Rick Wilber Straight Changes [html]


Unknown RICK WILBER STRAIGHT CHANGES There's classic anecdote about the great Satchel Paige pitching a game that was about to be called on account of darkness. (That's right--there were no stadium lights in the 1940s and '50s.) The umpire was persuaded to let the game go on more innings, and Pagie then proceeded to strike out the other side on ten pitches. When a teammate chided him about needing ten pitches, Paige remarked "The ump misssed one." Rick Wilber's father was catching in the big leagues back then (for the other St. Louis club), so it's no surprise that the spirit of an elder huzler should be the one to pass on an important lesson about sliders and fastball and things in this tale. It is the top of the ninth, and the Worden Pirates hold a one-run lead. This is along the lines of a miracle. Johnny O., on the bench between innings, reminded the Pirates that they haven't won an opening game since, since, well, he can't remember. Certainly never in the ten years he's been catching. Dan Carlow walks out to the mound, just shaking his head at the thought of it. Base hits, stolen bases, hit-and-runs, sacrifice flies -- the Pirates have somehow managed them all and built up a 4-3 lead. Now all Dan has to do is hang onto it. This is not, of course, an easy thing for a weekend pitcher, who by rights should be home typing up his column for tomorrow's Tribune, not out here pretending he can still pitch, even at this humble level, a semi-pro senior men's league. Dan takes a warm-up pitch, his arm so tired he isn't sure, as he goes into the wind-up, if he can even get the ball over the plate. He lets it go, and sure enough the ball hits in front of the plate and skips by Johnny O., who gets up from his crouch to walk back to the screen and get the ball. Watching him, Dan sees his dad in the stands, up in the top row behind home. Of course it isn't Dad, can't be. It's just an old guy sitting there who looks a bit like him, that same old worn Cardinal cap, the same way he leans forward, elbows on knees, watching the game intently. Dad died last summer, damn it, toward the end of the season. On a Sunday. The memories of that day come to Dan unbidden, like they always do, always there with him, ready to surface at any time. The car, the exhaust, the hose, the tape, the vomit in the lap -- the cessation, the surrender. Dan shakes his head to try and clear the memory of it. He still sees his dad in too many places, thinks of him too often. Frank Carlow was a solid minor leaguer in the Cardinals' chain back in the late nineteen-thirties and pre-war forties, a real prospect. He was called up to the big club in September of '41, was on his way. And then came Pearl Harbor and the war, so Frank's career plans changed and he became a weather observer, flying in bombers over Italy and the Balkans, nearly got killed but got put back together, fell in love with an American nurse and wound up married and back in St. Louis, that shattered left leg ending his playing days but not his love for the game. So he turned to coaching, was good at it, wound up being a career minor league manager, helping the young kids with that dream to make it to the big leagues. Two or three times he was rumored to be in line for a big league managing job, and every now and then he came up to coach for the big club. He earned a reputation as one of the good ones, a laborer in the fields of professional ball. But Frank never won a pennant, not a single one, in Tidewater or Denver or Spokane, or anywhere else -- not a one. And it ate at him, grew and enlarged over the years until it became the major frustration of his life. Until the cancer, that sure changed his perspective. Dan stands on the mound, tired. He looks in toward the dugout and sees Jimmy, his son, in there arranging the bats in perfect order in the dirt, smallest to largest. Next to them, the helmets, set with the bills forward, are just so. Jimmy looks up, sees Dan, waves, yells something at him. Dan smiles. What a kid, what a terrific kid. Dan takes another warm-up. The ball floats lazily in toward the plate, so fat it looks like slow-pitch softball. His arm feels dead. This is the first game of the season and he only planned to go four or five innings; but it turns out the Pirates only have nine players today and he's the only pitcher, so tired or not, he's on the mound. What he needs, he thinks, is one of those mechanical arms the old pitching machines had, the ones where the metal arm just wound up tight on its spring and then let loose, flinging the ball in toward the plate. Two days before, on a sultry Friday evening, Dan took Jimmy with him and drove away from Lakeland, taking the back roads north of I-4 past the strawberry fields and dairies and Florida scrub until he reached the east side of Tampa and the batting cages on Busch Boulevard. It is tacky, touristy Florida there, a world away from the simpleminded complacency of Lakeland. Down the road a half mile is Busch Gardens and a park full of happy Ohioans and Michiganders looping the loop and buying trinkets and monorailing past the animals in their pocket Serengeti. And there, just east of the thirty-nine dollar admission ticket that buys a day full of fun and a tour of the brewery, are the batting cages. In the cages, for fifty cents, a machine pumps out ten fastballs and Dan can get into the groove, hit after hit, letting it all flow together. The zen of the swing. He has found some good, simple truths in those batting cages. These machines are ancient, have been there for years, circling, stopping on their way to receive a ball from the basket and then whipping over the top to deliver the pitch, straight and hard, always at the same prescribed speed. Talk about your pitching mechanics, Dan thinks. There is a primal fulfillment in those cages. No guessing, no waiting for the breaking ball, no doubts about life's little change-ups. Just straight balls, coming at you, and swing. Dan likes the seventy-mile-an-hour machine best. It is fast enough to be a challenge but still hittable for him. The eighty is nearly impossible, and he can't imagine anyone hitting a ninety-mile-an-hour pitch. It is good, as he loosens up to start the final inning, to think of those machines with their mechanical arms that never tire, never ache for the next four or five days. Or never win a game either, he reminds himself. There are pluses to the pain. All it takes is a certain dedication, a certain commitment. The batting cages were fun, Dan and Jimmy spending four or five dollars on the machines and then going out for pizza. Jimmy, especially, had a wonderful time, swinging away at the slowest machine, now and then catching hold of one to rattle it around the enclosure. The kid flat-out loved it. Every time he hit one he did a little victory dance, almost getting plunked once or twice by the next pitch -Dan had to yell at him that the machines weren't going to wait for him to celebrate. Flawed, wonderful Jimmy. When Jimmy was born, twenty years ago, Dan was waiting outside the delivery room, the classic pacing father-to-be, when the doctor came out to "have a word with you about your son." Down's syndrome, the doctor explained. Mentally retarded. "He'll never be normal, Mr. Carlow," the doctor said. "He'll always be slow." The doctor recommended that they put the baby into an institution right away, said that would be best for everyone. But this was Dan's boy, his own first-born son, and so Dan said no, we'll keep him. Sally, in her hospital bed cuddling the baby, said she felt the same way. A couple of years later she changed her mind. There was a lot of shouting, a lot of tears, a boyfriend. Dan got the house, the car, and Jimmy. Sally got her freedom. Dan hears the echoes of those times as he watches the boy: He'll always be slow. And yeah, that is certainly the case, has been for these twenty years. But slow doesn't begin to explain Jimmy, or what he means to Dan. The kid, you see, can see things clearly, see things honestly in this murky, gray old world. Dan loves the boy for that, for his innocence and honesty. He wishes he could find more of that essential goodness in himself, to tell the truth. Just this morning Jimmy proved it again. He left a note for them, for Dan and his girlfriend Michelle. When Dan stumbled, groggy with sleep, into the kitchen and poured himself that first cup of coffee, Michelle was already up, reading the note, crying. Dan wishes he loved Michelle. She is a terrific person, a caring lover, and seems to understand his limitations. He ought to treat her better, be able to offer her more than he does. But marriage is certainly not on his list and doesn't seem to be on hers, either. She has her two past divorces, and he has Jimmy and the vicious scene he and the boy went through with Jimmy's mom when she screamed at the poor kid while Jimmy stood there, silent. She said she couldn't take it anymore, just couldn't damn handle it, and left. Even after all these years, Dan doesn't dare risk that again. Last night, when Michelle made her little announcement, showed why. The two of them were in the kitchen where Dan was rummaging around in a drawer looking for a corkscrew, when Michelle said "Danny?" He didn't like the sound of that, and turned to look at her, saying nothing. "Danny, I have to talk about something. About someone." "Uh-oh," he said, and tried to smile. Damn. They both always knew that something like this might happen, had even talked about it over the years, about how their relationship was really fine, but, well, if the real thing came along for her ... "Danny, I met this guy. He works over at the college, a professor." "And?" "And I like him. He's a good man. Divorced a few years back and looking to settle down. He's a little serious, maybe. But he's stable, and awfully nice." "Awfully nice," Dan said. "Yes," she said, firmly. "He's awfully nice. And he's a Christian. The real thing, born again and everything." "You're joking, Michelle. Really?" She laughed, "Well, yeah, he's a little odd about that, odd about a couple of things, actually." "Odd?" "But, Danny, I really like him. He's good to talk to, he doesn't just talk about sports all the time, he's..." "Ouch," Dan said, and could only smile. "But, yeah, he's a little odd. Like about sex. He really thinks we should wait, see how serious it gets, he says, before getting that involved. I think maybe he's thinking about marriage, and would want to wait for that, even." She shrugged. "It's a religious thing, you know?" "I know," he said, picking up the wine and peeling back the metallic cap before starting in with the corkscrew. "Well, hell, Michelle, I think that's great. I'm happy for you. He's luckier than he knows. He's very, very lucky. You're a wonderful woman." She blushed, walked over to him. "Thank you, Dan. I knew you'd understand." He poured her a glass of the wine. Now what? "Well," he said, "here's to you and your new friend," and he raised his glass to clink it with hers. She sipped, smiled, sipped again. "You know," she said, "this does sort of change the equation of things for us a little." "A little?" All he seemed to be able to do was phrase short questions. Damn. "Yes, Danny. But only a little, really. Look, I'm just starting to get to know this guy. I just wanted you to know that, that's all, really. So there wouldn't be any surprises later, you know?" "Later?" "Oh, Danny. He's a really fine man, but he's so, so, well, cautious all the time, you know what I mean? He almost said "Cautious?" but held off, just looked at her instead. "And I'm not quite ready for nothing but all that caution, Danny. Not quite ready, you understand? I mean, I want to keep dating him, see how it goes. But that doesn't mean..." She walked over to him, leaned up and kissed him. He understood. They walked into the front living room. Michelle went over to the stack of CDs and picked a favorite, clicked it into the machine, turned to look at Dan. He held out his arms so that she would come into them with a smile, and they started dancing to "Avalon," an old Roxy Music song. As they danced Michelle slowly unbuckled his belt, pulled it from his pants, giggled as she threw it onto the couch. Then, slowly, while the song talked about seduction and momentary perfection, she undid his shirt buttons one by one, scratching his chest in between. They made love for hours. Michelle wasn't on the pill, and didn't want to use the diaphragm and messy cream, so it was always up to Dan to hold back, and the lack of climax seemed to keep him going damn near right through the night. And she flowed so well along with him, just languidly, timelessly, rolling and deeply laughing and nibbling here and there and cuddling and cupping and then slowly rolling again. Her skin. Jesus God he liked skin that smooth. And her thighs, her strong, supple thighs: they just did not let go for what seemed like hours -- was hours. And the strange softness of her lips when she was half asleep. He leaned over her, kissed them, and then, finally, fell asleep. Then, in the morning, she was up early, trying to get herself dressed and organized before Jimmy -- a late riser most days -- woke up and came wandering in to check on Dad. Dan, waking up, heard her in the bathroom, and then heard the footsteps heading downstairs, to the kitchen, he guessed, to make some coffee. Downstairs, when he got there, the coffee maker was bubbling away and Michelle sat over by the table, reading that letter. "Look at this," she said, and held up a piece of paper from Dan's computer printer, the perforated holes still attached to it. "For My Dad" it read across the top of the paper. "What is this?" Dan said, and took it from her. "It's from Jimmy. He must have done it last night while we were out. Take a look." Jimmy was prettygood with the computer. Played some of the games, seemed to know his way around in it all right. Dan didn't know his son was writing with it, though. Dan read the sheet, and then just shook his head and smiled. "This probably took him an hour to write. Hell, he's something, isn't he?" Michelle had tears in her eyes. She nodded. "He is that, Danny, he is that. He's really something." Dan put the sheet back on the table. "I'll leave it here for him. You coming to the game this afternoon?" "I don't know yet, Dan. Maybe," Michelle said, pouring a cupful of coffee. "Can I take the coffee with me?" "Sure. Gotta go right now?" "I think so. Yes. I do, I have to go now." She stood, leaned over to kiss him, smiled and left. He was sipping on his coffee, looking over the headlines on the front page of the Tribune, when he heard her car start up. A few minutes later Jimmy came down, rubbing his eyes, grinning, ready for breakfast. Dan gave his son a good-morning hug and got started on the eggs and hash browns. Jimmy, sipping on his own cup of coffee, said "Big day today, Dad, right? New season." "Right, Jimmy. Pirates are going all the way this year. All the way. Championship. Betcha a hundred dollars." "You on, Dad. Hundred dollars," Jimmy said. And then he laughed, getting the joke. The letter went like this: Jimmy Carlow Lakeland Florida This is: My letter to my dad Hello my Dad, I like you. This will be fun for me. I like it typing, and I like writing like you, like my Dad. You are a good man. Your name is Dan Carlow. I am Jimmy. Your best son. Grandpa says hello to you, My dad. I see him sometimes. Grandpa says I be proud of you, and of me, too! I work hard at McDonald's. I clean it the lobby and I make buns and, sometimes, I make it the fries, too. I like it. A lot! You work at it the newspaper. You write three lone, two, three) collums a weak. You are famous and a good pitcher too. I am proud of You, and You are Proud of me, two. I be batboy for Worden Pirates! I keep it the bats just right. And the helmets. This is hard work, and I like it. A lot! My dad is pitcher for Pirates for many years. I be batboy for many years. We are a team. We have fun. We try hard. I keep it my own room in our house. It is clean. I am cooking now too for my dad. Hot dogs and pot pies too. My dad's girl friend is michelle. She is nice girl. I like her. a lot. We go for drives in her fast car on sometimes. She likes to smile. I like her. A lot! This week, on Friday, I visit Group Home. people there say I could live in Group Home. I could to. I would love it there., And be an adult. I love my Dad. (I spell check this like my dad shows me. It works grate!l Jimmy Carlow Lakeland Florida A few weeks ago Dan got a call from the local agency. They had a place lined up where Jimmy could go and live pretty much on his own, a group home they called it. The agency people thought Jimmy could actually handle that, could live in his own little apartment in this special complex, a place where he'd have someone to help out when he needed it -- a "coach" they called it. Otherwise, Jimmy would be expected to make it on his own. Dan has his doubts. Jimmy is such a kid in so many ways. Dan has spent twenty years watching this boy's halting growth, encouraging him, guiding him, protecting him. Dan doesn't know if he is ready to see Jimmy have to face this mean old world on his own. At the batting cages, Jimmy really tagged the machine's last pitch, sending a line drive up the middle and banging it hard off the back of the cage. Jimmy laughed and danced around, yelling about home runs and world series and winning. Dan laughed with him and then, tired of knocking the balls around the screened-in cage, he talked Jimmy into quitting and they headed for CDB's and some pizza. When Dan was a kid his dad took him to those same cages, and they weren't even screened in back in the sixties, they didn't have any limit on how far you could hit the ball. You could watch it soar into the night sky if you really caught hold of one, watch it land and roll out onto the golf driving range that used to be there. The driving range is an apartment complex now, OakHaven Village, one of those stucco-walled complexes that cater to Tampa's wannabes -the ones who still believe in the entrepreneurial dreamland that Florida bills itself as. His dad took him there once a week that one long glorious summer when Danny was ten. The two of them would swing away, twenty pitches for a dime, until they were good and tired. Then came Dairy Queen and root beer floats on the way home. It was always a good time, getting away from Morn and her crazies and the fights she had with Dad and the screaming and even the shattering crash of the emptied glasses. Wonderful times. Poor Dad, putting up with that for all those years before Mom finally left and went West. And now Dan is facing the forty mark and the batting cages are fenced in tight all the way around. And Dad is gone, and Morn is still crazy out in California somewhere, still puttering around with her sculpture and her poetry and drinking her carrot juice in the morning and her wine -"It's just wine, that's all, just a few glasses of wine" -- all night. He wonders when he might hear from her again, get another of those strange, rambling middle-of-the-night phone calls. It's been a long time. It's time to get serious. Dan looks down at the first hitter of the inning, a chubby boy who doesn't have much power but got the bat on the ball last time up. John gives the signal, one finger down toward the dirt, fastball. Dan goes into his wind-up. And it feels good, stride and release, machine-like for the moment, the ball dipping a bit at the end. A nice sinker, strike one as the boy watches it go by. The balls in the batting cages, the ones from those pitching machines, never sink, never tire, never change. Dependable, trustworthy -- as long as the metal arm keeps whipping over the top and then lets it go, strike, strike, strike. Dan lets another one go, a fastball sinker. The chubby kid swings and chops it into the dirt foul, strike two. Dan takes a deep breath, feeling okay for the moment. He glances at the dugout, can see Jimmy in there, sitting over at the end of the bench, having one of those conversations with himself that he's been having lately, chatting up a storm, gesturing, laughing, talking to himself. Dan asked him about it the other day, about who he's talking to. Jimmy said it was Grandpa. Dan smiled, ruffled the boy's hair, gave him a hug. Frank had loved the kid, doted on him, coached him in playing basketball and baseball, tried to help the boy with his pitching, just seeing if he could teach Jimmy to throw a strike, just one, all the way from the mound to home. "That kid tries so damn hard," he told Dan once, shaking his head. "If I'd had a few more like him, trying that hard, I'd have won a dozen goddamn pennants." Dan had laughed. Now, on the mound, Dan remembers how Frank had coached him, too, worked on his fastball, his slider, his straightchange, the one that looked like a fastball but came in so much slower. That was the secret with the straight change, the way it looked like it was going to be one thing but turned out to be something else entirely. It worked because it was different. It always seemed risky to Dan, so fat as it floated up there. But Frank loved it, he always said, because "It's a fooler, that changeup. You use it right, when they don't expect it, and you'll get some strikeouts with it, son. Guaranteed. You just have to know when's the right time for it." On the other hand, Dad hated the sinker, Danny's favorite pitch. He cursed it for its unreliability. "Son," he asked him once after a Pirates' game, "how can you like using any damn pitch that gets better as you get more tired? Hell, you can't trust the damn thing. Sometimes it sinks, sometimes it doesn't. You're lucky the hitters in this league are so terrible." Dan remembers laughing at that. They lost that game by five or six runs, including a couple of sinkers that flattened out and turned into home runs. Oh, well. Hard to argue with the old guy sometimes. Thing is, Dan likes the sinker, maybe because of its unpredictability. It's a little like a knuckle ball in that way. Could be great, could be awful. Like life. He throws another sinker in and the chubby kid goes for it, swinging weakly but topping it so it trickles out toward the mound. Dan comes off the mound, grabs it cleanly with his bare right hand, and turns to throw it to Tommy at first. But his arm, his shoulder, can't handle this new movement, throwing from a different position, and the ball sails high on him, riding over Tommy's outstretched glove and out into the open field past the stands in short right. Stevie, out in right, has to run like the devil to go get it and hold the runner to second. Terrific, thinks Dan. Instead of an easy out I put the tying run in scoring position. Just super. He tries to bear down, wants to concentrate. But the oppressive heat has taken a toll, certainly, and the truth of the matter is he's so tired that he feels sort of disconnected from the game. He walks the next guy on four pitches. Dan stands on the mound, hands on his hips, glove folded back, and tries not to show how tired he is. Damn, any other team in the universe would have a reliever in by now, but this is the Worden Pirates, and there is no reliever, no bench. Just the nine of them today, and none of the others can pitch. Hell. Dan walks back off the mound and tries to gather himself together. Just get the ball over the plate, he says to himself, and hope for the best. Don't worry about the arm, don't think about it. Just no more walks, at least be sure of that. No more walks, nothing for free. He gets back onto the mound, kicks a little dirt into the hole in front of the rubber so he'll have a better footing, and then goes into the stretch. Jesus, his arm feels dead. He lets the pitch go, a sinker right down the middle. Dan doesn't have much stuff on the ball, he is far too tired for that and the ball stays up flat and fat, never does sink. But the hitter, expecting a breaking ball, gets caught with the bat on his shoulder and watches the fat thing float by for strike one. "Got away with that one, Danny. Got lucky," says a voice from behind the mound. Dan, taking the throw back from Johnny O., turns to see who said it but there is no one there. Weird. "Look, you don't have enough stuff to make that sinker work anymore, Danny, and you know it." Damn. Sounds like Dad, that raspy voice that almost whispered toward the end. "Yeah, Danny, it's me, sure enough," says the voice. By god, it is his dad. What the hell? There is a chuckle. "I don't know. Beats me, too, son. But here I am." Dan comes off the mound, confused, dizzy with the heat and this hallucination. A stroke? A fainting spell? Heat prostration? "Nah, son, none of that," his dad says. "Just old Frank Carlow, back for a little game of ball with his son Danny, that's all. It's just me." "Dad?" "Oh, Christ, kid, don't say anything out loud like that. They'll think you're nuts," his dad says. "Look, just get back up there, get into the stretch, and let's get you out of this inning, okay? I'll explain everything later." "Dad?" he says again. "What the hell?" But the voice, the hallucination or whatever it is, is right. Best to just ignore it and get back on the mound. He could go see Doctor Pat tomorrow, get a check-up, see if it is some sort of heat thing. Pat is a friend, and will be honest with him. Christ. Voices. Just what he needs. Dan goes into the stretch, takes a look at the runners at second and first, and then peers in for the sign from Johnny O. One finger stabs down at the dirt. Another fastball sinker. "Won't work," his dad's voice says. "Shake it off, son. I'd try a slider, and keep it away from him. He'll chase it." Oh, god. Dan backs off the rubber, stands still for a moment, tries to clear his head. He wipes his forehead with his sleeve, the sweat pouring off him, puts his cap back on. He looks in to see John, still calling for that sinker. Dan says no to that with a slight shake of the head. Johnny tries again, two fingers, a curve. Dan shakes that off, too. Johnny stands, calls time, and trots out to the mound. "What's the matter?" "What's the matter?" Dan repeats. "Jesus, Johnny, I'm next to dead out here and you're calling for fastballs. I just don't have them in me." "You want to bring Ricky in from right to pitch? He doesn't have much, but he can get it over." Dan waves his glove at Johnny. "No, no. I'll manage, but let's try the slider on this guy. I think he might go for one low and away. All right?" "Sure. No problem," Johnny says, and clanks back down to the plate, crouches behind it. Dan goes into the stretch, takes a look at the two runners, and comes in with the slider. It's the first one he's thrown in a while, and, surprisingly, it feels good, is, in fact, damn near perfect, starting off waist high and down the middle and then breaking away, out of the strike zone wide and low. And the batter goes for it, starting his swing, realizing his mistake and trying to stop it, but too late. Strike two. "I'll be damned," Dan says aloud, "it worked. Hell, let's go for it one more time, okay?" "No," says Dad's voice. "I got a better idea. This kid'll be protecting the plate now. With two strikes on him he'll be looking for that slider or your fastball. Let's try the straight change." Dan just shakes his head. Of course, the change-up. But what the hell, at least it's easy to throw. He steps back onto the mound, shakes off the signs from John until he gets the change, and lets it go. The kid is way early on it, almost falling over trying to stop his swing, missing badly. Strike three. One out. His dad's voice sounds pleased. "I knew it," he says, as the ball comes back to Dan. Dan steps back down off the mound, tucks his glove under his arm and rubs the ball for a minute, stalling for a little rest time and hoping to get through whatever it is that brought on this damn voice. "It's not the heat, Danny. Honest. It's me. Man, it's good to be here, good to talk to you. Jimmy's a great kid, but it's hard to hold a real conversation with him, you know." And damned if Dan can't almost see the old man standing there behind the mound -- that battered old red Cardinal cap perched on his head, that crooked smile that rose more on the left side of his face, that potbelly gut. No one else seems to notice, and the old man is barely there, even for Dan. It might be, Dan thinks, just a worsening of the heat prostration or something. Dan looks to the stands to see if the guy he saw before is still there. The guy is gone. The apparition shakes its head, says, "Face it, Danny. It's me, and you know it. Didn't Jimmy tell you about this? He said he would. Hell, I think that kid's the reason I'm back, Danny. He told me you guys needed me out here. So, let's get this next guy, all right?" And they do, on four pitches, a fastball inside, two sliders low and away, and another change-up. Strikeout. There is an actual burst of applause from the stands, some encouraging yells. The locals aren't used to seeing this sort of thing, but they sure do like it. "You know," says his dad, firming up a little with each pitch, getting clearer and clearer for Dan, "this is kind of fun, Danny. Maybe this is why I came back, to do a little coaching." "I don't think so, Dad. I don't think you're back at all. But if you are, it isn't to tell me what kind of pitch to throw." Fletch comes trotting in from third base, concerned perhaps about his pitcher talking to himself. "Jesus, it's hot," he says, wiping the sweat from his face. "You okay, Dan?" Dan just smiles. "Fine, Fletch. Just fine. Let's end this thing, okay?" And three pitches later, he does, following Dad's instructions he gets the next hitter to hit a one-hopper to Fletch, who steps on the bag at third to end the game. Pirates win, 4-3. Amazing. Dan walks slowly off the mound. He can hardly lift his arm to grasp Johnny O.'s hand as his catcher trots out to congratulate him, but it's a win, by god. For the Pirates. There is a little knot of happy players who walk in together to the bench. None of them seem to notice the wispy image of his Dad still standing out on the mound, looking happily in toward the plate. Dan, looking back once or twice, doesn't know quite whether to laugh or cry. Has this been real somehow? Will a cold cup of water make it all fade away? He doesn't know, but Frank sure looks happy out there. Jimmy runs up to give his dad a hug. "You a winner, my dad. Nice job. Great pitching. I be very proud of you." "Thanks, Jimbo," Dan says, and concentrates to bring his arm up, put it around the boy as they walk in toward the bench and some water. "We finally won one, didn't we?" "And Dad," says Jimmy, "I not tell anyone about Grandpa, right? He told me to keep it a secret, except to tell you." "What?" Jimmy leans over to speak conspiratorially. "Grandpa says we keep this all a secret, right? Tell no one." Dan just smiles. Right. Tell no one. He gives the boy a hug. "That's right, Jimmy. It's a secret, it's our little secret, okay?" "Okay, my dad. It is a secret." Dan sits on the bench, reaches over with his left hand to push in the button on the cooler to get some cold water, and drinks a cupful down in gulps. "You won?" He turns. It's Michelle, smiling. "I thought I'd stop by and commiserate after your weekly loss, maybe take you and Jimmy out for a bite to eat," she says. "And now I find out that you won. How in God's name did that happen? "She looks terrific. She looks wonderful. Dan stands, laughing. "Beats me," he says. "But eating sounds good, a little victory burger maybe, okay?" And the three of them walk over to Michelle's Pathfinder, climb into it. Dan is glad that she's driving. Maybe, by the time they've eaten and she's brought them back here to pick up his car, his tired old arm will work well enough that he'll be able to shift gears and steer with it. Maybe. She's backing out of her space when Jimmy, in the back, rolls down his window and leans out to wave back toward the diamond. "What's he doing.?" Michelle asks. Dan looks. There's nothing out there that he can see. But Jimmy, he thinks, is the one who sees things clearly. "It is nothing, 'Shelley," Jimmy says. "Just nothing at all." And then he leans over the back of the seat and whispers into his father's ear, "Grandpa says bye, my dad. We see him next week. We win them all this year, he says. We win the pennant." And Michelle looks over at them with a quizzical smile, wondering what's going on. "Later," Dan tells her, and chuckles. "I'll try and explain it all to you later." "Explain about what?" Good question. "About the game. About winning. About Jimmy," he says. And then he looks at her. She seems different somehow today. He can't quite put his finger on it, but she's, she's ... He gives up, smiles, and adds, "And mostly, I guess, about straight changes."

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