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61.
Marius was raw with nerves. He refused to admit how fond he'd become of Mrs Wilkinson. Was he crazy forcing her on to a right-handed track, was the trip too short, would she ever get her little feet out of the mud? There wasn't a blade of gra.s.s left in the winners enclosure. Now his wife, who he hadn't seen since she left him, had turned up with Shade and he'd forgotten how beautiful she was, particularly smothered in Shade's furs, which she'd been so violently opposed to wearing in the old days. Collie and Harvey-Holden were with them. Marius looked straight through the lot.
Etta was distressed. Having put a tenner she could ill afford on Mrs Wilkinson, she had mislaid her betting slip. Searching frantically, not wanting to bother anyone, she didn't notice s.h.a.gger surrept.i.tiously picking it up and putting it in his notecase.
One more race needed. The crowd cheered, the press gathered, as Rogue, always last to leave the weighing room because he liked to make an entrance, sauntered out in Shade's orange and magenta colours, smiling round, whacking his boots, kissing Olivia on both cheeks and shaking the hands of Shade and Harvey-Holden.
Mrs Wilkinson had beaten Playboy once, so Harvey-Holden instructed both Rogue and Dare Catswood, who was riding Stop Preston, to block Wilkie's good eye and hem her in.
'Amber Lloyd-Foxe will panic and lose it.'
Rogue raised an eyebrow but said nothing.
Amber was already in a state of shock, having barged into the weighing room and discovered Rogue naked on the scales and flashing the biggest tackle therein.
'Don't win by too much,' Marius warned her.
Mrs Wilkinson was allowed three races over hurdles as a novice before she was allotted a handicap, which Marius wanted as low as possible because it meant less weight to carry.
The twelve riders were down at the start, surrounded by even more photographers. Nervous as a cat, poised for his hundredth, Rogue on a vast Bafford Playboy was eight inches taller than Amber, and winding her up.
'Winning isn't everything,' he said rea.s.suringly, and then after a pause, 'it's the only thing.'
He's much less beautiful in a gum shield, thought Amber. Wish he'd keep it in all the time.
'Make sure you're in the frame, darling,' he added as they rode their horses up to look at the first fence, 'then you'll get into the winners and be able to cash in on all my publicity.'
As she glared up at him, he ostentatiously checked his reflection in her goggles.
Mrs Wilkinson was trembling violently, psyching herself up.
'Who's going to make it?' asked the starter.
'I am,' said Dare Catswood.
'I'm keeping mine handy,' said Awesome.
'I'm going to win,' said Rogue.
They were out, b.u.mping and jostling for position on a course which curled off towards the trees round to the right.
The flag fell, the tape flew, they were off. Dare Catswood set a furious pace on Preston to exhaust Mrs Wilkinson, who hated not leading the pack.
Rogue and Amber rowed all the way round.
'Don't crowd me,' she screamed as he sat on her tail.
'You know I'm only looking at your a.r.s.e.'
Amber was having a nightmare ride. The pace was faster than anything she'd ever imagined as they took off and landed on ground slipperier than turkey fat.
With no right eye, Mrs Wilkinson couldn't see the rail. Frantic to find something on which to focus, she kept hanging left.
'Get off my line, you stupid c.u.n.t,' yelled the jockeys as she drifted across them. The track had been ripped to pieces by earlier races. As horses overtook a faltering Mrs Wilkinson, they kicked clods of earth in her good eye.
At the next flight she slipped again, jumped wildly left and would have unshipped Amber, if Rogue hadn't grabbed her silks and tugged her back into place.
'Use your f.u.c.king stick down the left side to correct her,' he yelled. 'You're not with the Pony Club now.'
'It'll b.l.o.o.d.y freak her out,' yelled back Amber.
'Well, yank her back to the right, then.'
Watching the television by the tote, Marius was in agony. How could he have put Wilkie through it? Etta was in double agony, with Corinna driving her nuts. Too vain to wear her spectacles, she bombarded Etta with questions.
'What's that funeral cortege following the riders?'
'Oh, ambulance, doctors, vets and things.'
'Who's in the lead?'
'Dare Catswood and Awesome Wells.'
'Which one's Mrs Willoughby?'
'Wilkinson. She's the grey and Amber's wearing emerald green colours ... Lying fifth, no, sixth now.'
Etta was terrified seeing Mrs Wilkinson lurch ever wider as they swung into the home straight.
'Taking the scenic route,' yelled Rogue as he and the other jockeys got to work, somehow staying put as their frantically thrusting bodies kicked and pushed and, like weavers with their looms, switched whip and reins to different hands as they thrashed their horses on.
'Which one is Amber?'
'The one in emerald green.'
'Why isn't she whipping Mrs Willoughby like the others? She seems to be going backwards. Where's that good-looking Rogue Rogers?'
'In the lead in magenta and orange.'
'Why can't he ride Mrs Willoughby?'
'Please, Corinna,' cried Etta, 'watch the big screen.'
Mrs Wilkinson had steadied. Ahead galloped Preston and Awesome Wells's chestnut mare Katya Katkin, and ahead of them Rogue and Playboy. But Rogue was having to use a lot of whip, Playboy was not jumping fluently, wearily dragging his feet out of the mud. Harvey-Holden, registered Amber, even with Collie's added expertise, has not got that horse fit enough.
Already the crowd were roaring him home.
'Come on, Rogue!'
'Kick on, son.'
'Come on, Playboy!'
Two out Dare Catswood and Preston fell, horse and jockey lying in a crumpled heap. Very carefully, Mrs Wilkinson landed to the left and jumped over them, allowing Rogue to surge even further ahead.
'He's going to p.i.s.s all over it,' said Chris in disgust.
'She'll be third. Come on, Wilkie!' cried Etta.
Deafened by the increasing roar of the crowd on the run-in, Rogue glanced back through his legs, realizing he was safely in front, then up at the big screen. Yippee, a hundred up.
Playboy, a young horse, however, decided, rather than run the gauntlet of those cheering, shouting punters and the flashing photographers, to swing right through the gap in the rails on to the steeplechasing course. Before Rogue could yank him back left on to the run-in, he had cleared the next fence.
Like a wireless switched off, the cheers stopped.
Stupid prat's taken the wrong course, thought Amber in ecstasy.
'Now's our chance, Wilkie,' she cried, as Mrs Wilkinson, eye-balling Katya Katkin and grinding her teeth, trundled past the aghast, astounded faces. She was in front by a mud-splattered nose, and despite being briefly headed by Katya, fought back with tremendous courage and stayed ahead all the way to the line.
As Amber pulled up, still shaking, burying her face in Mrs Wilkinson's muddy shoulder, she heard a stream of expletives coming from a returning Rogue and ostentatiously clapped her hands over her ears.
'Dear, dear, why didn't you use your whip to stop him hanging right?'
'We won, we won,' screamed Etta. 'Oh Corinna.'
But Corinna had gone. Having lavishly reapplied blood-red lipstick, she had hurtled down the steps, across the gra.s.s, ducking under the rails and running down the course with her arms out.
'With any luck she'll be trampled to death like a suffragette,' said Seth.
Tommy came panting up, hugging Mrs Wilkinson, pulling her ears and crying as she clipped on the lead rope.
'Well done, you took out Rogue.'
'Hubris took him out,' said Amber.
'Hugh who?' said Awesome, cantering up and putting an arm round Amber's shoulders. 'Well done, you took out that f.u.c.ker.'
Next minute Corinna pounded up, arms out, then, deciding Mrs Wilkinson's face was too muddy to be kissed, s.n.a.t.c.hed the lead rope from Tommy and the microphone from Richard Pitman, so he could interview her rather than Amber.
'We don't need two of us to lead her,' Corinna then said dismissively to Tommy, and strode off to the winners enclosure. The photographers went crazy.
Amber's deadpan face was as mud-speckled as a thrush's egg, but as she rode into the winners enclosure she touched her green hat, punched the air and grinned in ecstasy, and the crowd roared their applause. Rogue would get his hundredth later on, this was the young conditional's moment.
As she dismounted, Marius was beside her, ex-wife, Shade and Harvey-Holden forgotten.
'That was brilliant. Must have been really hairy. I'm sorry, the trip was wrong, the going was wrong, she's never running right-handed again, but she still won. G.o.d, she's got guts.'
'This is the most exciting day of my life,' Corinna was telling the press, as she took up her position next to Mrs Wilkinson.
It was while Amber was weighing in that she heard the horrible news that although Dare Catswood had only wrenched his shoulder, Stop Preston had had to be put down. She then escaped to the women's changing room, which was part of the ambulance room, in which she would probably have ended up if Rogue hadn't dragged her back on to Mrs Wilkinson, and burst into a flood of tears.
'You don't want to do that,' said a soft voice. 'You've got to talk to the press.'
It was Rogue. Having shed Shade's silks, he was dressed in a black undershirt. His face was still spattered with mud, making his smile wider and whiter. As she wasn't wearing heels, his blue eyes were on a level with hers.
'Well done,' he said. 'Aren't you glad I let you win?'
'You did not.'
'I did too, I wanted Marius to put you op for Wetherby next month.'
'He won't, he hasn't. You did not,' sobbed Amber, 'I won on my own.'
Frantically wiping her eyes, she was about to slap his face when Rogue caught her hand and brushed it with his lips, sending a thousand volts through her. 'I'm going to Wetherby too,' he said, 'and I'm going to take you out to dinner, and later in the evening we're going to make peace, not war.' Then, at her look of bewilderment: 'Well done, darling, of course you won and that's one h.e.l.l of a brave little horse. I better go and win the last race.'
62.
Sadness was cast over the day by the death of Stop Preston, who had showed such promise.
'The horses that die in their glory, and never grow old,' sighed Alan.
'Congratulations to Mrs Wilkinson and all her connections,' crackled the loudspeaker.
'Sounds just like Jane Austen,' mocked Corinna as she went up to collect Mrs Wilkinson's cup, watched with differing emotions by the rest of the syndicate.
'Oh I have been to Ludlow Fair And left my necktie G.o.d knows where,'
quoted Seth.
'And carried half way home, or near, Pints and quarts of Ludlow beer:'
continued Alan, 'Then the world seemed none so bad, And I myself a sterling lad.'
'Tommy's a sterling stable lad,' observed Seth.
'And she's got such a crush on Rafiq, and poor Rafiq's got such a crush on Amber,' said Alan.
He and Seth, having both made a grand on Mrs Wilkinson, were getting drunk on the way home. Corinna, who'd pa.s.sed out, was sleeping peacefully in the back. Chris, also drunk, was pouring his heart out to the Major, who was well aware that he and Chrissie had lapsed on their subscription but, unlike s.h.a.gger, not through avarice.