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Second Wind

Dick Francis




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  EPILOGUE

  “A FUN ROMP.”

  —The San Francisco Examiner

  “SMOOTH AND INTELLIGENT.” -Publishers Weekly

  SECOND WIND

  TV meteorologist Perry Stuart is used to predicting drab periods of English drizzle with the obligatory heavy rain and sunshine to follow. Never before has he witnessed the catastrophic power of a giant Caribbean storm ... until a fellow forecaster offers him a hurricane-chasing ride in a small plane as a vacation diversion. But when the diversion turns tragic and the plane is downed, Stuart barely escapes with his life.

  But he can’t escape what he saw on the island—and if the people who’ve tracked him back to England have their way, Stuart will have a zero-percent chance of survival ...

  “Page-turning suspense.”

  — The San Diego Union-Tribune

  “Francis does a masterly job.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  RAVE REVIEWS FOR DICK FRANCIS

  “It’s either hard or impossible to read Mr. Francis without growing pleased with yourself. not only the thrill of vicarious competence imparted by the company of his heroes, but also the lore you collect as you go, feel like a field trip with the perfect guide.”

  —The New York Times Book Review

  “One of the most reliable mystery writers working today ... Francis’s secret weapons are his protagonists. They are the kind of people you want for friends.”—Detroit News and Free Press

  “[Francis] has the uncanny ability to turn out simply plotted yet charmingly addictive mysteries.”—The Wall Street Journal

  “A rare and magical talent ... who never writes the same story twice ... Few writers have maintained such a high standard of excellence for as long as Dick Francis.”

  —The San Diego Union-Tribune

  “Each Francis novel seems to be his best.”

  —The Sunday Oklahoman

  “[The] master of crime fiction and equine thrills.” —Newsday

  “Few things are more convincing than Dick Francis at a full gallop.” —Chicago Tribune

  “Francis just gets better and better...It can’t be as easy as he makes it look, or all mystery writers would be as addictive.”

  —The Charlotte Observer

  “After writing dozens of thrillers, Dick Francis always retains a first-novel freshness.”—The Indianapolis Star

  “He writes about the basic building blocks of life—obligation, honor, love, courage, and pleasure. Those discussions come disguised in adventure novels so gripping that they cry out to be read in one gulp—then quickly reread to savor the details skipped in the first gallop through the pages.”—Houston Chronicle

  “Dick Francis stands head and shoulders above the rest.”

  —Ottawa Citizen

  Fiction by Dick Francis

  DEAD HEAT

  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

  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

  Anthology

  WIN, PLACE, OR SHOW

  Nonfiction

  A JOCKEY’S LIFE

  THE SPORT OF QUEENS

  THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Group (USA) Inc. 375 Hudson StreetNew York, New York 10014, USA

  Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada

  (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)

  Penguin Books Ltd., 80 Strand, London WC2R ORL, England

  Penguin Group Ireland, 25 St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd.)

  Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia

  (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty. Ltd.)

  Penguin Books India Pvt. Ltd., 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi—i 10 017, India

  Penguin Group (NZ), Cnr. Airborne and Rosedale Roads, Albany, Auckland 1310, New Zealand

  (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd.)

  Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty.) Ltd., 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196,

  South Africa

  Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R ORL, England

  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, business

  establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  SECOND WIND

  A Berkley Book / published by arrangement with the author

  PRINTING HISTORY

  Jove mass-market edition /October 2000

  Berkley mass-market edition / November 2005

  Copyright © 1999 by Dick Francis.

  The Edgar® name is a registered service mark of the Mystery Writers of America, Inc.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form

  without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in

  violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

  For information, address: The Berkley Publishing Group,

  a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.,

  375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.

  eISBN : 978-1-101-00722-8

  BERKLEY®

  Berkley Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group,

  a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.,

  375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.

  BERKLEY is a registered trademark of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  The “B” design is a trademark belonging to Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  http://us.penguingroup.com

  My sincere thanks to

  JOHN KETTLEY

  Meteorologist

  FELIX FRANCIS

  Physicist

  MERRICK FRANCIS

  Horseman

  and

  NORMA JEAN BENNET

  ETHEL SMITH

  FRANK ROULSTONE

  CAROLINE GREEN

  ALAN GRIFFIN

  ANDY HIBBERT

  PILAR BUSH GORDON

  STEVE PICKERING

  and

  THE CAYMAN ISLANDS

  NATIONAL ARCHIVE

  PROLOGUE

  Delirium brings comfort to t
he dying. I had lived in an ordered world. Salary had mattered, and timetables. My grandmother belonged there with her fears.

  “But isn’t there a risk?” she asked.

  You bet your life there’s a risk.

  “No,” I said. “No risk.”

  “Surely flying into a hurricane must be risky?”

  “I’ll come back safe,” I said.

  But now, near dead as dammit, I tumbled like a rag-doll piece of flotsam in towering gale-driven seas that sucked unimaginable tons of water from the deeps and hurled them along in liquid mountains faster than a Derby gallop. Sometimes the colossal waves swept me inexorably with them. Sometimes they buried me until my agonized lungs begged the ultimate relief of inhaling anything, even water, when only air would keep the engine turning.

  I’d swallowed gagging amounts of Caribbean salt.

  It had been night for hours, with no gleam anywhere. I was losing all perception of which way was up. Which way was air. My arms and legs had bit by bit stopped working. An increasingly out-of-order brain had begun seeing visions that shimmered and played in colors inside my head.

  I could see my dry-land grandmother clearly. Her wheelchair. Her silver shoes. Her round anxious eyes and her miserable foreboding.

  “Don’t go, Perry. It gives me the heebie-jeebies.”

  Whoever listens to grandmothers.

  When she spoke in my head, her mouth was out of sync with her voice.

  I’m drowning, I thought. The waves are bigger. The storm is worse. I’ll go to sleep soon.

  Delirium brings comfort at the end.

  1

  At the beginning it was a bit of fun. Kris Ironside and I, both single, both thirty-one, both meteorologists employed to interpret the invisible swings and buffets of global air for television and radio audience consumption, both of us found without excitement that some of the vacation weeks allotted to us overlapped.

  We both worked in the Weather Center of the British Broadcasting Corporation, taking it in turns with several other forecasters to deliver the good or bad weather news to the nation. From breakfast to midnight our voices sounded familiar and our faces smiled or frowned into millions of homes until we could go nowhere at all without recognition.

  Kris rather enjoyed it, and so had I once, but I had long gone beyond any depth of gratification and sometimes found the instant identification a positive drawback.

  “Aren’t you ... ?”

  “Yes, I guess so.”

  I used to go for vacations to lands that didn’t know me. A week in Greece. Elephants in the Serengeti. By dugout canoe up the Orinoco. Small adventures. No grand or gasp-worthy dangers. I lived an ordered life.

  Kris stabbed with his thumb the roster pinned to the department notice board. Disgust shook his hand.

  “October and November!” he grumbled. “And I asked for August:”

  It was January at the time: August tended to be given to those with school-age children. Kris’s chances of August had always realistically been zero, but with Kris hope often outweighed common sense.

  It was his streak of wild unpredictability-the manic side of his character—that made him a good evening pub companion, but a week in his company once in the foothills of the Himalayas had left me glad to return to home soil.

  My own name, Perry Stuart, appeared alphabetically near the bottom of the list, ahead only of Williams and Yates. In late October, I saw, I could take the ten working days still owing to me by then and return to the screen on the eve of Fireworks Night, November 5th. I shrugged and sighed. Year after year I got especially chosen and, I supposed, honored to deal with the rain-or-no-rain million-dollar gamble on fine weather for the night the skies blazed with the multicolored firework starbursts sent up in memory of Guy Fawkes and his blow-up-Parliament gunpowder plot. Year after year if I got downpours right I winced over sackloads of letters from reproachful children who reckoned their disappointment to be my fault.

  Kris followed my gaze down the list and tapped my name with his finger.

  “October and November,” he pronounced without surprise. “Don’t tell me! You’ll waste half of that leave on your grandmother again.”

  “I expect so.”

  He protested, “But you see her every week.”

  “Mm.”

  Where Kris had parents, brothers and a coven of cousins, I had a grandmother. She had literally plucked me as an infant out of the ruins of a gas-exploded house, and had dried her grief for my dead parents in order to bring me up.

  Where batches of my meteorological colleagues had wives, husbands, live-ins and one-nighters, I had—sometimes—my grandmother’s nurses. I wasn’t unmarried by design: more by lack of urgency or the advent of Cinderella.

  As autumn approached the Ironside manic-depressive gloom intensified downwards. Kris’s latest girlfriend left him, and the Norwegian pessimism he’d inherited from his mother, along with his pale skin, lengthy jaw and ectomorph physique, was leading him to predict cyclones more often than usual at the drop of a single millibar.

  Small groups of the great wide public with special needs tended to gravitate to particular forecasters. One associate, Beryl Yates, had cornered weddings, for instance, and Sonny Rae spent his spare time advising builders and house painters, and pompous old George told local councils when they might dryly dig up their water mains.

  Landowners, great and small, felt comfortable with Kris, and would cut their hay to the half hour on his say-so.

  As Kris’s main compulsive personal hobby was flying his own light aircraft, he spent many of his free days lunching with far-flung but welcoming farmers. They cleared their sheep out of fields to give him landing room and had been known to pollard a row of willows to provide a safe low-trajectory takeoff.

  I had flown with him three times on these farming jaunts, though my own bunch of followers, apart from children with garden birthday parties, had proved to be involved with horses. I seemed particularly to be consulted by racehorse trainers seeking perfect underfoot conditions for their speedy hopefuls, even though we did run forecasts dedicated to particular events.

  By voice transfer on a message machine a trainer might say, “I’ve a fancied runner at Windsor on Wednesday evening, what are the chances of firm ground?” or “I’m not declaring my three-mile ’chaser to run tomorrow unless you swear it’ll rain overnight.” They might be pony club camp organizers or horse show promoters, or even polo entrepreneurs, begging for the promise of sunshine. They might be shippers of brood mares to Ireland anxious for a calm sea crossing, and they might above all be racecourse managers wanting advice on whether or not to water their turf for good going in the days ahead. The prospect of good going encouraged trainers to send their horses. The prospect of many runners encouraged spectators to arrive in crowds. “Good going” was gold dust to the racing industry; and woe betide the forecaster who misread the clouds.

  But no weatherman, however profound his knowledge or intuition, could guess the skies right all the time, and, as over the British Isles especially the fickle winds could change direction without giving notice, to be accurate eighty-five percent of the time was miraculous.

  Kris’s early autumnal depression intensified day by day and it was from some vague impulse to cheer him up that I agreed to his suggestion of a Sunday lunch flight to Newmarket. Our host, Kris assured me, would be catering for at least twenty guests, so my presence would hardly overload the arrangements. “And besides,” Kris added with mild routine sarcasm, “your face is your fortune, you can’t get away from it. Caspar will slobber all over you:”

  “Caspar?”

  “Caspar Harvey, it’s his lunch.”

  “Oh.”

  Caspar Harvey might be one of Kris’s wealthiest farming cronies, but he also owned three or four racehorses whose trainer twittered in nervous sound bites in my ears from Monday to Sunday. Oliver Quigley, the trainer, temperamentally unsuited to any stressful way of life, let alone the nerve-breaking day-to-day of the tho
roughbred circuit, was, on his messages system, audibly in awe of Caspar Harvey, which was hardly the best basis for an owner-trainer relationship.

  I had met neither man face to face and didn’t much want to, but as the day of the lunch approached I kept coming across references to “that gift to racing, Caspar Harvey” or “Caspar Harvey in final dash to honors on the winning owners’ list” or “Caspar Harvey pays millions at the Yearling Sales for Derby hopes”: and as my knowledge and curiosity grew, so did my understanding of the Quigley jitters.

  The week before the Caspar Harvey lunch was one of those times when I gave the top two forecasts, at six-thirty and nine-thirty each evening, daily working out the probable path of air masses and going in front of the cameras at peak times to put my assessments on the line. Many people used to think that all Kris and I and other forecasters did was to read out from someone else’s script: there was often surprise when we explained that we were in actual fact forecasters, that it was we who predicted the weather ourselves, using the information gathered from distant weather stations and having discussed it with colleagues. We then went “live” and unscripted—and usually alone—into a very small studio where we ourselves placed the computerized weather symbols on the background screen map of Britain.