CHAPTER I
A REVELATION
A group of boys was assembled in an open field to
the west of the public
schoolhouse in the town of Crawford. Most of
them held hats in their
hands, while two, stationed sixty feet distant from
each other, were
“having catch.”
Tom Pinkerton, son of Deacon Pinkerton, had just returned
from Brooklyn,
and while there had witnessed a match game between
two professional
clubs. On his return he proposed that the boys
of Crawford should
establish a club, to be known as the Excelsior Club
of Crawford, to play
among themselves, and on suitable occasions to challenge
clubs belonging
to other villages. This proposal was received
with instant approval.
“I move that Tom Pinkerton address the meeting,”
said one boy.
“Second the motion,” said another.
As there was no chairman, James Briggs was appointed
to that position,
and put the motion, which was unanimously carried.
Tom Pinkerton, in his own estimation a personage of
considerable
importance, came forward in a consequential manner,
and commenced as
follows:
“Mr. Chairman and boys. You all know what
has brought us together. We
want to start a club for playing baseball, like the
big clubs they have
in Brooklyn and New York.”
“How shall we do it?” asked Henry Scott.
“We must first appoint a captain of the club,
who will have power to
assign the members to their different positions.
Of course you will want
one that understands about these matters.”
“He means himself,” whispered Henry Scott,
to his next neighbor; and
here he was right.
“Is that all?” asked Sam Pomeroy.
“No; as there will be some expenses, there must
be a treasurer to
receive and take care of the funds, and we shall need
a secretary to
keep the records of the club, and write and answer
challenges.”
“Boys,” said the chairman, “you
have heard Tom Pinkerton’s remarks.
Those who are in favor of organizing a club on this
plan will please
signify it in the usual way.”
All the boys raised their hands, and it was declared
a vote.
“You will bring in your votes for captain,”
said the chairman.
Tom Pinkerton drew a little apart with a conscious
look, as he supposed,
of course, that no one but himself would be thought
of as leader.
Slips of paper were passed around, and the boys began
to prepare their
ballots. They were brought to the chairman in
a hat, and he forthwith
took them out and began to count them.
“Boys,” he announced, amid a universal
stillness, “there is one vote for
Sam Pomeroy, one for Eugene Morton, and the rest are
for Frank Fowler,
who is elected.”
There was a clapping of hands, in which Tom Pinkerton
did not join.
Frank Fowler, who is to be our hero, came forward
a little, and spoke
modestly as follows:
“Boys, I thank you for electing me captain of
the club. I am afraid I am
not very well qualified for the place, but I will
do as well as I can.”
The speaker was a boy of fourteen. He was of
medium height for his age,
strong and sturdy in build, and with a frank prepossessing
countenance,
and an open, cordial manner, which made him a general
favorite. It was
not, however, to his popularity that he owed his election,
but to the
fact that both at bat and in the field he excelled
all the boys, and
therefore was the best suited to take the lead.
The boys now proceeded to make choice of a treasurer
and secretary.
For the first position Tom Pinkerton received a majority
of the votes.
Though not popular, it was felt that some office was
due him.
For secretary, Ike Stanton, who excelled in penmanship,
was elected, and
thus all the offices were filled.
The boys now crowded around Frank Fowler, with petitions
for such places
as they desired.
“I hope you will give me a little time before
I decide about positions,
boys,” Frank said; “I want to consider
a little.”
“All right! Take till next week,”
said one and another, “and let us have
a scrub game this afternoon.”
The boys were in the middle of the sixth inning, when
some one called
out to Frank Fowler: “Frank, your sister
is running across the field. I
think she wants you.”
Frank dropped his bat and hastened to meet his sister.
“What’s the matter, Gracie?” he
asked in alarm.
“Oh, Frank!” she exclaimed, bursting into
tears. “Mother’s been bleeding
at the lungs, and she looks so white. I’m
afraid she’s very sick.”
“Boys,” said Frank, turning to his companions,
“I must go home at once.
You can get some one to take my place, my mother is
very sick.”
When Frank reached the little brown cottage which
he called home, he
found his mother in an exhausted state reclining on
the bed.
“How do you feel, mother?” asked our hero,
anxiously.
“Quite weak, Frank,” she answered in a
low voice. “I have had a severe
attack.”
“Let me go for the doctor, mother.”
“I don’t think it will be necessary, Frank.
The attack is over, and I
need no medicines, only time to bring back my strength.”
But three days passed, and Mrs. Fowler’s nervous
prostration continued.
She had attacks previously from which she rallied
sooner, and her
present weakness induced serious misgivings as to
whether she would
ever recover. Frank thought that her eyes followed
him with more than
ordinary anxiety, and after convincing himself that
this was the case,
he drew near his mother’s bedside, and inquired:
“Mother, isn’t there something you want
me to do?”
“Nothing, I believe, Frank.”
“I thought you looked at me as if you wanted
to say something.” “There
is something I must say to you before I die.”
“Before you die, mother!” echoed Frank,
in a startled voice.
“Yes. Frank, I am beginning to think that
this is my last sickness.”
“But, mother, you have been so before, and got
up again.”
“There must always be a last time, Frank; and
my strength is too far
reduced to rally again, I fear.”
“I can’t bear the thought of losing you,
mother,” said Frank, deeply
moved.
“You will miss me, then, Frank?” said
Mrs. Fowler.
“Shall I not? Grace and I will be alone
in the world.”
“Alone in the world!” repeated the sick
woman, sorrowfully, “with
little help to hope for from man, for I shall leave
you nothing. Poor
children!”
“That isn’t what I think of,” said
Frank, hastily.
“I can support myself.”
“But Grace? She is a delicate girl,”
said the mother, anxiously. “She
cannot make her way as you can.”
“She won’t need to,” said Frank,
promptly; “I shall take care of her.”
“But you are very young even to support yourself.
You are only
fourteen.”
“I know it, mother, but I am strong, and I am
not afraid. There are a
hundred ways of making a living.”
“But do you realize that you will have to start
with absolutely nothing?
Deacon Pinkerton holds a mortgage on this house for
all it will bring in
the market, and I owe him arrears of interest besides.”
“I didn’t know that, mother, but it doesn’t
frighten me.”
“And you will take care of Grace?”
“I promise it, mother.”
“Suppose Grace were not your sister?”
said the sick woman, anxiously
scanning the face of the boy.
“What makes you suppose such a thing as that,
mother? Of course she is
my sister.”
“But suppose she were not,” persisted
Mrs. Fowler, “you would not recall
your promise?”
“No, surely not, for I love her. But why
do you talk so, mother?” and
a suspicion crossed Frank’s mind that his mother’s
intellect might be
wandering.
“It is time to tell you all, Frank. Sit
down by the bedside, and I will
gather my strength to tell you what must be told.”
“Grace is not your sister, Frank!”
“Not my sister, mother?” he exclaimed.
“You are not in earnest?”
“I am quite in earnest, Frank.”
“Then whose child is she?”
“She is my child.”
“Then she must be my sister—are you
not my mother?”
“No, Frank, I am not your mother!”