One night a great black storm came rolling up from the south. Green glares of lightning ripped across Andy's window, flash after flash, tearing darkness and colour away. Thunder cracked and crashed, and then the rain thrashed at the roof. All through his sleep he heard crashing thunder, hurtling rain, and the wash and gurgle of gutters overflowing. In the morning the storm-water channel was running full, carrying timber and paper and soggy cardboard out to the harbour. When Andy looked through the gate into Beecham Park, he stood transfixed. The green circle inside the track had become a wide sheet of water, and a company of seagulls screamed over it or sat on the surface.
That morning Joe was out early too, chasing the milkman for an extra pint of milk that his mother had forgotten to order. He came upon Andy staring through the wire mesh of the gate, silent and still. Joe stopped to look too. The strong white wings of the gulls flashed in the early sun.
âSee the birds,' whispered Andy, finding a friend beside him. âBirds and dogs and horsesâ¦I wish the birds would stay.'
âYou didn't have to pay three dollars to look at it,' Joe reminded him. âYou could have looked without.'
âI could have looked without,' repeated Andy, nodding. He added, âOnly now it's mine.'
Joe tried again. âWouldn't you like to have the money back and buy something else? You'd still have this just the same.'
Andy's eyes slid away, discarding these words. As far as he could see, they had nothing to do with anything.
âLet's help you get the money back,' persisted Joe. âWe're friends, aren't we? We'll help, boy.'
The warmth of Andy's smile was like the sun coming through a window. âGee, I know that, Joe. If I need any help I'll let you know.'
Joe turned away helplessly, clutching his bottle of milk. Andy's voice called after him.
âHey, Joe! I'm real sorry you haven't got a place like this, Joe. I mean a real place, not kidding like that gameâ¦You can have a share of this any time you like, Joe.'
Joe muttered, âThanks, boy,' and went away.
It was when he heard this story from Joe that Terry, that fierce young O'Day, turned coldly angry. In precise and considered words he stated that the old man who had sold Beecham Park Trotting Course to Andy Hoddel was a mean, miserable, cunning and rotten old urger. Then he closed his lips in a thin straight line and went away to look for Andy.
Joe had told his story on the way home from school. By then the storm-lake had drained away from Beecham Park, the seagulls were gone and the sun had almost dried the grounds. Terry came upon Andy observing these changes from the vacant ground above Wattle Road, sitting on his favourite stone and surrounded by stray cats. Terry stood before him, coldly determined.
âWho's this old geezer that sold you Beecham Park?'
âHim?' said Andy. âI don't know him. He's the bloke that used to own it.'
âYou come and find him and show us. He can give you back that money.'
â
I
don't want it back,' said Andy, astonished. âI'd rather have the racecourse. That's why I bought it.'
âYou listen to me,' said Terry sternly. âHe never owned Beecham Park, so he couldn't sell it to you. He's a yellow dingo, taking money off you like that. He's rooked you, that's all.'
Andy began to look lost and lonely. Terry's relentless voice went on.
âCan't you understand plain English? You had a dirty trick played on you. You've been robbed. You got a right to have that money back again, and you're getting it back. We'll make him give it up.'
âYou stop it!' shouted Andy, stumbling to his feet. âI don't want that money back when I already spent it, do I?' Stray cats hissed, spat and vanished over fences. âI had enough trouble buying the place,' shouted Andy, âwithout you messing it up!' He turned and loped quickly away into the lane.
For a day or so Terry kept on searching, determined to make the victim realize his misfortune; but now Andy really was avoiding his friends, darting round corners and into back lanes whenever he saw them coming. He was nervous of Terry.
Both Mike and Joe were annoyed when they heard of this episode. âYou went off half cocked,' said Mike, accusing Terry. âYou ought to have known it wouldn't work. It's useless trying to bounce Andy, he just gets pigheaded.'
âYou've upset him, too,' added Joe. âIf you don't watch out, he won't talk to us about it at all. How can we get him out of this mess if we don't know what's going on?'
âI know you were doing your best,' said Mike, cutting the argument short now that Joe had entered it. âAnyhow, it can't be helped.'
Only Matt sympathized with Terry. âI know just how you feelâyou wish you could get behind Andy and
push
him. At least you and I have tried, and that's more than some people I know.'
Joe and Mike ignored this reproach. Each of them still had that feeling of waiting for the real problem to emerge. There was something more at stake than the loss of three dollars, something they didn't yet understand. Meanwhile they could only go on as they were doing, looking out for Andy whenever they thought of it and not seeing him very often.
Andy continued to avoid them. By now he had gazed at his racecourse from every possible point, and his shyness was beginning to wear off. Sitting on the side of the cliff and looking into the grounds, he began to wonder if the men had swept them properly.
âA packet of trouble,' he would mutter, solemnly shaking his head. âThat's what he said. A packet of trouble.'
It had been no trouble at all to Andy. He could have wished it to be a little more trouble, for it hardly seemed to know he was there.
One night when the whine of the mechanical hare went on and on, he ventured down to the open gate instead of going up to the cliff to watch. There was a man standing just inside the gate, a tall man with a strong, long-jawed face and a square mouth. Andy was surprised to see him and halted rather suddenly. Then he gave the man his warm smile, said, âHullo, mister,' and leaned against the gatepost. The man looked at him in a serious way that Andy liked, and nodded politely.
The hare came whirring by, and the greyhounds bounded after it in long, elastic strides. To stand so near them was something new. Andy chuckled with excitement, looking up at the man in a companionable way, and went on watching. A short-legged ginger pup with a curling tail recognized Andy and came to sit in the gateway. It grinned a happy, silly grin, but Andy was too absorbed to notice.
There were no people in the grandstands and no lights on except the floodlights over the track. There were only the men who were busy with the dogs, and they were not wearing their long white coats. They were away on the other side of the course, near the barrier with its little doors that opened to let the dogs out at the beginning of a race. The hare went whining endlessly round the track, going quite slowly some of the time but never stopping. Sometimes, as it passed the barrier, the doors would fly open and four or five greyhounds would leap after it. Then the hare would put on speed and give them a race. There was a constant yelping and baying.
âIt's not proper racing,
I
know,' said Andy wisely to the tall man. âJust practising, that's all it is.'
âTraining,' said the man, nodding.
Then something happened that filled Andy with astonishment and joy. The hare came slowly by, with no greyhounds following. The ginger pup at Andy's feet went running into the ring, yapping in a happy, breathless wayâand suddenly, on the emerald-green track under the brilliant lights, the puppy was chasing the hare. Neck stretched out, ears flying, short legs bounding, the puppy was catching up when, just in time, the hare speeded up and escaped. The puppy went after it, yapping eagerly.
Andy roared with laughter. He hit the gate with his hand and roared again. âLook at him go! He nearly got it! He thinks he's a greyhound.' He laughed and laughed, looking up at the tall man and pointing at the ridiculous ginger pup.
On the other side of the track, indignant greyhound-trainers were waving and shouting. The pup, uncurling its tail a little and beginning to look hunted, swerved away under the rails and disappeared. The tall man's square mouth stretched into a wide smile.
âA nice set-out,' he said, giving Andy a sympathetic nod. Then he strolled off towards the stands.
Andy came a little farther inside the gate and sat on the ground. He was glad to have made friends with the tall man. He sat by himself in the dusk, full of the pride of ownership.
On the next afternoon, finding the gate open again, he slipped quietly inside and looked about. There was nobody in sight on all the broad circle of the racecourse. Andy wandered about, noticing details he had never seen before in spite of all his watching: mysterious locked doors under the big grandstand, wooden benches inside the ring where the band sat when it wasn't playing, a long building with a row of little windows like the ticket windows; until he found himself in an open space right under the high walls. It was very quiet and deserted. He felt safe and private inside the walls of the racecourse.
It was not as clean and neat as it seemed from a distance. He collected some old programmes, cigarette packets and wrappings from chocolate bars and put them in an empty rubbish-bin. âOught to keep it tidy,' he said, shaking his head. âA packet of trouble, that's what it is.'
There was a long garden bed against the wall, with roses and hydrangeas standing tall at the back and a tangle of phlox and dianthus in front. Andy was surprised and pleased to find it there, and looked at it for a long time. There were some withered flowers on the plants, and weeds growing here and there between them. Andy shook his head again.
âI shoulda come before,' he said with some pleasure.
He crouched on the paving in front of the bed and began to pull out weeds and pick off a few dead flowers. After a while he felt that someone was near him. He looked up. It was the tall, sober man with the long jaw and square mouth. He carried a coiled hose over his arm, and he was looking at Andy in the same serious but friendly way as before.
âJust going to give them a drop of water,' he said, laying down the hose. He uncoiled one end and took it to a tap farther along the wall. He screwed in the hose, turned on the tap and came back. Andy sat back on his heels and watched the hose writhe and jump as it took the pressure of water. The man picked up the nozzle and threw a jet of water among the plants.
âYou work here, mister?' asked Andy, pulling at another weed.
âPart of the time,' said the man. He glanced at the little heap of weeds and dead flowers on the paving and added, âSeems you've been working too.'
âThere's a lot wants doing,' said Andy, frowning and nodding. âI shoulda started sooner. I picked up a whole heap of papers already. It's a packet of trouble.'
âTakes some keeping up, all right,' the man agreed.
âI don't know who you are,' Andy stated, obviously thinking about it. He liked this quiet, friendly man.
âName's Bert Hammond. Yours?'
âWhatâme? I'm Andy Hoddel, that's who I am.' He tried the man's name over. âBert Hammondâthat's Mr Hammond, that is.' Shyness was making him grab at the weeds and yank them hard. He wanted to tell the man more than just his name. He wanted to say what else he was, besides being Andy Hoddel; but the words seemed to be too big. He went back a little way in the conversation, so that he could have another try.
âIt's a packet of trouble, this place. I shoulda kept an eye on it sooner.' He glanced sideways and saw that the man was watching him thoughtfully. He chuckled a few times, and then the words came. âIt's
my
place, this. Did you know that, Mr Hammond? I own it.'
The man nodded in a good-humoured way. Andy could tell that he hadn't really known at all. He wasn't even listening properly.
âI own the lot,' he insisted. âAll this. Got it cheap because the old man wanted to get rid of it. Three dollars, and cheap at the price. A packet of trouble, he said it was. It is, tooâbut I reckon it's pretty good, don't you?'
The man nodded again. He was listening all right now, and Andy chuckled proudly.
âI only had two dollars, and Mum never knew I took that. My own money, it was, out of my box. I never pinched it. Only then I had to get that other one,
that
took me a time. I done everything, getting that money, but I got itâ¦It was worth it, don't you reckon, Mr Hammond?' He stood up and looked across the wide grounds, and his blue eyes were warm with joy in his racecourse.
âWho sold it to you?' said the man; but he said it in a quiet and friendly voice that was not at all like Terry's. Andy laughed.
âDon't you know? The old man, of course, the one that
used
to own it. He never said his name, but he used to own this place.' Suddenly afraid again, he stared with round eyes and with spikes of hair standing up.
âI don't want the money back, Mr Hammond. Terry saysâJoe saysâthey reckon I can have the money back. What do I want it for? I'd rather have Beecham Park! Wouldn't you rather have Beecham Park? You won't tell Terry and Joe, Mr Hammond? You won't say who that old bloke is? See, they might ask him for the money back.'
âAll right, boy. All right. I won't tell them.'
Andy laughed with relief. âI better get on with my work.'
Bert Hammond took the hose to the farther end of the bed. Andy wandered about collecting more papers. They worked in a companionable way without talking until Andy, who was still remembering how wrong Joe and Terry had been, suddenly remembered something that Matt had said. He raised his head and called.
âHey! Mr Hammond!'
âThat's me!'
âDo I have to pay you money for doing this?'