Wild Pitch

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Wild Pitch Page 3

by Matt Christopher


  “I hope we do better against the Surfs,” said Tip.

  Eddie looked at him. “Why do you have to keep mentioning the Surfs?”

  “We’re playing them next week, that’s why.”

  “We know that. You don’t have to keep reminding us.”

  Tip frowned. “Man, are you touchy. What did you have for lunch? Hot salami?”

  “Don’t you get it?” Puffy cut in. “Monahan plays with the Surfs. And it’s a ninety-nine percent chance that he’ll be pitching.”

  Tip laughed. “I know, I know. The last thing in the world old buddy Eddie wants is to pitch to a girl.” He turned and patted Eddie gingerly on the back. “Well, old buddy, might as well stand up to the situation like a man. When she gets up to the plate just pretend she’s another guy. She’s going to wear a uniform like the rest of her team. If you’re better than she is, you’ll get her out in three pitches. Maybe less. If you aren’t better—”

  Eddie raised a hand. “Just one cotton-pickin’ minute,” he interrupted. “You two twerps don’t seem to understand. She’s a girl. And I don’t think it’s right for a girl to play in a boys’ league. It’s meant for us, don’t you understand? She could be darn good. Heck, my sister Margie could play better baseball than a lot of guys in our league, but does that qualify her to play with us? No!”

  “Like I said,” said Tip calmly, “she’s already on a team. No matter what you say or do you won’t change that.”

  “Right,” agreed Puffy. “But I’m with you, Eddie. I don’t think a girl should play on a boys’ team, either.”

  “What’s your reason?” asked Tip, turning to him. “The same as Eddie’s? Because she’s a girl?”

  Puffy nodded. “And girls get hurt easier. They’re more fragile.”

  “Baloney,” said Tip.

  Eddie stared at him. “I suppose you think it’s okay for a girl to play on a boys’ team?”

  Tip shrugged. “Look, if she’s good, why not? If she gets hurt it’s her own tough luck. She asked for it. She must’ve gotten permission from her parents to play. They must’ve signed for her. Otherwise she wouldn’t be playing.”

  “I still say she’s a girl,” said Eddie, refusing to yield to his friend’s arguments. “And girls shouldn’t —”

  “Let’s knock it off,” Puffy broke in irritably. “There must be something better to talk about than a girl playing on a boys’ baseball team.”

  “What about love?” Tip suggested, smiling.

  “Hey, that’s an idea,” said Puffy. “You suppose she knows anything about that?”

  “Love? Her?” Eddie sneered. “You’ve seen her face. She looks as if she grew up on hay.”

  Puffy and Tip laughed.

  None of them had much to say about anything during the rest of their journey home.

  There were times during the next few days that Eddie wished Tuesday would never come. He was almost one hundred percent certain that he was going to pitch against the Surfs, and a thought that had crossed his mind, one that he had not mentioned to a living soul, was the possibility of Phyllis Monahan’s getting a hit off him — or maybe two. He remembered Puffy’s teasing him, “Afraid that she’d get a hit off of you?” If she was as great a hitter as some of the guys on his team said she was, she might wind up with an extra baser. He didn’t want to think what that would do to his ego.

  Damn! Guys should never be shown up by girls, he thought. Why couldn’t she have found a girls’ baseball team to play on?

  But he knew why, of course. Argus didn’t have a girls’ baseball team. It had girls’ softball teams, but apparently good ol’ Phyl Monahan thought she was too good to play on one of them.

  Tuesday rolled around quicker than he wished, and Eddie learned for certain that a part of his fears was turning out true. He was starting.

  While the Lancers were playing catch near the first-base side of the ball park, the Surfs were taking their batting practice. Eddie tried to pretend he didn’t care who batted, but from the corner of his eye he furtively watched to see when Phyl Monahan would come up to the plate.

  She was the fifth to bat. This might or might not mean she was fifth in the batting lineup. But when Tip laid his mitt against his hip to take time out to watch her bat, Eddie found it was an excellent excuse for him to watch her, too.

  A quick glimpse at the other Lancer players showed that they all were curious about her ability. Did she rate with the rest of her teammates, or didn’t she?

  She let the first pitch go by, hit the next one down to shortstop, the next to center field, and the next two to deep left. The last drive hit the top of the fence, missed clearing it by inches, and bounced back onto the field.

  Eddie turned away, not caring to see how well she could bunt.

  “Hey, you see that?” Tip exclaimed, taking the mitt from his hip and resuming play.

  Eddie grunted, preferring not to pursue the topic any further.

  Tip smiled, as if he understood.

  After the Surfs finished their batting practice, the Lancers took their turn. Lynn drilled a liner that hit the center-field fence, and Dale lambasted one a few feet over it, the only two long drives hit among the Lancers’ thirteen players.

  From the quiet of their dugout the Lancers watched the Surfs work out in field practice, their attention drawn mainly to the kid playing first base. Phyl Monahan.

  “She’s got a mean stretch,” Puffy observed. “Watch her, Rod. Maybe you can learn something.”

  “Bull,” scoffed Rod.

  Monahan reached for a high throw, and pulled it down.

  “See that?” said Lynn. “Half the time her foot’s off the bag.”

  She pegged it back across the diamond.

  “Throws like a girl,” said Paul.

  “She is a girl, dummy,” said Tip. “Or don’t you know the difference?”

  Coach Inger stepped up in front of them in time to hear the exchange of remarks.

  “Okay, cut the sarcasm,” he snapped, and looked at Eddie. “How’s the arm, pal?”

  “Okay.”’

  “Good.” He looked over his shoulder. “They’re coming off. Okay, get out there, and let’s take them.”

  5

  Eddie grooved the first pitch and watched it go for a sharp single over Paul’s head.

  “Not too good, Eddie, boy!” Rod said.

  “Breeze it by ’im, Eddie!” said Larry, stepping up on the grass near the third-base sack.

  Eddie caught the relay from Puffy, who was covering second base, and stepped back on the mound. He waited for the next Surf batter to get into the box, studied him a moment, and nodded his agreement to Tip’s sign.

  He streaked one toward the inside of the plate. The batter started to put his bat out to bunt, then quickly jumped back to avoid being hit.

  “Ball!” shouted the ump.

  “Make it be in there, Eddie!” cried Paul. “Make it be in there!”

  He made it be in there, and this time the batter successfully stuck out his bat for a neat bunt inside the third-base line. Larry came in, pounced on it, and pulled his arm back to throw.

  “Second base!” Eddie yelled.

  On the verge of throwing to first, Larry threw to second instead. Paul, covering the bag, stretched to catch the throw, but the runner beat it by a step.

  “No!” cried the base umpire, giving the safe sign.

  Tip glared at Eddie. “Dummy, why’d you tell him to throw to second? He was too far away from it!”

  Eddie shook his head, aware now he should have kept his mouth shut. “I thought he had time,” he said lamely.

  “Sure you did,” grumbled Tip.

  Eddie read the sarcasm in Tip’s voice and tried to ignore it. Sometimes it wasn’t hard to irk the burly catcher, especially when he felt he was right on an important play.

  Eddie caught the soft throw from Paul, took a look at the men on first and second, and stepped on the mound.

  Tip signaled for a curve and gave him
a target on the inside of the plate. Eddie threw it. The ball headed toward the inside corner and dipped in. The batter swung. Missed.

  “Strike one!” snapped the ump.

  Tip gave him the two-finger sign again. Eddie nodded, stretched, and pitched. The ball headed for the middle of the plate. Just as it dipped toward the outside corner, the batter swung. The fat part of the bat connected with the ball and sent it flying toward short right field.

  Eddie watched it drop on the grass, a sick feeling coming to his stomach. The hit was going to knock in one run at least, he thought.

  Right fielder Tony Netro bolted after it, grabbed it on the second hop, and pegged it home. The runner on second made the turn at third and was a quarter of the way home when Tip caught the ball.

  He probably decided he couldn’t make it, because he hightailed it back, diving under Tip’s throw to third. He was safe.

  Larry carried the ball halfway over to Eddie then tossed it the other half.

  “Watch for a squeeze, Larry,” Eddie cautioned.

  Eddie watched a tall, well-built cleanup hitter come to the plate, and glanced at the batter stepping into the on-deck circle. It was Monahan.

  For a second their eyes met, and he looked away, staring at the grass as he headed back toward the mound. He was sure she recognized him and Tip as the guys who had caused her to lose her balance on her bicycle that day last week.

  Tip called time and trotted in toward him. They met in front of the mound.

  “What do you want to do?” Tip asked.

  Eddie frowned. “What do you mean?”

  “I think he’ll try to squeeze in a run.”

  “Shall I keep them high?”

  “Yeah. But not too high. I don’t want to be jumping for them.”

  Eddie smiled. “You won’t.”

  Tip returned to his position. The ump called time in. Eddie walked onto the mound and set his left foot on the rubber. His first pitch was even with the batter’s face. The batter tried a bunt and ticked it.

  “Strike!” said the ump.

  Eddie placed the next pitch high and inside. The batter swerved to avoid being hit.

  “Ball!” said the ump.

  “In there, Eddie,” Tip encouraged him. “In there, boy.”

  Eddie grooved the next pitch. He hadn’t intended to; it just happened that way.

  The batter bunted. The ball dropped in front of the plate and rolled toward the pitcher’s mound. Eddie sped after it, aware that the runner on third was blazing for home. He reached the ball, scooped it up, and tossed it underhand to Tip.

  “Ouuuut!” yelled the ump as Tip tagged the sliding runner.

  Cheers exploded from the Lancer fans.

  “Nice play, Eddie!”

  “Way to go, Eddie, boy!”

  Tip came toward him, smiling, and tapped the ball into his glove. “Look who’s up.”

  “I know.”

  “Think she’ll bunt?”

  “With one out?” Eddie shrugged.

  He turned and headed back toward the mound.

  “Send it out of the lot, Phyl!” yelled a Surf player from the dugout.

  “Clear the bases, Phyl!” yelled another.

  Eddie took time to size up the situation. There was one out, the bases were loaded, and Phyllis Monahan was up. In a million years he wouldn’t have dreamed he’d be in a position like this. Facing a girl batter upset him enough. To be facing her with the bases loaded multiplied his anxiety tenfold.

  Suppose — just suppose — that she got a lucky hit off him? One, or two, or even three runs could score. What would a freak thing like that do to him? Talk about humiliation!

  “Get ’er out of there, Eddie, boy!” Rod said in a steady chatter from first base. “Get ’er out of there, boy!”

  He stepped on the mound, absently ran his arm across his forehead, and took a quick glance at the sweat he had wiped off. He couldn’t believe it. She was making him sweat.

  I’m going to strike you out, Monahan, he promised silently. I’m going to show you that girls don’t belong on a boys’ team.

  “Put it here, baby!” Tip yelled, tapping the pocket of his mitt with his fist. “Right here, baby!”

  Eddie stretched, and delivered. The ball streaked for the outside corner, missed it by an inch. Monahan let it go.

  “Ball!” said the ump.

  “Make it be in there, Eddie!” said Paul.

  Eddie let go another. This one started to cut the inside corner, and Monahan swung. The sound of bat meeting ball was solid. The ball shot out to left field, a high, arcing drive that looked as if it might go over the fence. The yell that started from the Surfs’ fans began to grow and grow.

  Eddie watched the ball, his breath caught in his throat. The white dot kept curving, kept curving toward the left, and finally struck the fence about five feet left of the foul line.

  “Foul!” yelled the home-plate umpire.

  The fans’ yell changed from one of hope to a groan of disappointment.

  Cries deluged him. “Hey, man! Are you lucky!”

  “She’s got your number, Eddie!”

  “What do you think of that power for a girl, Eddie?”

  He tried to ignore them. It was a lucky hit, he told himself. The pitch was just right for her. Waist high. Inside corner. She’d be a lousy hitter if she hadn’t hit it, foul or not.

  The ump handed Tip a new ball. Tip tossed it to Eddie. Eddie rubbed it around in his hands. He always liked the feel of a new ball. It felt as if it were his own, that he could control its destiny.

  The ump stretched out his arms and held out a finger from each hand to show the crowd the count.

  Tip signaled for a curve. Eddie’s nod was almost imperceptible. He stretched and threw.

  The ball shot toward the inside of the plate, and high. Monahan started to lean into it, pulling her bat back in readiness to swing.

  Suddenly her eyes widened in fear. She started to turn her head, to duck away from the incoming pitch. Eddie froze as he saw the direction the ball was taking. It wasn’t going where he intended it to! It was streaking for her head!

  “Duck!” he shouted. “Duck!”

  She tried, but the throw was too fast for her, too close. The ball struck her in the back of her head. It glanced off her helmet and bounced high into the air, landing near the backstop screen.

  She collapsed in the batter’s box, and didn’t move.

  6

  Eddie stared, mouth open, frozen. He saw Tip standing by the plate, staring at the fallen batter as if he were stricken, too.

  The plate umpire was the first one to reach her. He knelt beside her, clutched her hand, talked to her. He was nervous, worried. The two base umpires were running forward, too.

  Players poured out from both dugouts.

  “Hold it!” Coach Inger commanded his men. “You guys stay here!”

  The Surfs’ coach was running toward his girl star, oblivious to his team’s running close at his heels. Fear and anxiety filled their faces and eyes.

  Eddie heard the word “ambulance,” and saw one of the base umpires heading toward the narrow opening between the backstop screen and the Lancers’ dugout.

  He stood awhile, immobilized, feeling as if he were watching a scene on television.

  He saw Surf players glare accusingly at him.

  “You did it on purpose, Rhodes,” a red-haired kid snapped at him.

  “Yeah,” snarled another, lips drawn up at the corners.

  A kid came running from the third-base bleachers, a tall, big-boned kid with dark hair and wild eyes, fists clenched.

  “You louse!” he shouted at Eddie, ready to swing at him. “You were jealous of her and you hit her! You hit her on purpose!”

  He swung, catching Eddie by surprise, and hit him on the side of the jaw. Eddie saw an explosion of stars and reeled.

  “You crumb!” the kid raved on. “I’ll—”

  “Hey, cut it out!” another voice broke in.
r />   Eddie saw Larry and Puffy grab the big kid from behind. Rod came to help and tried to pin the kid’s arms to his back. The kid was strong, and anger seemed to boost his strength as he pulled himself free from the three boys and started back after Eddie.

  Eddie stood there, his fists clenched and held up now to protect himself.

  “I didn’t!” he cried. “I didn’t do it on purpose! I would never throw at a batter intentionally!”

  The kid swung at him again, and Eddie caught the blow on his arm.

  “You did then, you rat!” the kid yelled. “You did that intentionally!”

  “No! You’ve got to believe me!”

  A cop came bolting toward them. He reached the big kid, grabbed his right arm, and twisted it behind his back.

  “All right, now,” he said in a calm voice. “Settle down.”

  He held the kid till his anger had subsided. Then he slowly took his arms from around him.

  “Take off,” the cop ordered, shoving him away. “Get back in the bleachers. I don’t care what you do, but keep away from him.”

  The kid gave him a mean look and turned again to Eddie.

  “She’s my cousin,” he rasped. “I’m going to see that you don’t get away with it, head buster.”

  The cop grabbed his shoulders. “I said take off, buddy. I don’t want to keep repeating myself. Okay?”

  The kid said nothing. He shrugged his shoulders and started toward the bleachers. Then he changed his mind and headed toward the small group that had assembled near the prostrate girl.

  Her bare head was lying on the dirt.

  “She ought to have something under her head,” Eddie said to the cop.

  The cop looked at the girl. “No one’s supposed to touch her,” he said. “The ambulance will be here in a minute. The medics will handle it. They know what to do.”

  A siren whirred in the distance. In seconds a blue-and-white ambulance swept into the park, lights flashing. The siren quieted down to a dead silence. The lights kept blinking. Two men in white uniforms broke out of the vehicle and rushed to the girl. One took her hand, felt her pulse, pulled back an eyelid and looked at her eye. The other took a look at her, then raced back to the ambulance, and brought out a stretcher. They lifted the girl onto it and put her inside the ambulance. A woman got in with her. Her mother, Eddie figured.

 

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