acquired skill. True, he could
throw the curves, and had some speed, but at his best he could not find
the plate more than once out of six times, and, when disturbed or rattled,
he was even worse. Like many another fellow, he erroneously believed
that the ability to throw a curved ball was a pitcher's chief
accomplishment.
"It was lucky Springer developed so well as a twirler last year,"
observed Eliot.
"Lucky!" sneered Hooker. "Why, I don't recollect that he did anything
worth bragging about. He lost both those games against Wyndham."
"We had to depend on him alone," said Roger; "and he was doing too
much pitching. It's a wonder he didn't ruin his arm."
"You've got to have some one beside Springer this year, that's sure,"
said Hooker. "He can't pitch much more than half the games
scheduled."
"Phil's tryin' to coach Rod Grant to pitch," put in Sile Crane. "I see
them at it last night, out behind Springer's barn."
Roy Hooker laughed disdainfully. "Oh, that's amusing!" he cried. "That
Texan has never had any experience, but, just because he and Phil have
become chummy, Springer's going to make a pitcher out of him. He'll
never succeed in a thousand years."
"Here they come now," said Ben Stone, as two boys turned in at the
gate of the yard; "and Phil has got the catching mitt with him. I'll bet
they've been practicing this noon."
"Jinks! but they're getting thick, them two," chuckled Chub Tuttle.
"As thick as merlasses in Jinuary," drawled Sile Crane whimsically.
"Being thick as molasses, they're naturally sweet on each other,"
chirped Cooper.
"Hi! Hi!" cried Tuttle. "There you go! Have a peanut for that."
"No, nut for me; I shell nut take it," declined Chipper.
"It's a real case of Damon and Pythias," remarked Stone, watching the
two lads coming up the walk.
"Or David and Jonathan," said Eliot.
Phil Springer, the taller of the pair, with light hair, blue eyes, and long
arms, looked at a distance the better qualified to toe the slab in a
baseball game; but Rodney Grant was a natural athlete, whose early life
on his father's Texas ranch had given him abounding health, strength,
vitality, and developed in him qualities of resourcefulness and
determination. Grant had come to Oakdale late the previous autumn,
and was living with his aunt, an odd, seclusive spinster, by the name of
Priscilla Kent.
Two girls, sauntering down the path with their arms about each other,
met the approaching boys, and paused a moment to chat with them.
"Phil's sister is struck on our gay cowboy," observed Cooper, grinning.
"I rather guess Lela Barker is some smit on him, too," put in Sile Crane.
"That's sorter natteral, seein' as how he rescued her from drowndin'
when she was carried over the dam on a big ice-cake in the Jinuary
freshet. That sartainly made him the hero of Oakdale, and us fellers
who'd been sayin' he was a fake had to pull in our horns."
"The real hero of that occasion," declared Hooker maliciously, "was a
certain cheap chap by the name of Bunk Lander, who plunged into the
rapids below the dam, with a rope tied round his waist, and saved them
both."
"I wouldn't sneer about Lander, if I were you, Roy," said Eliot in grave
reproof. "I wouldn't call him cheap, for he's shown himself to be a
pretty decent fellow; and Stickney, whose store he once pilfered, has
given him a job on his new delivery wagon. There's evidently more
manhood and decency in Lander than any of us ever dreamed--except
Grant, who took up with him at the very beginning."
"And a fine pair people around here thought they were," flung back
Hooker exasperatedly. "Why, even you, yourself, didn't have much of
anything to say for Rod Grant at one time."
"I was mistaken in my estimation of him," confessed Roger
unhesitatingly. "I believe Stone was about the only person who really
sized Grant up right."
"And now, since he's become popular, this hero from Texas chooses
Springer for his chum instead of Stone," said Roy.
"He has a right to choose whoever he pleases," said Ben, flushing a
trifle. "We are still good friends. If he happens to find Springer more
congenial than I, as a chum, I'm not going to show any spleen about it."
"It's my opinion," persisted Hooker, "that he has an object in his
friendliness with Phil Springer. He's got the idea into his head that he
can pitch, and he's using Phil to learn what he can. Well, we'll see how
much he does at it--we'll see."
The girls having passed on, the two boys now approached the group
near the steps. Springer was beaming as he came up.
"Say, Captain Eliot," he
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