Murder, She Wrote (1984–1996): Season 10, Episode 6 - Bloodlines - full transcript

Jessica visits horse trainer Matt Cleveland on Wally Hampton's stud ranch in Virginia's Blue Mountains, where everybody is elated about the prospects for their promising racehorse Swift Prince. Matt is clobbered down and Jessica finds a mysterious syringe, but it's a stimulant injected in Prince, three days before a major race, so unlikely still to be detected even if it makes him win. Meanwhile Catherine Noble's neighboring ranch is financially troubled, so daughter Tracey Noble can't get a grand wedding, and their partner, Lloyd Mentone, schemes with the Hamptons assistant trainer -who is fired by Matt- while insisting Prince shouldn't race with a not perfectly healed injury as his leg could be permanently hurt. Matt tells Jessica a video cassette he just received could help take 3 seconds off Prince's time, and shortly after has a fatal car accident, or is it murder? Now rancher son Paul Hampton, a banker, pulls the plug at his deal with Loyd, and calls off the wedding with Tracy 'which was only a match between stud ranches'. Jessica now solves the horse mystery and Matt's murder.

Tonight on Murder, She Wrote.

- What did you get?
- 138 and two.

He's ready to fire.

You entered Swift
Prince behind my back.

But if he wins Saturday,
we're looking at 30 million.

What do you think? Is
this going to kill them?

If Swift Prince doesn't win this
race, I'm going to lose everything.

Easy!

Who the hell gave you
permission to work him?

Freeze!

My God! They've
injected Swift Prince.



I'd appreciate it if you
could keep this quiet.

I can do this. Nobody
understands that horse like I do.

Come on, boys,
come on over here.

Attaway, Jill!

You know, I remember
hearing about Swift Prince

as a two-year-old when I was
writing The Triple Crown Murders.

Wasn't he burning the
tracks up on the West Coast?

You got a hell of a memory,

Jessica, he was running for
Mentone Farms near Del Mar then.

And being mentioned
as a contender

in the following year's
Kentucky Derby, wasn't he?

Right.

But then he just
seemed to vanish.

Well, he had a
training accident.



His fetlock, he injured it.

Never ran as a three-year-old.

You know, this may be
an amateur's observation,

but from the way he's looking,

I would say that Swift Prince could
hold his own again on the track.

Yeah. That's what the new owners,
Wally and Catherine, said to me.

They wanted me to enter him
in the Raleigh this Saturday.

He works real good now,
and he'll be running Saturday.

With Jill aboard?

Maybe that was the surprise that
you were so close-mouthed about?

Well, call it fatherly pride,

but, Jessica, she knows how to sit a horse
as fine as anybody else that ever rode.

Well, at the risk of a little
godmotherly pride, I have to agree.

What've you got?

Oh, three quarters, 12 and two.

He's moving real good,
but he's going wide.

Don't go wide with him!

Keep him on the rail, Jill! Don't
let him bear out on you like that

in the middle of the
track! Honey, go with him!

What did you get?

138 and two.

Matt, that's terrific.

Terrific?

He's ready to fire.

Excuse me, will you?

Hello?

Matt, hold on a second. I
want to put you on the speaker.

Catherine dropped by for a
drink. I want her to hear this, too.

Now, what was his time?

Thirty-eight and two.

It's a go, then!

And we're going to win it, too!

Oh, Matt, you're magic!

What about Lloyd? Is he
going to give us any trouble?

Oh, he's coming in from
the coast this afternoon.

Don't worry. At worst,
it'll be two against one.

Good ride, Jill. Thanks.

Dad, how'd he go?

138 and two, honey.

So, are we racing
Saturday, or what?

You bet we are, honey.
We're racing Saturday.

Oh, Jill.

Okay, Jess, here's the deal.

Now you tell me everything
you know about writing,

and I'll tell you everything
I know about racing.

Hey, and, Jess, to top it off,
I'll bet you a lobster dinner

you can't outdo The
Triple Crown Murders.

You're on, Matt.

So what's this one gonna
be about, aside from murder?

Oh, this wonderful Blue Ridge
country, breeding champions.

Those dreams
you all chase after.

Jess, the bet's off.

If I can help you
with your research...

Oh, you will, I'll
guarantee it. You both will.

And if I'm not here
pounding this keyboard,

I will be up at the house.

Wally has given to me
the most beautiful room,

with a great view
of the mountains.

Say, when am I going to
see Catherine and Tracey?

Tracey, are you around?

Over here, Mom.

Swift Prince is going to run in
the Raleigh Stakes on Saturday.

That's great! His
time must have gone...

Better than we hoped.

And that means that if he wins,

his stud fees go up, right?

Exactly. To the
moon, if we're lucky.

We'll have to wait till the race
on Saturday, though, for that.

So, does this mean I get to invite
another hundred guests to the wedding?

Oh, I'm afraid not, my darling.

We're talking futures, you know.

But your share of the
Raleigh Handicap purse...

Oh, that won't even come
close to getting us even.

And that's if he wins.

Oh, it's just the bridesmaids'
dresses, and now...

I don't like this any
better than you do.

God knows, I don't
want to disappoint you.

Look, things will loosen up.

If Paul can push
the loan through...

Well, maybe we should just

postpone the damn wedding
until we can afford to do it right.

I'm sorry, Mom. I didn't
mean to snap at you.

All you've got to worry about...

Paul told me a lot.

You don't know the
half of it, my darling.

The truth is, Tracey, we're
about this far from losing all of it.

The farm, the horses,
the entire estate.

Oh, my God.

I've been hanging on by
my fingernails for months. I...

That's why you needed Wally to
come in on Swift Prince, wasn't it?

Well, and you're
marrying a Hampton.

I thought it would be
in our best interest.

Well, it's going to be
a beautiful wedding.

Now, you're not just
doing this for me?

No.

I'm definitely doing it for me.

Thanks. You're welcome.

You're okay?

I like your champagne,
Wally, but not your surprises.

You entered Swift
Prince behind my back.

There was a deadline
for entries, Lloyd.

And he's sound.
Just ask the Doc.

Our deal was the horse goes
straight to stud. No racing.

Catherine, Wally,

I've known Swift Prince
since he was a yearling.

I nursed him through his injury.

And when I checked his
leg before I left for the coast,

it was badly swollen.

You'll find horses have
swollen legs when they've been

laid up for a long time.

I took x-rays yesterday.

There's no indication
of residual damage.

He never gives me any sign
whatsoever that he's in any kind of pain.

He loves to run.

Man, I don't
understand you people.

What in the hell is the matter with
a sure five, six million in stud fees?

Uh, this may sound like a
foolish question, Mr. Mentone,

but wouldn't it be better

to have Swift Prince compete in
some of these big handicap races,

and perhaps increase
his value by winning,

rather than not racing at all?

Bravo, Jessica!

And if he re-injures that leg, and we
have to destroy him, we'll have nothing.

Dad, Lloyd's got a point.

I'm sorry you're not with us on
this, Lloyd, but it's a done deal.

Catherine and I
have you outvoted.

To Matt and Jill.

Who're going to put Swift
Prince in the winner's circle

at the Raleigh Handicap.

To Jill, then.

Catherine, I haven't
seen Tracey yet.

Oh, Jessica, she's in town.

She's shopping for
wedding decorations.

Oh.

Forgive me if I
touched a raw spot.

It's not so raw
anymore, Jessica.

Paul and I just developed
different values over time.

What she's trying
to say is that, uh,

he was trying to buy into
Catherine and Wally's plan.

You know,
bloodlines and stables.

Daddy, let go of
it, please. It's over.

Oh, yeah, sure, it's over.

Yes. It's over.

Uh-huh.

Have a drink with your old man.

Look, I got to get
back to the bank.

Are things okay
with you and Tracey?

Yeah, okay.

Wonderful.

The wedding should
be a lot of laughs.

Dad, what do you want from me?

For you to get out of
that three-piece suit,

come back here,
help me run the farm.

But I'll settle for that
year-end audit you promised.

The tax deposits are
due in a couple of days.

Okay, I'll take
care of it tomorrow.

Thank you very much.

Come in.

Mrs. Fletcher. Pardon me.

Oh, no, please, please, come in.

You don't really give yourself
much time to relax, do you?

Well, I try. But life and
deadlines, they seem to interfere.

And now me. May I?

Oh, please.

I'm afraid all I can offer you
is some lukewarm coffee.

My favorite kind. Black.

Matt tells me that you've spent
most of your life in horse racing?

Yes. I grew up watching races
from the tower at Saratoga.

I'm kind of concerned
about Swift Prince.

Yes, so I gathered.

If there's one
thing I've learned,

and I'm sure your research
has done the same for you,

it's that racehorses are never quite
the same once they've been injured.

It depends on the
injury, doesn't it?

Yes. And the horse.

Mmm-hmm.

The Raleigh
Handicap is big time.

The top four-year-olds,
ambitious trainers, hungry jocks.

They play for keeps,
and dangerous.

A shove by another
horse, a stumble...

That leg could collapse.

And there's Jill's safety
to be considered, too.

I suspect that Matt and
Jill are aware of the risks.

Forgive me, but I think that your memory
is playing tricks on you, Mr. Mentone.

The tower at Saratoga wasn't
built when you were growing up.

If you'll excuse me, I think
I better get back to work.

What do you say, Gus?

I hear you haven't been around
the stable in about a week.

That's about right.

The money I've
been slipping you,

I need you to be
there, keep me posted.

I've been under the weather.

Assistant trainer...

I'd been on that job ten years
before Hampton brought Matt in there.

I got it, Gus. One of the
saddest stories I ever heard.

I want you back at work.

Now.

And sober.

Jessie, say hello
to Bulwark here.

He's a yearling, broken
about two months ago.

Still gets a little skittish, though,
when you put a saddle on him.

Oh, he's lovely.

Yeah.

All right, Shari, up on top.

And let me tell you...

He'll be a little
green with you.

And go easy with him, now.

Easy! Take it easy!

Steady!

Who the hell gave you
permission to work him?

I did.

Seeing as how you were
not tending to your job.

You can't do this to me.

I can't? I just did.

Why don't you gather up
your gear and get out of here?

We're not through, Matt.

You were through
the day you were hired.

Hey, we're not talking
about the national debt here.

We're just looking at a $600,000
line of credit, fully secured.

And Mrs. Noble's
assets are as sound as...

Yeah, I'll have the appraisal for
you tomorrow, at the latest. Thanks.

Oh, uh, by the way, I want to get
this through before the weekend,

because if, God forbid, something
should happen to Swift Prince

at the Raleigh Handicap,
the lady's balance sheet

is going to take a
major nose dive. Thanks.

Very impressive.

Hi, my darling.

Hi, Tracey.

I've been trying to
call you all morning.

Well, I had to go to
Philipsburg for a meeting.

So, what do you think?

Is this going to kill them at my
top secret surprise bridal shower?

You look very beautiful.

Oh, Paul, it's going
to be so spectacular.

We are going to have
the finest stable in Virginia.

Then you won't have to
work in this silly bank anymore.

Tracey, I happen to
like banking, okay?

Come on. You said you
want to be your own person.

Face it, Paul, the only reason you
like it is because your father doesn't.

Hey, what are you doing? Hey!

Matt!

Someone... Someone clobbered me.

Well, don't try to talk.

Dad, what happened?

He's hurt. I saw
someone running.

I'm... I'm all right.

Hold him steady for me.

What is it?

The proverbial
needle in a haystack.

They've injected Swift Prince.

You mean, this is
merely butylmethate?

Well, that's what it
smells and tastes like.

I won't know for sure till
morning if that's what this is,

or if it got into
his bloodstream.

You should be thankful
they weren't trying to kill him.

Kill him? It would only
make him run faster.

So who'd want to
do a thing like that?

And why? I mean,
don't the stewards

always run blood tests
on the winning horses?

And whoever it was must have
known that he'd be disqualified.

Not necessarily. The
race isn't for three days.

Bute can be hard to detect
after the first 24 hours.

They had it planned, all right.

Sure, he wins the race, then
he takes the test, he tests clean.

Anyway, I'll call you as
soon as I know something.

Dad, are you okay?

Huh? I'm fine. I'm
fine, sweetheart, yes.

What are you looking at
me so strangely for, honey?

Well, what if the test
comes back positive?

If the tests come out positive,
the stewards will have to report it.

We'll have no choice, we'll have to
scratch the horse from the Raleigh.

Listen, can we talk
about the assailant?

Do you remember
anything about him?

Well, 6-to-5, it was Gus.

You mean, he tries to drug Swift
Prince to make him run faster,

hopefully to win the Raleigh Cup,
and then possibly be disqualified?

And if he doesn't win,
there's no blood test.

Exactly.

But if there's no
guarantee that you, or Matt,

or Hampton Farms
would be harmed,

I mean, what would
he hope to gain from it?

Jessica's right.

The whole thing just
doesn't make any sense.

With Gus's boozed-up
brain, what is sense?

Well, unless I'm
missing something here,

any one of you, including
Mr. Mentone and Mrs. Noble,

would have more reason than Gus

for wanting Swift
Prince to run faster.

I'll slide by Gus's
place and question him.

Ah.

Plus, maybe his fingerprints
will show up on the syringe.

Or not.

Look, just one moment.
One more thing.

I'd appreciate it if you
could keep this quiet

until after we got
the blood test results.

There's no point in unnecessarily
alerting the track officials.

Of course not, Mr. Hampton.

Always delighted to do you
and your, uh, friends here a favor.

As long as it's within the law.

Mother, the bridal shop is
insisting on getting a certified check

before they even... Jessica!

Tracey! You look lovely!

Hello. Oh, Wally,
yes. Oh, thank God!

The blood test is negative.
Swift Prince is clean.

Yes, go on.

Oh, that's fantastic. Oh, thanks.
Thanks for calling. Bye-bye.

Now I'll be able to sleep again.

Oh, Mother, that's
such great news.

I'm so pleased for you.

Yeah, yeah, the committee
will take care of it tomorrow.

Okay, I'll call you. Bye.

What can I do for you, Lloyd?

My friends tell me that
your head office in Chicago

is very sensitive to the
federal bank examiners.

Your friends are, uh, are right.
It's a common concern these days.

Specifically, I hear they're worried
about the supporting documentation

on the loan application
submitted by Catherine Noble,

and approved on
behalf of this branch,

by you.

I see.

Now, if she lied on those
applications, she's committed fraud.

And I'm sure a case could be
made that you are a party to it.

Well, all I can say is, I'm
glad you're not my partner.

And I can avoid all
this unpleasantness by

talking her into voting with you

to scratch Swift Prince
from the Raleigh Handicap?

In that case,

well, I believe I can guarantee that
everyone will live happily ever after.

Get out.

Think about it, Paulie.

All right, Sammy, take
him back. Go on, son.

Well, hi. How are you, Cathy?

Oh, good, mostly. That's good.

I miss working with you, Matt.

Well, I miss you
working with me, too.

It wasn't my idea to
go to work for Wally.

Yeah. You know, Wally wouldn't
have bought into Swift Prince unless

I allowed you to
become the trainer.

Really? Well, that's a
very nice compliment.

Matt,

I really need to win this one.

If Swift Prince
doesn't win this race,

I'm going to lose everything.

Noble Farms is mortgaged
way beyond the hilt.

Cathy, I knew things
were... Were kind of tight,

but I didn't realize
they were that tight.

Tony Maldonado
doesn't have a mount.

And as you know,
he's a top rider.

That's out.

Matt, Jill is like a
daughter to me, too,

and I know how much
you want her to ride,

but I think Swift Prince is too
much horse for her to handle.

Oh, too much horse.
Cathy, she can sit any horse.

Okay, Matt, friendship aside,

I need to reach out
for the best I can get.

All right,
friendship aside. I...

I'm the trainer, and
I'm the one that decides

who's going to be on top of
that horse the day he runs.

Just read my contract!

I have the right
to chose the rider!

Oh, I... I'm sorry, Cathy,
but you had faith in me once.

I'm asking you to
have faith in me again.

All right, thanks anyway.
Yes, I'll tell her. Thank you.

Excuse me, Matt, uh,
this just came for you.

Thank you, Jess. Just
talking to Sheriff Benson there.

He talked to Gus, who said he didn't
know anything about butylmethate,

and there were no
fingerprints on the syringe.

Oh, that's too bad.

Yeah, but don't worry. I think
everything's going to be okay,

because I have a hunch

that the key to taking three
seconds off of Swift Prince's race

is right in here.

Oh?

I'll let you know.

Matt. Yeah?

That business with Catherine
wanting to use another jockey,

that's going to be all right?

Not to worry.

Nothing that a big win
on Saturday won't cure.

Right.

Jill... Hi. Hi.

Got your bean-counting hat on?

Oh, uh, yeah. Dad's audit.

Listen, uh, you feel like
maybe grabbing a bite to eat?

Yes. Okay.

Yeah.

Now, listen, don't move.
I'll be right over, okay?

Problems?

I'll talk to you about it
later, Jess. I got to run.

Oh, hi, Jessica.

Have you seen Paul anywhere? He said he
was going to be down here doing an audit.

Well, he was, but he
left about an hour ago.

Oh. We were going to
talk about bridesmaids' gifts.

Well, I guess it will wait. Do
you have any dinner plans?

I do now.

Great.

So, there's this new French
restaurant in the village.

It's a little trendy, but the
food's good. What there is of it.

Sounds like half the French
restaurants in Manhattan.

Isn't that Matt's
truck up ahead?

Yeah, it looks like it.

Wonder what it's doing out here?

Your statements are
almost ready for signature.

Nothing much to
it, Mrs. Fletcher,

your basic robbery-assault
that went too far.

And that video cassette,
you never found that?

Nothing on his
person or in the truck.

The state police say witnesses
saw an itinerant in the area.

They're looking for him now.

Matt stops to fix his flat, a
guy walking along offers to help.

A drifter?

Who just happens to be in the
same spot on a lonely, two-lane road?

Sure.

The perpetrator bludgeons
him with the flashlight.

Three good blows here, according
to the coroner's preliminary.

Then he grabs Matt's
wallet and wristwatch,

and apparently that video
cassette you said he was carrying,

and he takes off.

But there are no tools on
any of these photographs here.

I mean, no jack, no tire
iron, no lug wrench, nothing.

He hadn't gotten that far.
He was still checking the tire.

Ah. Sheriff, excuse me.

Have you discovered
what caused the flat?

Well, I can answer that,
ma'am. It was a faulty valve.

Faulty? How?

A speck of sand must've
caused a slow leak.

I couldn't find anything, but
there were no holes in the tire.

Look, if you and Miss Noble
could just please sign these.

It's getting kind of
late, and Vern and I

have a whole bunch of
paperwork to finish up.

Just one other thing, Sheriff.

One.

Sheriff, if I've
said anything, I...

I'm sorry.

I guess because you're
their friend, I just figured...

Catherine and Wally?

Yeah.

Which side of the racetrack you
happen to come from around here

counts for a lot, Mrs. Fletcher.

Truth is, if it wasn't for
this badge I was wearing,

those folks you're rubbing elbows
with wouldn't give me the time of day.

You know, you might like
to take a second look at that.

Now, there's a school
of thought that says that

people get what they
think they deserve.

You had a question?

Have you been
able to locate Jill?

We tracked her down over at
Arlo's Restaurant with Paul Hampton.

They're on their way here now.

And have you had
any response from the

messages that you left
for Catherine and Wally?

That's two questions,
Mrs. Fletcher.

But the answer's no. I
guess they're still out.

Same with, uh, Gus
Tardio and Mr. Mentone.

Had you seen Matt this evening?

No.

He called a little after
7:00. He was upset.

Wally was here. We
were going out for dinner.

Matt asked if we'd
wait, he'd be right over.

He wanted to talk to us.

And he never turned up?

Around 8:30, I called
his office. No answer,

so Wally and I left.

Oh, Jessica,
this is so horrible.

Yes, uh, Louisville, please.

The number for Sportrack.
That's on Highland Avenue.

Victor, Wyoming.

Right.

555-4475. Thank you very much.

You going to be okay?

Yeah. Thanks.

See you later.

Bye.

Jill, I'm so sorry.

I loved him so much, Jessica.

I did, too.

I couldn't go home, you know?

I had to come here.

I'm going to win this race
for him, Jessica. I swear.

And I believe that you will.

And you're quite certain
that there were no calls

to or from Matt Cleveland
to Victor, Wyoming? I see.

And that note pad
sheet that I mentioned,

and the video cassette, you
haven't found either one of them?

All right.

Well, thank you, Sheriff. Hmm?

Right this way, sir.

No, I haven't seen
Mr. Tardio. Bye.

She's in the study.

Oh, now that is quick service.

That's why I get the
big bucks, ma'am.

If you'd, uh, sign
right here, please.

Sure.

Thank you.

Have a nice day.

The price of fame, no doubt.

Here you are, hiding in the
Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia,

and delivery people still
manage to catch up with you.

Oh, yes, they can be relentless.
Thank you so much, Wally,

for letting me use your phone.
And thanks also to your cook.

I'm going to try to get
Jill to eat some of this.

ANNOUNCER ON
TV: Out of the far turn

Swift Prince saves
ground down on the rail,

with Dancing Tommy alongside. Jockey
Rene Gusto goes to the right-hand whip

and Dancing Tommy lugs in, breaking
Swift Prince's stride. He takes the lead.

On the outside, Arnie's
Boy is making a bid,

but here comes Swift
Prince down on the rail.

He passes Dancing
Tommy with a burst of speed.

Swift Prince holds on to win!
A magnificent show of heart,

capping a truly outstanding
campaign as a two-year-old...

I don't get it.

He used to always run the rail,
and now I can't get him near it.

Your father apparently saw
something that we're missing.

Do you think
that's why he was...

Hello. Oh, yes, Catherine.

Well, she's right
here. I'll tell her.

Catherine and Wally are on their
way over here. They'd like to talk to you.

Oh, Jill, you know how
we felt about your dad,

and how you must
be feeling right now.

We wouldn't even be discussing this if
the race weren't coming off tomorrow.

Okay. Go ahead.

What Catherine's
trying to say...

Look, I know, I understand.

You don't think I'm in
emotional condition to ride.

And he's going to know that.

And we know how
badly you want this,

how much you
want to see him win.

Anyway, Tony Maldonado
has become available.

I can do this! I'm
telling you, I can do this.

And we've decided
to let him ride.

Look, nobody understands
that horse like I do,

you know, nobody does.
Except maybe my dad.

Tony's been up
on the best, Jill.

I know. I know.

For some pretty big purses,
and he's won more than his share.

Now, we're certain that Matt would
have understood, and we hope you will.

Well, it's your horse, isn't it?

It's your decision.

You surprise me, kid.

What made you change your mind?

You did, Lloyd.

And Matt Cleveland's death.

A bum robs him and kills him,
that made you see the light, huh?

I don't believe that's the way it
happened, Lloyd. I think you killed him.

I never said I was brilliant,
but that dumb I'm not.

Okay, so you changed your mind.

Whatever works. Did
you speak with Catherine?

No. And I don't intend to.

Not about scratching
Swift Prince.

Are you crazy?

She is going to lose the farm,

and you are going
to lose your job.

Her, maybe. Me?

That'll be fine.

Oh, you see this? It's
Catherine's loan application.

And whichever way
the race turns out, Lloyd,

she and my dad are going to find
out what kind of a partner they've got.

I just wanted you to know.

And thank you for helping
me get my head straight.

See you around, Lloyd.

If you talk to her, just
tell her I've got to see her.

Tell her it's about her
business at the bank.

What's the hurry, Paul?

No time for your fiancee?

I've got to get
over to the stable.

Got some hot audits you
need to do? Like last night?

Tracey, it was getting late. I
thought you weren't coming.

Like hell.

We had a hamburger,
okay? Big deal.

Then I brought her home,
after they found Matt.

Look, Paul, I'm
talking about us.

For God's sake, we're
getting married in a month.

Are we?

You know, Tracey,

I was going to do this later, but "us" is
what's wrong with this whole arrangement.

None of it's about us. Not
the wedding, not you and me.

What are you talking about?

It's about our parents.

You know, this royal match
that they've put together.

Look, Tracey, I'm trying to
say this as nicely as I can.

But this whole show, two historic
stables joined in holy matrimony,

I mean, come on, they're breeding us, just
like they're going to breed Swift Prince.

Honey, I mean,
that's a part of it.

But we care about each other.

No. You're in love
with the fantasy.

You're in love with the best
gowns, the showiest fabrics,

some kind of gigantic
racing enterprise.

Well, that's not me, and I'm not going
to play other people's games anymore.

Our folks' or anyone else's.

You're serious. Totally.

Call off the wedding.

You can make me the heavy, you
can do it any way you want, but it's over.

I'm sorry, Tracey.

Paul, if you want to
have a fling with Jill...

He likes the
center of the track.

You're going to have
to hold him to the rail.

Yes, sir.

Catherine...

What did you do to my daughter?

I did her a favor.

Listen, I just wanted
to wish you well...

Well, would you do
me a favor? Go to hell.

I just wanted to wish
you well tomorrow.

Jill, hi. I need to
talk to you. Uh...

Whoa!

It's all right. Settle
down, settle down.

There you go. Come on!

Whoa!

Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!

No, not me, people.
You can keep this one.

Tony, oh, no, wait!

No, let her come to you.

And then say
"maybe" at least once.

Apparently the
Racing Association

doesn't keep track
of incoming calls.

I mean, nobody remembers talking
to Matt, much less why he called.

Well, you won't need that information
from the Racing Association, Mrs. Fletcher.

We know who killed
him. It was Gus Tardio.

We found tire prints that match
Gus's truck on the shoulder 30 to 40 feet

from where Matt was killed.

And you picked him up?

No, just his truck. Got
an APB out on him.

Sheriff, are you sure about
those phone company records?

I mean, Matt called
the Racing Association

and he called Catherine
Noble, and nobody else?

That's also why I'm here.
I brought the printout.

This is a bulletin from the
Department of Motor Vehicles.

Oops. Sorry about that.

I must've grabbed it by mistake.
It looked like the right one.

I'll tell you what, I'll go back, pick it
up and bring it back to you, how's that?

Looked like the
right one. Of course!

Why wouldn't it?
Except for the rail.

Come again?

Sheriff, I believe I know
what this is all about.

But we've got to get over to
the Raleigh Racetrack right away.

Can you alert security?

Well, I'll sure try, but I'm not
sure I understand, Mrs. Fletcher.

I'll explain it on the way over.

I've got to talk to the
man at the racetrack.

I believe that Swift
Prince is in grave danger.

Freeze! Drop it!

What is this stuff?

Triethyl chloronate.

It's a lethal poison. The horse would
have been dead within five minutes.

You see, I assumed that what
Matt had written on his notepad

was Victor, Wyoming.
And then it hit me

that the W-Y could also be
an abbreviation for "Way,"

and the Racing Association
confirmed it for me. Victor Way,

owned by Mentone Stables, a horse
that looks very much like Swift Prince.

That's the horse in Swift
Prince's trailer, right over there.

And the numbers tattooed inside
their lower lips were similar enough

that they could also be
altered sufficiently to fool

Catherine Noble
and Wally Hampton.

But not enough to convince the track
stewards, if we wanted to race him.

Plus, they might have
recognized their contrasting styles.

Swift Prince was
always on the inside

and Victor Way couldn't
be held in at the turns.

But why switch horses?
Why go to all that trouble?

Money. Lots of it.

Victor Way is a good horse,
but Swift Prince is a great horse.

And unless I'm very much
mistaken, at this very moment,

he's running somewhere in
South America as Victor Way,

and cleaning up for Mr. Mentone
and his gambler friends.

And what was supposed to happen was
you were gonna clean up another million

on this Swift
Prince's stud fees.

It's all true but I
didn't murder anyone.

Sure, you didn't.

Sheriff, Mr. Mentone's
telling the truth.

He didn't kill Matt, but
I think I know who did.

Car doors slamming?
That told you who did it?

I had just come into Matt's office
last night, as he was rushing out.

I barely noticed hearing
a single car door slam.

I'll talk to you about it
later, Jess. I got to run.

That was the killer
arriving at the stable.

And then a few moments
later, I heard two doors slam...

and the sound of Matt's
truck starting up and driving off.

Well, he was on his way
over to tell Wally and me

what he had discovered
about Swift Prince.

That's right. But
he never made it,

because his killer had
gotten into his truck with him.

It was you, Tracey.

Jessica, that's ridiculous.
Why would I kill Matt?

To keep Wally and your mother from
learning the truth about Swift Prince.

To keep her from losing those
millions of dollars in stud fees,

money that she badly needed
in order to hold onto the farm

for herself, and for you.

That's a very serious
accusation, Jessica.

Yes, Catherine, it is.

No.

No, you're wrong.

Mother, tell her to stop. I
mean, she can't prove any of this.

I can't, Tracey. But
there was an eyewitness.

Gus Tardio saw everything.
He was parked on the shoulder

not far down the road from
where you got Matt to stop.

Tracey, for God's sake,
tell me this isn't true.

She's right.

I, uh...

just arrived at the
stables to see Paul,

and Matt came rushing out.

Matt, Matt, what is it?
Why are you so excited?

Tracey, your mom and Wally have
been taken big time by Mentone.

What do you mean?

Why, that isn't
Swift Prince in there.

It's some claimer named
Victor Way. I've got to tell them.

Oh, my God! I'm
going to go with you.

All I knew was that if the truth got
out, Mother would lose everything.

I hope this doesn't
sound too rough,

but for what Mentone did, I
think he ought to be whipped.

I had to stop him somehow.

Um... Matt, I... I feel sick.

Sick?

Could you pull over, please?

Yeah, sure.

Are you all right, honey?

So I let the air
out of his tire,

and I left the flashlight,

and then I walked
back to the stable.

Where you came in and
asked me if I'd seen Paul,

as if you'd just driven up.

I never dreamed that Gus
was out there watching.

He wasn't, Tracey.

I got the idea because they found
his tire tracks near the murder site,

but they were from
another time. It was Gus

who was paid by Lloyd Mentone
to try and drug Swift Prince,

but he has an
alibi for last night.

I'm sorry, Mother. So sorry.

I'm afraid I bear some
of the responsibility here.

Jill, look at that, huh?

Opening up a three-length lead,

and still flying under a...

Oh, we got it now, we got it!

He's lengthening his lead to seven
lengths, and wins going away...

I could watch that eight
or ten more times tonight.

And here's a toast to some
very flexible track officials

for letting us make a
last-minute name change.

Yes.

Jessica, I have
one question for you.

What was that business with the
failed attempt to drug Victor Way?

Well, Lloyd Mentone
admitted he hired Gus to do it,

but to make sure that
we found the syringe,

so you'd have the horse tested
before the race and withdraw his entry.

I can't believe how Catherine
and I bought into Lloyd's scheme.

Well, you know, Dad,
maybe it's the Hampton genes.

Seeing only what we want to see,

until we wake up.

To Matt, for seeing what should
have been obvious to the rest of us.

And to Mrs. Fletcher, for
getting us to take a second look.