The Tinkerer: Reckoning
The Tinkerer: Reckoning Like that pile of scrap so many things he wants to become, but he never graduated from being the utility guy he was in college ball, a cleat firm at each position: A Presbyterian who doesn’t mind the Virgin’s intercession time to time, milk at a local farm but Walmart pickup most else, commute across state lines. Hell, even heaven and earth both have a hold. When he finds himself in the splits, he tries to trust the ache is not a tear but a long-coming loosening like a too-tight tendon. Sometimes he can still see himself there, spitting seeds and stretching down the left-field line, wondering who he’s going to be today and whether there’s still a solid spot for such fluidity in the line-up card tacked over the bat-rack.