âBut where would you find a vet willing to risk his licence to help a drug-smuggler?' asked Daniel.
âThe same place you'd find one willing to divert quantities of a large animal tranquillizer from clinical trials to a Scram factory,' said Brodie. âWe knew there was likely to be a vet involved somewhere. Once the money's big enough there's always someone ready to risk his reputation.'
âSlow down,' growled Deacon, âI want to get this straight in my head. So somewhere in Germany a vet is fiddling his paperwork so that he's ending up with a surplus of the tranquillizer he's supposed to be trialling. And someone in England, probably in or around Dimmock, has the facilities to combine that drug with a bunch of other commoner chemicals in order to produce the next big thing on the party scene. All they need is a way to get the German tranquillizer past Customs in Dover.'
Brodie took up the hypothesis. âAnd somebody looked at a horse and saw a barrel on legs. He knew a lot of them came to England, and he wondered what Daniel did: could you get packets of drugs into a horse's digestive system?'
Ally too was getting the hang of this new sport, beach volleyball with theories. She threw a punch of her own as one sailed past her. âOnly instead of just having me to ask, this guy had a vet â a large animal vet at that â on the payroll. So he asked him, and it turned out the answer was yes. All they needed was a form of packaging that would go either up a horse's nose or down its throat, and the patience to wait for it to reappear.'
âAnd a steady supply of horses being brought from Europe,' added Brodie.
âDo you suppose there are drugs in all the horses he brings in?' asked Daniel.
Deacon shook his head. âWhy take the risk when one horse can carry enough to keep the south coast party scene popping for a month? One horse per load would be plenty. He finds an excuse to have his vet look at the selected animal â¦'
âIf anyone asked he could say it looked a bit colicky,'
offered Ally.
âOK,' said Deacon, âso while he's ostensibly checking it out he whacks a bit of sedative into it and shoves the chemical, packed into something like a rubber sausage, into its gut. Then all Windham has to do is make sure it reaches his yard before nature takes its course.'
âEvery so often,' Daniel said quietly, âsomeone who's carrying drugs inside them dies when a package ruptures.'
Shock further hollowed Alison's thin cheeks.
âThat's
what happened to our horses?'
âMaybe. If someone dies on an aeroplane they conduct an autopsy. If a horse dies in transit, I imagine they call the knackers. It was only because it happened a number of times that people began to wonder if it was more than just bad luck.'
âAnd Dad guessed what he was doing,' whispered Ally.
Deacon nodded pensively. âThe other possibility, I'm afraid â¦'
Daniel shook his yellow head in warning. âDon't even go there.'
Deacon didn't understand. Then he saw Brodie soothing what was clearly going to be a black eye, and he did. âAh. No.'
âAnd now he's working for Mary! We have to warn her,' Ally said urgently. âBefore it all happens again.'
âNo,' said Deacon sharply. âI mean it, Miss Barker â nothing we've said leaves this room until I say it can.'
âBut she's in danger! If we can guess what he's up to, if Dad did, she will too. Maybe not at once but soon enough. Then he'll have to shut her up too.'
âI promise you,' said Deacon, âI won't let Mary Walbrook come to any harm. But the problem with this is not going to be catching those involved, it's going to be proving it. We need a chain of evidence. We need a horse with the drugs still in it, that got into it while it was in Windham's hands.'
Brodie rather liked the idea of a sting. âWhat would you need?'
Deacon thought for a moment. âFirst and foremost I'd need a horse. One that's currently in Germany and can be shipped here through Dover. I'd need to be able to prove it was clean when
Windham collected it â witness statements from reliable parties saying the animal was in their care for a week beforehand and ate nothing but hay and oats.'
âSo when it arrives in Dover and you have it seized,' said Daniel, âand someone with a peg on his nose goes through its droppings and finds these rubber sausages stuffed with chemicals, only his mother will believe Johnny Windham didn't put them there.'
Deacon nodded. âSo now I have to find a suitable horse â quickly, because Miss Barker is worried about Miss Walbrook, and discreetly because if Windham gets suspicious he'll carry the horse, all right, he just won't put anything in it.' He blew out his cheeks in a gusty sigh. He thought he had a mountain to climb.
Brodie was trying hard to keep a straight face. âWhat you need, Jack, is a reputable finding agent. Speak to her nicely, promise to meet her expenses, and if you're very lucky she'll do it for you and Johnny Windham will never suspect that you're involved.'
Deacon frowned. âWhat are you telling me? You know of a suitable horse?'
âWell â yes and no. Right now there is no horse, but Windham thinks there is. Give me twenty-four hours and I'll give you your mule.'
âHow?'
âJack, trust me â this is what I do. I have a buyer, I have the transport waiting, I can even tell you the animal's name.'
âWho's the buyer?' asked Deacon.
âWhat animal?' asked Ally.
Brodie flashed her most winning smile at Daniel. âHe is. And it's a pony called The Saracen's Daughter.'
She started with Dieter Townes first thing the next morning. She gave him fifteen minutes' notice, phoning ahead to tell him to stay in the yard because she needed him to help with her inquiries. To her that sounded sufficiently official to command obedience without actually containing a claim to be something she was not. Only on the drive to Cheyne Warren did it occur to her that it was a bit like sticking a note through someone's door saying
Fly â all is discovered.
At least if she found him at the stables it suggested he had nothing much in his life to be ashamed of.
He was mucking out when Brodie got there. He looked up at the sound of her car, and neither hurried anxiously to meet her nor stood quaking, just waited calmly for her to come over. âAnd just what are these inquiries you need my help with, Mrs Farrell?' he asked coolly.
She flashed him her most engaging smile. âSorry about that, Mr Townes. I hope I didn't alarm you. But it is important, and it's important to be discreet â it may end up being a police matter. You won't be involved in that, but I do need some technical advice.'
âTry me.'
âI need a pony,' she said. Though she paused, he realised it wasn't that simple and kept waiting. âI need it to be in Germany now but available to ship to England immediately. I need it to be an Exmoor pony, and I need to be able to pass it off as a daughter of a stallion called The Saracen. Where do I start looking?'
Townes gave it some thought, then shook his head. âI don't think you can do it. It used to be possible to pass one horse off as another if you really wanted to but now they've all got passports that record their breeding. We might find you an Exmoor mare in Germany but I can't see how you'd get away with lying about her sire.' He eyed her disapprovingly. âOr why you'd want to, for that matter.'
âI can't tell you any more,' said Brodie, âexcept that I'm working with the police on this and it's not going to backfire on either of us. Especially if I can't make it work. I couldn't find a
pony of unknown breeding and fib?'
âYou could find any number of ponies of unknown breeding, and that's what it would say on their passports. But none of them will be Exmoors. There just aren't that many true Exmoors around, and their breeding should be a matter of record. Why does it have to be an Exmoor?'
âBecause I said it was,' she confessed ruefully. âIt was just a story â I never thought I'd have to produce the damn pony.'
âYou've told someone you know of an Exmoor mare by The Saracen, and it's in Germany but you can acquire it for them.' It was an accurate enough assessment: Brodie nodded. âAnd you don't, and you can't, and you're trying to lie your way out of trouble. Mrs Farrell, I can see exactly how this would end up as a police matter.'
She understood his misgivings, wished she could allay them. But she was worried that an incautious word might find its way to Windham Transport. âWould talking to Detective Superintendent Deacon set your mind at rest?'
She fully expected him to say “No, of course not”, that he trusted her. He said, âYes.'
It was a brief and guarded phone call, but after it Townes set himself to helping her. âIs it the animal that's important? Or the bloodline?'
Brodie wasn't sure what he was asking. âI need a pony, that's all. But I cited this particular bloodline when I was describing it. If I produce something different, somebody might get suspicious and what we're trying to achieve by all this will go down the tubes.'
âThere might be a way to use any pony mare you can get your hands on and it wouldn't matter what it said on her passport. Because it wouldn't be her bloodline that was significant but that of the foal she was carrying.'
Brodie was confused. âBut surely the foal will have the same bloodline as its mother. If I can't find an Exmoor to pass off as The Saracen's Daughter, how can I pass off the foal as The Saracen's grandchild?'
âSurrogacy,' said Dieter Townes, and gave her a lesson in the economics of horse-breeding. âA mare carries a foal for eleven
months. She may breed every year, she may not. When she's pregnant she's not doing much else, which is a problem if she's a competition mare. And a foal which is the progeny of both a mare and a stallion which have proved themselves in competition is worth much more than the foal of untried parents.
âWhat the owners of top mares do is harvest their eggs and transplant the resultant embryos into surrogate mothers â mares which have no genetic connection with the foal they're going to deliver. The benefits are that the best mares can now, like the best stallions, produce many more offspring than nature intended, with minimal risk to themselves and minimal disruption to their athletic careers.'
He kept looking at her until Brodie indicated that she was with him so far. âOK. Suppose you'd managed to find The Saracen's Daughter, but her owner wasn't willing to part with her. What he might sell you is an embryo of hers implanted in a healthy but unremarkable pony mare. She'd carry it to term and deliver it as normal, and never know it wasn't hers; but genetically it would be the offspring of The Saracen's Daughter and whatever Exmoor stallion had been chosen to sire it.'
Already Brodie could see the advantages, both for breeders and for her. âSo all we need is a healthy pony mare? We don't need it to say anything in particular on its passport?'
âExactly,' said Townes. âWhoever this is that you don't want to get suspicious, you tell him that you weren't able to purchase The Saracen's Daughter but you have an embryo of hers in a surrogate mare and she's the one you're bringing back from Germany. What do you think? In all the circumstances â which you know and I don't â would that be a plausible tale?'
Brodie thought all round it before she answered. But she couldn't see a problem. The paperwork would refer to the pony she bought â any bog-standard pony mare that she could pick up cheap in Germany. The main thing was to have a credible story. So far as she could make out, Townes had provided her with exactly that.
âDo you know, Mr Townes,' she said, âI do believe it would.'
Â
Â
An evening spent on the Internet and she had most of what she was going to need to make this work. She found a dealer near Essen who could provide her with a fit pony mare ready to travel. Her breeding wasn't entirely clear but there was probably a bit of Haflinger in her somewhere. She was eight years old and called Gretl.
The dealer, whose name was Mannheim, was prepared to isolate the pony immediately and vouch for everything that would be fed or otherwise administered to her for a week before Windham came for her. A member of Dimmock CID would fly over three days before Gretl's departure to ensure the continuity of evidence that would take the case to court. Brodie didn't go into the reasons for these unusual measures or why the English police were interested in a German pony, and beyond seeking her assurance that Gretl would be unharmed Herr Mannheim didn't ask questions.
Before any of these arrangements were made she asked if Mannheim had had any dealings with Windham Transport, and he said he hadn't.
Brodie organised for a vet to take a barium X-ray of the pony before her journey started. With that, the statement from the man feeding it and the testimony of a British police officer who'd had it under observation throughout the relevant period, Brodie believed a court would accept that any substance present in the pony's guts on arrival at Dover must have been put there by or with the connivance of the carrier. From her days in a solicitor's office she knew that courts would sometimes tie themselves in knots rather than accept the patently obvious, but she thought those three bits of evidence together would make it hard for the most cautious of jurors to do anything but believe.
The only thing she had to leave to chance was whether Windham would select Gretl as a mule. He might have six or eight animals on the lorry, of which probably only one would be used. All she could do was make the little mare as attractive a target as possible.
Once her plans were laid she phoned Johnny Windham. She
told him the story of the surrogacy, and provided him with Gretl's details and Mannheim's number so that final arrangements could be made.
âHe tells me she's an easy pony to handle. I suppose, to be a surrogate she'd have to be. She's obliging with the vet so she shouldn't give you any problems. She's rather bigger than an Exmoor, he said â about 140 centimetres, which probably makes more sense to you than it did to me, and built like a tank. She's not a valuable pony herself but she'll do my client's job for him.' Which was true enough.
She asked when Windham could collect the pony and when she could expect delivery.
Windham consulted his diary. âEssen? That's about four hundred kilometres to Calais. I'll have a lorry in the area next week. If she's confirmed in foal and ready to leave, why don't I pick her up on Tuesday morning? We'll be on our way home by then, I'll have her at my yard that night. I'll keep her for the usual three days, just to make sure she isn't incubating anything nasty, and deliver her on Saturday. Where will you be keeping her?'
Brodie was ready with that too. âAppletree Farm, Cheyne Warren.'
Windham nodded. âI know the place. Eleven o'clock suit you?'
âPerfect,' said Brodie. If he'd said midnight she wouldn't have argued: if all went to plan not one of them, not her nor the pony nor Windham himself, would be there.
Â
She told Deacon the arrangements that she'd made, noting with quiet satisfaction that he didn't query any of them or wish she'd done something different, just jotted them down.
âWho are you sending to Essen?' she asked.
âJill Meadows,' he said. âShe can pass herself off as a groom and Windham shouldn't even notice her. I'll need to arrange a car for her â once the pony's on the lorry I want her to follow it. I want her to be able to say that the lorry left the Calais road at such-and-such a time and went into a yard at this address, and emerged an hour later and drove non-stop to the ferry. When the address turns out to be a vet, or a dealer's yard where a vet
just happened to be present, that'll be another nail in their coffin.' He raised his voice, shouted for Charlie Voss. âI'm going to need a Eurostar ticket to Essen for Meadows, and a car for her when she gets there.'
Voss was taking notes. âWhen?'
âThe pony's being collected on Tuesday morning. We want her at Mannheim's yard sometime on Friday.'
âFine,' said Voss.
âFine,' said Deacon.
âFine,' nodded Brodie, âonly make it two tickets.'
A good part of everything she said was chosen for effect. She loved the way people's eyes came round to her as if drawn by magnets, widening with alarm, and the careful way they picked their words as if she might be dangerous when provoked.
Voss said, âYes?' uncertainly, and Deacon said, âWhat?' and made it sound like steel-capped boots.
âOf course I have to be there,' said Brodie, as if it was the most obvious thing in the world. âI set this all up. If something comes unstuck at the last minute, somebody's going to have to fix it on the wing. Can Jill Meadows do that? Can you do it, from here? Jack, I don't know if
I
could do it from here. I need to be on the spot. If Jill can pass as a girl groom, I'm sure I can.'
âOf course you can,' growled Deacon, âif we bury you in the midden for three days first. Brodie,
I
could pass as a girl groom before you could.'
She didn't take that as a insult. âIt doesn't matter what I look like because Windham mustn't see me. We've met, remember? I'll keep out of sight while he's in the yard. Jill can chew on a bit of straw and tell me what's happening. Then we'll follow him at a distance.'
âWhat's this
we
nonsense?' demanded Deacon. âYou're not a police officer. You're not one in this country so you're certainly not one abroad. You're a private citizen. You're here to be protected and served.'
âAnd as a private citizen,' she replied smoothly, âI'm free to travel to Germany whenever my business requires it. This pony is my responsibility, remember â I promised Herr Mannheim I'd take care of it. If it comes to some harm it's my reputation at
stake.'
Deacon gave in with a bad grace. âAs long as you're not wanted by Interpol I suppose you're free to go anywhere you want. OK, Charlie, make it two tickets. God knows how I'll get the expenses approved.'
âBy pointing out that I was the one who made it possible for you to wrap up a major drugs operation,' Brodie said tartly. âYou're talking as if this was a holiday!'
He sniffed at her. She flounced at him. Charlie Voss went and booked the tickets.