The Paul & Jenny Stories Pt. 17n: The Batting Order Ch. 14
Paul.
I walked out into the middle hopefully looking more confidant then I felt.
"The fastest bowler he had ever faced." Bill had said.
Well, Bill was getting on a bit and his eyesight wasn't what it was. Roger came out to meet me.
"Watch it." He said reassuringly. "He's fast."
I went to the batsmen's end of the wicket and asked the umpire to position my bat in line with the middle stump. I straightened and looked around the field at where the fielders were placed. There were four other fielders standing in a line in the slips beside the wicket keeper. Two other fielders were fairly close in, one on either side of the wicket and the other three out along the boundary markers. I glanced at the scoreboard. We were only in the second over. Two runs scored with one wicket down.
"Four balls to come." The umpire told me as I settled into my batting stance.
Jerry had a very long run up. He was starting it now. I remembered how he had eyed me up and down at the coconut shy as if deciding which part of my anatomy would look best with the imprint of a cricket ball on it.
Clear your mind. I told myself.
Jerry was going through his delivery motion. I lifted my bat slightly and transferred my weight to the balls of my feet. Here it comes. Well pitched up. I pushed my left leg out with my bat tight against my pad. I felt the ball nick the edge of my bat and waited for the cries to go up from behind me for a catch.
"Run." Roger was calling from the other end.
I could see him heading towards me and took off towards the far end of the wicket. I dabbed my bat down and turned and looked. One of the slip fielders was jogging towards the distant boundary. A young lad was throwing the ball to him. The umpire was signalling a four and Roger was walking back up the pitch towards me. I had to go back and bat again.
"Well played." He said, as we met in the middle.
"What happened?" I asked.
"The ball went between first and second slip." He said, tapping at the pitch with the end of his bat. "They didn't move. I don't think they saw it."
"I don't think I did." I told him and made my way back to the batting crease. Jerry was back at the start of his run up. He didn't look pleased. In he came. The ball was pitched hard into the ground about mid way up the pitch. It was coming at my head. I swung my bat and ducked my head at the same time. My bat jarred in my hand. Roger was crying 'run' again. I ran. I looked over my shoulder. The ball had already reached the boundary behind the wicket keeper. I stopped running. I looked at Jerry who was standing with his hands on his hips staring at me. I smiled at him and walked back to my crease.
He was coming in to bowl again. I stepped forward to meet it. Thud. It hit my bat then my pad and shot away from me. The fielder on that side of the pitch stopped the ball and rubbed it vigorously against the top of his thigh, leaving a bright red stain then threw the ball to Jerry. He walked back to his start point again. He turned and was coming in to bowl again. It was coming at my body, waist height. I fended it away at the last moment and it sped away behind my legs beyond the dive of the wicket keeper. I was running before Roger called. I tapped my bat over the batting crease at the far end of the pitch to complete the run and turned for a second. Two of the fielders were chasing the ball. They reached it as I completed my second run.
"Stay." I heard Roger shout from the far end.
The fielder threw the ball back to the wicket keeper and the umpire called "over."
All the fielders changed position on the field as I walked down the pitch to talk to Roger.
"You take that young lad and I'll see to the other bowler." Roger said, tapping at the ground with his bat.
He turned and walked back to his batting crease before I could suggest an alternative strategy. I walked back to my place and watched as the next bowler came in to bowl. That was more like it. Only ten paces of run up. The ball was well pitched up and straight. Roger stepped out and showed it a far more amount of respect than it deserved and played it to a nearby fielder.
The next ball was the same. Well pitched up and straight. Again Roger treated it with the utmost respect and played it straight back down the pitch. The same with the third and forth balls. The fifth ball was a little shorter and sat up nicely, asking to be hit. Roger clipped it to one side and we ran two runs. One ball to come. Again it was short. Roger paddled it away with his bat.
"Come on." I called. "There's a run there."
"Stay." Roger called back, raising a hand in its white padded glove to me.
There had been plenty of time for one run.
The fielders changed position and Jerry started walking back to the start of his run up.
* * * * *
Jenny.
The door from the changing room opened and everybody trooped out.
"Can I have your car keys, please Jenny." Lynda asked. "I think I'll sit out there for a while."
"I'll have a pint." Ian said.
"I'd better get changed." Ron said, disappearing back into the changing room.
The atmosphere was very strained.
Mary looked hard at me as I handed my car keys to Lynda. What had I done?
"Will you come back with me. Shirley. Please." Mary asked. "I told the ladies from the WI we wouldn't be an hour. They'll be wondering what's happening."
"I'll help you carry things." David offered.
I pulled Ian his pint and watched as they all left the room. For a while it was completely empty. The low rumble of conversation coming from outside was punctuated by an occasional burst of applause and the odd shout of encouragement. I picked up a few used glasses from around the room and took them to the sink behind the bar for washing. The water heater hissed into life as I turned on the hot water tap. I added some washing up liquid and rinsed out the glasses before placing them on the draining board.
"Hello."
I turned to face Ron. He was a man of medium build; his hair was too long for a clergyman but was in keeping with current fashion. He wore a university cricket jumper. I studied the badge on his breast.
"Balliol College, Oxford." He supplied.
"What happened?" I asked. "In there."
"There was quite a heated exchange for a few minutes. Mrs Wagstaffe was very upset. Which is understandable." He picked at a loose thread on the stitching on the finger-pads of one of his batting gloves. "There was talk of calling the police."
"I hope they are not."
"No." He smiled. He had a nice smile. "They won't be doing that. I think they all need a little time to cool down. Especially your two friends."
He smiled again. I smiled in return.
"I had better pad up as well." Jim Clark said, entering the room and heading for the changing room.
"How are we doing?" Ron asked without taking his eyes from mine.
"Twenty-five for one." Came Jim's reply as he opened the changing room door. "Paul's playing well."
The changing room door closed after him.