"Gardner Dozois - The Hanging Curve" - читать интересную книгу автора (Dozois Gardner) The Hanging Curve
By Gardner Dozois **** IT WAS A COOL OCTOBER night in Philadelphia, with a wet wind coming off the river that occasionally shifted to bring in the yeasty spoiled-beer smell of the nearby refineries. Independence Stadium, the relatively new South Philly stadium that had been built to replace the old VeteranтАЩs Stadium, which still stood deserted a block or so away, was filled to capacity, and then some, with people standing in the aisles. It was the last game of a hard-fought and bitterly contested World Series between the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Phillies, 3-2 in favor of the Phillies, the Yankees at bat with two out in the top of the ninth inning, and a man on third base. Eduardo Rivera was at bat for the Yankees against pitcher Karl Holzman, the YankeesтАЩ best slugger against the PhilliesтАЩ best stopper, and Holzman had run a full count on Rivera, 3-2. Everything depended on the next pitch. Holzman went into his slow, deliberate windup. Everybody in the stadium was leaning forward, everybody was holding their breath. Though there were almost ten thousand people in the stands, nobody was making a sound. Even the TV announcers were tense and silent. Hey, there it is! The pitchтАФ Some pundits later said that what was about to happen happened because the game was so tight, because so much was riding on the next pitchтАФthat it was the psychic energy of the thousands of fans in the stands, the millions more in the viewing audience at home, every eye and every mind focused on that particular moment. That what happened was caused by the tension and the ever-tightening suspense felt by millions of people hanging on the outcome of that particular pitchтАж. professional baseball, there had been many games as important as this one, many contests as closely fought, many situations as tense or tenser, with as much or more passion invested in the outcomeтАФand yet what happened that night had never happened before, in any other game. Holzman pitched. The ball left his hand, streaked toward the plateтАж. And then it froze. The ball just stopped, inches from the plate, and hung there, motionless, in midair. After a second of stunned surprise, Rivera stepped forward and took a mighty hack at the motionless ball. He broke his bat on it, sending splinters flying high. But the ball itself didnтАЩt move. The catcher sat back on his butt with a thump, then, after a second, began to scoot backward, away from the plate. He was either praying or cursing in Spanish, perhaps both. Hurriedly, he crossed himself. The home-base umpire, Kellenburger, had been struck dumb with astonishment for a moment, but now he raised his hands to call time. He took his mask off and came a few steps closer to lean forward and peer at the ball, where it hung impossibly in midair. The umpire was the first to actually touch the ball. Gingerly, he poked it with his finger, an act either very brave or very foolish, considering the circumstances. тАЬIt felt like a baseball,тАЭ he later said, letting himself in for a great deal of comic ridicule by late-night talk show hosts, but it really wasnтАЩt that dumb a remark, again considering the circumstances. It certainly wasnтАЩt acting like a baseball. He tried to scoop the ball out of the air. It wouldnтАЩt budge. When he took his |
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