Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Chapter 2: Suicide Squeeze




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfSkMzC6GBg



“Was that ear-arm-nose-brim?” whispers Ronki after calling time-out and meeting Coach Q halfway up the third base line.

“Nose after arm means bunt, Einstein,” he hisses with hands cupping his mouth to muffle the code. “Now get that bat on the ball because Reid’s heading home on the next pitch.”

“Suicide squeeze?” questions Jo from the bench. “The feller don’t even know thar’s no stealin until she throws it in softball.”

“Yeah, and we need both those runs to beat the frickin’ Woman’s College,” adds Toni Valenti from the on deck circle.



__________



The two Gibson-Henrys had been sibling schools when birthed by Methodists before the Civil War. The happy family was separated in the 1930s by a nasty divorce from the church in order to qualify for Carnegie Foundation funding. Admission of women to the men’s college in the early seventies ended any semblance of civility between Magnolia and Danville, especially for the competing female sports teams.
The night before the first game I had scarfed a bag of chewing tobacco from Q’s office while finishing the team laundry in the Old Gym.

“Hey big guy!” startled me as I snuck across the fountain plaza toward Alma Wood dormitory.

“MG, I nearly stained my shorts,” I gasped. “What are you doing in there?”

“Mon nom de famille, c'est La Mer après tout!”

“Speaking of names, why MG if you’re Marie-Josee?”

“Silly man, J sounds like G in French,” she laughed, waving her arms in the cold water to splash me.

“Hey!” I immediately regretted shouting, leaping back to avoid the spray.

“Hé, c’est une anguille ici,” she screamed, scrambling out of the fountain with water streaming down her long legs.

“The American eel is a catadromous fish born in the Sargasso Sea but living in rivers before returning to salt water to breed,” I blurted, reverting to facts in the face of those legs.

“PEENT…PEENT” from overhead made us both jump. I was about to toss the bag and run when we caught a glimpse of a night hawk darting through the dome of light from the fountain’s lamp post.

“Are you going to Jo’s?” I asked, recovering enough to salvage the encounter.

The side door to the old three-story brick building was propped open by a wad of paper in the latch. I was about to knock on Jo’s carved oak door when it was thrown open to reveal half the team lying around in various stages of nightclothes.

“Hey big feller, d’ya git the goods?” she shouted before reaching over to turn down the turntable volume.

“Virginia’s finest,” I replied, handing over the pouch and sitting back against the heavy door.

Jo took one look at the bag and leapt up, slamming it down into the trash can as she kneed me aside and stormed out.

“What crawled up her and is eating its way out?” laughed Toni, crab-walking over to the can with her squat frame hidden in flannel pajama pants, her thick red hair spilling over the shoulders of an oversized KISS t-shirt.

“I’ll find out,” offered Ronki, her smooth face creased with a furrowed brow as she lithely stepped over our legs in her blue jean cut-offs and headed down the hall. “You guys go right on ahead.”

“Here’s to the new coach!” toasted Toni, pulling open the foil top and holding up the pouch for MG.

“One does this in the mouth?” asked our French relief pitcher, taking a big whiff and staring down into the moist leaves with amusement in her emerald green eyes.

“Jest a pinch between yer cheek and gum,” drawled Shawna Drachman, imitating a TV commercial as she tossed her long blond locks out of her lean face. “Then you suck and spit.”

“So Januzzi, I’ve got an important question for you,” Toni said before squirting a stream of brown juice into a ceramic Homer Laughlin mug someone had lifted from the cafeteria. “On a hot summer night would you offer your throat to the wolf with the red roses?”

“Will he offer me his mouth?” I dutifully replied with the second line of a song from the new Meatloaf album.

“Seriously though, Zo, what do you think of the Q Ball?”

“This rookie fireballer led Tidewater with 107 K’s and is vying for a spot in the bullpen,” I replied, repeating the back of his 1965 New York Mets baseball card. “Too bad he blew out his shoulder before ever getting into a game at Shea Stadium.”

“I betcha the bastard didn’t have to shave his legs before games?” lamented Shawna. “Those skirts you guys gave us suck the big one.”

“You wax, no?” asked MG incredulously.

     The girls laughed their way down to the basement bathroom for a French lesson, leaving me alone in Jo’s room. I stood up to leave and was hit by a wave of nausea and dizziness as the nicotine reached my central nervous system.

“How the hell do they play on this stuff?” I mumbled as I stumbled back to my dorm room.



__________



Ronki steps back into the batter’s box and assumes the hitting position with her left hip toward the mound and the bat held up and back as if ready to swing. We’re down one run with runners on second and third base and one out in the bottom half of the seventh and last inning. The Woman’s College pitcher steps back into her windup and slings her body forward. Just as the ball leaves her fingertips, Sue Reid takes off from third toward home.

Ronki jumps around to face the pitch. The ball is heading for her face so she ducks and reaches the bat up.  She misses and the ball slaps into the catcher’s mitt.

“Strike three!” calls the home plate umpire.

Sue leaps into a hook slide on the inside of the leftfield foul line. The catcher dives to reach her big mitt across the corner of the plate. Sue skids past on her left side, her right hand brushing across the glove before skimming the plate.

“You’re out!” yells the ump, and our first game is our first loss.




Box Score:








Monday, February 25, 2019

Chapter 1: Mah Number





https://people.com/shop/fashion/accessories/hair/madsportsstuff




“But mah Pop, he’us twenty-two when he played hyer,” argues Joreverting to her home dialect.(1)

“The best player always gets the Mick’s lucky number seven” counters Coach Jim Quintana, reaching over to pat her on the bottom.


 __________


We were passing out uniforms after the first practice on the newly cut grass of March below the Mason Dixon Line. The women had been frisky as they hit the lime green expanse and tart smell of spring on Dusk Field.

“If wood’s good enough for the bigs, it’s good enough for girls,” Coach Q had announced when Catherine Kent arrived with one of the new aluminum bats.

These were the first words of wisdom of the new Gibson-Henry College  coach to his softball team.
The previous season they had been a club team organized by juniors Veronica Leskuski and Josepha Collins. After winning the all-Richmond tournament, Ronki and Jo had lobbied the Dean for school backing. He had stalled by pointing out all the permissions and costs, only assenting to bring it to the Board of Governors when the new school President arrived with two teen-aged softball playing daughters.
Coach Q had let me pick the numbers for the rest of the players, saving seven for Jo and seventy-seven for himself. I mostly deferred to the strong-willed women, serving only thirteen to MG since she didn’t know what to pick as an exchange student new to softball. She had played boules in southern France and that bocce-like game using metal balls didn’t have uniforms, much less unlucky numbers.
Being a student-trainer for a college women’s team had certain advantages and disadvantages for a, shall we say, “big” guy. The players ignored him in the equipment room of the Old Gym, a stately brick building built in 1887. They also forgot that guy on Saturday nights in the not-so-stately motel dorms and fraternity houses that made up the Gibby-Hank social scene of the late 1970s.


 __________


“Hey coach, how about a hit of that chaw?” asks Jo, stalling for time and dodging his pat with her dark curls bouncing.

“We don’t want any hair on that pretty little chest, now do we?” he laughs, running long fingers through a thin black comb-over.

“Not iffin I git mah number,” she bargains, eyebrows raised and chestnut eyes flashing as she leans on the door frame.

“Does it have to be one or the other?” he grins, stepping behind his desk and spitting into an extra large McDonald’s cup.

Jo storms out of the office stripping off the new white Izod Lacoste polo with number seven on the back and heading for the exit in her sports bra.

“Wait, try this on for size,” I call, tossing her the only remaining jersey.

“We’re meetin in mah room after larnin so fetch a poke a that tobacco,” she smiles, pulling on number seventy-seven as she bumps open the door.

The soft “who coo, who, coo, who” of a mourning dove floats in on the orange of a piedmont sunset, briefly illuminating Jo’s ruddy skin before the oak door slams shut.





1. Unusual terms, phrases, and phonetical spellings used for the character Josepha Collins are derived from a glossary of terminology in North From the Mountains: A Folk History of the Carmel Melungeon Settlement, Highland County, Ohio by John S. Kessler and Donald B. Ball (Mercer University Press, 2001).