Stevens checked on the remaining members of the coxed pair as they went about their work and was pleased to see that they were doing their chores diligently. He walked over to the crew’s sweep, Andrew Lang, and tapped the strapping youth on the shoulder as the boat’s hull shone brightly under his cleaning cloth.
Andrew gave an involuntary jump and turned. When he saw it was the president he flushed and Stevens was yet again surprised at how young he appeared in some respects and yet how much he had grown in height and size since being ousted as the crew’s cox. Now, as the crew’s sweep, he towered over Stevens yet still managed to retain his childish features.
‘To the victors go the spoils,’ Stevens said without a smile as he handed one of the dark brown bottles to the tall lad. Still too young to drink, Stevens was allowing the crew a small reward for their success.
‘Thank you, Sir,’ Andrew whispered as he took the bottle and placed it to his lips. Stevens thought the boy looked like an overgrown kewpie doll and his unbroken voice was still that of a young child.
The president shook his head as he made his way down the length of the slim craft to where a second young man worked at cleaning the scull’s bow.
Almost as tall and broad as their sweep, the crew’s bowman, Clyde Stevens, looked up at his uncle. The older Stevens held out the second opened bottle to him, but before the young man could offer his thanks, Roger Stevens said harshly, ‘Come with me.’
The younger Stevens took a long swig of beer and then followed after his uncle. He had a feeling in his stomach that what was to come was not going to be pleasant.
Roger Stevens strode purposefully along a narrow dirt track that paralleled the river and finally came to a stop well out of sight of the club. He waited impatiently for his nephew to catch up.
‘What happened out there?’ Stevens demanded.
‘We won,’ said the young rower defensively.
‘Yes. You won. Just. You’re a far better crew than that. I want to know why.’
‘Did you want us to lose?’ asked Clyde, attempting to adopt an air of bravado under his uncle’s disapproving gaze.
Roger Stevens poked his nephew in the chest with a stiff finger. ‘Don’t be smart with me! Tell me what happened out there!’
‘I don’t know. The little dago was calling the tempo, but Andrew didn’t seem to be listening. He was rowing at a pace of his own. I had to keep time with him or we would have had a clash of oars.’
‘Then what happened?’
‘Biagi threw some water in Andrew’s face. It must have woken Andrew up or something because he fixed up his stroke. It was a close thing, but Biagi picked the right time for us to up the tempo and our effort over the last hundred metres was enough to get us home.’
‘It could easily have been different and the village would have lost a great deal of money. What was wrong with Lang?’ The president knew exactly what was wrong with Lang but wanted to see if his nephew was aware.
‘I don’t know. He said he was suffering from a stitch, but it didn’t look that way to me. Maybe his balls are finally dropping.’
The president grunted. ‘He’s caused the club a deal of embarrassment. I’ve had to make things right this afternoon and that wasn’t cheap. If he weren’t a club member he would be in the hands of the police right now.’
‘Perhaps it would have been for the best if you let the coppers take him. I can’t stand him. He’s a creep.’
It was evident to the president that Andrew’s fellow rowers shared the same low opinion of their sweep as those expressed by his fellow directors and the members of ‘Old Codgers’.
Andrew Lang’s father had come from a long line of well-built farmers and they had supplied the rowing club with a long line of successful oarsmen. He would have been automatically initiated into the ranks of the club’s ‘inner circle’ and ultimately joined the Old Codgers if he had not been killed while serving his country at Tobruk.
While being raised by his widowed mother, the Old Codgers had discussed the ‘girlish’ Andrew and come to the conclusion that he needed more men in his life. They had therefore approached his mother and informed her that they were taking the diminutive Andrew into the club to train as a cox. It was the only position his small stature had allowed him to perform. Most had assumed that Andrew would continue to take after his mother’s side of the family with their pixie-like looks and size and had been taken by surprise when, seemingly overnight, he had taken on the size and shape of his deceased father; however, his mother’s pixie-like features and voice had remained attached to his now immense frame.
‘We can’t let what happened today happen again,’ continued Roger Stevens.
‘What can I do?’
‘The three of you are about to finish school. You’ll be going to university and Andrew will be off to do his apprenticeship. The time has come for the final step.’
Clyde took a deep drink of the amber fluid and shivered. He knew exactly what his uncle was saying.
‘Do Mum and Dad know?’
‘We told your father. He agrees. This is not something that your mother should know about. Do you understand me?’
‘Yes, Sir. When?’
‘Later. After the crowds have left.’
The boy nodded reluctantly. ‘I wanted to do it with Dave Conway. At least I know that I can rely on him.’
‘I’m afraid this is more important. I’ll explain to Dave that it’s in the best interests of the club that he doesn’t do it. We’ll make it right for him. Dave’s a dedicated clubman. He’ll understand. You’re on the same crew as Andrew, so it has to be you. The Old Codgers won’t forget you for doing this.’
‘What if he can’t make it? What if he’s not strong enough? He nearly stuffed things up today. What if he gets another stitch?’
His uncle gave the boy a grim look. ‘The Old Codgers are all in agreement. They’ve told me to tell you that if he can’t make it, then you’re to leave him out there. You’re not to help him in any way. He either comes out the other side a man or he doesn’t come out. We owe it to his father’s memory to do this for him.’
Uncle and nephew made their way back down the river and when they arrived at the boatshed Clyde could see that their scull had been cleaned and was now safely stored inside while his fellow crewmen sat in the sun with their backs to the shed and shared yet another bottle of beer. Andrew Lang held up the bottle to Clyde with an alcoholic twinkle in his eye. The beer was already having an effect on him. ‘Compliments of your father,’ he chirped in his high-pitched voice.
The voice grated on Clyde as it did most people, but he smiled nonetheless and took a swig before handing it to Angelo Biagi. As the slim youth was tilting the bottle to his lips he noted the presence of Andrew’s cousin, Matilda Lang, on the river bank not far away. They were classmates and he knew she hated her given name and that only her mother and aunt referred to her as Matilda. To everyone else in the village she was the beautiful Tilley.
Jealously he watched as Clyde wandered over to the girl while trying to appear casual. ‘We won,’ he told her simply.
‘So I saw,’ she nodded. ‘Not by much though. Who stuffed up?’
Clyde’s grin turned to a grimace. Is everyone in this village a damn rowing expert?!
‘It doesn’t matter. We won. That’s all that counts,’ he replied gruffly.
‘I’m sure that’s