Part 23 (1/2)
”No,” declined Wallingford. ”I'm unlucky when I press a bet.”
Rosey S. put up a very good race for place, but dropped back in the finish to a chorus of comforting observations from the quartet, who, to make matters more aggravating, had played the winner for place at a good price.
Jake Block came to them right after the race and handed over the money. He was evidently in a great hurry. Wallingford started to talk to him, but Block moved off rapidly, and it dawned upon J. Rufus that the horseman wanted to ”shake” him so as not to have to invite him to dinner with himself and Beauty Phillips.
Sunday morning he went around to that discreet young lady's flat for breakfast, by appointment. ”Mrs. Phillips” met him with unusual warmth.
”I've been missing you,” she stated with belated remembrance of certain generous gifts. ”Say,” she added with sudden indignation, ”you may have my share of Block for two peanuts. What do you suppose he did? Offered me five dollars to boost him with Beauty. _Five dollars!_”
”The cheap skate!” exclaimed Wallingford sympathetically.
The Beauty came in and greeted him with a flush of pleasure.
”Well,” she said, ”I got it, all right. The horse runs in the fourth race Friday, and its name is Whipsaw.”
”Whipsaw!” exclaimed Wallingford. ”He's stringing you.”
”No, he isn't,” she declared positively. ”It was one o'clock last night before I got him thawed out enough to give up, and I had to let him hold my hand, at that,” and she rubbed that hand vigorously as if it still had some stain upon it. ”He told me all about the horse. He says it's the one good thing he's going to uncover for this meeting.
He tried Whipsaw out on his own breeding-farm down in Kentucky, clocking him twice a week, and he says the nag can beat anything on this track. Block's been breaking him to run real races, entering against a lot of selling-platers, with instructions to an iron-armed jockey to hold in so as to get a long price. Friday he intends to send the horse in to win and expects to get big odds. I'm glad it's over with. We promised to go out to Claremont this afternoon with Block, but that settles him. To-morrow I'm going out with you.”
J. Rufus shook his head.
”No, you mustn't,” he insisted. ”You must string this boy along till after the race Friday. He might change his mind or scratch the horse or something, but if he knows you have a heavy bet down, and he's still with you, he'll go through with the program.”
”I can't do it,” she protested.
He turned to her slowly, took both her hands, and gazed into her eyes.
”Yes, you can, Beauty,” he said. ”We've been good pals up to now, and this is the last thing I'll ever ask of you.”
She looked at him a moment with heightening color, then she dropped her eyes.
”Honest, Pinky,” she confessed, ”sometimes I do wish you had a lot of money.”
CHAPTER XVI
IN WHICH WALLINGFORD AND BLACKIE DAW ENJOY THEMSELVES
On Monday, nearing noon, Wallingford dropped into a flashy cafe just off Broadway, where he knew he would be bound to find some one of his quartet. He found Short-Card Larry there alone, his long, thin fingers clasped around a gla.s.s of b.u.t.termilk.
”h.e.l.lo, Wallingford,” he said, grinning. ”Going out to the track to-day?”
”I'm not going to miss a race till the meeting closes,” a.s.serted Wallingford. ”I've a good one to-day that I'm going to send in a couple of hundred on.”
”What is it?” asked Larry.
”Governor.”
”Governor!” snorted Larry. ”Who's in the race with him?” He drew a paper to him and turned to the entries. ”Why,” he protested, ”there isn't a plug in that race that can't come back to hunt him.”