The Major’s Fate
The affair of Prime Minister and the
nail was not allowed to fade away into obscurity.
Through September and October it was made matter for
pungent inquiry. The Jockey Club was alive.
Mr. Pook was very instant, with many Pookites
anxious to free themselves from suspicion. Sporting
men declared that the honour of the turf required
that every detail of the case should be laid open.
But by the end of October, though every detail had
been surmised, nothing had in truth been discovered.
Nobody doubted but that Tifto had driven the nail
into the horse’s foot, and that Green and Gilbert
Villiers had shared the bulk of the plunder.
They had gone off on their travels together, and the
fact that each of them had been in possession of about
twenty thousand pounds was proved. But then there
is no law against two gentlemen having such a sum
of money. It was notorious that Captain Green
and Mr. Gilbert Villiers had enriched themselves to
this extent by the failure of Prime Minister.
But yet nothing was proved!
That the Major had either himself
driven in the nail or seen it done, all racing men
were agreed. He had been out with the horse in
the morning and had been the first to declare that
the animal was lame. And he had been with the
horse till the farrier had come. But he had concocted
a story for himself. He did not dispute that the
horse had been lamed by the machinations of Green
and Villiers, with the assistance of the
groom. No doubt, he said, these men, who had been
afraid to face an inquiry, had contrived and had carried
out the iniquity. How the lameness had been caused
he could not pretend to say. The groom who was
at the horse’s head, and who evidently knew
how these things were done, might have struck a nerve
in the horse’s foot with his boot. But
when the horse was got into the stable he, Tifto, so
he declared, at once ran out to send for
the farrier. During the minutes so occupied the
operation must have been made with the nail.
That was Tifto’s story, and as he
kept his ground, there were some few who believed
it.
But though the story was so far good,
he had at moments been imprudent, and had talked when
he should have been silent. The whole matter
had been a torment to him. In the first place
his conscience made him miserable. As long as
it had been possible to prevent the evil he had hoped
to make a clean breast of it to Lord Silverbridge.
Up to this period of his life everything had been “square”
with him. He had betted “square,”
and had ridden “square,” and had run horses
“square.” He had taken a pride in
this, as though it had been a great virtue. It
was not without great inward grief that he had deprived
himself of the consolations of these reflections!
But when he had approached his noble partner, his
noble partner snubbed him at every turn, and
he did the deed.
His reward was to be three thousand
pounds, and he got his money. The
money was very much to him, would perhaps
have been almost enough to comfort him in his misery,
had not those other rascals got so much more.
When he heard that the groom’s fee was higher
than his own, it almost broke his heart. Green
and Villiers, men of infinitely lower standing, men
at whom the Beargarden would not have looked, had
absolutely netted fortunes on which they could live
in comfort. No doubt they had run away while Tifto
still stood his ground; but he soon began
to doubt whether to have run away with twenty thousand
pounds was not better than to remain with such small
plunder as had fallen to his lot, among such faces
as those which now looked upon him! Then when
he had drunk a few glasses of whisky-and-water, he
said something very foolish as to his power of punishing
that swindler Green.
An attempt had been made to induce
Silverbridge to delay the payment of his bets; but
he had been very eager that they should be paid.
Under the joint auspices of Mr. Lupton and Mr. Moreton
the horses were sold, and the establishment was annihilated, with
considerable loss, but with great despatch. The
Duke had been urgent. The Jockey Club, and the
racing world, and the horsey fraternity generally,
might do what seemed to them good, so that
Silverbridge was extricated from the matter.
Silverbridge was extricated, and the Duke
cared nothing for the rest.
But Silverbridge could not get out
of the mess quite so easily as his father wished.
Two questions arose about Major Tifto, outside the
racing world, but within the domain of the world of
sport and pleasure generally, as to one of which it
was impossible that Silverbridge should not express
an opinion. The first question had reference
to the Mastership of the Runnymede hounds. In
this our young friend was not bound to concern himself.
The other affected the Beargarden Club; and, as Lord
Silverbridge had introduced the Major, he could hardly
forbear from the expression of an opinion.
There was a meeting of the subscribers
to the hunt in the last week of October. At that
meeting Major Tifto told his story. There he was,
to answer any charge which might be brought against
him. If he had made money by losing the race, where
was it and whence had it come? Was it not clear
that a conspiracy might have been made without his
knowledge; and clear also that the real
conspirators had levanted? He had not levanted!
The hounds were his own. He had undertaken to
hunt the country for this season, and they had undertaken
to pay him a certain sum of money. He should
expect and demand that sum of money. If they
chose to make any other arrangement for the year following
they could do so. Then he sat down and the meeting
was adjourned, the secretary having declared
that he would not act in that capacity any longer,
nor collect the funds. A farmer had also asserted
that he and his friends had resolved that Major Tifto
should not ride over their fields. On the next
day the Major had his hounds out, and some of the
London men, with a few of the neighbours, joined him.
Gates were locked; but the hounds ran, and those who
chose to ride managed to follow them. There are
men who will stick to their sport though Apollyon
himself should carry the horn. Who cares whether
the lady who fills a theatre be or be not a moral young
woman, or whether the bandmaster who keeps such excellent
time in a ball has or has not paid his debts?
There were men of this sort who supported Major Tifto; but
then there was a general opinion that the Runnymede
hunt would come to an end unless a new Master could
be found.
Then in the first week in November
a special meeting was called at the Beargarden, at
which Lord Silverbridge was asked to attend. “It
is impossible that he should be allowed to remain in
the club.” This was said to Lord Silverbridge
by Mr. Lupton. “Either he must go or the
club must be broken up.”
Silverbridge was very unhappy on the
occasion. He had at last been reasoned into believing
that the horse had been made the victim of foul play;
but he persisted in saying that there was no conclusive
evidence against Tifto. The matter was argued
with him. Tifto had laid bets against the horse;
Tifto had been hand-and-glove with Green; Tifto could
not have been absent from the horse above two minutes;
the thing could not have been arranged without Tifto.
As he had brought Tifto into the club, and had been
his partner on the turf, it was his business to look
into the matter. “But for all that,”
said he, “I’m not going to jump on a man
when he’s down, unless I feel sure that he’s
guilty.”
Then the meeting was held, and Tifto
himself appeared. When the accusation was made
by Mr. Lupton, who proposed that he should be expelled,
he burst into tears. The whole story was repeated, the
nail, and the hammer, and the lameness; and the moments
were counted up, and poor Tifto’s bets and friendship
with Green were made apparent, and the
case was submitted to the club. An old gentleman
who had been connected with the turf all his life,
and who would not have scrupled, by square betting,
to rob his dearest friend of his last shilling, seconded
the proposition, telling all the story over
again. Then Major Tifto was asked whether he wished
to say anything.
“I’ve got to say that
I’m here,” said Tifto, still crying, “and
if I’d done anything of that kind, of course
I’d have gone with the rest of ’em.
I put it to Lord Silverbridge to say whether I’m
that sort of fellow.” Then he sat down.
Upon this there was a pause, and the
club was manifestly of opinion that Lord Silverbridge
ought to say something. “I think that Major
Tifto should not have betted against the horse,”
said Silverbridge.
“I can explain that,”
said the Major. “Let me explain that.
Everybody knows that I’m a man of small means.
I wanted to ’edge, I only wanted to ’edge.”
Mr. Lupton shook his head. “Why
have you not shown me your book?”
“I told you before that it was
stolen. Green got hold of it. I did win
a little. I never said I didn’t. But
what has that to do with hammering a nail into a horse’s
foot? I have always been true to you, Lord Silverbridge,
and you ought to stick up for me now.”
“I will have nothing further
to do with the matter,” said Silverbridge, “one
way or the other,” and he walked out of the
room, and out of the club. The affair
was ended by a magnanimous declaration on the part
of Major Tifto that he would not remain in a club
in which he was suspected, and by a consent on the
part of the meeting to receive the Major’s instant
resignation.