Read Waiting for Teddy Williams Online
Authors: Howard Frank Mosher
Junior's father had been a worthy adversary and sometime friend to Spence. Often, after an exciting win, Spence and the macaw had joined the old owner in his office where, with their good friend Jack Daniel, they would visit and reminisce. The old man would shed real tears and say baseball wasn't what it used to be and get so drunk Spence would have to drive him home to Revere. One night, as Maynard Senior staggered through the door, he out and peed all over the boy's mama's twelve-thousand-dollar Turkish living room carpet, while the mama shrieked steadily and Spence and the child lummox looked on.
“Looky here, Junior,” Spence began.
The lummox let out a great sigh. “I am growing
so
weary of requesting that you not call me by that detestable cognomen.”
“Look, Maynard,” Spence said, though that didn't sound right, either, “last night we lost another pitcher for the season. Torn rotator cuff and that's all she wrote. I'm down to three starters, counting the Alien. What I need here, I need me two, three more arms, we're going to make a run at the division, much less do anything in post-season.”
“What earthly reason is there to suppose that even with thirty more arms, a ragtag assortment of has-beens, never-was's and never-will-be's like your so-called team could possibly âdo anything in post-season'?”
“Well,” Spence said, “the boys are on a roll, see? Say we take the pennant again. Say we take the Serious. Why, then you wouldn't need to sell the team. Plus you'd get the credit for bringing the championship to Boston. The thing is, we need to move right now, before the no-trade deadline. After that we can't bring no more new players on board.”
The lummox put his fingers together, making his little church steeple. “I am well aware of when we cannot sign additional players. Therefore I will give you thirty thousand dollars to use as you see fit. You may buy one thirty-thousand-dollar arm or three ten-thousand-dollar arms. The cash is yours to do with as you wish. A most handsome offer, I should say.”
Spence stared at him, unable to formulate an appropriate reply. The lummox stood up and walked over to the sheet draped over the weight machine or whatever it was. Whipping it off with a flourish, he said, “Don't you think I've just made Mr. Spencer a handsome offer, pater?”
Before Spence's astonished eyes stood the stuffed figureâhe supposed it must be stuffedâof Maynard E. Flynn Senior himself. He was wearing a three-piece suit and his Red Sox cap, and his recriminating index finger was thrust out at Spence as it had been a thousand times when the old man was alive. Spence's first clear thought was that the taxidermist had done a terrible job. The old man's nose overhung his lower face by three or four inches, and the eyes were as yellow and feral as those of a caged leopard.
“Wax,” the lummox said. “For my museum.”
Spence felt a tiny wave of relief. Wax was better than stuffed.
“Oh, there'll be one of you, too,” the lummox said. “Dancing the hornpipe, or something along those lines.”
Spence stared at the lummox. Then Maynard had another inspiration. He reached for the phone on his desk. “Get me my attorney,” he told his receptionist.
With the famous Flynn sneer playing over his lips, he said, “I'm going to make you a sporting proposition, Mr. Spencer. If you can win the World Series this year, I'll sell the team to the local group. Otherwise, the whole operation, you and your overpriced contract included, will be heading west.”
“If I win the Series you'll keep the team in Boston?”
“That's what I said. We'll finalize it with my solicitor
and
we'll make it public. Give those lowly journalists something to write about.”
The lummox put down his flexer and placed the tips of his fingers together. “Here's the church,” he said. “Here's the steeple. Here's Fenway.” He opened up his locked fingers to show nothing but his palms. “Where are all the Faithful?”
So when Spence took three quick steps toward him, thrust out his hand, and said, “You got a deal, Maynard,” the lummox was almost too surprised to knuckle-punch him on the arm, though not quite.
R
ECENTLY LOUISIANNE
had been running with E.A. before his daily workouts with Stan. One morning, just back from a five-mile circuit to Kingdom Landing, they sat on the Colonel's pedestal on the village green, watching the sun come up over Allen Mountain, lighting up the Green Monster atop the baseball bat factory where Moonface was posting last night's Sox score. Boston had been in Montreal, looking for a sweep of a three-game series with the Expos in the last interleague contest of the season.
Louisianne wore bright red running shoes and red shorts with a matching halter top, her long, dark brown hair tied back with a red ribbon. As they waited for the score to go up, E.A. told her about the
WYSOTT
Allens' longtime feud with Devil Dan and Dan's threats to dozer down Gran's barn and house. But he couldn't stop staring at her slender, coffee-with-cream-colored legs. Although Louisianne seemed interested in the feud, finally she kicked E.A.'s sneaker and said, in a perfect imitation of her father's Cajun accent, “What you looking at, boy?”
E.A. turned as red as Louisianne's running outfit. She laughed and told him in her own voice to be careful or she'd make him disappear. As Moon put up the score, Boston 7 Montreal 3, she said, “Actually, Ethan, it's a lot harder to make someone appear than disappear.”
“Who's going to appear?” he said.
She glanced up at the courthouse clocktower. “Stick around for a few minutes. You might be surprised.” Then she jumped down off the pedestal and jogged back over to the hotel, where she and Stan were staying.
“Hook, line, and sinker,” the Colonel said, as E.A. continued to ogle her bobbing dark ponytail and pretty legs. “I just hope she doesn't break your heart in the end is all. I don't mean to interfere. But you might better know now than later that women will generally do that to you. They will break your heart, or your spirit, or both.”
“I'll thank you to keep your advice to yourself,” E.A. said.
“Time was when you were happy enough to receive it,” the Colonel snapped back. “I see those days are longâwell, look at that, will you.”
A dark, expensive-looking car was pulling up to the hotel. It stopped directly in front of the porch just as Cajun Stan, dressed in white as usual, came out and waved. The driver, a heavyset man in his sixties, built as solid as the brick shopping block, got out and nodded to Stan, then looked around the village, his gaze stopping on the Green Monster atop the factory with last night's score posted on it. He wore a Red Sox windbreaker and a Sox cap, and on his shoulder sat a large, multicolored bird.
Â
As word began to spread that the Legendary Spence had appeared in the village, a steady stream of Sox fans appeared to get a look at him, get an autograph, take a snapshot, or just say hello. People like Gypsy and Gran and Bill and Frenchy LaMott, who ran the commission sales, and even Old Lady Benton, who probably wouldn't have walked across the street to meet the president of the United States, were eager that August morning to see the famous Spence in person as he and Stan walked down the common toward the baseball diamond. E.A. was already warming up with Teddy, who'd appeared with their gloves and a ball just after Spence arrived. The elderly bat boys, sitting out on the hotel porch in the morning sunshine, did not walk over to the diamond. That would have been beneath their dignity. But Fletch and Early and Late leaned forward in their folding chairs and watched attentively as Stan and Spence headed down the green past the statue.
“It's a nice pastime, Stanley,” Spence was telling his old bud. “It's a very nice pastime when they can sell your franchise right out from under you the season after you've put an American League pennant banner over your home grounds and gotten to the last game of the Serious, not to mention we're leading the AL East by a game as we speak. Is that the kid?”
“That him,” Stan said.
“He ain't too big, is he?” Spence said.
“You gone be surprised,” Stan said.
“I doubt it,” Spence said.
E.A., warming up on the mound, felt good. A little nervous, but ready.
“Okay?” Teddy said.
“Okay,” E.A. said and threw a fastball, up and in on a right handed batter.
“You go, E.A.!” Gypsy shouted.
“Ninety-four, ninety-five miles an hour,” Stan said to Spence. “Hard to get a bat on.”
“Any pitch five inches inside is hard to get a bat on,” Spence said. “Tell him he's supposed to hit the glove.”
“He sending the hitter a message,” Stan said.
“The umpire will send him a message,” Spence said. “Ball one.”
“You're down on the count, kid,” he said to E.A. “I don't like my pitchers getting down on the count. I don't like leadoff walks. A pitcher wants to stay on my right side, he better stay up on the count and not be walking no leadoff batters.”
For the next ten minutes Spence watched E.A. throw. In only one instanceâwhen a slider hit the dirt beside the plateâdid Teddy have to move his mitt more than an inch or two.
The crowd of villagers, at least fifty strong now, was quiet. Everyone's eyes were on Spence, to see how he was reacting. The Colonel, away up the common in deepest center field, seemed to be leaning forward, holding his broken-off sword at an expectant angle, waiting to hear the verdict. Even Gran seemed to be holding her breath.
Spence stood near the pitcher's mound, wondering what exquisite new possibilities for disappointment this Vermont development offered. The night before, when he'd gotten back to his hotel in Montreal, a town where they didn't even speak English as their first language and they played hockey as their main sport, something had made him pick up the phone and call Stan. And Stan had somehow talked him into renting a car and driving down to see the kid this morning, leaving his team to fly back to Boston on their own. Now he found himself wishing he'd gone with them, not because he wasn't impressed with E.A. but because he simply didn't know how much more heartbreak he could take in a single season.
“Well,” Stan said, “he can throw, him, yeah?”
“Oh, he can throw, all right,” Spence said. “I'm desperate for pitchers and he can throw. Now”âreaching reluctantly for the contract in his back pocketâ“we're going to find out whether he can pitch.”
“I
EVER TELL YOU
folks about my all-time favorite baseball con?” Stan was saying. “When I con old George Steinbrenner out of his lemonzene?”
It was early in the evening. E.A. would be leaving for Boston the next morning, and Stan and Louisianne were departing that night in Stan's old pink limousine for a fair in upstate New York. The Paiges and Gypsy and Teddy and Gran and Bill and E.A. were gathered around Gran's kitchen table for a celebratory dinner of out-of-season venison and trout, woodchuck, Bill's dandelion wine, and a store-bought white cake on which Gypsy had inscribed, with chocolate frosting:
Â
Congrats to Ethan Allen
,
a Member of the Boston Red Sox
Â
“If it hadn't been for Steinbrenner,” Gran said, “Bucky Dent never would have put on pinstripes, and I'd be going dancing tonight instead of confined to a wheelchair.”
Gypsy cut her eyes at E.A. and he grinned.
“Steinbrenner a bad one, all right,” Stan agreed. “Mr. Moneybags. What wrong with baseball today, you ast me. For years it be my dream to con that man. Finally it come to me how.
“It spring training, back seven, eight years ago. Every morning, old George come to the ball park in a long, black lemonzene. That automobile most as long as a city block. You want the truth, I had my eye on it for a long while. So I go down by the entrance of the park with a big old valise in my hand, got the word dirt wrote on it in red letters. And when George go by I hold up that valise, make sure he get a good look at it. About the third morning, that lemonzene stop. Driver says, âWhat you got in the suitcase, brother?' I say, âDirt.' âDirt?' âThat right. Dirt on all the big players on Mr. Steinbrenner team, the World Champion New York Yankees.'
“âMr. Steinbrenner ain't interested,' the driver say and pull through the gate. But ten, fifteen minutes later he come back and ast to see inside that valise. I open it up a crack, pull out a file on the New York manager, all full of made-up lies. âGot one on every player,' I say, and stick the file back in the grip. âHow much you want for this stuff?' the driver say. I say, âMan, I don't sell, but this what I tell, don't fret, 'cause I want to bet.' âWhat that jive suppose to mean?' âMean this,' I say. âMean I bet Mr. Steinbrenner all the dirt in this little traveling bag âgainst his nice black lemonzene I can strike out the three top hitters in they Yankee lineup.'
“Well, sir,” Stan continued, “that big old bodyguard driver start to laugh. Then he tell me Mr. Steinbrenner don't never bet or gamble. So I say fine and get ready to go 'bout my business, me. But the driver call out, hey,
he
might bet me, gentleman agreement, if Mr. S authorize him. He tell me come back with the suitcase next morning, seven sharp. Before any fans or press get there.”
Stan took a big bite of the store-bought cake. Louisianne was tossing a baseball from hand to hand. Abruptly the ball vanished and she looked at her father, waiting for him to tell the rest. Teddy had been staring out the window at Devil Dan, who was surveying his property line where it cut close to Gran's barn. Now he, too, shifted his gaze to Stan. Everyone, even Bill, was listening.
“So what happened?” E.A. said.
“Well, next morning I show up, go out on the mound with no warm-up. Slam bam, thank you, Stanâthree Yankees up, three Yankees down. Nine pitches, nine strikes. Old George, he so disgusted he throw the lemonzene keys at my head and away I go.”