174741.fb2 Nice Fillies Finish Last - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 17

Nice Fillies Finish Last - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 17

CHAPTER 17

Shayne dropped Claire at the clubhouse entrance and put the Cadillac in its old place in the parking lot. When he came out of the men’s room after washing off the lipstick, the crowd was roaring and the public-address announcer was calling the order in which a field of trotters was rounding into the stretch. This was the eighth race, Shayne discovered from the board as he came out on the ramp. He was back just in time. He waited till the horses completed their stretch run, turned, and came jogging back toward the paddock, blowing. Then, as the crowd patterns changed, he began looking for Rourke’s head bandage.

“Mike, I was afraid you wouldn’t get here,” Rourke said, as Shayne came up to him. “I saw you and the Domaine dame take off in that big Cad. Sandra tells me Mrs. Domaine’s the one who put sleeping pills in my soup-and I didn’t want to drink that soup, you may recall,” he told the nurse. “You made me. Mike, what have you been doing? Putting on pressure?”

“I put on a little. How’s the twin-double investment?”

“Going according to plan, according to plan. Things are getting tense.”

The nurse was on the edge of her seat, clutching her bag. “I had no idea harness racing was so interesting, Mr. Shayne. The picture the horses make coming around that turn!”

“And especially when it’s your horse that’s out in front,” Rourke said.

“I see you’ve got binoculars,” Shayne said, taking them. “You had a ticket on all the horses in the eighth?”

“That’s what we decided. Thorne’s trotter took the sixth, very well behaved, didn’t work up a sweat. Paid us lucky bettors $54 for two. I had ten bucks on the nose, besides all the twin tickets on him. I cashed that $10 ticket for $270, and that gives us our capital.”

“Who do you mean by us?”

“Me and Sandra. You didn’t want in, and I’m not cutting you in when we’re three-quarters of the way home. I had Thorne’s trotter wheeled in the first half, and that brought us out of the seventh with sixteen live tickets.”

“It’s complicated, isn’t it?” Miss Mallinson said.

“It’s not complicated at all!” Rourke insisted. “What the hell, I’ll explain it again. Thorne’s trotter was Number Three. We combined Number Three with every horse in the seventh-eight separate tickets at two bucks apiece. But that would only give us one live ticket at the end of the half, to turn in for our pick, in the eighth and ninth. So we bet that same combination sixteen times. Cost $256. What’s hard to understand about that? The Number Two horse won the seventh. All right, we had sixteen tickets that said Number Three and Number Two, and we traded those in for two sets of tickets combining My Treat, the Domaine horse in the ninth, with all the horses in the eighth. The Number One horse just won the eighth. So now we have two tickets that are still live-Number One in the eighth and Number Four in the ninth, and if Number Four comes in, baby, we’ve cracked the twin double!”

“I’ll believe it when it happens, Tim. You know it isn’t good for you to get excited.”

“One ticket is yours and one’s mine. How can you be so calm?”

Shayne swung the binoculars toward the clubhouse, thumbing the focusing knob as he hunted for the Domaines.

“Too bad I couldn’t bring you up to date before you spent all that money, Tim,” he remarked. “One or two things have changed.”

“I knew it!” Rourke exclaimed after a stunned silence. “My Treat isn’t going to win.”

“Let’s say I wouldn’t bet any money on it.”

“But I already have!”

The nurse stroked his shoulder, as though gentling an excited horse. “It’s only money, Tim.”

“Only!” he said, outraged.

Shayne picked up Larry Domaine’s table. The crowd shifted and he saw Claire, as lovely as ever, her face composed and self-assured, showing nothing but pleasure in her youth and good looks and good fortune. She didn’t look like the same person who had been on the bed with Shayne at the motel. Shayne’s arm was joggled and he lost her briefly. She was smiling at her husband when he picked her up again. Domaine turned his head. Shayne might have missed it if he had been half a dozen tables away, but through the binoculars there was no mistaking the fact that Domaine was angry. The painful little line over the bridge of his nose gave him away, and there was a sparkle in his mild pale eyes.

Moving the binoculars, Shayne saw Mrs. Moon at the same table. She was talking to people nearby, laughing in her usual glittering way.

After a brief fanfare, the hard metallic voice of the public address called out, “The pacers for the ninth race are on the track.”

Shayne turned to watch them pass the grandstand. The horse Paul Thorne was driving, Famous Son, was small and shaggy, with a mean look, and didn’t seem fast. Thorne was applauded; in addition to winning with his own trotter, he had had another first and a third. My Treat, the Domaine mare being driven by Brossard, had a long, pretty stride. Mrs. Moon’s Fussbudget, a medium-sized, undistinguished-looking roan, was listed at eighteen to one on the board. The lights blinked as more money was bet on the other horses, and the odds on Fussbudget lengthened to twenty. Famous Son was the favorite, at five to two. My Treat was getting new backing from people who went by a horse’s looks rather than its record. It was now fourteen to one.

“I’m going to use the glasses to watch the clubhouse,” Shayne said. “You watch the race and tell me what’s happening. I’ll see how they react. Keep an eye on Fussbudget.”

“This is one hell of a time to tell me to keep an eye on Fussbudget,” Rourke said. “We could have protected ourselves by taking one ticket on her and one on My Treat. I’ll have to report back to the hospital when this is over. I’m in agony.”

“I don’t think you’re in agony at all,” Miss Mallinson said. “I think you’re enjoying every minute of it.”

The public address cried, “The marshals call the pacers!” Two girls on ponies, in fake cowgirl outfits, began lining up the sulkies in the back stretch behind the starting car, a long white convertible supporting a wide folding gate. As the car moved toward the turn at ten miles an hour, the drivers brought their horses’ heads up to the gate and the announcer called, “The field is in the hands of the starter.”

A moment later: “The field is in motion!”

The car gained speed gradually. Bettors hurried back from the galleries. A yell arose, the starter shouted “Go!”, the gate folded in and the car swooped away. Shayne checked the final odds and swung his binoculars to the clubhouse.

Excited people lined the railing. Everybody who had stayed for the last race had money on it, and a handful still held valid tickets in the twin double. This group was close to hysteria, seeing visions of one of the rich payoffs that had been making headlines lately. The Domaines and Mrs. Moon had risen, Domaine between the two women. Claire’s clenched fists were pressed hard against her breast as she watched the rush for the turn. It was obvious to Shayne that she thought the whole course of her life would be determined by the outcome of the race.

“It’s Speedy Lad at the turn,” the announcer called. “Famous Son is second, Hurricane Edna on the rail, Painted Lady is fourth, then it’s My Treat, Fussbudget. Fussbudget moving up. Now it’s Speedy Lad, Famous Son-”

Rourke said prayerfully, “Come on, My Treat. Move.”

“Don’t talk to the horses, talk to me,” Shayne told him.

Of the three people he was watching, Mrs. Moon was screaming advice to her horse, Claire stood rigid and silent, Domaine watched the track with a faint smile. He glanced down at his left hand, where he held a stopwatch. Without hurrying, he took off his pince-nez and raised his binoculars to watch the horses go into the turn coming out of the backstretch.

“My Treat’s got an opening,” Rourke said. “There’s a cranny there she can get through. She’s coming out. She’s going to take that next horse. There she goes.”

Shayne heard the rattle of hoofs through the crowd-roar and turned to watch the horses come past the grandstand. Thorne had lost his cap. His long black hair was flying in the breeze. He was using his whip. The head of his horse, Famous Son, came abreast of the leading driver. The horse in first place was beginning to fade.

The announcer called, “And now it’s Speedy Lad, it’s Famous Son, Painted Lady is third-

Claire was pressing her fingertips against her temples. Domaine still had his binoculars up. He was no longer smiling.

“I can’t stand it,” Rourke moaned. “What’s the matter with that driver? Come on, My Treat! Get going, will you, Brossard? He’s relaxed! He doesn’t care if he wins or not! Well, finally. He’s brushing her now. That’s right, sweetheart, go. No-Painted Lady’s carrying her out, Mike! The driver’s lost a rein.” He howled. “She squeaked past, My Treat barely squeaked past. That was nice driving, but God it was close.”

In the clubhouse, Domaine had taken the binoculars down and snapped his pince-nez back on. His eyes were narrow. Mrs. Moon seized his arm in her excitement.

The announcer called, “Going into the back-stretch, it’s Famous Son first, then it’s Speedy Lad-”

“My Treat’s fourth,” Rourke said, “coming up fast on the outside. Fussbudget’s still hanging in there, damn her. It’s those four horses. Hey! Hurricane Edna broke. Pulled to the outside. Thorne’s whipping Famous Son again.” He said suddenly, “They bumped! Thorne wobbled, collided with Speedy Lad-I don’t know what happened. Maybe he did it deliberately to let My Treat through-”

The crowd was roaring insanely. Claire had her hand over her mouth, her eyes wide, but Shayne couldn’t see enough of her face to gauge the expression. Domaine was smiling again.

Rourke said, “They’re both out of the race. That was a rough piece of driving, Mike. Thorne and the other horse are out of it, their equipment is jammed together. And there goes My Treat!”

The announcer: “Now it’s My Treat first as they come into the stretch, it’s Fussbudget, it’s Painted Lady third by two lengths-”

“Thorne’s out of his sulky,” Rourke said. “His horse is dragging him.”

Domaine’s binoculars, Shayne saw, weren’t aimed at the front-running horses, but at Thorne. His front teeth were bared.

“Brossard’s trying,” Rourke said. “I’ll say that for him. He’s whipping his horse. Fussbudget’s coming up fast. My Treat is tiring. Now they’re neck and neck. Mike, we’re going to lose! Fussbudget’s past. Running strong. My Treat’s all done. She’s laboring.”

The announcer: “And now in the stretch it’s Fussbudget by a length, it’s My Treat second, it’s Painted Lady. Coming down to the wire it’s Fussbudget, it’s Painted Lady, it’s My Treat. Fussbudget wins it by two lengths, Painted Lady is second, My Treat third-”

Mrs. Moon, in the clubhouse, was jumping up and down, necklaces and bracelets flying, her hair wild. Claire was rigid again, but it seemed to Shayne that her eyes were shining. An odd expression moved across Domaine’s face, an expression of satisfaction and triumph. By the way they looked, they all three had a winner. Domaine raised the binoculars and looked off toward the turn, where Thorne had fallen. His lips came back again, showing his teeth.

Rourke moaned. “What the hell happened? She quit in the stretch. Half a furlong to go. I’ll never come that close to winning a twin.”

Shayne pulled out the key to Room 17 at the motel, the room he had rented that afternoon. “Stop thinking about money, Tim. Now the important things start happening. This is the Golden Crest Motel, on the ocean, between Pompano Beach and Lauderdale. Go there right away. I’ll be with you as soon as I can.”

“Jesus, will you look at that payoff,” Rourke groaned as the unofficial twin-double winner was flashed- 6 and 8, pays 22,717.80. “Twenty-two thousand bucks. You knew about Fussbudget and didn’t tell me. I don’t think I’ll ever forgive you.”

The apron was jammed with homeward-bound horse-players, that vast majority with no winnings to collect from the cashiers. Shayne vaulted the rail onto the track. The official sign was up on the board and the horses had turned and were coming back. He kept close to the rail. Fussbudget turned toward the judges’ tower to have her picture taken. A guard shouted at Shayne; the redhead lengthened his stride. At the gap leading to the paddock, he ducked back under the rail and waited.

When he saw Franklin Brossard bringing in My Treat, he went under the rail again and grabbed the curved bar over Brossard’s sulky wheel. The horse felt the drag on the sulky and stopped at once.

“Take your hands off my bike,” Brossard said evenly.

“I want to talk to you, Frank. Do you recognize me? You crowded me off the road outside Lauderdale this afternoon.”

Brossard glanced at the paddock judge, who was watching like a vulture, his eyes hooded. Moving nothing but his right wrist, Brossard flicked the point of his whip across his body at Shayne. The redhead was waiting for it. He came up fast, let the whip wrap itself around his forearm, and pulled. He grabbed Brossard’s wrist as it came across. Brossard’s body was as tough and resilient as a twist of bridge cable, but balancing as he was on the precarious little seat, his feet up in the foot-brackets, he had no leverage.

The judge shouted, “Get your sulky out of the gap!”

Brossard’s mean eyes glittered at Shayne. “OK, tough guy. I’ll meet you in front of the Domaine barn as soon as I get a swipe to tend the horse.”

“We’re doing this my way,” Shayne said. “Don’t try to hurry your horse or I’ll pull you out on the ground.”

Two uniformed Pinkertons ran out of the paddock.

“Any trouble, Frank?” one of them said.

Brossard spat a mouthful of tobacco juice into the dirt. Without replying he flicked the reins and the horse began to move. Shayne let go of Brossard’s wrist but kept a firm grasp on the bar. The big paddock barn was emptying. They went through at a walk. In the stable area, horses under blankets were being led around the walking circle. In front of some of the stalls, grooms worked on tack or washed bandages. A fluttery old man stepped out from under an overhanging shed roof, under a wrought-iron sign reading, “DOMAINE,” and took My Treat by the head harness.

“Baby doll,” he said sadly, “you lost me a five spot.”

Brossard swung down stiffly, rubbing the grayish stubble on his lantern jaw. “Your name’s Shayne, right? I didn’t make it an issue out there on the strip because I don’t know if Mr. Domaine-”

The rest of his breath came out in a puff as Shayne’s fist hit him above the belt buckle and dumped him backward against the shed rail and over it into the dirt. Shayne vaulted the rail after him. Brossard kicked out viciously, grazing Shayne’s kneecap, then shifted balance and came up at a slant, his folded arms protecting his face from a sudden jerk of Shayne’s knee, and tried to butt the detective in the stomach. Shayne caught his bristly chin in both hands, went backward a step, then dug in, brought his hands up and spilled Brossard back against the stall door. For an instant the driver hung there, and Shayne pumped a hard right against the side of his head, dropping him. He rolled, shook his head to clear it, and came to his feet with a short club that had a leather thong looped from one end, apparently some kind of instrument used to control horses. He was still groggy from Shayne’s right, and he moved in slow motion, like the horses Shayne had watched on tape in the racing secretary’s office. Shayne chopped at the big muscle of his arm and picked the club out of his numbed fingers.

A man came running across the wide dirt road from another stable. Shayne looked at him, the club in his hand. He stopped abruptly at the rail.

“Inside,” Shayne said to Brossard. “You’re going to tell me some of your boss’s secrets, and it’s too public out here.”

The driver gave him an evil look and went into the tack-room. Shayne followed.

“Take off your boots,” he snapped. Brossard looked surprised. “What do you mean, take off my boots?”

Shayne rapped the back of his knees with the club and Brossard sat down abruptly on the floor. He had lost his cap in the fight. Without it, he looked older.

“The Pinks are going to be along in a minute, and if you think you’re going to break my toes or anything-” Shayne slammed the door and locked it. He made a menacing gesture with the hardwood club and Brossard started pulling at his boots. Shayne picked up the first one that came off, turned it upside down and shook it. A twin double ticket fluttered out.

“That’s where I thought you’d be carrying it,” he said. “I didn’t see any pockets in those silks.”

“I thought I’d keep it for a souvenir,” Brossard sneered, “but if you want it that much you can have it.”

“Six and four,” Shayne said, reading the numbers on the ticket. “Six and eight was the winning combination. Who’s the four horse?”

Brossard looked at him curiously. “My Treat. The Domaine mare, for the love of God. Is that the reason for this punch in the belly? You thought I was faking it in the stretch?”

“She ran out of steam awfully fast.”

“You never saw that happen with a horse? I didn’t expect it with this baby, but she had that close scrape in the backstretch and I guess she didn’t have nothing left. The way she was fading there, I was lucky to bring her in third. But they don’t pay off in the twin on thirds. Give me my goddamn boot.”

Shayne tossed it to him and he yanked it on angrily. He came to his feet, brushing straw and dirt off his pink pants.

“After driving four races in three hours, I just love a good brawl before I go to bed,” he said. He felt his long jaw. “You pack quite a right hand, mister. Jesus, I could understand it if you’d broke any bones when I ran you off the road, but I hear you didn’t even have to put on a bandaid.”

He took a cigarette from a pack on a shelf and looked for matches. He opened a drawer in a workbench and whirled with a pair of brass knuckles on his fist. Shayne had been watching his movements closely, and crowded him with the short club. Brossard gauged his chances. Sneering, he tossed the knuckles back in the drawer.

“Give me a light.”

Shayne ignored the request. “Did you know Joey Dolan told somebody he was going to the Belle Mark an hour or two before he was killed?”

Brossard’s eyelids twitched. He said hoarsely, “Did you say killed?”

“You didn’t think that was going to be called an accident, did you?”

“Damn right it was an accident! Joey was no ordinary rummy. He wouldn’t drink wood alcohol unless he didn’t know what he-”

He looked sharply at Shayne and clamped his mouth shut. Somebody outside rattled the knob of the locked door. Brossard went to the door, looked at Shayne for an instant, then unlocked the door and opened it. Two of the track Pinkertons were outside. One had a gun showing.

“Beat it,” Brossard said with a jerk of his head.

“They said somebody was kicking you around, Frank-”

“Any time anybody wants to kick me around, they’re welcome to try. Go back to sleep.”

He slammed the door and found a match. “You said Joey told somebody. What does that mean, you don’t know who?”

“If we lit enough fires under people, we could find out. You didn’t kill him, did you, Brossard?”

“Why would I want to kill Joey? I liked the guy. But I don’t like that crap about my apartment. It makes me wonder if somebody’s trying to frame me.”

“Does Paul Thorne still have a key to it?”

“You pick up things, don’t you, Shamus? He gave me back the key I let him have. That don’t mean he didn’t have another one made, cost him a quarter. I slept in the bunkhouse last night. Four guys to a room. That gives me three witnesses.”

“Is this the tack-room where Joey was going to sleep last night?”

“Yeah. I don’t mind, I let him, but nobody’s supposed to know about it. He gets out a cot and puts it away again before anybody shows up in the morning. That was the idea.”

“Did you pay for that twin-double ticket with your own dough?”

“Why not? Domaine’s not too bad a boss. Most of the time he leaves the stable alone. When he tells me to do something, I do it, and I don’t ask why. Today he told me he wanted to win with My Treat, and then he told me he’d heard that Thorne had a winner in the sixth. He didn’t have to draw a diagram.”

“You hadn’t heard anything about Fussbudget?”

“Does it look as though? The bastards have been hiding her. She never did a thing before tonight. We’ve been hiding My Treat, and it’s a piece of crummy luck that the office dropped both horses in the same race.”

“Domaine definitely wanted you to win with My Treat?”

“Christ, that was the object, Shayne. We’ve been bringing her along bit by bit. I raced her a couple of times when I had to fake her condition to get her past the vet. She was way below par, three or four seconds slow, at four lengths a second. That set up her classification. The next time out she was feeling feisty. I held her to fifth but next morning my shoulders were sore. Last time she was really ready but we were waiting for a twin-double race to turn her loose. I gave her a bad drive that time, went out on the rim with her and died on the last turn. Tonight I don’t know what. She just didn’t have it. All of a sudden it was like she was up to her knees in sand.”

“Did Mrs. Moon talk to you before the race?”

“Mrs. Moon!” His surprise seemed real. “Why should Mrs. Moon talk to me? Probably what you heard about was Mrs. Domaine.”

Shayne pulled at his earlobe. “What did she want?”

Brossard hesitated. “I wouldn’t tell you as a rule, but that thing about my apartment really bothers the hell out of me. She wanted me to pull My Treat. There are things going on around here I don’t want to know about. If you can figure them out, fine. The boss said win. The boss’s wife said lose, and she said she’d feed me five hundred bucks if I did. I didn’t say yes or no. Nothing like that ever happened before. No matter which way, I was behind the eight ball. You can’t win and lose both. Maybe now she owes me five hundred bucks. And maybe I hadn’t better try to collect, too, what do you think, Shayne?”

“What happened to Don J., Brossard?”

“Thorne’s colt? The one that was killed?” He took another puff on his cigarette and ground it out. “Let’s forget about Don J. That’s history.”

Shayne tossed the club onto the workbench with a clatter. “All right, so long as I know you killed the horse, I don’t care about the details.”