"How are you coming with your reports?"
"I've got the pitcher's all wrapped up and I'll have the outfielder's done tomorrow."
"Give me your bottom-line impression, Cory. What's your gut telling you?"
Cory Landrieu had been scouting minor-league players for twelve years which was one year short of how long it had been since he'd played in the big leagues. He tried various things after he retired or rather, was let go, at the age of 28. It had taken him until he was 25 to get called up and his rather checkered career lasted all of three years, but he'd still made a lot of money and had been savvy enough to put most of it away. Nearly every other guy he knew in his position was broke if not dead broke. Hell, even some of the better players spent every dollar they earned. He'd watched guys get million-dollar signing bonuses and seven-figure contracts for two or three years and spend it faster than it came in and leave with nothing on the way out.
Not Cory. He had close to a million dollars invested and owned his own home and a decent car. His alimony payments were behind leaving with no bills other than child support, money he was happy to spend on his 12-year old daughter, Amanda. He was otherwise able to what he loved to do. Baseball.
He'd tried running a restaurant like a lot of other former players, but he'd hated every minute of it. An old friend in the Seattle Mariners looked him up and offered him a job scouting college and minor leaguers and he'd initially turned it down because it was mostly endless traveling, paperwork and filing reports. But in the final analysis, Cory concluded it was still baseball and even if he couldn't play the game an longer, he could still be around it and that was enough. He was gone a lot, he ate and slept in a ton of small diners and motels in podunk towns, but he didn't mind too much because he was doing something he truly enjoyed. It also helped that he was damn good at it.
"Don't waste your time on the pitcher, but sign the outfielder," he said in answer to the question. "And do it soon. He's good, Tom. He's one of the best I've seen in the last two years. If we don't sign him fast, someone else will."
The outfielder was Desean Washington, a tall, lanky black kid with a strong arm, a lot of speed, and a natural hitter. He'd never hit a lot of home runs, but he had the potential to bat .300, steal a lot of bases, and score a bunch of runs. He could more than hold his own defensively, but he'd need some time in the minors to polish and hone his skills. The bottom line was this kid had a sky's-the-limit future ahead of him and Landrieu couldn't recommend him strongly enough.
Cory'd already spoken to him several times and as a 22-year college senior, he didn't need parental permission to do anything. But this kid was a clean cut, straight arrow who still lived at home with his mother. That was probably the main reason he'd chosen to play for the University of Washington Huskies, a school not know for its baseball teams. It had a very strong football program and did okay on the basketball court, but it was no Arizona State when it came to the Great American Pastime. The only reason he'd even agreed to scout this kid was that it allowed him to spend an extra week at home and see Amanda. But the first time he saw him, he thanked his lucky stars he'd agreed to do so.
Desean was eager to turn pro, but said he wouldn't sign anything without his mother's approval, and Cory was meeting with them both the following afternoon. Landrieu found himself not only enjoying the kid's talents on the field, but his company off the field as they went for dinner or did other things together to find out what kind of character he had. To his great delight, Desean had a lot of it and hanging out with him was more fun than duty.
With any luck, his mother would agree to the terms the team would offer once his report was final. That meant that young Mr. Washington would become an instant millionaire thanks to the signing bonus alone. Okay, taxes would take about 40% of it, but for a kid without a pot to piss in, that wasn't a bad start. A couple of years in the minor leagues making $25,000 a year paying his dues could well lead to a call-up to the bigs where he'd be making real money where the minimum salary was $500,000 a year.
He sent his report as an attachment to an email around 10pm and by 8am he had the approval to make the offer he'd expected. He could get a binding electronic signature as a temporary authorization before the lawyers swooped in and made it official within 72 hours.
He'd had no trouble finding the address in one of Seattle's poorest neighborhoods the first time he'd stopped by to pick up Desean. His mother worked—a lot—and Landrieu had yet to meet her. He located the tiny, dilapidated, two-bedroom house and parked the car out front as he always did. He walked up the short walkway which led to the front door and as he went to knock, it opened for him. "Mr. Landrieu! Please come in. My momma's anxious to meet you."
He led Cory inside and asked him to have a seat. He did so on a very old sofa covered with a blanket. He moved around twice trying to find a spot that didn't have an exposed spring before settling in.
"My apologies, Mr. Landrieu. It's on my very long list of things to take care of."
Hearing a female voice, Landrieu stood without looking. He also smiled and extended his hand before making eye contact. When his eyes met hers he was unprepared for what he saw and compared to what he expected, it caught him completely by surprise.
"I'm Talisha Washington. It's a pleasure to meet. Won't you please sit down?" she suggested. She smiled as she warned him, "Just be careful."
Her smile was amazing. It was bright and genuine. Perfect white teeth framed by soft, full lips. Her face was nothing short of beautiful and he quickly saw that everything below the neck matched the beauty above it. Landrieu had been in the homes of more poor people than he could count and a substantial percentage of them happened to be black. He'd talked to scores of mothers over the years in homes just like this one all over the country and almost without exception, whether they were black, white, or brown, they fit a kind of profile—not in any kind of negative or stereotypical way. It was just that they tended to be average looking to well...something less...with many of them also being um...rather large. On rare occasions he'd met a mom here or there who was attractive and a time or two he'd one who was even pretty. He'd just never before run into one who was...beautiful.
And although it didn't make a bit of difference to him, the voice he heard also didn't match his expectations. He didn't follow or even care about politics, but he couldn't help but think of something the current vice president once said about the current president: "Here's a guy who speaks with no Negro dialect unless he wants to." To say he was surprised that guy was the one selected to be his running mate was an understatement in the extreme. Landrieu laughed to himself as he thought about the old saying: Politics makes for strange bedfellows. But as crass or careless as the vice-president's comments had been, they most definitely applied in this case.
He turned his attention back to this unbelievably attractive woman in front of him as he tried to square the circle by figuring out how a woman so good looking could be living in this kind of quasi-poverty. How was it she hadn't had a modeling career or become a professional in medicine, law, or some other discipline? She could have certainly married into money had she so desired because it was a fact that very attractive would could attract wealthy men. He wasn't implying Talisha, or any woman for that matter, should do such a thing, only that it was very possible to do so. Therefore, the enigma became even more intriguing as he fought to make sense of something that seemed so out of place to him.
"Mr. Landrieu?" she said in a way that let him know she'd said something he hadn't heard.
"Ma'am?" he said.
"Would you like some tea? I can have a cup ready in five minutes."
"Um, well, if you're having some, then sure. I'd like that. But please don't bother for my sake."
"I'll be right back. You two go ahead and talk while I put the water on."
He watched her walk away and couldn't help but notice she was wearing what was likely the nicest dress she had. It was made of cotton and had a kind purple floral design to it. She wore an older matching cardigan sweater over it along with a simple gold necklace and gold studs which glittered against her flawless, milk-chocolate complexion.
"Sir?" he heard in the distance.
"Sorry? What was that?" he said turning toward Desean.
"I told you my momma's real pretty, didn't I," he said more as a statement than a question.
"Um, yes, you did tell. I just hadn't noticed," he said not wanting to admit he was having trouble focusing let alone that something was causing a stir in a place that usually only happened in a bar on a weekend night. Landrieu had no problem finding 'dates' or whatever one cared to call taking one attractive, nameless girl after the other back to a nameless motel trying to fill the void left by the painful divorce six years earlier.
"Uh-huh. I can see you not noticing," Desean said with a smile. "It's cool. Everybody says my momma is fine and even though she's my momma, I can't argue with that. She is a beautiful woman."
"I heard that, Desean!" she said from the kitchen. "There's no need to butter me up, baby. You know I love you more than anything."