The Final Out
Sitting above a seat of steel
I watch the sun as it spills
Through the clouds
To the ground
Shining on the pitcher’s mound.
Summer heat’s not half as bad
As years passed
When I were a lad.
Yet, they still sweat and wipe their brow.
With shirts untucked
And with some luck
Should head for shelter
With a third out.
Count them one
Count them all.
Count them nine to chase the ball.
There’s a pitch.
A swing.
A miss.
The bat cuts the air
With a wicked hiss.
Sit down and bring yet another
Batter to the plate
To swing and hack and take some cuts
To make contact
On a swinging bunt.
Pitcher and catcher
Both converge
On the ball as it bounces.
The batter runs
With strides so full
Just to reach the base
Before the throw
To be called “safe.”
It was not to be
As ball hits glove
The third out is called.
The game is at an end.
One team cheers
While the other one cries
But on the ground
There he lies.
The last out in a game of bat and ball
Tears streaming he begins to crawl
Away from the crowd
To hide in shame
For being the last out
In the Big Game.
As time moves on
Fade does the pain
But it replays itself
Time and again.
As each time I sit
On this cold steel seat
And look out on the field
Where the loser was me.
The sun has gone down
And the time has arrived
For me to finally say goodbye
To the field
Where took place that great bout
Where I became the final out.