HIS right name was Frank X. Farrell, and I guess the X stood for
"Excuse me." Because he never pulled a play, good or bad, on or
off the field, without apologizin' for it.
"Alibi Ike" was the name Carey wished on him the first day he
reported down South. O' course we all cut out the "Alibi" part of
it right away for the fear he would overhear it and bust
somebody. But we called him "Ike" right to his face and the rest
of it was understood by everybody on the club except Ike himself.
"What do you all call me Ike for? I ain't no Yid."
"Carey give you the name," I says. "It's his nickname for
everybody he takes a likin' to."
"He mustn't have only a few friends then," says Ike. "I never
heard him say 'Ike' to nobody else."
But I was goin' to tell you about Carey namin' him. We'd been
workin' out two weeks and the pitchers was showin' somethin' when
this bird joined us. His first day out he stood up there so good
and took such a reef at the old pill that he had everyone
lookin'. Then him and Carey was together in left field, catchin'
fungoes, and it was after we was through for the day that Carey
told me about him.
"Yes," says Carey, "but he can't hit near as good as he can
apologize."
Then Carey went on to tell me what Ike had been pullin' out
there. He'd dropped the first fly ball that was hit to him and
told Carey his glove wasn't broke in good yet, and Carey says the
glove could easy of been Kid Gleason's gran'father. He made a
whale of a catch out o' the next one and Carey says "Nice work!"
or somethin' like that, but Ike says he could of caught the ball
with his back turned only he slipped when he started after it
and, besides that, the air currents fooled him.
"I thought you done well to get to the ball," says Carey.
"I had malaria most o' the season," says Ike. "I wound up with
.356."
"Where would I have to go to get malaria?" says Carey, but Ike
didn't wise up.
I and Carey and him set at the same table together for supper. It
took him half an hour longer'n us to eat because he had to excuse
himself every time he lifted his fork.
"Doctor told me I needed starch," he'd say, and then toss a
shoveful o' potatoes into him. Or, "They ain't much meat on one
o' these chops," he'd tell us, and grab another one. Or he'd say:
"Nothin' like onions for a cold," and then he'd dip into the
perfumery.
"Better try that apple sauce," says Carey. "It'll help your
malaria."
"Whose malaria?" says Ike. He'd forgot already why he didn't only
hit .356 last year.
"Whereabouts did you say your home was?" I ast him. "I live with
my folks," he says. "We live in Kansas City--not right down in
the business part--outside a ways."
"How's that come?" says Carey. "I should think you'd get rooms in
the post office."
But Ike was too busy curin' his cold to get that one.
"I used to play a fair game," he says. "I'm all out o' practice
now--can't hardly make a shot."
We coaxed him into a four-handed battle, him and Carey against
Jack Mack and I. Say, he couldn't play billiards as good as
Willie Hoppe; not quite. But to hear him tell it, he didn't make
a good shot all evenin'. I'd leave him an awful-lookin' layout
and he'd gather 'em up in one try and then run a couple o'
hundred, and between every carom he'd say he'd put too much stuff
on the ball, or the English didn't take, or the table wasn't
true, or his stick was crooked, or somethin'. And all the time he
had the balls actin' like they was Dutch soldiers and him Kaiser
William. We started out to play fifty points, but we had to make
it a thousand so as I and Jack and Carey could try the table.
The four of us set round the lobby a wile after we was through
playin', and when it got along toward bedtime Carey whispered to
me and says:
"Ike'd like to go to bed, but he can't think up no excuse."
Carey hadn't hardly finished whisperin' when Ike got up and
pulled it:
"Well, good night, boys," he says. "I ain't sleepy, but I got
some gravel in my shoes and it's killin' my feet."
We knowed he hadn't never left the hotel since we'd came in from
the grounds and changed our clo'es. So Carey says:
"I should think they'd take them gravel pits out o' the billiard
room."
But Ike was already on his way to the elevator, limpin'.
"He's got the world beat," says Carey to Jack and I. "I've knew
lots o' guys that had an alibi for every mistake they made; I've
heard pitchers say that the ball slipped when somebody cracked
one off'n 'em; I've heard infielders complain of a sore arm after
heavin' one into the stand, and I've saw outfielders tooken sick
with a dizzy spell when they've misjudged a fly ball. But this
baby can't even go to bed without apologizin', and I bet he
excuses himself to the razor when he gets ready to shave."
"And at that," says Jack, "he's goin' to make us a good man."
"Yes," says Carey, "unless rheumatism keeps his battin' average
down to .400."
Well, sir, Ike kept whalin' away at the ball all through the trip
till everybody knowed he'd won a job. Cap had him in there
regular the last few exhibition games and told the newspaper boys
a week before the season opened that he was goin' to start him in
Kane's place.
"You're there, kid," says Carey to Ike, the night Cap made the
'nnouncement. "They ain't many boys that wins a big league berth
their third year out."
"I'd of been up here a year ago," says Ike, "only I was bent over
all season with lumbago."
It rained down in Cincinnati one day and somebody organized a
little game o' cards. They was shy two men to make six and ast I
and Carey to play.
"I'm with you if you get Ike and make it seven-handed," says
Carey.
So they got a hold of Ike and we went up to Smitty's room.
"I pretty near forgot how many you deal," says Ike. "It's been a
long wile since I played."
I and Carey give each other the wink, and sure enough, he was
just as ig'orant about poker as billiards. About the second hand,
the pot was opened two or three ahead of him, and they was three
in when it come his turn. It cost a buck, and he throwed in two.
Well, it was raised back at him and then he made another mistake
and raised again. They was only three left in when the draw come.
Smitty'd opened with a pair o' kings and he didn't help 'em. Ike
stood pat. The guy that'd raised him back was flushin' and he
didn't fill. So Smitty checked and Ike bet and didn't get no
call. He tossed his hand away, but I grabbed it and give it a
look. He had king, queen, jack and two tens. Alibi Ike he must
have seen me peekin', for he leaned over and whispered to me.
"I overlooked my hand," he says. "I thought all the wile it was a
straight."
"Yes," I says, "that's why you raised twice by mistake."
They was another pot that he come into with tens and fours. It
was tilted a couple o' times and two o' the strong fellas drawed
ahead of Ike. They each drawed one. So Ike throwed away his
little pair and come out with four tens. And they was four treys
against him. Carey'd looked at Ike's discards and then he says:
"Yes, yes, you did," says Carey, and showed us the two fours.
"What do you know about that? " says Ike. "I'd of swore one was a
five spot."
Well, we hadn't had no pay day yet, and after a wile everybody
except Ike was goin' shy. I could see him gettin' restless and I
was wonderin' how he'd make the get-away. He tried two or three
times. "I got to buy some collars before supper," he says.
"No hurry," says Smitty. "The stores here keeps open all night in
April."
"Well," says Carey, "your old man knows you're still here yet
this afternoon if you was here this mornin'. Trains leavin'
Cincinnati in the middle o' the day don't carry no ball clubs."
"Yes," says Ike, "that's true. But he don't know where I'm goin'
to be next week."
Well, by this time he'd lost two or three pots and he was
desperate. We was playin' just as fast as we could, because we
seen we couldn't hold him much longer. But he was tryin' so hard
to frame an escape that he couldn't pay no attention to the
cards, and it looked like we'd get his whole pile away from him
if we could make him stick.
The telephone saved him. The minute it begun to ring, five of us
jumped for it. But Ike was there first.
"Yes," he says, answerin' it. "This is him. I'll come right
down."
And he slammed up the receiver and beat it out o' the door
without even sayin' good-by.
"And the next time we ask him to play," says Carey, "his fingers
will be so stiff he can't hold the cards."
Well, we set round a wile talkin' it over, and pretty soon the
telephone rung again. Smitty answered it. It was a friend of
his'n from Hamilton and he wanted to know why Smitty didn't hurry
down. He was the one that had called before and Ike had told him
he was Smitty.
"Ike'd ought to split with Smitty's friend," says Carey.
"No," I says, "he'll need all he won. It costs money to buy
collars and to send telegrams from Cincinnati to your old man in
Texas and keep him posted on the health o' your uncle in Cedar
Rapids, D. C."
And you ought to heard him out there on that field! They wasn't a
day when he didn't pull six or seven, and it didn't make no
difference whether he was goin' good or bad. If he popped up in
the pinch he should of made a base hit and the reason he didn't
was so-and-so. And if he cracked one for three bases he ought to
had a home run, only the ball wasn't lively, or the wind brought
it back, or he tripped on a lump o' dirt, roundin' first base.
They was one afternoon in New York when he beat all records. Big
Marquard was workin' against us and he was good.
In the first innin' Ike hit one clear over that right field
stand, but it was a few feet foul. Then he got another foul and
then the count come to two and two. Then Rube slipped one acrost
on him and he was called out.
"What do you know about that!" he says afterward on the bench. "I
lost count. I thought it was three and one, and I took a strike."
"You took a strike all right," says Carey. "Even the umps knowed
it was a strike."
"Yes," says Ike, "but you can bet I wouldn't of took it if I'd
knew it was the third one. The score board had it wrong."
"That score board ain't for you to look at," says Cap. "It's for
you to hit that old pill against."
"Well," says Ike, "I could of hit that one over the score board
if I'd knew it was the third."
"Oh, two or three inches or half a foot," says Ike.
"I guess you wouldn't of threatened the score board with it
then," says Cap.
"I'd of pulled it down the right foul line if I hadn't thought
he'd call it a ball," says Ike.
Well, in New York's part o' the innin' Doyle cracked one and Ike
run back a mile and a half and caught it with one hand. We was
all sayin' what a whale of a play it was, but he had to apologize
just the same as for gettin' struck out.
"That stand's so high," he says, "that a man don't never see a
ball till it's right on top o' you."
"Might as well, with that big high stand to bother a man," says
Ike. "If I could of saw the ball all the time I'd of got it in my
hip pocket."
Along in the fifth we was one run to the bad and Ike got on with
one out. On the first ball throwed to Smitty, Ike went down. The
ball was outside and Meyers throwed Ike out by ten feet.
You could see Ike's lips movin' all the way to the bench and when
he got there he had his piece learned.
"You says his sign was pickin' up dirt and he says it's slidin'
his hand. Which is right?"
"I'm right," says Smitty. "But if you're arguin' about him goin'
last innin', I didn't give him no sign."
"You pulled your cap down with your right hand, didn't you? " ast
Ike.
"Well, s'pose I did," says Smitty. "That don't mean nothin'. I
never told you to take that for a sign, did I?"
"I thought maybe you meant to tell me and forgot," says Ike. They
couldn't none of us answer that and they wouldn't of been no more
said if Ike had of shut up. But wile we was settin' there Carey
got on with two out and stole second clean.
"There!" says Ike. "That's what I was tryin' to do and I'd of got
away with it if Smitty'd swang and bothered the Indian."
"Oh!" says Smitty. "You was tryin' to steal then, was you? I
thought you claimed I give you the hit and run."
"I didn't claim no such a thing," says Ike. "I thought maybe you
might of gave me a sign, but I was goin' anyway because I thought
I had a good start."
Cap prob'ly would of hit him with a bat, only just about that
time Doyle booted one on Hayes and Carey come acrost with the run
that tied.
Well, we go into the ninth finally, one and one, and Marquard
walks McDonald with nobody out.
And Ike goes up there with orders to bunt and cracks the first
ball into that right-field stand! It was fair this time, and
we're two ahead, but I didn't think about that at the time. I was
too busy watchin' Cap's face. First he turned pale and then he
got red as fire and then he got blue and purple, and finally he
just laid back and busted out laughin'. So we wasn't afraid to
laugh ourselfs when we seen him doin' it, and when Ike come in
everybody on the bench was in hysterics.
But instead o' takin' advantage, Ike had to try and excuse
himself. His play was to shut up and he didn't know how to make
it.
"Well," he says, "if I hadn't hit quite so quick at that one I
bet it'd of cleared the center-field fence."
"I was goin' to on the next ball," says Ike. "But I thought if I
took a good wallop I'd have 'em all fooled. So I walloped at the
first one to fool 'em, and I didn't have no intention o' hittin'
it."
"Well," Ike says, "I was lookin' for him to throw me a fast one
and I was goin' to awing under it. But he come with a hook and I
met it right square where I was swingin' to go under the fast
one."
"Great!" says Cap. "Boys," he says, "Ike's learned how to hit
Marquard's curve. Pretend a fast one's comin' and then try to
miss it. It's a good thing to know and Ike'd ought to be willin'
to pay for the lesson. So I'm goin' to make it a hundred instead
o' fifty."
The game wound up 3 to 1. The fine didn't go, because Ike hit
like a wild man all through that trip and we made pretty near a
clean-up. The night we went to Philly I got him cornered in the
car and I says to him:
"Forget them alibis for a wile and tell me somethin'. What'd you
do that for, swing that time against Marquard when you was told
to bunt?"
"I'll tell you," he says. "That ball he throwed me looked just
like the one I struck out on in the first innin' and I wanted to
show Cap what I could of done to that other one if I'd knew it
was the third strike."
"But," I says, "the one you struck out on in the first innin' was
a fast ball."
"So was the one I cracked in the ninth," says Ike.
You've saw Cap's wife, o' course. Well, her sister's about twict
as good-lookin' as her, and that's goin' some.
Cap took his missus down to St. Louis the second trip and the
other one come down from St. Joe to visit her. Her name is Dolly,
and some doll is right.
Well, Cap was goin' to take the two sisters to a show and he
wanted a beau for Dolly. He left it to her and she picked Ike.
He'd hit three on the nose that afternoon--off'n Sallee, too.
They fell for each other that first evenin'. Cap told us how it
come off. She begin flatterin' Ike for the star game he'd played
and o' course he begin excusin' himself for not doin' better. So
she thought he was modest and it went strong with her. And she
believed everything he said and that made her solid with
him--that and her make-up. They was together every mornin' and
evenin' for the five days we was there. In the afternoons Ike
played the grandest ball you ever see, hittin' and runnin' the
bases like a fool and catchin' everything that stayed in the
park.
I told Cap, I says: "You'd ought to keep the doll with us and
he'd make Cobb's figures look sick."
But Dolly had to go back to St. Joe and we come home for a long
serious.
Well, for the next three weeks Ike had a letter to read every day
and he'd set in the clubhouse readin' it till mornin' practice
was half over. Cap didn't say nothin' to him, because he was
goin' so good. But I and Carey wasted a lot of our time tryin' to
get him to own up who the letters was from. Fine chanct!
"Well," I says, "I should think he'd of learned to write with his
left hand by this time."
"It's his left hand that was cut off," says Ike; "and he was
lefthanded."
"You get a letter every day," says Carey. "They're all the same
writin'. Is he tellin' you about a different ball player every
time he writes?"
"No," Ike says. "It's the same ball player. He just tells me what
he does every day."
"From the size o' the letters, they don't play nothin' but
double-headers down there," says Carey.
We figured that Ike spent most of his evenin's answerin' the
letters from his "friend's sister," so we kept tryin' to date him
up for shows and parties to see how he'd duck out of 'em. He was
bugs over spaghetti, so we told him one day that they was goin'
to be a big feed of it over to Joe's that night and he was
invited.
Well, I want to alibi Carey and I for what come off in Boston. If
we'd of had any idear what we was doin', we'd never did it. They
wasn't nobody outside o' maybe Ike and the dame that felt worse
over it than I and Carey.
The first two days we didn't see nothin' of Ike and her except
out to the park. The rest o' the time they was sight-seein' over
to Cambridge and down to Revere and out to Brook-a-line and all
the other places where the rubes go.
But when we come into the beanery after the third game Cap's wife
called us over.
"If you want to see somethin' pretty," she says, "look at the
third finger on Sis's left hand."
Well, o' course we knowed before we looked that it wasn't goin'
to be no hangnail. Nobody was su'prised when Dolly blew into the
dinin' room with it--a rock that Ike'd bought off'n Diamond Joe
the first trip to New York. Only o' course it'd been set into a
lady's-size ring instead o' the automobile tire he'd been
wearin'.
Cap and his missus and Ike and Dolly ett supper together, only
Ike didn't eat nothin', but just set there blushin' and spillin'
things on the table-cloth. I heard him excusin' himself for not
havin' no appetite. He says he couldn't never eat when he was
clost to the ocean. He'd forgot about them sixty-five oysters he
destroyed the first night o' the trip before.
He was goin' to take her to a show, so after supper he went
upstairs to change his collar. She had to doll up, too, and o'
course Ike was through long before her.
If you remember the hotel in Boston, they's a little parlor.
where the piano's at and then they's another little parlor
openin' off o' that. Well, when Ike come down Smitty was playin'
a few chords and I and Carey was harmonizin'. We seen Ike go up
to the desk to leave his key and we called him in. He tried to
duck away, but we wouldn't stand for it.
We ast him what he was all duded up for and he says he was goin'
to the theayter.
"Now look here," says Carey, "this is goin' to cost me real money
if I lose. Cut out the alibi stuff and give it to us straight.
Cap's wife just as good as told us you was roped."
"Oh, no," says Ike, "but sometimes a man don't know what he's
gettin' into. Take a good-lookin' girl, and a man gen'ally almost
always does about what she wants him to."
"They couldn't no girl lasso me unless I wanted to be lassoed,"
says Smitty.
"Oh, I don't know," says Ike. "When a fella gets to feelin' sorry
for one of 'em it's all off."
Well, we left him go after shakin' hands all round. But he didn't
take Dolly to no show that night. Some time wile we was talkin'
she'd came into that other parlor and she'd stood there and heard
us. I don't know how much she heard. But it was enough. Dolly and
Cap's missus took the midnight train for New York. And from there
Cap's wife sent her on her way back to Missouri.
She'd left the ring and a note for Ike with the clerk. But we
didn't ask Ike if the note was from his friend in Fort Wayne,
Texas.
When we'd came to Boston Ike was hittin' plain .397. When we got
back home he'd fell off to pretty near nothin'. He hadn't drove
one out o' the infield in any o' them other Eastern parks, and he
didn't even give no excuse for it.
To show you how bad he was, he struck out three times in Brooklyn
one day and never opened his trap when Cap ast him what was the
matter. Before, if he'd whiffed oncet in a game he'd of wrote a
book tellin' why.
Well, we dropped from first place to fifth in four weeks and we
was still goin' down. I and Carey was about the only ones in the
club that spoke to each other, and all as we did was remind
ourself o' what a boner we'd pulled.
"It's goin' to beat us out o' the big money," says Carey.
"Yes," I says. "I don't want to knock my own ball club, but it
looks like a one-man team, and when that one man's dauber's down
we couldn't trim our whiskers."
"Yes," I says, "but why should a man pull an alibi for bein'
engaged to such a bearcat as she was?"
"He shouldn't," says Carey. "But I and you knowed he would or
we'd never started talkin' to him about it. He wasn't no more
ashamed o' the girl than I am of a regular base hit. But he just
can't come clean on no subjec'."
Cap had the whole story, and I and Carey was as pop'lar with him
as an umpire.
"What do you want me to do, Cap?" Carey'd say to him before goin'
up to hit.
"Use your own judgment," Cap'd tell him. "We want to lose another
game."
But finally, one night in Pittsburgh, Cap had a letter from his
missus and he come to us with it.
"You fellas," he says, "is the ones that put us on the bum, and
if you're sorry I think they's a chancet for you to make good.
The old lady's out to St. Joe and she's been tryin' her hardest
to fix things up. She's explained that Ike don't mean nothin'
with his talk; I've wrote and explained that to Dolly, too. But
the old lady says that Dolly says that she can't believe it. But
Dolly's still stuck on this baby, and she's pinin' away just the
same as Ike. And the old lady says she thinks if you two fellas
would write to the girl and explain how you was always kiddin'
with Ike and leadin' him on, and how the ball club was all shot
to pieces since Ike quit hittin', and how he acted like he was
goin' to kill himself, and this and that, she'd fall for it and
maybe soften down. Dolly, the old lady says, would believe you
before she'd believe I and the old lady, because she thinks it's
her we're sorry for, and not him."
Well, I and Carey was only too glad to try and see what we could
do. But it wasn't no snap. We wrote about eight letters before we
got one that looked good. Then we give it to the stenographer and
had it wrote out on a typewriter and both of us signed it.
It was Carey's idear that made the letter good. He stuck in
somethin' about the world's serious money that our wives wasn't
goin' to spend unless she took pity on a "boy who was so shy and
modest that he was afraid to come right out and say that he had
asked such a beautiful and handsome girl to become his bride."
That's prob'ly what got her, or maybe she couldn't of held out
much longer anyway. It was four days after we sent the letter
that Cap heard from his missus again. We was in Cincinnati.
"We've won," he says to us. "The old lady says that Dolly says
she'll give him another chance. But the old lady says it won't do
no good for Ike to write a letter. He'll have to go out there."
"Sure," says Cap. "But I'm goin' to break the news to him right
now. It's time we win a ball game."
So in the clubhouse, just before the game, Cap told him. And I
certainly felt sorry for Rube Benton and Red Ames that afternoon!
I and Carey was standin' in front o' the hotel that night when
Ike come out with his suitcase.