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Authors: Felix Francis

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‘Not at this time,’ Tony said in his official ‘Deputy Director’ tone.

‘Why not?’ I asked, but I already knew the answer.

It was much more convenient for FACSA if everyone believed that both Steffi Dean and Diego Ríos had been murdered by the Irish groom, Patrick Sean Murphy. Public confidence would not be
compromised, as would certainly be the case if it became known that one of the Agency’s own had been responsible. A high-profile trial, and all the media attention it would generate, would
not be very welcome.

‘We may not have secured a conviction,’ Tony said.

‘Surely there’s enough evidence.’

‘The ballistics are inconclusive and it would largely be your word against Bob’s. Could we take the chance? It is sometimes pretty difficult to get a jury to convict even when the
evidence is overwhelming.’

Ask O.J. Simpson’s prosecutor, I thought.

‘So what happens to Bob now?’ I asked.

‘He’s been retired from the service,’ Tony replied. ‘Supposedly because he’s medically unfit, but he knows the true reason. He has effectively been dismissed,
losing his benefits and his pension.’

By benefits he meant government-funded medical insurance for life.

‘Did you question him about warning people of upcoming raids?’

‘We certainly did.’

‘And how about Jason Connor? Couldn’t you at least arrest him for that?’

There was a short silence.

‘We decided that such an arrest would not be in the best interests of the Agency.’

‘Who is
we
?’ I asked.

‘The Director and I.’

‘Why?’

‘Other than the collection of cash from George Raworth at Belmont Park on the day Steffi Dean was killed, we had no real evidence of racketeering and absolutely nothing concerning the
death of Jason Connor. So we cut a deal.’

‘What deal?’

‘That Bob would leave the agency and face no criminal charges but, in return, he would tell us everything that had been going on.’

Tony paused and I waited patiently for him to continue.

‘Over the years Bob had set up quite an operation with nearly a hundred trainers and breeders. Anyone that he came into contact with during his normal agency work.’ Tony laughed.
‘He effectively sold them insurance. They paid him monthly premiums on the understanding that he would warn them if there was a planned FACSA raid, or even if any out-of-competition drug
testing was due to take place at their stables.’

‘How much was this monthly premium?’ I asked.

‘Not a lot. It depended on the trainer, but it was always less than a hundred dollars, sometimes only fifty. Not enough for anyone to worry about.’

But even fifty dollars a month was six hundred a year. Times that by a hundred trainers and the sum would soon add up.

‘Was Hayden Ryder one of the trainers who paid?’

‘Yes,’ Tony said.

So that was why Ryder had been angry enough to go for Bob with a pitchfork. It had been his bad luck that Trudi Harding had seen it and shot him.

‘What did Bob say about Jason Connor?’ I asked.

‘He refused to speak about him. He knew he was on firm ground as the Maryland Medical Examiner had already declared that Connor’s death was an accident.’

‘But you still don’t believe it?’

‘No,’ Tony said. ‘There was something rather cocky about Bob Dean’s demeanour when I was questioning him about it, as if he knew we knew but there was nothing we could do
about it.’

And there wasn’t.

‘Where did the money go?’ I asked. ‘That sort of cash doesn’t appear anywhere on Bob’s bank statements.’

I knew because I’d checked.

‘His elderly mother has dementia,’ Tony said, ‘and Bob has power of attorney over her affairs. It all went directly into her bank account.’

‘But then where?’

‘The mother is in a nursing home. The money paid for her care. Bob claims that was why he set the scheme up in the first place but he was making more than was required. He withdrew the
balance in cash.’

‘So why were he and Steffi trying to get ten grand out of George Raworth?’

‘Raworth was not one of his regular clients and Bob claims it was Steffi’s idea to get some quick extra. It seems she wasn’t happy that most of the other money went to the
mother.’

I bet she wasn’t. Steffi had been the greedy one. It had been their undoing.

‘Did Bob give you the names of all the trainers and breeders who were paying him?’

‘That was part of the deal.’

‘What are you going to do to them?’ I asked.

‘There’s not much we can do. It’s hardly illegal to help pay for an old lady’s nursing care. According to Bob, that’s what they were told – a
contribution
, he called it.’

‘You could always send in the drug testers unannounced.’

Tony laughed. ‘We already have plans to do just that.’

I looked out of the car window as we sped westward along the DC Beltway towards Fairfax. Washington was waking up and the roads were already busy.

‘I heard Bob and Steffi talking when I was hiding from them,’ I said. ‘Steffi was expecting Bob to leave his wife and marry her. I was amazed when he shot her.’

‘We interviewed Mrs Wade yesterday. She told us that those plans had been put on hold. Bob had promised her to give their marriage another chance, for the sake of their daughters. Not that
it will survive now. She was apoplectic with rage when we told her that Bob had spent two nights in a New York hotel with Steffi Dean earlier in the week. He’d told his wife he was on an
official agency assignment, when he’d actually taken three days of his annual vacation.’

‘Did she know about his other little sideline?’

‘She said not. She thought the nursing home was paid for by Medicare. She is absolutely furious with Bob about that too.’

So Bob Wade had lost his job, his benefits, his pension, his marriage and his right foot, but not his liberty.

Was it enough?

It seemed it would have to be.

I flew back overnight to London on a British Airways super-jumbo.

‘Mr Hinkley, you’ve been upgraded to first class,’ said the man behind the check-in desk.

‘Thank you,’ I said, and wondered if Tony had anything to do with it. I expected so. For someone who could arrange a Green Card in twenty-four hours and spirit an inmate out of
Rikers Island, fixing an upgrade would have been child’s play.

I relaxed into my first-class seat with a glass of chilled champagne and thought about my future.

Would I stay with the BHA?

I wasn’t sure.

Paul Maldini had been keen to have me back –
stay for as long as you need, provided you come back eventually
.

I’d been away for over five weeks – five weeks of excitement and danger. Would I be able to settle back into my old routine?

I put off the decision by taking a week’s leave, spending much of it with my sister. The renewed chemo had made Faye feel ill again and her skin looked pale and almost
transparent when I first went to see her. But her spirits were high.

‘It is good news,’ she said, forcing a wan smile. ‘My doctor thinks we caught it just in time.’

Good, I thought. But both of us knew it would be back, and that we wouldn’t always manage to catch it
just in time
.

The following week I went back to work at BHA headquarters in High Holborn.

‘Had a good holiday?’ asked one of the admin staff.

‘Great, thanks,’ I said.

I went along the corridor to my office and sat down at my desk.

There were hundreds of unopened emails in my inbox. I sighed and set to work replying to some of the most urgent.

At noon, the phone rang.

‘Hello,’ I said, answering.

‘Hi, Jeff,’ said a familiar voice. ‘How are things?’

‘Great, Tony, thanks.’

‘Did you see the Belmont on Saturday?’

‘Sure did,’ I replied. ‘It was on late here.’

I had watched the race live on television. Fire Point, now trained by Sidney Austin and ridden by Jimmy Robertson, had won the Belmont Stakes by five lengths from Amphibious, going away.

‘Makes you think, eh?’ Tony said.

‘It sure does.’

The irony was not lost on either of us that maybe, just maybe, Fire Point had been good enough all along to win the Triple Crown without the need for George Raworth and Charlie Hern to nobble
the opposition. Perhaps they would then have deserved the kudos and won the five-million-dollar trainer bonus fair and square. As it was, they were facing financial ruin due to the expected
lawsuits from the owners of the five EVA-infected horses, plus a long stretch on Rikers Island for fraud and animal cruelty.

‘Any other news?’ I asked.

‘Angie Wade has officially filed for divorce.’

She who would take Bob for everything she could.

‘Anything else?’

‘Yes. One other thing. I thought you might be interested in the following piece that appeared in today’s
New York Times
.’

He read it out to me:

Irishman Patrick Sean Murphy, aged 33, indicted and awaiting trial for the first-degree murders of fellow Belmont Park groom Diego Manuel Ríos and Federal
Special Agent Stephanie Dean, was found hanged in his cell at Sing Sing Prison, Sunday morning, in a suspected suicide. Murphy was pronounced dead at the scene. Police sources confirm that no
one else is being sought in connection with the murders.

But you should never believe anything you read in the newspapers.

‘So Patrick Sean Murphy is officially no more,’ I said. ‘Is the case now closed?’

‘Indeed it is,’ Tony replied. ‘How are you settling back into life as Jefferson Roosevelt Hinkley?’

‘I’m working on it.’

Also by Felix Francis

GAMBLE

BLOODLINE

REFUSAL

DAMAGE

FRONT RUNNER

Books by Dick Francis and Felix Francis

DEAD HEAT

SILKS

EVEN MONEY

CROSSFIRE

Books by Dick Francis

THE SPORT OF QUEENS

(Autobiography)

DEAD CERT

NERVE

FOR KICKS

ODDS AGAINST

FLYING FINISH

BLOOD SPORT

FORFEIT

ENQUIRY

RAT RACE

BONECRACK

SMOKESCREEN

SLAY-RIDE

KNOCK DOWN

HIGH STAKES

IN THE FRAME

RISK

TRAIL RUN

WHIP HAND

REFLEX

TWICE SHY

BANKER

THE DANGER

PROOF

BREAK IN

LESTER: The Official

Biography

BOLT

HOT MONEY

THE EDGE

STRAIGHT

LONGSHOT

COMEBACK

DRIVING FORCE

DECIDER

WILD HORSES

COME TO GRIEF

TO THE HILT

10-LB PENALTY

FIELD OF 13

SECOND WIND

SHATTERED

UNDER ORDERS

First published in Great Britain by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd, 2016

A CBS COMPANY

Copyright © Felix Francis, 2016

This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.

No reproduction without permission.

® and © 1997 Simon & Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved.

The right of Felix Francis to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

Simon & Schuster UK Ltd

1st Floor

222 Gray’s Inn Road

London wc1x 8hb

www.simonandschuster.co.uk

Simon & Schuster Australia, Sydney

Simon & Schuster India, New Delhi

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

Hardback ISBN: 978-1-4711-5547-5

Trade Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4711-5548-2

eBook ISBN: 978-1-4711-5550-5

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to
actual people living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

Typeset in Sabon by M Rules

Printed and bound by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY

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