Authors: William Diehl
Tags: #Mystery, #Crime & mystery, #Mystery & Detective, #20th century, #General, #Suspense, #Adventure, #Crime & Thriller, #Fiction, #American fiction, #thriller
down. The trainer led him to the tie-up to be saddled.
Disaway was a fine-looking animal with very strong front legs and a sweat-shiny chest, hard as
concrete. The muscles were quivering and ready. Callahan walked close and stroked first one foreleg,
then the other, then strolled ba.ck to the rail.
No comment.
The owner was a short, heavy man in a polo shirt with a stopwatch clutched in a fat fist and binoculars
dangling around his neck. His name was Thibideau. He stood with his back to the jockey, chewing his
lip. When he spoke, his voice was harsh and sounded like it was trapped deep in his throat.
“Okay,” he said, without turning around or looking at the rider, “let‟s see what he can do. You open
him up at the three-quarter post.”
The exercise rider looked a little surprised and then said, “The three-quarter, yes, sir.”
They threw the saddle over the gelding‟s back, all the time talking to him and gentling him, and got
ready to let him out.
“All these characters are interested now,” Callahan said. “The track handicappers, the owners, the
trainers, the railbirds—all standing by to see just how much horse he is today.”
The exercise rider led the gelding out onto the track, lined him up, and then, standing straight up in
the stirrups and leaning far over the horse‟s mane, egged him on until he stretched out his long legs
and took off down the track into the fog. Half a dozen stopwatches clicked in unison somewhere in
the mist.
I could hear him coming long before he burst through the haze, snorting like an engine, his hoofs
shaking the earth underfoot. Then, pow! he came out of it and thundered past us, his head up and his
mane waving like a flag. The watches clicked again. Callahan looked at the chronograph on his wrist.
Still no comment.
“Let‟s get some breakfast,” he said. “The jockeys‟ll be showing up about now.”
I watched Disaway as they led him out to be hosed and squeegeed down and fed. His nostrils were
flared open, his ears standing straight up and slightly forward, and there was a look of defiant
madness in his eyes. I was beginning to understand why Pancho had a thing about Thoroughbreds.
“Well, what do you think?” I asked as we walked down the shedrows.
“About what?”
“What was all that about, feeling the horse‟s legs, the stop-watches, all the inside track stuff?”
“Well, he‟s not a bad kid,” Callahan said as we walked through the dissipating fog. “He‟s strong,
good bloodlines, has good legs, but he‟s a mudder. He just does okay on the fast track. If I were a
betting man I‟d put my money on him to show. He‟s about half a length short of a champion.”
“You got all that from feeling his forelegs?”
“I got all that from reading the racing form.”
As we walked past the shed rows and headed across a dirt road toward the jockeys‟ cafeteria, I saw a
dark blue Mercedes, parked near the stables. It was empty. I looked around, trying not to be obvious,
but the fog was still too heavy to see anybody farther away than twenty feet.
“Old Dracula‟s here,” Callahan said.
“Dracula?”
“Raines. The commissioner.”
“You don‟t like him?” I found myself hoping Callahan would say no.
“Runs a tight operation. Like him a lot better if he had blood in his veins. One cold piece of work.
That‟s his wife right over there.”
It caught me by surprise. I turned quickly, getting a glimpse of Doe through the fog, talking nose to
nose with a horse in one of the stables. Then the mist swirled back around her and she vanished.
“Let‟s mosey to the commissary,” Callahan said. “Grab some groceries. Listen to the jocks and
trainers.”
I didn‟t know Callahan well, but he was acting like a man who‟s on to something.
The fog had lifted enough for me to see the contours of the cafeteria, a long, low clapboard building.
The dining room was a very pleasant, bright room that smelled of fresh coffee and breakfast. It was
about half-filled with track people: jocks, trainers, owners, handicappers, exercise riders, stewards.
The talk was all horses. Mention Tagliani to this group, they‟d want to know what race he was in and
who was riding him.
I stayed close to Callahan, ordered a breakfast that would have satisfied a stevedore, and listened.
Callahan was as tight with these people as a fat man‟s hand in a small glove. He talked to the track
people from one side of his mouth and me from the other:
“The little guy with the hawk nose arid no eyes, that‟s Johnny Gavilan. Very promising jock until he
took a bad spill at Delray a couple years ago. Turned trainer..
Or:
“The little box in the coat and cap is Willie the Clock, the track handicapper. He works for the track
and sets the beginning odds for each race. Knows more about horses than God and he‟s just as honest.
Or:
“The guy in the red sweater, no hair, that‟s Charlie Entwhistle. A great horse breeder. Started out as a
trainer, then won this horse called Justabout in a poker game. At first it was a joke because old
Justabout was just about the ugliest animal God ever created. He had no teeth. He‟d stand around the
paddock munching away on his gums and from the front he looked bowlegged. People would come
down to the paddock, stick their tongues out at him, throw things at him, laugh at him. The Toothless
Terror they called him, and he didn‟t look like he could beat a fat man around the track.
“Everybody was laughing at Charlie Entwhistle.
“But it turns out there‟s only one thing Justabout was any good for, and that was running. He not only
loved to run, he couldn‟t stand for anything to be in front of him. Brother, could that kid run. He was
home in bed before the rest of the field got to the wire. He rewrote the record books, made Sunday
school teachers out of a lot of horseplayers, and he made old Charlie Entwhistle rich.”
Callahan looked at me and smiled.
“And that‟s what horse racing‟s all about.”
We had finished breakfast, and he picked up his coffee. “Now let‟s go to work,” he said, and we
moved toward the other side of the room.
30
“Just listen,” Callahan said as we drew fresh cups of coffee, though I hadn‟t so much as cleared my
throat for the last thirty minutes.
“Every day of the season, Willie the Clock judges the top three horses in each race and sets the
opening odds. His choice is printed in the program as a service to the bettors. No guarantees, of
course, but that doesn‟t matter. The players are always pissed at him. He‟s maybe the best
handicapper in the business, but it‟s a thankless damn job.”
“Why?”
“Because favorites lose more than they win. They get a bad break out of the gate or get caught in a
traffic jam in the backstretch
and can‟t find a slot. Here comes a long shot paying thirty to one and the players yell „boat race.‟
Everybody wants to lynch Willie.”
We sat down next to the square little man, who was about sixty, had a face the texture of weatherbeaten wood, wore the same coat, rain or shine, winter or summer, and had a black cap pulled down
hard over his eyes. His binoculars were as big as he was. He didn‟t talk much and was very cautious
about his clipboard, which is where all his information was scribbled.
He peered suspiciously from under the peak of his cap, recognized Callahan, gave him what I assume
passed for a smile for Willie, and scowled at me.
“This‟s Jake, Willie,” said Callahan. “lie‟s on our side.” Willie grunted and returned to his breakfast.
“What‟s lookin‟ good?” Callahan asked.
The little man shrugged and ate a while longer. We sipped coffee while Callahan eyeballed the room.
He nudged me once and nodded toward a wiry little guy, obviously a jockey, who came into the
restaurant and sat by himself in a corner. The newcomer didn‟t look a day over fifteen and wouldn‟t:
have weighed a hundred pounds in a diving suit.
“Ginny‟s Girl looks good in the fifth,‟ Willie said finally, then closed up for another five minutes.
Callahan didn‟t press but finally said, “How about Disaway?”
Willie looked at him from the corner of his eye.
“Something special?” he asked.
Callahan shrugged. “Just wondering, y‟know, after he dozed off in the stretch Sunday.”
“He‟s lookin‟ fair.”
Another minute or so of silence, then:
“Not too crazy this morning; clocked cut at 3:22. Not bad since they opened him up at the threequarter and he‟s usually a stretch runner..
He washed down a piece of dry toast with a gulp of black coffee, searched for something in the corner
of his mouth with a forefinger, then added:
“Track gets a little harder later in the day, he may tiptoe around. Right now I‟d say he‟s a toss-up to
place behind Polka Dits, who was kinda wild at the workout.”
“Talk at ya,” Callahan said, and we moved on again.
“You get all that?” he asked when we were a respectable distance from Willie.
“I think so,” I said. “If the track‟s hard, Disaway‟ll probably fold in the stretch again. If it stays soft,
he could come in second.”
“Very good. You‟re learning.”
“The little guy you gave me the nudge on,” I said. “What was that all about?”
“That‟s Scoot Impastato. Out of Louisiana. Started racing quarter horses when he was thirteen. Moved
up to Thoroughbreds when he was sixteen, if you believe his birth certificate. He‟s a seasoned jockey,
great legs, magic hands, and he‟s all of twenty, soakin‟ wet.”
“Very impressive,” I said. “So why the nudge?”
“He was riding Disaway on Sunday,” Callahan said, and headed toward the little guy.
The jockey, Scoot Impastato, was a man in a child‟s body, with a voice that sounded like it was still
trying to decide whether it was going to change or not. Right now it was kind of low choirboy. But the
boy had hands made of stainless steel.
“Hey, Mr. Callahan,” he said as we at down.
“How they runnin‟, Scoot?” Callahan asked.
“So-so,” the youngster answered. “You know how it goes— some days it don‟t pay to answer the
call.”
“Still upset about the race Sunday?” Callahan said. He was fishing. I don‟t know much about horse
racing but I know fishing when I hear it.
The kid chuckled. “Which one?” he asked. “1 was up four times and I ran out of the money four
times.” He seemed to be taking it in stride.
“Well, maybe it was some little thing, y‟know, maybe you handled them a little different than usual
and they got pissed. You know Thoroughbreds.”
He laughed aloud. “I oughta,” he said. He poured half his cup of coffee into an empty water glass and
filled the cup with cream until it looked like weak chocolate milk, the way New Orleanians like it.
He added some sugar and kept talking as he stirred it up. “Once at Belmont I was up on Fancy Dan,
fifty wins in two seasons, the horse couldn‟t lose. He went off a three-to-two favourite. The bell rings,
the gate pops, he just stands there‟ I‟m whackin‟ him with the bat, I‟m bootin‟ hell outta him, I‟m
cussin‟ him, I‟m sweettalkin‟ him. He ain‟t goin‟ nowhere, he just stands there lookin‟ at the crowd
and smellin‟ the grass. For all I know, he‟s still standin‟ there.”
“So what happened with Disaway?”
Definitely fishing.
“Crapped out,” he said with an aimless shrug. “He came outta that three stall like Man o‟ War and led
the pack all the way around the backstretch; then we come into the clubhouse and all of a sudden he
starts fallin‟ asleep on me. Midnight Star comes by like we was stopped for gas, then half the field
passes us. I guess he just decided to walk home. I was yellin‟ at him just to keep him awake.”
“How‟d he look in the morning workout?”
“Fine. Not too spooky. Ran good. Two-tenths ahead of his usual speed.”
“Well,” Callahan said, “at least he got out of the gate.”
“Sunday was like that. Seems every horse I rode wanted to be someplace else for the day. Well, it‟s
Thoroughbreds for you, like you said.”
His breakfast came. Steak, three eggs, and grits, and he dove in. I wondered how he stayed so small.
Callahan kept fishing.
“You up on Disaway today?”
“Nope. No more. Cot me another ride. Chigger Bite.”
“How come?”
“Me and Smokey had it out. After the race he starts chewin‟ my ass for lettin‟ Disaway out early.
Finally I says, „Hey, it wasn‟t me, it was Mr. Thibideau,‟ and he looks at me like he thinks maybe I‟m
lyin‟ or somethin‟. Who needs that shit anyways? The owner says let him loose at the five-eighths, I
let him loose at the five-eighths.” And he laughed again. “Maybe he thought the seven-eighths pole
was the wire.” He kept talking while he ate. “It ain‟t like it was some big surprise. Hell, we been
talkin‟ about it. Mr. Thibideau wanted to try a change-up, letting him out at the five-eighths „stead of
the stretch, maybe cut a coupla tenths off his time. He just didn‟t have anything left for the stretch.
Anyways, I never argue with the owners.”
“You didn‟t disagree with Thibideau, then?”
“Not out loud. Hell, he comes up just before post time, tells me boot him on the backstretch, and
that‟s what I did. I just figure you want to try a change-up, why do it when you‟re the favourite? I‟d
rather wait until we‟re not on the board—nothin‟ to lose that way.”
“Well, he probably had his reasons.”
“Afterwards he comes up, says he‟s sorry, and gives me a double century, make up for the purse. „I
made a mistake‟ is all he says.”