Of course Ben Davis drove a nicer car than you, he just didn't act like it
March 23, 2009Ben Davis went to my father’s high school. A reception room precedes the office of the dean of admissions, whose omnipotence carries to the ends of the world such that he decides who gets to pay $22,000 in a given year for the privilege of attending the Augustinians’ campus. When the sun is right—early on the East Coast—Malvern Prep’s acres almost bear outlines of the Villanova cathedral tower’s long shade.
Davis stood in the dean’s office, leaning against the wall, those protracted shadows shrinking. An ornamental side table lay underneath his feet.
We first met seven years ago in that office, when I was an eighth-grader looking to go to Malvern Prep for high school, but the conversation moved like traffic out of a concert venue. One-way. Frozen in time, Davis continually stared at a scorching home run he had just hit, his piped Malvern uniform still piping from the force.
Above the photograph of him, the title USA TODAY NATIONAL PLAYER OF THE YEAR hovered like a mistake curveball. Not many wide-eyed prospective students missed the framed poster on the dean’s wall. “Wow,” I said. That was our conversation. Then, he was Malvern’s finest athletic product, a Seattle Mariners catcher. Seven years later he would be my teammate.