“He’s
the most intimidating pitcher in the history of baseball.”
“Because
of the beard?”
“Well,
that helps. Would you want to go against this guy?”
“I
don’t know if I’d give a shit about him as much as a dude who
puts people in the hospital or once exploded birds in mid-air.”
“Imagine
that, but add a big, gnarly beard opposed to a sick mullet.”
“That
ruins the whole argument. Sasquatch here doesn’t blow up birds.
Dude doesn’t throw a consistent hundred-mile fast ball.”
“But
if he did.”
“You
already said he was the
most intimidating.
You’re backtracking.”
The
buttons strained on Jefferson’s Ken Griffey, Jr. jersey. It was one
of the originals, he would say, from the nineties. Not original like
Griffey wore it, but original as in an MLB authentic fan jersey. This
was before Griffey was a greedy prick who only played for money. Back
when the Mariners were a team full of players who did it for the love
of the game.
“I’m
just saying I wouldn’t want to bat against him.”
“You
wouldn’t bat against anyone in the majors. Probably not even in the
minors,” Jefferson laughed a brittle few shots of air.
“Like
you would,” Preston sank back against the plaid love seat. The
fabric used to be tight and perky, but years of use had worn it down.
Jefferson knew he needed to go and find a replacement, but couldn’t
find the motivation. Preston’s extra weight pushed cat hair into
the air, the floating particles catching the solitary source of light
from the TV.
“Not
only would I, but I could.”
“Bullshit.”
“Seriously.
Stick me up against any of these guys and watch it happen,” he
said. “Wham-O,” the O
was
hardly audible. He made the pantomime of swinging a bat. The way he
held his hand showed Preston that his friend imagined a wood bat,
just like the pros. Babe Ruth would have held a bat like the one
Jefferson put into his hands. The fabric clung tight against his ever
expanding stomach. He’d been eating worse in the last few months,
having to go to the store every few weeks to upgrade his waist size.
Even the ring on his left hand felt tight.
“Looks
more like you striking out, you son-of-a-bitch.”
They
turned their attention back to the game. 3-2,
two out, bottom of the ninth. The
pitch looked high and tight, but the ump called it. Game over.
“Well.
Crap.”
“Maybe
they’ll play better on Wednesday,” Preston stood up, shaking his
head and patting the stray hairs off his jacket.
Jefferson
stayed seated in his recliner, staring at the TV, twirling the golden
band on his finger.
“Maybe,”
he said.
“I’m
off. See you then?”
“Yeah,
yeah,” Jefferson sighed. “See you Wednesday.”
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