Baseball Joe In The Big League Part 36
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An instant later the stranger had thrown one powerful arm about the young pitcher, and, with his other hand he pressed the chloroform-saturated rag to Joe's nose and mouth.
Joe tried to cry out, and struggled to free himself. But his senses seemed leaving him under the influence of the powerful drug.
At that moment, as though it had been timing itself to the movements of the man who had followed Joe, there drove up a large ramshackle cab, and out of it jumped two men.
"Did you get him, Wes?" one asked eagerly.
"I sure did. Here, help me. He's gone off. Get him into the cab."
Poor Joe's senses had all but left him. He was an inert ma.s.s, but he could hear faintly, and he recognized the voice of Shalleg.
He tried to rouse himself, but it was as though he were in a heavy sleep, or stupor. He felt himself being lifted into a cab. The door slammed shut, and then he was rattled away over the cobbles.
"I wonder what they're going to do with me?" Joe thought. He had enough of his brain in working order to do that. Once more he tried to struggle.
"Better tie him up," suggested a voice he now recognized as that of the fellow who had twisted his arm on the street car.
"Yes, I guess we had," agreed Shalleg. "And then to the Delaware with him!"
Joe was too weak, and too much under the influence of the drug, to care greatly what they did with him--that is, in a sense, though a feeling of terror took possession of him at the words.
"The river!" gasped Wessel. "I thought you said there'd be no violence, Shalleg."
"And there won't!" promised the leader of the conspirators.
"But you said to tie him, and then to the river with him."
"You don't s'pose I'm going to chuck him in; do you?" was the angry question.
"I don't know."
"Well, I'm not! I'm just going to put him out of the way for a time. I told him I'd get even with him for not helping me out of a hole, and then for spreading reports about me, that kept me from getting a place on the Cardinals, as well as on any other team. I told him I'd fix him!"
So, this was the secret of Shalleg's animosity! He had a fancied grievance against Joe, and was taking this means of gratifying his pa.s.sion for revenge. Joe, dimly hearing, understood now. He longed to be able to speak, to a.s.sure Shalleg that he was all wrong, but they had bound a rag about his mouth, and he could not utter a sound, even had not the chloroform held his speech in check.
"Pa.s.s over those ropes," directed Shalleg to his cronies in the cab, which lurched and swayed over the rough stones. The cab held four, on a pinch, and Joe was held and supported by one of the men. The gag in the young pitcher's mouth was made tighter, and ropes were pa.s.sed about his arms and feet. He could not move.
"What's the game?" asked Wessel, as the trussing-up was finished.
"Well, I don't want to do him any real harm," growled Shalleg, "but I'm going to put him out of the game, just as I was kept out of it by his tattling tongue. I'm going to make him fail to show up to-morrow, and the next day, too, maybe. That'll put a crimp in his record, and in the Cardinals', too, for he's been doing good work for them. I'll say that about him, much as I hate him!"
Joe heard this plot against him, heard it dimly, through his half-numbed senses, and tried to struggle free from his bonds. But he could not.
On rattled the cab. Joe could not tell in which direction they were going, but he was sure it was along the lonely river front. The effects of the chloroform were wearing off, but the gag kept him silent, and the ropes bound his hands and feet.
"Have any trouble trailing him?" asked Shalleg of Wessel, who had disguised himself with a false beard.
"Not a bit," was the answer. "It was pie! I pretended I had lost my way."
The men laughed. Either they thought Joe was still incapable of hearing them, or they did not care if their ident.i.ty and plans were known.
A mult.i.tude of thoughts rushed through Joe's head. He did not exactly understand what the men were going to do with him. They had spoken of taking him to the river. Perhaps they meant to keep him prisoner on a boat until his contract with the St. Louis team would be void, because of his non-appearance. And Joe knew how hard it would be to get back in the game after that.
True, he could explain how it had happened, and he felt sure he would not be blamed. But when would he get a chance to make explanations? And there was the game to-morrow! He knew he would be called on to pitch, for Mr. Watson had practically told him so. And Joe would not be on hand.
"Aren't we 'most there?" asked Wessel.
"Yes," answered Shalleg, shortly.
"What are we to do?" asked the other.
"You'll know soon enough," was the half-growled reply.
The cab rattled on. Then it came to a stop. Joe could smell the dampness of the river, and he realized that the next act in the episode was about to be played.
He felt himself being lifted out of the cab, and he had a glimpse of a street, but it was too dark to recognize where it was, and Joe was not well enough acquainted with Philadelphia to know the neighborhood. Then a handkerchief was bound over his eyes, and he was in total darkness.
He heard whispered words between Shalleg and the driver of the cab, but could not make out what they were. Then the vehicle rattled off.
"Catch hold of him now," directed Shalleg to his companions. "We'll carry him down to the river."
"To the river!" objected Wessel, and Joe felt a s.h.i.+ver go through him.
"Well, to the boat then!" snapped Shalleg. "Don't talk so much."
Joe felt himself being carried along, and, a little later, he was laid down on what he felt was the bottom of a boat. A moment later he could tell by the motion of the craft that he was adrift on the Delaware.
CHAPTER XXVII
THE RESCUE
For a few moments Joe was in a sort of daze. He was extremely uncomfortable, lying on the hard bottom of the boat, and there seemed to be rough water, for the craft swayed, and bobbed up and down.
Joe wondered if he was alone, for he did not hear the noise of oars in the locks, nor did he catch the voices of the three rascals.
But it soon developed that they were with him, for, presently Wessel asked:
"Where are we going with him?"
"Keep still!" snapped Shalleg in a tense whisper. "Do you want someone to hear us?"
"Who, him?"
"No, someone on these s.h.i.+ps. We're right alongside of 'em yet. Keep still; can't you!"
Baseball Joe In The Big League Part 36
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Baseball Joe In The Big League Part 36 summary
You're reading Baseball Joe In The Big League Part 36. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Lester Chadwick already has 582 views.
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