So here was the trick. Tim waited.
"Sending messages back and forth," Don went on, "is all right while we're brus.h.i.+ng up the code. We know the code now. It's time to begin to specialize for the contest. One of us will have to do nothing but send, and the other nothing but receive."
Still Tim waited.
"Which do you want to do, send or receive?"
"I--I'll send," said Tim. He felt like a boy who had squeezed his fingers in his ears and had waited for a gun to go off, and had then found that the gun was not loaded. He was bewildered, lost, confused.
Wednesday he came again. And still there was no bossing, no giving orders, no high hand of authority. Perhaps there was no trick.