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.)
the dress adhere to her skin and Anna could see a pulsing movement as if
a tiny hand or foot pounded the ceiling for quiet.
"Oh my God," Tabby said ." Oh my dear God." She didn't cease to weep but
the tears came silently, mixing with the water Anna had thrown, dripping
off'her jaws and down the bodice of her dress.
Anna pulled up a second chair and sat knee to knee with Tabby, ready to
catch her if she fell.
They were still sitting like that when the helicopter came.
NAKED ANNA STOOD on the shore. Warm wavelets licked at her Nbare toes
like friendly puppies. There was just enough breeze so she could feel
the air moving across her skin. Dusk had come and gone and the cloak of
night gave her privacy for this ultimate freedom. She marveled at how
different life was without clothes on; better-at least until it grew
cold or buggy. For modern Victoriansa culture that kept nudity in
darkened movie theaters linked always with sex and more often than not
with violence-to be outdoors and naked was exhilarating, wild,
dangerous.
Particularly for a woman alone.
Anna pushed that thought aside. It was media-borne and not usually
true. Fear sold ad space and so television and the newsplipers
mainlined it.
For a long ways out the ocean was shallow, and she walked sixty yards
before the water came to her waist. Stars overhead, stars on the water,
she sank down and let the sea lift her. The rubber bands that held her
braids had been cut and the insistent pulse of the ocean unraveled her
smoke-matted hair. Something, seaweed maybe, slunk past her left leg,
touching the back of her knee. She added sharks to the list of things
she refused to think about. Fear was a burglar, breaking into one's
mind, stealing away peace. Mentally she bolted her doors and drifted
with the night.
The fire was out, the bodies bagged; yellow police tape cordoned off the
crash site. Though Anna had never worked a plane wreck before, the dead
and dying were not strangers to her. The twisting roads of Mesa Verde
National Park and the straight fast highway through the southern edge of
the Guadalupe Mountains had claimed their share of motorists. There had
even been a man burned to death in a wildfire she'd worked in
California. But he'd been totally consumed, reduced to elemental ash.
What was troubling Anna was the pilot's right ear. That pink, human ear
nestled in the carnage. The image would take a while to fade. Weeks
would pass before the sight of a shrimp in a nest of fettuccine or a
dried apricot among the peanuts was rendered harmless.
Lowering her feet to the sandy bottom, Anna spread her legs and leaned
into the sleepy surf, reveling in the sensual thrill of water against
her skin. The moon crept misshapen over the horizon, spilling its light
across the Atlantic. Twining it through her fingers, Anna wove strands
of gold into the dark salt water, enjoying the mindless play.
After the fire had been declared out and the brass and the medics and
the machinery had ferried each other back to the mainland, Guy had
gathered the crew together.
"Bear with me now, I've had the training but this is the first time I've
had to use it," he'd said as he stood in front of the house that served
as the fire dorm. His face was blacked from soot. Kept clean by his
hard hat, his head gleamed in the growing dusk. Propping one foot on
the stump of a tree cut nearly level with the ground, he rocked slowly,
thinking.
Legs dangling like children, Anna and Dijon sat side by side on the
tailgate of the pumper truck. Rick leaned against a fender and AI sat
on one of the coolers, methodically packing his pipe.
A southern evening trickled in from the east, filling the cracks between
the shadows with soothing darkness. Drought had knocked the mosquitoes
to their knees and only an occasional bloodthirsty whine pierced the
tranquillity. Stars had yet to shine and the sky was colorless with the
abdication of the sun.
Air-conditioning, sofas, lights, window screens-all were less than
twenty feet away but no one thought to move the meeting indoors. For
the five of them, tailgates and trucks were familiar ground, closer to
home than strange quarters.
"You've all heard of critical-incident stress management?" GLIY asked,
looking around for a neutral spot where he could aim a stream of tobacco
juice ." Anybody ever been through a session?"
Everybody but Dijon raised a hand ." Good. Then help me out. You
pretty much know the drill. Anybody want to go first?"
Ten seconds ticked by; then Rick said: "It's a crock of shit, if you ask
me."
Anna felt a stab of anger on Guy's behalf but the crew boss took Rick's
words in stride, recognizing them for what they signified: discomfort.
This new touchy-feely stuff had yet to be embraced by some of the rank
and file.
Hands on hips, Guy stared upward a moment; a man collecting his thoughts
." Then why don't you just kind of be here in case somebody needs you to
listen, okay, Hick?" he said at last ." We won't be doing group hugs or
nothing."
Rick was nailed in by that. No face lost. Nothing to bluster against.
He propped an elbow on the edge of the truck bed and tried to look
superior.
Anna understood the impulse. She didn't want to talk about her feelings
either. Maybe nobody else shared them. Maybe they weren't good enough.
Maybe it was nobody's damn business. Maybe they were inappropriate;
that was the fear that silenced most people.
Goaded by fear of fear, Anna decided to go first ." I was afraid the
widow was going to drop that baby right then and there."
Nods all around. Nobody outraged. It was just a thought. Anna felt a
little bad for referring to Tabby Belfore as "the widow." just
distancing herself, she guessed.
Half a minute crept by, tension stretching the seconds till Anna swore
she could feel herself aging, but she was damned if she was going to go
first twice.
" Hanson bothered me," Dijon blurted out.
"Yeah? Why?" Anna knew that Guy, ever diligent to his duties as crew
boss, was trying to coax. He was following the book. But being born a
booted, hard-hatted man, there was a lack of conviction. Like a good
soldier he followed orders, even those he didn't thoroughly comprehend.
It didn't matter. Dijon answered anyway and that was what counted, the
talking ." He was so tucking 'Ho, ho, ho."' Dijon had forgotten to clean
up his language in front of a lady. He must have been upset ." Then
he'd go all fakey, undertaker-sad."
"Maybe he didn't know what else to do," AI said.
"He's a dirtbag," Rick said.
More silence followed, less strained this time. Night was flowing from
the east. The anonymity bestowed by darkness eased their minds.
"I don't figure anybody was still alive by the time we got there," Dijon
said tentatively. The hope in his voice seemed to crystallize all their
thoughts. Finding dead bodies-even fresh ones-was one thing, but to be
there, helpless witness to the migration of souls, was something else
entirely.
Transmuted from gold to silver, the moon had shrunk to the size of a
dime. The dunes were white with its light. Silhouetted against the
sands, a small herd of horses walked north in single file: a
stallioneven at this distance Anna could see impressive equipment
drooping nearly to his hocks-five mares, and two foals. The Cumberland
horses; the herd numbered close to three hundred animals. For decades
they'd run wild on the island. They were part of the lore, part of the
allure, part of the history. And a dilemma for the NPS .
The fragile dune and interdune structures hadn't evolved to cope with
equine depredation. Hardened hooves of these exotic beasts destroyed
the delicate plant life that held the sand in place. Their enormous
appetites grazed down the vegetation between dune and forest, and the
sand was migrating inland, smothering the freshwater lakes.
It would be political suicide to kill them and economic folly to deport
them. Blessedly uninvolved in higher management, Anna chose to float on
the tide and enjoy them.
Not for the first time the scene in the Belfores' kitchen played through
her mind. Tabby's reaction had bothered Anna at the time .
In retrospect it seemed even stranger and she wondered if Tabby had
slipped a cog under the strain.
In her years as a park ranger, Anna had delivered her share of bad news.
People took the hit in a lot of ways. The storm of grief had been
expected. The denial wasn't out of place. Tabby's sudden laughter,
though jarring, hadn't been particularly alarming. Comedy of the absurd
was based on the fact that what startles may very well get a laugh.
Lazily, Anna looked toward shore. The horses were gone. So was the ATV
she'd borrowed to come to the beach. A jolt of adrenaline disturbed her
calm till she spotted it where she'd left it. A strong current,
scarcely felt in so large a body of water, was carrying her north,
parallel to the island.
The beach was devoid of humanity but not of life. Minute skittering,
too far away for Anna to identify, attested to abundant actlyity. Ghost
crabs probably; maybe even baby loggerhead turtles from an earlier
laying, though she doubted it. Marty Schlessinger would have been in
attendance had that been the case. And, too, the nests tended to be
further north, east of where the drug interdiction plane went in.
Anna's thoughts had come full circle, back to the accident and its
aftermath. Back to Tabby Belfore's kitchen. She recommenced playing
"What's wrong with this picture?" In a moment she hit on it .
It wasn't the surprise, the laughter, or the denial, but that they had
come late-a split second too late. Tabby had been waiting for bad news,
just not the bad news she got.
What, if anything, that portended, Anna wasn't sure.
Rolling over onto her belly, she let the waves carry her shoreward till
her fingers touched bottom. The deliciously wicked and wonderful
sensation enveloped her again as she wandered nude down the shoreline,
turning now and again to watch the moon fill her watery footprints with
silver.
staring at the old black rotary phone. A corner of [the coffee table
was cleared of the wiquitous slither of magazines to accommodate it. In
the bedroom of his small Chicago apartment dwelt all the FBI agent's
high-tech communications equipment: fax, modern, answering machine,
Touch-Tone cordless. But when he really wanted to talk, he came to the
rotary. It had heft and substance. He could press the round receiver
to his ear and shut out the world, whisper into the cupped mouthpiece
and feel close to the other end of the line.
Staring at the lump of plastic, still warm from Anna's call, he was
dismayed to think how much of his life-social, family, business, and
love-was conducted over the phone.
Danny and Taters fluttered down from the magazines stacked on the mantel