Monday, January 13, 2014

Chapter 9 – I Once Knew a Fence in Chicago


One afternoon, the summer before fourth grade, we were playing “pitcher’s hand out” in the grass field behind the St. Clare convent. That’s a form of slow-pitch baseball played when you’re short on players. There were only six of us that day so each team had a pitcher, a shortstop and a left-fielder. The team that was batting supplied the catcher, but in the event of a play at the plate, the pitcher would cover home to avoid any conflict of interest on the part of the catcher. We were all right-handed hitters, so anything hit to the right-field side of second base was an automatic out. And since there was no first baseman, if the infielder relayed a ground ball to the pitcher before the batter reached first base or the pitcher successfully fielded a grounder before the batter reached first, the batter was out. Hence the name “pitcher’s hand out.”
             Way out in the deepest part of left-center field was the convent’s fence. (The convent was the building our parish nuns lived in.) Most of the fences in our neighborhood were 4-foot-high cyclone fences – easy to see through and easy to hop over. This fence was a true privacy fence – 6-feet high and made of solid wooden planks that ran horizontally. You couldn’t see through it, under it or over it. That fence was so far from our home plate there was no way any of us could ever jack one over it. Except for Kenny Bartkowiak. Seemed like no matter how deep outfielders played him, Kenny somehow managed to hit the ball over their heads. And on this particular day he got all of one, as he often did, and hit the ball over that fence.
            After Kenny finished rounding the bases, we all gathered around home plate to assess the situation: we didn’t have a back-up ball; it was way too early to call it a day; and it was too far to anyone’s house to go get another ball. So it was decided we’d retrieve the ball from the convent’s yard. As simple as this might sound, it was not an undertaking to be undertaken lightly. If it were any other fence in the neighborhood, the outfielder would have just hopped it without a second thought to fetch the ball. But this was not just any fence. It was a fence with no gaps or holes to peek through anywhere. For all we knew, the yard was inhabited by the kinds of monsters one sees depicted on old sea maps. And nuns lived there. So if any of us did try to sneak a peek over the top of that fence, he did so at the risk of being struck blind.
            So we decided that all six of us would go get it. But when we found ourselves gathered in front of the back gate, we stood as still as fence posts, unsure of how to proceed. After all, the security at a convent must be incredible. The gate was certainly double-bolted and chained shut. Then suddenly, without warning, Kenny lifted the latch and swung the gate open. Considering what was there, we could not have been more surprised if we had seen Hoyt Wilhelm pitching BP to Billy Williams.
            Whenever I recall that moment, I invariably hear harp music (although there was no musical accompaniment whatsoever) as that gate swung open to reveal … an attractive, smiling woman in her mid-twenties, wearing a light yellow, sleeveless blouse, shorts and sneakers, refinishing a small dresser. I wondered “What kind of a sin gets you ‘Ten Hail Marys, an Act of Contrition and refinish a piece of furniture’ for penance?” but was jolted from my reverie by five little words that shattered a lifelong stereotype in an instant: “Hi boys, I’m Sister Kathleen.” Our jaws dropped to our shoe-tops. She didn’t look like a nun! She didn’t dress like a nun! And she certainly didn’t smile like one! “Yer a nun?” gulped Tommy. “No lie?” asked Joey. “Get out!” protested Greg. “No way!” remonstrated Bob. She was quite tickled by our disbelief, and when she reiterated she was indeed a nun, we peppered her with questions about where she was from, how she was dressed and what she was doing at St. Clare. When she told us she’d be teaching fourth graders in the fall, we lost it all over again and told her we’d be fourth graders in the fall. She beamed beatifically and asked us our names. As we all introduced ourselves I kept thinking that every nun we had ever encountered before had been a lot older. A lot more reserved. And dressed in black habits that covered everything except hands and faces. But this new nun was different! This Sister could have been one of our sisters! She could have been a nurse or a waitress or a teller at the bank! She looked just like a regular person! Plus, she didn’t yell at us for hitting a ball into her yard. And she smiled a lot.
            After we’d chatted up Sister Kathleen for a while, one of the guys found our ball and we returned to the field to finish the game. And while I can’t speak for the others, I had a tough time concentrating on baseball the rest of that afternoon. Because for the past couple of days we’d all been complaining about the fact that summer was coming to an end and we’d be going back to school soon. And then we met a new, young nun who was really nice. And friendly. And pretty. And seemed to actually like us. And she would be our teacher that fall at St. Clare, along with other new nuns. And while it might not have met the criteria required by The Vatican, I gotta say I’m pretty sure that was a bona fide miracle. And suddenly it seemed as if maybe the fourth grade at St. Clare de Montefalco wasn’t going be so bad after all.