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Our team veterans did not lack sympathetic encouragement on the last nine holes, and all four matches tightened up to such an extent that we wavered between hope and fear until Crane's final putt on the seventeenth green dropped us into the depths of despair.
Gilmore, setting the pace with Jordan, gave us early encouragement by maintaining a safe lead throughout and winning his match, 3 to 2. First blood was ours, but the period of rejoicing was a short one; for the deliberate Lounsberry, approaching and putting with heartbreaking accuracy, disposed of Bishop on the seventeenth green.
"One apiece," said Doc Pinkinson. "Now what's Elder doing?"
The Elder-Smathers match came to Number Seventeen all square; but our man ended the suspense by dropping a beautiful mashie pitch dead to the pin from a distance of one hundred yards. Smathers' third shot also reached the green; but his long putt went wide and Elder tapped the ball into the cup, adding a second victory to our credit.
"It's looking better every minute!" chirped the irrepressible Doc Pinkinson. "Now if Moreman can lick his man we're all hunky-dory. If he loses--good-a-by, cup! No use figuring on that red-headed snipe of a kid. MacNeath has sent him to the cleaner's by now, sure!"
The gallery waited at the seventeenth green, watching in anxious silence as Crane and Moreman played their pitch shots over the guarding bunker.
Both were well on in threes; but the Bellevue caddie impudently held his forefinger in the air as a sign that his man was one up. Moreman made a good try, but his fourth shot stopped a few inches from the cup; and Crane, after studying the roll of the green for a full minute, dropped a forty-foot putt for a four--and dropped our spirits with it.
"That settles it!" wheezed Daddy Bradshaw. "No need to bother about that other match.... Oh, if Anderson was so set on breaking his leg, why didn't he wait till to-morrow?"
"Then he could have busted 'em both," remarked the unfeeling Pinkinson, "and n.o.body would have said a word. Might's well pay those bets, I reckon. We got as much chance as that s...o...b..ll they're always talking about. If it didn't melt, somebody would eat it."
He turned and looked back along the course. Two figures appeared on the skyline, proceeding in the direction of the sixteenth tee. The first one was tall, and moved with long, even strides; the second was short, and even at the distance it seemed to strut and swagger.
"h.e.l.lo!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Pinkinson. "Ain't that MacNeath and the kid, going to Sixteen? It is, by golly! D'you reckon they're playing out the bye holes just for fun--or what?"
"It can't be anything else," said Bradshaw. "The boy couldn't have carried him that far."
Somebody plucked at my sleeve. It was a small dirty-faced caddie, very much out of breath.
"Mister Phipps says--if you want to see--some reg'lar golf--you'd better catch the finish--of his match. He says--bring all the gang with you."
"The finish of his match!" I cried. "Isn't it over? You don't mean that they're still playing?"
"Still playin' is right!" panted the caddie. "They was all square-when I left 'em."
All square! Like a flash the news ran through the gallery. The various groups, already drifting disconsolately in the direction of the clubhouse, halted and began buzzing with excitement and incredulity. All square? Nonsense! It couldn't be true. A green kid like that holding MacNeath to an even game for fifteen holes? Rot! But, in spite of the doubts so openly expressed, there was a brisk and general movement backward along the course, with the sixteenth putting green as an objective point.
It was a much augmented gallery that lined the side hill above the contestants. All the other team members were there, our men surprised and skeptical, and the Bellevue players nervous and apprehensive. There was also a troop of idle caddies, who had received the word by some mysterious wireless of their own devising.
"MacNeath is down in four," whispered one of the youngsters; "and Reddy has got to sink this one."
Ambrose's ball was four feet from the cup. He walked up to it, took one look at the line, one at the hole, and made the shot without an instant's hesitation--a clean, firm tap that gave the ball no chance to waver, but sent it squarely into the middle of the cup. MacQuarrie himself could not have shown more confidence. MacNeath's caddie replaced the flag in the hole, dropped both hands to his hips, and moved them back and forth in a level, sweeping gesture. His sign language answered the question uppermost in every mind. Still all square! A patter of applause gave thanks for the information and Ambrose looked up at us with a quizzical grin. I caught his eye, and the rascal winked at me.
He was first on the seventeenth tee, and this time there was no sign of nervous tension. After a single powerful practise swing he stepped forward to his ball, pressed the sole of his club lightly behind it, and got off a tremendous tee shot. I noticed that his lips moved; and he did not raise his head until the ball was well down the course.
"He's countin' three before he looks up!" whispered a voice in my ear; and there was MacQuarrie, the b.u.t.t of a dead cigar between his teeth, and his eyes alive with all the emotions a Scot may feel but can never express in words.
"Then he's really been playing good golf?" I asked.
"Ay. Grand golf! They both have. It's a dingdong match, an' just a question which one will crack fir-rst."
MacNeath's drive held out no hope that he was about to crack under the strain of an even battle. He executed the tee shot with the machinelike precision of the veteran golfer--stance, swing and follow-through standardised by years of experience.
Our seventeenth hole is a long one, par 5, and the approach to the putting green is guarded by an embankment, paralleled on the far side by a wide and treacherous sand trap, put there to encourage clean mashie pitches. The average player cannot reach the bunker on his second, much less carry the sand trap on the other side of it; but the long drivers sometimes string two tremendous wooden-club shots together and reach the edge of the green. More frequently they get into trouble and pay the penalty for attempting too much.
The two b.a.l.l.s were close together; but Ambrose's shot was the longer one by a matter of feet, and it was up to MacNeath to play first. Would he gamble and go for the green, or would he play short and make sure of a five? The veteran estimated the distance, looked carefully at his lie, and then pulled an iron from his bag. Instantly I knew what was pa.s.sing in his mind--sensed his golfing strategy: MacNeath intended to place his second shot short of the bunker, in the hope that Ambrose would be tempted into risking the long, dangerous wooden-club shot across to the green.
"Aha!" whispered MacQuarrie. "The old fox! He'll not take a chance himself, but he wants the lad to take one. '"Will ye walk into my parlour!" says the spider to the fly.' Ay; that's just it--will he, now?"
Ambrose gave us no time for suspense. MacNeath's ball had hardly stopped rolling before his decision was made--and a sound one at that! He whipped his mid-iron from the bag.
"'Fraid I'll have to fool you, old chap," said he airily. "You wanted me to go for the green--eh, what? Well, I hate to disappoint you; but I can't gamble in an even game--not when the kitty is a sand trap....
Ride, you little round rascal; ride!"
The last remark was addressed to the ball just before the blade of the mid-iron flicked it from the gra.s.s. Again there were two white specks in the distance, lying side by side. If MacNeath was disappointed he did not show it, but tramped on down the course, silent as usual and absorbed in the game. Both took fives on the hole, missing long putts; and the battle was still all square.
Our home hole is a par 4--a blind drive and an iron pitch to the green; and the vital shot is the one from the tee. It must go absolutely straight and high enough to carry the top of the hill, one hundred and forty yards away. To the right is an abrupt downward slope, ending in a deep ravine. To the left, and out of sight from the tee, is a wide sand trap, with the father of all bunkers at its far edge. The only safe ball is the one that sails over the direction post.
Ambrose drove; and a smothered gasp went up from the gallery. The ball had the speed of a bullet, as well as a perfect line; and, at first, I thought it would rise enough to skim the crest of the hill. Instead of that, it seemed to duck in flight, caught the hard face of the incline, and kicked abruptly to the left. It was that crooked bound which broke all our hearts; for we knew that, barring a miracle, our man was in the sand trap.
"Hard luck!" said MacNeath; and I think he really meant to be sympathetic.
Ambrose looked at him as a bulldog might look at a mastiff.
"Oh, I wouldn't say that!" he answered, rather stiffly. "I like to play my second shot from over there."
"You're welcome!" said MacNeath; and completed our discomfiture by poling out a tremendous shot, which carried well over the direction post and went sailing on up the plateau toward the clubhouse.
No man ever hit a longer ball at a more opportune time. As we toiled up the hill I tried to say something hopeful.
"He may have stopped short of the trap."
"Not a hope!" said MacQuarrie, chewing at his cigar. "He'll be in--up to his neck."
Sure enough, when we reached the summit there was the caddie, a mournful statue on the edge of the sand trap. The crowd halted at a proper distance and Ambrose and MacNeath went forward alone. MacQuarrie and I swung off to the left, for we wanted to see how deep the ball was in and what sort of a lie it had found.
"Six feet in from the edge," muttered Dunn'l, "an' twenty feet away from the wall. Lyin' up on top of the sand too. An iron wi' a little loft to it, a clean shot, a good thir-rd, an' he might get a four yet. It's just possible."
"But not probable," said I. "What on earth is he waiting for?"
Ambrose had taken a seat on the edge of the trap; and as he looked from the ball to the bunker looming in front of it, he rolled a cigarette.
"You don't mind if I study this situation a bit?" said he to MacNeath.
"Take your time," said the veteran.
"Because I wouldn't want to use the wrong club here," continued Ambrose.
The caddie said something to him at this point; but Phipps shook his red head impatiently and continued to puff at his cigarette. He caught a glimpse of me and beckoned.
"How do the home boys stand on this cup thing?" he asked.
"All even--two matches to two."