Alex’s dad came forward. ‘Eric Fanning. I enjoyed watching your father immensely.’
‘So did I.’
‘You know my fiancée, Alison, but not her dad, Clive Baker,’ Alex said.
He was the sour-faced man I hadn’t recognized from the clubhouse the night before.
Alex also introduced me to someone who hadn’t been with him last night. He was a tall, athletic man in his late-forties with black hair and a well-groomed beard. He leaned in to shake my hand. ‘Vic Hancock of Hancock Salvage.’
Hancock Salvage was the name splashed over the sides of Alex’s car in ten inch high letters. Hancock’s reputation preceded him. Hancock Salvage was the biggest salvage and car auction business in Britain. He’d sponsored several drivers over the years, but this was the first time I’d seen him at a race.
‘I’m glad to see motor racing isn’t as cut-throat as the salvage business,’ Hancock said with a laugh.
‘The racing world is filled with good people,’ Mr Fanning said, patting my shoulder.
The irony of the statement wasn’t lost on me considering the situation.
We chatted for a few minutes before I left them to the repairs. Everyone thanked me for my considerateness and I headed over to race control for the qualification times.
The head timekeeper emerged and posted the results on the wall before handing out copies to the eager drivers for their own records. I looked to the head of the times first. Derek’s mind games had proved ineffectual. Alex had taken pole position from Derek by three tenths, a pretty big margin. I couldn’t contain a smile but soon lost it when I saw my qualifying time. I’d qualified fourteenth. I was a second and a half off my times from just two months ago. I really needed to put my engine out of its misery.
Alex winning pole position served to incite the rumour mill. All anyone could say during lunch was if Derek was going to do something, he’d have to do it during the race.
In addition to being the track owner, Myles Beecham was the clerk of the course. He did his best to kill the rumour at the driver briefing. As clerks of the courses went, Beecham was the most pedantic, treating drivers like disobedient children. That was never more obvious than at his driver briefing. He reeled off his usual speech about drivers following track’s instructions and using mirrors during the race. Just as I thought he was finishing up, he added a caveat.
‘I know racing is a competitive sport by nature and there can be only one winner, but it’s not a contact sport. The best driver wins because he outdrives everyone else. Stowe Park has a reputation for fair and fun entertainment. I wouldn’t want anything to change that today.’
There it was. Derek was on notice. Myles was watching. As warnings went, it could have come with a keener edge. If Myles’s words were an attempt to shame Derek into behaving, he was wasting his time. Derek needed to be struck with something blunter than a verbal warning.
I looked over at Derek. He stood with Jeff Morgan and Matthew Strickland, his usual race day hangers-on. Morgan leaned in and whispered something. Derek shrugged his shoulders as if he didn’t understand what Myles was talking about. It was a nice act, but I didn’t know who he was trying to fool.
‘Thank you,’ Myles said. ‘Good luck to everyone.’
Walking back to my spot in the paddock, I pushed Alex and Derek from my mind to concentrate on the race. I visualized a lap in my mind, picking out my braking points, turning points and apexes. I studied the starting grid to see who was around me and whether I needed to be careful of them at the start, as well as to concoct a plan of how I’d get the jump on them when the lights turned green.
When the announcement went out over the PA system for the Formula Ford drivers to make their way to assembly area, I needed to pee. After fifteen races, I hoped to be past this point, but nervous tension got me every time. Dylan fired up the engine and broke out his customary bag of sunflower seeds. He ate them all the time; especially when he was nervous and he was nervous anytime I hit the track. I left him to his munching and crossed the paddock to the toilets. I stood over the trough and tried to relax enough to go. I wasn’t the only one with this race-related bladder problem. Seven other drivers, including Alex, stood at the urinal with uncooperative prostates. By the time I managed to do what I intended on doing, Alex and I were the only ones left in the toilets. I get quiet before a race, putting all my energy into my thoughts, but I broke my custom.
‘Good luck today,’ I said. ‘I hope you win.’
‘Thanks. I won’t be back if I don’t.’
‘Moving up?’
He smiled. ‘No, moving out. Win, lose or draw, I’m retiring. Alison and I got engaged a while ago and the wedding is in the spring. As my wedding gift to her, I’m retiring from racing to concentrate on becoming a chartered accountant. If I’m going to be a husband, then I need to be a grown-up.’
He grinned and it took me a moment to return one. Alex had a promising racing career ahead of him. I couldn’t believe he was walking away from it. I knew I couldn’t.
‘Wow. Congratulations.’
‘Thanks. Don’t tell Alison, she doesn’t know. No one does, and I want to make it a surprise after the race.’
‘Your secret is safe with me. Now I really hope you win.’
‘So do I.’
I followed Alex out as three other drivers went in.
‘What’s in your tea leaves, Aidy?’
The opposite of what’s in yours, I thought. ‘I hope to run in the national series next season and keep moving up through the ranks.’
‘And go as far as your dad?’
‘If I can.’
‘Take this from someone who’s a few years older. Don’t ever let this come between you and a happy life. This sport crushes more dreams than it creates.’
I was more than aware of this fact. The sport had orphaned me. ‘I won’t.’
‘Then you’re smarter than the average driver.’
The call went out again for drivers to make their way to the assembly area. We shook hands and wished each other luck before going our separate ways.
Two hours later, Alex was dead.
Lap Three
I hadn’t seen Alex die, just the accident. I’d gotten a good start off the line to take tenth place going into the first major bend at Wilts Corner. Wilts is a second gear right-hand turn and everyone made it through cleanly. Alex and Derek led the field, pulling away from the pack. They were side by side going into Barrack Hill. It’s a fast, right-hand kink that can be taken without lifting off the gas. Just. There’s no room for error. Get it wrong and there’s a concrete wall to catch you. Everyone was nose to tail going into the bend, making it hard to see anything at the front. I’d just grabbed fourth gear and was looking for my turning-in point when Alex’s car popped up on two wheels. The second it crashed back down, it slewed left off the track and into the wall.
Even though my view was obscured, I knew exactly what Derek had done to Alex. Like Formula One and Indy cars, Formula Fords are essentially just a cockpit bolted to an engine with the four wheels and suspension exposed. With these racecars, there’s the danger of interlocking wheels with another car. If you’ve seen the chariot race from Ben Hur then you know what I mean. When it happens, both drivers have to work together to get untangled. It’s usually achieved by the drivers matching each other’s speed and carefully separating, then going back to racing. It happens by accident, but it also happens by design. Locking wheels is a nasty technique for taking out a car. A driver slips his wheel inside and in front of the car he wants to take out, then slows down. Just taking your foot off the gas for a second will do the damage. The faster car rides over the top of the slower car’s wheel, sending it on to two wheels and breaking its suspension when it lands. It’s a tricky manoeuvre with the potential for taking out both cars, but usually the faster car comes off worse. To the spectator, it looks like an accident.