Ya stupid sonuvabitch, the place is deserted! It’s gotta be a ******’ night game, ya ******’ mook, But though the parking lot had the forlorn look Of a down-on-its luck strip mall on a weekday afternoon, There was just the hint of activity and indeed a game, A friends-and-family affair with the Cubs, Losers if not particularly lovable, So we departed the ancient Gremlin (Ostensibly painted cab-yellow, Though festooned with enough Bondo and duct tape To make it difficult to tell Where car began and slapdash repair ended) Strolling toward the deserted ticket window To drop the two-bucks per for upper deck seats, Knowing that we would find amenable ushers Willing to let us move down to the boxes After it became fully apparent There was no last-minute influx scrambling off the 7 train, And we sat in the sun-drenched field level seats (Though its warmth a relative thing, The rays’ angle and the decidedly April wind Requiring buttons to be snapped And collars to be turned upward) Viewing the spectacle of two clubs Dutifully and somewhat optimistically Performing the rites of Spring, each nine knowing There would be no October heroics in their futures, Their first-rate plays and foibles Gathering our appreciation or scorn Between gulps of over-priced watery beers, And as we sat in this unlovely stadium, Looking for all the world Like some Bunyan-esque chipped ashtray Plopped down on an unprepossessing landfill (The hopes and wistful dreams of this children’s game Perched uneasily atop ancient sardine tins and discarded rattles) We agreed that we would do this again, But it never came to pass, as life its ownself Rolled on like the cap of John Pacella (Invariably flying off his unruly mop From the effort of launching yet another fastball In the all-too-vain hope it would find itself Somewhere in the vicinity of the strike zone) Tumbling brim over crown in the swirl of the breeze.