Up or down?
After Jimmy had received his check
and was about to leave, a couple of men approached
him.
“We seen that little mix-up
in there,” said one of them. “You
handle your mitts like you been there before.”
“Yes,” said Jimmy, smiling,
“I’ve had a little experience in the manly
art of self-defense.”
The two men were sizing him up.
“Feinheimer can you?”
asked one of them. Jimmy nodded affirmatively.
“Got anything else in view?”
“No,” said Jimmy.
“How’d you like a job as one of Brophy’s
sparring partners?”
“I wouldn’t mind,” said Jimmy.
“What is there in it?”
They named a figure that was entirely satisfactory
to Jimmy.
“Come over the day after Christmas,”
he was told, “and we’ll give you a trial.”
“I wonder,” thought Jimmy
as he started for home, “if I have gone up a
notch in the social scale or down a notch? From
the view-point of the underworld a pug occupies a
more exalted position than a waiter; but—
oh, well, a job’s a job, and at least I won’t
have to look at that greasy Feinheimer all day.”
At ten o’clock Monday Jimmy
was at Young Brophy’s training quarters, for,
although he had not forgotten Harriet Holden’s
invitation, he had never seriously considered availing
himself of her offer to help him to a better position.
While he had not found it difficult to accept the
rough friendship and assistance of the Lizard, the
idea of becoming an object of “charity,”
as he considered it, at the hands of a girl in the
same walk of life as that to which he belonged was
intolerable.
Young Brophy’s manager, whom
Jimmy discovered to be one of the men who had accosted
him in Feinheimer’s after his trouble with Murray,
took him into a private office and talked with him
confidentially for a half-hour before he was definitely
employed.
It seemed that one of the principal
requisites of the position was a willingness to take
punishment without attempting to inflict too much
upon Young Brophy. The manager did not go into
specific details as to the reason for this restriction,
and Jimmy, badly in need of a job, felt no particular
inclination to search too deeply for the root of the
matter.
“What I don’t know,”
he soliloquized, “won’t hurt me any.”
But he had not been there many days before the piecing
together of chance remarks and the gossip of the hangers-on
and other sparring partners made it very apparent
why Brophy should not be badly man-handled. As
it finally revealed itself to Jimmy it was very simple
indeed. Brophy was to be pitted against a man
whom he had already out-pointed in a former bout.
He was the ruling favorite in the betting, and it was
the intention to keep him so while he and his backers
quietly placed all their money on the other man.
One of the sparring partners who seemed
to harbor a petty grudge against Brophy finally explained
the whole plan to Jimmy. Everything was to be
done to carry the impression to the public through
the newspapers, who were usually well represented
at the training quarters, that Brophy was in the pink
of condition; that he was training hard; that it was
impossible to find men who could stand up to him on
account of the terrific punishment he inflicted upon
his sparring partners; and that the result of the
fight was already a foregone conclusion; and then in
the third round Young Brophy was to lie down and by
reclining peacefully on his stomach for ten seconds
make more money than several years of hard and conscientious
work earnestly performed could ever net him.
It was all very, very simple; but
how easily public opinion might be changed should
one of the sparring partners really make a good stand
against Brophy in the presence of members of the newspaper
fraternity!
“I see, “said Jimmy, running
his fingers through his hair. “Oh, well,
it’s none of my business, and if the suckers
want to bet their money on a prize-fight they’re
about due to lose it anyway.”
And so he continued permitting himself
to be battered up four or five times a week at the
hands of the pussy Mr. Brophy. He paid back the
twenty the Lizard had loaned him, got his watch out
of pawn, and was even figuring on a new suit of clothes.
Never before in his life had Jimmy realized what it
meant to be prosperous, since for obvious reasons
Young Brophy’s manager was extremely liberal
in the matter of salaries with all those connected
with the training-camp.
At first it had been rather humiliating
to Jimmy to take the drubbings he did at the hands
of Young Brophy in the presence of the audience which
usually filled the small gymnasium where the fighter
was training. It was nearly always about the
same crowd, however, made up of dyed-in-the-wool fans,
a few newspaper men, and a sprinkling of thrill-seekers
from other walks of life far removed from the prize-ring.
Jimmy often noticed women among the spectators—well-dressed
women, with every appearance of refinement, and there
were always men of the same upper class of society.
He mentioned the fact once to the
same young man who had previously explained the plan
under which the fight was to be faked.
“That’s just part of the
graft,” said his informant. “These
birds have got next to a bunch of would-be sports
with more money than brains through the athletic director
of—” he mentioned the name of one
of the big athletic clubs—“and they
been inviting ’em here to watch Brophy training.
Every one of the simps will be tryin’ to get
money down on Brophy, and this bunch will take it
all up as fast as they come.
“The bettin’ hasn’t
really started yet; in fact, they are holding off
themselves until the odds are better. If Brophy
goes into the ring a three-to-one favorite these fellows
will make a killing that will be talked of for the
next twenty years.” “And incidentally
give boxing another black eye,” interjected
Jimmy.
“Oh, what the hell do we care?”
said the other. “I’m goin’ to
make mine out of it, and you better do the same.
I’m goin’ to put up every cent I can borrow
or steal on the other guy.”
It was Saturday, the 15th of January,
just a week before the fight, that Jimmy, trained
now almost to perfection, stepped into the ring to
take his usual mauling. For some time past there
had been insidiously working its way into his mind
a vast contempt for the pugilistic prowess of Young
Brophy.
“If,” thought Jimmy,”
this bird is of championship caliber, I might be a
champion myself.” For, though Young Brophy
was not a champion, the newspapers had been pointing
to him for time as a likely possibility for these
pugilistic honors later.
As this mental attitude grew within
him and took hold of Jimmy it more and more irked
him to take the punishment which he inwardly felt he
could easily inflict upon Brophy instead, but, as Jimmy
had learned through lean and hungry months, a job
is a job, and no job is to be sneezed at or lightly
thrown aside.
There was quite a gathering that afternoon
to watch Young Brophy’s work-out, and rather
a larger representation than usual from society’s
younger set. The program, which had consisted
in part of shadow boxing and bag punching by Young
Brophy, was to terminate with three rounds with Jimmy.
For two rounds the young man had permitted
Brophy to make a monkey of him, hitting him where
he would at will, while Jimmy, as a result of several
weeks of diligent practice, was able to put up apparently
a very ferocious attempt to annihilate his opponent
without doing the latter any material damage.
At the close of the second round Brophy
landed a particularly vicious right, which dropped
Jimmy to the canvas. The crowd applauded vociferously,
and as the gong sounded as Jimmy was slowly rising
to his feet they were all assured that it was all
that had saved the young man from an even worse thrashing.
As Jimmy returned to his corner there
arose within him a determination to thrash Young Brophy
within an inch of his life after the big fight was
out of the way and Jimmy no longer bound by any obligations,
for he realized that for some reason Brophy had just
gone a little too far with his rough tactics, there
having been in the arrangement with the sparring partners
an understanding that when a knock-down was to be
staged Brophy was to give his opponent the cue.
No cue had been given, however. Jimmy had not
been expecting it, and he had been floored with a
punch behind which were all the weight and brawn of
the pugilist.
He had long since ceased to consider
what the spectators might think. So far as Jimmy
was concerned, they might have been so many chairs.
He was merely angry at the unnecessary punishment
that had been inflicted. As he sprawled in his
corner he let his eyes run over the faces of the spectators
directly in front of him, to whom previously be had
paid no particular attention, and even now it was
scarcely more than an involuntary glance; but his
eyes stopped suddenly upon a face, and as recognition
suddenly dawned upon him he could feel the hot blood
rushing to his own. For there was the girl whom
Fate had thrice before thrown in his path! Beside
her he recognized the Miss Harriet Holden who had been
with her the night at Feinheimer’s, and with
them were two young men.
Something within Jimmy Torrance rebelled
to a point where it utterly dominated him—rebelled
at the thought that this girl, whom be had unconsciously
set upon a pedestal to worship from afar, should always
find him in some menial and humiliating position.
It was bad enough that she should see him as a sparring
partner of a professional pug, but it made it infinitely
worse that she should see him as what he must appear,
an unsuccessful third or fourth rate fighter.
Everything within Jimmy’s mind
turned suddenly topsyturvy. He seemed to lose
all sense of proportion and all sense of value in one
overpowering thought, that he must not again be humiliated
in her presence.
And so it was that at the tap of the
gong for the third round it was not Torrance the sparring
partner that advanced from his corner, but Jimmy Torrance,
champion heavyweight boxer of a certain famous university.
But why enter into the harrowing details of the ensuing
minute and a half?
In thirty seconds it was unquestionably
apparent to every one in the room, including Young
Brophy himself, that the latter was pitifully outclassed.
Jimmy hit him whenever and wherever he elected to him,
and he hit him hard, while Brophy, at best only a
second or third rate fighter, pussy and undertrained,
was not only unable to elude the blows of his adversary
but equally so to land effectively himself.
And there before the eyes of half
a dozen newspaper reporters, of a dozen wealthy young
men who had fully intended to place large sums on
Brophy, and before the eyes of his horrified manager
and backer, Jimmy, at the end of ninety seconds, landed
a punch that sent the flabby Mr. Brophy through the
ropes and into dreamland for a much longer period
than the requisite ten seconds.
Before Jimmy got dressed and out of
the gymnasium he, with difficulty, escaped a half-dozen
more fistic encounters, as everybody from the manager
down felt that his crime deserved nothing short of
capital punishment. He had absolutely wrecked
a perfectly good scheme in the perfection of which
several thousand dollars had been spent, and now there
could not be even the possibility of a chance of their
breaking even.