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Chapter no 18

Spare

THE GAME REQUIRED A BAT, a tennis ball, and a total disregard for oneโ€™s physical safety. There were four players: a bowler, a batsman, and two fielders

stationed mid-corridor, each with one foot in the corridor and one in a room. Not always our rooms. We often intruded on other boys trying to work. Theyโ€™d beg us to go away.

Sorry, we said.ย Thisย isย ourย work.

The radiator represented the wicket. There was an endless debate about what constituted a catch. Off the wall? Yes, catch. Off a window? No catch. One hand, one bounce? Half out.

One day the sportiest member of our group hurled himself at a ball, trying to make a tricky catch, and landed face-first on a fire extinguisher hooked to the wall. His tongue split wide open. Youโ€™d think after that, after the carpet had been permanently soiled with his blood, weโ€™d have called an end to Corridor Cricket.

We didnโ€™t.

When not playing Corridor Cricket weโ€™d loll in our rooms. We got very good at affecting postures of supreme indolence. The point was to look as if you had no purpose, as if youโ€™d bestir yourself only to do something bad or, better yet, stupid. Near the end of my first half we hit on something supremely stupid.

Someone suggested that my hair was a complete disaster. Like grass on the moors.

Wellโ€ฆwhat can be done? Let me have a go at it.

You?

Yeah. Let me shave it off.

Hm. That didnโ€™t sound right.

But I wanted to go along. I wanted to be a top bloke. A funny bloke.

All right.

Someone fetched the clippers. Someone pushed me into a chair. How quickly, how blithely, after a lifetime of healthy growth, it all went cascading off my head. When the cutter was done I looked down, saw a dozen pyramids of ginger on the floor, like red volcanoes seen from a plane, and knew Iโ€™d made a legendary mistake.

I ran to the mirror. Suspicion confirmed. I screamed in horror. My mates screamed too. With laughter.

I ran in circles. I wanted to reverse time. I wanted to scoop up the hair from the floor and glue it back on. I wanted to wake from this nightmare. Not knowing

where else to turn, I violated the sacred rule, the one shining commandment never to be broken, and ran upstairs to Willyโ€™s room.

Of course, there was nothing Willy could do. I was just hoping heโ€™d tell me it would be OK, donโ€™t freak out, keep calm, Harold. Instead, he laughed like the others. I recall him sitting at his desk, bent over a book, chuckling, while I stood before him fingering the nubs on my newly bare scalp.

Harold, what have you done?

What a question. He sounded like Stewie fromย Family Guy.ย Wasnโ€™t it obvious?

You shouldnโ€™t have done it, Harold!

So weโ€™re just stating the obvious now?

He said a few more things that were immensely unhelpful and I walked out. Worse ridicule was yet to come. A few days later, on the front page of theย Daily

Mirror,ย one of the tabloids, there I was with my new haircut.

Headline:ย Harry the Skinhead.

I couldnโ€™t imagine how theyโ€™d got wind of the story. A schoolmate must have told someone who told someone who told the papers. They had no photo, thank goodness. But theyโ€™d improvised. The image on the front page was a โ€œcomputer-generatedโ€ rendering of the Spare, bald as an egg. A lie. More than a lie, really.

I looked bad, but not that bad.

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