Despite his team winning 13 of 14 games and surging toward an unlikely playoff berth, Mets Manager Mickey Callaway has still not noticed any uptick in enthusiasm for his squad near his residence in the city.

“I go to the field and I go to my apartment,” he said Wednesday at Citi Field. “I don’t ever see anybody. I eat every meal here and then go to sleep. I need to rest.”

It is getting harder not to notice what is going on in Queens, though, and his team shows no signs of slowing. In beating the Miami Marlins, 7-2, Wednesday afternoon, the Mets (59-56) won their sixth straight, completed a four-game sweep and improved to 19-6 since the All-Star break.

Having closed to within a game of a wild-card berth thanks to their remarkable run, the Mets will get an off day Thursday before a home weekend series against the Washington Nationals (60-53) — who happen to occupy the top National League wild-card spot. The Mets are aware that the competition will be stiffer after devouring a steady diet of minnows — next week they head to Atlanta to face the N.L. East-leading Braves — but they are starting to envision bigger things.