Part 52 (2/2)

Hooligans William Diehl 58000K 2022-07-22

By the time I was finished, he knew I knew who was on the Committee and the extent of its power, and I did it all by innuendo, a casual mention of t.i.tan here, of Seaborn there, none of it incriminating. I stopped short of that.

I was having a h.e.l.l of a time. It was the Irish in me: don't get mad, get even. I was doing both.

”Anyway,” I said, summing it all up, ”the fix wasn't part of this other mess, it's just indicative of what was happening here. Uh . . . ” I tried to think of a delicate way of putting it. ” . . . A change of values in the city since the old days.”

His cold dark eyes s.h.i.+fted to me and he stared at me for several seconds although his mind still seemed to be wandering. Then he nodded very slowly.

”Yes,” he said sadly. ”That's well put, Kilmer. A change of values.”

It was then that I realized how deeply hurt he was. Bad enough to find out you have been lied to by your best friends, but to get the information from your wife's old boyfriend went a little beyond insulting. I stopped having a good time and started feeling sorry for him. A lot of Harry Raines' dreams had been destroyed in a very few minutes.

Pancho Callahan stared out the window at the racetrack. He had less to say than usual-nothing.

Raines got up, poured another round of brandy, and slumped on the corner of his desk.

”I appreciate your candor,” he said, stopping to clear his voice halfway through the sentence. ”I understand about your . . . previous ties to Dunetown. All this is probably difficult for you, too.”

He wasn't doing bad at the innuendo himself. A lot of information was bouncing back and forth between us, a lot of it tacitly. I almost asked him what had been troubling him.

Instead, I dug it in a little deeper.

”It hasn't got anything to do with old ties, Mr. Raines,” I said. ”I'm an investigator for the government. I came to help clean up your town. I've been here five days and I only know one thing for sure. Everybody of importance I turn to for help, kicks me in the s.h.i.+ns instead. Callahan wouldn't have told you all this. He wouldn't be that inconsiderate. I, on the other hand, have never scored too well in diplomacy. It doesn't work in my job.”

I stopped talking. The dialogue was beginning to sound defensive.

Raines looked at Callahan. ”Can you confirm this?” he asked quietly.

Callahan nodded slowly.

”My G.o.d,” Raines said again. And then suddenly he turned his attention back to Pancho Callahan.

”The blame rests squarely with the trainer,” Raines snapped, almost as if he had forgotten the conversation moments before. It was as if it had given him some inner strength. The weight seemed to be gone. Fire and steel slowly replaced it, as if he'd made a final judgment and it was time to move on. ”I'll have Barton's a.s.s. I'll get him out of here along with that d.a.m.n Butazolidin.”

Callahan chimed in: ”Seems to me, sir, we're talking about two different things here. Buting up the horse today and fixing the race on Sunday. They're connected this time, but they're two different problems.”

”Yes, I understand that,” he said. He braced his shoulders like a marine on parade and ground his fist into the palm of his other hand.

”We talked to the jockey . . . ”

”Impastato,” Raines said, letting us know he knew his track.

”Right. Impastato got chewed out by Smokey Barton for letting Disaway out at the five-furlong post-he usually goes at the three-quarter. Anyway, it was Thibideau who told him to run the race that way.”

”That happens; it's not uncommon,” Raines said, attempting to be fair.

”No. But it's usually not done in a race where the horse is favored and the track is right for him.”

”I agree,” said Raines, who was turning out to be n.o.body's fool, ”but it's not enough to prove the race was a fix.”

”No, but there's something else. The last race Disaway ran, Impastato says the horse was shying to the left going out of the backstretch. Started running wide.”

”Look, I'm sorry, Callahan,” Raines said impatiently, ”but I need to know where you got this thing about the race being fixed. I can't go to the stewards and tell them I heard it around the track.”

”You can't take it to the stewards at all . . . or the Jockey Club,” Callahan said, looking to me for support.

”And why not?”

”We can't prove any of it,” I said. ”You're a lawyer. All of this is expert conjecture. You could get your tail in as big a crack as ours would be.”

”My tail's already in a crack,” he growled.

Callahan said, ”What Jake means is, we can't prove the horse was burned out so he wouldn't run well. We can't prove Thibideau put the final touch on it by opening him up too early. We can't even prove it was Thibideau. Fact is, we can't even prove for sure the horse has been running with a hairline crack in his foreleg.”

Raines' anger was turning to frustration.

”Why don't you just spell it out for me,” he said.

”Okay,” said Callahan. ”The way I see it, they couldn't Bute him on Sunday because there's a little kick to Butes; the horse might just have done the job anyway, and he was favored. The fix was for Disaway to lose. They had to Bute him today because he was going lame after the workouts, and today was his day to win. So Disaway ran like a cheetah, couldn't feel the pain in his foreleg until he went down. What I think is that Thibideau set up the loss on Sunday. Smokey's only sin was not pulling the pony because he was going lame. h.e.l.l, you could run a lot of trainers off the track for doing that.”

”Then I'll run 'em off,” Raines said angrily. He finished his second brandy and stood with his back to us, staring down at the track. ”An owner's greed, a trainer's stupidity, and two horses are dead. One jockey may never ride again, and another is lying in pain in the hospital.” He turned back to face us.

”To my knowledge, there's never been a fix at this track, not in almost three years.”

”Well,” Callahan said, ”it was well thought out and impossible to prove. Would've worked like a Turkish charm, too, except the leg was weaker than they thought, which is always the case when a horse breaks a leg in a race.”

”Then just what the h.e.l.l can I do?” Raines roared, and for a moment he sounded like Chief Findley.

Callahan finished his drink and stood up.

”About this one? Nothing. Thibideau lost his horse; he's paid a price. The other two horses and jockeys? Don't know what to say. It'll go down in the books, just another accident. I don't think-see, the reason we told you this, it isn't the last time it's going to be tried. I know how you feel about the track and the horses. It's something you needed to know.”

Raines sighed and sat back in his chair and pinched his lower lip.

”I appreciate it, thanks,” he said. But he was distracted. His gaze once again was focused somewhere far away.

”Mr. Raines, it wouldn't help us-Callahan here, myself, and the rest of Morehead's people-for you to talk about this fix business. Not for just now. Maybe in a day or two, okay?”

He could hardly refuse the request and didn't.

”I respect your confidence,” he said, without looking at either of us. ”Will forty-eight hours be enough?”

Callahan looked at me and I shrugged. ”Sure,” I said, ”that'll be fine. We'll be checking with you.”

We left him sitting there, staring out at the track he had created and which he obviously loved and cherished and felt protective of, the same way Chief felt about Dunetown. I felt sorry for him; he was like a schoolboy who had just discovered some ugly fact of life. Callahan didn't say anything until we were outside the building and walking back around the infield to the car.

”You were pretty tough in there,” he said.

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