Amy gave Dick a peck on the cheek and wished him luck. He was a mess. Shirt hanging loosely out the waist band of his trousers, cricket bag bursting and his bat at an untidy angle against the car boot. In a rush and late again. Most of them were. He wouldn’t be the last to arrive. Sunday afternoon cricket. He couldn’t not do it, but . . . .
Two middle-aged men, dressed in check shirts, ten gallon hats and rough leather trousers, stood facing each other, twenty two yards apart. One was tall and bald, the other squat and silver haired. Neither was smiling as right hands hovered over six guns.
‘I’m going first,’ said Phil.
‘No, you’re not, you’re the bad guy.’
‘Who said? Anyway the bad guy goes first.’
‘You always get to go first, and you’re downwind.’ Bert pointed at his gun, ‘Do you know we haven’t got the right kit? These aren’t Colt 45’s. Strictly speaking, we should have Colt 45’s. Its shocking. Yesterday, I was nearly fobbed off with an eight gallon hat. The standard of gun fighting is dropping every year.’
Phil nodded, ‘Aye, I know. I’ve kept up my times though. Still got the quickest draw since Billy was a kid. You remember Billy Iredale from the old days? Fastest gun in the valley, ‘till I came along.’
‘Dick . . . Dick, are you playing today?’ shouted the captain from mid off, ‘or shall we get one of theirs to keep wicket?’
Dick shook his head and his recurring daydream faded, ‘Sorry skip, miles away.’ Two aging gunslingers, slugging it out on a B movie cowboy set, too old and too proud to back down.
Crouching ten feet behind the wicket, Dick turned his attention instead to Phil Cross, the opening bowler. Even in his fifties, Phil used a long run. The first ball zipped down the leg side for four before Dick could get a glove on it.
‘I’ll send you an appointment for the optician, Dick.’
‘Sorry, Phil.’
Bert Hammond bowled the second over off seven strides, several short of his prime. Dick didn’t fare any better when the third ball kept low.
‘Have you got a bad back lad?’
‘Sorry, Bert.’
‘We don’t want extras to be their top score do we Dick?’
‘No Bert.’
Phil and Bert were proud men with respectable careers behind them in the West Yorkshire leagues. Their breath was short and their muscles ached and they still ran in as if every ball could take a wicket. When Bert was on, a wise umpire had cotton wool in his left ear. Phil’s manners were more muted, more a supplication to a higher being as the ball passed the outside edge yet again.
Fielders were bottom of the pile in Phil and Bert’s scheme of things, to be tolerated as long as they took catches and picked the ball up cleanly. So it wasn’t long before the Hammond roar when Tom put down a skier off the third ball of Bert’s second over, ‘Whatever are you doing Miller? You dozy wassock, you should’ve swallowed that.’
Tom, new player, journalist and a Brummie with an accent to match, had yet to appreciate West Yorkshire’s small talk. If he’d a tail it would have been between his legs as he walked back to extra cover.
Next over, Reg Harvey let one through his legs.
‘Bend your back you idle sod. You are close enough to the ground,’ shouted Phil, ‘and spend less time admiring your Grecian 2000.’
Reg retrieved the ball from the boundary, tweaked his moustache and, winking at Tom, yelled toward Phil, ‘Stop pitching half volleys outside off stump then.’
Supposedly a friendly game of Sunday cricket down at Lowerthong, it had all the important ingredients: a dry sunny day, a decent forecast, a picturesque cricket ground and an opposing side bristling with slow cowards. The Wanderers were over from Barnston, cricket’s bottomless pit. Their captain had won the toss and elected to bat. Lowerthong’s skipper would’ve fielded first anyway as neither Phil nor Bert could raise a gallop just after tea.
Towards the end of his spell, Phil got a long hop to lift a touch. The batsman dollied it to point off a top edge. Bert looked heavenwards in disbelief, ‘Well I never, did you see that? If it’d been any shorter it’d’ve hit ‘is big toe.’
Bert then bowled their star man. Phil was stood at short third man, hands on hips, ‘He was blind. Someone had to get him.’
There are occasions when, in a what can otherwise be a lonely game, the players meet for a chat. The taking of a wicket is one of these moments and Phil and Bert thrived on them. The rest of the side were more than happy to collaborate in the hope that a spot of mid-wicket bonding might mollify Phil and Bert’s outrage. Otherwise, since the batsmen had their own problems, like seeing the ball, the only people to share in Phil and Bert’s intimacies were Dick and the umpires. As the umpires had heard it all before, there was only Dick left to listen.
Phil’s first ball of his sixth over was pulled toward the square leg boundary, sending Bert on a seventy yard dash. Having returned the ball, Bert doubled over, coughing and wheezing like Doc Holiday. Phil was the first to comment, ‘Get the twelfth man on, skip, he’s knackered.’
Bert slowly walked back to first slip and propped his arms on his knees. ‘I’m getting too old for this Dick. Palpitations.’
Minutes later, Phil stopped suddenly as he ran in to complete the over and clutched his lumbar region. Bert was quick to console him, ‘Come in off your shorter run, in fact just come in, your time is up.’
Dick tried to be more diplomatic, ‘OK, Phil?’
‘No Dick, I’m lying on the floor for a rest,’ replied Phil.
At the tea interval, surrounded by sandwiches, buns and mugs of sweet hot grey fluid, Phil improved enough to open the scorebook at the previous season’s game, ‘I got 5 for 32 against these last year. We buried ‘em. I took my two thousandth wicket that day.’
When Tom Miller’s eyes widened, Bert took over, ‘He’s always kept his stats, even when we were kids. Bit of a nerd. You did bowl well though, I remember it now. I missed out. It was the pitch, suited your leg cutter. Too soft on top for me, and the ball was out of shape. In my day the balls were always hard and true. Its shocking. Standards are dropping everywhere you look . . . ’
The skipper clutched Dick’s shoulder, ‘Dick, get your pads on. Nobody’s volunteered to open, so you’re coming in with me.
‘Yes, skip.’
‘Phil six, Bert come in at five.’
‘Righto, skip,’ said Phil, ‘stroll round the boundary, Bert? Don’t get out too soon Dick.’
‘No Phil,’ Dick strode toward the changing rooms. Too bad if I said no for once, he thought. Never opened at school or since really, until now. Taking advantage of his good nature. There’s plenty of other things he could be doing.
Dick did his ten overs, saw off their quicks and dutifully became Barnston’s first wicket. A small contribution to half decent stand. His school sports master had described him as a steady bat. Lowerthong’s Sunday cricketers were less complimentary.
‘Batted Dick,’ said Reg lounging outside the clubhouse. It was the polite thing to say in friendly cricket, or hard luck if you’d played like a lemon. Dick wasn’t inclined to take such comments seriously.
‘Come on Dick, no need to be grumpy.’
‘You sound just like my wife, Reg.’
Family commitments prevented Dick from playing the week after. Why Amy’s sister had to arrange a BBQ on a Sunday afternoon was a mystery to him. There were compensations though – he caught a re-run of “High Noon” while everyone was changing. For once he forgave the hour his daughter spent in the bathroom, and the delays that followed Amy’s insistence on doing fifteen jobs simultaneously – another of life’s mysteries. Gary Cooper, aging and frail, but such courage. I couldn’t do it thought Dick. The brave pointless act. Make a stand. Maybe once upon a time. It was only a film. Could be real though. A vague disquiet grew somewhere below his chest. Might it have been different?
Amy swept in, ‘Come on Dick, snap out of it, we’re all ready. Get the car.’
Strange, thought Dick as he arrived at the ground the following Sunday. Usually players arrived late or at least the last minute, and changed alone. Yet here they all were, sat together in the dressing room. The mood was as grey and flaky as a sightscreen in need of a new coat of whitewash.
‘What’s up lads? Ambrose and Walsh playing for them then?’
‘We haven’t a full team, Dick,’ said Tom, ‘you won’t’ve heard. Phil and Bert aren’t so good.’ He raised his left arm, showing a substantial bulge at the elbow, ‘and I can’t do much. Trapped it in a door.’
The skipper broke up the party, ’Right lads, we’re fielding. Dick, would you care to put the gloves on? Nobody else wants to.’
Dick tucked his trousers into his socks and found the keeper’s pads. Just a doormat, he thought, and we’ve no chance, eight men at best.
Portly Reg, former officer and gentleman, followed Dick onto the field, ‘Do I detect a smidgeon of mutiny?’
Dick drew in a big breath and took a long look at the pitch, ‘What’s the score then, Reg?’
Reg shied a practice ball for Dick to catch, ‘Rain stopped play at Headingley . . . ,’ He received a withering glance, ‘Oh, you mean Bert and Phil. Not sure. Last game, Bert broke down with chest pain, running round the boundary. Said he had a bit of angina and not to worry. I ran him straight home, but he wouldn’t call out the emergency doctor, stubborn I suppose. I phoned him in the week and he was still waiting to see his own doctor.’
‘What about Phil?’
‘His back’s gone. Still in bed apparently, can’t move,’ Reg paused, about to stroll to midwicket. He half turned, ‘we’ve the Melbridge Cup in a couple of weeks.’
‘So we have,’ said Dick, adopting the position behind the stumps.
Forty overs and two hundred runs later, a despondent understrength Lowerthong Sunday side queued for tea in the small clubhouse.
‘What’s the Melbridge Cup?’ asked Tom.
‘Its the annual fixture between Melthwaite and Townbridge,’ said Reg, ‘we’re hosting it this year as part of our hundredth anniversary celebrations.’ As he was reputed to consider it bad form to be interrupted when in full flow, he was allowed to carry on at some length, ‘ a long-standing ritual . . . going back hundreds of years . . . part of the late summer fertility festival . . . chance for local boys to prove themselves . . . rite of passage . . . being selected was highest honour . . . ‘
Dick and the regulars had listened to this many times. For years, the fixture had been the site of legendary battles between Phil and Bert and, played on a local feast day it had traditionally drawn large crowds.
Then Reg suddenly recaptured the team’s attention, ‘Aye, and Chris Cain is in town.’
Dick felt as though he’d walked into a door. Just the sound of the name was sufficient to bring up images of, how long ago? Must have been fifteen years. And now he was coming back. Under a bit of a cloud. The tabloids were at it again.
‘Sorry. Chris Cain?’ Tom’s question brought Dick back to the present.
‘He used to play for us occasionally,’ Reg gave a short account of Cain’s rise from relative local obscurity to a big London achiever, still in touch with his roots, particularly Melthwaite cricket, ‘he was a protégé of Bert’s. I’m surprised you’ve not heard of him.’
‘Heard of him sure,’ Tom sat forward and folded his arms, ‘I can’t see what it has to do with us.’
Reg sighed and shrugged his shoulders, ‘I invited him to the game and he said yes. Committee OK’d it.’
Everyone went quiet and looked at Reg as he studied the table cloth. Then they all had something to say. Personalities like Cain tended to produce divided opinions. Many said Reg had done well; it would be great for the centenary to have some sort of a celebrity. Others simply resented tainted success. A mild fuss but they were all curious.
Reg sat up and buttoned up his shirt, ‘It’ll be low key, no advertising. Maybe one reporter from the local paper.’
Tom’s chair scraped along the floor as he stood. Then they were all returning plates and mugs to the tea ladies and heading for the changing rooms.
The start to Lowerthong’s innings did little to raise morale. Dick, Reg and the skipper were all out for single figures. The middle order then began to resist and grind out some sort of a total. The skipper sat and watched with the scorer. Dick and Reg toured the boundary.
‘Bit of a stunner, that,’ said Dick.
‘Apparently . . . ‘
‘I was at college with Cain’s brother,’ said Dick, ‘Visited him a couple of times, so I knew him a bit before I came here. Part of the reason for moving. The area.’
Reg stopped to catch up with play, ‘Good shot . . . innocent until proved guilty you know.’
‘What? . . . oh Cain . . . yes, absolutely.’
Another wicket fell. ‘I’ll get padded up,’ said Reg.
Dick was left alone to ponder the news. He and Cain had been acquainted, no more, except for the one incident when they became brief intimates. Cain left on an upward trajectory. Dick remained, shattered. A long time to rebuild. Naive and trusting some said. Working too hard and not seen it coming. Those who had not known misery were fortunate. The dogged guilt, the cheerlessness, others’ embarrassment. A little of the joy returns. Not the enthusiasm or the confidence. Amy said it could have been worse. It was the worst Dick had ever been.
When he called in the toilet, Tom was changing his elbow dressing. ‘Here let me help,’ said Dick.
‘Its OK,’ Tom swivelled away and roughly tied the bandage.
Back in the changing room, Dick sat on one of the rough wooden benches and watched the game through the long window. There’d been another wicket and Reg was at the crease. Odd for an injury he thought. On the inside of the elbow, and red like it was inflamed.
Lowerthong were never going to get the required runs. Everyone had a bat. After a drink or two, the players drifted in ones and twos from the clubhouse. Tom caught up with Dick in the car park, ‘Can I have a word?’
‘Sure, what’s on your mind?’ asked Dick.
‘Thing is, I’m already doing a piece for “The Courier” on Cain. Done some digging. Weren’t you connected with him?
‘Mm . . . slightly.’
‘My sources say he’s worried, something from the past that might come out.’
Dick unlocked his car door, ‘Really . . . don’t think I can help,’ Dick dumped his kit on the back seat, got in and switched on the engine, ‘Sorry Tom.’ He closed the door and drove off. I am not going to get involved, he thought. Won’t change anything. What happened, happened.
He sat in the car on the drive when he got home. Do you ever really get to know your fellow players, he wondered? He knew the basics about Bert and Phil, their passion for cricket, their only expression to carry on playing as long as they could, ignoring the messages that time must be giving, but they are making a stand, a statement, drawing some sort of line in the sand. This is us, and bollocks to the lot of you. Can’t go on forever of course. And Reg, committee man and good egg. He belonged to a different world. Sunday
How much do you know about your fellow players? Sunday teams emerge from a clutch of the interested once they are over the hill, once they can no longer make the second team. Perhaps where cricket hasn’t been played before, perhaps partly as a nursery for younger players. Lowerthong were a bit of all those, but mostly they came from a generation of good school players who wanted to carry on. People who were comfortable together, had children at the same time and reproduced a cycle of wealthy accidents of birth. The skipper, Reg and Cain were in that cycle. Dick was not. teams came from the tired and old and the young that had yet to get going, or where cricket wasn’t that popular. But it also came from the recurrent cycle of wealthy accidents of birth. They were at school together, had their children together, enjoyed spending time and playing cricket together. Reg and Cain were in the cycle. Dick wasn’t. And Tom, unknown, hack and an addict, wanting something from him, not a cricketer really, not in the cycle, just a man with an expensive habit who was in the dirty business of exposure. A man who could give Dick a way back, back to right some wrongs, fight the good fight, make a stand, draw a line in the sand.
The easy confidence of the skipper in leadership, the huffing and puffing of Bert and Phil, Reg’s quiet probing and support.
The way people play their sport, it tells you all you need to know, more than having a history, a CV. There was always something dodgy about Tom.Do some backfill on how Tom plays, poor attitude etc.
What was he going to do, he was static, no not even that, static needs energy to stay put, he was drifting, no direction, certainly no stand or line in the sand. He could tell or he could not rock the boat.
On the day of the cup game Dick tried to get Amy and her sister organised.
‘What do we want to go to cricket for?’
Dick explained, ‘Its a special match. The rest of the team will be there, with their families. Bar’ll be open.’
Lowerthong is one of the prettiest grounds in the West Riding cricket league: a horizon of Pennine hills, shady riverside trees, drystone walls and a large bank of green comfortable grass. When they arrived Melthwaite were batting, 4 down for 150 with 15 overs to go before tea. Dick, Amy and her sister sat on the bank.
‘Anyone fancy a burger?’ Dick wandered over to the BBQ where he’d spotted Reg nursing a glass half full of ale.
‘How’s it going?’
‘Nicely. Phil’s had a spell off a shortened run. Only went for two an over. No wickets though.’
Dick put his hands in his pockets, ‘Bit risky with his back.’
‘Both sides have players in the town team over at York, so they’re a bit short,’ he took a sip of his beer, ‘Phil said he was fine. Bert’s on for Melthwaite as well. Coming in at nine.’
Dick said he’d see Reg later and went back to Amy and her sister.
‘Who’s winning?’
‘Melthwaite have got two hundred and thirty, but Townbridge have to bat yet.’
‘You mean there’s more. They’ve just come off. Haven’t they finished?’
‘Its the tea interval, that’s all.’
Dick sighed. Amy never has understood cricket. Where had he gone wrong? He began to hum “Do not forsake me, oh my darling, on this our wedding day”. Strange sitting here, not being able to hear what the players are saying. He turned his eyes toward Lowerthong church tower, standing proud of the foliage behind the clubhouse. The clock showed five past five as Townbridge started their innings.
The family next to them turned on the radio.
‘Here is the news and weather.’
Amy overheard the poor forecast, ‘Dick we haven’t brought anything in case it rains.’
‘Chris Cain is supposed to be coming,’ said Dick.
‘Really. The hot shot who’s been in the headlines, that Cain?’
Dick nodded.
‘Will you see him?’
‘Doubt it.’
‘Here is the six o’clock news.’ Dick checked the scoreboard; 101 for 4.
Mm . . . they’re cracking on a bit he thought. He overheard Amy and her sister talking about Cain. Made quite a name for himself. Pity about the recent business. Dick recognised the contrast in himself. He’d drifted along, accepted what life had given him. Now, after fifteen years, was something coming back to bite him on the bum? Gary Cooper’s ill face appeared in front of him. Marshal Kane had an hour and ten minutes until the shoot-out. Dick shivered; brilliant. What a film. Gary never backed down from anything. The billboards said it all, “The story of a man who was too proud to run.”
How was going to react to Cain?
‘News and sport now at six thirty.’ Dick shook his head and returned to the present. How they doing now. 153 for 5. They might just get them. Bert hasn’t had a bowl yet.
Amy stood up, ‘Its quarter to seven, Dick. Sky’s looking grim, we’re off. Try not to be too long.’
Many others had had the same idea and the grass bank was emptying. Tree branches began to billow and rustle as the wind got up. Clouds gathered, high over Lowerthong, but darker and lower on the horizon. Then only the Melthwaite and Townbridge stalwarts were left, gathered in front of the clubhouse, no longer in shirt sleeves. The coals on the bare BBQ glowed and grey ash flew untidily. Dick joined Reg, who was talking with Tom and the skipper on the edge of the small crowd.
‘Hi skip, Tom. Close game.’
‘Yes.’
Townbridge needed thirty off the last four overs with three batsmen left. On the other side Melthwaite were running out of bowlers.
‘Bert’ll have come on, Reg. Has Cain arrived?’
‘Aye. Come to think of it, Phil might have to bat. What a finish. He’s been delayed.’
Six-fifty on the scoreboard clock. Another over, another wicket, six nearer the total.
Bert had two overs to bowl. Eight runs off the first.
Six-fifty five. A wicket in the thirty-ninth over and another eight runs.
Seven to win, the last man in, Phil, facing the final over from Bert. The first drops of rain splashed onto the flags in front of the anxious clubhouse.
Bert paused at the start of his run and adjusted his left sock. Seven strides and the ball shaved Phil’s pads. Groans of encouragement from Townbridge. The next was a yorker that Phil blocked. More groans. The keeper picked up and threw the ball back to Bert. He turned and walked back to his mark as Lowerthong church bells began their seven o’clock ritual. Phil waited. Seven strides, right arm aloft, a small grunt of effort and the ball’d gone. Phil stepped outside off stump and watched the ball carefully, first pitching half way and then rising toward his bat, up and ready. As the clock fell silent, he pulled mightily to leg and the ball smacked into the keeper’s gloves.
Melthwaite shouted for joy. Townbridge cringed. And then, deathly quiet apart from the pitter patter of steadily falling rain. Bert lay face down across the crease at the bowler’s end and Phil, on his knees, keeled over and came to rest on his arched back, pale and agonised.
They’ve killed each other, thought Dick.
Then it was all activity, and sirens and ambulances. Lightening arced across the low black clouds, followed almost immediately by a crash of thunder. The wind whipped into the trees and the rain poured.
Further thunderclaps and there was Cain. Someone who looked like Cain. Well tailored, manicured and coiffured, but a gaunt shadow.
They shook hands and Cain nodded, ‘Dick. Hoped I see you.’
Dick had expected to be tight lipped and closed off. To prevent his uselessness from showing and dim the sense of failure that was illuminated in Cain’s success. But he simply felt uneasy and confused as he gazed at Cain’s wasted face and dark eyes. Gary Cooper’s black and white image appeared. Reg, Tom and the others introduced themselves.
Dick turned to the dark and deserted rain soaked pitch. The umpires had forgotten a couple of stumps, picked out now in a long shaft of light shining from the clubhouse.
Cain stood next to him.
‘You look ill,’ said Dick.
‘Yes, its been tough. Now I know what you must have been through. I haven’t done anything you know. You’re looking well, the family man, steady away’
‘Just successful that’s all.’
Cain smiled, ‘Thought I didn’t support you I guess, back then? Richard Pell, next in line, onward and upward. Look where it gets you. You were floundering’
‘We both know I wasn’t suitable. I’d reached as far as I was going. reached the limits of what you could manage, too much happening in every bit of your life Didn’t see the way I’d react that’s all. Took life, everything too seriously. I know now it was for the best.’
‘No hard feelings at all, hard to believe.’
‘A small corner, yes.’
‘Enough to talk to a man with a heroin problem.’
‘You know about him.’
‘Been dogging me for six months. Didn’t quite spot he’d catch up with me here though. Think he must be after you. Me being here is a bonus. Once you’ve got somewhere and have vertigo and falling into the abyss, there’s plenty of slimy creepy crawly things come out from under stones. I can beat this thing, but not with your knowledge of what went on.
Time is a strange thing, things alter, things move on, not in a positive action oriented sense, like a journey between a and b, but a journey nevertheless, a journey inside somehow. Freud had a rationalisation for it. Dick always thought that was an excuse. Personality was fixed anyway so how could you do anything about anything. But telling stories to yourself, making sense in small bite pieces, not trying to do too much, let it all make sense in time. Cain genuinely didn’t bother him as a person, last night had cured that, he was a broken man, a fellow travellor, but . . . What was he going to do?
Dick lost touch with Sunday cricket after that and it was two years before he revisited the shoot-out scene. He wandered over to Gabrielle, faithful scorer, and peeped at the scorebook over her shoulder.
‘Fancy that, Cross and Hammond are playing.’
‘Dick! Hello. Long time. Take a good look.’
Well is that Bert? Red-faced, huffing and puffing up to the crease, and Phil, scratching around, trying to bat? Hang on they can’t be, they’re only lads. The penny dropped.
‘Grandsons.’
‘Correct. Now look again.’
Dick couldn’t see anything. Then the tallish umpire behind the stumps took off his cap and scratched his bald head. Dick quickly checked the man standing at square leg – silver hair and rather squat.
He waited with Gabrielle for the tea interval.
‘Its a thing dreams are made of, Bert.’
‘Aye. The lad’s got promise. They don’t have the same commitment we had though. Moping on street corners, drinking in pubs. Standards are not what they were. Still that’s how it is these days, Dick. I’ve had to adjust, can’t stay in the past you know. How’ve you been? We’ve missed your steady opening knocks.’
Did you get any more wickets, Phil?’
‘Nay lad,’ his hairless head cracked into two, ‘but I dropped my five hundredth catch.’
3962
NOTES
The Sunday team
Just how much do you know about your fellow players. Sunday teams emerge from a clutch of the interested once they are over the hill, once they can no longer make the second team. Perhaps where cricket hasn’t been played before, perhaps partly as a nursery for younger players. Lowerthong were a bit of all that, but mostly they came from a generation of good school players who wanted to carry on playing together. People who would see each other regularly anyway. Who were comfortable with sharing, children at the same time, producing a cycle of the wealthy, comfortably arranged as an accident of birth.
Tom and Dick were not part of this cycle. Reg and the skipper were, and so was Cain – definately ‘one of us’.
A loose alliance of the idle.
Tom Fuller
The nasal drawl came from the midlands, a town like Dudley. It irritated or amused. He was unskilled in country matters. He wondered why the local farmers spent so much time mowing grass. Still the pubs reminded him of the concrete jungle to which he was more used. He said his parents were still there, and a brother. We all imagined interminable symmetrical terraces, much like Leeds or Sheffield or any other city. A snotty kid growing up with the rest of them, designer trainers and jeans, mobile phone clamped to one ear.
Reg describes two sorts of people. Those that wear long sleeves and those that wear short sleeves. Tom arrived with a bulging dressing at his elbow, he was a long sleeved man. ‘Can’t do much today, skip. Trapped my elbow in the door. He had the local chemist, moved north with his wife and family twelve months ago, no one was sure why, but he could play cricket well enough. Even with his left elbow a problem he was able to pick up and throw, bowl at half pace. He’d have to see about batting.
Dick
Dick had the northern qualifications, and a residents’ twelve year pass. He’d been accepted, though he may not have felt acceptable. He’d lead a life of variety in many places, but increasingly middle age nagged a vague disquiet that he could have been something else. His list included several cities in the north, then Wales and America, which had impressed rural values. It suited a temperament which tended to isolation, made worse by the professional course he had chosen. He wasn’t at ease with the aggressive natures that many professionals needed. Then Richard junior, a talent. The pain was dull, reinforcing a sense of unreality. Mid fifties, time was running out, time to make a stand and stop drifting.
His northerness had not disappeared. It wasn’t an accent, but the tone was spiky, the sentences clipped and the smiles limited. He made Lowerthong because he could, not because he fitted. Amy sent him out to stop him being with himself, watching old movies or reading historical novels. He often said very little, disquieting for many, as if he had the answer. He was burdened by lots of possible answers, things done and seen. Beneath the surface was an ambitious father who had underachieved and wasn’t allowing the next generation to. The quietness was not judging others but himself.
Reg
Ex-officer and a gentleman. Southerner who didn’t quite fit the local well-to-do mould, moved with job, never played cricket, good hand-to-eye, joined things to help out his sons. Yet seemed well connected. Moustache upright bearing, chatterbox,
The Tale
Its about something from the past coming back to bite you on the bum a la High Noon. Kane and The Fuller gang. Citizens not taking sides, wife running out on him until the final reel.
Wife fed up with playing cricket.
Turn it upside down – Kane comes back after many years.
Movie producer/politician – high profile anyway, with an entourage.
big crowds possibly – come for the centenary match, or to see Bert and Phil. rain eventually sends them all away
Local boy made good, problem with Fuller in the past, politics, police don’t know enough to carry a grudge Kane important enough to have security and maybe intelligence that implicates a local attempt at something.
Dick at college with his brother.
I was at college with his brother. Chris is Oxbridge, met him a couple of times’ Kane is not the Kane he knew, what’s going on?
Tom Fuller, the local dentist – Fullers. Is he a character with an imagined past, not what he seems, a surprise – a drug addict turned state’s evidence. Trial in the offing. Trying to forget a past which Cain’s arrival produces the risk of resurfacing somehow, exposure. To what extent will Tom try and cover up. How important are secrets to him? Is their a connection with Cain in the past.
Do we need to know, or will it come out in the last chapter? Is Cain simply a plot device, not really in the story. The turbulence that will make the characters react.
It has to be something of interest to the reader about character, Bert Phil the skipper Tom or Dick Reg
Would or wouldn’t people come to support the centenary, essentially a local showdown, Cain coming will help or hinder? Tension for Reg
Is it a drugs story? advocate of drug pubs or something?
Cain is advocate of loosening legislation on drugs, a la prohibition and alcohol
background is law, a lawyer, brother of someone in college with Dick, so met in the past. ?sees is as a career opportunity part of political progress
Tom is chemist and anti-drug freedom, why not sure. Certainly make Tom unreliable, saying one thing and doing another.
Dick? is father of a drug overdose, very aware of how young people get drugs torn between banning and safe use. O