Sometimes the passing of years can heighten memories rather than dim them. And the sweet nostalgia for our youth and memories of childhood summers become tinted with rose-coloured bifocals. Waking up mornings to the smell of freshly cut grass, hopping fences, sticky fingers from home made popsicles, peeling noses and scraped knees and baseball …always baseball. We’d line up to pick teams before the sun had gotten hot enough to burn the moisture out of the clumps of discarded grass. If we were lucky we could get two games in before our mothers called us all for lunch, then, on scorching hot afternoons we’d be at the local public pool, if not, more baseball.
A great deal of those games were played a stone’s throw from my house near a straggly willow and a dried out patch of dirt shoe- trampled from countless scrambles for third base and home.
Teams were picked hastily with no concern for or sparing of feelings of those with less than the desired athletic prowess.
If a captain thought a kid was less than team material, this consensus was usually shared by all but the weak player himself.
One particularly hot morning I was picked by the captain of one team and a loud protest erupted from a heavy set (or just plain “fat” in those pre-P.C. days) kid named Wally. It seems Wally objected to my playing on “his” team, but due to the fact that the bat and ball were mine he was quickly vetoed by the other kids. That didn’t stop Wally from stomping over and demanding that I not play “or else” which I stubbornly chose to ignore. I misguidedly assumed my teammates would charge to my rescue and throw him out of the game. He was on top of me in an instant and since he was probably almost double my weight he was an immovable force. He was also brandishing my bat which he proceeded to lower towards my throat with both his hands. I was panicky in most situations like this, more so against a psycho with a formidable weapon. I struggled to no avail to topple this enraged giant but only succeeded in choking myself more with the bat and I envisioned a Louisville Slugger tattoo permanently burned into my neck.
Wally’s anger-reddened face suddenly became a spastic mask of wounded surprise and as his arms shot up to his head, I quickly squirmed out from under him and dashed for my house. After bolting the door shut I ran upstairs with my brother close behind me and we ran into our shared room where we could see from the window to the ball field below. I noticed the bully, Wally was holding a red stained tissue of some sort to his head and screaming up towards my brother and me. My now incoherent brother was screaming back at Wally and waving a steak knife in his direction.
It appears that while Wally had been straddling me, my brother, fearing for my life, had snuck up from behind and cracked down on Wally’s cranium with a fair sized field rock. A small crowd had started to gather in front of our house and a lot of them were elbowing for sitting room on a low brick wall bordering a kid’s sandbox area about 15 feet from our door. The easily swayed crowd were now firmly on Wally’s “team” as they jeered up at us from their secure perch behind the bleeding giant. As the crowd seemed to need a sacrifice and blood had already been spilt, my baseball bat was deemed to be the logical choice. Clearing a space on the wall by gesturing with the bat, Wally titillated the giddy crowd by starting to smash the bat against the concrete capped bricks.
The bat was quickly halved and splintered with Wally in mid swing when my mom turned the corner and noticed the commotion. Her frugal and alert eye noticed what was left of the bat, which she had just purchased at Woolco the previous week. Irish blood being what it is, my mom soon pumped herself up to a suitable state of maternal rage. Although she seemed quicker to anger over wasted wood than wounds that day, she couldn’t help but notice the blood stained Kleenex and t-shirt Wally sported. That didn’t stop her from bellowing a frightful litany of the bully’s shortcomings as she ran after him while he shakily tried to manoeuver his bike out onto the street. She used the handle end of the shattered bat to repeatedly bash his rear fender as he sped away bleating. On her way back to the house and still gripping the stunted slugger, she glowered at the riff-raff assembled on the wall and the peanut gallery dispersed like feathers in a hurricane. Later we all got a serious lecture when my mom found out about the rock, but at the same time I could tell she was secretly proud that my brother came to my rescue.
A few months later we found out that Wally’s dad beat him daily and Wally had trouble keeping the few friends he happened to make. I never found out what happened to that kid as we grew up and moved on with our lives. I tried Facebook and Google but I’m secretly glad I never found him, only because if he’d turned out as I’d expected, some angry fat guy in a trailer park, I guess I would have been disappointed. I hope things turned around for old Wally
later in life.