Bang The Drum Slowly (22 page)

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Authors: Mark Harris

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“How much do you get per annum?” said I.

“I am ashamed to say,” said he. “It is not enough to live on, and we are in the poorhouse. I believe I might get used to it in a few years.”

“At least you do not split fingers,” I said.

“That is true,” said he.

“It is a job where when your legs give out you can sit down and still hold it,” said I. “A lot of boys wish they had such a fix to look forward to.”

“But you do miss the noise and the excitement,” he said. “You never pass a ball field without lumping up a little in your throat. Goddam it anyhow, by the time you are old enough to have more sense than power you realize you already pissed away the most exciting days of your life.”

“Do they leave you swear like that out there?” I said.

“Everybody swears everywhere,” said he. “Shakespeare and all the rest, all up and down the years they swore at life. Plain old mother talk ain’t nowheres near strong enough to describe such a terrible mixup as life, Author.”

“Life is good,” I said. “How would you like to die tomorrow?”

“I would not,” he said, “because I am under contract to fill out the year here, and because I keep laughing every minute, and because I wish to finish up a book I am writing, and because I would like to see if you boys can cop the flag which you should of copped by now. You should of shook them son of a bitches long ago.”

“I am also writing a book,” I said.

“What about?” said he.

“Oh, a little bit about everything,” I said.

“That is too goddam big,” he said, “though a genius like you will handle it easy.”

“Leave me read you a few pages,” I said.

“Not coast to coast on my telephone bill,” he said. “I wish you would tell me what is up.”

“I will nose around and call you back,” I said. “Collect.”

“Sure,” he said, “and be quick,” and he give me his number and I wrote it down on top of one of my pages and stuck them in my pocket and went and pushed the elevator. I give a couple elevators the go-by until finally Peter come, and I told him ride me up and down empty once or twice. “What is new?” said I.

“Dutch’s Mrs. is here,” said he. We rode up the top and got out and he took a couple puffs on his cigar. He leaves a cigar burning on top of the fire-box up there. He laid it back on top of the box and we got back in and started down again. “Patricia is also here,” he said. “Tootsie can tell you more. The long distance been flying far and fast all over creation.” I got out on the lobby and bought some cigars and took them back and give them to Peter, and I strolled over and said to Tootsie, “Tootsie, I never seen you looking quite so gorgeous before.”

“It sure was good to hear Red,” she said. “And he was right, every word he said. You should of shook them long and long ago. It is not your fault, Author, for you are 17 and 8 on the year and been pitching your heart out, but something is wrong beyond understanding. I could use 2 grandstands any day or night the week you get back from Washington.”

“Sold,” I said.

“Old Man Moors is flying down from Detroit and Mike Mulrooney is flying in from QC with Piney Woods. Swanee Wilks is flying out from Appalachia to manage QC for Mike. Doc Loftus and Doc Solomon been on the wire all day with Rochester, Minnesota. I only catch a little bit now and again but I do not believe they are getting any satisfaction.”

“Concerning Pearson?” I said.

“Certainly,” she said. “Who else?”

“What is wrong with Pearson?” said I.

“I do not know. They are talking this medical doubletalk. I believe he has a leak in his blood somewheres. For 2 more grandstands on the following day I heard something else.”

“Sold,” said I.

“You are in the doghouse because of the bonus clause in your contract.”

“The bonus clause?” said I.

“Certainly,” said Tootsie. “What else?”

“How did they find out?” said I. “I mean how did they find out about Pearson?”

“Dutch’s Mrs.,” said Tootsie. “She heard it off Mrs. Joe Jaros who beard it off Joe who heard it off you who heard it off Goose Williams, for Goose was in Rochester, Minnesota, all winter with Pearson. They got some kind of a big hospital out there. Third-base side, Author, lower deck, not too far back and not behind no pillars nor posts.”

I called Red from a pay phone, and I told him what was up, the whole truth, and he said he would call Dutch and try and jack the pay up a little and fly on in, and I went up to Dutch’s sweet and knocked, and they said “Come

Everybody was there, Dutch and his Mrs. and Patricia and the coaches and Ugly and Doc Loftus and Doc Solomon and 2 lawyers, one a man and the other a lady. “Good evening to all,” I said.

“So!” said Dutch. “I knew that I would get to the bottom of it.”

“Good evening to you,” they said. They all sat around not talking. My contract was on the table in front of the lawyers, and every once in awhile they picked it up and looked at it and threw it down again. I waited for somebody to say something, and finally Patricia spoke up. “I never heard of anything quite so terribly horrible,” she said. “I can not understand why I am not crying.”

“Keep your hanky handie, dearie,” said Dutch’s Mrs., “for it first must penetrate your skull. I myself thought nothing of it when she told me but only went about my business shucking my shoulders until all of a sudden it knocked me down.”

“You keep thinking it could be your own,” said Joe. “I started dreaming these dreams.”

“Do you not think,” said Dutch, “that we already discussed it enough as far as how very terribly horrible it is? Can we not stick to the subject? Tomorrow is a baseball game as usual and we are no nearer knowing than before.” He looked at me now. “Author,” he said, “you got us into this, so now get us out.”

“What is the problem?” said I.

“The problem is what to do,” said he. “If you will back out of your clause like a man we can release him and bring in some protection, which I doubt that you will have the kindness and decency to do but would rather go on knifing us in the back. I admire you for it, believe me. I knew something was up when I left YOU put the clause inbut had no sleep in several nights due to that goddam motorcycle driver, which the idea of putting up with the rest of the summer makes my belly crawl.”

The telephone rung, Red, and Dutch clapped his hand over it and said, “How much can I offer?”

“The sky is the limit,” said Patricia, “but use good taste.”

“Hello there, old pal,” said Dutch.

“Hello there yourself,” said Red. I could hear his voice but I could not hear the words. “It would all sound fine to me,” said Red, “except I can not leave here. They can not find another man on such short notice.”

“To do what?” said Dutch. “They can find 40,000 men in a minute.”

“I am making money hand over fist out here,” said Red.

“Horsefeathers,” said Dutch. “Nobody makes money in such a racket but the football coach. I will up it 33⅓% and not one penny more.”

“I can not stand the noise and the excitement,” said Red. “I quit it for good and never miss it and am glad to be done with it. Keep it and best of luck.”

“Very well,” said Dutch, “I am sorry to troubled you.”

“Goodby,” said Red.

“Goodby,” said Dutch.

“Goodby,” said Red.

“I will up it 16⅔% more,” said Dutch. “That is twice the first wire plus 33⅓% plus 16⅔%. I am under strict orders to go no higher.”

“Tell him I said hello,” said Ugly.

“Ugly says hello,” said Dutch.

“Tell him I also said hello,” I said.

“Author also says hello,” said Dutch.

“Sold,” said Red, and Dutch hung up, “Somebody remember and can Diego Roberto when Red hits town,” he said. “Every cloud got its silver lining.”

The lawyers looked at the contract again, and Dutch looked at me, and then away. “I still believe we are in title to some help from the Commissioner,” he said. “Cleveland was helped when Mays killed Chapman if memory fails me. Why Cleveland and not New York?”

“You can not get help from the Commissioner and keep it in this room both at the same time,” said Joe.

“Then we must let it out,” said Dutch, “except she says it would not be human. Yet is it human to lose the flag? What have you thought up yet, Doc?”

“Nothing else,” said Doc Solomon. “We been thinking.”

“You are a slow thinker,” said Dutch.

“You must be calm,” said his Mrs. “You must think of the boy.”

“I am thinking of the boy. I been thinking of nobody but the boy all afternoon and all night and am not libel to stop. It is more thinking than I done about him in my life before. He was $1,000,000 worth of promise worth 2¢ on delivery. It is Mike Mulrooney’s fault, goddam his Irish soul if you will pardon the expression.” He looked at the lady lawyer.

“I am not Irish,” said she.

“I thought you were,” he said. “Goddam his Irish soul then, a great and wonderful man but a soft-hearted bastard. Now I must put up with him and Red and that motorcycle driver. What in hell was his name? Do you mean to tell me he is libel to die without any warning? Why in hell do they call it that?”

“Piney Woods,” said Ugly.

“That was it,” said Dutch. “My good hope from Good Hope, Georgia.”

“It is named for Hodgkin, the man that discovered it,” said Doc Loftus.

“Maybe he knows something about it,” said Dutch. “Is he alive himself? Maybe he thought up a cure by now which those jugheads out in Rochester, Minnesota, ain’t heard about yet. What kind of a place is that to have a goddam hospital, anyhow, out there in the wilds of nowhere? Does a man not freeze his ass off by the time they get him in bed?”

“It is pretty built up,” I said.

“They have got some of the best-paid amateur leagues in the country out there,” said Ugly.

“You ought to know,” said Dutch to me. “You were there. You sneaked out there in the middle of the winter, and all the rest was hokus, Mary Pistologlione and hunting on the ice and gags by telephone and miracle drugs for the clap. Then I hired a goddam detective. What was his name, Author, anyhow?”

“Rogers,” I said. “Mr. Rogers.”

“Fine name,” said Dutch. “He could not detect cow-flop in a barnyard.”

“Leave us go sleep on it,” said Patricia. “We will decide something,” and we went. But I don’t think they ever decided anything, or if they did they never left me in on it. Red come in and coached catchers, and Mike come in and kept Bruce’s spirit high, and Piney with him, just in case. Tuesday was baseball again as usual, like Dutch said it would be. We lost to Brooklyn, Washington beating Boston and chipping the cushion to 2.

CHAPTER 15

THE FIRST the boys knew anything was up, Piney Woods walked in the clubhouse in Brooklyn Tuesday night wearing cowboy clothes, pants and shirt and a 10-gallon hat and high-heel boots and a rope and a gun on his belt and carrying a guitar. “Howdy, partners,” he said.

“Howdy there, Piney partner,” the boys all said.

“Did you come in by horseback from QC?” said Gil.

“No, partner,” said Piney, “we flew.”

“Did you stop and camp along the way and cook up your grub by the fire?” said Herb.

“No,” said Piney, “we ate on the plane.”

“Who is we?” said Sid.

“Me and Mike,” he said, and the boys all begun wondering how come Mike come. “How come Mike?” they said.

“I do not know,” he said. “All I know is you been needing catching protection.”

“We been needing no such a thing,” said Goose. “Pearson been doing a man-size job.”

“Probably they shipped you along to water the coyotes,” said Horse, “and keep the rustlers out of Brooklyn.”

“I guess I could,” said Piney, taking his gun off his belt. He put it up on the shelf, and it fell off, and everybody jumped. It broke open, and the bullets spilled on the floor and rolled here and there and everywhere, and he crawled around after them and put them back in.

By Wednesday morning the whole of New York knew something was up. Red hit town in the morning. The paper just got through wondering all over the place why Mike was there, and now Red give them new food for their fire. They begun calling everybody up and rapping on the door.

The only individual in town it made no impression on was Bruce. “It sure is good to see Mike,” he said, and that was all, except when Red come he said it sure was good to see Red, and he looked in the paper and told me who said what, saying, “Tex O’Malley says in his column Dutch is on the outs with the Moorses and being canned,” and saying “Winston Waters says in his column Dutch is splitting with his wife,” and saying “Krazy Kress says in his column Piney Woods is a sure bet for 56,” and I kept waiting for the paper to stop hitting around it and learn the truth, which I doubted O’Malley or Winston Waters would ever do, though Krazy might of, for he is quite a writer about 2 shots in 5, and then when he closed the paper Red come busting in, and I got out of bed and never went back.

He was looking very white. “I live in a foggy part of the town,” he said, and he sat down and we talked, the first time we seen him in over 2 years, and Mike come in soon after and also sat down, and Goose and Horse, and I sent for coffee for all, though by the time it come Ugly and Joe drifted in, and I sent the boy back for more, and then Patricia come and I got back in bed on account of these pajamas I hang out in. Somebody should invent pajamas with zippers, though to tell you the truth she is far from the blushing type.

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