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Shayne tossed it to him and he yanked it on angrily. He came to his feet, brushing straw and dirt off his pink pants.

“After driving four races in three hours, I just love a good brawl before I go to bed,” he said. He felt his long jaw. “You pack quite a right hand, mister. Jesus, I could understand it if you’d broke any bones when I ran you off the road, but I hear you didn’t even have to put on a bandaid.”

He took a cigarette from a pack on a shelf and looked for matches. He opened a drawer in a workbench and whirled with a pair of brass knuckles on his fist. Shayne had been watching his movements closely, and crowded him with the short club. Brossard gauged his chances. Sneering, he tossed the knuckles back in the drawer.

“Give me a light.”

Shayne ignored the request. “Did you know Joey Dolan told somebody he was going to the Belle Mark an hour or two before he was killed?”

Brossard’s eyelids twitched. He said hoarsely, “Did you say killed?”

“You didn’t think that was going to be called an accident, did you?”

“Damn right it was an accident! Joey was no ordinary rummy. He wouldn’t drink wood alcohol unless he didn’t know what he-”

He looked sharply at Shayne and clamped his mouth shut. Somebody outside rattled the knob of the locked door. Brossard went to the door, looked at Shayne for an instant, then unlocked the door and opened it. Two of the track Pinkertons were outside. One had a gun showing.

“Beat it,” Brossard said with a jerk of his head.

“They said somebody was kicking you around, Frank-”

“Any time anybody wants to kick me around, they’re welcome to try. Go back to sleep.”

He slammed the door and found a match. “You said Joey told somebody. What does that mean, you don’t know who?”

“If we lit enough fires under people, we could find out. You didn’t kill him, did you, Brossard?”

“Why would I want to kill Joey? I liked the guy. But I don’t like that crap about my apartment. It makes me wonder if somebody’s trying to frame me.”

“Does Paul Thorne still have a key to it?”

“You pick up things, don’t you, Shamus? He gave me back the key I let him have. That don’t mean he didn’t have another one made, cost him a quarter. I slept in the bunkhouse last night. Four guys to a room. That gives me three witnesses.”

“Is this the tack-room where Joey was going to sleep last night?”

“Yeah. I don’t mind, I let him, but nobody’s supposed to know about it. He gets out a cot and puts it away again before anybody shows up in the morning. That was the idea.”

“Did you pay for that twin-double ticket with your own dough?”

“Why not? Domaine’s not too bad a boss. Most of the time he leaves the stable alone. When he tells me to do something, I do it, and I don’t ask why. Today he told me he wanted to win with My Treat, and then he told me he’d heard that Thorne had a winner in the sixth. He didn’t have to draw a diagram.”

“You hadn’t heard anything about Fussbudget?”

“Does it look as though? The bastards have been hiding her. She never did a thing before tonight. We’ve been hiding My Treat, and it’s a piece of crummy luck that the office dropped both horses in the same race.”

“Domaine definitely wanted you to win with My Treat?”

“Christ, that was the object, Shayne. We’ve been bringing her along bit by bit. I raced her a couple of times when I had to fake her condition to get her past the vet. She was way below par, three or four seconds slow, at four lengths a second. That set up her classification. The next time out she was feeling feisty. I held her to fifth but next morning my shoulders were sore. Last time she was really ready but we were waiting for a twin-double race to turn her loose. I gave her a bad drive that time, went out on the rim with her and died on the last turn. Tonight I don’t know what. She just didn’t have it. All of a sudden it was like she was up to her knees in sand.”

“Did Mrs. Moon talk to you before the race?”

“Mrs. Moon!” His surprise seemed real. “Why should Mrs. Moon talk to me? Probably what you heard about was Mrs. Domaine.”

Shayne pulled at his earlobe. “What did she want?”

Brossard hesitated. “I wouldn’t tell you as a rule, but that thing about my apartment really bothers the hell out of me. She wanted me to pull My Treat. There are things going on around here I don’t want to know about. If you can figure them out, fine. The boss said win. The boss’s wife said lose, and she said she’d feed me five hundred bucks if I did. I didn’t say yes or no. Nothing like that ever happened before. No matter which way, I was behind the eight ball. You can’t win and lose both. Maybe now she owes me five hundred bucks. And maybe I hadn’t better try to collect, too, what do you think, Shayne?”

“What happened to Don J., Brossard?”

“Thorne’s colt? The one that was killed?” He took another puff on his cigarette and ground it out. “Let’s forget about Don J. That’s history.”

Shayne tossed the club onto the workbench with a clatter. “All right, so long as I know you killed the horse, I don’t care about the details.”

CHAPTER 18

Too many people had seen him in Domaine’s Cadillac, so after retrieving his brown-paper bag of tools, Shayne took a cab.

“The Golden Crest Motel on Al A. I’m in a hurry.”

He waited till they were halfway there before asking, “You didn’t make this same run earlier tonight, did you?”

“Hell, no,” the driver said. “I was too busy losing money. Do you know I went into the ninth with five tickets? Fussbudget,” he said with disgust. “Where did she come from?”

Shayne told him to let him out on the highway. He saw Tim’s rusted-out Ford, a few cars away from Claire Domaine’s Mercedes. He went up the outside staircase and tapped on the door of Room 17. There was no response. After a moment he tapped again, more impatiently, and the door was opened by Miss Mallinson. Her cheeks seemed flushed. She was smoothing her hair. Shayne shot a quick glance at Rourke, who was sitting back against the headboard of the bed, whistling softly. The bedspread was rumpled.

“Next time I’ll tell them to put you in a body cast,” Shayne said.

“I was feeling weak,” Rourke said innocently. “Naturally I lay down. What’s in the paper bag? Something to drink?”

“Be patient. We have work to do first.”

He found the wire he had snaked through the hole in the baseboard and tied in a little transistor speaker.

“-that you, Mike?” Claire’s voice said. “Mike. Please. I have to talk to you. Is it connected yet? Can you hear me? Hurry.”

Shayne straightened decisively. “Now listen to me, Sandra,” he told the nurse over Claire’s pleas from the little speaker. “Turn out the lights and wait at the window. The second you see a car come in from the highway, knock twice on the wall. If it’s a red convertible, knock three times.”

He snapped the spring lock on the door so he could open it from the outside and knocked on the door of Number 18. It opened and Claire came into his arms. He moved her out of the lighted doorway and closed the door. She was breathing shallowly and seemed close to hysteria.

“I can’t go through with it, Mike. He’ll kill me. I know it. I’ll be lying on the floor dead before you can get in to help me. He’ll be out of his mind with disappointment. I won’t have a chance to ask him about Joey, so there’s no point in it now. Don’t make me do it.”

She was pulling at the front of his shirt, looking up at him. “Stay with me. You ask him. He won’t know what he’s saying. He’ll blurt something out.”

Applying a slow, powerful pressure, he broke her grip. His eyes drilled into hers and made her listen.

“Are you sure he’ll be here?”

“Yes! He hurt his leg when he fell. Larry sent him a message in the infirmary. Mike, I told Brossard to lose! I thought of that loan shark Paul borrowed from, and suddenly it hit me-if Paul can’t pay, he’ll get some of the same treatment he’s been dishing out to other people. I’ll be free of him.”