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 It wasn’t snobbishness that caused Maple Ridge to at first look askance at Jack. It was rather a spirit of clannishness, due to the fact the school was essentially New England, and that in almost every case when a new student entered the other fellows either knew him personally or knew who he was. Very likely he was fresh from one of the four or five lower schools that fed Maple Ridge; quite possibly he was the second or third or even fourth of his name to enter. Jack was an outsider whom nobody had ever heard of, who had attended no school that anybody knew of and who, as though to emphasize his oddity, came not only from a place outside New England but from the West, a region treated of in geographies and occasionally Eventually, however, as the Kansan neither scalped Doctor Benedict, indulged in war-whoops or behaved vastly different from themselves, the others got over their alarm and accepted the newcomer if not unreservedly at least with toleration and a display of respect. For a time the name of Kansas had been applied to him, not at all in a sense of ridicule, however, but that appellation was gradually being dropped. In a manner Jack was, I fear, something of a disappointment to his schoolmates. They were quite prepared to be shocked and scandalized by the Westerner, and when no shocks were forthcoming they doubtless lost much of their faith in the stories they had read about the Wild West. Sam Phillips held his new and undesired room-mate at arms’ length for quite a week. After practice Jack and Sam returned together to the gymnasium, pausing a moment on the terrace to watch a game of tennis that was in progress. “How did you get on?” asked Sam as they continued up the path. “All right, I think,” replied Jack. “I only had two chances in the field and got them both.” “That’s good, but let me tell you something, Jack. When you threw to the plate on that “Yes. But the trouble is, Sam, that when you’re in a hurry and you’ve got a long throw you can’t always put the ball just where you want it.” “No, but the oftener you do the better chance you stand of making the team. That’s the point, Jack. Every fielder slips up sometimes, but it’s the fellow that slips up oftenest that sits on the bench when the real games come along. When you throw in to the plate—which isn’t very often, of course, since you’ll usually throw to an infielder—just glue your eye to the catcher’s left and put your mind on getting the ball there. And, by the way, never take your eye away from where the ball’s going until it’s left your hand. Some fellows shift their eyes Jack shook his head. “No, but I’ve seen it played.” “Well, it’s the same idea. You swing your club back and you keep your eye right on the back of the ball—or just behind it—until you “I see what you mean, of course,” replied Jack as they entered the gymnasium. “I hadn’t just thought of that before, though. I’m much obliged.” “That’s all right,” responded Sam as they ran down the stairs to the locker room. “Hello, Sammy. How’s the Arm?” (Sam’s pitching arm was always referred to in a manner of the deepest respect and reverence, and its welfare was a matter of constant anxiety. The word Arm as Ted Warner pronounced it began with a capital A.) “Fine and dandy,” replied Sam. “You know Mr. Borden, don’t you, Ted?” Ted shook hands with Jack. “We’ve never been properly introduced yet,” “He’s doing finely,” replied Sam, saving Jack the trouble of answering. “We’re going to have him on the first in a week or so.” “I hope so, I’m sure,” said Ted politely. “I say, Sammy, come over to the room tonight, will you? We want to fix up a batting-list for Saturday’s game with the Towners. Dolph told me to tell you. Bring Borden along if he cares to come.” Ted slipped out of the last of his togs and, wrapping a bath towel about him, nodded, smiled and turned toward the showers. “That’s fine,” said Sam with satisfaction. “I’m glad he asked you over.” “Why?” “Because he and Dolph Jones room together, you see, and Dolph’s captain, as you know. It doesn’t do a fellow any harm to know the captain if he wants to make the team.” Sam grunted as he pulled his shirt over his head. “Of course,” he went on as his head reappeared Sam scurried toward the shower baths, leaving his room-mate to finish his undressing leisurely and thoughtfully. He was quite as anxious to get on the baseball team as Sam was to have him, but, he reflected with a rueful smile, with all his inexperience behind him he doubted if even a personal acquaintance with Captain Dolph Jones would place him there. Still, if hard work could do the trick—— He picked up his own towel, draped it about him and strode across the locker room as resolutely as though baseball practice and not a hot and cold shower bath awaited him. |