When the weather is grey
and cold and it looks as if the sun, the long-forgotten sun, will perhaps never
rise again, whenever it is, like Ishmael said so long ago, a dark and drizzly
November in my soul, I think back, almost 41-years-ago to the day, to my last
games as a boy, in the small industrial city of Saltillo, Mexico, when I played
for the Seraperos, the worst team in the Mexican Baseball League.
The Chrysler plant had
opened in Saltillo the winter before, and now, the once-verdant hills that
ringed the ancient city—a city older than the oldest city in the United States,
a city older than New York, or Boston, or Philadelphia, a city older than the
Spaniard’s St. Augustine—now the city was ringed in soot and monoxide and the
stinging burn of a million cars spewing leaded exhaust.
The season was nearly
over. We had played our games and now the season was nearly over.
Most of my teammates
would be returning to their full-time homes, where they’d find jobs selling
cheap burial insurance or work as bouncers in bars. Or maybe they’d just run
around their hometowns wearing an old sleeveless tee-shirt chasing all-day
chickens out of their scrubby front yards and chasing all night senoritas with
deep eyes and sultry laughs.
I alone would be headed
to El Norte, to New York, where I would matriculate, a year after my
high-school classmates, into college. I would be leaving behind my first and
second loves: Karmen Rodriguez, a ticket-taker for the Seraperos who had moved
in with me when I moved in with Hector and Teresa Quesadilla. And my second
love, baseball.
This was it for me and
baseball. After playing the game my whole life, I was done with the sport. Done
with the aches and the pains, and the monotony, and mostly done with the empty
pointlessness of being almost a man and playing a boy’s game.
I was out in the yard
with a pickaxe. There was the stump of an old tree that Hector and I spent the
summer trying to remove. I banged at the base of the wood and dug deeper into
the concrete hard dirt, chipping rocks and rock-hard roots along the way.
Covered with sweat and soot, I lacked a bowler hat, or I would have looked like
Amos and Andy in blackface.
“Jorge,” it was Teresa.
I ignored her. I wanted
to get that stump out and was enjoying hitting the hard ground with force and
aggression.
“Jorge, some lemonade
you will now drink.”
She brought a frosted
glass out to the little patio where we used to sit when the smoke from the
factory wasn’t too bad.
“You drink.”
“I want that stump. That
stump is mine,” I swigged.
I went back to the
pickaxe and battled. I would bang and bang and bang, then shove at the stump
like a football lineman against a foe.
Hector had wound a chain
around the stump and fastened the other end to his green Datsun station wagon.
I got into the car and
pulled at the stump.
It gave.
I went back to it with
my pickaxe and banged some more.
Karmen came home. She
was wearing a red t-shirt of mine as a long smock and a pair of white shorts
beneath. She turned a hose on in the back and sprayed me from a distance until
I stopped.
We kissed hello.
“I have made progress,”
I said in Spanish.
“Yes,” she said in
English.
“Hoy es el dia.”
“Yes,” she said in
English.
I banged and dug and
crowbarred for another hour. I was once again covered in sweat and soot and dessicated
dirt that once passed for soil. I pushed at the stump. It was loose.
I ran back to Hector’s
Datsun and pulled with the force of its 80-horsepower four-cylinder.
The stump pulled against
the automobile but finally time and gravity lost to fuel and engine.
It was out of the hole.
I shortened the chain
and dragged the stump out of Hector and Teresa’s backyard and to a vacant lot
across the street from their home where some kids had cut a gaping hole in the
chain link. I shoved it in there and drove the Datsun back into its place in
the driveway.
I was done.
I knew it was time for
me.
As it had been time for the tree.
As it had been time for the tree.
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