Eddy Keith gave me a final blank stare and without a word removed himself from the room.
Sir Thomas and all the administrators shook my hand and also Chico"s; and going down in the lift Chico said, "They"ll be kissing you next."
"It won"t last."
We walked back to where I had left the Scimitar, which was where I shouldn"t have. There was a parking ticket under the wiper blade. There would be.
"Are you going back to the flat?" Chico said, folding himself into the pa.s.senger"s seat.
"No." "You still think those boot men... ?"
"Trevor Deansgate," I said.
Chico"s face melted into half-mocking comprehension.
"Afraid he"ll duff you up?"
"He"ll know by now... from his brother," I shivered internally from a strong flash of the persistent horrors.
"Yeah, I suppose so." It didn"t worry him. "Look, I brought that begging letter for you...."He dug into a trouser pocket and produced a much-folded and slightly grubby sheet of paper. I eyed it disgustedly, reading it through. Exactly the same as the ones Jenny had sent, except signed with a flourish "Elizabeth More", and headed with the Clifton address.
"Do you realise they may have to produce this filthy bit of paper in court?"
"Been in my pocket, hasn"t it?" he said defensively.
"What else"ve you got in there? Potting compost?"
He took the letter from me and put it in the glove box, and let down the window.
"Hot, isn"t it?"
"Mm."
I wound down my own side window, and started the car, and drove him back to his place in Finchley Road.
"I"ll stay in the same hotel," I said. "And look... come to Newmarket with me tomorrow."
"Sure, if you want. What for?"
I shrugged, making light of it. "Bodyguard."
He was surprised. He said wonderingly, "You can"t really be afraid of him... this Deansgate... are you?"
I shifted in my seat a bit, and sighed.
"I guess so," I said.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
I talked to Ken Armadale in the early evening. He wanted to know how my session with the Jockey Club had gone, but more than that he sounded smugly self satisfied, and not without reason.
"That erysipelas strain has been made immune to practically every antibiotic in the book," he said. "Very thorough. But I reckon there"s an obscure little bunch he won"t have bothered with, because no one would think of pumping them into horses. Rare, they are, and expensive. All the signs I have here are that they would work. Anyway, I"ve tracked some down."
"Great," I said. "Where?"
"In London, at one of the teaching hospitals. I"ve talked with the pharmacist there, and he"s promised to pack some in a box and leave it at the reception desk for you to collect. It will have Halley on it."
"Ken, you"re terrific."
"I"ve had to mortage my soul, to get it."
I picked up the parcel in the morning and arrived at Portman Square to find Chico again waiting on the doorstep. Lucas Wainwright came down from his office and said he would drive us in his car, if we liked, and I thought of all the touring around I"d been doing for the past fortnight, and accepted gratefully. We left the Scimitar in the car park which had been full the day before, a temporary open air affair in a cleared building site, and set off to Newmarket in a large, air-conditioned Mercedes.
"It"s too darned hot," Lucas said, switching on the refrigeration. "Wrong time of year."
He had come tidily dressed in a suit, which Chico and I hadn"t: jeans and sports shirts and not a jacket between us.
"Nice car, this," Chico said admiringly.
"You used to have a Merc, Sid, didn"t you?" Lucas said.
I said yes, and we talked about cars half the way to Suffolk. Lucas drove well but as impatiently as he did everything else. A pepper and salt man, I thought, sitting beside him. Brown and grey speckled hair, brownish grey eyes, with flecks in the iris. Brown and grey checked shirt, with a nondescript tie. Pepper and salt in his manner, in his speech patterns, in all his behaviour.
He said, as in the end he was bound to, "How are you getting on with the syndicates?"
Chico, sitting in the back seat, made a noise between a laugh and a snort.
"Er..." I said. "Pity you asked, really."
"Like that, is it?" Lucas said, frowning.
"Well," I said. "There is very clearly something going on, but we haven"t come up with much more than rumour and hearsay." I paused. "Any chance of us collecting expenses?"
He was grimly amused. "I suppose I could put it under the heading of general a.s.sistance to the Jockey Club. Can"t see the administrators quibbling, after yesterday."
Chico gave me a thumbs up sign from behind Lucas"s head, and I thought I would pile it on a bit while the climate was favourable, and recover what I"d paid to Jacksy. "Do you want us to go on trying?" I said.
"Definitely." He nodded positively. "Very much so."
We reached Newmarket in good time and came to a smooth halt in George Caspar"s well-tended driveway.
There were no other cars there; certainly not Trevor Deansgate"s Jaguar. On that day he should be in the normal course of things at York, attending to his bookmaking business. I had no faith that he was.
George, expecting Lucas, was not at all pleased to see me, and Rosemary, coming downstairs and spotting me in the hall, charged across the parquet and rugs with shrill disapproval.
"Get out," she said. "How dare you come here?"