Barnaby’s face fell. “Dead?” He looked from Dillon to Demon.
“Definitely,” Demon said. “It created quite a stir. Collier was well-known. He’d been in the business for decades and had some fine horses. Apparently he was riding by a local quarry, something spooked his horse, and he was thrown down the quarry cliff. His neck was broken.” Demon looked at Dillon. “What happened to the stable? Who inherited?”
“His daughter. She had no interest in the stable or the horses-she sold them off. I saw the paperwork crossing my clerks’ desks.”
“Who bought them-any particular party?”
“Most went in singles or pairs to different stables.”
Demon frowned. “No mention of a partner?”
Dillon studied Demon’s face. “No. Why?”
“Collier got into difficulties at the end of the autumn season last year-he bet on some of his own runners and lost heavily. I’d wondered if he’d be racing again, but after the winter break he returned, not only with no cuts to his string, but with two very classy new runners.”
“Not Catch-the-wind and Irritable?” Barnaby asked. “Those were the horses involved in the suspect races.”
Demon described the two horses; Dillon agreed to check. He looked at Barnaby. “Was there any suggestion the horses were stopped-that the jockeys held them back?”
“No. All those complaining seemed certain the jockeys did their best-they didn’t want to implicate them, but couldn’t see how else it was done.”
Demon and Dillon exchanged a look. “How it was done,” Dillon said, “we can guess. Who benefited is the question.”
“Actually,” Demon said, “the first question might be: how did Collier die? Was it an accident, or…”
“Or given the rumors”-Dillon’s voice hardened-“and the likelihood someone would eventually look into them, as we are, was Collier silenced?”
“Silenced? Why?” Barnaby asked.
“So he couldn’t implicate whoever had funded the substitutions,” Flick replied.
Barnaby looked puzzled. Flick explained, “The other way to fix a race and make a great deal of money is to run a particular horse that does well until it establishes a sound reputation-excellent form-and then, for one race, switch another horse for it. Your ‘favorite’ then loses. After the race, you switch the real horse back. By the time any inquiry is afoot and the stewards think to examine the horse that unexpectedly lost, it’s the right horse, and there’s no evidence of any wrongdoing.”
Barnaby nodded. “But why couldn’t it just have been Collier behind it, with his death an accident as presently thought?”
“Because,” Dillon said, “finding substitute horses is expensive. They have to be specific matches, and Thoroughbreds as well.”
“So,” Flick said, “if Collier was hard-pressed, there must have been someone else involved.”
“More”-Demon caught Barnaby’s eye-“someone had to have bailed Collier out.”
Barnaby’s brows rose. “On condition he train and race-and arrange, however it’s done-the substitutions?”
Dillon nodded. “That seems likely.”
“I see.” Barnaby looked at Demon, then Dillon. “It looks like a visit to Grantham should be my next jaunt.”
Dillon rose. “I’ll get the details of Collier’s stable from the register, and we can check that the horses Demon remembers were the suspect runners. When are you thinking of leaving?”
“There’s a ball at Lady Swalesdale’s to night.” Standing, Flick shook out her skirts. “I’m sure her ladyship would be delighted to have you join us.”
“Ah…” Barnaby looked at her, then Dillon. “I’ll be off north at first light. I’ll need to spell my horses. I rather think I’ll give Lady Swalesdale’s a miss.”
Demon coughed to hide a laugh.
Flick leveled a severe glance at Barnaby.
Dillon scoffed, “Coward.”
Barnaby grinned. “You’re just sorry you can’t escape, too.”
In that, Barnaby had been wrong; Dillon hadn’t been interested in escaping Lady Swalesdale’s ball. Quite the opposite-he’d been looking forward to observing the lovely Miss Dalling coping with her smitten swains. If he was any judge of her temper, they’d soften her up nicely-for him.
Leaning against the wall of an alcove, concealed by the shadows cast by a large palm, he watched Priscilla Dalling captivate-and, whenever she noticed him watching, flirt with-a tribe of local gentlemen, one and all besotted by her bounteous charms.
While he appreciated the picture she made in her lavender silk gown with its keyhole neckline that, far from being decorous, drew attention even more provocatively to the deep valley between her breasts, while his eyes drank in the sleek yet curvaceous figure her well-cut gown so lovingly revealed, while his gaze was drawn to the exposed curve of her nape, to the vulnerable line highlighted by the black curls cascading from the knot on her head to bob seductively alongside one ear, it wasn’t her physical beauty that held his interest.
Beauty had never meant much to him-it was just the outer casing. What was inside mattered more. When he looked at her, he saw a fiery spirit, a feminine reflection of himself. It was that that lured him, that drew him to her.
He continued to watch cynically as she dealt with her admirers. The outcome of her flirting was already trying her temper-serve her right. The gentlemen were a boon in his eyes; they had her corralled; she couldn’t slip from his sight without them giving warning.
Two days had passed since he’d encountered her racing for her very life over the Heath. Two days since he’d discovered some man had come far too close to ending her life.
The draining of all color from her face when he’d shown her the hole in her hat still haunted him. She hadn’t known how close to death she’d come.
He’d ridden his own temper hard and kept away for the rest of the day, and the next, knowing he’d meet her to night. He’d seen her at a distance in town; since he’d escorted her back to the Carisbrook house, she’d left it only in the company of her aunt and Miss Blake. No one had come to visit her, and she hadn’t slipped away to any illicit meeting; he’d had four of his stable lads on special duty, watching the house day and night.
Through the palm fronds, he studied her face-the set of her chin, her eyes-and decided she hadn’t yet softened enough for his purpose. It wasn’t yet time to offer her an escape.
He’d left Barnaby armed with the direction of Collier’s stable, east of Grantham. They’d confirmed Collier’s classy new runners had been the horses involved in the suspect races. Over dinner, Barnaby had remembered to mention that Vane had stumbled on similar whispers about a race run at Newmarket a few weeks before, early in the autumn season.
The earlier suspect races had been at Goodwood and Doncaster, under Jockey Club rules, true, but not the same as a race at Newmarket, run under the Club’s collective nose. If it was part of the same scheme, the perpetrators were arrogant and cocksure. And there would almost certainly be more to come.
Dillon knew the scheme wasn’t targeted at him personally, yet as the Keeper of the Breeding Register and Stud Book, the office responsible for the verification of horses’ identities, the scheme was a direct challenge to his authority. More, the Committee had asked him to investigate and deal with the problem, setting said problem squarely in his lap. His past indiscretion, even if now history, only compounded the pressure.
The scheme might not have been conceived with a personal aspect, yet for him it had assumed one; he felt as if he were facing an as-yet-unsighted enemy who had a lethal arrow nocked and aimed at him-he had to cut the bowstring before the arrow could be loosed.
He refocused on Pris Dalling. Far from being on the side of his enemy, he was convinced she was presently standing somewhere in the mists between him and the opposition.