CHAPTER XII
A CALL
I have spoken of Ben Mayberry’s fondness for athletic sports, and the great benefit he gained from the exercise thus obtained. When business permitted, I visited the ball grounds, where his skill made him the favorite of the enthusiastic crowd which always assembled there. He played shortstop, and his activity in picking up hot grounders and his wonderful accuracy in throwing to first base were the chief attractions which brought many to the place. He was equally successful at the bat, and, when only fourteen years old, repeatedly lifted the ball over the left-field fence—a feat which was only accomplished very rarely by the heaviest batsmen of the visiting nines.
There were many, including myself, who particularly admired Ben’s throwing. How any living person can acquire such skill is beyond my comprehension. Ben was the superior of all his companions when a small urchin, and his wonderful accuracy improved as he grew older.
To please a number of spectators, Ben used to place himself on third base, and then “bore in” the ball to first. In its arrowy passage it seemed scarcely to rise more than two or three feet above the horizontal, and shot through the air with such unerring aim that I really believe he could have struck a breast-pin on a player’s front nine times out of ten. I never saw him make a wild throw, and some of his double plays were executed with such brilliancy that a veteran player took his hand one day as he ran from the field, and said:
“Ben, you’ll be on a professional nine in a couple of years. Harry Wright and the different managers are always on the lookout for talent, and they’ll scoop you in.”
“I think not,” said the modest Ben, panting slightly from a terrific run. “I am a little lucky, that’s all; but though I’m very fond of playing ball I never will take it up as a means of living.”
“There’s where your head ain’t level, sonny. Why, you’ll get more money for one summer’s play than you will make in two or three years nursing a telegraph machine. Besides that, think of the fun you will have.”