Read Murder at the Racetrack Online

Authors: Otto Penzler

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

Murder at the Racetrack (2 page)

Julie Smith has written twenty mystery novels, including five about a San Francisco lawyer, Rebecca Schwartz, who made her
debut in
Death Turns a Trick,
and nine about Skip Langdon, a female New Orleans cop who was the heroine of the 1991 Edgar-winning
New Orleans Mourning.

Scott Wolven has had stories selected for
Best American Mystery Stories of the Year
for four consecutive years—more appearances than any writer aside from Joyce Carol Oates. His first book, the short story
collection
Controlled Burn,
was published in 2004 by Scribner.

Now we’re at the post and the bugler is raising the horn to his lips, so get ready for a great ride—and some terrifying moments
as
Murder at the Racetrack
awaits.

—Otto Penzler

New York, July 2005

Lawrence Block

S
o who do you like in the third?”

Keller had to hear the question a second time before he realized it was meant for him. He turned, and a little guy in a Mets
warm-up jacket was standing there, a querulous expression on his lumpy face.

Who did he like in the third? He hadn’t been paying any attention, and was stuck for a response. This didn’t seem to bother
the guy, who answered the question himself.

“The Two horse is odds-on, so you can’t make any money betting on him. And the Five horse might have an outside chance, but
he never finished well on turf. The Three, he’s okay at five furlongs, but at this distance? So I got to say I agree with
you.”

Keller hadn’t said a word. What was there to agree with?

“You’re like me,” the fellow went on. “Not like one of these degenerates, has to bet every race, can’t go five minutes without
some action. Me, sometimes I’ll come here, spend the whole day, not put two dollars down the whole time. I just like to breathe
some fresh air and watch those babies run.”

Keller, who hadn’t intended to say anything, couldn’t help himself. He said, “Fresh air?”

“Since they gave the smokers a room of their own,” the little man said, “it’s not so bad in here. Excuse me, I see somebody
I oughta say hello to.”

He walked off, and the next time Keller noticed him the guy was at the ticket window, placing a bet. Fresh air, Keller thought.
Watch those babies run. It sounded good, until you took note of the fact that those babies were out at Belmont, running around
a track in the open air, while Keller and the little man and sixty or eighty other people were jammed into a midtown storefront,
watching the whole thing on television.

Keller, holding a copy of the
Racing Form,
looked warily around the OTB parlor. It was on Lexington at Forty-fifth Street, just up from Grand Central, and not much
more than a five-minute walk from his First Avenue apartment, but this was his first visit. In fact, as far as he could tell,
it was the first time he had ever noticed the place. He must have walked past it hundreds if not thousands of times over the
years, but he’d somehow never registered it, which showed the extent of his interest in off-track betting.

Or on-track betting, or any betting at all. Keller had been to the track three times in his entire life. The first time he’d
placed a couple of small bets—two dollars here, five dollars there. His horses had run out of the money, and he’d felt stupid.
The other times he hadn’t even put a bet down.

He’d been to gambling casinos on several occasions, generally work related, and he’d never felt comfortable there. It was
clear that a lot of people found the atmosphere exciting, but as far as Keller was concerned it was just sensory overload.
All that noise, all those flashing lights, all those people chasing all that money. Keller, feeding a slot machine or playing
a hand of blackjack to fit in, just wanted to go to his room and lie down.

Well, he thought, people were different. A lot of them clearly got something out of gambling. What some of them got, to be
sure, was the attention of Keller or somebody like him. They’d lost money they couldn’t pay, or stolen money to gamble with,
or had found some other way to make somebody seriously unhappy with them. Enter Keller, and, sooner rather than later, exit
the gambler.

For most gamblers, though, it was a hobby, a harmless pastime. And, just because Keller couldn’t figure out what they got
out of it, that didn’t mean there was nothing there. Keller, looking around the OTB parlor at all those woulda-coulda-shoulda
faces, knew there was nothing feigned about their enthusiasm. They were really into it, whatever it was.

And, he thought, who was he to say their enthusiasm was misplaced? One man’s meat, after all, was another man’s
pots-son.
These fellows, all wrapped up in
Racing Form
gibberish, would be hard put to make sense out of his Scott catalog. If they caught a glimpse of Keller, hunched over one
of his stamp albums, a magnifying glass in one hand and a pair of tongs in the other, they’d most likely figure he was out
of his mind. Why play with little bits of perforated paper when you could bet money on horses?

“They’re off!”

And so they were. Keller looked at the wall-mounted television screen and watched those babies run.

•    •    •

It started with stamps.

He collected worldwide, from the first postage stamp, Great Britain’s Penny Black and Two-Penny Blue of 1840, up to shordy
after the end of World War II. (Just when he stopped depended upon the country. He collected most countries through 1949,
but his British Empire issues stopped at 1952, with the death of George VI. The most recent stamp in his collection was over
fifty years old.)

When you collected the whole world, your albums held spaces for many more stamps than you would ever be able to acquire. Keller
knew he would never completely fill any of his albums, and he found this not frustrating but comforting. No matter how long
he lived or how much money he got, he would always have more stamps to look for. You tried to fill in the spaces, of course—that
was the point—but it was the trying that brought you pleasure, not the accomplishment.

Consequently, he never absolutely had to have any particular stamp. He shopped carefully, and he chose the stamps he liked,
and he didn’t spend more than he could afford. He’d saved money over the years, he’d even reached a point where he’d been
thinking about retiring, but when he got back into stamp collecting, his hobby gradually ate up his retirement fund—which,
all things considered, was fine with him. Why would he want to retire? If he retired, he’d have to stop buying stamps.

As it was, he was in a perfect position. He was never desperate for money, but he could always find a use for it. If Dot came
up with a whole string of jobs for him, he wound up putting a big chunk of the proceeds into his stamp collection. If business
slowed down, no problem—he’d make small purchases from the dealers who shipped him stamps on approval, send some small checks
to others who mailed him their monthly lists, but hold off on anything substantial until business picked up.

It worked fine. Until the Bulger & Calthorpe auction catalog came along and complicated everything.

Bulger & Calthorpe were stamp auctioneers based in Omaha. They advertised regularly in
Linn’s
and the other stamp publications, and traveled extensively to examine collectors’ holdings. Three or four times a year they
would rent a hotel suite in downtown Omaha and hold an auction, and for a few years now Keller had been receiving their well-illustrated
catalogs. Their catalog featured an extensive collection of France and French colonies, and Keller leafed through it on the
off-chance that he might find himself in Omaha around that time. He was thinking of something else when he hit the first page
of color photographs, and whatever it was he forgot it forever.

Martinique #2. And, right next to it, Martinique #17.

•    •    •

On the screen, the Two horse led wire to wire, winning by four and a half lengths. “Look at that,” the little man said, once
again at Keller’s elbow. “What did I tell you? Pays three-fucking-forty for a two-dollar ticket. Where’s the sense in that?”

“Did you bet him?”

“I didn’t bet on him,” the man said, “and I didn’t bet against him. What I had, I had the Eight horse to place, which is nothing
but a case of getting greedy, because look what he did, will you? He came in third, right behind the Five horse, so if I bet
him to show, or if I semi-wheeled the Trifecta, playing a Two-Five-Eight and a Two-Eight-Five…”

Woulda-coulda-shoulda, thought Keller.

•    •    •

He’d spend half an hour with the Bulger & Calthorpe catalog, reading the descriptions of the two Martinique lots, seeing what
else was on offer, and returning more than once for a further look at Martinique #2 and Martinique #17. He interrupted himself
to check the balance in his bank account, frowned, pulled out the album that ran from Leeward Islands to Netherlands, opened
it to Martinique, and looked first at the couple hundred stamps he had and then at the two empty spaces, spaces designed to
hold—what else?—Martinique #2 and Martinique #17.

He closed the album but didn’t put it away, not yet, and he picked up the phone and called Dot.

“I was wondering,” he said, “if anything came in.”

“Like what, Keller?”

“like work,” he said.

“Was your phone off the hook?”

“No,” he said. “Did you try to call me?”

“If I had,” she said, “I’d have reached you, since your phone wasn’t off the hook. And if a job came in I’d have called, the
way I always do. But instead you called me.”

“Right.”

“Which leads me to wonder why.”

“I could use the work,” he said. “That’s all.”

“You worked when? A month ago?”

“Closer to two.”

“You took a little trip, went like clockwork, smooth as silk. Client paid me and I paid you, and if that’s not silken clockwork
I don’t know what is. Say, is there a new woman in the picture, Keller? Are you spending serious money on earrings again?”

“Nothing like that.”

“Then why would you… Keller, it’s stamps, isn’t it?”

“I could use a few dollars,” he said. “That’s all.“

” So you decided to be proactive and call me. Well, I’d be proactive myself, but who am I gonna call? We can’t go looking
for our kind of work, Keller. It has to come to us.”

“I know that.”

“We ran an ad once, remember? And remember how it worked out?” He remembered, and made a face. “So we’ll wait,” she said,
“until something comes along. You want to help it a little on a metaphysical level, try thinking proactive thoughts.”

•    •    •

There was a horse in the fourth race named Going Postal. That didn’t have anything to do with stamps, Keller knew, but was
a reference to the propensity of disgruntled postal employees to exercise their Second Amendment rights by bringing a gun
to work, often with dramatic results. Still, the name was guaranteed to catch the eye of a philatelist.

“What about the Six horse? ” Keller asked the little man, who consulted in turn the
Racing Form
and the tote board on the television.

“Finished in the money three times in his last five starts,” he reported, “but now he’s moving up in class. Likes to come
from behind, and there’s early speed here, because the Two horse and the Five horse both like to get out in front. ” There
was more that Keller couldn’t follow, and then the man said, “Morning line had him at twelve-to-one, and he’s up to eighteen-to-one
now, so the good news is he’ll pay a nice price, but the bad news is nobody thinks he’s got much of a chance.”

Keller got in line. When it was his turn, he bet two dollars on Going Postal to win.

•    •    •

Keller didn’t know much about Martinique beyond the fact that it was a French possession in the West Indies, and he knew the
postal authorities had stopped issuing special stamps for the place a while ago. It was now officially a department of France,
and used regular French stamps. The French did that to avoid being called colonialists. By designating Martinique a part of
France, the same as Normandy or Provence, they obscured the fact that the island was full of black people who worked in the
fields, fields that were owned by white people who lived in Paris.

Keller had never been to Martinique—or to France, as far as that went—and had no special interest in the place. It was a funny
thing about stamps; you didn’t need to be interested in a country to be interested in the country’s stamps. And he couldn’t
say what was so special about the stamps of Martinique, except that one way or another he had accumulated quite a few of them,
and that made him seek out more, and now, remarkably, he had all but two.

The two he lacked were among the colony’s first issues, created by surcharging stamps originally printed for general use in
France’s overseas empire. The first, #2 in the Scott catalog, was a twenty-centime stamp surcharged “MARTINIQUE” and “5 c”
in black. The second, #17, was similar: “MARTINIQUE / 15c” on a four-centime stamp.

According to the catalog, #17 was worth $7,500 mint, $7,000 used. #2 was listed at $11,000, mint or used. The listings were
in italics, which was the catalog’s way of indicating that the value was difficult to determine precisely.

Keller bought most of his stamps at around half the Scott valuation. Stamps with defects went much cheaper, and stamps that
were particularly fresh and well centered could command a premium. With a true rarity, however, at a well-publicized auction,
it was very hard to guess what price might be realized. Bulger & Calthorpe described #2—it was lot #2144 in their sales catalog—as
“mint with part OG, F-VF, the nicest specimen we’ve seen of this genuine rarity.” The description of #17—lot #215 3—was almost
as glowing. Both stamps were accompanied by Philatelic Foundation certificates attesting that they were indeed what they purported
to be. The auctioneers estimated that #2 would bring $15,000, and pegged the other at $10,000.

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