Dick Francis's Gamble - Felix Francis [121]
I supposed I could have tied the horse to the fence and climbed over, but the location of the deserted horse would then have given away the fact that I had gone, and where, and I feared I would have had Shenington and his mob still on my tail. And I somehow felt safer on the horse because I could outrun those on foot, gun or no gun.
“With that neck, I wouldn’t ride a bike, let alone a horse,” the spinal specialist had said to me all those years ago. Yet here I was on horseback, galloping around in the dark, but I felt completely safe and at home. I just had to make sure I didn’t fall off.
I cantered the horse right along the fence in the hope there might have been a gate. Five feet was too high for any horse to jump, let alone a tired-out hunter chaser that should have been warm in his stable by this time of night. Not that a gate would help much. It would probably be locked, and I couldn’t ask the horse to jump it in the dark.
The pincer arms of the search parties were moving closer together, and if I didn’t move away pretty soon I was in danger of being caught in their trap. I kicked the horse hard, and we galloped back along perimeter fence all the way down to the far northern end of the track and into the extra loop, taking my chances that the horse wouldn’t stumble or put his foot in a rabbit hole.
I was still looking unsuccessfully for an exit through the fence. And I was beginning to think that my only option might be to double right around and try to find a way out through the parking lots, but the searchers were getting closer, and the opportunities for doing that were being closed off by the minute.
The chain-link fence finally gave way to a hedge, but not a nice, low jumpable hedge but a high impenetrable jungle of hawthorn and blackberry. I trotted along its length and finally found a gap in the undergrowth. The horse and I went through the gap and into the field that was used as a helicopter landing pad during the Festival meeting.
I doubled back, putting the hedge between me and my pursuers. By this time, it was an almost completely black night and I didn’t now have the reflected light from the vehicle headlamps to help me. The horse and I moved steadily forward at the walk, the blind leading the blind. The animal beneath me must have been as confused as I was as to where we were going, but he had been trained well and responded easily to my every command.
“Come on, boy,” I said quietly into his ear. “Good boy.”
I could see the lights from the houses in Prestbury village. The hedge must be thinner straight ahead.
Suddenly, I thought I heard a man cough. I gently pulled the reins, and the horse stopped and stood silently. I listened intently in the darkness.
Had I been mistaken?
The man coughed again. Then he called out but in a language I didn’t recognize. He was on the other side of the hedge, but I couldn’t tell exactly how far away. A second man answered, again in a foreign tongue, and he was certainly farther away still.
The men had to be Shenington’s heavies.
I held my breath and prayed that the horse wouldn’t make a noise or jangle the bit in his mouth.
I strained to listen to their conversation and thought I might have heard the nearest man moving, but I was far from sure.
The rain came to my aid.
It had been easing somewhat, but now it returned with a vengeance, falling in heavy drops that ran down my neck. But I didn’t care. The noise of the rain may have prevented me from hearing anything further of the men’s conversation, but, more important, it would also mean that they would be unable to hear me moving on.
I made some fairly gentle clicking noises and gently nudged the horse in the ribs with my foot. “Walk on,” I said to him in his ear.
We eventually came upon a gate and it wasn’t locked.
I dismounted and led the horse through, closing the gate behind us.
A light suddenly came on, flooding the area with brightness