CHAPTER VIII STRANGE PASSENGERS
Among the Hillcrest fans feeling was running high. That something strangeand rather terrible had happened to their new and quite marvelouspitcher, they appeared to realize. "But what did happen?" they wereasking. "Who's to blame? Who were the men in that plane?" Two men hadbeen seen. They were not close enough to be recognized. Had the Centraliacrowd hired them to heckle the new pitcher? This they found it difficultto believe. The friendliest of relations had always existed between thetwo small cities, even though there was a keen rivalry. "But who? Who?Who?" they were asking on every side. The mystery of the dark-skinnedpitcher from the laboratories deepened.
As for Doug Danby, on whose shoulders rested Hillcrest's hopes ofvictory, he found no time for solving mysteries.
"Fred, old boy," he said to Fred Frame, "you'll have to go in there andwin the game. And you can!" He gave him a slap on the back. "If--"
"If my arm holds out," Fred finished.
Tall, angular, red-headed, silent and droll, Fred was a universalfavorite. He had been a successful pitcher until his arm had taken togoing wrong. "I'll go in," he said simply, "and do my best."
A loud cheer greeted him as he walked toward the mound. Despite all this,he felt a chill run up his spine. The score stood 6 to 5 against him.This wonderful crowd had turned out to see their team win. They hadbanked heavily on the mysterious "Prince." In this they had lost. Wouldthey lose the game as well?
"Not if _I_ can help it!" Fred set his teeth hard.
"What if that plane returns?" He shuddered. "What if they do to me thething they did to the 'Prince,' whatever that was! Oh well!" He set hisshoulders squarely.
But now the shouts of the throng brought him back to earth. Motioning thebatter to one side, he prepared to "throw a few over."
As his hand grasped the ball, as his muscles began playing like ironbands, as the ball went speeding to cut the plate and land with a loudplop in the catcher's mit, all else but the game was forgotten.
"We must win!" He set his lips tight.
And indeed they must. They had lost one game, could not afford to loseanother.
That he was in a hard spot he knew quite well. With the score standing 6to 5 against him, with men on second and third and only one man out, thegame might be lost with a single crack of the bat. It was with a rapidlybeating heart that he motioned the batter up.
Yet, even as his arm went back, two questions flashed through his mind:"Who is this 'Prince'? What happened that after such a brilliant start hewas unable to finish?
"Something queer!" he muttered for the third time as he sent the ballspinning.
"Ball!" the umpire called.
Then, like a bolt from the blue came a thought. He made a sign to thecatcher. They met half way between the mound and the home plate. After afew whispered words they parted.
Fred's second offering went very wide of the plate. He did not seem tocare. Then, just as he wound up for the third pitch, someone caught on.
"He's goin' to walk that batter!" a big voice bellowed from the bleachersof the opposing team. "Big League stuff! Walking Billy to get at Vern!"
At once there was a mad roar that ended in hisses and boos.
Little Fred cared for that. If he wished to walk Centralia's toughestbatter to get at a weak one, it was his privilege. "And after that?" anImp seemed to be whispering in his ear. All the same the passed batterwent down to first. The bags were loaded.
"If I slip now--" he thought. "Just listen to them howl!" He gripped theball hard.
"Wow! He's got a rubber arm!" a big voice roared as the umpire calledanother ball.
There was silence as Fred slipped over a strike.
Again that roar with the second ball.
"Strike!"
"Ball!"
"There you are!" the big voice roared. "Two and three! Let's see you getout of that!"
Fred caught his breath. Bases full. Three balls, two strikes, and--"Ifonly the old soup-bone holds out!" he murmured.
His hand went out. It came back. He shot the ball straight from theshoulder. Then, without knowing why, he followed the ball. Lucky break!The batter connected. He sent a bouncer straight into Fred's mitt and hehalf way to the plate. With a mad dash he was there to cut off the run tothe plate. Next he sent the ball speeding to first.
"Double play! Double play!" the crowd roared. And so it was. The inningwas over. For the moment, at least, all was well.
Inspired by his unusual success in pulling his team out of the hole, Fredpitched the remaining innings with the skill of a genius. He allowed onlyfive hits, and left but three men on base. Hillcrest scored three runs inthe seventh, to cinch the game. In the end Fred was carried from thefield in triumph.
"Another big day Wednesday, and we'll win!" exulted Doug Danby.
"Don't get too much excited," he warned Johnny and Meg as they camerushing up to congratulate him. "This is not the end. It is only thebeginning. We must win again and again. It's going to take a realcampaign to gain our end."
"Don't worry!" Johnny laughed. "The way Fred pitched those last innings,there's not a team that can stop us."
"There's where you're wrong." It was Fred who spoke. He had just come upto them.
"What do you mean?" Johnny asked in surprise.
"Well--" Fred paused to ponder. "Well, you know there are times when youdo things and you say to yourself, 'I can do this as often as I choose.'Then there are times when you feel all sort of lifted out of yourself andyou do things well without seeming to try. But when it's all over yousay, 'That was great! But I better never try that again. If I do, I'llfail.' This afternoon was just like that. Johnny, I wouldn't like to facethat situation again, ever!" Fred's tone was so serious that for a fullmoment no one spoke.
It was Fred himself who at last broke that silence.
"But then, there'll not be the need." He smiled. "Our old friend, the'Prince' will lead us to sure victory next time."
"The 'Prince'!" Doug turned to Meggy. "Where did your uncle find him,Meggy? Who is he? Where's he been hiding?" Meggy was ColonelChamberlain's favorite niece.
"I don't know," Meggy admitted.
"But your uncle said he'd been working down at his laboratories for morethan three months!" Johnny protested.
"Ye-es," Meggy replied slowly, "and I suppose that should make him myfirst cousin! But it doesn't. I never saw him before, nor heard of himeither. Uncle doesn't tell me much about the laboratories. There arealways so many secret investigations going on down there, so manyprocesses being developed--things he can't talk about--that--well, Iguess he thinks it's best to say nothing at all about any of it. And Isuppose," she added, "this pitcher is just one more secret."
"But why would he hide out so?" Doug Danby asked.
"He just doesn't wish to be recognized, that's why," Johnny said in atone that carried conviction.
"In a town like this?" Doug exclaimed. "It sure does seem strange!" Hadhe but known it, those were the very words that were passing from lip tolip all over this quiet little city. "A strange pitcher! A mysteriousdark stranger! And in a town like this!" That was what they were saying.And, almost without exception, the answer was, "Just think, in a townlike this!"
"Well anyway," Fred said, "he _can_ pitch! And that's just what we need.We'll just have to have him next Wednesday when we go against Fairfield.They're the toughest battling bunch we'll play for a long time. You can'tcount on me to lick them."
"The 'Prince' only lasted two and a half innings," Doug suggested.
"Yes, but some--" Johnny did not finish. What he started to say was,"Something rather terrible happened to him." After all, he had onlyguessed that; could not prove it.
"Well," Johnny said, "I gotta be anklin' on home. Goodbye, Meggy.Goodbye, boys."
A half hour later he was seated on a ridge that lay above the town.Beneath him was a long, low building.
"The laboratories!" he whispered. "Place of myste
ry. Home of themysterious 'Prince.'"
His whole being was stirred. It was not that he suspected any wrong ofthose who worked behind heavily glazed windows in the laboratories. Farfrom that. Colonel Chamberlain had always been counted among Hillcrest'sforemost citizens. The laboratories belonged to him.
"I'll have to hunt up Goggles," Johnny told himself. "Wonder where hewent? He always knows a lot. He may know more than I do about thispitcher."
Goggles was a thinker. He was the only boy ever entrusted with ColonelChamberlain's secrets. He alone, of all the town's boys, had crossed thethreshold of the laboratories. Only he had seen something of that whichwent on inside.
"They test all sorts of things in there," he had confided to Johnny oneday, "soap and silk, dyes, and all sorts of powerful drugs. They try tofind things out, to do things that have never been done before, likemaking rubber out of crude petroleum or paper out of sunflower stalks.They succeed sometimes, too. See!" He had pulled a sheet of paper fromhis pocket. "Made from a sunflower stalk. Pretty good paper, eh?
"When they make a real discovery," he went on, "they sell it to somegreat manufacturer.
"Colonel Chamberlain--" he had taken a deep breath. "He showed me a lotof things I can't talk about. He says maybe some day I can work with himin the laboratories. Boy! Won't that be grand!"
"Yes, I shouldn't wonder if Goggles knows something about this 'Prince,'"Johnny said to himself now.
He broke short off to stare down at the laboratories. Someone had comewalking down the gravel path. He walked slowly. "Seems to drag his feet,"Johnny whispered. Just then the newcomer looked up toward the sun. Johnnygot a full view of his slim, dark face. It was the 'Prince.' A momentmore and the long, low place of mysteries had swallowed him up.
That evening Johnny searched in vain for Goggles. Goggles' mother did notknow where he was, nor did anyone else. Johnny decided to go on a littledetective cruise all by himself. Mounting his bicycle, he rode east ninemiles to the Shady Valley landing field. In the office he found two menin aviators' uniforms playing checkers.
"Say!" he said in a subdued voice, "Did any of you fly a plane over theHillcrest ball field this afternoon?"
"Yes, I did." The younger of the two men looked up quickly. "Why?"
"Oh nothing I guess." Johnny dropped into a seat prepared to watch thegame.
Though for a full quarter hour he said never a word, the young aviatorlooked at Johnny in a queer way many times.
"Well, what about it?" he said, turning to Johnny when the game was over.
"Nothing I guess," Johnny repeated.
"That _was_ a queer business," the aviator chuckled, "that flying overyour field. Had two passengers, sort of hard lookers, but well-dressed.Said they lived in Hillcrest. They wanted to go over the ball game. Kepttelling me to circle down, down, down. Then they'd say, 'No! Not now! Upagain!' They repeated that little trick three times."
"I know," Johnny breathed.
"You know?" the young aviator stared.
"Of course I do. Go on."
"Well--" the aviator cleared his throat. "The third time we went downcloser than I like to. Then we flew away. Sort of queer, I'd say!" Heshot Johnny an enquiring look.
"Did they carrying anything?" Johnny asked.
"Nothing that I saw."
"No gun or anything like that?"
"Of course not. What do you think? Think we operate a bombing plane orsomething?"
"No, not quite that." Johnny lapsed into silence.
"Queer business!" The aviator stared at him hard. "What do you know aboutit?"
"Nothing much I guess." Johnny's tone did not change. "Only thought Imight."
"But look!" the aviator exclaimed. "If you think that's queer, listen tothis one. A short while back I took a long trip, thousand miles or more.Flew it at night. Passenger told me where to go and where to land.
"Place we landed was all light when we were coming down. It went dark theminute we landed.
"Two men in uniform came rushing up. One said, 'Say! Where do you thinkyou are?'
"'Don't know,' I said.
"'Well, you'd better,' one of them yelled. 'This is a Federal prison.Move out of here quick!'
"'Guess we'd better leave right away.' That's what my fare said to me."
The aviator paused for breath. Johnny was staring.
"Wait! That's not all!" The aviator waved a hand. "The lights came on,bright as day, just long enough for me to taxi across the enclosure andrise; then all went dark.
"And listen!" He paused once more. "When my fare left the plane, therewas a man with him, a slim, dark-faced man. He came from that prison. I'dswear to it! Can you beat that?"
"Looks like a jail delivery." Johnny spoke low. "Should think you'd beafraid!"
"I would," the aviator settled back in his chair, "only the man who wentwith me that night, my passenger, was one of the best known and mosthighly respected citizens in this part of the country. I was hired byhim."
"Slim, dark-faced man," Johnny murmured to himself, recalling theaviator's words as he rode home a short time later.