There were a number of intersecting walkways that allowed access to the various air-conditioning units and the multitude of electronic aerials and satellite dishes that were spaced around all over the place. Each of the walkways had a metal grille floor and railings down either side to prevent anyone straying off them onto the roof itself.
I knew from experience that it was possible to see the far side of the parade ring from one of the walkways. I’d used it before, the previous year, when I’d twisted my ankle and didn’t fancy going all the way down to ground level to see the horses.
I now spent a few moments checking the jockeys’ silks. It was rare, but not unknown, for the printing in the paper to be wrong, for example if a horse had been sold the night before a race and was running in the new owner’s colours, something that was not that uncommon in the Grand National.
But, on this occasion, I was satisfied that all were attired as expected, and I made my way back down to the commentary box in time to describe them to the crowd as they cantered round the end of the track to the seven-furlong start point on the far side of the course.
This time, when the horses spread out as they entered the straight, I was ready for the ‘Clare moment’ as I decided to call it, that moment when all the jockeys were facing me and each one of them reminded me of her. This time, in some strange way, I felt somewhat comforted by its arrival rather than being overcome.
Far from trying to put Clare out of my mind in case it was too upsetting, I wanted to remember her every day and this would be the way I would do it.
Suddenly I was more at ease with life and I realized that, as for my father, the feeling of guilt over Clare’s death had overshadowed and distorted the grief. From that moment on, I told myself, I was going to rejoice in the memory of her brief existence, and do my best to protect that memory.
Not that I didn’t still feel terrible guilt over not answering the telephone calls from Clare that night. I did. And I lay awake for hours most nights rehearsing to myself what I could have done better to prevent the disaster.
But Jim Metcalf’s advice to say nothing, and to do nothing, was for the old, indecisive me. The new, resolute and well-focused me would call Toby Woodley’s bluff and make him prove what he was claiming was true, or else admit that he couldn’t.
I did go down to the weighing room after the second race and, instead of avoiding people who might ask me questions about the front page of the
‘A worm, more like,’ said Jack Laver, the racecourse broadcast technician who had made me the tea at Lingfield. ‘Nasty piece of work, that one. He was here earlier. Always tries to snoop around the weighing room to see if there’s any gossip he can use, or make up. The Clerk threw him out.’
The Clerk of the Scales presided in the weighing room like a judge in a courtroom, sitting behind a desk and ensuring that everything was done correctly, including keeping the press out.
His primary role was to ensure that all the jockeys ‘weighed out’ for each race at the correct weight, and also that the winner and those placed ‘weighed in’ again afterwards, together with any other jockeys that the Clerk may choose at his sole discretion. He also had to ensure that each jockey was wearing the correct colours and had the right equipment, such as blinkers or a visor, which their horse may have been declared as wearing.
And all the jockeys called him ‘sir’.
Not that they weren’t averse to trying to fool him — usually because they were having trouble getting down to the required weight.
‘Cheating Boots’ have been around almost since racing first began — paper-thin ultralight riding boots used only for weighing out, which the wearer then, illegally, changed for a more substantial pair back in the jockeys’ changing room, well out of sight of the Clerk. Weighing back in is not a problem as riders are allowed up to two extra pounds to provide for rain-soaked clothes, or accumulated mud thrown up from the track.
These days, a jockey’s racing helmet is not included in his riding weight, unlike his saddle, which is. However, the coloured cap that is worn over the helmet, should be included but there are always those who will try to place the cap down on the Clerk’s table while they are weighing out.
Every little helps.
In truth, it was all a bit of a game and, just like with school teachers and their miscreant pupils, the Clerks of the Scales were wise to their schemes and almost always won, but that didn’t stop the jockeys from trying.
‘Everything all right up top?’ Jack asked. ‘Monitor OK?’
‘Fine,’ I said, ‘as long as I can turn down the brightness a bit, now that it’s getting dark.’