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.)
temperature was easily above a hundred degrees and the place smelled
like old gym socks. A scarred Formica table held the remains of several
meals mixed in among newspapers, magazines, and junk mail, Against a
wall between the two blinded windows was a couch faded from use and
sunlight. Its once orange and brown plaid had mellowed to a less
offensive hue. More newspapers, underpants, and a single dirty sneaker
were scattered over it to casual effect. No curtains softened the
windows, no rugs rescued the blue speckled linoleum floors, no pictures
graced the walls. An old metal office desk had been shoved against the
wall where the front door banged it every time it opened. Littered with
papers and used coffee cups, it looked the most promising.
As Anna closed the door behind her, she was caught by a stealthy sound
from the nether regions of the small house. For a moment she froze,
listening, then wrote it off to the creaking of an old structure.
Slattery Hammond's bookkeeping habits weren't any better than his
housekeeping. She sat at the desk and methodically shuffled through his
piles: unpaid bills, envelopes full of snapshots, canceled checks, a
postcard from North Cascades in Washington bearing the predictable
"Having a wonderful time. Wish you were here," signed "Bonnie."
The Beechcraft was his; Anna found several payments to a West Coast bank
on the loan. Any heirs were in for a disappointment however; she also
found a bill for the airplane's insurance that was long past due. There
were half a dozen snapshots Scotch-taped to the wall. One was of
Slattery standing beside his plane.
Having never seen the man at his best, Anna studied it with interest.
Hammond was surprisingly good-looking. For some reason-perhaps the name
Slattery or maybe his reputation as recounted by Alice Utterback-Anna
had pictured him as a greaseball. If he was, his evil ways had yet to
leave their stamp on his features. He looked to be in his early
thirties, tall and lean, with brown hair that fell over his forehead.
His eyes were wide-set and ingenuous, his smile that of a boy.
"Deadly," Anna said, and put the photo back where she'd found it.
Of the other five pictures, four were of a girl of eighteen or twenty
playing on a beach and one was a long shot of a pale-haired hiker who
struck Anna as vaguely familiar and she wondered if it was someone she'd
known. The coincidence wouldn't have surprised her. The Park Service
was small and mobile. Rangers from all over crossed paths in training,
in transit, and many of them traveled to other parks when they had the
time off.
Three drawers yielded up Hammond's checkbook, a .357 Colt revolver, four
boxes of ammunition, a stale Marlboro, and a pile of mouse droppings. No
logbooks ." Damn," Anna whispered, and pushed her chair back to survey
the room for another likely spot .
Nothing presented itself. Hammond traveled light.
She wandered into the kitchen but wasn't inspired to touch anything.
What dishes Hammond had were crusted with food and piled in the sink.
The counters hadn't been wiped for a while and two thin black trails of
sugar ants had snaked out to feast on the windfall.
Half the cupboard doors hung open. Anna opened the rest: dust, shotgun
shells, more mouse droppings, and three cans of chili .
The kitchen drawers produced little more. Steeling herself for
Hammond's Good Housekeeping coup de grace, she opened the refrigerator.
It wasn't bad. There was nothing in it but beer, ten or fifteen rolls
of Kodak film, margarine, and a pair of blunt-nosed scissors, the kind
people buy for little kids. For a moment Anna pondered the significance
of the scissors, but drew a blank. Undoubtedly this was one secret
Slattery had taken with him to the grave.
The freezer was better stocked, holding ice, vodka, and twelve packages
wrapped in tinfoil. Anna dutifully unwrapped each one though she could
see no reason a pilot would be so paranoid about his logbooks that he
would disguise them as food. They contained nothing but chunks of badly
butchered meat. Closing the door, she noticed three zip-lock bags on
the interior shelf. At first glance they appeared to contain one pork
chop or one ham bone each. On close examination she was both disgusted
and mystified. Each baggie held one obviously used tampon.
"Oh ish!" she said, using Frederick's favorite expletive.
The bedroom boasted a single bed with a sleeping bag on it, and a
beat-up dresser vomiting clothes. Eau de gym socks overlaid the mess.
Anna made a cursory search of the dresser, picking through the contents
as if they crawled with body lice or crabs, but found nothing of
interest.
The closeness in the sealed house, aggravated by the myriad odors of
garbage and dirty laundry, was beginning to get to Anna. A feeling of
suffocation and tunnel vision built under her sternum and behind her
eyes. the bedroom closet was the only place she'd not yet searched. She
determined to make short work of it and get out of' there.
When she opened the closet door, the room erupted. flammond's clotlies
flew out Lit lier as if they had a life of their own. A licavy plaid
shirt fll)peci winglike at her face and she heard herself yelling. The
something struck a jarring blow above her left ear .
Inside her skull she felt her brain shift and her body was jolted as if
she'd fallen from a great height. A vortex of darkness opened in front
of her and she pitched forward into it.
EW YO it K C I'FY always exhilarated Frederick. Desl)ite its size and
Nbrawling image, Chicago felt small, clean, and easily escaped .
Frederick's vision of Manhattan, locked in by rivers and the sca, was
that of an overburdened ship; like photos he'd seen of derelict boats
bursting with Haitian refugees. Or maybe a birthday balloon in that
anxious limbo between plump and pop, a sense of danger, high stakes.
New York was considered the murder capital of the world. Statistics
didn't bear that out; it was just that the city was so condensed. When
everyone is packed onto half a dozen avenues, everything becomes public,
corpses and dirty laundry included.
Several weeks earlier a couple from Ely, Nevada, in Manhattan for the
first time, had found the naked body of a three-year-old stuffed in a
Bloomingdale's bag on the hood of their rented Hyundai. Even in the Big
Apple that wasn't the norm, but they'd left for home convinced they'd
been to, if not Sodom, then Gomorrah.
The night was warm and he had walked up from the Parker Meridien, where
he was staying at great personal expense. The Parker Meridien had the
key ingredient in the hotel business: location. For that Frederick
shelled out the cash and put up with the insufferable young snob at the
registration desk.
Dr. Molly Pigeon had agreed to meet with him at a pub near the corner
of Ninth and Fifty-ninth. More, he suspected, out of curiosity to see
her little sister's beau than to discuss the death threats .
Dr. Pigeon had described the place: near a corner, glassed-in side walk
seating, window frames painted green. In New York on Ninth Avenue that
didn't narrow it down much and Frederick pulled a slip of paper out of
his pocket with the pub's name written on it. This was the place.
Standing outside in the dark gave him the edge, and feeling slightly
foolish for the professional paranoia of a lifetime, he stepped into
shadow and searched through the tables. Back from the windows, by a
six-by-six post supporting the pseudo greenhouse, he found her. 'There
wasn't any doubt in his mind that it was Anna's sister. There was a
strong familial resemblance. Molly was older and her features more
refined-delicate almost. Her face had a look of control Anna's lacked
and her lips were fuller, more sensuous, but she was unquestionably a
Pigeon. A formidable one. Everything about her breathed power,
competence, and control. Her deep pur pie suit was tailored, her high
heels without a scuff, her short manicured nails painted with clear
polish. Only two chinks showed in the armor: she was smoking and a
nervous habit of running her fingers through her hair had turned an
expensive cut into a girlish, bedroom tousle.
My turn next, Frederick thought as he walked through the door.
Anticipating her inspection, he stood straighter and tugged the cuffs of
his linen sport coat, bought for the occasion, down toward his knuckles.
Off-the-rack clothes seldom had sleeves long enough and a government
salary didn't allow for tailor-mades. Not with a kid in college.
Brushing aside an adolescent fear of appearing uncooled he headed toward
Dr. Pigeon's table.
She s ood when she saw him. In her eyes there was no judgment and her
smile was warm and slightly crooked. The illusion of coldness was
dispelled. But not the illusion of control. Her handshake, the
invitation to sit, the slight nod that brought a waiter running, all
gave Frederick the reassuring feeling that he'd been accepted into a
well-ordered universe.
" Scotch, no ice," Frederick said to the waiter.
"The same , Molly said, then cackled ." You and I are going to get along
fine." Her eyes were hazel, like Anna's, and deeply crinkled at the
corners. Feigned or not, they almost twinkled with interest, as if she
eagerly awaited the fascinating story of his life .
Frederick could see how she commanded $150 an hour.
" An FBI agent," Molly stated.
Beyond Dr. Pigeon's shoulder, Frederick could see the waiter gossiping
with the bartender. He wanted his Scotch. Needed it might be closer to
the truth. Meeting Molly had him as nervous as a boy on his first date.
"A psychiatrist," he countered.
Molly laughed again and the sheer ghoulish sound of her odd chortle made
him laugh with her.
"Don't you sometimes wish you had an occupation that didn't require
comment?" she asked.
The drinks were on their way. Unwittingly, Frederick breathed out his
relief ." Ye s," he answered honestly ." When I'm tired, I've been known
to lie just to avoid a discussion of Ruby Ridge."
"It could be worse." Molly accepted her Scotch ." You could work for the
IRS."
Within thirty minutes the last of the ice was broken, the preliminaries
were over, and two more Scotches were on their way. TO his surprise,
Frederick found he was relaxed and enjoying himself .
Molly was no longer a legend but flesh and blood, a sophisticated,
urbanized Anna, with an openness he missed in her sister.
At the thought of Anna, he reluctantly got down to the supposed business
of this meeting ." Did you do your homework?" he asked.
"Indeed I did." Molly pulled a black leather briefcase from beneath the
table and plucked a manila folder from an outside pocket.
The folder had a computer-generated label on the top ." DEATH THRENrs,,
was written in block letters. A tiny skull and crossbones adorned one
end, a knife dripping red blood the other ." Oh," Molly said, when she
caught his glance ." Clip art. New software. I couldn't resist."