David waited until he was sure his grandfather was asleep before he went out to the men at the car.
âI'm going to stay here, Mr Biggins,' he explained as he got his bag.
âAre you going to be all right out here?'
âIt's my home, sir.'
âBut your grandad?'
âHe's got cancer David,' said Mr Pringle.
David looked to Mr Biggins.
âHe's had a doctor apparently. Is there someone?'
âWe look after our own out here, Mr Biggins,' said Mr Pringle.
David said, âNell'd be good. Nell Parker, the blacksmith's daughter. But...' David shrugged. There was no one else.
âYou will be at the dance,' said Mr Pringle.
David didn't want to go. He couldn't. Not leave Grandad now he'd made it back.
Mr Biggins patted his shoulder and said, âNo, no. We'll take care of all that.'
âIt's in his honour!' insisted Pringle.
âI will find Nell Parker and bring back some groceries,' said Mr Biggins as though he had decided on what he'd have for dinner. He pushed his homburg tightly onto his head and went to sit in the passenger seat of the car.
âA lot of trouble for this. And no guest of honour.' Mr Pringle only looked at David a moment before turning to go.
David went back in without waiting for the car to leave. Jess lay in the kitchen with her head in the bedroom door. His grandfather lay sleeping on his side on the bed. David found a jug of water under a fly net in the kitchen. He poured a cup and took it into the bedroom and put it there on the night stand.
He went outside to the rain tank next to the house. It was empty; the clump of mint that had grown under it was just black stalks. The chooks had water and he chased off some mice and topped up their barley and pollard. He looked in their nesting, but only found one egg. He went to check on the horses, but the barn was empty. His grandfather might have sold them he reckoned, but might have agisted them somewhere too. There was a bore out the back of the stables and, in that yard, water was still in a trough. Four pretty scrawny sheep fought for the shade under the eave off the shed. David got a hay bale and broke it open on the top fence rail, letting half fall into the yard. They came for it straight away.
He went over to the shed. The tank had a trickle and he filled an earthen bottle. There were little wrigglers in it. He'd have to boil it up. David lit the fire in the stove and put the water on to boil. Then he went out and got some firewood and checked the vegie garden. He got some spuds and a couple of scrawny carrots. The parsley looked good. He could make a soup later.
Jess whined at his grandad's door, but the old man did not stir. David watched the way he breathed, taking two good slow breaths and then holding for some seconds before taking the next two breaths. David did not know what cancer was, but had seen enough death on the farm to know it was in his grandfather.
He found his hat on its peg by the door. It had a new band. He turned it, letting the sunlight catch the mesh of dugite snakeskin that his grandad must have skinned and cured and sewn into the new band. He ran his finger along the oiliness of the band. It was a mighty flash snakeskin hatband.
David went out on the farm. He went to the dam, only it wasn't a dam any more. The mud at the bottom was hard cracked clay, its sides wind blown smooth. When there had been water, who was to say what may or may not have been hidden beneath. Now it was obvious. There was nothing hidden. His mother wasn't here. It was just a big gravel hole with no magic.
David pulled his hat down a little, feeling the hug of the new band tight around his head. He looked at the dam again and he conjured up the water in which his mother had drowned. He imagined it there, full and black. He saw how it turned golden as the sun went down. He stood with his eyes open and dreamed of the midgies dancing as the light faded. Then it was just an empty hole in the clay again under a biting sun, but he laughed out loud that he could pull off this trick of just thinking of other times and making them so.
Jess found him and they went off together to the river, where David found all the pipes and taps lying hot on the dead land. Tic-tics screamed all around. The earth was hot dust and the brightness of the sun made him squint even when looking down, until he got into the trees of the river line and found some shade. The pump was still there, but the river was a dry trench of sand. You could dig in the river bed at some spots and probably find water and drink it through your hat if you needed to, but there would be no
crops this year.
On the way back to the house he came upon his practice wicket by the shed. He looked over the metal wickets towards the bowler's end. He went up to that end and picked a ball from the bucket and spun it, no wrist, just his fingers. They felt good. He noticed the lantern that he'd practised by was already covered in spider web, even though he'd only been gone a little while. David couldn't recall how long he'd been gone. Then he realised he couldn't recall the boy who'd practised here on this cement wicket, either. It was not just a different time, but a different person, only to be guessed at, like all the other people he found in the world.
He took the ball inside and put it on the kitchen table while he chopped the vegetables. There was some iffy chicken meat in the meat safe, and he put some of that in the pot too, giving the carcass to Jess. His grandfather coughed and he went in to him.
âChicken soup,' said the old man, wriggling himself up a little on his bed.
âI guess,' said David.
âYou guess? Did you close your eyes while making it?'
âNo, sir. I put some chicken in it, so I'm hoping that's what it tastes like when it's finished, is all.'
His grandad nodded.
âBe ready in a bit. There's some water.'
David pointed to the bed stand, but his grandad had trouble getting up to it, so he grabbed him under the shoulders and lifted. It was easy. There was nothing to him any more. He was not much heavier than Jess. He settled him half-sitting on the couple of pillows.
âUnder the bed is some brandy.'
David got the bottle which was half full and went and got
another cup and poured in a good couple of nips, and held it up to his grandfather's mouth.
He gulped at it, like his Uncle Mike. Like Mrs O'Locklan.
His grandad caught him looking, and said, âI got cancer.'
âYes, sir.'
âEats up your insides. Like rust.'
âOh.'
âHurts too.' He didn't look at David while he said this, but into himself where the ache must have been. âLike you never tasted, this one.' His eyes snapped back up, looking a little clearer than they had before.
âYou need to get back to the team.'
âI will, sir. With an aeroplane, you can go across the whole country in a day or so.'
His grandfather looked at him dubiously.
David shrugged. âI don't know about all that, but it's true. Weeks by train and a day and a night by flying, sir. If the old crate doesn't end in the drink.'
His grandad thought on that a moment.
David asked, âDid you hear about the cricket?'
âYeah. Little Nell came out and told us. Brought some stuff. And that teacher of yours.'
âMr Wallace?'
âYeah. Funny bloke. What did he do to you?'
âUm, nothing. He's good.'
âKept apologising for not understanding your greatness. Silly bugger.' He was quiet again.
David thought about this. It felt good. Mr Wallace thinking he was great.
âBroke some records, huh?' said the man.
âYes sir. They're talking about you too about that.'
âRoom for improvement?'
âYes sir. I'll have to come up with some new things, I reckon. And I'll have to come up with some new ideas about Mr Longford. He got that run, and I never got him out in the second innings. They'll play me different now. I brought the paper. Can I read it to you?'
âYou been practising your reading?'
âTrying, sir.'
David went and stirred the soup and got a chair from the kitchen and put it near the bedroom window where the afternoon light was best. Then he got the paper from his bag. It was creased and screwed up now, and some of the print had smudged from his handling of it.
âI never could figure why you can't read, son.'
âNo, sir. Letters keep turning around, Mrs O'Locklan reckons. She's a lady I met in Melbourne. You'd like her, sir.'
âI mean, you're not stupid.'
âNo, sir. I hope not. Not just some dumb cow that's for sure.'
âYou're not, but David, you got to bloody think. Use your noggin.'
âYes, sir. Sorry, sir.'
âYour uncle, is he looking after you?'
âYes, sir,' David lied. Then he wondered if it were a lie, because he didn't know the real answer to the question. He knew it would take too long to explain all that, while he was still trying to understand it himself. He thought about the night his uncle had come and about his leaving.
âDid you know you were sick when Uncle Mike came and took me away?'
He didn't speak straight away. In fact, David assumed he'd gone to sleep when he finally said, âYes.'
âOh.' David settled some in his chair while he turned his grandfather's answer over and over and held it against some of the things that had happened to him. This new fact was like a lantern he could shine on that morning and now see things that had been dark and misunderstood.
David sighed, relieved. âDid Uncle Mike know you were sick?'
âNo. The king still sick?'
âSir?' David looked up, and his grandfather indicated the newspaper.
âThe king, he better, worse or dead?'
âUm, getting better, sir.'
âYou making his team look stupid won't improve his mood.'
David felt alarmed that he should cause the king concern, but then realised his grandfather was joking. He looked at him a while wondering how many jokes he might have been making all this time without David knowing. Had his uncle or someone taught him jokes while he was away? Or was his grandfather loosening his too-tight grip on what he had set against the world?
David looked down at the paper. During the game he had not thought of the king. Or his grandad, or his uncle or even his father. The crowd had not existed. He couldn't even particularly recall his team mates. There was only each batsman and the field set around them. He remembered voices. Tanner's and Mr Richardson suggesting strengths and weaknesses. But it wasn't like that either. It was more like a clock with its back off, or an arithmetic problem at school that you just suddenly see all of it at once laid out in the air. That morning, he imagined the ball he'd bowl and he saw what the batsman would do. And mostly, that's
exactly how it happened. He was surprised sometimes. When that ball moved so far from the offbreak, or when Windsor didn't step forward to loft him and dominate, but went back ... and out.
The three balls to Longford in the second innings had been the best. Like a dance. Mr Longford had countered and David then too, and Mr Longford again to score the run. David clapped Mr Longford, but realised he was the only one at the whole ground who seemed to be doing so. Those three balls were a thing in themselves. But the rest was somehow simple and clear and done. Nothing else had existed except those batsmen and the field placements and bowling the ball, like on top of a hill looking at forever.
Early on the morning of the fourth Test, Mr Richardson had asked David to prove whether his hand had healed. In the hall outside the change rooms of the Melbourne Cricket Ground, with Mr Johnson facing and Mr Baker keeping, and the rest of the team bobbing heads out of doorways, David had been able to really let the ball sing. In fact the first two were in line with Mr Baker's knees but spun off to hit the wall before passing Mr Johnson. That's when they first heard the whirring sound. Mr Baker called it fizzâlike your homemade ginger beer going off. Mr Johnson said it reminded him of the electric wires in Sydney when it rains on them.
âThat happens when I get some really good spin going,' explained David. âWhen I give it a rip.'
âMeaning of course that you haven't been on song until now, like, eh lad?' said Mr Jackson's voice from a room somewhere. There were guffaws.
âWhat you think?' Mr Richardson asked.
Mr Baker said, âHe's got a new nut and he's turning it on ice, Cap.'
âI couldn't touch it, John,' said Mr Johnson looking only at the captain.
âShow 'em your googly, Little Man,' called Ten Ton.
Mr Richardson took the ball and bent down to David, pushing it into his hands. âShow me your googly.'
David bowled and Mr Johnson, ready as he was, still had trouble with it. âNow do a leg break,' said Mr Johnson, tossing the ball back to Mr Richardson.
David did. The leg break turned away, but bounced higher than the googly, forcing a catch to Mr Baker.
Mr Johnson laughed.
Maud McLeod called out, âYeah, well that don't prove much, an' all.'
âGet knotted, Mopsey,' said Mr Johnson.
âHow 'bout the one that stands up?' It was Mr Calligan.
Mr Johnson nodded.
David bowled a loopy, and Mr Johnson only just kept it down. Mr Johnson said, âYou can make that ball hit the bat faster, can't you David?'
âYes sir, with the shooter. Hard off the lino though.'
âHard off the lino though.' It was Ned Hall, guffawing.
David could hear Maud laughing with him. âBit hard with an egg, Cap'n, but I'll see if I can make it go round his ears. Oh, I can.'
They all had the giggles.
Mr Richardson got David's attention and asked him to bowl some more.
He made the ball hit the bat harder and shoot forward, then bowled another topspinner that climbed higher. Then he put in his skidder, which didn't really grip on the
linoleum but still kept low.