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Eileen Hennessy
World Series

By then the war had been over for three years, and the men were back
home. My best friend, Teresa Rossi, was in bed recovering from the epileptic
fit that she had had on the day her parents sent her big sister Camille
with her swollen belly to family out of state. My second-best friend, Catherine
Mullin, tenth polio case of the year, was in the hospital and lying in an
iron lung that pushed her in and pulled her out.
Mrs. Levy, wife of the owner of the radio store on Bedford Avenue, pushed
the baby carriage around to the south wall of the store and stood sunning
her new baby, a boy with a strange large head and strange small slanty eyes.
Mr. Levy set up a television set in the store window. At game time every
afternoon, a crowd of men and boys gathered outside on the sidewalk. Women
with lumpy net shopping bags crossed to the other side of the street. On
my way home from school, I found another store window to look at myself
in.
My father took the week off from looking for a job, and sat by the radio
listening to every game. The afternoons were hot, so he left the windows
open. From the moment I turned the corner into our street, I listened for
the voice of the radio announcer. On the last day of the series, I was listening
so hard that I nearly stepped on a snake that was shedding its skin on our
sidewalk. I stood and watched the snake convulse as it sucked its body in,
held like that for a moment, then let go and jerked itself forward. After
a few more jerks like this, the snake got free of its skin. Then I heard
the fans on the radio roar. I heard the announcer say, "That's it."
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