"Final Out" by Brendan ThomasThe short stop bent low, gathered the ball confidently in his glove, and delivered it precisely into the outstretched hand at first base as the runner lunged in a desperate attempt to beat the throw. The Umpire bent his right arm and shouted “Out!” Game over. Bill sat in the bleachers watching his son congratulate the victors before assembling for his final team talk. Bill thought back to his son’s first baseball day, oversized glove, baggy pants, cap low over his eyes, ball rolling between his legs, joyful laughter. He’d grown into his uniform, played every position from pitcher to catcher, and enjoyed success. He remembered his son’s first home run, little league, final inning of a bad loss, the ball scraping over the outfield fence. They’d left the diamond that night like winners, his son holding the prized ball tightly in his hand, only loosening his grip when sleep came. He thought of coaches, good and bad, parents full of advice for their player alone, bad hotels and good team dinners. They’d lived it all. Now it was over, college beckoned, his son short on the skills required to continue playing the game they loved.
His son packed his bag for the last time. First his black bat, nicked and scratched, the veteran of many important moments, his glove with leather laces dangling, it’s surface softened by balls slapped into its face. They would miss the sound of ball against leather. Finally he turned his cap bill to back as was his postgame habit, looked for his father’s face and slowly trudged towards him, crossing the baseball diamond and pitchers mound once more, stopping to scoop dirt before continuing forward. “Ready?” he asked his father who took a moment to steal another glance across the field before answering “No.”
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