Read Endangered Species Online
Authors: Nevada Barr
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Pigeon; Anna (Fictitious character), #Women park rangers, #Cumberland Island National Seashore (Ga.)
Guy settled into the dirt and lay back, using his pack as a headrest. AI
puffed absently on a dead pipe. Dijon couldn't take the stillness and
leaped up to join Rick gossiping with an extraneous maintenance worker.
Dead strangers evoked a smorgasbord of the lesser emotions and served as
marvelous educational tools, warnings, and veiled threats. When an
acquaintance was killed it was closer to home; one knew some of the
threads that tied the deceased to a common humanity. Without enough
real connection to grieve, one was left in an uncomfortable place
between curiosity and embarrassment.
Chief Ranger Hull crossed the clearing, wiping his hands carefully on a
clean white pocket hanky. Scenting a shift in the action, Rick and
Dijon drifted back to the rest of the crew.
Hull stopped near Guy's feet and the crew boss sat up as a sign of
respect ." Mr. Marshall here has probably already told you the pilot
was Slattery Hammond. He was flying drug interdiction for us and the
Department of Forestry." Hull never looked up from his hands while he
talked, but continued to rub meticulously between each finger with the
square of cotton. His face worked maniacally, the eyebrows rising as if
in sudden surprise, then dropping, his mouth stretching as if he were
trying to scrape something from his rabbity teeth by moving his lips
over them. For the first time Anna saw the facial gestures for what
they were; not emotion but uncontrolled tics or nervous spasms, worse
now that he was under pressure ." We're pretty sure the second man was
our district ranger, Todd Belfore. Mr. Marshall said he'd spent time
with you, so I realize this is bad news for you as well as us."
Finally Norman Hull pocketed the handkerchief and Anna breathed a sigh
of relief. Till it stopped she'd not realized how much his Pontius
Pilate routine was getting on her nerves.
"It will be worst for Mrs. Belfore-Tabby. As you are probably aware
she is . . . ah . . . with child. Very much so." Despite the
god-awful circumstances, his old-world delicacy elicited a mental smile
from the part of Anna's brain that eschewed modern cynicism .
"I would greatly appreciate it, Mr. Marshall-Guy-if you wouldn't mind
lending me this young lady. I feel Mrs. Beffore would be more
comfortable if there was another woman present."
Panic rose in Anna's chest ." Where's Lynette?" she demanded cravenly.
"Lynctte's gone over to the mainland," Hull said. He sounded offended,
as if he had offered Anna a great honor. In a way he had.
"Sorry," Anna said ." Caught me off guard. Sure, I'll come .
Damn." She levered herself up from the duff but she could tell she'd not
been quick enough. Disapproval flickered through the busy machinations
of the chief ranger's face.
Shouldering her pack, she followed him docilely from the oak woods. A
shiny blue Ford pickup truck waited for them in the dust of the lane.
That Hull managed to keep it glossy through sand and salt and drought
spoke reams about the man.
Anna buckled herself in and the chief ranger drove south. The closer
they came to Plum Orchard, the slower the truck moved.
Hull was dreading this as much as she was. Anna took comfort in that.
Regardless of her gender she didn't doubt he'd do the actual breaking of
the news. He was chief ranger. They were paid for that sort of thing
and most took their responsibilities to heart. Stewardship extended to
all the animals in the park, even the two-legged variety.
Plum Orchard was a gracious old Georgian Revival-style mansion built in
1898 by Andrew Carnegie for his son. In the grand tradition, it rose
three stories with arched floor-to-ceiling windows along the ground
floor and four fine strong pillars supporting a gabled porch roof two
stories high. A railed veranda ran around three sides. Several
additional porches were tucked into odd angles. One, near the back,
still boasted a wide swinging bench that Anna liked to catnap on when
they were involved in the tedious process of filling rubber stock tanks
with well water.
Two of these tanks marred the expanse of front lawn. With the
continuing drought the crew kept them full so that should fire break
out, helicopters could fill their drop buckets. The island was
surrounded by water but so delicate was the chemistry of life that to
use salt water to quench inland fires would damage the ecological
balance.
Beyond the tanks, ancient oaks, furred in resurrection ferns and
dripping veils of Spanish moss, dotted the grounds. Two stately palms,
grown taller than the house, stood sentinel at the front entrance.
Behind the house was the inland waterway that separated the island from
the mainland and the town of St. Marys.
Ranger Hull followed the graveled drive around to the back of the house
and switched off the ignition. He and Anna had not exchanged a single
word since they'd left the burn site. The bang of a screen door rattled
down from the upstairs apartment and they exchanged guilty glances.
"Waiting isn't going to make it any easier," he said, and pulled the
handle on his door. Anna noticed he didn't actually push it open till
he satisfied himself that she was going to do the same. Her earlier
cowardice had not gone unnoticed. To redeem herself, she stepped
smartly from the truck and walked around the tailgate.
Wooden stairs, added in recent years as a fire escape and to provide
private access to the apartment, led up to the second floor .
Tabby Belfore had come onto the small landing outside the screen door.
The sun was behind her, shining through the thin fabric of her summer
dress and her fine blond hair. The dress was pale yellow and sheer,
very much like her hair. Backlit, the clothing appeared burned away,
only a halo left surrounding her narrow shoulders and swollen belly. To
Anna she was beautiful, reminiscent of a stunning painting she'd once
seen by Gustay Klimt of a pregnant nude veiled in crimped auburn hair.
Anna found herself running up the steep steps, suddenly afraid Tabby
would fall.
" You're Anna, aren't you?" Tabby began, knowing the answer but feeling
the need to make hostess noises.
"Yes. Fire crew." Anna had reached the top and, standing between Tabby
and the stairs, felt both relieved and foolish. Chief Ranger Hull
pushed up behind her and she was glad to turn the situation over to him.
"May we step inside, Mrs. Belfore?" Hull asked courteously.
All was not well and Tabby sensed it. Her delicate face closed like a
poppy at sundown. Wordlessly she backed into the hallway between the
stairs and the kitchen. A gentleman, Norman Hull held the door and Anna
was forced to enter next.
Tabby closed both hands on her skirt, crumpling the fabric above her
knees. She continued to back away till a kitchen chitir stopped her.
"Why don't we sit?" Anna said gently.
Obediently, Tabby lowered herself onto the seat. She looked for all the
",orld like a waif expecting to be beaten. Her eyes were downcast, her
fingers clutching convulsively, her shoulders pinched up around her ears
as if to ward off a blow.
She didn't ask a single question.
"We have some rather bad news," Hull said. Anna willed him to kneel,
bend down, anything to close the gulf between Tabby Belfore and himself.
Though the kitchen was small, the space loomed like a gulf and Anna
could imagine Mrs. Belfore pitching face forward into it. Quietly she
slipped behind the chair, sat on her heels and rested her elbows on her
knees, forming human arms to the straightbacked chair that held Tabby.
The girl seemed unaware Anna was not part of the furniture. Her fingers
loosed the flimsy dress and closed around Anna's wrist.
Still she didn't look up and she didn't ask for the news.
"Todd has been killed in an airplane crash," Hull said evenly .
"We are terribly sorry for your loss. If there's-"
Tabby's head jerked up, her mouth slightly open; a quick look at the
chief ranger, away, and again the look. A classic double take so out of
place, the beginnings of a laugh were startled out of Anna's throat. The
laughter went on and for an instant Anna thought she'd gone off her
rocker, but it was Tabby who was laughing. Anna got ready to grab the
girl if she had to.
Abruptly, the laughter stopped ." No. Not Todd," Tabby said .
"That's not funny."
Norman Hull. slowly turned his Stetson around, running the brim through
his fingers. His face was working overtime: the eyebrows up, a sudden
grimace. Despite the tic, concern was clear in his eyes ." The drug
interdiction plane crashed and the pilot was killed," Hull began again.
This time Tabby was nodding as if she understood, as if she was taking
the information in.
"Todd was with him. We're pretty sure he didn't feel anything .
Death was instantaneous."
Tabby sat stone-still. Anna shifted her weight. Her right leg was
going to sleep. Hull looked at her for help or corroboration but she
merely shrugged. Tabby had heard. There was nothing to do but wait.
"Todd wasn't with him," Tabby said finally. Neither Anna nor Norman
Hull replied. Tabby looked from one to the other, the emotions on her
face as readable as those of a very young child: disbelief, rage, fear.
And something else. The last one, Anna couldn't read. It was how she
imagined a woman's face would look if her heart suddenly imploded and
she had the misfortune to go on living.
Another few seconds passed. Anna started to get to her feet .
Tabby began screaming, raw gouts of desperation. Reaching up, she raked
her fingers down her cheeks. The nails had been bitten to the quick but
the force of the clawing left angry welts.
Anna turned to Hull ." Get that helicopter. Get her out of here .
To a hospital."
The chief ranger nodded, put his Stetson square on his head, and left
the kitchen. Anna could hear his boots clattering down if)e wooden
stairs to the truck where he'd left his radio.
Tabby's screams sawed out with the regularity of breath. Ann,,] caught
hold of her hands but the fingers remained stiff and curled as if she
were still tearing at her face. Twice Anna begged her to stop. The
screams went on and the moment Anna loosed her hands the rending of the
flesh began again.
"Come on, come on, take it easy, we'll get you through this."
Anna was murmuring the words she'd murmured to a hundred shaken and
injured people over the years. She scarcely heard her own voice.
A coffee cup sat on the drainboard, an inch of cold coffee scummed with
milk in it. Anna dumped it and refilled it with cold water . In a
sudden snapping movement she threw it in I'abby's face.
Abruptly the screaming stopped. Tabby's hands transformed back into
something resembling human appendages. Spluttering like one nearly
drowned, she wiped the water from the front of her dress.
You can't do this," Anna said quietly ." Much as you want to, you cant
fall apart now."
Tabby smoothed her hands over her belly. The water made the fabric of