Tom Mendicino introduced college-bound Charlie Beresford and high-school baseball hero Kevin “KC” Conroy in KC, At Bat. Now KC is trying to find his way—if he can just figure out where to look… KC has spent most of his twenty years working his way to the minor leagues. One drunken fight in a Spokane gay club, and he’s thrown it all away. Convinced he can’t return to his former coach’s devoutly Christian household, KC thumbs his way to Seattle. If he’s no longer the Mighty KC, destined to have his stats on a Topps trading card, who is he? The loser his mother always warned he would be? An imposter praying in vain for God to change him? Bad luck and a busted nose bring him to Eugene, Oregon, where he finds unlikely friends, work, and even a new purpose. But day by day he’s gaining something else: courage to play from the heart, no matter what the result might be…
Release date:
May 26, 2015
Publisher:
Lyrical Press
Print pages:
120
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“Come on, honey. You gonna make me get down off this stage and drag your pretty little ass up here?”
Even after three Jack and Cokes, he knows this isn’t a good idea. He shouldn’t even be here. He ought to be home, in bed, sound asleep. He’s gonna wake up in the morning, just like the last time, and the time before that, and swear he’ll never do it again, that he’s done with all that. It’s always easier to keep to the straight and narrow when the team is on the road, when he’s without his wheels, and he’s stuck bunking with three or four teammates in a crummy Days Inn where the rooms are so small they can’t escape the stink of each other’s craps. They pass the time playing Texas Hold ’em and sharing a few buckets of KFC and a couple of sixes of cheap local beer. It gets monotonous, living out of a duffel bag, but at least there aren’t any opportunities to get into trouble.
But back here in Spokane, in the cramped, two-bedroom monthly lease he shares with two roommates, he gets antsy, bored with television and Call of Duty. Tecchio, the older of the two, has been kicking around the minor leagues for years and is at the end of the line; he’s practically shacked up with the dental hygienist he’s thinking of settling down with after the season. And Rodriquez is only eighteen, a few months out of high school, and homesick. He travels eighty miles to spend the night at his mama’s house whenever he can. KC doesn’t really like Tecchio’s company. But he’s happy enough to hang out with Rodriquez, watching idiots eat earthworms on stupid reality shows and ordering pizza. KC’s afraid to be on his own, with too much time on his hands and the freedom to disappear for hours on end with no one to question his comings and goings. He’d tried running with the wilder boys on the team, prowling the local titty bars, getting soaking drunk, and ending the night at Asian massage parlors. But he’d ended up paying the girl a hundred bucks for her silence, knowing he’d never live it down if his teammates knew he couldn’t get hard. So he stays at the apartment, alone most nights, with the lights turned off, watching the Mariners play on cable and listening to his Pop-Pop’s old vinyl records on his turntable.
He calls California every night to check in with Coach Freeman. They talk about the day’s game and Coach gives him an inspirational pep talk and a few Bible verses, then leads him in a prayer. KC listens quietly and promises to avoid temptation, to have faith in the Lord, Our Father, and to call if he’s feeling sad and troubled, no matter the hour of the day or night. He tries falling asleep, reciting the words to the prayers the Freemans have taught him. But it’s hard to concentrate. His mind is on other things, things a true Christian man would never think about. Sometimes, he’ll try jacking off in the bathroom which only makes him hornier, so he’ll reach for his iPhone, exchanging messages with strangers on Scruff and Grindr. Or if he’s too impatient to wait for the slow drivel of essential information—WHERE R U, HOW BIG, C OR UC—he’ll grab his jeans and his boots and run off seeking heat and noise, music and people, dancing and drinking, somewhere to lose himself in a crush of sweating bodies, everyone drunk and high and happy.
“Are you bashful, handsome?”
The voice is mocking, playing to an appreciative crowd that loves nothing better than watching a strapping looker like KC, a young man attainable only in their boldest fantasies, being taunted, nudged just to the brink of humiliation, by a scrawny, raspy-voiced transsexual named Darlene Duncan wearing a garish dress and stiletto heels. KC’s up for the challenge and, tossing back a fourth Jack and Coke, climbs up onto the stage. He ignores the nagging voice in the back of his head warning him tomorrow morning is only a few hours away. He’ll wake up with a throbbing headache and sunlight will feel like a hot iron pressed against his eyes. Somehow he’ll manage. He’ll make to it the ballpark and after he laces up his cleats, he’ll be the Mighty KC again, shrugging off last night’s excesses as easily as swatting away a mosquito.
“Cat got your tongue? Come on stud, stand up straight and let everyone take a good look at you.”
Darlene struts across the stage, coyly brushing her body against KC’s, letting her manicured talons settle on his crotch, giving his cock a gentle squeeze.
“Oh my!” she sneers. “Maybe you’re not so shy after all! What’s your name, big boy?”
KC leans forward and squints into the stage lights, searching for any familiar faces in the rowdy room. It’s cool. No one he knows in Spokane has paid a ten-dollar cover to see this show. None of his teammates on the Chiefs would be caught dead in this place. He mumbles into the mike.
“Speak up, baby. Ricky, he tells me,” she informs the audience. “This pretty little thing’s name is Ricky.”
All eyes are on him. One squat drunk troll rips open his shirt and bares his man boobs, wagging his tongue lasciviously.
“Come on, Little Ricky, don’t keep your adoring public waiting,” she urges him, apparently needing to pick up the pace of the contest.
It’s fun, basking in the cheers. It’s not all that different from the frenzy whenever he makes solid contact with a ninety-three mile an hour fastball or slides feet-first into home plate. He pulls his brand new red polo, its bright color still unfaded by detergent and the heat of the dryer, over his head. He feels their eyes roving his smooth, taut belly, following the faint wisp of black hair that snakes around his navel. Someone hands him a beer and he tips it into his mouth, chugging it in a single swallow. He takes a deep breath when he finishes. He feels light-headed, truly, deeply drunk. He thrusts his arms in the air, Rocky-style, and bends at the waist, drawing appreciative catcalls as he flexes his biceps. His pecs and abdomen are truly a wonder to admire. He’s too swept up in waves of appreciation to notice that Darlene is annoyed by losing control of her audience, irritated at being upstaged by an amateur.
“Settle down, cowboy,” she snarls. “Those go, too,” she insists, pointing at KC’s feet.
Darlene seems disappointed he doesn’t take a drunken tumble, but KC is forever graceful, even in a state of advanced intoxication. He reaches down and pulls off his boots and his socks, balancing himself on a single foot without effort.
“Take your pants off now,” Darlene says, barely concealing her contempt, eager to move on to the next, presumably more malleable, contestant in the Club Odyssey Wet Briefs competition. But tonight KC is a showman, flirting with his fans, showily unbuckling his belt, teasing them as he plays with his zipper, making them beg for more as he slowly reveals the hard muscles of his legs.
“Looks like we’re blessed with a professional Chippendale tonight,” Darlene says into the microphone, her voice dripping with sarcasm as she pushes KC towards a small plastic wading pool at the center of the stage. “Go on. Get in there. You’re not going to melt.”
KC slaps his bare feet in the shallow water. He knows the entire room is staring at his crotch. His fans are getting restless. A few of them shout for him to take it off, begging for at least a peek. He hooks his thumb under the elastic waistband and slowly pulls his briefs away from his skin, teasing them with the promise of a glimpse of the fat dick cradled in his underpants. Darlene slaps his hand hard, the cruel edge of her voice making it clear she’s not fucking around.
“Don’t even think about it, asshole. I don’t need the fucking cops in here threatening my license.”
The crowd turns on her, booing and hissing her surprising Puritanical streak.
“Fuck you all,” she bellows, her voice full of fake cheer, trying to salvage the situation. “I have a better way to show you what Little Ricky’s packing.”
Darlene grabs a huge plastic Super Soaker and strikes a commando pose, taking aim at KC’s Jockeys. The water is shockingly frigid, as if she were punishing KC for stealing the show. The wet cotton clings to his skin and he feels his penis shrinking, retreating into the safety of his body. The cold water trickles down his thighs, sending goose bumps up and down his legs.
“Turn around now Cowboy. I. . .
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