Enquiry - By Dick Francis Page 0,30

pick locks, fights or pockets. Certainly not Oakley’s.

Oakley and Didi. They were old at the game. They’d invented the rules. Oakley and Didi were senior league.

How did anyone get in touch with Oakley, if they needed his brand of service?

He could scarcely advertise.

Someone had to know about him.

I thought it over for a while, sitting in my car in the car park wondering what to do next. There was only one person I knew who could put his finger on the pulse of Birmingham if he wanted to, and the likelihood was that in my present circumstances he wouldn’t want to.

However…

I started the car, threaded a way through the one way streets, and found a slot in the crowded park behind the Great Stag Hotel. Inside, the ritual of Business Lunch was warming up, the atmosphere thickening nicely with the smell of alcohol, the resonance of fruity voices, the haze of cigars. The Great Stag Hotel attracted almost exclusively a certain grade of wary, prosperous, level-headed businessmen needing a soft background for hard options, and it attracted them because the landlord, Teddy Dewar, was the sort of man himself.

I found him in the bar, talking to two others almost indistinguishable from him in their dark grey suits, white shirts, neat maroon ties, seventeen-inch necks and thirty-eight-inch waists.

A faint glaze came over his professionally noncommittal expression when he caught sight of me over their shoulders. A warned off jockey didn’t rate too high with him. Lowered the tone of the place, no doubt.

I edged through to the bar on one side of him and ordered whisky.

‘I’d be grateful for a word with you,’ I said.

He turned his head a fraction in my direction, and without looking at me directly answered, ‘Very well. In a few minutes.’

No warmth in the words. No ducking of the unwelcome situation, either. He went on talking to the two men about the dicky state of oil shares, and eventually smoothly disengaged himself and turned to me.

‘Well, Kelly…’ His eyes were cool and distant, waiting to see what I wanted before showing any real feeling.

‘Will you lunch with me?’ I made it casual.

His surprise was controlled. ‘I thought…’

‘I may be banned,’ I said, ‘But I still eat.’

He studied my face. ‘You mind.’

‘What do you expect…? I’m sorry it shows.’

He said neutrally, ‘There’s a muscle in your jaw… Very well: if you don’t mind going in straightaway.’

We sat against the wall at an inconspicuous table and chose beef cut from a roast on a trolley. While he ate his eyes checked the running of the dining-room, missing nothing. I waited until he was satisfied that all was well and then came briefly to the point.

‘Do you know anything about a man called David Oakley? He’s an enquiry agent. Operates from an office about half a mile from here.’

‘David Oakley? I can’t say I’ve ever heard of him.’

‘He manufactured some evidence which swung things against me at the Stewards’ Enquiry on Monday.’

‘Manufactured?’ There was delicate doubt in his voice.

‘Oh yes,’ I sighed. ‘I suppose it sounds corny, but I really was not guilty as charged. But someone made sure it looked like it.’ I told him about the photograph of money in my bedroom.

‘And you never had this money?’

‘I did not. And the note supposed to be from Cranfield was a forgery. But how could we prove it?’

He thought it over.

‘You can’t.’

‘Exactly,’ I agreed.

‘This David Oakley who took the photograph… I suppose you got no joy from him.’

‘No joy is right.’

‘I don’t understand precisely why you’ve come to me.’ He finished his beef and laid his knife and fork tidily together. Waiters appeared like genii to clear the table and bring coffee. He waited still noncommittally while I paid the bill.

‘I expect it is too much to ask,’ I said finally. ‘After all, I’ve only stayed here three or four times, I have no claim on you personally for friendship or help… and yet, there’s no one else I know who could even begin to do what you could… if you will.’

‘What?’ he said succinctly.

‘I want to know how people are steered towards David Oakley, if they want some evidence faked. He as good as told me he is quite accustomed to do it. Well… how does he get his clients? Who recommends him? I thought that among all the people you know, you might think of someone who could perhaps pretend he wanted a job done… or pretend he had a friend who wanted a job done… and

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