Authors: Lyndon Stacey
âBut you will come back?'
âMaybe.' Ben threw the word over his shoulder as Jakob slowed and dropped behind but, after a few steps, he stopped and turned. âYes. I'll be back. After all, I've got a job to do.'
Jakob smiled. âAh yes. The job.'
BEN ARRIVED AT
Castle Ridge just before midday and found Truman on the drive in front of his house, just about to get into his Range Rover. The trainer was wearing olive corduroys and a hefty sweater, topped off with the obligatory waxed jacket, and carried a pair of expensive-looking binoculars slung round his neck. His skin looked sallow under the freckles and his eyes hooded. Ben thought he looked exhausted.
âAh, Ben. At last. Come on, get in â I'm just going up to watch the last lot.'
âRight, but can I just let my dog out first to stretch her legs? She's been in the car for a couple of hours and she might need a pee.'
âBring her along. She can get in the back with mine and have a run when the horses have finished.'
âOK, thanks.'
As Ben let Mouse out, Truman opened the tailgate of the Range Rover and two Jack Russells and a bull terrier spilled out on to the gravel in a kind of yapping, growling whirlwind.
âGet back in!' he ordered, and two of them did. The third, and smallest, was picked up unceremoniously by its scruff and dumped with its fellows.
Mouse approached Truman and sniffed his trouser leg suspiciously before looking up at him with just the faintest wag of her long, whiskery tail. However, Ben's suggestion that she jump into the back of the man's car was greeted with a look that unmistakably said, âYou
cannot
be serious!'
âGo on. It'll do you good to mix with your own kind for a change,' Ben said firmly, lifting her in.
She turned round and sat like a débutante amongst prostitutes, neither looking to the right or the left but instead gazing imploringly at Ben as the hatch was slammed.
Truman drove down the drive and along the road for a quarter of a mile before turning into a narrow lane. The Range Rover climbed steeply and his foot was heavy on the accelerator until the rump of the hindmost horse came into sight. The column of walking thoroughbreds stepped off the tarmac on to the verge as the vehicle slowly coasted past. There were maybe thirty in total, money on the hoof; the representation of the dreams of dozens of people tied up in a fragile bundle of flesh, bones and muscle.
The stable-lads and lasses wore an assortment of navy and brown jodhpurs with windproof jackets, and were muffled up in gloves and scarves against the cold north-easterly. Halfway along the string Ben saw Mikey mounted on a lean chestnut, but he was looking straight ahead and didn't see Ben.
Truman was apparently deep in thought and had said nothing so far â surprising, given his volubility on the telephone â so Ben broke the silence.
âHow's my brother coming along? Are you pleased with him?'
âNot too bad.' Passing the lead horse, the Range Rover began to pick up speed once more. âHe's riding at Wincanton tomorrow. He's got a couple of quite decent rides, too, because Rollo's picked up a three-day suspension. You should come and watch. I'm going; I'll give you a lift if you like.'
âThanks. That'd be good.'
Truman turned off the lane through an open field gate and followed the rising crest of the hill to its highest point, where he swung the vehicle round to face the slope and turned the engine off.
âWe had another email early this morning,' Truman said, as soon as the diesel motor stopped turning over. âI have to have the money by Friday. I'm to put it in a black bin-bag, drive to Fordingbridge car park and wait there with my mobile phone for further instructions.'
âFordingbridge? Why there, I wonder? Does Ford know where the emails are being sent from yet?'
âYes, but it's no help. The first was from Tunbridge Wells and this morning's was from a library in Basingstoke. There's no problem finding the terminals they were sent from, but no way of tracing the user unless they were stupid enough to log on under their real name, and there's not much hope of that.'
âSo what's the plan? Do you pay up?'
âWhat else can I do? You haven't come up with anything at all?'
Ben shook his head. âNot yet.' He gave Truman a summary of his dealings with Rackham and the ALSA group. âAnd last night four of them were in Haywards Heath making trouble for a touring horse circus that I'm doing an article on. God! They'd hate me calling them that, but I don't know how else to describe them.'
âYou spend your working life around horses, but you don't ride, Mikey says.'
âIt's not a necessary qualification.'
âBut you used to ride for your father, didn't you?'
Ben sighed inwardly. Questions; always questions. Why did he always have to explain himself?
âYes, I did, but I haven't ridden for a long time,' he said, hoping that would be sufficient; it was, probably because Eddie Truman wasn't a rider himself and didn't understand what an addictive habit it could be.
âSo you're confident that ALSA have nothing to do with it?' he said, switching back to his original topic.
âWell, as sure as I can be. I don't know what else I can do; I think I've worn my welcome a bit thin there, to say the very least. To be honest, if they
had
got Cajun King, I shouldn't think they'd be getting involved in all this other stuff or inviting a journalist to interview them. Anyway, I imagine Ford is on their case, too?'
âYes, I think so, but he doesn't tell me much â just that they're doing all they can and I'll be the first to know if they come up with anything. So what will you do next?'
âThat depends on you. What else can you tell me that you aren't telling the police? Who else have you upset?'
Truman took off his cap and scratched his balding head.
âAnyone who's as successful in business as I've been is bound to have made a few enemies on the way,' he said, replacing the cap and turning his green-eyed gaze on Ben. âAnd I suppose there've been a couple of people who've left my employment muttering threats about revenge, but I can't think of anyone who'd go so far as this to get back at me â at least none who'd have the wit and resources to do it. I mean, it's one thing to harbour a grudge, but quite another to organise and carry out something of this scale.'
âMm. That's the thing, isn't it? And, having pulled it off, where the hell do you keep a race-fit thoroughbred? I suppose the police can't organise much of a search in case they put the wind up the kidnappers.'
âThey sent a couple of their young female officers in plain clothes to put posters up in all the tack shops and feed stores within a fifty mile radius of Guildford, saying just that a bay thoroughbred has been stolen from his stable and asking people to report any unexpected new arrivals. They've notified riding schools, too, but of course we might be looking in completely the wrong area. It's a needle in a bloody haystack.'
âAnd you're not even sure you've got the right haystack.'
Truman grunted. âThat's about it.'
âSo how are you coping?'
âIt's been bloody awful, but when you've got ninety-six other horses, all with their own individual needs, you have to keep going. One horse â however special â is just one among many, and everything else has to go on as normal. I suppose, in a way, it helps. After all, there doesn't seem to be anything I can do.'
âAnd what about your staff? What have you told them?'
âOccasionally I send a horse or two to a yard near Petersfield for a few days of TLC. There's a girl there who does acupuncture â incredibly good â and I've told them King pulled up a bit stiff after his race and I've sent him there. That'll satisfy the lads for a few days, and the sad fact is that most of them don't care much. About three quarters of the lads are foreign. Come from all over the place: Brazil, Czech Republic, Poland, Colombia â you name it! It's quite common in the industry. The lads come over on a work permit, work here for a year or so earning three or four times what they would back home, and then take their money and go. You can't blame them, really. For some of them it's the only way to pay for an education, and there's not exactly a queue of English youngsters waiting to get into the profession. But it means that there's often very little interest in the long-term success of the stables; no real loyalty.'
âI didn't realise,' Ben said. âWhy do you think English kids don't want to come into racing any more?'
âSeveral reasons. For one thing, it's hard work and they can earn so much more sitting on their bums playing with computers. And another thing is their size. Kids in this country are huge these days! No good at all for exercising racehorses. Too many Big Macs and not enough activity.'
âSo what about your head lad and your office staff?'
âWell, Bess knows, of course, and I've had to tell my assistant trainer, but then he's my son-in-law, so I think we're safe there. Trent, my head lad in the yard, doesn't know yet, but he'll probably start asking awkward questions if King isn't back in the next couple of days. Even as it is, I think he's picked up on the atmosphere. Who else is there? Oh, Vicki, Bess's assistant in the office; she's only part-time. We haven't told her. Of course I've told my family â Elizabeth, my wife, and my daughters, Helen and Fliss â but none of them knows you're working for me, for obvious reasons.'
âMeaning that you'd rather they didn't know how dirty you play?'
Truman's eyes narrowed. âYou must have led a very blameless life, Mr Copperfield. Ah,' he sat up and lifted his binoculars to his eyes, âthey're coming.'
Starting from a point well below them, the horses set off in pairs to canter steadily for a couple of hundred yards along the floor of the valley and then shift into a gallop as they hit the rising ground. As the first two powered up the incline at what Ben judged to be about three-quarter-speed, he and Truman got out of the Range Rover to get a better view.
The wind cutting across the ridge was bitter, and Ben zipped up his leather flying-jacket and raised the collar, whereupon Truman furnished him with the information that locally, the spot was known as Windwhistle Hill.
âWe've got four grass gallops: three longer ones here, and a five-furlong one over the other side of the yard. And there are three all-weather ones, with differing distances and surfaces. One plough, one sand and plastic, and a pig-hair and mushroom-compost one. There's usually something we can use, whatever the weather.'
The approaching horses, one bay and one chestnut, were matching stride for stride, their heads dipping in unison, legs striking forward to cover the ground and breath steaming from their widened nostrils to hang in the frosty air. Muscles rippled under clipped coats burnished with gold by the winter sun. Crouched over their withers, the lads stood in the stirrups, letting their hands move with the rhythm of the gallop and suddenly Ben wished, with a passion that surprised him, that he could be in one of those saddles.
Where had that come from?
âJewster is being lazy,' Truman murmured to himself. âWhy doesn't he work him with Cokey? How many times have I suggested it?'
He pulled a mobile phone from the pocket of his coat and pressed a button or two. âTrent? Why didn't you work Jewster with Cokey like I asked you to? . . . Oh, is he? . . . Well, Dibble would have been better than Rocky. Rocky wouldn't inspire anyone to run! . . . OK, next time.'
âCokey's lost a shoe,' he informed Ben, who,
feeling an answer was required, nodded and said, âOh,' adding, âDo you have your own farrier at the yard?'
âPart-time. He's with us every afternoon.'
âSo, tell me about the horses. I'll need a cover story if I'm going to be around the yard for a day or two, so let's make believe I really am doing a story on the Gold Cup horses, as I told Rackham. Actually, I might as well do the bloody story â I'm doing all the research. So, do you have any other runners?'
âYes.' Truman was looking through his binoculars once more. âThe chestnut with the white face in the next pair. He's entered and he's in with a squeak. He's owned by a syndicate from the pub in the village. They take it all very seriously â I expect some of them are in that group watching over there.'
He swung an arm and Ben looked across to see a bunch of perhaps seven or eight people, with binoculars, standing just inside the boundary hedge.
âDo you always have an audience?'
âNot always, but leading up to a big race like this . . . Ah. Ray's coming up. Ray Finch, my son-in-law; married to Helen, my eldest.'
As the next two horses crested the rise, Ben could see someone out to the side and some fifty yards behind, riding on a general-purpose saddle with longer stirrups. His mount, as it drew closer, was obviously an older horse â probably retired, Ben guessed.
Truman strode over to the newcomer as he dismounted and immediately engaged him in
conversation while the horse, held on a loose rein, lost no time in putting his head down to crop the grass.
Seeing them side by side, Ben thought that Truman and his son-in-law could have been cast from the same mould. Finch was, at a guess, in his early forties and not yet carrying quite as much weight as Truman, but he was of a similar height and his sandy hair was already sparse.
He wondered idly if Truman's eldest had seen her husband as a replacement father figure.
Truman didn't bother to introduce them and, beyond giving him a brief, curious glance, Finch took no notice of Ben. The discussion mostly concerned the horses, with a few comments thrown in about one or two of the lads. As it drew to a close Truman said, âWell, have a word with Davy, would you? If his heart's not in it, he might just as well move on. He's no good to us.'