The Bullpen Gospels

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The Bullpen Gospels Page 26

by Dirk Hayhurst


  “Let’s rock and roll!” I said.

  “You want to put some money on this one?”

  “Let me get warmed up first, and I’ll think about it.” They were always trying to get me to bet.

  Around this time, the team mascot, a giant, fuzzy prairie dog walked by the door, stopped, looked at us, shook his head and walked away. The Rough Riders mascot was not rough or a rider, he was a giant orange with a tired act.

  “You guys like your mascot guy?” I asked.

  “He’s a total assbag,” the dude with the corn chips said.

  “Why’s that?”

  “He acts like he’s a Hollywood star, Mr. Big Shot. Like his act is the most important thing on the field.”

  “Yeah, get this, man”—sunglasses dude smacked me in the arm—“he had a meltdown because I drove him around the field too fast, and he didn’t get to maximize his exposure time. What the hell? He’s a fucking orange prairie dog!”

  “Do any of the players mess with him?” Players have a long history of screwing with mascots. Mostly, this involved buckets of water and the drenching of fuzzy suits. Some mascots thrive on it and use it as a chance to entertain the crowd. Others hate it and want to be left in peace while grinding out another day of acting like a Lumber King, or a Prairie Dog, or Beaver.

  “No, some team tried it once, and he had a conniption. He had our front office write a formal reprimand to the team that did it.”

  “Wow, what a puss. You know, I’ve had some pretty good runins with mascots. There was this one dude, he was a Hawk or an Eagle or something, and he drove around the field on some kind of mini motorcycle.” I talked while the game started, and soon we were all firing rockets at each other, explosions echoing down the hall.

  “The first night of the series, when this dude came rolling by, everyone in the pen smoked him with cups of water. He got real pissed about it, and later on in the game, he came over to the pen during one of his acts and yelled at us in his mascot hand-movement, mime language. We were like, ‘Dude, we know you’re a man in there. You can talk to us. It’s okay.’ So he started screaming at us about getting him wet and how we better stop or else, which, of course, made us do it again the next night.”

  “Of course,” the crew said. I blew one of them up and watched his body fly into a wall like a Jack Russell terrier.

  “So we did it again the next night, worse, aiming for the face mesh part of his costume. We almost knocked him off his bike. He decided he would get even by making water balloons and soaking us during the game, when we were getting warmed up to go in.”

  “No shit? Did he?”

  “Yeah, he soaked one of our guys—the wrong guy. The dude he hit with the balloons was a maniac with a full back tattoo and a thing for German death metal, and he almost went over the rails to kill the mascot.” The crew laughed as I went over the rails and fell into a deep chasm to my doom while trying to avoid a grenade. “The next night, when the mascot rolls by, our dude gets up and charges at the mascot. He didn’t tackle him, but he caused him to wreck. The mascot gets up and mimes that he wants a piece of our boy. Nothing happens there, but that night, more water balloons come raining down on our pen.”

  “Damn it!” a crew member cried. I had stuck a plasma grenade to his character’s back and he blew up, giving me the lead.

  “What did you guys do to get even?”

  I finished the game before finishing the story. I lost, but it was close.

  “Oh, yeah. Well, the next day, we got there earlier and got into the mascot’s dressing room, like the one your mascot has down the hall here. Our dude who wanted to kill him took a dump, scooped a turd into a bag, went into his dressing room, and ground it into the mascot’s helmet.”

  “That’s awesome!”

  “Yeah, it was hilarious. The mascot didn’t even come out that night. Ruined his whole show, but you know, he had to have put it on before he figured it out.” The grounds crew looked around at each other and smiled deviously. “You didn’t hear that from me,” I said.

  “Hear what?”

  “We playing again? No rockets this time?”

  “Yeah, what level—”

  Suddenly, Dalton’s head popped into the room. “Jesus dude, been looking all over for you, Abby wants you in the next inning. You gotta get loose, like now.”

  “What!” I said, springing to my feet. “Holy shit! I thought I was down tonight!” I dropped the controller and ran out the door, rounding the corner so hard my cleats slipped on the smooth concrete causing me to wipe out and eat floor.

  When I hit, Dalton stood there laughing at me. “I’m just kidding dude, you’re fine. Abby didn’t call. Gotcha.”

  “You son of a bitch!” I said, rolling over.

  “Oh my God, that was one of the best things I’ve ever seen!”

  Chapter Thirty-nine

  On day two of the series, during pitchers’ stretch, we dodged batting practice balls struck by the Rough Riders as we loosened in right field. Back and forth we went, jogging with high knees, shuffling, and doing tall leg kicks while calls of “heads up!” echoed across the field, informing us that another ball was coming in hot.

  Juice, the team’s strength coach, seemed preoccupied with something other than our stretch. He stared longingly across the outfield grass at a hot young blond girl who was shagging balls with the Frisco team.

  Strength coach is a peculiar job. Though it has the word coach in its title, it’s not truly a coaching job in the minors as much as it’s a babysitting job. The strength coach makes sure players stay in good shape, but in the minors, where the food is fatty, the travel hard, and the desire to spend extra time in a gym weak, it’s all about compromises.

  Since a strength coach doesn’t do much coaching, he isn’t respected by the team as a hitting coach or a pitching coach would be and isn’t paid like one either. The strength coach finds himself more player than coach. Most strength coaches are young, younger than some of the players they’re asked to oversee. They want to have a good time, get rowdy with the young bucks in uniform, and at the same time be respected as the coach title suggests. It’s a fine line, and if you act like a player most of the time, don’t expect to be treated like a coach when your ego gets hurt.

  Juice was named so because he was a big ball of muscles. Since bulging biceps and monster quads were associated with illegal substances, we nicknamed him as such, even though he was as clean as the virgin snow. Minor league coaches and staff are subjected to drug tests just like the players, FYI. Juice spent most of his college years pumping iron and learning about the body. It would only make sense that he was built as his title suggested. However, for such a tough dude, he was a little sensitive, a trait we exploited whenever possible.

  Juice obviously liked the girl he was watching. She worked for the Rough Riders, and that’s how he met her. He took her out just a little while ago, and they got their groove on, something Juice didn’t keep to himself. Now seeing her on the field surrounded by minor leaguers made him uncomfortable. He suddenly wished he’d been more discreet.

  “Is that your girl over there, Juice?” Blade asked.

  “She’s looks like she’s having a lot of fun next to number 24.”

  “Yeah, I hear he swings a real big bat.”

  “Chicks dig the long ball, Juice. You know that.”

  “Shut the fuck up,” Juice growled.

  “Oh man, sensitive! Sorry Juice, if you would have told us you were in love, I wouldn’t have brought it up.”

  “I’m not in love with her.”

  “Then you’d be okay if I asked her out?”

  “She’d never go out with you,” Juice said. I forgot to mention, he was a little vain. It’s hard not to be that big and not dig your looks just a tad.

  “Wow, dude. I may not look like you, but it looks like she digs guys in jerseys.”

  “How many guys on the team do you think she’s been with?”

  “That’s enough. Keep runni
ng your mouth, and I’ll rip your fucking arms off and beat you with them.”

  The guys stopped stretching and stared at Juice. Blade smiled. “Did you just say you’d rip my arms off and beat me with them?”

  “Shut up!” an angry Juice warned.

  “You did! You did just say that. You seriously said you would rip my arms off and beat me with them. I’ve had a lot of threats in my day, but wow.”

  “Juice, she’s got you whipped, bro,” Rob said.

  “No, she doesn’t.”

  “If you are willing to dismember another dude for her, I’d say you’re whipped.”

  “Fuck you, guys. You’re all a bunch of savages anyway.”

  “Us? All of a sudden you’re better than us?”

  “Heads up!” Another ball came screaming in, and Juice picked it up and fired it back into the fence.

  “Jesus bro, fucking relax. We don’t need you going all Hulk smash on anyone.”

  “I can’t believe you think you are better than us, Juice. Us—your family,” Blade continued.

  “I just don’t need your comments about my girl.”

  “We don’t need you getting all pissed at us. You should be tearing off the arms of number 24 over there.”

  Juice turned around and stared down the guy lingering in the area of his lady. He wasn’t even talking to her.

  “Wow, you are rattled, bro.”

  “No, I’m not.”

  “I think she’s bad for your career.”

  “Just shut up and get on the line. You got half poles today.”

  “I don’t think I can do the running today, not in this unsafe work environment.” Rob again.

  “Shut up and get on the line.”

  “Why? Because if I don’t, you’ll rip my arms off and beat me with them?”

  Juice dropped his head and smiled a bit but tried to fight it back in favor of his inner alpha male.

  “There he is! There’s happy Juice. Come on out happy Juice; come on back to us!”

  Juice smiled and suddenly all was well again. He took a deep breath, and the crowd of pitchers started laughing with him. “Repeat after me, Juice: bros before hos. Say it.” Juice shook his head. “Say it, Juice!”

  “Bros before hos,” Juice mouthed.

  “That’s more like it. Now that we got that squared away, seriously, can I ask her out?”

  Chapter Forty

  “Alright, Kangaroo Court is now in session, any fucking swear words from this point on and it’s a buck.” The crowd sat silently, with the oldest guys in the middle acting as judges. Ox, Rob, and a position player, Brett Bonvechio, to made up the, panel representing each of the two major player groups. “What do we got first, Drew?”

  Drew dug into the box and pulled out a folded-up paper. “This is to Manrique from team. Max fine for having the worst smelling…uh, can I say ass?”

  “Yeah, if you’re reading, it’s legal.”

  “Worst smelling ass on the team.”

  “How do you plead Manrique?”

  “No guilty. Is not my fault I’ave bad gas.”

  “Yes, it is. You eat all the stuff you know you shouldn’t eat, and then you don’t even try to be considerate about it once you start ripping,” the prosecution responded.

  “What you mean? I eat what you eat—same spreads.”

  “No, you don’t. You come in here with your carne asada with extra beans every other day. If there is a Mexican place in the area, you’ll sniff it out.”

  “What you want me to do? I’m Mexican. I eat Mexican food.”

  “Well, take some Beano for Christ sake! Make an adjustment.”

  “Valid point,” Handsome Rob said.

  “It’s not like I’m trying to fart on you.” Manrique threw his hands up, as if innocent.

  “Actually,” I said, raising my hand. “That’s not entirely true.” Earlier in the season, I was passed out on the bus during a long trip home from Arkansas. I had finally fallen asleep after fighting to get comfortable with the bus seats for what seemed like hours. I went under with my head careened back, sucking air like some old man who passes out in church services. Manrique thought it would be funny if he climbed onto the seat backs, dropped his pants, and laid a bare-ass Mexican food fart right into my open mouth. I woke up dry heaving. It was so ripe, I thought we’d crashed into a manure truck.

  As soon as I contradicted Manrique, everyone in the room started to laugh. Kangaroo Court with this team was a treat. It was unfortunate we didn’t do it earlier in the year as it always proved to be a good bonding moment. But with so much travel, movement, and adversity, it was difficult to fit it in. Now that the team was coming around, making a race for the playoffs, we felt comfortable enough to loosen up. Sure, we’d collect some fine money for a trip to the bar, but we were bonding.

  “Dirk offers another valid point.”

  “Yeah, every time I tell you I’m going to kick your face in about your stinky butt leakage, you giggle about it. You know what you’re up to. Max fine. Hell, I’d double max fine, if I could.”

  “I agree,” Rob said. “Max fine.”

  “Yeah, I’m tired of smelling you, too,” Brett said. “Max fine.”

  Manrique threw his hands up again. “Fine, but I am going to fart twice as much now on purpose.”

  “I’m going to beat you twice as hard!” Ox retorted.

  “Okay, next offense,” Rob said, moving things along.

  Drew fished another fine out of the fine box. “This is to Chase Headley for referring to himself in the third person. Witness: team. Suggested fine: double max.”

  “Whoa now, that’s ridiculous. I’ve never referred to myself in the third person.”

  “Yes, you did, Chase. I heard you,” a witness shouted. “I heard you say it after you got back from the big leagues that ‘Chase Headley is only one man’.”

  “I’ve never said anything like that.”

  Another position player spoke up. “I heard you say that if you were in the big leagues, you would have hit that ball into the upper, upper deck. ‘But here,’—the witness made quotations with his hands—‘Chase Headley has to understand the balls aren’t as good, and Chase Headley will have to settle for standard home runs.’”

  “Whatever. You guys are just making stuff up.” And they were, but the crowd was laughing and Chase was the only person on the team to make it to the big leagues from inside the organization. He was a shoo-in for Texas League Player of the Year and was having a phenomenal season—no way we could let that go his head. He also got a big-league paycheck, whereas the rest of us had to be content with our minor league pittance. We couldn’t let him hog it all to himself.

  “I heard him do it too,” I said. “I heard him say that ‘Chase Headley knows what the fans want and Chase Headley will deliver.’”

  “Wow, Chase, you can take the player out of the big leagues, but you can’t take the big leagues out of the player, huh?”

  “Erroneous! Erroneous on all counts!” Chase declared, smiling.

  “Yeah, this is only the minors, Chase. I know it’s not San Diego, but you don’t have to keep reminding us how easy it is for you. The least you can do is stop the third-person routine.”

  “Go ahead, fine Chase Headley. See if he cares,” Chase said. More laughter.

  “Alright, Chase pleads guilty to not being here all year. Ten bucks for going to the ‘show’ and not taking us with him.”

  The next fine was for someone wearing the wrong hat out to batting practice—simple two-dollar matter. Then there was a fine for a guy getting drunk and ruining his wingman’s night out by throwing up on the potential beef. The crowd roared with laughter as the story was told. The party being prosecuted argued he did the offended a favor by shielding him from the grenade he was about to take home. However, said the court, since the offended was in a slump, the accused was indeed guilty for standing in the way of his wingman’s career development and, thus, the success of the team. It was a very wise rul
ing.

  Manrique was fined a second time for his gas, but the fine was thrown out under the statute of double jeopardy. I was fined for playing video games with the grounds crew during a game, which I fought as best I could, losing the case only when I admitted that I lost the Deathmatch to the grounds crew—a poor representation of our team’s video game prowess.

  “This next fine is for Juice for threatening to rip off someone’s arms and beat him with them. Witness: bullpen.” Blade retold the story that got Juice heated up again and, consequently, jeered by the entire team. He was fined two dollars, one for each arm he threatened to rip off.

  “This fine is for Lunchbox, from Hayhurst, for asking what is on the other side of the sun. Suggested fine, one dollar,” Drew read.

  The crowd of peers looked to me; then Rob spoke. “We are going to need to hear the story on this one.” Lunchbox shook his head in disgust.

  I told the tale about how I was sitting on the bench in the dugout in San Antonio. Lunchbox comes in in a huff. He sits down next to me and asks me if I know a lot about science. I say yes. He asks if I know a lot about the sun. I say I know a little. Then, in a moment of genuine seriousness, Lunchbox looks me in the eye and says, “So, do scientists know, like, have they figured out what’s on the other side of the sun?”

  “You mean, what’s on the inside of the sun? Like the center?” I replied, thinking of gas and pressure and whatnot.

  “No, like what’s around back of it, like behind it, the other side.”

  “You’re asking me what’s behind the back of the sun?”

  “Yeah, do scientists know that?”

  “Yes, Lunchbox, we are, planet Earth, like half of the year. We orbit it.”

  Lunchbox stared at me in wonder. “What do you mean, orbit?”

  “Are you serious? We circle it, all the planets do. It’s how we get our calendar.”

  “That doesn’t make any sense,” Lunchbox said. “If we orbit it, then how come in all the science books the planets are all lined up in a row on one side?”

 

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