#2
calling the shots, catcher is conduit between all, holds the
keys to everything, including the beer tent and the t-shirt
truck. catcher sees all, surveys between the nosebleeds and
the quiet possibility that forever lives inside the on-deck circle.
catcher is asked to paint in leather between imaginary lines with
the critic resting their chin upon the crown of catcher’s head.
as reward for reaching the bigs, catcher gets to chase down the
line without kneesavers knocking against their calves. catcher isn’t
paid enough. catcher’s hat never shows wear in postgame interviews:
no pine tar, no sun fade. catcher is clean besides the places that the
equipment prescribed failed to reach. catcher isn’t paid nearly enough.
behind the plate, catcher is just another anyone, with neck protected
by metal goat beard or weird plastic snood if catcher is still small.
catcher calls for gatherings at the mound, calms the wild ones and sparks
the rest with small words said into catcher’s all-absorbing mitt. catcher
never gets to streak, is required to rest on no practiced rotation except
how and when catcher’s body wears or wears down. catcher has to be
kept down for reasons of pride, so catcher gets saddled with monikers,
like yogi or pudge. and yet, at times, catcher hides their eyes, turns their
head away, tempting us to run. but we don’t, because between each
inning, catcher always shows us the future, if we even thought of
running.
AVERY GREGURICH is a writer living and working in Marengo, Iowa. He was raised next to the Mississippi River, and has never strayed too far from it.