In this excellent Dick Francis novel, Steven Scott is a very successful businessman, who discovers that his friend, Jody Leeds, the trainer of his horses has been stealing from him, and its not a small amount. Leeds has been charging him for trips that were not taken and jockey training rides that were not ridden. This is just the tip of the iceberg, however, because Leeds and as Scott discovers in this engaging story, his crew have been using Scott to line their pockets in a nefarious scheme.
Scott, who was a neophyte in horse training has relied on Leeds, the son of a member of the jockey club, Leeds has help picked out the horses for Scott to buy, trains them, then races them in England. Scott has also bet with Leeds bookie -- Ganser Mays.
The horses all do well but Scott discovers that somehow or other when he has his biggest bets on his horses, they all seem to lose. He basically figures out that Mays and Leeds are conspiring to fix the races. Figuring this all out, at the start of the novel, Scott fires his trainer and takes his horses back. However, Leeds conspires to steal Energise, Scott's latest horse, and when Scott goes to get the horse back, he discovers that Leeds plot is even more complicated, as the horse that is returned is not Energise, but looks like him.
Enlisting the help of a business man, a lovely girl that he meets and courts during the novel, and another bookie, Scott decides to get Energise back.
Unusually for a Francis novel, Scott's courtship of the girl is done well and Scott's business background is also well drawn, but its the story itself that is just sublime.
In the end, even after all that transpires, Scott knows that it was worth it.
And so will the reader.