The sun is lowering over the trees on the horizon, and the sky is lit orange. The world is filled with light. The birds are chattering.
Baseball season is almost here. Hallelujah.
I am catching a game between two Little League teams. It’s an unofficial matchup. This is pre-spring training in a small town, where baseball is still something folks get excited about.
The kids are young, and still unclear on the rules of the game, but they’re trying.
A child hits a ground ball.
“RUN!” the parents in the bleachers cheer. The kid drops the bat. He sprints straight toward the pitcher, runs over the mound, leaps over second base, and keeps going until he collides with the centerfielder. And I love it.
Major League spring training starts today, and I can hardly stand myself. I’ve been counting down the days.
When I was a boy, my father and I listened to ball games on his Philco radio, or watched them on television. Almost every
night of the summer, we kept a scorecard placed beside an AM speaker, and a bag of parched peanuts.
When we weren’t following baseball, we were playing catch. When we weren’t doing that, we were at Little League games, like this one. When we weren’t doing that, we were in church.
Of course, my childhood baseball career was cut short. My father died in a terrible way. It was the kind of death that makes everyone in a small town gasp when they read it in the papers.
It was though someone had erased the sun.
And something else bad happened on the same day of his passing. And I mean the ACTUAL DAY of his death.
It was an announcement on the national news. The commissioner of Major League Baseball stood at a podium and proclaimed that there would be no World Series that…