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"I don't care twopence about his colour, there's the make and shape of a great horse there, and, grey or no grey, he'll win races."
"When will you take delivery?" asked the seller.
"He can return home with the horses I have at Epsom. They are at Tom Lucas's boxes. I'll send a lad round for him this evening," said May.
The bargain was completed; and Fred May invited Ulick to accompany him to the house where he was staying for the races.
Nothing more was said about the Saint until after dinner, when Fred May remarked that they might as well go and see if the ugly-coloured customer looked any better in his new box.
"I am afraid the change of boxes will not improve him," said Ulick, "but we can go and see."
The Saint was quite at home in his quarters, and the lad who brought him from Lowland Lodge said he was as quiet as an old sheep.
"That is another point in his favour," said May. "There will be no trouble with the starting machine in his case."
Ulick half wished he had bought him, more especially as the trainer seemed so satisfied with his bargain.
"Do you really think he will make a good horse?" asked Ulick, when they were in the house again.
"I am as certain of it as anyone can be over such ticklish things as racehorses. I never saw a much better shaped colt, and he's cheap enough at the price."
"I almost wish I had bought him," said Ulick.
"You can have him at the price I paid if you wish," said May.
"That would hardly be fair to you," replied Ulick. "I must give you something for your trouble. If you had not had the courage to buy him, despite his colour, I should not have the chance perhaps now."
"If you really want him, pay me the two hundred guineas for him, and let me train him," said May.
"That goes without saying," replied Ulick. "Of course, you will train him; I should not think of sending horses elsewhere."
"Then let us conclude the bargain."
"Very well. I will give you the two hundred guineas and leave him in your charge," replied Ulick, and in this way he became the owner of the Saint.
During the season the Saint fully endorsed the good opinion formed of him by Fred May. He won four races, in one of which he beat the best of his year, much to the delight of Ulick and the trainer.
The Saint went into winter quarters with an unbeaten record, and racing men thought it a pity he was not in any of the cla.s.sical events, but they were determined to keep an eye upon him in handicaps.
Eli Todd was surprised when he learned that Mr. Lanark, the owner of the Saint, was none other than Ulick Maynard. The Squire would have been still more astounded had he been enlightened upon the subject.
It was Ulick's firm determination to find Janet Todd and induce her to return home. He was thoroughly tired of being away from Hazelwell, and he meant to force Janet, if necessary, to tell her father the truth, and then Eli could impart it to the Squire. He puzzled his brains to think what Eli meant by saying it would cause even more trouble than had already occurred if what he partly suspected turned out true.
Ulick, however, did not believe that Eli would withhold a confession from Janet from his father.
"He wants more than mere suspicion to act upon," said Ulick to himself, "and he shall have it if I can find Janet. I can deal with the man who allowed the blame to fall upon me when I discover his name, and I shall not spare him."
He often thought about Irene, and wondered how she and Warren Courtly got on together. He had never liked Warren, although he had nothing against him, except his constant attentions to Irene, and as a result his marriage with her. This, however, he knew was partially his own fault, although he doubted if he would ever have succeeded in winning her. He left the course clear for Warren, and therefore rendered it a comparatively easy task for him.
It never occurred to Ulick that Warren Courtly had anything to do with the disappearance of Janet Todd. Had it been suggested to him he would have laughed at the idea as absurd.
CHAPTER X.
"THE CURIOSITY."
The Saint's first appearance as a three-year-old was at Kempton Park in the Pastures Handicap, a mile race on the Jubilee course. Having wintered well, as the trainer antic.i.p.ated, he developed into a fine three-year-old, and in the early spring had a real good trial with some first-cla.s.s handicap horses. Fred May was exceedingly anxious to place the colt well, and decided upon the Pastures Handicap because the distance was suitable, and the cla.s.s of horses he was likely to meet in a five hundred pound race would not trouble him much.
Ulick agreed with him, and accordingly the Saint was entered.
Contrary to their expectations, there were some good horses in the race, including the winner of the Lincolns.h.i.+re Handicap, and a four-year-old named Pinkerton, who had won the Jubilee Stakes the year before.
"We are in better company than I fancied we should be," said Fred May, when he glanced down the entries, "and I expect we shall get a biggish weight. We can strike him out if he is badly in."
The handicap, however, proved to be a good one, and although the Saint had eight stone, a big weight early in the year for a three-year-old, both Ulick and the trainer considered he had a chance. Pinkerton had eight stone twelve, and this horse they considered the most dangerous.
There are few more enjoyable places than Kempton Park for racing in the spring, or, in fact, at any time of the year.
Although the Pastures Handicap was not the princ.i.p.al race of the day, it attracted the most attention, mainly on account of the Saint being a runner. His two-year-old performances placed him almost on a par with the Derby horses, and the favourite for that race would have been regarded as a certainty in the handicap with eight stone. It was generally acknowledged by the "clever division" that a four-year-old like Pinkerton ought to be able to give the Saint twelve pounds. Mulgar, Kit Cat, and Ringbell were also fair performers, and Kit Cat had been booked as a "rod in pickle" for some time past. As she had only seven stone, it was regarded as her "day out"--in other words, that the weight was right and she was going for the money.
The ring was kept busy when betting was opened on the Pastures Handicap.
Four to one bar one, was first shouted, Pinkerton being the favourite, but these odds soon expanded until it was four to one on the field.
In the paddock the Saint was the great attraction. Everyone knew his two-year-old performances, and his remarkable colour always caused a mild sensation. He was "washy" enough as a two-year-old, but this spring he was almost white with a few "flea-bitten" spots on him.
"Looks as if he'd been powdered with black pepper and salt," was one characteristic remark, which certainly hit the mark.
Despite his colour, there was no mistaking the quality and fitness of the horse. He had been perfectly trained, hard and clean in his coat, no dandified polish on it, but a real glow of health.
"He'd make the Derby horses go if they ran against him now," said a well-known pressman.
"You are right, Harry. I fancy he'd start pretty near favourite. I think I shall back him," was the answer of a brother scribe.
The ladies crowded round "the curiosity," as the Saint was nicknamed, and a horse with a nickname is as popular as a rosy-cheeked schoolboy dubbed "apples." A nickname is a sure sign of something out of the common in man, boy, or horse.
"The curiosity" took the mobbing in good part, it troubled him not at all, although he condescendingly glanced round the ring from time to time, and, as Fred May saddled him, made playful snaps at his coat, and once succeeded in securing his hat.
Ben Sprig was to ride the Saint; a good jockey with a reputation for honesty. He was a miniature man, about thirty-five, capable of riding seven stone if necessary. His face was a study. Ben Sprig seldom smiled outwardly; he seemed to conceal all expressions of joy inside his small frame, and the only signs of pleasure experienced were sundry chuckles that sounded like the cracking of nuts. He spoke jerkily, shooting out his words like darts, and taking time to consider between each one. His complexion was bronze, and his eyes were small and brown. He had beautifully-shaped small hands and feet, of which he was very proud. He was dapper in his dress, and always clean and spruce. His humour was proverbial, and as he always had a solemn countenance it proved the more effective. A man who laughs at his own jokes is like an advertiser who stares at his own advertis.e.m.e.nts. There was none of the advertising agent about Ben Sprig.
"Where's Ben?" asked May, as the bell rang.
"I'll hunt him up," said Ulick, as he hurried off towards the jockey's room.
Ben Sprig was a thorn in the side of all clerks of the course. They invariably had to hurry him up, and in nine cases out of ten he was always the last to leave the paddock. He had a habit of sneaking his mount up the course when the majority of the spectators thought all the horses were at the post.
"Come along, Ben," said Ulick. "I never saw such a fellow, you are always last."