Dick Francis's Gamble

Read Dick Francis's Gamble Online

Authors: Felix Francis

Table of Contents
 
 
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)
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Copyright © 2011 by Dick Francis Corporation
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Francis, Felix.
Dick Francis's gamble / Felix Francis.
p. cm.
ISBN : 978-1-101-52925-6
1. Jockeys—Fiction. 2. Investment advisors—Fiction. 3. Horse racing—
Betting—Fiction. 4. Murder—Investigation—Fiction.
I. Francis, Dick. II. Title.
PR6056.R273D
823'.914—dc22
 
 
 
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
 
While the author has made every effort to provide accurate telephone numbers and Internet addresses at the time of publication, neither the publisher nor the author assumes any responsibility for errors, or for changes that occur after publication. Further, the publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or thirdparty websites or their content.

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For my granddaughter
Sienna Rose
With thanks to my cousin
Ned Francis,
financial adviser
 
And the offices of
Calkin Pattinson and Company Ltd
 
And to Debbie,
as always
1
I
was standing right next to Herb Kovak when he was murdered.
Executed
would have been a better word. Shot three times from close range, twice in the heart and once in the face, he was almost certainly dead before he hit the ground, and definitely before the gunman had turned away and disappeared into the Grand National race-day crowd.
The shooting had happened so fast that neither Herb nor I, nor anyone else for that matter, would have had a chance to prevent it. In fact, I hadn't realized what was actually going on until it was over, and Herb was already dead at my feet. I wondered if Herb himself had had the time to comprehend that his life was in danger before the bullets tore into his body to end it.
Probably not, and I found that strangely comforting.
I had liked Herb.
But someone else clearly hadn't.
 
 
T
he murder of Herb Kovak changed everyone's day, not just his.
The police took over the situation with their usual insensitive efficiency, canceling one of the world's major sporting events with just half an hour's notice and requiring the more than sixty thousand frustrated spectators to wait patiently in line for several hours to give their names and addresses.
“But you must have seen his face!”
I was sitting at a table opposite an exasperated police detective inspector in one of the restaurants that had been cleared of its usual clientele and set up as an emergency-incident room.
“I've already told you,” I said. “I wasn't looking at the man's face.”
I thought back once again to those few fatal seconds and all I could remember clearly was the gun.
“So it was a man?” the inspector asked.
“I think so,” I said.
“Was he black or white?”
“The gun was black,” I said. “With a silencer.”
It didn't sound very helpful. Even I could tell that.
“Mr. . . . er.” The detective consulted the notebook on the table. “Foxton. Is there nothing else you can tell us about the murderer?”
“I'm sorry,” I said, shaking my head. “It all happened so quickly.”
He changed his line of questioning. “So how well did you know Mr. Kovak?”
“Well enough,” I said. “We work together. Have done for the past five years or so. I'd say we are work friends.” I paused. “At least we were.”
It was difficult to believe that he was dead.
“What line of work?”
“Financial services,” I said. “We're independent financial advisers.”
I could almost see the detective's eyes glaze over with boredom.
“It may not be as exciting as riding in the Grand National,” I said, “but it's not that bad.”
He looked up at my face. “And have you ridden in the Grand National?” His voice was full of sarcasm, and he was smiling.
“As a matter of fact, I have,” I said. “Twice.”
The smile faded. “Oh,” he said.
Oh, indeed, I thought. “And I won it the second time.”
It was unlike me to talk much about what I now felt was a previous life, and bragging about it was even more uncharacteristic. I silently rebuked myself for my indulgence, but I was getting a little irritated by the policeman's attitude not only towards me but also towards my dead colleague.
He looked down again at his notes.
“Foxton,” he said reading. He looked up. “Not Foxy Foxton?”
“Yes,” I said, although I had long been trying to give up the Foxy nickname, preferring my real name of Nicholas, which I felt was more suited to a serious life in the City.
“Well, well,” said the policeman. “I won a few quid on you.”
I smiled. He'd probably lost a few quid too, but I wasn't going to say so.
“Not riding today, then?”
“No,” I said. “Not for a long time.”
Had it really been eight years, I thought, since I had last ridden in a race? In some ways it felt like only yesterday, but in others it was a lifetime away.
The policeman wrote another line in his notebook.
“So now you're a financial adviser?”
“Yes.”
“Bit of a comedown, wouldn't you say?”
I thought about replying that I believed it was better than being a policeman but decided, in the end, that silence was probably the best policy. Anyway, I tended to agree with him. My whole life had been a bit of a comedown since those heady days of hurling myself over Aintree fences with half a ton of horseflesh between my legs.
“Who do you advise?” he asked.
“Anyone who will pay me,” I said, rather flippantly.
“And Mr. Kovak?”
“Him too,” I said. “We both work for a firm of independent financial advisers in the City.”
“Here in Liverpool?” he asked.
“No,” I said. “The City of London.”
“Which firm?”
“Lyall and Black,” I said. “Our offices are in Lombard Street.”
He wrote it down.
“Can you think of any reason why anyone would want Mr. Kovak dead?”
It was the question I had been asking myself over and over again for the past two hours.
“No,” I said. “Absolutely not. Everyone liked Herb. He was always smiling and happy. He was the life and soul of any party.”
“How long did you say you have known him?” asked the detective.
“Five years. We joined the firm at the same time.”
“I understand he was an American citizen.”
“Yes,” I said. “He came from Louisville, in Kentucky. He used to go back to the States a couple of times a year.”
Everything was written down in the inspector's notebook.
“Was he married?”
“No.”
“Girlfriend?”
“None that I knew of,” I said.
“Were you and he in a gay relationship?” the policeman asked in a deadpan tone of voice, his eyes still on his notes.

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