the Redbury Stakes, and to get longer prices for
anything you may like to put on between now and tomorrow afternoon.
Come to the stables and I'll tell you. But first, is there a place where we
may command a view of the ground behind the stables without being
seen?"
"Yes, there's a ventilation grating at the back of each stall."
"Good! Then we'll watch from Hamid's stall, which will be empty.
Select your most wooden-faced and most careful boy, and send him out
behind the stable with Hamid at two o'clock to the moment. Put the
horse in a full suit of clothes -- it is necessary to cover up that white
star - and tell the lad he must lead it up and down slowly for twenty
yards or so. I rather expect the red-bearded man will be coming along
between two o'clock and half-past two. You will understand that Hamid
is to be Janissary for the occasion. You must drill your boy to appear a
bit of a fool, and to overcome his stable education sufficiently to
chatter freely -- so long as it is the proper chatter. The man may ask the
horse's name, or he may not. Anyway, the boy mustn't forget it is
Janissary he is leading. You have an odd fad, you must know (and the
boy must know it too) in the matter of training. This ridiculous fad is to
have your colt walked up and down for half an hour exactly at two
o'clock every afternoon, and then given a handful of malt as he comes
in. The boy can talk as freely about this as he pleases, and also about
the colt's chances, and anything else he likes; and he is to let the
stranger come up, talk to the horse, pat him in short, to do as he pleases.
Is that plain?"
"Perfectly. You have found out something about this red-bearded chap
then?"
"Oh, yes -- it's Naylor the bookmaker, as a matter of fact, with a false
beard."
"What! Naylor?"
"Yes. You see the idea, of course. Once Naylor thinks he has nobbled
the favourite he will lay it to any extent, and the odds will get longer.
Then you can make him pay for his little games."
"Well, yes, of course. Though I wouldn't put too much with Naylor in
any case. He's not a big man, and he might break and lose me the lot.
But I can get it out of the others."
"Just so. You'd better see about schooling your boy now, I think. I'll tell
you more presently."
A minute or two before two o'clock Dorrington and Telfer, mounted on
a pair of steps, were gazing through the ventilation grating of Hamid's
stall, while the colt, clothed completely, was led around. Then
Dorrington described his operations of the previous evening.
"No matter what he may think of my tale," he said "Naylor will be
pretty sure to come. He has tried to bribe your stablemen, and has been
baffled. Every attempt to get hold of the boy in charge of Janissary has
failed, and he will be glad to clutch at any shadow of a chance to save
his money now. Once he is here, and the favourite apparently at his
mercy, the thing is done. By the way, I expect your nephew's little
present to the man you sacked was a fairly innocent one. No doubt he
merely asked the man whether Janissary was keeping well, and was
thought good enough to win, for I find he is backing it pretty heavily.
Naylor came afterwards, with much less innocent intentions, but
fortunately you were down on him in time. Several considerations
induced me to go to Naylor's room. In the first place, I have heard
rather shady tales of his doings on one or two occasions, and he did not
seem a sufficiently big man to stand to lose a great deal over your horse.
Then, when I saw him, I observed that his figure bore a considerable
resemblance to that of the man you had described, except as regards the
red beard and the spectacles -- articles easily enough assumed, and,
indeed, often enough used by the scum of the ring whose trade is
welshing. And, apart from these considerations, here, at any rate, was
one man who had an interest in keeping your colt from winning, and
here was his room waiting for me to explore. So I explored it, and the
card turned up trumps."
As he was speaking, the stable-boy, a stolid-looking youngster, was
leading Hamid back and forth on the turf before their eyes.
"There's somebody," said Dorrington suddenly, "over in that clump of
trees. Yes -- our man, sure enough. I felt pretty sure of him after you
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