2,99 €
Finkler's Field: A Story of School and Baseball written by Ralph Henry Barbour who was an American novelist. This book was published in 1911. And now republish in ebook format. We believe this work is culturally important in its original archival form. While we strive to adequately clean and digitally enhance the original work, there are occasionally instances where imperfections such as missing pages, poor pictures or errant marks may have been introduced due to either the quality of the original work. Despite these occasional imperfections, we have brought it back into print as part of our ongoing global book preservation commitment, providing customers with access to the best possible historical reprints. We appreciate your understanding of these occasional imperfections, and sincerely hope you enjoy reading this book.
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Finkler's Field
A Story of School and Baseball
By
Ralph Henry Barbour
CHAPTER I. ON THE BENCH
CHAPTER II. “KANSAS”
CHAPTER III. SAM IS MISSING
CHAPTER IV. BOARDERS VS. TOWNERS
CHAPTER V. KIDNAPPED!
CHAPTER VI. THREE OUT
CHAPTER VII. CHESTER IS PUZZLED
CHAPTER VIII. THE PEACE EMBASSY
CHAPTER IX. JACK GETS A LIFT
CHAPTER X. THE SLUMP
CHAPTER XI. AN ALARM OF FIRE
CHAPTER XII. THE BATTING LIST
CHAPTER XIII. A GARRISON FINISH
CHAPTER XIV. FINKLER’S FIELD
“Sam shed his coat ... and walked toward the plate.”
“One out; men on first and third!”
The coach hit a swift grounder toward second, and second baseman, reaching it with one hand, snapped it quickly to first, from whence, it sped back to the plate and the outstretched glove of Dolph Jones, catcher and captain of the Maple Ridge School Nine.
It was snappy work all around. Tom Shay, the coach, nodded approval, and the boys grouped on the bench and along the top of the stone wall behind it voiced applause.
Sam Phillips, who had been pitching to “Ducky Drake,” the substitute catcher, pulled off his glove and squeezed himself into a seat on the bench. “Gus is playing good ball this spring, isn’t he?” he observed, his gaze on the second baseman. “I guess, though, he is still wondering how that ball got into his mitt!”
“Chesty” Harris, the manager, stopped snapping the elastic on his score-book and smiled. “Turnbull won’t have everything his own way, Sammy. Steve Grady is going to push him hard for second.”
“Steve’s not so bad,” answered Sam gravely. “The only trouble with Steve is that he’s a Towner.”
“Huh!” Harris gave the elastic band an indignant snap. “You wait until next Saturday and see what the Towners will do to you chaps!” Sam simulated surprise.
“Say, you’re a Towner, too, aren’t you, Chesty? My word, I’d forgotten that! You seem such a smart, decent sort of chap that one sort of forgets your—your degradation!”
A murmur of laughter greeted this sally. Repartee not being the baseball manager’s strong point, he retorted by digging his elbow forcibly into Sam’s ribs.
“That’s all right, but you wait and see the way we’ll do you Boarders up! We’ve got the dandy team this year, all right! Turnbull on second, Mort Prince to pitch, Coolidge at short——”
“Where are you going to play?” asked Sam innocently.
“Oh, you run away,” muttered Chesty, amid laughter. Harris’s efforts to make the team and his final acceptance of the managership, proffered him as a combined reward for his efforts and consolation prize, was a school joke. Chesty was good-natured and could stand any amount of “ragging.”
“We’re going to hammer you all over the lot,” announced one of the boys on the wall, also a Towner, as the day students at Maple Ridge were called.
“Pound away, Joe,” replied Sam with a laugh. “I’ll give you a quarter apiece for all the hits you make off me, my lad.”
“Give me a quarter for every time I get my base?” asked Joe Williams eagerly.
“I will not! You’d get in front of the ball and get hit! I know you, Joseph!”
Ensued a spirited discussion of the chances of Boarders and Towners to win the annual baseball game which was to be played the following Saturday. As many of the group were Towners, the latter had the better of the argument, however the contest might turn out.
It was half-past four of an afternoon in the latter part of April. The fellows had been back from Spring Recess but three days, and today’s practice represented the first real work that had been done out of doors since the autumn. The first choice men were on the diamond, and the dozen or so adorning the bench and the stone wall were substitutes, if we except Sam Phillips. Sam, a thickset, jolly-looking youth of sixteen, was very little like the popular conception of a good ball-player. But in spite of his appearance, Sam was, in his way, a wonder. He was the best pitcher that Maple Ridge had ever known; what Coach Shay called “a natural-born twirler.” It had been Sam’s effective and heady work that had wrested the victory from Maple Ridge’s dearly hated rival, Chase Academy, last year, and when the Towners talked glibly of winning Saturday’s game they knew all the while that as long as Sam Phillips was in the box for the Boarders their chance of a victory was about as big as an under-sized pea.
Maple Ridge School lies a mile and a half from the town of Charlemont, Massachusetts. The campus overlooks a wide valley of farm and meadow pricked out with white homesteads, with the river trailing like a blue ribbon down the centre. Southward the smoky haze shows where Springfield lies. Back of the school property rises the steep slope of Maple Ridge. The buildings are five in number; the two dormitories, North and South; the recitation hall, or School Building as it is called; the Residence, abode of the Principal, Doctor Benedict—more familiarly known as “Benny”—and the gymnasium. Behind the gymnasium the land slopes to a terrace wide enough to accommodate two tennis courts. Another slope brings one to the level of the playground. Not very extensive, this latter; not half large enough for its purpose, in fact, for behind the campus Finkler’s meadow juts in, cutting the playground down to a width scarcely more than half of that of the campus itself. The restrictions of the athletic field had long been a matter for dissatisfaction amongst the students of Maple Ridge. There wasn’t room for a running-track, the gridiron filled almost every foot of field, and as a baseball ground the place was decidedly unsatisfactory, since a very long hit to right field invariably went over the stone wall into Finkler’s meadow, necessitating a ground rule to the effect that over the wall was good for but two bases. The eastward limit of the school property was marked by the brook that meandered between the edge of the playground and the first slope of the Ridge. On the other or northern side the playground was limited by a high iron fence backed with an evergreen hedge. Beyond lay the big estate of one of Charlemont’s wealthiest mill owners. As seeking to recover a ball knocked into Caldwell grounds would have been an almost hopeless effort, the diamond had been slightly skewed until the foul-line on that side ran clear to the brook. But by securing a clear left field it had been necessary to sacrifice right field, and as a result the foul-line past first ended abruptly against Farmer Finkler’s stone wall but a short distance behind the bag, and during a game one or more Preparatory Class youngsters were posted nearby for the sole purpose of jumping or scrambling over the wall and recovering balls. The wall was well built, but no wall erected without mortar can withstand such constant assaults and, as may be supposed, Farmer Finkler’s wall, in spring and fall, was always in need of repairing. As a matter of fact, no Maple Ridge boy bothered his head much when in getting over he toppled a stone to the ground, for between the owner of the meadow and the students existed a feud of long standing.
“Two down and a man on first!” shouted the coach, tossing the ball and swinging his bat. There was a crack and away arched the sphere. But Mr. Shay had put too much swing into that hit, for the ball came to earth in Finkler’s meadow.
“Let it go!” he shouted, as Dolph Jones tossed another ball to him. “Same play!”
This time the long fly was caught by Watkins and relayed to the plate in time to cut off the supposititious runner. Meanwhile “Midget” Green, a “Prep” of twelve years, whose chief ambition outside of school hours was to chase balls, was scrambling over the wall. “Chesty” Harris watched morosely.
“Gee,” he muttered, “I wish we had a field big enough to play ball in!”
There was nothing novel in this complaint, and so the hearers made no reply, unless a grunt by “Ducky” Drake could be called such. Every one heartily seconded Chesty’s wish, but they did so silently. Concurrence was a matter of course, just as protest every time a ball went over the stone wall was a matter of habit.
“I should think they’d move this fence back and give us more room.” This expression of opinion, uttered in a quiet, serious voice, came from a boy sitting on Sam’s left, a good-looking, well-built fellow of fifteen who had hitherto listened to the conversation in silence. The looks of surprise directed toward him faded as the others recognized the speaker.
“Oh,” said Joe Williams, “it’s ‘Kansas.’”
A smile went around, and the boy who had spoken echoed it faintly. “Well, now, couldn’t they?” he persisted.
“Oh, sure!” replied Chesty with a wealth of sarcasm.
But Sam answered seriously.
“Jack,” he said, “if that stone wall could be moved it wouldn’t be where it is. Benny has been trying to buy or lease that piece of meadow from old Finkler for years, but the cranky old hayseed won’t listen to him. The fact of the matter is, Jack, that old Fink doesn’t like us; hates us like pizen, to be strictly truthful.”
“Oh, does he? Why?”
“We-ell—” Sam squinted thoughtfully across the diamond—“I dare say we—that is, former generations of Maple Ridgers—have worried him some. By turning your head slightly, Mr. Borden, you will observe that up the slope there, behind South, there are trees. In the Fall those trees bear apples, very, very enticing apples, eh, fellows?”
“Rather!”
“Yum, yum!”
“The best ever, Sammy.”
“Quite so; and you ought to know, Joseph,” Williams grinned. “Well, Jack, to err is human, and every fall we err; I might say we fall. I’m told that we used to err more than we do now. One year, so history hath it, about sixty fellows descended on that orchard between morning school and dinner time and just about—er—depopulated it of apples. Nowadays the old codger keeps a dog, a large, ferocious and extremely suspicious dog; his name is Rowdy, and he is well named. Rowdy spends all his waking moments—and I am convinced that he never, never really sleeps—in prowling around looking for Maple Ridge legs. Gathering Farmer Finkler’s apples is no longer the pleasant, casual recreation it used to be. If your soul cries for apples now you put on all your old clothes, bundle up your legs in leg-guards, arm yourself with a baseball bat and say your prayers as you creep silently over the wall.” Sam shook his head regretfully. “No, erring isn’t what it used to be. You have to work for your apples these days!”
“They’re good, though, when you get them,” sighed Chesty with a reminiscent smile.
“Yes, but ever since Tyler Wicks spent almost two hours up a tree with Rowdy underneath begging him to come down and be eaten my appetite for apples isn’t what it used to was.” Sam frowned. “Personally, I think it’s a mighty mean trick to let a dog hang around an apple orchard. It—it indicates a lack of confidence in the—er—the integrity of your neighbors.”
“Very small, I call it,” Joe Williams agreed laughingly.
“It seems too bad, though, he won’t let the school have the use of that piece of land,” said Jack Borden, turning to look at the clear, level stretch of meadow beyond the wall. “It would surely make a dandy field, wouldn’t it?”
“Fine and dandy, Kansas,” agreed Chesty. “Why, if we had that, or even a good slice off it, we could have a quarter-mile running track!”
“And then, maybe,” muttered Drake, who was a member of the Track Team, “we wouldn’t get simply snowed under every spring at the Tri-Meet.”
“Considering we haven’t a track of our own,” said Williams, “I think it’s sort of wonderful we do as well as we do.”
“Of course it is,” Drake admitted. “But it gets monotonous when you’re licked hard every year. We go over to Chase or Dixon and get ten or twelve points in field events and then sort of stand around and watch the other fellows take all the track stunts. It makes me tired!”
“Maybe,” mused Chesty, “Old Fink will up and shuffle off this mortal coil some day and then we can have the field.”
“Huh! Don’t you believe it,” exclaimed Williams pessimistically. “He will leave a will forbidding his—whatdoyoucallems—his heirs to let us have it. He’s the meanest old rascal in the State of Massachusetts!”
“And he hates us fellows like the mischief,” added Drake.
“Hates us for the mischief, I guess,” laughed Sam. “I don’t think he needs to be so nasty about it, but I will own that he has some cause for not loving us.”
“We never did anything to him until he acted so pesky mean,” growled Williams. “Nothing, that is, but swipe a few of his old apples. And he’s got about a hundred trees over there and wouldn’t miss what we take, anyway.”
“Well, I don’t know how it started,” replied Sam, “but I do know that it’s war to the knife now. Remember last Fall when we met him coming home from town in his buggy and Tyler Wicks walked up to the old horse and put his arms around his neck?”
“You bet! Say, that was funny, wasn’t it? The horse stopped short in the road and Old Fink was so astonished he didn’t know what to do or say for a minute!”
“And all the time Tyler was telling the horse that he was a ‘nice old plug’ and why didn’t he get a good, kind master.”
“But when Old Fink woke up he had a few things to say, didn’t he?” laughed Chesty.
“And the way he lashed out with his old busted whip was a caution! He got Tyler around the legs all right; he showed me the welts next day.”
“Just the same,” said Joe Williams, “he didn’t have any right to say we burned his haycock last September.”
“No, and he will think we did it as long as he lives. Nothing Benny could say made any difference with him.”
“Was it really burned?” asked Jack Borden.
“Oh, I guess it was burned all right,” answered Sam, “but none of us fellows knew anything about it. It was tramps, probably. We might have a little fun with the old codger, and swipe a few of his apples, but we don’t do things like that, you know.”
“It’s too bad he thinks that, though,” mused Jack Borden. “It seems to me that if we want to get the field we’d ought to be decent to him.”
“Huh! It’s too late for that now,” responded Drake gloomily. “He thinks we’re a pack of thieves and pirates.”
“Still, if we told him we wouldn’t make any more trouble or take any more apples——” suggested Jack.
“He wouldn’t believe it,” Chesty laughed. “You might drop around and see him some day, Borden, and tell him that. Just mention my name and it will be all right.”
“And if you get a chance at that fool dog,” said Williams, “just give him a kick for me, will you?”
“And another for me,” added Drake.
Jack was silent for a moment, looking thoughtfully at the meadow over his shoulder. Finally:
“Just the same,” he said, “I have an idea that Mr. Fink——”
“Finkler,” corrected Sam.
“Finkler might be brought around if we set out to do it.” Jack smiled half apologetically. “Of course, I don’t know very much about it, fellows, but it looks to me like a situation demanding diplomacy.”
“Sort of fancy yourself as a diplomat, Kansas?” asked a boy on the wall. Jack shook his head.
“No, I don’t. But if you fellows really need that field as badly as you say you do you’re going the wrong way about it. I know that much.”
“You know a whole lot for a new boy, seems to me,” said Joe Williams irritably. “I suppose out in Kansas——”
“Out in Kansas,” interrupted Jack calmly, “we don’t punch a fellow’s head when we want him to do us a favor.”
No one found anything to say to this, although Williams growled something to his neighbor regarding “fresh Western kids.” And before the subject could be proceeded with the Coach called the players in and turned toward the bench.
“All ready now,” he said. “We’ll try a few innings. Second Team in the field. Prince and Drake, battery. Wales on third, Borden in left field. Get out there and throw around, boys!”
Jack Borden had made the mistake of entering Maple Ridge in January at the beginning of the Winter Term, for the boy who enters school after his fellows seldom quite catches up. By the time of his arrival friendships have been formed, elections have been held and the school has shaken itself down, and the late arrival finds himself in the position of a frog in a strange puddle. Jack had meant to enter Maple Ridge in the autumn, but events had prohibited. One stroke of luck had, however, befallen him. Sam Phillips’s room-mate, Storey, had been forced to give up school because of illness, and Sam was in undisputed possession of Number 12 South when Jack arrived on the scene. Therefore Jack was put in with Sam, an arrangement that didn’t please Sam at all. At first Sam, like most every other fellow at Maple Ridge, every one of whom hailed from the Eastern States, and the most of them from New England, viewed the Kansan with mingled curiosity and alarm. Jack was the very first Westerner to invade Maple Ridge, and his coming seemed revolutionary, a veritable shattering of precedent. There was absolutely no telling what wild and gruesome things a Westerner might do!