April '04

BASEBALL!

 A Nice Life Andrew Bomback
A Fool's Faith Dennis Dillingham
  Stay on Second Lee Klein
 Pastime Scott Neumyer
 The Frozen Iceball Theory Leonard Pierce
 brad's reviews

Dave Clapper Joe Lee's Fastball
Elizabeth Ellen Priceless
Richard Grayson Diary of a Brooklyn Cyclones Hot Dog
Christopher Monks The Right Fielder's Epiphany
Steven Seighman Coming of Age






Diary of a Brooklyn Cyclones Hot Dog

            Richard Grayson




August 22

Wonderful news! Mr. Cohen came down to the ticket office this morning and said that I can be the new Relish for the rest of the season! Since Eduardo quit because his girlfriend is pregnant, I’ve been pestering everyone connected with the team – Party Marty, Sandy the Seagull, the infielders, even Mr. Cohen himself – with my dream that I should be the next Relish. And now it’s come true! I start in two days, when we play the Vermont Expos. I ran all the way from the Kings Highway station to get myself in training.

Grandmother was dismissive, as I expected. “What is it with this baseball?” she yells. “Is this what we came to this country for? Better you should be in school to be an eye doctor like Violeta! Baseball is not something a girl should make of her life!”

Sometimes I want to tell her that Violeta is spending most of her time with that Haitian artist in Williamsburg, but I know I cannot squeal on my sister. Besides, I think it is true love with Violeta and Fesner. I can only wish for that for myself, but I cannot think about that tonight: I have my first love, baseball!


August 23

The hot dog suit is very uncomfortable. And Eduardo left it a little sweaty. Also, the size is not quite right for me. I ask Mustard and Ketchup how they can stand it, and they say I will get used to it. Sandy the Seagull heard us talking, and he said, “You guys should be inside this and you’ll know what uncomfortable is!”

But Sandy is the one true mascot, the star here. Even when the fans do not know the names of the shortstop or even the pitcher, they know Sandy with his cheerful beak, his generous outspread wings, his Cyclones jersey – just like the players wear! – and his Cyclone leggings and his Cyclones hat. The hot dogs are cute-looking, but we are not one of a kind. You can’t find a Sandy the Seagull on the menu at Nathan’s.

I know it is a privilege to be on the field at KeySpan Park. I was happy to be selling tickets and sometimes being an usher, but now I get to be running around on the field every night! The girls I play softball with at Marine Park are so jealous!

The only better thing that can happen to me is impossible: for me to be the shortstop like Webster from Arkansas is. This is still my happiest moment since we left Kiev.


August 24

I cannot believe it was me out there tonight. In the middle of the fifth inning, as usual, the Hot Dog Race began. But tonight I was one of the three hot dogs, my cape of relish green blowing in the breezes. Green is now my favorite color. So much nicer, I think, than Ketchup’s red or Mustard’s yellow capes.

We start off at home plate as Party Marty gives us the signal and we run like the wind to the outfield. I was out of breath by the time I got there – I really need to stop smoking so much – but of course I am Relish and I’m supposed to come in last.

Mustard won tonight. But attention was thrown away from us because Sandy the Seagull slipped while he was dancing in the dugout. He was all right. Later, when I asked what happened, Mike (who is Sandy the Seagull) said, “Oh, I didn’t see where I was going and fell on my good friend, Con Crete.” Corey Ragsdale heard him and laughed but I didn’t think it was too funny. It’s good for Corey to laugh, him with his .188 batting average, especially since he made a fielding error which cost us the game against Vermont.

Violeta says I should look to see if we can get worker’s comp if I have an accident. What a timid one!


August 25

Today we got revenge and beat Vermont good. Duane pitched a four-hitter. I am getting better at running, but of course I had to finish last again. They say I need to come up with better ways to lose the Hot Dog Race, the way Eduardo did when he was Relish. James (Mustard) and Vinny (Ketchup) said I will begin to think of things to do.


August 27

We were playing the Staten Island Yankees today, and before the game I was talking with their mascot Scooter the Holy Cow, who is also a girl. She is quite pretty without her cow head. I wonder if she likes girls, too. She said she used to play softball but now doesn’t have time.

I finished far behind today, but I got distracted by a young Muslim woman in a head scarf who yelled at me to come over and sign an autograph. My first time! Mr. Cohen later told me that is the kind of thing I need to do to keep losing the Hot Dog Race.

After the game (we lost, 5-4, very sad), they asked us hot dogs to pose with Scooter and Sandy and Pee Wee. Pee Wee is a smaller Seagull than Sandy, a kid who just hatched near the roller coaster and was found by Sandy before the season begun.


August 28

Fesner and Violeta took the subway to Coney Island today, just to watch me. Fesner says the Cyclones are like way down in the minor leagues, below the Triple-A and the Double-A and the This-A and That-A. He has a Dominican friend who told him that, since he doesn’t know baseball. I tell him the guys on our team are good, some of them will be on the Mets someday and when that happens, I will turn on the TV and show him and laugh.

Unfortunately, Brian forgot to cover home plate tonight – something a pitcher should never do – and we lost again. The fans booed him and yelled bad words. This happened in the fourth inning, so everyone was in a bad mood by the time of the Hot Dog Race.

It is getting to be a little routine for me. I am more fit (I am down to six cigarettes a day!) but tonight I again was the losing condiment.

“Dead last!” an African American man yelled at me. “You’ve got to run your buns off next time!” People laughed, and I shrugged my shoulders – you have to exaggerate it under the costume – and people laughed some more.

On the Q train after the game, Violeta says I should consider becoming an actress, and Fesner says I could be in a Chekhov play. Because I am Russian? I say, and he says, No, because you already have experience with The Seagull. Ha ha.


August 30

I realize that we have only a few home games left. I don’t understand why it is such a short season. Mr. Cohen says that we are not the major leagues, but we are part of the Mets. Today Ed Charles and Art Shamsky from the 1969 team that won the World Series came to KeySpan Park. They posed for a picture with Sandy the Seagull and waved. I wanted to ask them questions, but they didn’t have time. Also, it is hard for people to understand me because the hot dog costume muffles my voice. I think Shamsky is Jewish, too.

Last again in the race. Today I got distracted by Claudia Cardinal, the New Jersey Cardinals mascot, who wanted to shake my hand. She is a sweet bird in the costume, but I found it is actually a man with a little beard underneath.


September 1

Today the softball girls from Marine Park came to the game. We beat the Oneonta Tigers, 13-3. What a game! And I came in second in the Hot Dog Race. Mustard had some bad clams at Umberto’s in Sheepshead Bay and vomited in his costume as he was running.


September 2

I would have won tonight had I not pulled a hamstring just as I was about to reach where Lester, the right fielder, was standing. He was very nice to me. It is hard on the players because they do not see many girls, so I think he liked helping me off the field. They take them back and forth to their dormitory near Brooklyn Poly Tech downtown and are very strict about late hours.

I do not tell Lester I am from the girls who like softball because I feel sorry for him. Before his slump, people talked about him being sent up to Binghamton, but no more.

At home Grandmother berated me when she saw me putting a bag of frozen peas on my hamstring. How can she understand what baseball means?


September 5

The reporter for the Canarsie Courier asked Mr. Cohen why Relish always loses the race. “He trains as much as Mustard or Ketchup,” Mr. Cohen said, “but things just don’t work out for the kid. But I do believe he lives up to his name, in terms of relishing life.”

Tonight it was that I just couldn’t handle the heat. It was over 90 degrees. Scooter the Holy Cow from Staten Island seemed really concerned, not sure if I was acting.


September 6

I broke poorly from the gate this afternoon, but Ketchup tripped Mustard and they got mad at each other and all of a sudden it looked like I would win. I was maybe ten strides from the outfield wall when Party Marty stopped his cha cha dance and came over and tackled me!

When I came back from Coney Island Hospital – all I had were bruised ribs – even the Batavia Muckdogs players said they were shocked.

Tomorrow is the last game, and Ketchup and Mustard are tied, with seventeen wins each. Relish is winless.


September 7

Sandy the Seagull said this morning that Mr. Cohen is very mad about what Party Marty did to me and thought about suspending him, but today was the last game and he didn’t have the heart.

And I felt well – better than well – for tonight my legs were with me. I caught Mustard and Ketchup at the wire. I think they were told to hold back because a man in a tuxedo came out and said, “I present this once-sluggish sausage with this bouquet of flowers!” As Sandy led the crowd in cheering, I ran around the bases in a victory lap.

Baseball is a wonderful life. I got Scooter’s phone number and a Cyclones cap for Grandmother and we beat Staten Island, 3-2.



Richard Grayson never knows what to say for bios, but: his first book of stories, With Hitler in New York, was published 25 years ago and is still available at Amazon.com, recent work has appeared online in Eyeshot, Yankee Pot Roast, Uber, Wilmington Blues, McSweeneys, Blithe House Quarterly and Really Small Talk and he is a cranky old man who watched as snow fell on Shea Stadium at the Mets' opener on April 6, 1971. (He keeps a diary.)