Дик Фрэнсис - Rat Race

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Rat Race: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Matt Shore, flying for a small air-taxi charter firm, took five passengers on a routine flight to the races — two jockeys, a trainer, an owner, and a friend. At the end of the afternoon he flew them off homewards again, discussing the successes and disasters of their day.
Awaiting them in the summer sky lay a quick extinction, which was avoided by a coincidence, an instinct, a hair’s breadth...
Matt guessed the sudden death had been aimed at one of his passengers: he didn’t know which and he didn’t know why, and he didn’t particularly want to know, he had troubles enough of his own. But gradually, remorselessly, he found himself being sucked in, until in the end the information was forced upon him, and action became necessary for survival.
Dick Francis, with a string of bestsellers (most recently enquiry) to his name, needs no introduction, rat race is a taut, exciting, beautifully planned thriller which will add to his reputation.

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‘Take care of yourself now, Matt,’ joked the Duke, and I smiled and said I would.

The Duke looked at his watch. ‘Good gracious!’ He stood up. ‘Come along now, everybody. Time we went along to the racecourse. And no more excuses, Charles, I insist on you lunching with me.’ To me he explained, ‘Charles very rarely goes to the races. He doesn’t much care for it, do you see? But as the course is so very close...’

Carthy-Todd’s aversion to race meetings was to my mind completely understandable. He wished to remain unseen, anonymous, unrecognisable, just as he’d been all along. Charles would choose which meetings he went to very carefully indeed. He would never, I imagined, turn up without checking with the Duke whether he was going to be there too.

We walked back to the racecourse, the Duke and Carthy-Todd in front, young Matthew and me behind. Young Matthew slowed down a little and said to me in a quiet voice, ‘I say, Matt, have you noticed something strange about Mr Carthy-Todd?’

I glanced at his face. He was half anxious, half puzzled, wanting reassurance.

‘What do you think is strange?’

‘I’ve never seen anyone before with eyes like that.’

Children were incredibly observant. Matthew had seen naturally what I had known to look for.

‘I shouldn’t mention it to him. He might not care for it.’

‘I suppose not.’ He paused. ‘I don’t frightfully like him.’

‘I can see that.’

‘Do you?’

‘No,’ I said.

He nodded in satisfaction. ‘I didn’t think you would. I don’t know why Uncle’s so keen on him. Uncle,’ he added dispassionately, ‘doesn’t understand about people. He thinks everyone is as nice as he is. Which they’re not.’

‘How soon can you become his business manager?’

He laughed. ‘I know all about trustees. I’ve got them. Can’t have this and can’t do that, that’s all they ever say, Mother says.’

‘Does your Uncle have trustees?’

‘No, he hasn’t. Mother’s always beefing on about Uncle not being fit to control all that lucre and one day he’ll invest the lot in a South Sea Bubble. I asked Uncle about it and he just laughed. He told me he has a stockbroker who sees to everything and Uncle just goes on getting richer and when he wants some money for something he just tells the stockbroker and he sells some shares and sends it along. Simple. Mother fusses over nothing. Uncle won’t get into much trouble about money because he knows that he doesn’t know about it, if you see what I mean?’

‘I wouldn’t like him to give too much to Mr Carthy-Todd,’ I said.

He gave me a flashing look of understanding. ‘So that’s what I felt... Do you think it would do any good if I sort of tried to put Uncle off him a bit?’

‘Couldn’t do much harm.’

‘I’ll have a go,’ he said. ‘But he’s fantastically keen on him.’ He thought deeply and came up with a grin. ‘I must say,’ he said, ‘That he has awfully good chocolate orange peel.’

Annie Villars was upset about Kenny Bayst. ‘I went to sec him for a few moments this morning. He’s broken both legs and his face was cut by flying glass. He won’t be riding again before next season, he says. Luckily he’s insured with the Racegoers’ Fund. Sent them a tenner, he told me, so he’s hoping to collect two thousand pounds at least. Marvellous thing, that Fund.’

‘Did you join?’

‘I certainly did. After that bomb. Didn’t know it was Rupert, then, of course. Still, better to do things at once rather than put them off, don’t you agree?’

‘Were Kitch and the stable lads insured too, do you know?’

She nodded. ‘They were all Kitch’s own lads. He’d advised them all to join. Even offered to deduct the premium from their wages bit by bit. Everyone in Newmarket is talking about it, saying how lucky it was. All the stable lads in the town who hadn’t already joined are sending their fivers along in the next few days.’

I hesitated. ‘Did you read about Rupert Tyderman in the Sporting Life ?’

A twinge of regret twisted her face: her mouth for the first time since I had known her took on a soft curve that was not consciously constructed.

‘Poor Rupert... What an end, to be murdered.’

‘There isn’t any doubt, then?’

She shook her head. ‘When I saw the report, I rang the local newspaper down at Kemble... that’s where they found him. He was lying, they said, at the bottom of an embankment near a road bridge over the railway. The local theory is that he could have been brought there by car during the night, and not fallen from a train at all...’ She shook her head in bewilderment. ‘He had one stab wound below his left shoulder-blade, and he had been dead for hours and hours when he was found.’

It took a good deal of lying-in-wait to catch the Duke without Carthy-Todd at his elbow, but I got him in the end.

‘I’ve left my wallet in the Accident Fund office,’ I said. ‘Must have left it on the desk when I paid my premium... Do you think, sir, that you could let me have a key, if you have one, so that I can slip along and fetch it?’

‘My dear chap, of course.’ He produced a small bunch from his pocket and sorted out a bright new Yale. ‘Here you are. That’s the one.’

‘Very kind, sir. I won’t be long.’ I took a step away and then turned back, grinning, making a joke.

‘What happens, sir, if it’s you who gets killed in a car crash? What happens to the Fund then?’

He smiled back reassuringly in a patting-on-the-shoulder avuncular manner. ‘All taken care of, my dear chap. Some of the papers I signed, they dealt with it. The Fund money would be guaranteed from a special arrangement with my estate.’

‘Did Charles see to it?’

‘Naturally. Of course. He understands these things, you know.’

Between the Duke and the main gate a voice behind me crisply shouted.

‘Matt.’

I stopped and turned. It was Colin, hurrying towards me, carrying the saddle from the loser he’d partnered in the first race.

‘Can’t stop more than a second,’ he said. ‘Got to change for the next. You weren’t leaving, were you? Have you seen Nancy?’

‘No. I’ve been looking. I thought... perhaps...’

He shook his head. ‘She’s here. Up there, on the balcony, with Midge.’

I followed where he was looking, and there they were, distant, high up, talking with their heads together, two halves of one whole.

‘Do you know which is Nancy?’ Colin asked.

I said without hesitation, ‘The one on the left.’

‘Most people can’t tell.’

He looked at my expression and said with exasperation, ‘If you feel like that about her, why the bloody hell don’t you let her know? She thinks she made it all up... she’s trying to hide it but she’s pretty unhappy.’

‘She’d have to live on peanuts.’

‘For crying out loud, what does that matter? You can move in with us. We all want you. Midge wants you... and now, not some distant time when you think you can afford it. Time for us is now, this summer. There may not be much after this.’ He hitched the saddle up on his arm and looked back towards the weighing room. ‘I’ll have to go. We’ll have to talk later. I came after you now, though, because you looked as though you were leaving.’

‘I’m coming back soon.’ I turned and walked along with him towards the weighing-room. ‘Colin... I ought to tell someone... you never know...’ He gave me a puzzled glance and in three brief sentences I told him why the Accident Fund was a fraud, how he and the bomb had been used to drum up business, and in what way Carthy-Todd was a fake.

He stopped dead in his tracks. ‘Good God,’ he said. ‘The Fund was such a great idea. What a bloody shame.’

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