Author Omar Shahid Hamid
Omar Shahid Hamid’s fourth novel, The Fix, is about cricket, a women’s cricket team on the verge of its biggest international success, its captain Sanam and vice-captain Fatima, and the match-fixing syndicates that threaten to derail their dreams.
Eos presents an extract from the recently published book.
They say it never rains in Lahore in May. Even if it does, it’s certainly never like this. The rain pelts down on the car with the force of a sledgehammer, the harsh thud of the drops hitting the bonnet and roof making a deafening sound. The driver slows to a crawl due to the total lack of visibility. It seems to Sanam that the only way he can continue driving in this storm is by activating some intuitive mental sonar.
She rolls down her window just an inch to get a sense of where they have reached. She barely catches a glimpse of the brown waters of Lahore’s famous Nehr almost spilling over on to the road, before her green national team blazer is drenched. So great is the flooding that even the canal’s regular urchins, who never miss an opportunity to bathe in the dirty water, have decided to give their usual sport a miss in this storm. Sanam worries about getting late for the soyem and asks the driver how much longer it will take, but the man simply shrugs his shoulders, nods toward the unsighted windscreen and gets back to his navigation.
To be late for the final rites of Tariq Zaman would be a tragedy. Pakistan has had many captains, but only one Skipper. He is the man credited with changing the nature of the country’s cricket. The fearless leader who forged a team out of a talented rabble, who got rid of the nepotism, lack of professionalism and inconsistent performances that had constantly plagued the cricket team for decades, and who pioneered the aggressive, positive tactics that did away with the previous dour, defensive approach, and came to define the Pakistan team of his era.
Skipper was always a man who believed in record-breaking performances. The country’s most successful captain ever, with more wins under his leadership than under anyone else; first cricketer from anywhere in the world to take 300 test wickets while also scoring more than 5000, runs; the man with the greatest number of match-winning innings in tests or one-day matches; the man with the bestselling poster in the history of the Pakistani publishing industry. Chances are if you came of age in Pakistan between 1977, which is when Skipper made his debut, and 1995, when he finally hung up his boots, you too bought that poster. If you were a boy, you probably attempted (unsuccessfully, nine times out of 10) to copy that strange Afro-like hairstyle that Skipper managed to look cool in, despite it having fallen out of fashion in the ’70s. At the very least, you turned your collar up and walked around your bedroom as if you had a stick stuck up your ass. Equally, if you were a female born in this period, you have gazed upon that poster at least once, stared into those blue eyes, and willed the glossy image to come to life and propose to you.
Skipper’s life resembled the perfect feel-good movie, where everything happens just as it should, the nice guy gets the girl, and good always triumphs over evil. Right up until the last act — that accursed World Cup. The one where Pakistan were overwhelming favourites, and Skipper was expected to lead them on a lap of honour to formalise what had already been recognised as their outstanding performances against all comers in the year leading up to the tournament. Of course, that’s not what ended up happening, and from there on, the trajectory of Skipper’s life had taken a downward turn. Just as everything he had done before the World Cup had effortlessly succeeded, everything after it failed miserably. Like a boxer who takes that one fatal punch that ends an otherwise brilliant career, Skipper never quite recovered from that defeat.
‘Oye, what the f*** was that ********* yesterday?’ Fatima has been quiet since Sanam picked her up in the vehicle that the board has given to them to go for the condolence.
‘What do you mean?’
‘Why did Babar sir hold you back after the meeting. Did he push you to meet with that kanjar Saleem Euro?’
Sanam’s eyes widen, and she nods towards the driver, embarrassed that he would have overheard Fatima’s coarse language. Fatima shrugs nonchalantly and chuckles. ‘Don’t worry, it’s not the first time chacha has heard these kinds of words. He’s not as sheltered as you.’ Even the old driver looks up from his navigation and smiles at that one.
Sanam purses her lips as if to respond, but lets the comment pass. ‘No, Babar sir didn’t push me to meet Saleem Euro. He wanted me to give a letter from him to Tariq Zaman sahib’s sister because he said he couldn’t come to the soyem himself.’
‘I bet he can’t. Skipper’s sister hates him.’
‘Why?’
‘Are you joking? You don’t know? Everyone knows. She holds Babar sir and that whole clique of players — Faisal Qureshi, Azhar Abbas, Ovais Tawheed, and Shoaib Abdullah — responsible for destroying Skipper’s life.’
‘Why? I thought they were all Skipper’s boys. Babar sir always said that it was Skipper who discovered every one of them and brought them into the team. He said Skipper fought with the selectors to get him in the side, when they preferred Babar sir’s elder brother as the keeper. So why would Skipper’s sister hate them all?’
‘That was all before the World Cup final. Everything changed afterward. Skipper was bitter because this group, his ‘boys’, threw the match. The World Cup victory was supposed to be his great triumph. Remember that hospital he wanted to build in honour of his mother?’
‘Yes I do remember. I collected money for the hospital when I was in class 7. But it never got built, right?’
‘It never got built, because Skipper had banked on the fact that a successful World Cup would generate the donations needed to fund it. And after these players threw the World Cup final, no one wanted to contribute a single paisa to his hospital. Skipper had to retire immediately afterward in disgrace.’
Sanam is quiet for a moment. In a different way, that same World Cup was a seminal moment in her life as well. For it was while watching the brilliance of Skipper’s team during that tournament, that she first fell in love with the game. The names that Fatima mentions were the first cricketing gods that Sanam ever worshipped. Of course, none of what Fatima is saying is new to her. She vaguely remembers the match-fixing controversy from that time. She was just 11, too young to comprehend what had happened. She does remember that a lot of people were angry, her father included. He didn’t come out of his room for two days, and when he finally resurfaced, he kept muttering, for days, about how ‘they’ could have done such a thing. But these things did not matter to Sanam at the time. As a new convert to cricket, she was enamoured with the beauty of the game, and not yet invested emotionally in a Pakistani victory. That early innocence protected her from the soul-crushing disappointment that the rest of the country had felt, of having lost a World Cup final, of having come so close yet remaining so far.
‘Do you really think they threw that final Fatima? I know that all those players have been dogged with these rumours for 20 years, but I always figured that was something disgruntled fans alleged every time Pakistan lost an important match. Nothing’s ever been proved, right?’