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‘Then why did you?’

‘The owner wanted to, if possible.’

‘Did he bet on it?’

‘The owner? No. It was a woman. She never bets much. She just likes to see her horses win.’

‘Pelican swore you’d backed it yourself, and put him off so that you could get a better price.’

‘You bookmakers are too suspicious for your own good.’

‘Hard experience proves us right.’

‘Well, he’s wrong this time,’ I insisted. ‘This bird friend of yours. If he asked me... and I don’t remember him asking... then I told him the truth. And anyway, any bookmaker who asks jockeys questions like that is asking for trouble. Jockeys are the worst tipsters in the world.’

‘Some aren’t,’ he said flatly. ‘Some are good at it.’

I skipped that. ‘Is he still angry after all these months? And if so, would he be angry enough not just to tell the Stewards that Cranfield backed Cherry Pie, but to bribe other people to invent lies about us?’

His eyes narrowed while he thought about it. He pursed his mouth, undecided. ‘You’d better ask him yourself.’

‘Thanks.’ Hardly an easy question.

‘Move your car now?’ he suggested.

‘Yes.’ I walked two steps towards it, then stopped and turned back. ‘Mr Newtonnards, if you see the man who put the money on for Mr Cranfield, will you find out who he is... and let me know?’

‘Why don’t you ask Cranfield?’

‘He said he didn’t want to involve him.’

‘But you do?’

‘I suppose I’m grasping at anything,’ I said. ‘But yes, I think I do.’

‘Why don’t you just quieten down and take it?’ he said reasonably. ‘AH this thrashing about... you got copped. So, you got copped. Fair enough. Sit it out, then. You’ll get your licence back, eventually.’

‘Thank you for your advice,’ I said politely, and went and moved my car out of his gateway.

It was Thursday. I should have been going to Warwick to ride in four races. Instead, I drove aimlessly back round the North Circular Road wondering whether or not to pay a call on David Oakley, enquiry agent and imaginative photographer. If Charlie West didn’t know who had framed me, it seemed possible that Oakley might be the only one who did. But even if he did, he was highly unlikely to tell me. There seemed no point in confronting him, and yet nothing could be gained if I made no attempt.

In the end I stopped at a telephone box and found his number via enquiries.

A girl answered. ‘Mr Oakley isn’t in yet’

‘Can I make an appointment?’

She asked me what about.

‘A divorce.’

She said Mr Oakley could see me at 11.30, and asked me my name.’

‘Charles Crisp.’

‘Very well, Mr Crisp. Mr Oakley will be expecting you.’

I doubted it. On the other hand, he, like Charlie West, might in general be expecting some form of protest.

From the North Circular Road I drove ninety miles up the Ml Motorway to Birmingham and found Oakley’s office above a bicycle and radio shop half a mile from the town centre.

His street door, shabby black, bore a neat small name-plate stating, simply, ‘Oakley’. There were two keyholes, Yale and Chubb, and a discreetly situated peephole. I tried the handle of this apparent fortress, and the door opened easily under my touch. Inside, there was a narrow passage with pale blue walls leading to an uncarpeted staircase stretching upwards.

I walked up, my feet sounding loud on the boards. At the top there was a small landing with another shabby black door, again and similarly fortified. On this door, another neat notice said, ‘Please ring’. There was a bell push. I gave it three seconds work.

The door was opened by a tall strong looking girl dressed in a dark coloured leather trouser suit. Under the jacket she wore a black sweater, and under the trouser legs, black leather boots. Black eyes returned my scrutiny, black hair held back by a tortoiseshell band fell straight to her shoulders before curving inwards. She seemed at first sight to be about twenty-four, but there were already wrinkle lines round her eyes, and the deadness in their expression indicated too much familiarity with dirty washing.

‘I have an appointment,’ I said. ‘Crisp.’

‘Come in.’ She opened the door wider and left it for me to close.

I followed her into the room, a small square office furnished with a desk, typewriter, telephone, and four tall filing cabinets. On the far side of the room there was another door. Not black; modern flat hard board, painted grey. More keyholes. I eyed them thoughtfully.

The girl opened the door, said through it, ‘It’s Mr Crisp,’ and stood back for me to pass her.

‘Thank you,’ I said. Took three steps forward, and shut myself in with David Oakley.

His office was not a great deal larger than the ante-room, and no thrift had been spared with the furniture. There was dim brown linoleum, a bentwood coat stand, a small cheap armchair facing a grey metal desk, and over the grimy window, in place of curtains, a tough looking fixed frame covered with chicken wire. Outside the window there were the heavy bars and supports of a fire escape. The Birmingham sun, doing its best against odds, struggled through and fell in wrinkled honeycomb shadows on the surface of an ancient safe. In the wall on my right, another door, firmly closed. With yet more keyholes.

Behind the desk in a swivel chair sat the proprietor of all this glory, the totally unmemorable Mr Oakley. Youngish. Slender. Mouse coloured hair. And this time, sunglasses.

‘Sit down, Mr Crisp,’ he said. Accentless voice, entirely emotionless, as before. ‘Divorce, I believe? Give me the details of your requirements, and we can arrive at a fee.’ He looked at his watch. ‘I can give you just ten minutes, I’m afraid. Shall we get on?’

He hadn’t recognised me. I thought I might as well take advantage of it.

‘I understand you would be prepared to fake some evidence for me... photographs?’

He began to nod, and then grew exceptionally still. The unrevealing dark glasses were motionless. The pale straight mouth didn’t twitch. The hand lying on the desk remained loose and relaxed.

Finally he said, without any change of inflection, ‘Get out.’

‘How much do you charge for faking evidence?’

‘Get out.’

I smiled. ‘I’d like to know how much I was worth.’

‘Dust,’ he said. His foot moved under the desk.

‘I’ll pay you in gold dust, if you’ll tell me who gave you the job.’

He considered it. Then he said, ‘No.’

The door to the outer office opened quietly behind me.

Oakley said calmly, ‘This is not a Mr Crisp, Didi. This is a Mr Kelly Hughes. Mr Hughes will be leaving.’

‘Mr Hughes is not ready,’ I said.

‘I think Mr Hughes will find he is,’ she said.

I looked at her over my shoulder. She was carrying a large black looking pistol with a very large black looking silencer. The whole works were pointing steadily my way.

‘How dramatic,’ I said. ‘Can you readily dispose of bodies in the centre of Birmingham?’

‘Yes,’ Oakley said.

‘For a fee, of course, usually,’ Didi added.

I struggled not to believe them, and lost. All the same...

‘Should you decide after all to sell the information I need, you know where to find me.’ I relaxed against the back of the chair.

‘I may have a liking for gold dust,’ he said calmly. ‘But I am not a fool.’

‘Opinions differ,’ I remarked lightly.

There was no reaction. ‘It is not in my interest that you should prove you were... shall we say... set up.’