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.)
grabbed at her.
"Maybe," Anna conceded ." Or maybe somebody was after Norman.
"Moot point anyway. These bags just don't hold water as murder weapons.
We'll learn more tomorrow." Alice wiped the evidence off the dashboard
into a leather briefcase, effectively closing the investigation for the
day.
"Watch it!" she yelled suddenly, and Anna slammed on the brakes. On the
dirt, stopping the tires had little effect on forward movement and they
skidded ahead. Two vehicles, both lightweight trucks, one the chief
ranger's, the other borrowed from maintenance to carry Wayne and Shorty,
were stopped in the middle of the road .
Neither had taillights or flashers showing. Even as Anna cursed them
she knew she'd never mention it; she too was driving blind .
Evening had crept upon them so imperceptibly, she'd not realized how
dark it had grown.
Several feet short of Norman Hull's rear bumper the truck shuddered to a
stop. Half a moment later a choking cloud of fine white dust engulfed
them.
Feeling righteous, if belatedly so, Anna switched on the truck's lights
to avoid waylaying another unwary motorist. The headlights raked the
side of the blue pickup truck and, as the dust cleared, picked out a
group of men huddled beyond it to the side of the road.
"Hit a deer," Anna said as she opened the door.
It wasn't a deer, it was a beautiful young man from Austria. And he
hadn't been hit by a car, he'd been shot.
As Anna and Alice approached, the knot of men untied itself .
Rick spoke first ." Anna, get your butt over here and take a look at
this guy's leg.".
Anna did as she was told. The young Austrian sat on a berm of white
dirt and shell that Mitch Hanson had dredged from the south end of the
island to resurface the inland roads. In the uncertain light he looked
terribly pale. His hair, pulled back in a ponytail, was a harsh
contrast in dark brown. He was probably not more than twenty-five, but
pain and exhaustion pulled taut the skin of his face and he looked
considerably older.
Beside him was a young Indian woman-American, not East Indian-as
strikingly beautiful as her companion. She was slight and dark, her
face made up of clear planes and sculpted curves .
Eyes and hair were close to true black. From her small, perfect ears
hung stylized bear fetishes in turquoise saddled with silver.
She had both hands pressed over her mouth as if to keep from screaming
or vomiting. The instant Alice and Anna entered the circle the hands
fluttered apart and she began trying to talk.
What she had been holding in was gasps. Even as her hands flew through
the air trying to tell her story, words were gusted out incoherently.
She was panting, as if she'd just run the hundred-yard dash.
"Sorry," she finally managed ." I can't breathe. The thing-the
bullet-got Guenther in the leg. I've been carrying him for miles."
"Dragging," the Austrian said in perfect English, accented just enough
to make even a middle-aged ranger's heart skip a beat.
Dragging was probably closer to the mark from the look of them .
Guenther was a good-sized man, six feet, maybe 175 pounds. The woman
was slight of frame and slender ." What's your name?" Anna asked her.
" Shawna."
"Breathe, Shawna." To Guenther, Anna said: "I'm Anna Pigeon .
I'm an emergency medical technician. Can I look at your leg?"
Wayne or Shorty had gone back to the truck and turned on the headlamps.
The hard, unilateral light obscured utterly what was in shadow and
ruthlessly illuminated all else.
Feeling a need to explain why nothing had been done prior to her
arrival, Rick said: "We got here maybe a minute before you."
Anna grunted her acceptance of that as she shined Alice Utterback's
Maglite behind the Austrian's knee.
Both hikers were dressed in shorts, heavy boots, and knee-high socks.
Guenther's left leg below the knee was swathed in layers of fabric
obviously cannibalized from out of their packs. T-shirts of various
colors made up the bulk of it.
"It hasn't bled through," Anna said ." How long ago did it happen?"
Guenther and Shawna looked at one another. Time had clearly ceased to
be a measurable linear entity.
"Four hours?" Shawna guessed.
"An hour?" Guenther offered.
"A while," Anna compromised. They were satisfied with that .
"I doubt there's much I can do you haven't already done," she went on ."
You're still up and talking. I'd say the two of you did a dynamite job.
I'm not going to mess with the dressing-all it would do is start the
bleeding again. When we get you to a doctor, he can take it off."
"I was planning to take the boat to the mainland later," Hull said. He
and his wife and their thirteen-year-old daughter lived in St. Marys, a
small town just across the estuary from Cumberland .
"We'll go ahead and leave now. I'll drive you to the hospital there."
" Sooner is better," Anna agreed.
"Anna, if you will get the young lady's statement enroute, I would
appreciate it," Hull said, and began issuing instructions for the
loading and transport of the injured man.
Guenther was settled in the back of the chief ranger's pickup on a pad
of blankets. Wayne rode beside him to keep him company and to keep an
eye on him.
Shawna tucked herself in the cab of the pumper truck between Anna and
Alice ." I love him," she said wearily as she buckled herself in, "but
he can sure be a pain in the ass. I hope the doctors give him drugs. He
needs mellowing out big-time."
She'd regained breath and equilibrium. As Anna fell in line, the last
in their little convoy, she asked again what happened.
"Turnabout's fair play," Alice said, and assuming the role of secretary,
pulled a legal pad out of her briefcase to take notes.
"I don't really know what happened," Shawna told them after a moment's
deliberation ." We'd been camping at Lake Whitney for a couple of days."
Whitney was one of the lovely freshwater lakes being threatened by the
encroaching dunes. Because of the delicacy of the island's ecosystem,
camping there was highly illegal, but Anna let it pass. She wanted the
story told without interruptions.
"We broke camp and were cutting cross-country. I don't know how long
we'd been walking-we were more or less lost but that was the idea. We
knew we couldn't get too lost on a little island. Eventually you're
bound to stumble across something that will set you straight. We were
pushing through a thick bushy place. Guenther was ahead of me a little
ways. There was this huge explosion, then Guenther was down on the
ground grabbing his leg and yelling."
" Whereabouts were you?" Anna asked.
Shawna shook her head ." I can't even guess. We'd been wandering, you
know, looking at things. Then I was pretty freaked. And carrying
Guenther was no picnic. Somewhere between the lake and where you found
us. I'm sorry." Shawna was panting again, as if the telling were as
strenuous as the doing.
"That's okay. Did you see anyone?" Anna asked.
"Nobody."
"Did you hear anything, like somebody running or talking?"
"Nothing. just the bang, then nothing." Shawna leaned forward, elbows
on knees, and rubbed her face hard with both hands.
"You must be pretty pooped," Alice said kindly.
"That's not the half of it," Shawna replied.
For several minutes they rode in silence. Anna struggled with the urge
to press the girl for more information and the desire to leave her in
peace. Information won.
"Describe the wound to me," she said. A slight sniff emanated from
Alice Utterback's direction and Anna assumed it was disapproval ." In
detail," she added, just to be contrary.
Shawna thought for a few moments and Anna realized she gave the girl's
answers more credence than she might have because they were so well
considered. In one so young, this methodical habit of the mind was
unexpected.
"It bled a lot so I can't tell you exactly. It was a mess and we just
wanted to wrap it up before he lost too much blood. Both of us have
first aid. We teach skiing in the winter and you have to. It looked
like a gouge, a furrow, like the bullet came through the back of his leg
sideways and just plowed this trough in his calf."
Guns in national parks were strictly forbidden but that didn't mean they
weren't there. As they were in much of America, guns were abundant in
the parks. Poachers carried them, criminals, researchers dealing with
potentially dangerous animals, citizens feeling the need for
self-protection, law enforcement officers. Short of strip-searching
every visitor and, on Cumberland Island, every resident, there was no
way of keeping them outside park boundaries.
" How big was the furrow?" Anna asked.
"Huge. The Grand Canyon. Maybe three inches wide and an inch or two
deep. Seriously. A big chunk of his calf was gone, like a big old bite
had been taken out of it."
Alice reached behind Shawna, still bent nearly double over her knees,
her face in her hands, and tapped Anna on the shoulder .
When she had Anna's attention she pointed to the girl. Tears were
pouring through her fingers, falling in great dollops, making mud in the
dust on her thighs. Anna had never seen anyone cry like that; buckets.
"If you keep on you'll dehydrate yourself," she said. Alice must have
given her a dirty look. Anna felt a slight tingling on the right side
of her neck ." It'll be okay," she added lamely.
" What if he's crippled?" Shawna whispered.
Anna had no answer to that. For two beautiful young people living by
the strength and grace of their bodies, it was hard to think of a more
bitter blow. Anna hoped Alice would jump in with something wise and
motherly, but she didn't.
As they emerged from the woods into the clearing that heralded the
offices and dock, an ATV roared out of the darkness, its headlight
bouncing with each rut. The lane was too narrow for cars to pass safely
and Anna eased the truck over to let the smaller vehicle by.
The ATV pulled up alongside and stopped. Marty Schlessinger, her white
braids frayed by the wind, glared at them through the truck's open
window. Anna was unoffended. Schlessinger glared at everyone, not so
much a message of malice, Anna thought, as a habit of looking deeply at
phenomena, studying the creatures of the planet.
"What's all the ruckus?" the biologist demanded ." Hull's rampaging
around like a scarecrow in a windstorm. You find something at the
crash?"
Anna shook her head, wishing Marty would turn off the ATV's engine
rather than shouting over the considerable din ." A kid got shot in the
leg. We found him up the road. Norman's taking him and his girlfriend
over to St. Marys. The kid's going to be okay," she added, more for
Shawna's benefit than the biologist's.
The darkness had deepened, but because Marty was so close, Anna could
read her face. The information registered with a look of mild surprise