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.)
leaves of the live oaks, producing a delicate clatter, a sweet
counterpoint to the throbbing shush of waves against the shore.
The open space between the tree line and the sea suited Anna .
As in the wide country of the Southwest, the eye could roll out to the
distance, the soul expand into the great spaces. Back in the densc
woods she didn't breathe as easily. There the air scarcely moved and
the clatter was like as not ticks dropping from the vegetation in search
of new homes with better-stocked larders.
Like the hero in a drawing room comedy, Dijon Smith entered laughing ."
oooeee, I wish I had balls the size of a ghost crab's," he said ." Those
little suckers aren't afraid of anything." Anna knew what he meant. The
little crustaceans, the biggest not more than ten inches from claw to
claw, would stand on their back legs and challenge the ton-and-a-half
pumper trucks as they drove down the beach.
Dijon's dark skin soaked up the moonlight till he looked a shadow of
himself. In a clichd Anna would never give voice to, all she could see
were the whites of his eyes and his flashing teeth.
At twenty-two, Dijon was the baby of the bunch by nearly ten years and
complained good-naturedly about being stuck in the retirement home for
aging firefighters. Under the spreading branches of a live oak, Smith
jumped up, caught hold of a limb, and began chinning himself with an
irritating effortlessness.
" That's knocking ticks down on you," Guy warned.
"Shit! No lie?" Dijon dropped and began brushing off his shoulders and
arms ." Don't tell me that, man. I hate those little mother-" A glance
at Anna ." Buggers.
"They can sense your body heat like heat-seeking missiles," the crew
boss said ." You shake their tree and they drop on you."
"Ticks." Dijon shuddered and did a little dance designed either to
dislodge insects or get a laugh. With Dijon Smith it was hard to tell.
Bending over at the waist, he fluttered his fingers through his
close-cropped hair.
"Don't flick them on me," Anna griped, and jumped back. So convincing
was the performance, she half believed he was acrawl with bloodsucking
monsters.
Marshall slumped back on the ATV, feet over the handlebars, back against
his day pack. Guy could get comfortable anywhere; a highly desirable
attribute in a wildland firefighter ." Get your eggs all laid?" he
asked.
" haven't gotten anything laid since we came to Cumbersome isle," Dijon
returned ." Even those turtles are starting to look good .
I've got to get out of here. I need sex and pizza. This sand and surf
and tick shit is driving me out of my"-again the look at Anna-"frigging
mind."
Anna smiled in the dark. Misplaced as it was, she appreciated the
sentiment and cleaned up her language around Smith to keep her credit
good.
AI Magnus, Rick Spencer, Mitch Hanson, and Lynette Wagner washed up from
the beach on a gust of chatter. Headlights and engine noise sliced the
night as Anna buckled herself onto the bench seat of the pumper truck.
Hanson had driven his government vehicle; Lynette rode with Dijon and
Rick in a second truck as decrepit as the one Anna shared with AI.
Magnus was a short stocky man somewhere in his thirties but exuding the
ageless maturity of the devoted family man. While the A'fV and the
truck growled into the night, AI scraped out the bowl of his pipe, then
banged it against the side of the truck. The smell of sea air and stale
tobacco radiated from his clothing and the cab began to feel as homey as
a country living room.
"No sense eating dust," he explained. He tamped fresh tobacco in the
bowl.
"Who's that Mitch Hanson guy?" Anna asked in idle curiosity .
"Marty seemed deeply aggrieved that he not only had the temerity to
exist but the unmitigated gall to do it in her vicinity."
AI finished the tamping and went through the lengthy ritual of lighting
his pipe before he answered. An addiction to pipe tobacco gave the user
an unearned air of deep and considered wisdom .
When the pipe was drawing properly, he said: "Mitch isn't a bad sort.
He's a dozer operator with maintenance. Keeps the roads passable. An
over-the-hill party boy. Double dipper. He's pretty much retired twice
but's still on the payroll. Maybe that's what's getting to Marty."
Anna nodded in the dark. Scattered throughout government services were
retired military men pulling a full pension and a salary .
Those who worked inspired jealousy. Those who coasted, hatred and
contempt.
Evidently Hanson was in the latter category. Anna had seen him grading
the inland lanes. Or, now that she thought about it, she'd seen his
bulldozer. Either he was nowhere around or he was lounging in the shade
gossiping with the locals. He looked to be fifty or thereabout. His
belly confirmed the aging-party-animal motif; thirty extra pounds
rounded out his face and middle.
The sight and sounds of the other vehicles faded. AI turned the key and
fired up the engine. Inland the lanes were narrow, the palmetto close
and thick. Stiff fingers of vegetation skritched along the sides of the
truck. Despite the muggy heat, Anna rolled her window up. Without
light she couldn't defend herself against the whip of the fronds.
The road was washboarded and hosted deep ruts where streams carried
rainfall from the interior. These seeming obstacles had no effect on
Magnus and he roared along at a bone-rattling thirty miles per hour. In
the beams of the headlights the lane unfurled, a twisting white ribbon
through a tunnel of green. It put Anna in mind of Mr. Toad's Wild Ride
in Disneyland. She cinched her seat belt as tight as it would go and
braced both feet against the dashboard.
"How'd you make out with Marty Schlessinger?" AI bawled over the racket
of the truck ." Did she ask you to dinner?"
"Nope. I asked her over but she wasn't in the mood to go slumming."
"Too bad. jimmy gave me a list of questions I'm supposed to ask her."
jimmy was Ai's eight-year-old son. They talked almost every night. In
a small office building about a mile from the dorm was a telephone fire
crew had access to. Anna and AI were the only members who seemed to
have anyone to call. Most evenings they flipped a coin to see who went
first.
Among Park Service nomads there were two mind-sets: those who threw
themselves wholeheartedly into each new adventure, sleeping with whoever
presented, eating what was set before them, and drinking deep from each
intoxicating cup they came across; and those with a strong tether to
home-a cord more often than not made of telephone wire. Age was a
dividing factor-the young were liberal, having as yet acquired nothing
worth conserving-but the newly single and dedicated bachelors swelled
those ranks.
The clatter of rusting metal drowned out even Al's basso profundo and
Anna settled into a favorite pastime: watching the world go by. Spotlit
into unnaturally bright colors, the jungle flickered past in patterns of
green and black. This was a dry jungle with fragile grip on land. Soil
was thin and sandy, the island prey to hurricanes that could flatten it
or divide it in two with a sudden waterway. Plants grew with the
voracious disregard of the condemned, springing from the rough ground in
impenetrable thickets to fight for light and air beneath oaks
broad-shouldered enough to have weathered a century of storms.
Occasionally the glancing blow of the high beams would stun a night
creature. Two baby raccoons, postcard-perfect, hung halfway up a palm
tree. AI passed in a thunderous cloud of dust without ever seeing them.
Anna hoped the quake of their passage wouldn't dislodge the kits. A sow
and three piglets dashed for cover beneath the palmetto fronds. Three
deer grazed in a meadow in the center of the island where a Beechcraft
on loan for drug interdiction was tied down at the end of a dirt strip.
'There wei-e few meadows maintained on the island. This was one of the
largest. Even more than in daylight, Anna felt the relief of coming out
into the open after so long a time closed beneath the dusty canopy of
vegetation.
Moonlight turned the deer to shadows, the dry grass to textured marble.
Unlike the feral pigs, deer on Cumberland were not hunted .
These looked up as the truck ground past but didn't leave off chewing.
Beside the meadow, tucked behind a cottage that could have lured Hansel
and Gretel to their deaths, was Stafford, one of the derelict mansions.
Built by Andrew Carnegie for his daughter, it had been a place of
carriages and candlelight and southern hospitality .
This fine old house, like a dowager duchess fallen on evil times, now
fought just to keep body and soul together.
Within were wooden staircases, sconces, parquet floors, coffered
ceilings-crafunen's work that, if artisans could still be found, would
cost a fortune to replicate. All was threatened by time and mildew. The
Park Service scrambled for funds to battle the decay and drafted plans
to bring back the grandeur, but for now it sat empty and vulnerable,
roofline sagging, foundation crumbling.
Several of these magnificent hulks dotted the island. Anna had wandered
through most of them, a pleasant break in the monotony .
Nostalgia, memories of lives never lived but only imagined, dwelt in the
silent dust-filled halls, the moldering books left on the shelves, the
broken furniture stashed in enormous cellars; in a moth-eaten fur
abandoned in an upstairs nursery. There was something fascinating in
the flotsam of the past, once valued things discarded when their owners
moved on.
When they reached the south end of the island, the road unraveled into
poorly marked byways leading to various NPS facilities. AI timegotiated
unerringly through the knot and turned at last onto the street where
they stayed. Several houses and two barracks were scattered beneath oak
trees on the east side of the road. A garage and storage barn were on
the right. Further down this minuscule Main Street the maintenance
buildings clustered. The structures were all of wood, scoured to
vintage softness by the ocean winds .
Wherever metal touched-door hinges, nailheads, window locksstreaks of
burnt orange attested to the constant rust.
At eleven at night all was dark and deserted but for the house that
quartered fire crew. The screened-in porch was aglow from lights
spilling out the open door. Behind the wiquitous row of boots, banned
from the interior by Guy in an attempt to slow the migration of the
dunes from outside to in, Anna could see people lounging in metal
folding chairs. The spark of a cigarette butt traced a slow are to
someone's mouth.
Lynette Wagner, Cumberland's GS-4 interpretive ranger, stood in the
doorway, yellow light turning the brown frizz of a shoulderlength perm
to red. Her laughter bobbed on top of the hum of conversation. Iwo
shadows hovered near her, Dijon and Rick ilo doubt. Lynette always had