“Pleasure doin’ business, pal,” I snarl/smiled at the recumbent Beast. Then Jaffa and I bowed to the startled lunchtime crowd and made our exit - strolling back to Jennings Road as though nothing had happened.
And still my back felt brilliant.
* * *
Back at work we had the house to ourselves, so Jaffa took me out into the back yard, pointed at a couple of trees about 15 feet apart, and said, “Awright Eric, let’s see what you got.”
With that, he retrieved a football from underneath a wisteria and commenced juggling about 20 metres away while I stretched my back and hamstrings.
He certainly had some skill, but the athletic effect was spoiled by the cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth as he bounced the ball from foot to head to shoulder.
“Hurry up, you ol’ fart!” he shouted as I continued to stretch. “Lady Shite ‘ll be back soon, so we’ve only got time fer a few.”
“Hold yer fuckin’ horses, mate. I’m still a bit jetlagged, plus I’ve been liftin’ boxes all morning.”
“Keep yer fahkin’ bollocks fer the rest home,” replied Jaffa as he let fly with a terrific half volley that was straight at my head. Despite the fact that I hadn’t touched a football since that grand final penalty save, the old reflexes snapped straight into play and I effortlessly palmed the ball down at my feet and side-footed back to him. He didn’t say a word but I could tell from the raised eyebrows that he was already impressed.
“Awright, let’s see how you go with something not lobbed straight to yer,” he said and slammed a shot low to my left. Without even thinking, I was down to it and pushed the ball into a bed of roses.
“Not bad,” conceded Jaffa as he lifted the broken stem of a white rose and then tore it away to conceal the damage. “Mind you, the goal’s not full size.”
“Wouldn’t matter how big it was against an amateur like you,” I remarked as he trotted back to his mark, examining the ball for possible punctures.
“We’ll see abaht that, Artful Codger,” replied Jaffa as he took a bit of a run up and drilled the ball hard, about six foot to my right and head high. Immediately, I was off my feet and palmed the ball over an imaginary crossbar and straight into a lead light window which crunched like a rotten tooth.
“Goal!” shouted Jaffa, but before I could dispute the matter we were confronted by the lady of the house, incandescent with anger aDRIan Deans
“What is the meaning of this?” she demanded, stamping her foot, hands on hips.
“It means England one, Australia nil,” replied Jaffa.
* * *
Jaffa dropped me back to my digs in West Hampstead, just around the corner from Mervyn’s club.
“I’m tellin’ yer, Ronnie won’t mind,” he insisted. “It’s no problem to come along to training. The ground’s just down the end of your street, for chrissakes! Just bring yer gear and be there by quarter past five.”
I didn’t know how I felt about this development - being invited to training. I’d more or less determined to retire from football for the sake of peace with Shona. England, after all, had already rejected me and I had little desire to subject myself to further humiliation.
“I dunno, Jaffa. Southern Conference is probably a little out of my league these days.”
“I’m not askin’ yer to play first team,” sneered Jaffa. “Jus’ come fer the fahkin’ run, mate.”
I climbed down from the truck and stretched my back. It felt pretty good.
“I’ll see how I feel.”
THE BAD LUCK OR STUPIDITY OF YOUTH
My digs were at 42C Kentside Rd in Bentham Green, a tiny suburb just west of West Hampstead. My place was about 300 yards from Kentside Field, where Bentham United played, and 500 yards from the West Hampstead Sportsmen’s Club.
The digs had been arranged by Mervyn. It was essentially a private home with a room to let, owned by one Bernice O’Toole - a youngish old stick, about 65, who had more in common with a tropical cyclone than with your standard-gauge British widow. Most of her energy was reserved for surfing the Internet, and when she discovered I’d never ventured into cyberspace, she was aghast.
“What, nivvir surfed? Young man like you? That’s a disgrace, so it is.”
Her computer was in the little office, just outside my bedroom door, and before I could stop her she’d set me up with an e-mail address.
“What’s yer nickname?” she’d asked, causing me to consider.
“Actually, I haven’t had one for a while. They used to call me Mr Cleansheets.”
“And best yer keep it that way,” she chuckled. “Right. Yer now Mr Cleansheets at hotmail dot com. Who d’yer wanna contact?”
Well. There was only one e-mail address I knew:
FROM: [email protected]
SUBJECT: Hello
Hi Doreen, how’s it going?
This is my first ever email.
Eric Judd (from the plane - first class)
“Last o’ the great romantics, so ye are,” smiled Bernice.
“Dunno what else to say,” I said. “She’s not me girlfriend.”
“No,” said Bernice. “Just the first girl ya thought of.”
* * *
I was deliberately late to training. I wanted to have a bit of a look at the guys before I reintroduced myself to the world of football. Southern Conference was semi-pro, after all. Probably about the same level as State Super League back in New South Wales - a level I’d never reached (despite being easily good enough).
Watching from a small copse on the far side of the field from the shed, they looked the same as any other bunch of guys who took the game reasonably seriously - standing around chatting - having a laugh before the coach showed up. Jaffa was clearly the centre of attention, and from his movements, I could tell he was acting out the incident in the bar at lunch time.
It was right on 5.30 - getting dark and a definite chill in the air.
The idea of training was suddenly extremely unattractive to me, but something very strange happened. I had more or less made up my mind to give the whole thing a miss, but as I started walking, I found myself moving towards the group of footballers, rather than away from them as I (thought I had) intended.
A bit of a silence fell as I approached. Jaffa gave me a grin and said,
“‘Ere ‘e is! Eric Judd. The Great White Hope!”
I was introduced to the boys but most of the names went in one ear and out the other, with a couple of exceptions. The oldest bloke there (besides me) was Trevor. He would’ve been late 30s and I already knew from Jaffa that he’d actually played for Oxford United in the old third division (now League 1)