Of course it's
limited. How long can it last? Not Joba's arm or his success. What really
matters: his time left with his dad. That's all the boy could think of when he
got that call just after last season, a weak voice on the phone rasping,
"Help me ... help me...." He raced home from a nearby restaurant to
find his father shaking from the pain of an appendix that would burst minutes
later on the operating table, setting off a series of complications that
stemmed from the polio and came within a whisker of ending his life.
They made it
through, together. Through nine days on a ventilator, two weeks in intensive
care, five months in the hospital. Through the staph infection and the
abscessed ulcer. Scared the hell out of the kid, seeing his dad scared for the
first time in his life.
And so, after a
life of never missing even the tiniest moments, his 56-year-old dad has to miss
the biggest moments. Has to remain at home, still unable to travel a year after
the surgery, watching his son fulfill the dream a thousand miles away, on a TV
screen.
Finally, no
matter how many times Joba calls him on their cellphone walkie-talkies for
their good-night ritual, or text-messages it from a faraway hotel and tries to
update him even on takeoffs of the Yankees team plane—Wheels up. Love!—the
distance grows too much to bear. Harlan gets a doctor's clearance, packs up on
the first Friday of September and drives the three hours of cornfields to
Kansas City....
Place the
crippled Native American orphan on his new candy-red scooter in the on-deck
circle of a major league ballpark during batting practice, his cellphone
jangling with calls from media across the country, and one Yankees star after
the next—A-Rod, Jeter, Rivera, Pettitte, Torre—introducing himself and praising
him for the job he did raising his son.
Place the son on
the grass nearby, loving every minute of it.
Place the father
in the handicapped section in Level 3 of Kauffman Stadium two hours later, his
extended family and friends seated just in front of him, watching the Yankees
enter the seventh inning with a 3--2 lead over the Royals.
Place the son in
the outfield grass, jogging toward the mound as the P.A. announcer booms,
"Your attention, please! Now pitching for the Yankees...."
Place the
father's hands on the scooter's handlebars, squeezing them tighter and tighter,
as if the thing's hurtling backward a hundred miles an hour. Watch his
daughter, Tasha, hug him and say, "This is it, Dad," as his family and
friends leap and scream.
Watch the son
turn his back to the plate, look to the sky and hold his Yankees cap over his
heart. Watch the father remove his Yankees cap and do the same as the tears
stream down his cheeks....