David stood at his mark.
Longford stood tall, and nodded to David. âMorning, Mr Donald.'
âGood morning, Mr Longford,' called David.
âAll very bloody pip-pip here then,' called Hall.
Longford took his guard.
David whispered, âAnd it's the moment we've been waiting for. Donald to Longford.' David saw the arc, saw the spin. He stepped in and bowled. The ball arced with nice height, and landed just on the edge of the footmark, where David had intended. Longford took no risks however. He stayed back, waiting. The ball hit the pitch, but didn't spin as much as the previous delivery. David's finger hadn't let him rip it. Longford came at the ball with bat and pad, but was a little surprised by the bounce, still managing to drop it to the ground. It went between Baker and Hall, and Hall had to lumber after it. Longford ran two runs.
David was glad he'd scored two, and was facing again, so he could keep setting his trap. Longford would look at you, David, his grandad had said, as he's careful and values his wicket. While he's looking, that would be the time to get him.
David stood at the top of his mark. He looked towards slips, then out to point. It was important, for this trap, to not move point yet. He needed to show Longford his stock ball. âDonald eyes the pitch. Longford is ready, easy in his stance.' David stepped in and flighted another high one, landing it straighter this time. Longford started forward, but then stepped back, his bat lifted, as the ball spun away towards the slips. Longford had his bat covering it the whole way. He probably could have cut it as it bounced at a useful height. David watched him nod, and practise a cut.
David yelled, âMr McLeod, a little straighter please.'
Longford watched McLeod move to cut off some future cut. Longford eyed the gap between McLeod and extra cover. David would do it now. He stood watching where he'd land it and imagining the ball. âDonald is waiting. Longford eyes the field.' David moved in and bowled. The ball was a little lower than the previous delivery, but looked similar and Longford went back. But this ball dipped a little, which made Longford adjust his cut shot, as he waited for the spin. It didn't come. David bowled his arm ball and the ball held its line going straight for the stumps. Longford tried to get his bat back towards it, but couldn't move in time. The ball hit Longford's pads right in front of the wicket.
The Australian team went up in appeal. Richardson started running forward from second slip. Mr Wisden was shaking his head.
David turned. âLbw,' he shouted.
âNot out,' said Wisden from behind his stumps.
âIt was going to hit the stumps!'
âDavid, that's enough,' called Richardson still advancing down the wicket.
âBut it was the arm ball. It was out leg before wicket.'
âDavid. Silence!'
Richardson took David by the shoulder. âThe umpire's decision is final. That's it. Bowl your next ball.'
âBut it was out, Mr Richardson.'
âLad, I think so too, but the umpire must have had doubts. So, according to the rules of cricket, Longford isn't out. Lucky him.'
âThat's unfair. I set the trap.'
âSet it again. Get on with it. Or get off this field,' said Richardson sharply, as he turned and walked back to slip.
David blew the air from his lungs as he tried to calm himself. He became aware of the crowd. They were complaining too. David wiped his forehead and felt sweat there. It was another hot day with no wind. He looked to Longford, who was watching him with interest. He walked back to his mark. Jackson threw him the ball, calling, âThis time, Babe.'
David hated that nickname. He should have had Longford, just as his grandad and he had planned. What must he be thinking now, if he was listening on the radio? David stepped in and bowled, and Longford stepped forward two good steps and hit the ball way over David's head. Six. The crowd groaned, but then clapped.
âNice shot,' called Dorrington.
David bowled too flat next ball and Longford hit him past a diving McLeod for four. Ten runs he didn't deserve already. David should grab his cap from the umpire at the end of the over, as he'd heard some disgruntled bowlers had done on occasion, only he didn't have one. The team hadn't even given him a cap. As he waited for Hampton to get the ball from the gutter, he wondered should he ask Richardson about getting a cap. All the other Australian players had green caps with the Australian coat of arms on them.
David tried for the rough again, but missed the spot and Longford hooked him for four more. He blocked the last delivery and David started to walk away with one for fourteen off his first over when Richardson called, âDavid, go and stand with Chalkie. Stand next to him for the entire over.'
McLeod came on to bowl, and David went to Mr Johnson. âWhy do I have to come and stand with you?'
âI'm not sure. Are we both in trouble, do you think?'
David felt stupid, standing right next to Mr Johnson, but Dorrington blocked the first couple of McLeod's medium pacers.
âI've taken a wicket. I should have had two.'
âAnd I've scored some runs,' said Mr Johnson, watching the wicket as he talked, âHundreds and hundreds.'
Dorrington stepped in to McLeod's third delivery and hit it towards the mid-wicket boundary. Hall gave chase.
âJust not now?' suggested David.
âThat's what I'm wondering. Why did you bowl so many bad balls after bowling so many good?'
David thought about that during the rest of the over. Even when Longford hit a single and Mr Johnson ran after it, and David ran after him, causing the crowd to laugh. He kept thinking about what had gone wrong. Then he knew. He had not done anything right. He had not thought about what he was going to do, and had not done it well. He'd bowled nothing balls, because he'd thought nothing.
âBut it was out, Mr Johnson.'
âI didn't think so. I thought it was going to spin like your other deliveries and miss off stump.'
âIt was my arm ball.'
âI didn't know you had an arm ball.'
âI do.' But David settled down again. âI have to get the umpires to understand.'
âNo.'
âWhat then?'
âI think you should think about the next ball, not what happened to the last.' He gestured towards the surrounding crowd. âThey can think about what's already happened, and we can too if we want, but later. After. While we're playing we must always be in the now and in the next and
not in the was.'
David nodded when Mr Johnson looked at him, but couldn't make his team mate's words stick in his head. He understood the meaning of each word, but the way Mr Johnson was putting them together made it add up to something else that David couldn't untangle.
âThe was,' said David hopefully.
âYes. Mr Richardson is possibly suggesting that I'm also thinking about what's happened and not about simply dealing with the next ball myself.'
âThe next ball?'
âHe's clever, but I don't think he's that clever. I think he just wanted me to settle you down. Go and bowl like you have been before you got all angry and silly.'
âYes, sir.'
It was David's next over. He was bowling to Dorrington, the stylish opener. He and Grandad had worked out a plan. Dorrington was a left-hander, and so offered many more options. The footmarks would allow David to spin the ball in to his wickets.
Dorrington suddenly called, âDo your worst, baby!'
âOi,' yelled Hall, âgo make up your own nickname.'
David concentrated. His finger felt pretty good. He'd be patient with Dorrington, but would have to open up mid-off to encourage the drive. David asked for a fly slip as well, because Dorrington liked to sweep and was likely to catch a top edge with David's extra bounce. He asked for a short third man. He imagined the ball. âDonald to Dorrington. No love lost there. Dorrington eyes mid wicket.' David stepped in and bowled a flatter, faster leg break. He'd intended it to be a set-up delivery, with not much on it, so that he'd get a
catch later in the over by giving him a topspinner. But for some reason Dorrington flashed at the ball awkwardly and too early. The ball popped up and Hall took the easiest of catches at gully.
The players ran up, including Hall this time. âNice nut, Babe.'
âI didn't mean it,' said David.
âDon't tell them that,' said Baker.
âIt wasn't a good ball.'
âThey're getting scared of ya,' said McLeod.
âYep,' said Bardsley, âHe's been standing up the other end watching all these mystery balls and he's...'
âShit himself,' laughed Hall.
âHmm, quite,' said Richardson, more seriously. âSo, same field as before for Windsor.'
âHe'll try to dominate me,' said David.
Windsor did not. Longford and he had a long discussion when he came to the wicket, and whether it was that, or another plan, David was unsure. Windsor refused to play at most of David's deliveries. He stepped towards the pitch of the ball, as though ready to crash them to the boundary, but merely watched them spin towards slips. When David tried his arm ball, Windsor blocked it. When David bowled from the rough, he merely padded the ball away, keeping his bat high and out of the way.
âCareful there, Eddie, you might have got a run,' muttered Jack Tanner, as the over finished.
Longford went after McLeod. He hit a four then a three. Next ball Windsor lashed out, hitting McLeod on the up towards the extra cover boundary, where Ten Ton stood and took a catch just before the pickets. He spun to face the
crowd, quite daintily, in order not to overbalance. Windsor was out for a duck, bowled McLeod, caught Hampton.
Everyone ran to McLeod.
âMopsey. Gutsy ball.'
âGotta keep flyin' the flag for us country boys.'
âCall ya Babe Senior soon.'
âGet stuffed.'
Bishop was coming out. England were three for sixty-five. They were still in a comfortable position to win the game, but as shaky a start as they'd had for some years.
Bishop and Longford both played carefully. Bishop blocked and prodded, even when David came on for his next over. When he edged a single, it was the first ball he'd tried to hit, rather than defend.
David got prepared for Longford, setting his field and clearing his mind. Longford stepped back and cracked the first ball past point for four. When David tried his arm ball, Longford picked it, and drove hard and straight for another boundary.
David saw a chance. He saw the ball that might do it. He bowled with good flight and height bringing Longford forward for another drive, but this was a good loopy. It hit the pitch and suddenly took extra speed and extra force. Longford tried to check the shot, but the ball kept rising at his bat and all he did was pop the ball up towards David. He grabbed at it, but the ball hit the hard part of his left hand below the thumb. It bounced out and up. It was still there in the air in front of him. Only David couldn't seem to move his feet. He watched it drop ever so slowly all the way to the ground. There was an enormous groan from everywhere.
Tanner called, âYou might be wanting to buy a lottery
ticket, Henry.'
âSome days make up for the other days, don't they?' Richardson said with wise smile.
David was looking at the ball on the ground. All the planning and a good ball too, and still it hadn't worked. Even he should have caught that. He looked at his hands open in front of his nose. His finger was slightly swollen, coming up again. He shook it, thinking he didn't have long before he couldn't bowl that day.
Mr Johnson was there. He'd run in a long way to pick up the ball and hand it to David. âSo, David, lucky that's in the past, eh?'
âYes, sir.'
He felt a pat on his back.
âWhile you're there Chalkie, come in to extra cover. Maud, silly point. Ned, leg gully.'
David turned. Mr Richardson was taking over the field. David was about to protest, but stopped. Richardson was dragging in the field. He was crowding them around Longford, close in. David thought about this. Longford had been given two lives. Had just given a return catch. He must be feeling the pressure. But this was Longford. The man had ice water in his veins, they said. What would he do?
âAll right with you, David?' called Richardson, going to second slip himself, next to Bardsley at first.
David went back to his mark, nodding. David looked down the wicket, whispering, âDonald to Longford. The field are in, waiting for a pop-up catch. Longford can defend here. Or he can attack.' David would guess. He saw the delivery he'd bowl. He saw what he hoped Longford would do. He stepped in, glimpsed Longford starting to move early. No. David changed to bowl flat and fast, still spinning. Longford
came down at it in two big bounds, but the extra speed beat him and the ball spun past his swiping bat. Baker took it in his gloves and swept the stumps. The team jumped. Longford stumped Baker, bowled Donald.
Players ran at David. Chests and stomachs and big thumps on the back that made him cough. The crowd was a distant tumult of excitement. He'd got Longford.
Richardson was talking, âClever ball that one. Three moves ahead.'
Maud McLeod grabbed David's cheeks quite hard and yelled into his face, âYou little beauty.'
Jack Tanner came forward and patted him on the chest. âGood ball, Mr Donald.'
âIt isn't over, boys,' said Richardson. âLots more wickets to take and not many runs to play with.'
âWell, laddie,' said Ernie Morgan, the English wicketkeeper, when he came to the crease, âyou're starting to look like a bolt of lightning out of the blue.'
David thought he'd said it not unkindly. Morgan edged him through slips for a single.
Richardson brought Calligan back next over and trapped Morgan leg before wicket. Ostler scored off his first ball, then he and Bishop rotated the strike with ones and twos.