“Up the workers, Teddy Ballgame,” Mungo echoed. Ted turned on sandaled feet and strolled out into the June evening. The walk out into the parking lot was arguably Ted’s least favorite part of the job. After the game, fans would line up behind barricades, hoping for a glimpse of their favorite players. They could see figures walking toward them out of the shadows and would try to guess who was coming at them by their size and shape. “Louuuuuuuuu” they’d bellow if they thought Lou Piniella was coming. Or “Bucky!!!” for Bucky Dent, “Captain” for Thurman Munson, “Gooooooooose” for Rich “Goose” Gossage, or, improbably, “Reggie! Reggie! Reggie!” on the way to his Bentley Bentley Bentley. Invariably, they thought Ted was a Yankee coming toward them, and after shouting out names of players and realizing it was Ted, would then give voice to their disappointment. Ted hated that moment when they saw that it was only him. Like it was just a terrible mistake, like he himself was a mistake.
It was a walk of shame all right. “Oh, forget it,” some kid would say. “It’s just Mr. Peanut. Yo, Mr. Peanut, what’s up, peanut man? THE PEA-NUT!!!” And usually, this would turn into an ironic name game—“Grizzly Adams!” they yelled with barely contained derision as they rounded Ted off to the nearest celebrity, in this case the actor on the hit TV show. He guessed he looked a little like Dan Haggerty because of the heft and the full beard and long hair. “Haggerty!!!” The name-calling would morph behind him in the dead air before an actual Yankee refocused their attention, as Ted made his long way to the crappy parking spaces at the far end of the lot. “The Haggermeister!!! The Grizzler!!! Grizzelda!!! Captain Lou Albano!!!” and the occasional “Jerry Garcia!!!”—which he kinda didn’t mind at all. Ted would cast his head down and smile awkwardly, hiding his mortification, wishing he could be as solitary as the Grizzler, or be invisible for the few minutes it would take to get to his car, at least more invisible than he was.
The tall lamps got sparser as Ted made his way to the back of the lot, as if no one really cared to see what happened back there. Ted’s mighty steed, his puke-green aging Toyota Corolla, waited patiently, the plastic bags that had replaced the front windows broken in the theft of his car stereo flapping gently in the summer breeze. Ted no longer locked the car. Whoever it was who wanted whatever it was that they thought was in that piece of shit was welcome to it, without needing to cause any more damage. Not that there was anything of value in there. It was filthy. Dirty clothes, soda bottles, and peanut bags littered the back seat. To save money, and because he had never really cared about food, Ted mostly ate the bagged peanuts that he sold at the games. This monochrome diet explained his unhealthy swollen gut and greenish complexion. No one had spent as much time with the peanut since George Washington Carver. If this was close to bag lady or homeless or hoarder behavior, Ted wasn’t bothered. He was a Marxist/Leninist/Trotskyite/Marcusian Deadhead who did not buy into the late, dying capitalist animal that was the United States economy. He existed in and out of the world he wanted to observe. I am the Heisenberg principle, he thought. Or maybe, I am the Highsenberg principle, as he lit up a joint.
Ted exhaled a plume of smoke of which Jimmy Cliff could have been proud, took his portable cassette player out of his backpack, and slid it into the opening on the dashboard. He turned the key over and the Japanese import shuddered to life, as if startled out of sleep and annoyed at being asked to move. “C’mon, Big Bertha-san,” Ted coaxed, as he stepped on the clutch, thinking to himself I am Mr. Clutch as he shifted into reverse. “Mistuh Crutch-uh.” Sometimes he would just speak to his “Collola” in the terrible, racist Japanese accent of Mickey Rooney in Breakfast at Tiffany’s—it was the bad, easy, faux-tough-guy type of racist stuff his father loved to say just to piss people off. Ted hated that shit, found it offensive. But sometimes, against his better judgment, Ted felt something like a ventriloquist’s dummy, involuntarily speaking his father’s words. He might adopt an attitude or phrase out of the blue, like some sort of paternal Tourette’s. The possessed moments would pass, and he would quickly become self-conscious again, looking around sheepishly to see if anyone overheard.
Music fought a losing battle through the tiny cheap speakers. The Dead. Almost always the Dead.
“Saint Stephen with a rose, in and out of the garden he goes.”
Ted sang along with Bob Weir in a decently tuneful imitation of Jerry Garcia’s vulnerable, knowing whine: “Country garden in the wind and the rain, wherever he goes the people always complain.”
Ted pulled out of the lot and onto the darkening streets of the Bronx. Singing—“Did it matter, does it now? Stephen would answer if he only knew how.”