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.)
going on about the bodies and all, never thinking. It could've just as
easy been Norman, Ellen's daddy. God, then I'd've been out of a job .
If you ask me, he ought to send the regional director a case of bourbon.
If he hadn't called Norm at the St. Marys office and kept him on the
line, he'd've made that flight instead of Todd.
"Nope," Renee said finally ." I could've swore I had some Bufferin in
here somewhere but I guess they all got ate up. Sorry." She flopped
down in her swivel chair and looked ready to kill a little more time in
idle chatter, but Anna didn't feel up to it. She mumbled her thanks and
made her escape.
In the break room she stole a Coke, promising the honor system two
quarters when she had them. Pressing the cold can against the lump on
her skull, she again braved the heat of the August sun.
Feeling like an exile, she cleaned out her room in the fire dorm and
drove to Plum Orchard. If Guy wanted the truck back, he could damn well
come and get it. Anna resented being sold down the river even as she
welcomed the solitude of the Belfores' apartment and the chance to lie
down before her head fell off.
The trip up the two flights of stairs took the last of her strength .
Abandoning her red fire pack on the first landing, she staggered in the
door.
The medicine cabinet was a disappointment. Apparently the Belfores
treated only maladies of the ego. A clutter of products promising to
restore hair, keep skin young, and grow strong fingernails filled the
shelves. No analgesics. Anna sat on the toilet and, head in hands,
indulged in a few tears of self-pity.
From a phone in the bedroom she called the Cumberland Island National
Seashore Visitors' Center in St. Marys. A cheerful female voice
answered. Anna introduced herself and begged this happy soul to send
some aspirin over on whichever boat was going to the island next.
It must have been a slow day. The woman kept Anna on the line for five
minutes, marveling at the recent tragedy and telling again the story of
the regional director's call saving Norman Hull from the jaws of death.
There was something in near misses, twists of fate, that rekindled in
the human psyche the desire to believe in a grand master plan.
Anna stayed on the line until the voice promised a bottle of Excedrin on
a maintenance boat leaving around three-thirty.
bence was a balm. To lie down on a bed, exquisite. Had some quiet
unobtrusive servant tiptoed in and turned on the air conditioner, Anna
would have believed in a kindly God. As it was, she lay in the stifling
heat, feeling the trickles of sweat prick under her clothes.
Sleep pressed heavily on her limbs, forcing her eyelids closed .
Was she indeed concussed, she knew she mustn't give in to it .
Vaguely she remembered that people with head injuries needed to be
awakened periodically for the first ten hours. For the life of her she
couldn't remember why.
Fending off the sandman's advances, she propped herself up against the
pillows and reached again for the bedside phone.
"Mesa Verde National Park."
"Hey, Frieda," she said wearily ." It's Anna."
Frieda was the dispatcher at Mesa Verde, the chief ranger , s secretary,
and, Anna hoped, a friend.
" What's up?" Frieda asked.
Directness: it was one of the many things for which Anna admired the
woman. She gave Frieda a brief account of the airplane crash. She
didn't mention the blow to the back of her head. Not because Frieda
would tell anyone-Mesa Verde's dispatcher was a safe repository for even
the most sensitive information-but because the effort of convincing her
she wasn't hurt was too much to contemplate.
"See what you can dig up on Slattery Hammond," Anna said .
"He used to work for the Forest Service in Region Six. Each pilot has
to be approved by the aviation department yearly. The records ought to
be in Redmond or Portland. And could you call m, back in half an hour
whether you find out anything or not?" Anna afraid that, left to her own
devices, she would sleep too long.
Frieda promised she would. If she thought the request peculiar she kept
it to herself. It wasn't in Frieda's job description to do
investigative background work but she was good at it and, when other
duties weren't pressing, enjoyed it. Frieda had been with the NPS for
eighteen years, half her life. Anybody who hadn't slept on her couch,
borrowed her car, or mooched a free meal off of her knew someone who
had. The dispatcher had connections in odd and useful places.
"Hammond. USFS. Region Six. Got it," Frieda said.
Anna let a sigh escape ." How's Piedmont?" she asked, her pain making
her homesick for the comforts of her cat.
"Misses his morn-other than that, good. Bella's taken to coming with
me. While I clean the cat box she plays with the cat. As a team, we're
unbeatable."
Bella was the seven-year-old daughter of one of the park employces. Anna
had fallen in love with the child her first summer at Mesa Verde.
"Good deal," Anna said ." I've got to go." She hung up before the ache
in her head deprived her of the power of coherent speech.
Secure in the knowledge that Frieda wouldn't let her sleel) to death,
Anna let her eyes unfocus and her mind drift. In the narrow and fuzzy
field of her vision was the bedroom door standing half open, a lacy pink
peignoir hanging from a hook on the back. What looked like a tiny
little kid's purse or a giant padlock hung from the doorknob. Because
she didn't know what it was, the object aggravated Anna. Above it was a
dead bolt and above that a chain lock. A chain lock on an inside door;
that wasn't the usual. Taken in the context of the two locks, the
unidentified hanging object lost its mystery. Anna had seen them
before. They were traveler's intruder alarms, motion detectors. When
disturbed they emitted a loud obnoxious noise.
Three security measures on the bedroom door. Jesus, Anna thought, as
she slid into a heavy sleep. At least one of the Belfores was sure as
hell afraid of something.
N N A WA S U P at four-thirty. At six she was to pick up Dijon at the
lfire dorm and patrol the north end of the island. Guy had made a
special trip to Plum Orchard the evening before to tell her her work
with fire crew was in no way alleviated by the nightly baby-sitting
chore. The first was her job, the second her duty.
Anna was feeling anything but dutiful. Her temples pounded as if
something vaguely equine were trapped in her skull hammering with
iron-shod hooves to get out. Her neck was stiff from sleeping on the
sofa in the Belfores' living room. Foraging for coffee in the
unfamiliar kitchen, she cursed Norman Hull, Guy, Tabby, and whoever had
tried to crack her skull.
The logical assumption was that whoever had hashed her over the head was
the same individual who sabotaged Slattery's Beechcraft. Frieda's
inquiries had turned up some interesting connections .
Hammond had a reverse discrimination suit filed against Alice Ut
terback. Prior to going to the Washington, D.C., office, Alice had been
head of aviation for Region Six. She'd passed over Hammond's
application three times. All three times she hired a female pilot to
fill the position he applied for. When he finally crawled on board in a
seasonal capacity, he alleged Alice had discriminated against him in an
assortment of petty ways. Anna's favorite was the accusation that Alice
had put up a poster of Charles Lindbergh over his picture of Miss
November in a hangar in Redmond, Oregon.
Alice certainly had the knowledge to wreck an airplane. And was now in
an excellent position to screw up the investigation. Not for a moment
did Anna believe that particular scenario. Still, it made her
uncomfortable.
Being a woman of wisely maintained cynicism, Frieda had run not only
Hammond but all the possible targets of the saboteur through NCIC, the
National Criminal Information Center. Hammond, Belfore, and Hull all
had clean records.
Anna had not thought to run the chief or district rangers. People with
felonies on their records were automatically barred from carrying a law
enforcement commission. Frieda knew better and told Anna horror stories
of a goodly number who'd slipped through the cracks: convicted murderers
wearing the green and gray, representing the NPS to a trusting public.
Through the grapevine, Frieda had also discovered that though Hammond
had no record, he'd had some run-ins with the local police in Hope,
Canada, the small town outside North Cascades National Park in
Washington where some of the park employees kept "city homes." Cops had
showed up at his apartment more than once. What about was open for
speculation.
Caffeine, a shower, and two Excedrin transformed Anna into something
more closely resembling a human being, and at five a.m. she slipped
quietly from the Belfores' apartment to greet the day. The sun had not
yet deigned to rise but there was promise in the east .
Standing on the wooden landing halfway down the fire escape, she
absorbed the freedom to he had out of doors.
She had known her head hurt, realized the couch was lumpy .
What hadn't occurred to her till she was free of it was the tension and
sorrow that permeated every stick of furniture and scrap of fabric that
made up the Belfore home. Even before Tabby returned from the mainland,
Anna had sensed it. Fear was there in the many locks, in the unguents
and creams for maintaining youth; sadness in the pink chiffon dressing
gown unsuited for a widow, in the wide bed, lonely for one; in every
picture where, against a glorious backdrop of green mountains, a blond
woman smiled at a dead man.
Breathing deeply of the soft air, Anna let some of that tension leave
her. Her mind sank into the holding warmth of a southern dawn as the
first light shamed the stars from the sky. The horrid littles of being
human: life, death, birth, love and betrayal, were of no moment to her
today. All she had to do was drive a truck and look for smoke. Even
with a headache and a bad attitude, she should be able to do that.
As she neared the meadow by Stafford mansion, rusted shocks and rough
road were well on the way to undoing her resolve. Early light poured
into the clearing. Splashed over the sand-blasted windshield it was
blinding. A small dark shape-a dog maybe-darted into the glare
obscuring the road in front of the truck and Anna slammed on the brakes.
She skidded to a stop without any sickening bumps. To her left was the
meadow, to her right a wall cemented from sand and shell that separated
Stafford and its attendant cottage from the dirt road.
The critter she'd narrowly avoided sending to the promised land was
disappearing through a gate in the wall. A glimpse of white tail and
spotted rump was all Anna was afforded. Then, like a magical moment in
a fairy tale, a face peeked back around the gatepost. A
fawn not more than a month old looked up at her with Disney eyes .