"It's only for a couple days, maybe a week if we can all get along. My grandparents are afraid of dying soon so they want to get everyone together."
"Oh," Brad nodded, tossing the baseball back to Tommy on the mound, "Your family doesn't get along?"
"Nah," Tommy found a grip on the ball, his index and middle finger holding fast across the seams while his pinky and ring finger curled up out of the way. "My mother's side is far too dysfunctional. Three daughters and seven marriages...you do the math."
But before Brad could do the math, Tommy was into his windup and stride, his gun of an arm launching the five ounce piece of hide in a blur of kinetic energy. Brad didn't even have time to gulp as the ball rocketed in at him, aimed dead red at his unprotected chest. In his squat he squared himself away and prepared for the inevitable slice to the left he knew the ball had to take. It was the pitch Tommy had chosen, he could tell by the subtle tip of the elbow and the blinding spin of the balls red laced seems.
And just like that, within the time it took to position his glove, the ball hit home with a hard thud.
"Seven marriages, really?" Brad grinned, tossing the ball in an easy arc back to his friend, "That is a fucked up family."
"Yeah," Tommy shrugged, taking a gulp from the Gatorade bottle beside the rubber. It was sweltering out, even for late august, and on the diamond, without a stand of shade or the rustle of a breeze, Tommy Perezzi was sweating in the most uncomfortable places. The band of his cap was slick with sweat, so was the arm band he had slipped over his powerful forearm.
"You're not giving up are you?" Brad smiled from behind the plate, his bright smile so painfully visible in relationship to his dark skin. Especially with the sun at it's fiercest apex.
Tommy responded with another slider, though this one slipped to far off the plate and would have passed as a ball. He bit his lip and waited for the throw back. The two had been out here for just under two hours, tossing the ball and talking just as they had done for years. Tommy on the mound and Brad behind the plate. Tradition. That was how baseball was played.
They had though to avoid the day's heat by starting early in the day, but by eleven o'clock it was already climbing past twenty eight degrees.
"At least the reunions at a lake," Tommy said, "I don't like this fucking heat."
"I love it," Brad said, "A good sweat is the best thing for you the day before a game."
"If you love the heat so much, why aren't you wearing your gear?"
"What, you think your pitches will hurt me?" Brad taunted, "Our relief pitchers have more punch than you."
"Fuck off," Tommy said as he speared the next pitch uncomfortably close to Brad's knees. Brad's coordination was too great however and he snatched the bone crushing object well ahead of his crouch.
He tossed the ball back and called for another. This went on for minutes, until both the athletes bottles were empty of hydration Brads knees were stiffened up.
"Last one," Tommy grunted, "If you miss this pitch you're buying the beers tonight."
"Fine, but if you go wild you have to take me with you on your vacation. I want to meet your hot cousins."
"Whatever," Tommy rolled his eyes, knowing full well none of his cousins were the slightest lookers. He took his stance and his grip in deep pocket of his mitt, feeling the seams with his nails to find his hold as he gave Brad his feared stare down.
Whenever at the mound Tommy envisioned two things: firstly, his ball always hitting the catchers mitt just before the batters swing, and secondly, those cheesy Mexican standoffs in every western movie ever.
It was in this zone that Tommy forgot about the box scores, the errors, the runs, everything. All the chaos of the game shoved aside like the dirt of a grave under a diggers shovel. It didn't matter if he was in the hole or ahead of the count; all that mattered was the next pitch. And then he was in motion, his long leg curling up, his toe pointed at where the shortstop would have been crouching, his torso twisted up, ready to flex into a powerhouse of strength, the ball held firmly, but loosely away from his palm.
His great stride was deceptive, a trick he put into this particular pitch to con the batter into guessing fastball, the thrust of his thighs only another layer of the deception. The ball came out of his grip high and slow, on a slow spin that changed as the seams caught the wind. The ball was down suddenly and off to the left, than the right, the swoops and dives completely under the butterfly effect. Then it was on the ground behind Brad, having sailed just over his shoulder as such a deceptive arc would allow. The game was over and Tommy had won, even though that pitch would have stuck the batter on the elbow.
"Fucker," Brad cursed, "Where did that come from?"
"If you weren't so short you would have caught that," Tommy smile, unfastening his glove and trotting to the plate, "And you should have known that if I see an opening to get what I want, I'm going to take it."
Brad laughed, "You dirty kid; do you ever play fair?"
"When the ump is watching, sure," Tommy grinned while he stuffed his mitt into his bat bag, "but when nobody is looking..." he let out a whistling breath, "You wouldn't believe what I get away with."
************************************************
"So when are you going to follow me down to Fairfax?"
No response. "Tommy!" She yelled again.
Putting down the half made sandwich she walked to the den where Tommy was sitting in the lounger, a bag of ice taped around right arm. "Jesus Tommy, put a towel around that, it's going to leak over the leather.
"What?" Tommy's head snapped away from the television screen to his mother's worried face. He followed her glare to his arm and nodded.
"Now," his mother said, "Are you coming down tonight with me, or in the morning?"
"In the morning, I have to meet the team at the Den to wish them luck for tomorrow."
Arlene, for all her college education and educational degrees, could not figure out why her son always wanted to hang out with that baseball team of his. It was not as if he played with them anymore, it had been a clause in his scholarship draft.
"I know," Tommy admitted, seeing his mothers' expression, "I just want to look after my roots, plus no one else on your side of the family even likes me."