Spinner (29 page)

Read Spinner Online

Authors: Ron Elliott

Tags: #Fiction/General

BOOK: Spinner
7.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Dwyer, elevated in the batting, flailed at a slow googly that landed and spun so far it evaded his bat but took the top of his leg stump. He actually grinned at Donald before shouldering arms. Proctor was also caught in slips, but by another superb catch to Tanner, this time diving to his left and grasping it just before it hit the ground. Both batsmen had attempted defensive shots, which proved a disastrous strategy against the rampant Donald. (And another hat-trick—Ed.)

England were now six for 0. Another odd thing had begun in this second innings. No one had rushed to Tanner to congratulate the brilliant fielding. No one had so much as patted Donald on the back during the entire second innings. There was a workmanlike silence out in the middle, with the occasional word here and there from the captain.

Hampton's Heroics

It was only now that Longford walked to the crease, and he alone seemed immune to the gait of condemned men that had accompanied the preceding batsmen. He nodded to the Australians, and chatted to Dorrington, surely as Nelson must have done on those burning decks. But Longford was not facing. And the ball was given not to Calligan but to big Paul Hampton.

Richardson set a conventional off side field to the left-handed opening batsman. Only McLeod and Calligan patrolled the on side. Hampton bowled three perfect balls that rose sharply and temptingly outside off stump. Dorrington was having none of it, appropriately ignoring what was still ‘the new ball.' Longford came down and there was a mid-field conference. It was clear what his captain's directions had been. Longford wanted a run. Clearly Hampton had guessed too, for his next delivery was a yorker, which Dorrington only just managed to dig out.

Mistakes, Divine Intervention or Sacrifice?

The next two balls may be discussed for just as long as all of Donald's deliveries put together. Only Tanner and Hampton will ever know. Dorrington flashed at Hampton's next delivery just
outside off stump. It was too quick and too wide and there was an audible snick. The ball flew straight to Tanner at second slip. And he put it down. My suggestion is that it must have taken quick thinking and concentration to not fulfil the years of training and instinct that Tanner possesses in order to drop such a regulation catch. The cheer that erupted from the crowd was greater than any for a catch actually taken.

The next piece of play was more transparent. Perhaps there was panic. Perhaps. Hampton bowled another yorker, and Dorrington squeezed it out. Longford was backing up and the ball went straight to Hampton who picked it up, as Longford turned. All Hampton had to do was touch the stumps not two feet away. He seemed to look at Longford who actually stopped running. Then Hampton turned and threw down to the other end, as Dorrington scrambled back to only just make his ground. He needn't have worried. The ball was well wide.

Another cheer from the crowd. The mythical perfect game was still in the offing, even though the Australians were clearly doing all they could to collude.

Donald Versus Longford

The field set for Longford was nothing like that set in the first innings. After much discussion between Richardson and Donald, a copybook leg-spin field placing was used, although there were two slips, point, cover point, extra cover, mid-off, mid-on, mid wicket and a short fine leg. There were no easy singles, but there were gaps in the field, especially out on the on side. The first ball had good height and drifted in, seeming to pitch in line with off stump, before it spun away to be
taken towards slips by Baker. Longford watched it all the way, his bat remaining between the ball and his wicket. The crowd, spoiled as they had been that day, groaned.

Richardson trotted from slip and called McLeod and Calligan from mid-off and mid-on respectively. The crowding of the bat was beginning, but with no protection at all straight down the ground. Donald's next ball looked like it was going to be his famous skidder but this one sped up. Longford, seemingly inclined to play back and watching for a low slowing ball, was caught by surprise. Up on his toes, he seemed frozen as the ball kept on coming, just like the ball that dismissed him in the first innings. Only this time he managed to drop his gloves out of the way at the last second. The ball passed over the stumps and into Baker's eager gloves.

Through my field glasses I clearly saw Longford smile as he nodded, but prodded the pitch where the ball had pitched as though suggesting the ball had hit a sweet spot on the dry grass. Donald held his position at the top of his run, only six steps really, and stood staring at Longford a moment, before bowling his next delivery. Longford went late, but went with a rush. Clearly deciding that a ball that does not hit the pitch cannot spin, Longford danced down the wicket. Donald either saw him coming, or was expecting the bait to be taken. He speared the ball shorter still, at Longford's feet. Longford went through with the shot, edging the ball out past Hall into mid-off. There was a very loud call of ‘Yes' as Hall turned and scrambled for the ball and Dorrington ran through to make what really should be called an easy single. The crowd groaned. The perfect game was gone.

History

Dorrington was out lbw the next ball. He had seemed ready to play his shots, but the topspinner, I believe, was too straight and too early for him to get bat to ball. It did not appear to be a difficult umpiring decision. The crowd was more relaxed now, finding their voice once more.

Ostler was bowled off stump, uncharacteristically hanging his bat out towards the ball as if it might burn him. The left-handed Morgan changed his stance significantly, seeming to position his left leg outside the line of his off stump. The ball was a brute. It spun hugely and quite high. It would seem to this reporter that if one cannot find the ball with the bat, then thrusting a leg is compromised. The ball seemed to catch Morgan's back leg, and off that, find its way to the stumps. It could have gone anywhere, but on this day, there could be only one answer. And yet another hat-trick.

Tudor, who has never been a crowd favourite, trudged to the centre for the last ball of Donald's over. There were so many men around the bat that, should he edge, it had to fall in someone's hands. Longford may have suggested he let it go. He seemed to try, but the ball bounced in line with the middle and even the worst batsman must place his bat between ball and wicket. The ball spun, taking a faint edge, and Tudor was caught by Richardson in a copy of the first innings dismissal, although this one came to Richardson at a more comfortable height. It was over. England all out for 1 run. Australia 2 runs, declared. Australia win the fourth Test by twenty wickets and 1 run.

Richardson Explains 2-Run Declaration

‘It was matter of momentum. The moment was there to be seized. Young David was clearly bowling like a magician, and I felt our fielding performance was rising to meet his challenge. Certainly McLeod's catch at mid-on in the first innings, and many pieces of work by Tanner all through the match, were special efforts. So, momentum and self-belief were a factor.

‘I also believed, as did my team mates, that the English were a little shell-shocked, if you'll forgive that phrase. I did not wish to give them time to regroup, nor to have time to rethink their approach. I actually only wanted one run, so as it turned out, getting two was exactly what was needed. I concede it was a gamble, but cricket is sometimes that, and life is always that.

‘Can I also say,' he said in closing, ‘and I don't have any perspective at all on this thing that has just happened, that I thank God for granting me the privilege to have been on this field of play today.'

Balls Checked Again

Umpires Wisden and Bosanquet have stated that the balls used in the Test are not in any way faulty. They examined the ball carefully at the end of the first outrageously destructive over. Indeed, Longford examined it on arrival at the wicket in the first innings. It was changed for the Australian innings and changed again for the next English innings, albeit with a great deal of shine still left.

Further tests were done at close of play, with a representative from the English team present for bowling and batting tests in the middle. [They continued
for the afternoon. Many of the crowd, perhaps feeling they had paid to see a day's cricket, remained to observe the testing procedures].

Whirring Sound a Fright

The ball tests may confirm a theory concerning the mysterious whirring sound reported by players during Donald's bowling. Opposing wicketkeepers agreed that the noise was caused by the speed at which Donald was spinning the ball. Mr Baker reported hearing that kind of noise every now and again when a spin bowler managed to elicit a particularly large amount of spin on the ball. Likewise Mr Morgan had also heard such sound on occasion, but certainly never on every delivery.

The theory is that the whirr comes from the stitching catching in the air like some whining piece of war ordinance. The effect on the English batsmen was equivalent. Minds seemed focused and then alarmed and befuddled. In the end the sound seemed to evoke sheer terror.

Off Their Heads

BY VISITING BRITISH NOVELIST BERNARD CHESHIRE—Delight. Then astonishment. Then a kind of glee, just as one imagines the rising expectation as the carts brought in the aristocracy to be guillotined, and as the inevitable next wicket fell, like some coiffed head tumbling into a basket, so too the next roar of approval. The executions were despatched so swiftly that scorers and crowds-people could barely take in the moment, let alone the whole occasion. ‘Was that a googly?' ‘Was he stumped or caught?'

Let me share a confidence. Where normally somnulating hacks take our moment in the sun and catch up with a little reading and correspondence, a new thing began to dawn out here today: enormous tension. Would they score even one run? We'd entered a new kind of world, some drunken night in April, some Shakespearean midsummer, where top is bottom and Alice rules our world. Somehow, we knew quite early the wickets were gone. It was that one run that was in doubt.

And I therefore declare victory. Longford got the run. The English captain stood tall today and rained on the Australian parade, denying Donald his perfect game. The king is not dead yet. Long live the king. I am still not sure whether I completely dreamed this.

David's Grandfather Ill

David Donald's grandfather is gravely ill. George Baker, West Australian cricket coach and farmer, has looked after David since an early age, and trained him in the art of spin. WA is gripped by the worst drought in twenty years and it is understood that the family farm is mired in debt. It is to be hoped that young David's exploits on the cricket field may rally his grandfather.

The official attendance was 87,446.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

The aeroplane landed on the playing fields of the Esplanade in Perth between the town and the river just after dawn. A thin group of office workers, idlers and government officials had shown up with a band playing ‘God Save the King'.

‘Might want to play that a few times an' all,' muttered Mr O'Toole, rather drunkenly.

Mr Biggins hissed, ‘That will be enough of your dark wit, thank you, O'Toole. I for one care very deeply about the King's health.'

Mr Kingsford Smith gave some speeches, but proceedings were interrupted, as a car had been arranged by the Western Australian Cricket Association to take David to Toodyay, where they were holding up the train to Dungarin. The dashing pilots had tried to arrange for some fuel to be taken to Dungarin so they could take David all the way, but there had not been time.

David tried to thank both men but couldn't reach them through the crowd. People were patting David on the shoulder and ruffling his hair and generally not letting him through. When Mr Biggins dragged him towards the car, David saw the crowd doing the same thing to Kingsford Smith, who took it with good grace and a very untired smile. David wondered at Mr Kingsford Smith's ability
to draw energy from his feat and from the crowd like a kerosene lamp being turned up. David found it draining. He slept in the car, woke for some breakfast in Toodyay, and slept again on the train back home.

It was just after lunch when they came into Dungarin. Even though David had only been gone for some months, the town seemed to have pulled back on itself, like a puddle drying in the heat. What had seemed a limitless world appeared no more than a siding to David now, even before O'Toole spoke. ‘Well kid, maybe it's not the arse end of the world, but how about its armpit?' For once, Mr Biggins seemed to agree.

David had been watching Mr Biggins and still could not decide on him. He was a neat man who wasted few words or movements. So, while he was of average height, he seemed shorter. According to what Mr O'Toole had got out of him, he had once been a solicitor but was now the treasurer of the Australian Cricket Board, but also, suggested O'Toole, a bit of a ‘fixer.' David doubted from the way he said it that this meant he was good with machinery. Mr Biggins' eyes never smiled, and never gave any hint at what was going on behind them.

On the other hand, there was Mr O'Toole, who never left you in any doubt whatsoever concerning every single thought, feeling, opinion and bodily condition that made up each minute of each hour of the day. He'd finally got to David about half an hour out of Dungarin, plopping himself on the seat next to him on the train while Mr Biggins was off fixing something. David opened an eye, and closed it again, pretending to sleep. O'Toole smelt of tobacco and stale milk.

‘So, where's your uncle?'

‘I don't know,' said David, and he didn't. His Uncle Mike had delivered him to the hotel that night, and Mr Biggins and Scully had come and got him a few hours later to go to the cricket ground.

‘So he's just abandoned you, has he?'

David said nothing. He couldn't think of a way to answer the question that didn't come out badly.

‘How about your grandad?'

‘He's good.'

‘I thought he was sick. I thought that's what I found out for you, and that's why we are going to see him.'

David looked at him. O'Toole was smiling his loose dribbly smile. His face was pink, like he was lifting something heavy.

‘You do know you wouldn't be getting back to see him if I didn't write those articles about you and him and the shared plight of our nation, and being mired in debt?'

David shrugged. He wasn't sure if that was true. He'd only read the article in the one paper on the plane.

‘So you don't care about your grandad?'

‘I do.'

‘Man who raised you single-handed out on the farm. Taught you everything you know.'

‘Stop it.'

‘Do you love him?'

David looked away, like he was looking out the window, even though he was not looking at anything except his own angry feeling.

‘Doesn't matter, David. They call you Billy like in Billy the Kid, but they also nicknamed you The Old Man. Is that after him?'

‘No. Mr Baker said I had like an old head on young
shoulders. At cricket. Nothing else.'

O'Toole started laughing. It was like a low rumble of thunder down a mine. ‘Yeah, well we'll keep that one from them won't we? That's called projection that is. Projection onto a pretty clean canvas.' He nodded to himself, satisfied with his joke.

David started to get up. ‘I got to go.'

‘Where? We're on a train.'

‘Toilet.' David just wanted to be away from him.

‘Okay, tell me about that ball you got O'Malley with in the second innings?'

‘Yeah, that was a good un,' said David with a smile.

‘You know they're calling it the greatest ball ever bowled?'

‘Ever?'

‘And it wasn't even leg spin was it? It wasn't your googly. It was a different grip, like you used in the third Test.'

It was true. David had intended to keep bowling leg spin. They were coming out exactly as he wanted and with good control. But Mr Johnson had been watching him bowl a couple of very good offies in the corridor that morning, and thought a good off-spin delivery at the start of the second innings would confuse and panic the English even further. It sure did that, although at the time David was not thinking about the collective minds of the other team. He was concentrating on nothing more than getting as much spin into his off break as he possibly could. He put everything into that ball and it sure did change direction off the pitch. He'd actually erred in putting it too far out to the leg side. If it had not drifted in a little, it might have been called a wide. The greatest ball they all talked about was a whisker from a mistake and nearly another run.

‘Anyone home?' O'Toole was watching him. ‘What kind of ball was it?'

‘I can't tell you. You'll put it in the paper, and then the Poms will read it.'

‘Who told you that? Richardson?'

David nodded, sure he'd got O'Toole back.

‘Well, sure. But we can put a little bit of truth on some and then we can put a little bit of misdirection in there too. A bit of spin of our own.' He smiled, his eyes closing like a cat in front of a fire, sharing his secret.

David said, ‘I'm sure you could. But I won't.' David prodded him with his knee to be let out.

O'Toole winced, but did heave himself up out of the seat, so that David could pass. ‘I don't need your cooperation for the story, Old Man. You are the story, but where that goes is up to me.'

David didn't sit again on the train to Dungarin.

David was adamant that Mr O'Toole not come out to the farm when the oldest Mr Pringle offered to take them in his car. There had been a welcoming committee of sorts at the little station. Nell wasn't there. All three Mr Pringles and their wives were dressed up. David smiled at the Mrs Pringle who had been his mother's friend, and she smiled back with no sign of sadness at all, although the morning sun lit her face hard, and David realised that she might be as old as Mrs O'Locklan. Her husband, as mayor, offered a speech concerning returning sons who had done great things, which in this case was not a dead soldier but David. The other Pringles tipped their heads forward as though listening, but they were really allowing the hat brims to shade their eyes. Bob Pringle and Jimmy Clarke leaned
up against the steps, yawning. Bob had a white shirt, and David supposed he must be working in the bank now. He whispered something to Jimmy who laughed out loud until he saw a Mr Pringle glaring. Old Jack came over from the pub, and he looked David up and down, before shaking his head and going away. Apparently there was to be a town dance that night. There was some clapping, but when O'Toole yelled, ‘And we can declare a fundraiser to save the Donald farm,' it stopped abruptly.

Eventually they all turned to David and it was evident it was his turn to speak. He said, ‘Can I go see Grandad now?'

There was a splutter of a laugh from Bob, but everyone else seemed as relieved as David that the welcome was over.

Mr Pringle, the banker, explained the financial side to Mr Biggins while he drove them to the farm. He may have forgotten David was in the back, as he made no attempt to be polite. But then David considered that this was how Mr Pringle had always dealt with him.

‘It's not a recent debt. It has accumulated with the interest and every now and then, when it gets out of hand, we buy up some of the land, so we can square things.'

‘Foreclose, you mean,' said Mr Biggins, nodding.

‘Yes. Most of the farmers have been finding it hard. Fourth straight year of the drought. Old Baker held out better than most on account of his pumps and pipes contraption from the river.'

‘Irrigation?' Mr Biggins turned to David then, and nodded appreciation, which David felt his grandad deserved.

‘Yeah. Good land by the river, usually,' said Mr Pringle, looking out at the dusty paddocks and bush.

‘And how much of that is now ... the bank's?'

‘I'd have to look at the map and the deeds and surveyors reports to be sure.'

‘You don't know?'

‘Been a long drought, Mr Biggins. Not much decent rain before that. You reckon we want dead land? Not worth anything if you can't grow wheat on it. Always bin too dry to run much sheep.'

Mr Biggins nodded as though he'd been chastised.

Mr Pringle looked over at him, and nodded once himself. ‘Old George is a pretty stubborn old coot.'

‘He is not,' said David.

Mr Pringle looked back for just a moment, but then away. ‘Anyway, he won't hire anyone. Only been him and the boy, so they haven't been doing much work. And now he's...'

‘Thank you, Mr Pringle. Most interesting. Of course, when the drought breaks, the river land would appreciate quite considerably, wouldn't it?'

Mr Pringle looked at Mr Biggins, who looked back. Neither man let his feelings show, like a good batsman looking at a good bowler.

‘We worked really hard. Both of us,' David said finally, but it didn't make David feel any better about what he'd heard.

It looked dry, even for February, and the easterly was kicking up dust down by the river line, which was not a good sign. Jess barked as they drove into the yard. There was dust thick on the kitchen window and some leaves over the doormat.

David scrambled out of the car and started for the door, but Jess kept jumping in his way, and he yelled, ‘Git out of it
dog,' and she slunk down so he could go inside.

‘Grandad?'

There were some dishes in the sink and flies there. He went into the bedroom, where his grandad was lying on the bed in his clothes.

‘Grandad.'

The man opened his eyes. ‘David.' He struggled to sit up. ‘Having a nap.' His face was pale, a whiteness having somehow insinuated itself into his tanned face. His lips looked bluish and his eyes yellow. He'd lost a lot of weight, also from his face. The dog came in and sat just inside the door. His grandfather didn't order her away. He was looking at David. ‘You done the watering?'

‘No, sir. Not yet.'

He looked at the window. ‘What time is it?'

‘After two, I guess. You want some lunch?'

‘I must have dozed off.' Then he looked at David again, as though for the first time. ‘David.'

‘Yes, sir.'

Then he must have seen the men, because he squinted, and yelled, ‘Get out Pringle. I'm not bloody dead yet.' His grandfather's voice seemed as strong as ever. It was his eyes that had gone soft.

‘Steady on, George. Just brought the boy out. Trying to help.' Mr Pringle raised his eyebrows at Mr Biggins, but the little man was already backing out of the kitchen.

His grandad watched the doorway a moment longer before he said, ‘There's some pay books and other papers hidden in a biscuit tin under the rain tank.'

‘Yes, sir,' David said, and checked to see that Pringle had gone out too.

‘When I'm gone, you take them to someone ... not a Pringle,
and you get them to sort it out. Maybe the blacksmith.'

‘Nell's dad. Yes, sir. But Grandad, you'll be all right.'

He looked at David again, and again it was like he had forgotten he was there. His skin had gone tighter around his cheeks. Some of the hundreds of lines that had crossed the old man's face had evaporated. His lips were moving, and David leaned to hear, but he wasn't speaking. He was working up a smile. The smile passed like the thin shadow of a cloud. Then his grandfather's face set hard.

‘Are you all right?' David said, feeling fearful for the first time.

‘Why are you here boy?'

‘You're sick.'

‘Why aren't you with the team?'

‘Grandad?'

‘Why aren't you with him?'

‘But Grandad, you're sick.'

‘Get out.'

‘Grandad?'

‘Get out of this room now. I don't want you here.'

David stood, and turned to go, but turned back nearly as fast. He didn't look at his grandad, but he sat back down. He wasn't afraid. Finally he said, ‘I reckon if you're too sick to kick me out of this room, Grandad, then I'll just stay sitting awhile.'

‘Are you disobeying me?'

‘Yes, sir, respectfully, I reckon I am.'

He tried to glare at David, tried to get that steel in his eye that David was afraid of, but couldn't manage it, and realising he couldn't, he closed his eyes. David thought he was about to sleep, but he said, ‘She never disobeyed me a single day in her life, and then when she met him, she never
obeyed me again. Off to dances, off to wed, off to England in the middle of the bloody war. Off forever.' Then the corners of his mouth turned up into a gossamer of a smile as he seemed to recall other things, and he lay there smiling again. David couldn't recall so many smiles in a year being on his grandfather's lips.

Other books

Game Control by Lionel Shriver
Covet by Alison Ryan
My Life in Heavy Metal by Steve Almond
The Redeemed by M.R. Hall
The Petticoat Men by Barbara Ewing
How Do I Love Thee? by Nancy Moser