<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch27"> CHAPTER XXVII<br/><br/> THE RIPTON MATCH</SPAN></h3>
<p>Mike got an answer from his father
on the morning of the Ripton match.  A letter
from Wyatt also lay on his plate when he came down
to breakfast.</p>
<p>Mr. Jackson’s letter was short,
but to the point.  He said he would go and see
Wyatt early in the next week.  He added that being
expelled from a public school was not the only qualification
for success as a sheep-farmer, but that, if Mike’s
friend added to this a general intelligence and amiability,
and a skill for picking off cats with an air-pistol
and bull’s-eyes with a Lee-Enfield, there was
no reason why something should not be done for him. 
In any case he would buy him a lunch, so that Wyatt
would extract at least some profit from his visit. 
He said that he hoped something could be managed. 
It was a pity that a boy accustomed to shoot cats
should be condemned for the rest of his life to shoot
nothing more exciting than his cuffs.</p>
<p>Wyatt’s letter was longer. 
It might have been published under the title “My
First Day in a Bank, by a Beginner.”  His
advent had apparently caused little sensation. 
He had first had a brief conversation with the manager,
which had run as follows: </p>
<p>“Mr. Wyatt?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“H’m ...  Sportsman?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Cricketer?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Play football?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“H’m ...  Racquets?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Everything?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“H’m ...  Well, you won’t get
any more of it now.”</p>
<p>After which a Mr. Blenkinsop had led
him up to a vast ledger, in which he was to inscribe
the addresses of all out-going letters.  These
letters he would then stamp, and subsequently take
in bundles to the post office.  Once a week he
would be required to buy stamps.  “If I
were one of those Napoleons of Finance,” wrote
Wyatt, “I should cook the accounts, I suppose,
and embezzle stamps to an incredible amount. 
But it doesn’t seem in my line.  I’m
afraid I wasn’t cut out for a business career. 
Still, I have stamped this letter at the expense of
the office, and entered it up under the heading ‘Sundries,’
which is a sort of start.  Look out for an article
in the <i>Wrykynian</i>, ’Hints for Young Criminals,
by J. Wyatt, champion catch-as-catch-can stamp-stealer
of the British Isles.’  So long.  I suppose
you are playing against Ripton, now that the world
of commerce has found that it can’t get on without
me.  Mind you make a century, and then perhaps
Burgess’ll give you your first after all. 
There were twelve colours given three years ago, because
one chap left at half-term and the man who played
instead of him came off against Ripton.”</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>This had occurred to Mike independently. 
The Ripton match was a special event, and the man
who performed any outstanding feat against that school
was treated as a sort of Horatius.  Honours were
heaped upon him.  If he could only make a century!
or even fifty.  Even twenty, if it got the school
out of a tight place.  He was as nervous on the
Saturday morning as he had been on the morning of the
M.C.C. match.  It was Victory or Westminster Abbey
now.  To do only averagely well, to be among the
ruck, would be as useless as not playing at all, as
far as his chance of his first was concerned.</p>
<p>It was evident to those who woke early
on the Saturday morning that this Ripton match was
not likely to end in a draw.  During the Friday
rain had fallen almost incessantly in a steady drizzle. 
It had stopped late at night; and at six in the morning
there was every prospect of another hot day. 
There was that feeling in the air which shows that
the sun is trying to get through the clouds.  The
sky was a dull grey at breakfast time, except where
a flush of deeper colour gave a hint of the sun. 
It was a day on which to win the toss, and go in first. 
At eleven-thirty, when the match was timed to begin,
the wicket would be too wet to be difficult. 
Runs would come easily till the sun came out and began
to dry the ground.  When that happened there would
be trouble for the side that was batting.</p>
<p>Burgess, inspecting the wicket with
Mr. Spence during the quarter to eleven interval,
was not slow to recognise this fact.</p>
<p>“I should win the toss to-day,
if I were you, Burgess,” said Mr. Spence.</p>
<p>“Just what I was thinking, sir.”</p>
<p>“That wicket’s going to
get nasty after lunch, if the sun comes out.  A
regular Rhodes wicket it’s going to be.”</p>
<p>“I wish we <i>had</i> Rhodes,”
said Burgess.  “Or even Wyatt.  It would
just suit him, this.”</p>
<p>Mr. Spence, as a member of the staff,
was not going to be drawn into discussing Wyatt and
his premature departure, so he diverted the conversation
on to the subject of the general aspect of the school’s
attack.</p>
<p>“Who will go on first with you, Burgess?”</p>
<p>“Who do you think, sir?  Ellerby?  It
might be his wicket.”</p>
<p>Ellerby bowled medium inclining to
slow.  On a pitch that suited him he was apt to
turn from leg and get people out caught at the wicket
or short slip.</p>
<p>“Certainly, Ellerby.  This
end, I think.  The other’s yours, though
I’m afraid you’ll have a poor time bowling
fast to-day.  Even with plenty of sawdust I doubt
if it will be possible to get a decent foothold till
after lunch.”</p>
<p>“I must win the toss,”
said Burgess.  “It’s a nuisance too,
about our batting.  Marsh will probably be dead
out of form after being in the Infirmary so long. 
If he’d had a chance of getting a bit of practice
yesterday, it might have been all right.”</p>
<p>“That rain will have a lot to
answer for if we lose.  On a dry, hard wicket
I’m certain we should beat them four times out
of six.  I was talking to a man who played against
them for the Nomads.  He said that on a true wicket
there was not a great deal of sting in their bowling,
but that they’ve got a slow leg-break man who
might be dangerous on a day like this.  A boy
called de Freece.  I don’t know of him. 
He wasn’t in the team last year.”</p>
<p>“I know the chap.  He played
wing three for them at footer against us this year
on their ground.  He was crocked when they came
here.  He’s a pretty useful chap all round,
I believe.  Plays racquets for them too.”</p>
<p>“Well, my friend said he had
one very dangerous ball, of the Bosanquet type. 
Looks as if it were going away, and comes in instead.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think a lot of
that,” said Burgess ruefully.  “One
consolation is, though, that that sort of ball is
easier to watch on a slow wicket.  I must tell
the fellows to look out for it.”</p>
<p>“I should.  And, above all, win the toss.”</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>Burgess and Maclaine, the Ripton captain,
were old acquaintances.  They had been at the
same private school, and they had played against one
another at football and cricket for two years now.</p>
<p>“We’ll go in first, Mac,”
said Burgess, as they met on the pavilion steps after
they had changed.</p>
<p>“It’s awfully good of
you to suggest it,” said Maclaine. “but
I think we’ll toss.  It’s a hobby
of mine.  You call.”</p>
<p>“Heads.”</p>
<p>“Tails it is.  I ought to
have warned you that you hadn’t a chance. 
I’ve lost the toss five times running, so I was
bound to win to-day.”</p>
<p>“You’ll put us in, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“Yes—­after us.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, we sha’n’t
have long to wait for our knock, that’s a comfort. 
Buck up and send some one in, and let’s get at
you.”</p>
<p>And Burgess went off to tell the ground-man
to have plenty of sawdust ready, as he would want
the field paved with it.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>The policy of the Ripton team was
obvious from the first over.  They meant to force
the game.  Already the sun was beginning to peep
through the haze.  For about an hour run-getting
ought to be a tolerably simple process; but after
that hour singles would be as valuable as threes and
boundaries an almost unheard-of luxury.</p>
<p>So Ripton went in to hit.</p>
<p>The policy proved successful for a
time, as it generally does.  Burgess, who relied
on a run that was a series of tiger-like leaps culminating
in a spring that suggested that he meant to lower the
long jump record, found himself badly handicapped
by the state of the ground.  In spite of frequent
libations of sawdust, he was compelled to tread cautiously,
and this robbed his bowling of much of its pace. 
The score mounted rapidly.  Twenty came in ten
minutes.  At thirty-five the first wicket fell,
run out.</p>
<p>At sixty Ellerby, who had found the
pitch too soft for him and had been expensive, gave
place to Grant.  Grant bowled what were supposed
to be slow leg-breaks, but which did not always break. 
The change worked.</p>
<p>Maclaine, after hitting the first
two balls to the boundary, skied the third to Bob
Jackson in the deep, and Bob, for whom constant practice
had robbed this sort of catch of its terrors, held
it.</p>
<p>A yorker from Burgess disposed of
the next man before he could settle down; but the
score, seventy-four for three wickets, was large enough
in view of the fact that the pitch was already becoming
more difficult, and was certain to get worse, to make
Ripton feel that the advantage was with them. 
Another hour of play remained before lunch.  The
deterioration of the wicket would be slow during that
period.  The sun, which was now shining brightly,
would put in its deadliest work from two o’clock
onwards.  Maclaine’s instructions to his
men were to go on hitting.</p>
<p>A too liberal interpretation of the
meaning of the verb “to hit” led to the
departure of two more Riptonians in the course of the
next two overs.  There is a certain type of school
batsman who considers that to force the game means
to swipe blindly at every ball on the chance of taking
it half-volley.  This policy sometimes leads to
a boundary or two, as it did on this occasion, but
it means that wickets will fall, as also happened
now.  Seventy-four for three became eighty-six
for five.  Burgess began to look happier.</p>
<p>His contentment increased when he
got the next man leg-before-wicket with the total
unaltered.  At this rate Ripton would be out before
lunch for under a hundred.</p>
<p>But the rot stopped with the fall
of that wicket.  Dashing tactics were laid aside. 
The pitch had begun to play tricks, and the pair now
in settled down to watch the ball.  They plodded
on, scoring slowly and jerkily till the hands of the
clock stood at half-past one.  Then Ellerby, who
had gone on again instead of Grant, beat the less steady
of the pair with a ball that pitched on the middle
stump and shot into the base of the off.  A hundred
and twenty had gone up on the board at the beginning
of the over.</p>
<p>That period which is always so dangerous,
when the wicket is bad, the ten minutes before lunch,
proved fatal to two more of the enemy.  The last
man had just gone to the wickets, with the score at
a hundred and thirty-one, when a quarter to two arrived,
and with it the luncheon interval.</p>
<p>So far it was anybody’s game.</p>
<h3 class="chap"><SPAN name="ch28"> CHAPTER XXVIII<br/><br/> MIKE WINS HOME</SPAN></h3>
<p>The Ripton last-wicket man was de
Freece, the slow bowler.  He was apparently a
young gentleman wholly free from the curse of nervousness. 
He wore a cheerful smile as he took guard before receiving
the first ball after lunch, and Wrykyn had plenty of
opportunity of seeing that that was his normal expression
when at the wickets.  There is often a certain
looseness about the attack after lunch, and the bowler
of googlies took advantage of it now.  He seemed
to be a batsman with only one hit; but he had also
a very accurate eye, and his one hit, a semicircular
stroke, which suggested the golf links rather than
the cricket field, came off with distressing frequency. 
He mowed Burgess’s first ball to the square-leg
boundary, missed his second, and snicked the third
for three over long-slip’s head.  The other
batsman played out the over, and de Freece proceeded
to treat Ellerby’s bowling with equal familiarity. 
The scoring-board showed an increase of twenty as
the result of three overs.  Every run was invaluable
now, and the Ripton contingent made the pavilion re-echo
as a fluky shot over mid-on’s head sent up the
hundred and fifty.</p>
<p>There are few things more exasperating
to the fielding side than a last-wicket stand. 
It resembles in its effect the dragging-out of a book
or play after the <i>dénouement</i> has been reached. 
At the fall of the ninth wicket the fieldsmen nearly
always look on their outing as finished.  Just
a ball or two to the last man, and it will be their
turn to bat.  If the last man insists on keeping
them out in the field, they resent it.</p>
<p>What made it especially irritating
now was the knowledge that a straight yorker would
solve the whole thing.  But when Burgess bowled
a yorker, it was not straight.  And when he bowled
a straight ball, it was not a yorker.  A four
and a three to de Freece, and a four bye sent up a
hundred and sixty.</p>
<p>It was beginning to look as if this
might go on for ever, when Ellerby, who had been missing
the stumps by fractions of an inch, for the last ten
minutes, did what Burgess had failed to do.  He
bowled a straight, medium-paced yorker, and de Freece,
swiping at it with a bright smile, found his leg-stump
knocked back.  He had made twenty-eight. 
His record score, he explained to Mike, as they walked
to the pavilion, for this or any ground.</p>
<p>The Ripton total was a hundred and sixty-six.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>With the ground in its usual true,
hard condition, Wrykyn would have gone in against
a score of a hundred and sixty-six with the cheery
intention of knocking off the runs for the loss of
two or three wickets.  It would have been a gentle
canter for them.</p>
<p>But ordinary standards would not apply
here.  On a good wicket Wrykyn that season were
a two hundred and fifty to three hundred side. 
On a bad wicket—­well, they had met the
Incogniti on a bad wicket, and their total—­with
Wyatt playing and making top score—­had worked
out at a hundred and seven.</p>
<p>A grim determination to do their best,
rather than confidence that their best, when done,
would be anything record-breaking, was the spirit
which animated the team when they opened their innings.</p>
<p>And in five minutes this had changed to a dull gloom.</p>
<p>The tragedy started with the very
first ball.  It hardly seemed that the innings
had begun, when Morris was seen to leave the crease,
and make for the pavilion.</p>
<p>“It’s that googly man,” said Burgess
blankly.</p>
<p>“What’s happened?”
shouted a voice from the interior of the first eleven
room.</p>
<p>“Morris is out.”</p>
<p>“Good gracious!  How?”
asked Ellerby, emerging from the room with one pad
on his leg and the other in his hand.</p>
<p>“L.-b.-w.  First ball.”</p>
<p>“My aunt!  Who’s in next?  Not
me?”</p>
<p>“No.  Berridge.  For
goodness sake, Berry, stick a bat in the way, and
not your legs.  Watch that de Freece man like a
hawk.  He breaks like sin all over the shop. 
Hullo, Morris!  Bad luck!  Were you out, do
you think?” A batsman who has been given l.-b.-w.
is always asked this question on his return to the
pavilion, and he answers it in nine cases out of ten
in the negative.  Morris was the tenth case. 
He thought it was all right, he said.</p>
<p>“Thought the thing was going to break, but it
didn’t.”</p>
<p>“Hear that, Berry?  He doesn’t
always break.  You must look out for that,”
said Burgess helpfully.  Morris sat down and began
to take off his pads.</p>
<p>“That chap’ll have Berry, if he doesn’t
look out,” he said.</p>
<p>But Berridge survived the ordeal. 
He turned his first ball to leg for a single.</p>
<p>This brought Marsh to the batting
end; and the second tragedy occurred.</p>
<p>It was evident from the way he shaped
that Marsh was short of practice.  His visit to
the Infirmary had taken the edge off his batting. 
He scratched awkwardly at three balls without hitting
them.  The last of the over had him in two minds. 
He started to play forward, changed his stroke suddenly
and tried to step back, and the next moment the bails
had shot up like the <i>débris</i> of a small explosion,
and the wicket-keeper was clapping his gloved hands
gently and slowly in the introspective, dreamy way
wicket-keepers have on these occasions.</p>
<p>A silence that could be felt brooded over the pavilion.</p>
<p>The voice of the scorer, addressing
from his little wooden hut the melancholy youth who
was working the telegraph-board, broke it.</p>
<p>“One for two.  Last man duck.”</p>
<p>Ellerby echoed the remark.  He got up, and took
off his blazer.</p>
<p>“This is all right,” he
said, “isn’t it!  I wonder if the man
at the other end is a sort of young Rhodes too!”</p>
<p>Fortunately he was not.  The star
of the Ripton attack was evidently de Freece. 
The bowler at the other end looked fairly plain. 
He sent them down medium-pace, and on a good wicket
would probably have been simple.  But to-day there
was danger in the most guileless-looking deliveries.</p>
<p>Berridge relieved the tension a little
by playing safely through the over, and scoring a
couple of twos off it.  And when Ellerby not only
survived the destructive de Freece’s second over,
but actually lifted a loose ball on to the roof of
the scoring-hut, the cloud began perceptibly to lift. 
A no-ball in the same over sent up the first ten. 
Ten for two was not good; but it was considerably better
than one for two.</p>
<p>With the score at thirty, Ellerby
was missed in the slips off de Freece.  He had
been playing with slowly increasing confidence till
then, but this seemed to throw him out of his stride. 
He played inside the next ball, and was all but bowled: 
and then, jumping out to drive, he was smartly stumped. 
The cloud began to settle again.</p>
<p>Bob was the next man in.</p>
<p>Ellerby took off his pads, and dropped
into the chair next to Mike’s.  Mike was
silent and thoughtful.  He was in after Bob, and
to be on the eve of batting does not make one conversational.</p>
<p>“You in next?” asked Ellerby.</p>
<p>Mike nodded.</p>
<p>“It’s getting trickier
every minute,” said Ellerby.  “The
only thing is, if we can only stay in, we might have
a chance.  The wicket’ll get better, and
I don’t believe they’ve any bowling at
all bar de Freece.  By George, Bob’s out!... 
No, he isn’t.”</p>
<p>Bob had jumped out at one of de Freece’s
slows, as Ellerby had done, and had nearly met the
same fate.  The wicket-keeper, however, had fumbled
the ball.</p>
<p>“That’s the way I was
had,” said Ellerby.  “That man’s
keeping such a jolly good length that you don’t
know whether to stay in your ground or go out at them. 
If only somebody would knock him off his length, I
believe we might win yet.”</p>
<p>The same idea apparently occurred
to Burgess.  He came to where Mike was sitting.</p>
<p>“I’m going to shove you
down one, Jackson,” he said.  “I shall
go in next myself and swipe, and try and knock that
man de Freece off.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Mike. 
He was not quite sure whether he was glad or sorry
at the respite.</p>
<p>“It’s a pity old Wyatt
isn’t here,” said Ellerby.  “This
is just the sort of time when he might have come off.”</p>
<p>“Bob’s broken his egg,” said Mike.</p>
<p>“Good man.  Every little helps.... 
Oh, you silly ass, get <i>back</i>!”</p>
<p>Berridge had called Bob for a short
run that was obviously no run.  Third man was
returning the ball as the batsmen crossed.  The
next moment the wicket-keeper had the bails off. 
Berridge was out by a yard.</p>
<p>“Forty-one for four,” said Ellerby. 
“Help!”</p>
<p>Burgess began his campaign against
de Freece by skying his first ball over cover’s
head to the boundary.  A howl of delight went up
from the school, which was repeated, <i>fortissimo</i>,
when, more by accident than by accurate timing, the
captain put on two more fours past extra-cover. 
The bowler’s cheerful smile never varied.</p>
<p>Whether Burgess would have knocked
de Freece off his length or not was a question that
was destined to remain unsolved, for in the middle
of the other bowler’s over Bob hit a single;
the batsmen crossed; and Burgess had his leg-stump
uprooted while trying a gigantic pull-stroke.</p>
<p>The melancholy youth put up the figures,
54, 5, 12, on the board.</p>
<p>Mike, as he walked out of the pavilion
to join Bob, was not conscious of any particular nervousness. 
It had been an ordeal having to wait and look on while
wickets fell, but now that the time of inaction was
at an end he felt curiously composed.  When he
had gone out to bat against the M.C.C. on the occasion
of his first appearance for the school, he experienced
a quaint sensation of unreality.  He seemed to
be watching his body walking to the wickets, as if
it were some one else’s.  There was no sense
of individuality.</p>
<p>But now his feelings were different. 
He was cool.  He noticed small things—­mid-off
chewing bits of grass, the bowler re-tying the scarf
round his waist, little patches of brown where the
turf had been worn away.  He took guard with a
clear picture of the positions of the fieldsmen photographed
on his brain.</p>
<p>Fitness, which in a batsman exhibits
itself mainly in an increased power of seeing the
ball, is one of the most inexplicable things connected
with cricket.  It has nothing, or very little,
to do with actual health.  A man may come out
of a sick-room with just that extra quickness in sighting
the ball that makes all the difference; or he may
be in perfect training and play inside straight half-volleys. 
Mike would not have said that he felt more than ordinarily
well that day.  Indeed, he was rather painfully
conscious of having bolted his food at lunch. 
But something seemed to whisper to him, as he settled
himself to face the bowler, that he was at the top
of his batting form.  A difficult wicket always
brought out his latent powers as a bat.  It was
a standing mystery with the sporting Press how Joe
Jackson managed to collect fifties and sixties on
wickets that completely upset men who were, apparently,
finer players.  On days when the Olympians of the
cricket world were bringing their averages down with
ducks and singles, Joe would be in his element, watching
the ball and pushing it through the slips as if there
were no such thing as a tricky wicket.  And Mike
took after Joe.</p>
<p>A single off the fifth ball of the
over opened his score and brought him to the opposite
end.  Bob played ball number six back to the bowler,
and Mike took guard preparatory to facing de Freece.</p>
<p>The Ripton slow bowler took a long
run, considering his pace.  In the early part
of an innings he often trapped the batsmen in this
way, by leading them to expect a faster ball than
he actually sent down.  A queer little jump in
the middle of the run increased the difficulty of
watching him.</p>
<p>The smiting he had received from Burgess
in the previous over had not had the effect of knocking
de Freece off his length.  The ball was too short
to reach with comfort, and not short enough to take
liberties with.  It pitched slightly to leg, and
whipped in quickly.  Mike had faced half-left,
and stepped back.  The increased speed of the ball
after it had touched the ground beat him.  The
ball hit his right pad.</p>
<p>“’S that?” shouted
mid-on.  Mid-on has a habit of appealing for l.-b.-w.
in school matches.</p>
<p>De Freece said nothing.  The Ripton
bowler was as conscientious in the matter of appeals
as a good bowler should be.  He had seen that the
ball had pitched off the leg-stump.</p>
<p>The umpire shook his head.  Mid-on
tried to look as if he had not spoken.</p>
<p>Mike prepared himself for the next
ball with a glow of confidence.  He felt that
he knew where he was now.  Till then he had not
thought the wicket was so fast.  The two balls
he had played at the other end had told him nothing. 
They had been well pitched up, and he had smothered
them.  He knew what to do now.  He had played
on wickets of this pace at home against Saunders’s
bowling, and Saunders had shown him the right way
to cope with them.</p>
<p>The next ball was of the same length,
but this time off the off-stump.  Mike jumped
out, and hit it before it had time to break.  It
flew along the ground through the gap between cover
and extra-cover, a comfortable three.</p>
<p>Bob played out the over with elaborate care.</p>
<p>Off the second ball of the other man’s
over Mike scored his first boundary.  It was a
long-hop on the off.  He banged it behind point
to the terrace-bank.  The last ball of the over,
a half-volley to leg, he lifted over the other boundary.</p>
<p>“Sixty up,” said Ellerby,
in the pavilion, as the umpire signalled another no-ball. 
“By George!  I believe these chaps are going
to knock off the runs.  Young Jackson looks as
if he was in for a century.”</p>
<p>“You ass,” said Berridge. 
“Don’t say that, or he’s certain
to get out.”</p>
<p>Berridge was one of those who are
skilled in cricket superstitions.</p>
<p>But Mike did not get out.  He
took seven off de Freece’s next over by means
of two cuts and a drive.  And, with Bob still exhibiting
a stolid and rock-like defence, the score mounted
to eighty, thence to ninety, and so, mainly by singles,
to a hundred.</p>
<p>At a hundred and four, when the wicket
had put on exactly fifty, Bob fell to a combination
of de Freece and extra-cover.  He had stuck like
a limpet for an hour and a quarter, and made twenty-one.</p>
<p>Mike watched him go with much the
same feelings as those of a man who turns away from
the platform after seeing a friend off on a long railway
journey.  His departure upset the scheme of things. 
For himself he had no fear now.  He might possibly
get out off his next ball, but he felt set enough
to stay at the wickets till nightfall.  He had
had narrow escapes from de Freece, but he was full
of that conviction, which comes to all batsmen on
occasion, that this was his day.  He had made
twenty-six, and the wicket was getting easier. 
He could feel the sting going out of the bowling every
over.</p>
<p>Henfrey, the next man in, was a promising
rather than an effective bat.  He had an excellent
style, but he was uncertain. (Two years later, when
he captained the Wrykyn teams, he made a lot of runs.)
But this season his batting had been spasmodic.</p>
<p>To-day he never looked like settling
down.  He survived an over from de Freece, and
hit a fast change bowler who had been put on at the
other end for a couple of fluky fours.  Then Mike
got the bowling for three consecutive overs, and raised
the score to a hundred and twenty-six.  A bye
brought Henfrey to the batting end again, and de Freece’s
pet googly, which had not been much in evidence hitherto,
led to his snicking an easy catch into short-slip’s
hands.</p>
<p>A hundred and twenty-seven for seven
against a total of a hundred and sixty-six gives the
impression that the batting side has the advantage. 
In the present case, however, it was Ripton who were
really in the better position.  Apparently, Wrykyn
had three more wickets to fall.  Practically they
had only one, for neither Ashe, nor Grant, nor Devenish
had any pretensions to be considered batsmen. 
Ashe was the school wicket-keeper.  Grant and
Devenish were bowlers.  Between them the three
could not be relied on for a dozen in a decent match.</p>
<p>Mike watched Ashe shape with a sinking
heart.  The wicket-keeper looked like a man who
feels that his hour has come.  Mike could see him
licking his lips.  There was nervousness written
all over him.</p>
<p>He was not kept long in suspense. 
De Freece’s first ball made a hideous wreck
of his wicket.</p>
<p>“Over,” said the umpire.</p>
<p>Mike felt that the school’s
one chance now lay in his keeping the bowling. 
But how was he to do this?  It suddenly occurred
to him that it was a delicate position that he was
in.  It was not often that he was troubled by
an inconvenient modesty, but this happened now. 
Grant was a fellow he hardly knew, and a school prefect
to boot.  Could he go up to him and explain that
he, Jackson, did not consider him competent to bat
in this crisis?  Would not this get about and be
accounted to him for side?  He had made forty,
but even so....</p>
<p>Fortunately Grant solved the problem
on his own account.  He came up to Mike and spoke
with an earnestness born of nerves.  “For
goodness sake,” he whispered, “collar
the bowling all you know, or we’re done. 
I shall get outed first ball.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Mike,
and set his teeth.  Forty to win!  A large
order.  But it was going to be done.  His whole
existence seemed to concentrate itself on those forty
runs.</p>
<p>The fast bowler, who was the last
of several changes that had been tried at the other
end, was well-meaning but erratic.  The wicket
was almost true again now, and it was possible to
take liberties.</p>
<p>Mike took them.</p>
<p>A distant clapping from the pavilion,
taken up a moment later all round the ground, and
echoed by the Ripton fieldsmen, announced that he
had reached his fifty.</p>
<p>The last ball of the over he mishit. 
It rolled in the direction of third man.</p>
<p>“Come on,” shouted Grant.</p>
<p>Mike and the ball arrived at the opposite
wicket almost simultaneously.  Another fraction
of a second, and he would have been run out.</p>
<center><SPAN name="illus6">
<ANTIMG src="images/jmike6.jpg" alt="MIKE AND THE BALL ARRIVED ALMOST SIMULTANEOUSLY"></SPAN></center>
<p>The last balls of the next two overs
provided repetitions of this performance.  But
each time luck was with him, and his bat was across
the crease before the bails were off.  The telegraph-board
showed a hundred and fifty.</p>
<p>The next over was doubly sensational. 
The original medium-paced bowler had gone on again
in place of the fast man, and for the first five balls
he could not find his length.  During those five
balls Mike raised the score to a hundred and sixty.</p>
<p>But the sixth was of a different kind. 
Faster than the rest and of a perfect length, it all
but got through Mike’s defence.  As it was,
he stopped it.  But he did not score.  The
umpire called “Over!” and there was Grant
at the batting end, with de Freece smiling pleasantly
as he walked back to begin his run with the comfortable
reflection that at last he had got somebody except
Mike to bowl at.</p>
<p>That over was an experience Mike never forgot.</p>
<p>Grant pursued the Fabian policy of
keeping his bat almost immovable and trusting to luck. 
Point and the slips crowded round.  Mid-off and
mid-on moved half-way down the pitch.  Grant looked
embarrassed, but determined.  For four balls he
baffled the attack, though once nearly caught by point
a yard from the wicket.  The fifth curled round
his bat, and touched the off-stump.  A bail fell
silently to the ground.</p>
<p>Devenish came in to take the last ball of the over.</p>
<p>It was an awe-inspiring moment. 
A great stillness was over all the ground.  Mike’s
knees trembled.  Devenish’s face was a delicate
grey.</p>
<p>The only person unmoved seemed to
be de Freece.  His smile was even more amiable
than usual as he began his run.</p>
<p>The next moment the crisis was past. 
The ball hit the very centre of Devenish’s bat,
and rolled back down the pitch.</p>
<p>The school broke into one great howl
of joy.  There were still seven runs between them
and victory, but nobody appeared to recognise this
fact as important.  Mike had got the bowling, and
the bowling was not de Freece’s.</p>
<p>It seemed almost an anti-climax when
a four to leg and two two’s through the slips
settled the thing.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>Devenish was caught and bowled in
de Freece’s next over; but the Wrykyn total
was one hundred and seventy-two.</p>
<hr width="30%" align="center">
<p>“Good game,” said Maclaine,
meeting Burgess in the pavilion.  “Who was
the man who made all the runs?  How many, by the
way?”</p>
<p>“Eighty-three.  It was young
Jackson.  Brother of the other one.”</p>
<p>“That family!  How many
more of them are you going to have here?”</p>
<p>“He’s the last.  I
say, rough luck on de Freece.  He bowled rippingly.”</p>
<p>Politeness to a beaten foe caused
Burgess to change his usual “not bad.”</p>
<p>“The funny part of it is,”
continued he, “that young Jackson was only playing
as a sub.”</p>
<p>“You’ve got a rum idea of what’s
funny,” said Maclaine.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />