It was Rodrigo Buendía. He had been quiet all morning, puffing away at a succession of cigars, walking back and forth across Diamond Green as if taking the measure of it. The confinement he and the others had undergone, in a lightless cell in the wagon sledge, had been hardest on him; Cinquefoil had told Ethan that the slugger even wept in his sleep. “Waste of time, dude. We should be out there warming up. Sprints. Bunt work–fielding and laying them down. And then a couple of hours of BP. You, little fox dude, you going to be in center today. When the last time you played ball?”
“Fifteen sixy-nine,” Cutbelly said at once. “I hit into three double plays.”
“That’s what I’m saying,” Buendía said.
Chabon, Michael. Summerland. United States, Thorndike Press, 2003. pp460