Dick Francis's Gamble - Felix Francis [132]
“Have you managed to identify the dead gunman as Dimitar Petrov?” I asked.
“We’re still working on it,” he said. “It seems that both Dimitar and Petrov are very common names in Bulgaria.”
“Can’t Uri Joram in Brussels help you?”
“Apparently, he denies any knowledge of anything,” he said. “Claims his e-mail address must have been used by others.”
“Why am I not surprised?” I said. “How about Shenington’s heavies at Cheltenham?”
“Not a sniff,” he said. “I expect they vanished into the night as soon as their boss ended up in the hospital.”
It reminded me of Billy Searle, who was now in fact out of the hospital, recuperating at home with the fixator on his broken leg. Officially, he was still denying any knowledge of who had knocked him off his bicycle, but he had confirmed to me privately that the nob responsible had indeed been Viscount Shenington. “I’m so glad the f-ing bastard got what was coming to him” had been his exact words when I’d told him of Shenington’s medical condition. And he had giggled uncontrollably and repeatedly punched the air.
The chief inspector and I rejoined the others.
“Rosemary says she’s lost her job,” said Claudia, sounding affronted on her behalf.
“Everyone at Lyall and Black have lost their jobs,” said Rosemary McDowd with bitterness.
Her tone also implied an accusation, and I took it to be towards me. Why was it, I wondered, that the blame often fell not on the wrongdoers but on the person who exposed them?
It wasn’t me who Mrs. McDowd should blame for the demise of Lyall & Black. It was Patrick Lyall, and maybe Gregory Black too, for not being sufficiently diligent in his management of the Roberts Family Trust.
And I surely had more right to be angry with her than vice versa.
After all, it had been she who had told Patrick that I’d been staying at my mother’s house, which had then allowed him and Shenington to send a gunman there to try to kill me.
“So what are you going to do now?” I asked her.
“I have absolutely no idea,” she said flatly. “How about you?”
“I thought I might try my hand at working in the movies or in the theater,” I said. “I’ve written to a few companies, offering my services as a funding specialist to help them find the production money for films and plays. I think it looks quite interesting.”
“But isn’t that a bit of a gamble?” she said.
I smiled at her.
With ovarian cancer, life itself was a bit of a gamble.
Heads you win, tails you die.
BY DICK FRANCIS AND FELIX FRANCIS
Crossfire
Even Money
Silks
Dead Heat
BY DICK FRANCIS
Under Orders
Shattered
Second Wind
Field of Thirteen
10 Lb. Penalty
To the Hilt
Come to Grief
Wild Horses
Decider
Driving Force
Comeback
Longshot
Straight
The Edge
Hot Money
Bolt
A Jockey’s Life
Break In
Proof
The Danger
Banker
Twice Shy
Reflex
Whip Hand
Trial Run
Risk
In the Frame
High Stakes
Knockdown
Slay Ride
Smokescreen
Bonecrack
Rat Race
Enquiry
Forfeit
Blood Sport
Flying Finish
Odds Against
For Kicks
Nerve
Dead Cert
The Sport of Queens
(Autobiography)