I swallowed. 'Well… er… we'll do the syndicates. Then we'll see.' Then I'll know, I thought. I'll know inside me, one way or the other. If I couldn't walk into tigers' cages any more, we were done. One of us wasn't enough: it had to be both.
If I couldn't… I'd as soon be dead.
The first syndicate on Lucas's list had been formed by eight people, of whom three were registered owners, headed by Philip Friarly. Registered owners were those acceptable to the racing authorities, owners who paid their dues and kept the rules, were no trouble to anybody, and represented the source and mainspring of the whole industry.
Syndicates were a way of involving more people directly in racing, which was good for the sport, and dividing the training costs into smaller fractions, which was good for the owners. There were syndicates of millionaires, coal miners, groups of rock guitarists, the clientele of pubs. Anyone from Aunty Flo to the undertaker could join a syndicate, and all Eddy Keith should have done was check that everyone on the list was who they said they were.
'It's not the registered owners we're looking at,' I said. 'It's all the others.'
We were driving through Kent on our way to Tunbridge Wells. Ultra-respectable place, Tunbridge Wells. Resort of retired colonels and ladies who played bridge. Low on the national crime league. Hometown, all the same, of a certain Peter Rammileese, who was, so Lucas Wainwright's informant had said, in fact the instigating member of all four of the doubtful syndicates, although his own name nowhere appeared.
'Mason,' I said, conversationally, 'was attacked and left for dead in the streets of Tunbridge Wells.'
'Now he tells me.'
' Chico,' I said. 'Do you want to turn back?'
'You got a premonition, or something?'
After a pause, I said 'No,' and drove a shade too fast round a sharpish bend.
'Look, Sid,' he said. 'We don't have to go to Tunbridge Wells. We're on a hiding to nothing, with this lark.'
'What do you think, then?' He was silent.
'We do have to go,' I said.
'Yeah.'
'So we have to work out what it was that Mason asked, and not ask it.'
'This Rammileese,' Chico said. 'What's he like?'
'I haven't met him, myself, but I've heard of him. He's a farmer who's made a packet out of crooked dealings in horses. The Jockey Club won't have him as a registered owner, and most racecourses don't let him through the gates. He'll try to bribe anyone from the Senior Steward to the scrubbers, and where he can't bribe, he threatens.'
'Oh, jolly.'
'Two jockeys and a trainer, not so long ago, lost their licences for taking his bribes. One of the jockeys got the sack from his stable and he's so broke he's hanging around outside the racecourse gates begging for handouts.'
'Is that the one I saw you talking to, a while ago?'
'That's right.'
'And how much did you give him?'
'Never you mind.'
'You're a pushover, Sid.'
'A case of "but-for-the-grace-of-God",' I said.
'Oh, sure. I could just see you taking bribes from a crooked horse dealer. Most likely thing on earth.'
'Anyway,' I said, 'what we're trying to find out is not whether Peter Rammileese is manipulating four racehorses, which he is, but whether Eddy Keith knows it, and is keeping quiet.'
'Right.' We sped deeper into rural Kent, and then he said, 'You know why we've had such good results, on the whole, since we've been together on this job?'
'Why, then?'
'It's because all the villains know you. I mean, they know you by sight, most of them. So when they see you poking around on their patch, they get the heebies, and start doing silly things like setting the heavies on us, and then we see them loud and clear, and what they're up to, which we wouldn't have done if they'd sat tight.'
I sighed and said 'I guess so,' and thought about Trevor Deansgate; thought and tried not to. Without any hands one couldn't drive a car… Just don't think about it, I told myself. Just keep your mind off it, it's a one way trip into jellyfish.
I swung round another corner too fast and collected a sideways look from Chico, but no comment.
'Look at the map,' I said. 'Do something useful.'
We found the house of Peter Rammileese without much trouble, and pulled into the yard of a small farm that looked as if the outskirts of Tunbridge Wells had rolled round it like a sea, leaving it isolated and incongruous. There was a large white farmhouse, three storeys high, and a modern wooden stable block, and a long, extra large barn. Nothing significantly prosperous about the place, but no nettles either.
No one about. I put the brake on as we rolled to a stop, and we got out of the car.
'Front door?' Chico said.
'Back door, for farms.'
We had taken only five or six steps in that direction, however, when a small boy ran into the yard from a doorway in the barn, and came over to us, breathlessly.
'Did you bring the ambulance?'
His eyes looked past me, to my car, and his face puckered into agitation and disappointment. He was about seven, dressed in jodhpurs and T shirt, and he had been crying.
'What's the matter?' I said.
'I rang for the ambulance… A long time ago.'
'We might help,' I said.
'It's Mum,' he said. 'She's lying in there, and she won't wake up.'
'Come on, you show us.'
He was a sturdy little boy, brown haired and brown-eyed and very frightened. He ran ahead towards the barn, and we followed without wasting time. Once through the door we could see that it wasn't an ordinary barn, but an indoor riding school, a totally enclosed area of about twenty metres wide by thirty-five long, lit by windows in the roof. The floor, wall to wall, was covered with a thick layer of tan-coloured wood chippings, springy and quiet for horses to work on.
There was a pony and a horse careering about; and, in danger from their hooves, a crumpled female figure lying on the ground.
Chico and I went over to her, fast. She was young, on her side, face half downwards; unconscious, but not, I thought, deeply. Her breathing was shallow and her skin had whitened in a mottled fashion under her make-up, but the pulse in her wrist was strong and regular. The crash helmet which hadn't saved her lay several feet away on the floor.
'Go and ring again,' I said to Chico.
'Shouldn't we move her?'
'No… in case she's broken anything. You can do a lot of damage moving people too much when they're unconscious.'
'You should know.' He turned away and ran off towards the house.
'Is she all right?' the boy said anxiously. 'Bingo started bucking and she fell off, and I think he kicked her head.'
'Bingo is the horse?'
'His saddle slipped,' he said: and Bingo, with the saddle down under his belly was still bucking and kicking like a rodeo.
'What's your name?' I said.
'Mark.'
'Well, Mark, as far as I can see, your Mum is going to be all right, and you're a brave little boy.'
'I'm six,' he said, as if that wasn't so little.
The worst of the fright had died out of his eyes, now that he had help. I knelt on the ground beside his mother and smoothed the brown hair away from her forehead. She made a small moaning sound, and her eyelids fluttered. She was perceptibly nearer the surface, even in the short time we'd been there.
'I thought she was dying,' the boy said. 'We had a rabbit a little time ago… he panted and shut his eyes, and we couldn't wake him up again, and he died.'
'Your Mum will wake up again.'
'Are you sure?'
'Yes, Mark, I'm sure.'
He seemed deeply reassured, and told me readily that the pony was called Sooty, and was his own, and that his Dad was away until tomorrow morning, and there was only his Mum there, and him, and she'd been schooling Bingo because she was selling him to a girl for show-jumping.