We share a quarter-season ticket plan with some of our neighbors, which this year included an exhibition game between the Nats and the Orioles. It was a bonus game, and no one else in the group was interested, so I texted my friend Mary, who is an Orioles fan, to ask if she wanted to go with me this afternoon. "Sure!" she agreed to take off early from school, "It will be like practicing for retirement!"
And as it turned out? It was.
The weather was lousy, but we didn't care; we expected it to clear up by game time. There was a snafu with the parking pass, which I spent a frustrating hour dealing with before just reserving parking somewhere else; all fine.
When we arrived, the park was nearly deserted due to the weather and the time of day on a Monday. Even so, we enjoyed rattling around like we owned the place, and all the employees were super cooperative and friendly. It was their opening day for the season, and their excitement was contagious.
The game was delayed, but Nats radio was kicking, playing hits old and older, which I was only too happy to sing along to. Mary had a great ballpark hot dog before we ditched our drizzly seats on the field level for some dryer nose-bleeds under the eaves way up in section 405.
We chatted, admired the view of the city and the Anacostia River, and watched the raindrops bounce off the tarp for an hour, scanning the field, the dugouts, and the bullpens for any activity that might give us a clue to the fate of the game. A little after 2, a guy dressed in red corduroys and a sportcoat approached us. We were two of the only three people in the section. "I think you're in my seat," he said, waving his phone.
Against the odds, we were, so we moved on up a couple of rows. A minute later, we saw some Orioles dragging their equipment duffles from the bullpen and decided to go. We hadn't made it to the stairs before the announcer confirmed what we suspected: the game was canceled.
"So that's retirement," I told Mary as we ambled down the ramp toward the exit. "Not always what you expect, but if you roll with it, it can be nice in its own way."
"I like it!" she said. "I'm in."