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.)
settled into a brief silence, fidgeted, then moved on ." So, what have
we got on the agenda for today, Mata?"
Anna raised an eyebrow.
"Like in Hari. Mrs. Sherlock."
Anna nodded to keep him from further analogy ." Mata" was better for the
self-image than "Marple" and he was headed in that direction ." Ranger
station," she said ." I'm going to call Frieda. See if she's turned up
anything more. Maybe you could call what's her name, that girl-"
" Woman ."
"Woman-of tender years-who works the Visitors' Center on St. Marys."
"The pudgy blonde or the lanky one with the nice set of Anna counted to
three waiting for the inevitable punch line.
. . .teeth?"
"Whoever." Though she'd probably seen and talked to each of them at
least once in passing, Anna had noticed neither of the young women ."
Which one was on duty on Thursday morning?"
"Blond pudgy," Dijon answered without hesitation. Hormones had
temporarily given him an almost superhuman memory for gender details.
"Okay. Her. Call and find out what the deal is with Hull. She's got
the idea he was on the phone with the regional office. Not true .
Maybe she'll tell us something we can use."
"Right. And why am I supposed to be calling His. (;eorgia Peach?"
"I don't know. Boy meets girl. Boy calls girl. Be creative."
A silence stumbled between them that was so unlike Dijon that Anna
looked over at him ." What?" she demanded.
"She's white. Don't look so offended. White's not innately disgusting.
But this is Georgia. PC ain't happening. What if Daddy's a good ol'
I)oy with a shotgun and a sheet?"
Anna hadn't thought of that ." Pretend you're Rick," she said after a
moment.
Dijon laughed ." You're frigging weird, you know that?"
He'd do it ." Good," Anna said, and having rolled one fender into the
single scrap of shade the lot afforded, she turned off the ignition.
Frieda had been busy. In her mind's eye, Anna saw a map of the United
States lit up by telephone calls as was sometimes depicted in old
movies. The lawsuit against Alice Utterback was more than just a
nuisance suit. Slattery had a strong case. According to Frieda, in
Alice's zealousness to bring women pilots on board, she'd pulled strings
in personnel. When the job descriptions were published, they were
explicit almost down to bra size, making it virtually impossible for any
but the four targeted women to obtain the positions.
Utterback was working with the knowledge of her superiors .
The United States Forest Service had come under contempt of court a few
years earlier for failing to hire women in sufficient numbers. Alice
had been instructed to see it didn't happen a second time. But though
the Forest Service would presumably cover any financial losses incurred
had Hammond pressed his suit, Utterback would have paid for it with her
career. Every public relations disaster required a sacrificial lamb.
Sometimes the lambs were innocent and sometimes not, but the chosen took
the hit for the rest of the flock.
Alice Utterback didn't strike Anna as the type to go like the proverbial
to the slaughter. Neither did she seem the sort to commit murder to
avoid it. There was that about the woman that led one to believe she
would fight her battles in the open and by Queensberry rules.
The dispatcher had less luck in her inquiry into the Belfores'
connection with Slattery Hammond. North Cascades was a big park and
wild; the districts didn't overlap socially as much as in smaller parks.
Hammond had flown out of Redmond and lived in Hope, Canada. Todd was
district ranger in the Cascades. The Belfores kept an apartment in
Hope, where Tabby spent most of her time .
Evidently Tabby was frightened by the wildness and isolation of the
Cascades. Todd came to town on his weekends. There was not even a
whisper of anything between Mrs. Belfore and the pilot. In a town the
size of Hope, unless Tabby was infinitely more resourceful than Anna
gave her credit for, there would have been gossip had the two been seen
together.
Frieda had tracked down the particulars on Hammond's marriage. They
were separated and had been since the birth of their son two years
before. Mrs. Hammond had filed for divorce on several occasions but
never went through with it. According to what Frieda had been able to
gather, she wasn't terribly broken up over her husband's demise.
Disposing of the inconvenient remains and getting her hands on the
insurance money were the goals an ungenerous coworker attributed to her.
There wasn't as much judgment in that as the bare words implied, Frieda
told Anna. The Hammond marriage had not been crafted inside the pearly
gates. For the past twenty-three months, the Mrs. had a restraining
order against Slattery and was fighting a dogged court battle to keep
him from unsupervised visitations with his son. Near as Frieda could
tell, the restraining order wasn't a onetime, divorce-spawned action.
Hammond had two previous orders filed against him in the past three
years. With the exception of the last, all had been withdrawn.
" That might explain the police visits to his apartment," Anna said.
"That would be my guess," Frieda replied.
Anna thanked her for her work, and after a minute or two of
pleasantries, she rang off.
"Anything?" she asked as Dijon let himself into the chief ranger , s
office and sprawled in the straight-backed visitor's chair by the door.
God, I'm good," he said cheerfuj)y ." Rick's got a date for the day
after we get off this desert isle, and if he follows my lead, he might
even get lucky."
"He's married," Anna said flatly.
Dijon made an exaggerated face depicting horror ." Well, gee, that
changes everything."
So much for family values. It was a moot point anyway. As soon as
their tour of duty was over, they'd all be flown out of Georgia on the
first available plane.
"What I got," Dijon said, and ticked the points off on fingers so free
of calluses that Anna guessed to date he'd done little but read and
write about fieldwork, "our Norman was on the mainland at the time the
plane went down. His. Pudge saw him come off the dock in St. Marys
around nine-thirty that morning. After the news of the crash reached
him he came back by helicopter. It was the chief his own self who told
her he'd been on the phone with whosis in the regional office at the
magical moment he was supposed to be rendezvousing with Hammond. His.
P. said Hull told her he'd taken the call over here. It didn't seem to
bother her that he'd have to break half a dozen laws of physics to pull
that off. I didn't push her, her being blond and all. Didn't want to
tax her brain."
Anna nodded ." Hull told Renee he'd taken the call in St. Marys."
Briefly she pondered in silence ." Lies are good," she said at last ."
Gives us something to go on."
"So we work it out backwards," Dijon said, as they motored sedately Gp
the lane toward the north end of the island, burning petrol and being
available ." The Beechcraft is tied down in an open field in the dead
center of the island for two and a half days and two nights .
Sometime during that-what?-sixty-two hours, person or persons unknown
sabotage it. That pretty much counts everybody in. No one that's not
in jail can account for that long a stretch of time .
Anybody off the island?"
"Not that I know of," Anna replied ." Easy enough to check."
" Screw alibis?"
" Pretty much."
"Witnesses?"
"Maybe," Anna granted ." Dot and Mona live right off the end of the
airstrip. They may have seen something. If they did, I can't imagine
they wouldn't have come forward. There's no such thing as a secret on
this island. I doubt there's a soul who doesn't know the plane was
wrecked on purpose. All we've managed to keep under wraps is how that
sabotage was accomplished."
"Maybe the old ladies don't know it could've happened over a three-day
period. Maybe they only thought about who was hanging around an hour or
two before the plane took off," Dijon said.
"Worth a stop, " Anna conceded.
Dijon whooped ." Hot on the trail," he said, and: "Can I interview the
old broads? I thought of 'em."
Inwardly, Anna groaned. At least she thought it was inward until Dijon
said: "Stop making noises like a buffalo in heat. I won't fu- foul up.
Jesus. Give me a break."
Anna said nothing. She was cursing the buddy system a paucity of
vehicles had saddled them with.
"Come on," Dijon wheedled with transparent charm ." Old ladies respond
well to godlike young men. Take you for example."
Anna laughed ." I'll watch and learn."
The meadow near Stafford House and Dot and Mona's cottage was set on a
neck of the island not much more than a mile wide. The field was
good-sized; enough space to house a dirt airstrip with room on either
end to climb clear of the wiquitous live oaks and paies .
Ribbons of shelf-and-sand cut the meadow from the surrounding woods.
Stafford was at the eastern edge of the airstrip. An eerie spot called
appropriately the Chimneys bordered it to the north where a settlement
of slave cabins had been burned to the ground after the Civil War,
leaving a grove of brick-and-mortar monuments: chimneys designed to
harness fire and left as a testament to its final victory. To the east,
pines cut off the view of the Atlantic. Left over from the days they
were grown for harvest, the trees marched away in orderly rows.
Dijon and Anna emerged on the southern edge of the rough rectangle to
find the place bustling-or as close to a bustle as the heat would allow.
The blue truck Alice Utterback had been given was parked beside the
airstrip. Three figures clad in the pale green of the United States
Forest Service were crceping along, heads down, eight or ten feet apart.
Along the shaded tabby wall at Stafford, a peanut gallery had formed.
Guy was there, spread over his ATV like a blanket. Lynette Wagner sat
on the wall, her legs dangling down near the crew boss's shoulders. She
was laughing at something Guy said. In the unguarded moment, his face
glowed with pride and pleasure. His defenses down, joy stripped his
worn face of years. Anna was surprised she hadn't noticed before. He
was sweet on Lynette. But then everybody was sweet on Lynette; Marshall
had gotten lost in the crowd. A scrawny band of gold on the left hand
was not proof against the girl's charms. Anna made no judgment calls.
Given life in the nineties, it was a wonder anyone's marriage survived.
For a brief moment, one that passed so quickly she didn't even need to
hold herself accountable for it, Anna was glad s],-'d been widowed. The
untimely death of her beloved Zachany had left her heart broken but her
dreams intact. For Anna Pigeon and Juliet Capulet True Love would
always exist.
Oblivious of fire ants and the wiquitous ticks, Dot and Mona sat nearby
on the ground, Flicka butting first one, then the other in successful