Someone patted him on the back, and Mr Johnson nodded grimly. âFinally.'
âA tough little century.'
âNo century is little,' shot back Mr Johnson.
âWhat's the score?' asked David, still trying to think
clearly enough to know who he was and where.
âSeven down for a hundred and forty odd.'
âHow much do we need?'
âAnother fortyish,' said Ken Hall, looking closely at his captain.
The men shuffled.
âAn' there's some clouds over east,' said Mr Jackson.
Maud McLeod came in bleeding from the nose. The big red drops that covered his cricket shirt were already turning brown. âBloody bastards.' He threw his bat the length of the room and it crashed into the wardrobe there.
David looked more closely at the team as they turned to look at Mr Richardson. Ned Hall had a big bruise on his cheek. Beardie had a cut over his eye.
âTwo all and a draw is pretty good, considering where we were a few Tests ago,' said Mr Jackson.
âI'm not too sure we can keep 'em out that long,' said Maud McLeod mopping at his nose.
Mr Biggins came back with the doctor.
The doctor shook his head. âLike a field hospital down here.'
Just then there was another groan from the crowd in the stand above the change rooms. Ten Ton yelled, âHe's not out, but he's down.'
âI'll be right back,' said the doctor hurrying out, followed by most of the team.
Mr Richardson headed out calling, âTanner or Calligan?'
âWelcome back, Billy,' said Maud.
âYeah, Kid, sorry we're lettin' ya down,' said Ned Hall.
âYou're not,' said David.
David noticed Mr Biggins still standing in the doorway. He had his hat in both hands where he was turning it round
and round.
David said, âMy uncle was a prisoner in this room with bars, Mr Biggins.'
âI want you to know I had nothing to do with that.'
âOf course not. You wouldn't!'
Mr Biggins nodded. âThank you. I'll see if I can find out where he is.' He turned to go, but said as he went, âWelcome back, David.'
David closed his eyes to the pain in his head, but made himself open them straight away. He didn't want to sleep any more. The world had a habit of moving on rather quickly when he wasn't there to watch it. He stood, and felt like vomiting again. He grabbed on to the jarrah cupboard only to see his name on it. David Donald.
His cricket gear was inside. On top of his creams and shoes was a brand new Australian cap. It was dark green with the emu and kangaroo on the front. He took the cap and fitted it firmly on his head. He dressed, fighting off his headache, but once he had one of the batting gloves on, he stopped dressing, overcome with how huge his hands seemed. He looked to his left hand. Ungloved, it was immense. âMy hands are so big,' he said with wonder.
âYeah an' my nose might have been broke a few times an' all.' It was Mr Scully, coming into the change rooms with a little bottle. âTell me something I don't know.'
âMr Scully, I can't put my other glove on.'
âHow many times I gotta tell you not to put your right glove on first? How you going to do your other hand? Can't you remember anything?'
âNo, sir. Not about batting.'
âNo, sir. And that's the truth. What are you getting into those things for anyway? You can't go out there.'
âBut just if we need the runs. If everyone else gets out.'
âAnd you think you'll be any help?'
David sat down on the bench. He supposed not. He wasn't very good at batting. He wasn't any good at all at batting. Only bowling and he'd missed that.
âAnyway, take a big sniff of this.'
David looked at the tiny bottle that was thrust towards him.
âWill it fix my headache?'
âNo. I'll go see if I can find some aspirin. Clear your head a little from all that stuff they had you on.'
âMy head feels like it's got an axe stuck in it.'
âLet's see then.'
Mr Scully turned David's head and looked at the back.
âYep. A dirty great axe stuck in there.'
David giggled. âDo you think it might put their bowlers off? Me batting with an axe in my head?'
âProbably not the way they're bowling. Just give 'em more to aim at. Anyway, you'll not be going out there, so you an' your axe can sit here and get better.'
Mr Scully pushed the bottle at David again and he sniffed the nasty smelling salts. They made his eyes feel big and clear, like he'd jumped in the river.
âWhat happened to me?' asked David.
âYou were kidnapped. Then rescued.'
âMy uncle?'
âDon't know about that.'
âHe was there. What happened to him?'
âI'll go get the skipper. He can tell you what's what. Or not. Up to him.' Mr Scully hastened out, muttering like a new harvesting machine.
David was aware of the crowd above. They seemed
clearer than before. Instead of the general murmur and noise, there was more one voice. A groan. A cheer. There was a lot of silence.
David took his right-hand glove off and put on his cricket pads, buckling the ankles first, then under his knees. He dragged the left glove on first, then the right with more difficulty, wriggling his fingers and dragging the glove up using his teeth. He looked at his enormous fingers once again with a new wonder. Had they grown even more?
Uncle Mike ... Michael had said some things. The crowd gasped as one and David was thankful for it. He stood and fished his bat from the back of his cupboard and set out to watch the rest of the Test match.
Outside the players' rooms, it was like a white sheet on the clothes line with the sun shining behind. David just stood inside the door waiting for the whiteness to clear. He saw them out there. The whole team were sitting forward on their seats looking out. They seemed frozen.
David noticed heavy clouds over the far pavilion, the big flags flapping.
Another crowd groan and David looked out to the centre of the oval. Legal must have ducked under a ball. He was straightening himself and loosening his arms, like he was putting on invisible suspenders.
The field setting looked odd. It was unbalanced. There was only one player on the off side. The rest were either in slips or crowded around the on side.
Tudor walked back to the top of his long run.
The scoreboard showed Australia eight wickets down for one hundred and forty-seven. David did the numbering and figured they only needed another thirty-four to win.
Tanner was on thirty-five.
Tudor ran in and bowled.
David couldn't see the ball, but did see Mr Calligan lean back, pushing his bat at what must have been a sharply rising delivery. There was a groan from the crowd.
Someone dived from silly mid-on. Everyone went quiet.
But Mr Calligan straightened himself again and David heard Ned Hall yell, âNaw, didn't carry.'
The crowd began its quiet murmur again, as someone tossed Tudor the ball, and he turned to go back to the top of his run, ready for the next delivery.
Mr Tanner went some steps down the wicket and said something to Mr Calligan, who nodded. Mr Calligan put on his invisible suspenders again, and waggled his head around as though his neck hurt.
The clouds looked dark, like they might have some rain. David could remember that far back, before the drought, when such darkness filled the sky and fell in great sheets you could see coming across the paddocks. The noise on the farmhouse roof would make you have to shout, and the dogs would be miserable and smell damp, and water would shoot off things in hundreds of mini waterfalls, making holes in the ground where they scrambled into the hungry earth. The paddocks would turn to thick mud. Grandad would hitch up the horses and break open the grain and get to planting. And thousands of slivers of water, like silver snakes, would rush down the sides of the dam where his mother had drowned and it would fill once again.
The crowd gasped and David saw Mr Calligan walking away from the wickets, batless, rubbing his chest. He bent over, hands on knees, gathering himself a moment. An English player patted him on the back.
Maud said, âDon't bloody offer consolation and then do it again, ya mongrel.' There were some boos up in the stands, agreeing with Maudy it seemed.
Ned Hall turned to Maudy and yelled, âHow 'bout we get Tudor by the cars at the back of the pub and sort him out once and for all?'
Mr Richardson said, âOi, not in public, boys. Everything they're doing is within the rules.'
Mr Johnson said, âBut hardly cricket.'
âWell, I'll be,' said Mr Baker.
They turned and were all looking at David, who'd edged out into the players' seats.
David couldn't account for why, but he put his bat forward and grounded it, leaning it away slightly at the top, and looked out over it as he had seen Windsor do. Maybe it was something his uncle would do, for the joke. Then he grinned and turned to them.
âNot on your life, David. No chance at all,' said Mr Richardson.
âI told him, Gov,' said Scully.
âBut just in case,' said David coming towards them.
âDonald.'
âDavid.'
âThe Kid.'
âDavid Donald.'
âIt's David.'
His team mates stopped and looked up and around.
David saw that the crowd in the Members were looking. And people in the stands above. They were all saying his name. It was like wind coming across the paddocks. You could see it moving around the ground slowly, both ways, a ripple of wheat in the breeze.
âDavid Donald.'
âDavid.' Then they started clapping.
Out in the middle, the cricketers stopped playing. They stood and looked back towards the pavilion.
And the people stood, all of them. They stood and they started clapping.
Then Ten Ton stood, still in his pads and he started clapping too, and Mr Johnson followed and Bardsley and Richardson and Hall and Baker and McLeod all standing and clapping towards David.
Just past his team mates, David saw the English batsman Timothy Bishop, who had run out from the middle to see what was going on. He smiled in a strange way, like someone who sees a batsman nearly play on, but instead French cut a four. Bishop turned and ran back out to the middle.
Mr Richardson made sitting gestures with both hands towards the crowd.
David tried to sit, but his bat got caught up in his pads and he fell on the bench, managing to jam the bat handle into his side as he did so. âOw.'
âEnter the third ballerina, riding on an elephant,' said Mr Baker.
Mr Johnson came over saying, âYou know why you can't bat, don't you, David?'
David got his bat untangled from his pads, and his feet onto the ground before replying, âBecause I have no technique and no eye for the ball?'
âNo, not generally can't bat. I mean why you can't go out there today.'
David looked out. There had been a change of over during all the cheering and clapping, and Mr Tanner was facing Proctor, again to the strange field setting.
Mr Johnson continued, âThey're bowling at the batsman. At the batsman's chest and head. If the batsman does the natural, instinctive thing and uses his bat to protect himself, the ball has a very good chance of being caught by one of all those fieldsmen gathered around.'
David watched Tanner get up on his toes and hit a ball out to the on side and run for three. The crowd roared its approval.
Ten Ton yelled, âMaybe we got our lucky charm back.'
David said, âBut you got a hundred, Mr Johnson.'
âThey didn't start doing it until I was set. It also plays to a strength of mine. I'm a good hooker. When I remember to move my feet, that is. I was able to move early and get inside the line of the rising delivery and help it to the boundary.'
âThen that's what I'll do.'
Mr Johnson shook his head.
Proctor bowled to Legal. The ball reared up and Calligan raised his bat. O'Malley, fielding in a fly slip, ran back and caught him over his head. The crowd moaned.
David looked up at the scoreboard. Apart from Mr Johnson's one hundred and six, only Jack Tanner was making runs. Bardsley, Hall and now Calligan were all out for a duck. Only Richardson had made double figures and he was out for eleven.
Ten Ton said, âYou think if I stop to retie my shoelace, that rain'll save us?'
Baker said, âThere's a plan.'
Mr Richardson said, âJust hang around for a bit, Ten Ton. Let Two Bob take most of the strike. Tell him to farm it and go for the draw.'
âRight, Cap.' He nodded.
Other players were nodding. A draw seemed possible.
Honourable even.
Mr Calligan was coming back, dejected, but receiving polite applause.
âCometh the hour, cometh the man, Ten Ton,' called Johnson.
Maudy yelled back, âI thought it was cometh the hour, cometh the barmaid.'
They laughed loudly, but as soon as Ten Ton turned to go, their faces turned serious again.
âSo David, you got away from those kidnappers, huh?'
David turned to see the reporter Charlie O'Toole, pushing his stomach up against the small fence next to the players' area, only a few yards away. Sweat bubbled all over his face like a squeezed sponge.
âNot now, O'Toole,' said Mr Johnson.
âNice hundred there, Mr Johnson. Might be too little too late to save your spot in the team, of course.'
âNot now please.'
âDavid, tell me about the kidnappers. They snatched you at the airport? Did they have help?'
âDon't answer, David.'
âWas it Sydney criminals or was your uncle in on the act?'
âHe wasn't.'
âYou two didn't cook it up to make some more betting money?'
âScully!' called Mr Johnson, âCan you get this chap out of here?'