CHAPTER XVIII
A TEST OF NERVE
The play was so close and so much depended on it that there was a rushof Pirate players to the plate to dispute the decision. But the umpirerefused to change it, and curtly ordered them to get back into the game.
Joe picked himself up, and, smiling happily, walked into the Giants'dugout, where he was mauled about by his hilarious clubmates, whileMcRae and Robbie beamed their delight.
"You timed that exactly, Joe," cried Robbie, "and you came down thatbase path like a streak. It's plays like that that stand the otherfellows on their heads. Look at Miles. He's mad enough to bite nails.You've got his goat for fair."
"It looks like the winning run," said McRae. "And it's lucky that youdidn't depend on Wheeler to bring you in, for there goes the thirdstrike. Now it's up to you to hold the Pirates down in their last half."
"And rub it in by making it a no-hit game," adjured Robbie, as Joe puton his glove and went out to the box.
Joe needed no urging, for his blood was up and his imagination wasfired by the prospect of doing what had not been done in either Leagueso far that season.
But the Pirates were making their last stand in that inning, and heknew that he would have his work cut out for him. Their coachers wereout on the diamond, trying to rattle him and waving their arms to getthe fans to join in the chorus. From stands and bleachers rose a dinthat was almost overpowering.
Joe sized up Murphy, the first man up, and sent one over that fairlysmoked. Murphy lashed out savagely and hit only the empty air.
"Strike one!" cried the umpire.
Murphy gritted his teeth, got a good toe hold, and prepared for thenext. Joe drifted up a slow one that fooled him utterly.
Then for the third, Joe resorted to his fadeaway, and Murphy, baffled,went back to the bench.
Jamieson, who succeeded him, gauged the ball better and sent it on aline to the box. A roar went up that died away suddenly when Joe thrustout his gloved hand, knocked it down and sent it down to first like abullet, getting it there six feet ahead of the runner.
Then Miles, the last hope, came up, and Joe wound up the game in ablaze of glory by letting him down on three successive strikes.
The Giants had won 1 to 0 in the best-played game of the year. Thenewspaper correspondents exhausted their stock of adjectives indescribing it in the next day's papers.
Only twenty-seven men had faced Joe in that game. Not a man had reachedfirst. Not a pass had been issued. Not a hit had been made. It was oneof the rarest things in baseball--a perfect game.
And as the crowning feature, the one run that gave the victory to theGiants had been scored by Joe himself by those dazzling steals to thirdand home.
It was a good omen for the success of the Western trip, and the Giantplayers were jubilant.
"No jinx after us this time," chuckled Larry.
"If there is, he got a black-eye to-day," laughed Jim. "Gee, Joe, thatwas a wonderful game. You won it almost by your lonesome. The restdidn't have much to do."
"They had plenty," corrected Joe. "More than one of those Pirate cloutswould have gone for a hit if it hadn't been for the stone-wall defensethe boys put up. No man ever won a no-hit game with bad playing behindhim."
At the hotel table that night Joe noticed that Iredell was not present.
"Wonder where Iredell is," he remarked to Jim, who was sitting besidehim.
"Search me," answered the latter. "He may be in later. He's so grouchyjust now that he seems to be keeping away from the rest of the fellowsas much as he can. You can't get a pleasant word out of him these days.I spoke to him to-day on the bench, and he nearly snapped my head off."
"Too bad," remarked Joe, regretfully. "I've gone out of my way to befriendly with him, but he won't have it. Seems to think that I'm toblame for all his troubles."
They would have been still more concerned about the missing member ofthe team, could they have seen him at that moment.
Iredell, on his way to the hotel, had drifted into one of the lowresorts which ostensibly sold only soft drinks, but where it was easyenough to get any kind of liquor in the back room. To his surprise, hesaw Hupft, McCarney and Lemblow sitting at one of the tables.
There was a momentary hesitation on the part of the trio before theyventured to speak to him, for they did not feel sure how their advanceswould be received. But a glance at his face showed that he was in adejected and reckless mood, and that decided them.
"Hello, Iredell," called out McCarney, with an assumption of boisterouscordiality. "Sit down here and take a load off your feet. Havesomething with us at my expense."
Three months before, Iredell would have scorned the invitation. Now heaccepted it.
They talked of indifferent matters, the others studying Iredellintently.
"I noticed you weren't playing to-day," remarked McCarney, with asickly grin.
"No," said Iredell, bitterly. "I ain't good enough for the Giants anymore. They've benched me and put that young brat, Renton, in my place."
"Case of favoritism, I suppose," said McCarney, sympathetically. "Why,you can run rings around Renton when it comes to playing short!"
"That fellow, Matson, has got it in for me," growled Iredell. "But I'llget even with him yet."
"Sure, you will," broke in Hupft. "Nobody with the spirit of a manwould take that thing lying down. He's jealous of you, that's what heis. You've been captain once, and he's afraid you may be again, and sohe wants to freeze you off the team."