Chapter 17
The RMS Etruria -- NY to Liverpool
The next morning while I was shaving, Dennis strolled into the bathroom, tossed the newspaper on the top of the commode and announced, "No ballgame for us today."
"What happened?' I asked, and nicked my neck with my Gillette razor.
"My source for today's tickets got himself arrested," he pointed to the headline on the front page of the Herald Tribune. "City Controller Caught With Fingers in the Till!"
I sighed and applied some toilet paper to the cut, "Easy come, easy go," I said examining the cut to see if it had stopped bleeding. It hadn't, and Dennis dug into his ditty bag and handed me a tube of styptic powder. I applied some and after a minute or so, the bleeding stopped.
"Well I can use the time to go down to the main library and do some needed research. Look at some old newspapers, and that should develop new questions to put to you about your playing days."
"All right, I have some business to take care of too. Let's agree to meet around four. We can take the girls out to dinner and screw them silly after."
"Sounds like a reasonable plan to me," I said, laughing along with Dennis.
He left the hotel room about twenty minutes later. I followed him out ten minutes after that, taking a cab to the Main Library at 5th Avenue and 42nd Street.
I trotted past the two Lions protecting the prestigious building, secure in the knowledge that it was the nation's largest public library and one of the country's most significant research centers.
On entering the building, I found myself in the Rose main Reading Room, a majestic room some 78 feet wide and 297 feet long, with 52 foot high ceilings. The room was lined with thousands of reference works along the floor level and along the balcony. It was furnished with sturdy wood tables, comfortable chairs, and brass lamps. I soon learned that the material I sought would be brought to me by library personnel from the library's closed stacks.
I would later discover that the retrieved books were sought out by young people on roller skates, whizzing down the numerous corridors of the building unseen by the typical reader like myself.
But after an hour or so of turning pages in the baseball books I had requested, I concluded that newspaper articles would be more beneficial to my particular needs. A helpful librarian directed me to the Microfilm section, which consisted mainly of The New York Times on reels of 35 millimeter microfilm.
I spooled through the Times baseball pages from 1885 to 1890 without uncovering anything important enough to include in my storyline. Bill had been very through, and although there were several areas he had omitted, I felt they didn't warrant inclusion and was about to hand the spools back to the librarian, when I remembered that Bill had retired in 1884 and maintained he hadn't used the power until 1895, eleven years later. I had strong doubts about this, and that was my reason for being at the Library. I began to think I was looking in the wrong place.
I left the library and bought two hot dogs from a street vendor and washed them down with an orange soda. I walked a block before finding an unoccupied phone booth. I fed enough quarters into the phone to satisfy the long-distance operator and was finally connected to Wesley Hancock, a former colleague at the Tribune in Chi-town.
"Shannon! You old bastard, where the hell are you?"
"No how are you, Roy?" I countered then laughed. "I'm in New York, taking in the Series, Wes."
"No shit! The Series, eh? You must have landed a job with one of the New York Dailies then. I told them you'd land on your feet."
"Not quite, Wes. I'm writing a book."
"Another author from the ranks, that it, Roy?"
"I guess. Say, Wes, you worked the travel section a while back, didn't you?"
"Ten years of bloody travel, Roy. Why, planning a trip to Europe?"
"No such luck. What I'm doing, or trying to do is figure out how people traveled, like, say a honeymoon back in the '80's."
"Not in any car, that's for sure," Wesley cackled.
"C'mon, Wes, help me out, here."
"Let's rule out horse and wagon, for a honeymoon, unless they were strapped for cash," Wes replied. "That leaves two possibilities. Do you happen to know where they honeymooned?'
"I don't."
"Well, how well off were they?"
"He was a baseball player... Major Leaguer."
"So he made more than the average Joe."
"I suppose so."
"My money's on a long train ride, say to one coast or the other. That would certainly be within their means."
"True enough, but I think he might have looked at trains as boring, having traveled them for years as a player."
"Then what's left to us is a steamship, say to Europe if he's from the East Coast."
"He is, Philadelphia. Born and raised. Even played some there.
"Hmmm, let me do some looking. What number can I reach you at?"
"Let me call you, Wes. When would be a good time?"
"Gimme a couple hours, say flourish?"
Fine. Wes. I call you then." I hung up and went back to the hotel. Dennis was still out, so I ventured down to the bar and listened to the game on the radio.
And what a game it turned out to be! The Yankees chose Bill Bevens, who had only won seven games during the regular season, and the unlikely hero pitched one of the most amazing 9 2/3 innings in World Series history. Although he permitted a fifth inning run (on two walks, a sacrifice and a ground ball), he entered the ninth with a no-hitter and a 2-1 lead.
The crowd at Ebbets Field was almost drowning the announcer's voice out as Edwards came to the plate to start the Dodger's off in the bottom of the ninth.
I looked around the hotel bar; it was cloudy with cigarette and cigar smoke. I had a scotch and soda tightly clenched in my hand. I mentally cursed the man who'd gotten himself arrested last night and in doing so had denied me the chance to be at the ballpark watching Bevens make baseball history.
Furillo drew a walk, and a comingled murmur of hope and despair echoed through the mahogany walled bar. Jorgenson fouled out, bringing Bevens within one out of the first no-hitter in World Series history. Shotton sent reserve outfielder Al Gionfriddo in to run for Furillo and Pete Reiser came in as a pinch-hitter for reliever Hugh Casey.
"He's gonna do it!" said a man two stools down from me.
"Who's gonna do what? Bevens gonna get the next one out, or is the Bums gonna rock him with a barrage of hits?" said the man to his right, a working man in overalls who on any other day would have been out of place in the hotel bar. But there was a construction site directly across the street and the worker's had congregated in the bar to listen to the final innings of the dramatic game.
The man two stools down waved off the worker and everyone strained to hear what happened next. Gionfriddo promptly stole second, and Reiser was walked intentionally, despite the fact he represented the potential winning run. Eddie Stanky was due up and Red Barber, the Dodger's great announcer with the flare for southern phases that revolutionized the way games were broadcast, was taking about the fact that Stanky had broken up Ewell Blackwell's attempt at a second consecutive no-hitter back in June. In the background noise during that comment, I heard the P.A. announcer saying that Miksis was running for Reiser.
Then Barber said: "Wait a minute... Stanky is being called back from the plate and Lavagetto goes up to hit... Gionfriddo walks off second... Miksis off first... They're both ready to go on anything... Two men out, last of the ninth... the pitch... swung on, there's a drive hit out toward the right field corner. Henrich is going back. He can't get it! It's off the wall for a base hit! ....Here comes the tying run... and here comes the winning run! ... Friends, they're killin' Lavagetto! His own teammates, they're beatin' him to pieces! ... and it's taking a police escort to get Lavagetto away from the Dodgers! Well, I'll be a suck-egg mule!
Everyone in the bar was stunned. The Bum's had tied the series and shaken the Yankees to their core. Or so I thought at the time.
I hung around listening to the various comments and offering several of my own for another hour, and then I headed back to my room and found Dennis waiting for me.
"Great game wasn't it?" he said for openers.
"It was. Were you there?"
"If I'd gone you would have joined me, Roy. I'm not that kind of guy. How'd it go at the library?"
"Um, I spent a couple hours working the microfiche machines. I found a couple things you didn't bother to mention. But when I thought about it, I decided they weren't really vital.
You seem to have covered the most important issues. Besides, why weigh down the story with minutia from the '80's?"
"Or the 90's, for that matter. I didn't pick up on Lajoie until 1895."
"That's true. Say, are we meeting the girl's tonight?"
"Yes, I called Lizbeth after I got back to the room. We'll pick them up around eight, if that's okey-doke with you."
"Oh, sure it is. I can't wait to poke Beatrice again."
Dennis laughed. "She certainly has a tight asshole."
"As does Lizbeth," I added, laughing along with him.
"Say Bill," I said, remembering to use his given name and thereby avoid another jolt or worse as he tried to enter my body. "When you married Florence, where did you go on your honeymoon?"
"We didn't, at least not then. I had to help run the family hotel and when Flo's Pop passed on; I spent a lot of time on his farm, helping the family out."
"But you did take her someplace, eventually, didn't you?"