I had aspirations of being a big league baseball player like so many boys did as we were growing up. I was drafted in the 18th round right out of high school but gambled by entering college and hoped to improve my stock and get drafted in an earlier round after a year or two, which would have meant a larger signing bonus and not quite so many bus rides on dilapidated team buses. But my college freshamn year a high and inside pitch from Randy Jenkins saw to it that would never happen. Once the bone around the eye healed I could see, but my ball reading ability and fearlessness in the batter's box was gone. Friends told me I should have went pro instead of gambling on college, but that experience landed me to where I am today, and if today is a consolation prize, it's a damn good one.
Jade Miller had a similar story. She had hoped to join the 2012 US Olympics Gymnastics squad. Years of training and competing left her body beaten and abused yet still feminine, a thing of beauty and gracefulness to be worshipped. Her downfall was the shoulder injury that left her just below that top tier. She had competed for two years in college and like me, cashed in her chips and decided to move on.
Aspen Jones was a bit of a mystery. She never talked about herself. She had the potential to be pretty, but never attempted to take the steps necessary to get there. She looked every bit the athlete, yet didn't show much interest in sports. The fact her last name was the same last name as the owner of the team caused a lot of whispers, but "Jones" isn't necessarily an uncommon name so the rumors or questions didn't seem to go anywhere.
We were all interns or aummer help in the summer of 2017 for the local Triple A baseball affiliate in Chicago. We had no major league sports of any kind in our city or state, so minor league and college teams took the place as major revenue and entertainment. I grew up as a Chicago Cubs fan, so the prospect of working for their Triple A affiliate to the defending World Series Champion was even more exciting than working with Jade and Aspen...at first.
Jade radiated confidence and beauty. Dark shoulder length hair, skin like toasted caramel, sapphire blue eyes, and a fit body that could cause a traffic jam, it was quickly decided that she would be the public face on social media and tv media during the winter for our upcoming media blitz. She was the face that graced local tv and newspapers while the players were in Arizona for spring training and our roster was not yet determined. She was excellent at it and was very popular, both for her abilities and status as a local athlete celebrity.
Aspen sometimes went with Jade and was pictured with her. Usually her duties required that she would just answer the phones or help with season ticket holders. She was good at whatever she did, but generally seemed to be somewhere else.
I was going to learn statistics and analytics once the season got underway, but my main job up to that point was to help dream up gimmicks and promotions for the upcoming season, find corporate sponsors and other ways to make money, and I was pretty good at it. I quickly started to dream up ideas that would get Jade to have to work with me.
It was late January and after our second full week of work we all decided to go out to the downtown party district, the Court Avenue District where local breweries, bars and restaurants were all within walking distance and the parking garages were connected with them via skywalk. Also, we could get to the minor league hockey game this way and see how those marketers did our jobs.
Callie, or "Mom" as we called her, was one of the permanent fulltime employees and not quite 30. She had already been married to and divorced from a player formerly on the team. She had caught him in the act of "sliding home" with one of the interns a few years ago.
"Adam, what do you think of Aspen?" Callie asked me while we were temporarily sitting alone at the bar
"Quiet. I think she could be cute, but seems to be a loner," I answered truthfully.
"Do you know who her dad is?"
"Mister Jones? The owner?" I asked. It made sense.
"No, her dad died when she was young, but 'Mister Jones' is her dad's uncle and he is very protective of Aspen. He took over when his brother's son died, and 'Mister Jones' never had children of his own. Keep that in mind."
So Aspen's dad died when she was young, and her dad's uncle owned the baseball team we all worked for. So what did that mean?
"Does...Aspen...like me? Is that why...? I asked. I wasn't sure why Callie was telling me this.
"Maybe a little. But I think Aspen is more interested in Jade than she is of you," Callie said. "But Mr. Jones has said how impressed he is of you and has been overheard telling Aspen you would be a wonderful suitor for her."
"Suitor," I chuckled. What an old fashioned word. Aspen, if she was interested in men, or me, would be nice to be with, but then there was Jade. My thoughts began to wander back to Jade, and her beauty, and her spitfire personality...
"I know. You all like Jade and don't let it interfere with your work. That's free advice from 'Mom', but don't make Mister Jones upset because you slighted his precious Aspen either. Think with your brain," as she pointed at my skull, "and not your head," as she pointed at my lap. Then she stood up, drained her fruity drink and walked away. Man, her husband had been in idiot unless the intern had been someone like Jade. No, he had been and idiot, pure and simple.
But why did Callie tell me this? Was Aspen into Jade? Who was Jade into? Who was Callie...
It didn't matter. If I wanted to be involved in baseball I needed to use my brain and not my dick. Aspen, Jade or Callie would have to all remain the thoughts of fantasy...
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I worked a lot with Callie early on and she directed me onto Mr. Jones' radar. I really thought Callie was interested in me despite our 6 or 7 year age difference, and as time went on I thought more and more about it. Aspen started to come out of her shell and Jade and I were able to include her in our leisure activities, which mostly meant going to hockey or basketball or listening to local bands play. The three of us were starting to get pretty close by the time April and the start of the season rolled around.
Roles and jobs didn't change, but new ones were added once we started league play and having home games to host, market and plan for. Jade was still the public face and had a fan-initiated Facebook page devoted to her. She was the one who asked fans trivia questions sponsored by our partners. Even though she usually didn't sell 50/50 raffle tickets, she was the one who drew the winning ticket. If it meant public interaction on a personal level, we sent Jade out. And she always meant success.
Aspen sold tickets along with 4 or 5 others, but she preferred being in the mascot uniform. Sometimes she would fill in as the "ball girl" and run baseballs out to the umpire. But mostly she tried to remain in the shadows. Even though I developed a bond with her, I could never quite break through. I wanted to crack that shell, but she still hadn't opened up.
But the bond I developed with Jade was getting stronger. We spent more and more time together and became solid friends. I would dream up promotions, games, gimmicks or silly shit, and Jade would always pull it off. But whatever promotion we were doing or assignments that needed filled, I tried to keep Jade away from the players. I didn't want her going the same route as the intern that broke up Callie'e marriage...
Late in April we had a noon game on Thursday followed by a night game in Omaha on Friday. We- Jade, Aspen, another male intern and I were going to get to go for two nights then come back home while the team moved on to another 2 cities. I was going to bunk up with the other guy and Aspen and Jade would share a hotel room.
And as luck would have it, the other male intern was hit by a car as he jaywalked. He would be fine in a few days, but he would not make this trip. So I got a hotel room alone.
"Adam, what room do you have?" Jade asked me.