But here again there was disappointment. Joe pitched the first game and won in a close fight, although the Cubs tied it up in the ninth and Joe had to win his own game in the eleventh by a homer. But the next two went to Chicago, and in the fourth game, which Jim pitched, the best he could do was to make it a tie, called in the twelfth on account of darkness.
This time it was not luck that gave to the Giants only one game out of three. They had as many of the breaks of the game as their opponents. They simply slumped. One of those mysterious things that come to almost every team once at least in a season had them in its clutches. Perhaps it was overanxiety, perhaps it was a superstitious feeling that a “jinx” was after them, but, whatever it was, it spread through the team like an epidemic. Their fingers were “all thumbs.” Their bats had “holes” in them. The most reliable fielders slipped up on easy chances. They booted the ball, or if they got it they threw either too high or too low to first. Double plays became less frequent. Two of the best batters in the team, Larry and Burkett, fell off woefully in their hitting.
In vain McRae raged and stormed. In vain Robbie begged and pleaded and cajoled. In vain Jim and Joe, who still resisted the infection, sought to stem the tide of disaster. The members of the team with a few exceptions continued to act as if they were in a trance.
McRae did everything in his power to bring about a change. He laid off Willis and Iredell, and put two promising rookies, Barry and Ward, in their places. This added a little speed on the bases to the team, but did not materially add to the batting or fielding, for the rookies were nervous and made many misplays, while they were lamentably short on the “inside stuff” that takes long experience to acquire. He shook up the batting order. But the hits were still few and far between.
St. Louis gave the Giants a sound trouncing in the first game, but in the second the Giants came to life and reversed the score.
Joe was in the box in this contest, and as he came in to the bench in the fourth inning, he noted, sitting in the grandstand, a figure that seemed familiar to him. The man seemed to have seen Baseball Joe at the same time, but he hid himself behind the form of a big man sitting in front of him, so that Joe could not be sure of his identification.
“What were you looking at so steadily, Joe?” inquired Jim, as his friend sat down on the bench beside him. “Did you by any chance catch sight of the jinx that’s been following us?” he continued jokingly.
“Maybe I did, at that,” replied Joe. “I could have sworn that I got a glimpse of Bugs Hartley in the grandstand.”
“Bugs Hartley?” echoed Jim in surprise. “How could that old rascal have got as far as St. Louis?”
“Beat his way, perhaps,” answered Joe. “Of course I’m not dead sure but that I might have been mistaken. And I won’t have much time to look for him while I’m in the box. But suppose in the meantime you go down to the coaching line near first. While you’re pretending to coach, you can take an occasional look at the grandstand and see if you can pick out Bugs. He’s somewhere about the third row near the center. Just where the wire netting is broken.”