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Chapter 6: The Fugitive Pioneer Stella had no
choice but to take the job. She'd been waitressing at The Ginger Man, and three weeks ago, at
shift's end, she set out for home. It
was cold. Her nose gone numb, she cupped
it with one red mitten. Giant silver
tines hung like rows of jagged teeth under the whitewashed girders of the
CTA. On the other side of the road stood
a bus stop--just beyond where the El crossed Though the vagrant
was alive and a woman, there wasn't much to it.
Yet still, in her mind's eye, Stella became that woman, wrapped in
blankets and garbage. And there, across
the street, in a cashmere coat and red mittens, she beheld a younger self, a
healthier self, a self both pitied and loathed for her innocence, ignorance,
faith, and good fortune. With new urgency,
Stella resumed her walk. Like a reformed
drunk with a sleepy will and a hollow leg aching to be filled, she rather by
instinct wandered off course--didn't even realize it until the train doors shut
behind her. She went two stops, got off,
and slopped through several blocks of slush.
Everything seemed corrupted with ash.
It hung like dull tinsel over the houses, over all the cold world. She couldn't tell which apartment was
his. She walked the block up and down,
then took a guess. An old boyfriend's
roommate answered, looked her over, and told her to wait inside. She waited.
Several drinks later, he admitted that her ex had moved months ago. She should've been angry, but life's all
about finding interesting ways to forget that you're dying. In the end--with moves practiced enough to be
laughable were she in her usual humor--he reminded her how beautiful she was,
and how safe from ugliness and despair. The El ride home
was even worse. Stella felt sick. He was clever. He did what men do. Again she descended the stairs of the
CTA--the frozen bundle of dying, still lumped in the bus stop. Stella paused, then pushed on, walking
backwards at times to keep from the wind. That was it. The weather, a blue nosed hag, the mistake
with an old flame's roommate. She had to
do something. There were no two
ways about a one way ticket. People
respect ambition, she thought, but it's really just escapism. Courage... cowardice.... Can't tell half the time if I'm pioneer or
fugitive. Within minutes of arriving
home, She was emailing résumés: *
* * One offer so
far--The Mother Board. Stella isn't
waiting to see if it'll be her last. Her
flight departs tonight, arcing south to alight 28.3º north of the equator,
81.41º west of the prime meridian, and finally, more precisely, to Horizons
Apartments on Destiny Drive. Looking
for a change? Career
path limited? Are you a
high energy person seeking a
growth opportunity with a growing
internet startup. Free- structured
environment. Applicants
must be hard working,
with sense of humor, and
willingness to grow. Salary,
mid to high 20s.... Bags packed, she'll soon be
there. Growing. "You're gonna
miss this weather," says her father. "Hardly,"
says Stella, "but I will miss you--you and mom." "We'll miss
you too, slugger. You leave an awful big
hole when you go." "I'll come
back... to visit, I will--in the Spring." Her father doesn't
reply, just stares out at the stadium like he has a thousand times. *
* * Since she was
sixteen, this place has been home--her bedroom looking out on the old green
scoreboard--and just to the left, from her tiptoes--home plate, five hundred
and eighty feet away. The property had
belonged to her grandfather--a brownstone on Everyone thought
Grandma Minesinger'd go first--Stella's mom always
joking, "Your grandma's got so many pills, the pharmacist calls her to get
his prescriptions filled." Indeed,
it took the old woman five glasses of juice each morning to drug her body into
forgetting to die. Despite this, Grandpa
Minesinger beat her to death when one bright March morning, paper in hand and
halfway up the stairs, he grabbed at the heart that died before him, and
finished his flight to heaven. When it came time
to scatter his ashes, Stella's grandma refused to go. Without her husband, she seemed caught in a
futile rundown between living on and dying.
She'd taken to staring out the window for long spells, had conversations
without company, and became bad about taking her pills, and supplements, and
pills to override the side effects of the pills and supplements. Though she needed
care, Stella's dad distrusted assisted living.
"Seem only to assist orphaned octogenarians in dying quicker,"
he'd say. But still, the family had secretive
talks on the subject... and then there were more talks--almost as though all
concerned were determined to make the dialogue outlast the old woman's need of
such assistance. She knew it, it seemed,
and Stella remembers how--whenever the topic was about to be broached--her grandma'd rush out with, "Your grandfather's still
here. You can sort of feel him around,
can't you?" or, "All I know is, this is where we lived, and this...
this is where I'll die. Your grandfather
would've wanted it that way." In
the end, Stella's grandfather got it the way he would've wanted it. Stella's dad had
grown up in the house on *
* * "You're not
mad at me?--you know... for leaving?" "Nah,
sport. I knew you would sooner or
later...." "Dad?"
says Stella. "Yeah?" "Would you do me a big, humungous
favor?" "Anything." "Don't spend so much time up here." "Up here? But I love it up here." "I know... I mean you say you do, but every time, it's like you drink and get all
sad." "A
little nip, and you peg me a booze hound?" "I
didn't say that. I just...." "Look,
I'll ration myself if it'll make my girl happy.
Now I gotta go warm up the car.
You have a flight to catch."
It's the house. All through the first year she loved it, but
halfway into the second, her enthusiasm slumped. All the games began to seem the same. There was one loss and one victory, but the
loss was already lost, and the victory already won--and that before the anthem
was sung. What remained?--just the same
old crunch of plastic cups and peanut shells and programs for sale, and get your
this here and get your that there, and the replaceable crowds marching through
the turnstiles, only to stumble beer-full out into the same streets--all of it
such a perfect fulfillment of expectation that it seemed flawed in some way. And it echoed through the hollow spaces--that
ruckus--through the roaring of autumn and into winter when a crust of ice tarped the diamond, ice that glittered with the hauntings of seasons passed over... seasons that, when made
green with spring, seemed somehow already memories of themselves--snowed over
like a late night TV, with that random noise of applause when your friends at
channel X wish you good night and the flag waves and the anthem plays and all
that's left is everything--everything and nothing--as billions of star blown
photons fuzz the screen. This was why
for Stella, whether mid the revelries of summer or the desolation of winter, a
mortal sort of gloom began to hang about that stadium--a gloom that sapped all
hope of post season play. Sentimental with
age, Mr. Minesinger was even more bewitched by it than was his daughter. Come each October he'd go to the roof and
stare for hours at the darkened stadium, all the while reminiscing of days when
the Cubbies weren't so quick to hibernate.
In truth, these were days he was too young to reminisce about, but as
with war, baseball stories are handed down, tributes are paid--memorabilia
borrowed for proof of authenticity.
Stella would roll her eyes, but put up with it. "So much history," he'd say. "So many of the greats...." or,
"Tinker, Evers and Chance took that very same field.... Took the series too--two of 'em. And the
Babe--pointed his bat damn near right at us and fired a shot into the history
books." Stella could only
comment to herself that Tinker, Evers and Chance did in fact "take"
the field--took it caked in their thieving cleats and stuck to their dusty
backsides--and the outfield too--mowed and carried out in bags and resodded. Fed up,
she made a mistake one night. She'd been to the
Vic to see a show. There was still some
reverb--a wind through the trees echo in her ears. Her mom had waited up to see that she arrived
home safe, but went to bed soon after.
From her room Stella heard her dad say that it was a nice night and that
he was going to the roof. She heard the
clink of ice cubes knocking the bottom of his glass, and then the creak of
stairs. He'd been having trouble
sleeping, and Stella--though tired--felt it'd be nice to give him company. Still tipsy, she bumped up the steps,
knocking the walls like an ice cube in a glass, and spilled out onto the
roof. It was a fall night and
chilly. Mr. Minesinger sat staring up
into the sky with a scotch on the rocks chiming in his loose grip. He was happy to see her, but soon seemed to
forget that he had company beyond his thoughts; his eyebrows fell, his smile
flattened, and again he was at it, talking of all the bad luck, losses to
Connie Mack's Athletics in 1910 and '29, to the Red Sox in '18, to Detroit in
'35 and '45, to the Yankees in '32 and '38--all the stories of failed heroics,
punctuated by the usual worn out consolation, "But we had a couple a good
years, right Stell?
Tinker, Evers, and Chance--like clockwork, the way they worked the
infield." Stella was
star-gazing too, less reverential than bored--all that old light. She'd been a tomboy long enough, she'd
thought, but he needed a son. Her mind
was set forward, belligerently so and, maybe it was because she was a week from
setting off to college which, though only twenty minutes away, seemed a big
deal. She's unsure, but what she said
surprised her: "What gets me is
that people still go on and on about Winky, Blinky, and Nod or whoever, when every damn person that was
in that stadium's dead." Her tone
was harsh--hateful even, and she could feel her father's eyes turn on her. Beneath a cold glitter of starlight, she
smiled a smile she hoped would confuse her meanness for humor. But there was something said now--a small
thing to be sure--but small things often cut the deepest. So many black stars, she thought, specks
in the sky without living essence behind....
So many people warm themselves by the light of dead fires; so many can't
even tell the difference. Stella has a mean streak. She knows it, and knows as well that it
becomes meaner and streakier at times of departure. The rooftop door swings open. She looks to her father. "What I said before, about coming home
in the spring. I will. I promise.
...And we'll get tickets, sit in the bleachers, right where we did for
Grandpa." Her dad nods. "By the way sport, been thinkin'.... I want
the same treatment he got. When I go,
will you do that?" "If you
want. We'll make it a family
tradition. What's Georgia clay, when you
can have Minesinger dust?" Stella
remembers sitting in the sunswept bleachers. Her dad had a promise to keep. Early April.
Opening Day. The air crisp as cut
paper. After breakfast, they'd split and
poured the ashes into two Ziploc bags.
Stella imagined getting frisked by a NARC, who, finding the baggies,
would poke a finger in, taste it like the cops do on TV, and say, "It's
foreign. Subtle. Smooth."
The goods, however, were unloaded without incident, and Grandpa
Minesinger was laid to rest during the seventh inning stretch, her dad saying,
"Well, pop, guess you finally got your ticket to eternity." "Car's
ready," he says now. "Better
say goodbye to your mother, and collect that cat of yours. The carrier's in the front hall." "Mom's not
coming?" says Stella. "You
know how she gets. Anyway,
better hustle. No telling how traffic's gonna be."
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