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He shook his head. 'n.o.body knows who attacked him. He was found on the pavement by some pa.s.ser-by, who called the police.'
'Well... have you asked him - Mason?' But I guessed at something of the answer, if not all of it.
'He's, er, never really recovered,' Lucas said regretfully. 'His head, it seemed, had been repeatedly kicked, as well as his body. There was a good deal of brain damage. He's still in an inst.i.tution. He always will be. He's a vegetable... and he's blind.'
I bit the end of the pencil with which I'd been making notes. 'Was he robbed?' I said.
'His wallet was missing. But not his watch.' His face was worried.
'So it might have been a straightforward mugging?'
'Yes... except that the police treated it as intended homicide, because of the number and target of the boot marks.'
He sat back in his chair as if he'd got rid of an unwelcome burden. Honour among gentlemen... honour satisfied.
'All right,' I said. 'Which two syndicates was he checking?'
'The first two that you have there.'
'And do you think any of the people on them - the undesirables - are the sort to kick their way out of trouble?'
He said unhappily, 'They might be.'
'And am I,' I said carefully, 'investigating the possible corruption of Eddy Keith, or Mason's semi-murder?'
After a pause, he said, 'Perhaps both.'
There was a long silence. Finally I said, 'You do realise that by sending me notes at the races and meeting me in the tearoom and bringing me here, you haven't left much doubt that I'm working for you?'
'But it could be at anything.' I said gloomily, 'Not when I turn up on the syndicates' doorsteps.'
'I'd quite understand,' he said, 'if, in view of what I've said, you wanted to... er...'
So would I, I thought. I would understand that I didn't want my head kicked in. But then what I'd told Jenny was true: one never thought it would happen. And you're always wrong, she'd said.
I sighed. 'You'd better tell me about Mason. Where he went, and who he saw. Anything you can think of.'
'It's practically nothing. He went off in the ordinary way and the next we heard was he'd been attacked. The police couldn't trace where he'd been, and all the syndicate people swore they'd never seen him. The case isn't closed, of course, but after six months it's got no sort of priority.'
We talked it over for a while, and I spent another hour after that writing notes. I left the Jockey Club premises at a quarter to six, to go back to the flat; and I didn't get there.
CHAPTER SEVEN.
I went home in a taxi and paid it off outside the entrance to the flats, yet not exactly outside, because a dark car was squarely parked there on the double yellow lines, which was a towing-away place.
I scarcely looked at the car, which was my mistake, because as I reached it and turned away towards the entrance its nearside doors opened and spilled out the worst sort of trouble.
Two men in dark clothes grabbed me. One hit me dizzyingly on the head with something hard and the other flung what I later found was a kind of la.s.so of thick rope over my arms and chest and pulled it tight. They both bundled me into the back of the car where one of them for good measure tied a dark piece of cloth over my dazed half-shut eyes.
'Keys,' a voice said. 'Quick. No one saw us.'
I felt them fumbling in my pockets. There was a clink as they found what they were looking for. I began to come back into focus, so to speak, and to struggle, which was a reflex action but all the same another mistake.
The cloth over my eyes was reinforced by a sickly-smelling wad over my nose and mouth. Anaesthetic fumes made a nonsense of consciousness, and the last thing I thought was that if I was going the way of Mason they hadn't wasted any time.
I was aware, first of all, that I was lying on straw.
Straw, as in stable. Rustling when I tried to move. Hearing, as always, had returned first.
I had been concussed a few times over the years, in racing falls. I thought for a while that I must have come off a horse, though I couldn't remember which, or where I'd been riding.
Funny.
The unwelcome news came back with a rush. I had not been racing. I had one hand. I had been abducted in daylight from a London street. I was lying on my back on some straw, blindfolded, with a rope tied tight round my chest, above the elbows, fastening my upper arms against my body. I was lying on the knot. I didn't know why I was there... and had no great faith in the future.
d.a.m.n, d.a.m.n, d.a.m.n. My feet were tethered to some immovable object. It was black dark, even round the edges of the blindfold. I sat up and tried to get some part of me disentangled; a lot of effort and no results.
Ages later there was a tramp of footsteps outside on a gritty surface, and the creak of a wooden door, and sudden light on the sides of my nose.
'Stop trying, Mr Halley,' a voice said. 'You won't undo those knots with one hand.'
I stopped trying. There was no point in going on.
'A spot of overkill,' he said, enjoying himself. 'Ropes and anaesthetic and blackjack and blindfold. Well, I did tell them of course, to be careful, and not to get within hitting distance of that tin arm. A villain I know has very nasty things to say about you hitting him with what he didn't expect.'
I knew the voice. Undertones of Manchester, overtones of all the way up the social ladder. The confidence of power.
Trevor Deansgate.
Last seen on the gallops at Newmarket, looking for Tri-Nitro in the string, and identifying him because he knew the work jockey, which most people didn't. Deansgate, going to George Caspar's for breakfast. Bookmaker Trevor Deansgate had been a question mark, a possibility, someone to be a.s.sessed, looked into. Something I would have done, and hadn't done yet.
'Take the blindfold off,' he said. 'I want him to see me.' Fingers took their time over untying the tight piece of cloth. When it fell away, the light was temporarily dazzling; but the first thing I saw was the double barrel of a shotgun pointing my way.
'Guns too,'
I said sourly. It was a storage barn, not a stable. There was a stack of several tons of straw bales to my left, and on the right, a few yards away, a tractor. My feet were fastened to the trailer bar of a farm roller. The barn had a high roof, with beams; and one meagre electric light, which shone on Trevor Deansgate.
'You're too b.l.o.o.d.y clever for your own good,' he said. 'You know what they say? If Halley's after you, watch out. He'll sneak up on you when you think he doesn't know you exist, and they'll be slamming the cell doors on you before you've worked it out.'
I didn't say anything. What could one say? Especially sitting trussed up like a fool at the wrong end of a shotgun.
'Well, I'm not waiting for you, do you see?' he said. 'I know how b.l.o.o.d.y close you are to getting me nicked. Just laying your snares, weren't you? Just waiting for me to fall into your hands, like you've caught so many others.' He stopped and reconsidered what he'd said. 'Into your hand,' he said, 'and that fancy hook.'
He had a way of speaking to me that acknowledged mutual origins, that we'd both come a long way from where we'd started. It was not a matter of accent, but of manner. There was no need for social pretence. The message was raw, and between equals, and would be understood.
He was dressed, as before, in a City suit. Navy; chalk pin stripe this time; Gucci tie. The well-manicured hands held the shotgun with the expertise of many a week-end on country estates. What did it matter, I thought, if the finger that pulled the trigger was clean and cared for. What did it matter if his shoes were polished... I looked at the silly details because I didn't want to think about death.
He stood for a while without speaking: simply watching. I sat without moving, as best I could, and thought about a nice safe job in a stockbroker's office. 'No b.l.o.o.d.y nerves, have you?' he said. 'None at all.'