Whip Hand

Chapter 5

I tucked his magazine inside my jacket and made my own way slowly in his wake, thinking about what he"d said. Pa.s.sing George Caspar I said, "Well done," in the customary politeness of such occasions, and he nodded briefly and said "Sid," and, transaction completed, I continued towards the door.

"Sid..." he called after me, his voice rising.

I turned. He beckoned. I went back.

"Want you to meet Trevor Deansgate," he said.

I shook the hand offered: snow-white cuff, gold links, smooth pale skin, faintly moist; well-tended nails, onyx and gold signet ring on little finger.



"Your winner?" I said. "Congratulations."

"Do you know who I am?"

"Trevor Deansgate?"

"Apart from that."

It was the first time I"d seen him at close quarters. There was often, in powerful men, a give-away droop of the eyelids which proclaimed an inner sense of superiority, and he had it. Also dark grey eyes, black controlled hair, and the tight mouth which goes with well-exercised decision-making muscles.

"Go on, Sid," George said into my tiny hesitation. "If you know, say. I told Trevor you knew everything."

I glanced at him, but all that was to be read on his tough weathered countenance was a sort of teasing expectancy. For many people, I knew, my new profession was a kind of game. There seemed to be no harm, on this occasion, of jumping obligingly through his offered hoop.

"Bookmaker?" I said tentatively: and to Trevor Deansgate directly, added, "Billy Bones?"

"There you are," said George, pleased. "I told you so."

Trevor Deansgate took it philosophically. I didn"t try for a further reaction, which might not have been so friendly. His name at birth was reputed to be Shummuck. Trevor Shummuck from Manchester, who"d been born in a slum with a razor mind and changed his name, accent and chosen company on the way up. As Bobby Unwin might have said, hadn"t we all, and why not?

Trevor Deansgate"s climb to the big league had been all but completed by buying out the old but ailing firm of "Billy Bones", in itself a blanket pseudonym for some brothers called Rubenstein and their uncle Solly. In the past few years "Billy Bones" had become big business. One could scarcely open a sports paper or go to the races without seeing the blinding fluorescent pink advertising, and slogans like "Make no Bones about it, Billy"s best" tended to a.s.sault one"s peace on Sundays. If the business was as vigorous as its sales campaign, Trevor Deansgate was doing all right.

We civilly discussed his winner until it was time to adjourn outside to watch the colts. "How"s Tri-Nitro?" I said to George, as we moved towards the door.

"Great," he said. "In great heart."

"No problems?"

"None at all." We parted outside, and I spent the rest of the afternoon in the usual desultory way, watching the races, talking to people, and thinking unimportant thoughts. I didn"t see Rosemary again, and calculated she was avoiding me, and after the fifth race I decided to go.

A racecourse official at the exit gate stopped me with an air of relief, as if he"d been waiting for me for a shade too long.

"Note for you, Mr Halley."

"Oh? Thanks."

He gave me an un.o.btrusive brown envelope. I put it in my pocket and walked on, out to my car. Climbed in. Took out, opened, and read the letter.

Sid,

I"ve been busy all afternoon but I want to see you. Please can you meet me in the tea room? After the last?

Lucas Wainwright

Cursing slightly, I walked back across the car park, through the gate, and along to the restaurant, where lunch had given place to sandwiches and cake. The last race being just finished, the tea customers were trickling in in small thirsty bunches, but there was no sign of Commander Lucas Wainwright, Director of Security to the Jockey Club.

I hung around, and he came in the end, hurrying, anxious, apologising and hara.s.sed.

"Do you want some tea?" He was out of breath.

"Not much."

"Never mind. Have some. We can sit here without being interrupted, and there are always too many people in the bar." He led the way to a table and gestured to me to sit down.

"Look, Sid. How do you feel about doing a job for us?" No waster of time, Commander Wainwright.

"Does "us" mean the Security Service?"

"Yes."

"Official?" I said, surprised. The Racecourse Security people knew in moderate detail what I"d recently been doing and had raised no objections, but I hadn"t imagined they actually approved. In some respects, I"d been working in their territory, and stepping on their toes.

Lucas drummed his fingers on the tablecloth. "Unofficial," he said. "My own private show."

As Lucas Wainwright was himself the top bra.s.s of the Security Service, the investigative, policing arm of the Jockey Club, even unofficial requests from him could be considered to be respectably well-founded. Or at least, until proved otherwise.

"What sort of job?" I said.

The thought of what sort of job slowed him up for the first time. He hummed and hah"ed and drummed his fingers some more, but finally shaped up to what proved to be a brute of a problem.

"Look, Sid, this is in strictest confidence."

"Yes."

"I"ve no higher authority for approaching you like this."

"Well," I said. "Never mind. Go on."

"As I"ve no authority, I can"t promise you any pay."

I sighed.

"All I could offer is... well... help, if you should ever need it. And if it was within my power to give it, of course."

"That could be worth more than pay," I said.

He looked relieved. "Good. Now... this is very awkward. Very delicate." He still hesitated, but at last, with a sigh like a groan, he said. "I"m asking you to make... er... discreet enquiries into the... er... background... of one of our people."

There was an instant"s silence. Then I said, "Do you mean one of you? One of the Security Service?"

© 2024 www.topnovel.cc