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Trevor Deansgate climbed out of his Jaguar and for good measure slammed the door. He was dressed in a city suit, in contrast to everyone else there, and looked ready for the boardroom. Black hair rigorously brushed, chin smoothly shaven, shoes polished like gla.s.s. Not the sort of man I would have sought as a friend, because I didn't on the whole like to sit at the feet of power, picking up crumbs of patronage with nervous laughter, but a force to be reckoned with on the racing scene.
Big scale bookmakers could be and often were a positive influence for good, a stance I thought sardonically that they had been pushed into, to survive the lobby that knew that a Tote monopoly (and a less greedy tax climate) would put back into racing what bookmakers took out. Trevor Deansgate personified the new breed; urbane, a man of the world, seeking top company, becoming a name in the City, the sycophant of earls.
'Hallo,' he said, seeing me. 'I met you at Kempton.... Do you know where George's horses are?'
'Right there,' I said, pointing. 'You're just in time.'
'b.l.o.o.d.y traffic.'
He strode across the gra.s.s towards George, racegla.s.ses swinging from his hand, and George said hallo briefly and apparently told him to watch the gallops with me, because he came straight back, heavy and confident, and stopped at my side.
'George says my two both go in the first bunch. He said you'd tell me how they're doing, insolent b.u.g.g.e.r. Got eyes, haven't I? He's going on up the hill.'
I nodded. Trainers often went up halfway and watched from there, the better to see their horses' action as they galloped past.
Four horses were wheeling into position at the starting point. Trevor Deansgate applied his binoculars, twisting them to focus. Navy suiting with faint red pinstripes. The well-kept hands, gold cuff links, onyx ring, as before.
'Which are yours?' I said.
'The two chestnuts. That one with the white socks is Pinafore. The other's nothing much.'
The nothing much had short cannon bones and a rounded rump. Might make a 'chaser one day, I thought. I liked the look of him better than the whippet-shaped Pinafore. They set off together up the gallop at George's signal, and the sprinting blood showed all the way to the top. Pinafore romped it and the nothing much lived up to his owner's a.s.sessment. Trevor Deansgate lowered his binoculars with a sigh.
'That's that, then. Are you coming to George's for breakfast?'
'No. Not today.' He raised the gla.s.ses again and focussed them on the much nearer target of the circling string, and, from the angle, he was looking at the riders, not the horses. The search came to an end on Inky Poole: he lowered the gla.s.ses and followed Tri-Nitro with the naked eye.
'A week today,' I said.
'Looks a picture.' I supposed that he, like all bookmakers, would be happy to see the hot favourite lose the Guineas, but there was nothing in his voice except admiration for a great horse. Tri-Nitro lined up in his turn and at a signal from George set off with two companions at a deceptively fast pace. Inky Poole, I was interested to see, sat as quiet as patience and rode with a skill worth ten times what he would be paid. Good work jockeys were undervalued. Bad ones could ruin a horse's mouth and temperament and whole career. It figured that for the stableful he'd got, George Caspar would employ only the best.
It was not the flat-out searching gallop they would hold on the following Sat.u.r.day morning over a long smooth surface like the Limekilns. Up the incline of Warren Hill a fast canter was testing enough. Tri-Nitro took the whole thing without a hint of effort, and breasted the top as if he could go up there six times more without noticing.
Impressive, I thought. The Press, clearly agreeing, were scribbling in their notebooks. Trevor Deansgate looked thoughtful, as well he might, and George Caspar, coming down the hill and reining in near us, looked almost smugly satisfied. The Guineas, one felt, were in the bag.
After they had done their work the horses walked down the hill to join the still circling string where the work riders changed onto fresh mounts and set off again up to the top. Tri-Nitro got back his lad with the olive-green husky and the red scarf, and eventually the whole lot of them set off home.
'That's that, then,' George said. 'All set, Trevor? Breakfast?'
They nodded farewells to me and set off, one in the car, one on the horse. I had eyes mostly, however, for Inky Poole, who had been four times up the hill and was walking off a shade morosely to a parked car.
'Inky,' I said, coming up behind him, 'the gallop on Tri-Nitro... that was great.'
He looked at me sourly. 'I've got nothing to say.'
'I'm not from the press.'
'I know who you are. Saw you racing. Who hasn't?' Unfriendly: almost a sneer. 'What do you want?'
'How does Tri-Nitro compare with Gleaner, this time last year?'
He fished the car keys out of a zipper pocket in his anorak, and fitted one into the lock. What I could see of his face looked obstinately unhelpful.
'Did Gleaner, a week before the Guineas, give you the same sort of feel?' I said.
'I'm not talking to you.'
'How about Zingaloo?' I said. 'Or Bethesda?' He opened his car door and slid down into the driving seat, taking out time to give me a hostile glare.
'p.i.s.s off,' he said. Slammed the door. Stabbed the ignition key into the dashboard and forcefully drove away.
Chico had arisen to breakfast but was sitting in the pub's dining room holding his head.
'Don't look so healthy,' he said when I joined him.
'Bacon and eggs,' I said. 'That's what I'll have. Or kippers, perhaps. And strawberry jam.'
He groaned.
'I'm going back to London,' I said. 'But would you mind staying here?' I brought the camera out of my pocket. 'Take the film out of that and get it developed. Overnight if possible. There's some pictures of Tri-Nitro and Inky Poole on there. We might find them helpful, you never know.'
'O.K., then,' he said. 'But you'll have to ring up the Comprehensive and tell them that my black belt's at the cleaners.'
I laughed. 'There were some girls riding in George Caspar's string this morning,' I said. 'See what you can do.'
'That's beyond the call of duty.' But his eye seemed suddenly brighter. 'What am I asking?'
'Things like who saddles Tri-Nitro for exercise gallops, and what's the routine from now until next Wednesday, and whether anything nasty is stirring in the jungle.'
'What about you, then?' 'I'll be back Friday night,' I said. 'In time for the gallops on Sat.u.r.day. They're bound to gallop Tri-Nitro on Sat.u.r.day. A strong work-out, to bring him to a peak.'
'Do you really think anything dodgy's going on?' Chico said.
'A toss-up. I just don't know. I'd better ring Rosemary.'
I went through the Mr Barnes routine again and Rosemary came on the line sounding as agitated as ever. 'I can't talk. We've people here for breakfast.' 'Just listen, then,' I said. 'Try to persuade George to vary his routine, when he gallops Tri-Nitro on Sat.u.r.day. Put up a different jockey, for instance? Not Inky Poole.'
'You don't think...' her voice was high, and broke off.
'I don't know at all,' I said. 'But if George changed everything about, there'd be less chance of skulduggery. Routine is the robber's best friend.'
'What? Oh yes. All right. I'll try. What about you?'
'I'll be out watching the gallop. After that, I'll stick around, until after the Guineas is safely over. But I wish you'd let me talk to George.'
'No. He'd be livid. I'll have to go now.' The receiver went down with a rattle which spoke of still unsteady hands, and I feared that George might be right about his wife being neurotic.
Charles and I met as usual at the Cavendish the following day, and sat in the upstairs bar's armchairs.