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.)
of her own; a rare luxury on a fire assignment ." God bless sexism," she
said to the spirits above the raked ceiling. As crew boss, Guy had
claimed one bedroom. He'd assigned her another as the only female. The
remaining three crew members shared the third .
As in every crew since the first group of Cro-Magnons banded together to
stomp out the first grass fire, there was a magnificent nose, a man who
snored with the resonance of a dull chain saw cutting through hardwood.
On this crew Rick did the honors.
Through two closed doors it was dulled to a comfortable rumble. A
little imagination could mutate it into a purr and Anna liked to pretend
Piedmont, her orange tiger cat, was curled up beside her .
Cats were such excellent soporifics.
Folding her hands behind her head, she stretched till her ankles
cracked. She had a lot to think about. Besides, she was too lazy to go
to sleep. It would mean getting up and crossing seven feet of hardwood
floor to switch off the light.
How serious was the threat against her sister? she wondered .
For Molly to mention it at all indicated some concern. On a couple of
occasions tlicre had been those who wished Anna ill. Oddly, before the
fear and outrage set in, her feelings were hurt; a childish sense of,
How could anyone dislike nte? Anna had felt that from Molly. For a
healer it must be worse.
In law enforcement, emergency response, firefighting-the things rangers
were involved with-a great deal of one's time was spent sitting around
waiting for something bad to happen. When boredom set in, it was
inevitable that one sort of hoped something bad would happen. No malice
intended, just something interesting to do. A psychiatrist dedicated
her life to ameliorating the impact of those bad happenings. It would
hurt to be the object of deadly hatred even if you knew the polysyllabic
name l'or the syndrome.
Molly would get over the insult-probably by morning. Despite her
vocation, Anna's sister was remarkably sane. The threats were the
tangible aspect of the greater evil of hatred and possibly madness. How
real the actual danger was, Anna couldn't fathom. The note and the
message were so pedestrian. There was a hollow bureaucratic ring to
them. Impersonal to the point of cruelty. Anna remembered her
fifth-grade teacher, Mr. White, telling her that hatred wasn't the
worst of emotions. If one hated one still cared .
Indifference was the most inhuman.
Anna could picture the author of the threats calmly penciling "Kill Dr.
Pigeon" on her calendar between "Meet with client rep" and "Get facial."
Tomorrow night she would test AI Magnum's patience. She'd call both
Molly and Frederick. Surely sleeping with an FBI agent earned a girl
some perks.
As had every day since Anna arrived on the island, Thursday dawned hot
and humid, the overnight low scarcely dipping below eighty. Inland the
heat was intensified by the clack of cicadas and the intermittent drone
of the drug interdiction plane making its sweep of the woodlands. By
nine a.m. it was ninety-three degrees.
On the shore a sea breeze made it livable. Anna and Rick patrolled the
beach. AI and Dijon were condemned to the suffocating interior till
they switched in midafternoon.
Shore duty pleased Anna because of the air and the everchanging patterns
of water and shell and sand. Sky mosaics, painted by clouds, had yet to
begin for the day. Cumberland sat beneath an inverted bowl of burnished
and burning blue.
At intervals were solitary fishermen, their folding chairs plunked down
where the last lick of surf could wash over their toes, cooler and
fishing rod in serene attendance. Creels were set several yards from
the main encampments, an island phenomenon that had been in place for
many years. Legend had it the alligator they called Maggie-Mary would
crawl down from the inland dunes, moving as quietly as a ghost for all
her great and scaly length, and rob them of their catch. The creels
were set apart lest she inadvertently rob them of a leg or a hand in the
process.
Rick was happy with beach patrol because of the nude sunbathers. It
never ceased to amaze Anna that in America naked was such a big deal. In
parks all across the country naked sunbathers, skinnydippers, and
topless hikers were warned and cited and occasionally arrested under any
statute that was handy, from Disturbing the Peace to Disorderly Conduct.
The only ticket Anna thought fit this trumped-up crime was Interfering
with Agency Functions. It certainly interfered with Rick's and Dijon's.
Dijon, Anna forgave-maybe because she liked him, but mostly because he
was twenty-two. Dogs bark, cats sharpen their claws, boys ogle and
pant. Rick-in his mid-thirties, married, Baptist, and a born-again
redneck transplanted from Massachusetts to southern Mississippi-Anna was
less tolerant of. He condemned while he leered and it was hard to tell
which activity gave him the greater thrill.
'This morning Anna was driving, Rick riding shotgun. For the I)ast
twenty minutes he'd been working himself into a lather over abortion
rights. Rusli LimbaLlgh and G. Gordon Liddy were his much quoted
experts on the subject. Anna was attempting a Zenlike state and failing
miserably. The heat, the boredom, and Rick were a combination that
would have gotten Gandhi's loincloth in bundle.
She kept her equilibrium by a base but satisfying amusement .
Each time Rick raised his binoculars to inventory an unsuspecting
sunbather's assets, Anna steered the truck toward the nearest hillock or
water-cut in the beach. So far she'd scored two "Fucks" and one "Dnmit,
Anna."
If I)people did harbor the inner child psychologists had brought into
vogue, hers needed a good spanking, Anna thought, as she turned the
wheel to take better advantage of a trench the retreating tide had left
behind.
,'shit," Rick growled as the binoculars banged against the soft tissue
around his eyes ." You drive like a girl." He too was bored and hot, but
if he'd hoped to get a rise out of Anna he was disappointed.
"Don't I though," she said as she adjusted her mental scoreboard: Anna
4, Rick 0.
"i'll (I rive , he said.
That suited her. Flocks of pelicans were skimming the ocean, flying
between the chocolate-colored waves like bombers down narrow canyons.
What seabirds lacked in color, they more than made up for in grace and
complexity. Anna never tired of watching the many ways they interacted
with the sea. Besides, torturing Rick was beginning to pall. He'd
never caught on to the game: fish in a barrel, no challenge.
She let the truck roll to a stop and switched off the ignition.
Rick was a big man, thick through the chest, shoulders, and head. His
face was a perfect oval. Clustered in the center were a dark mustache,
two close-set eyes, and a nondescript nose. The eyes had the puffy look
of a perennial hangover, though as near as Anna could tell, he suffered
more from allergies than alcoholism. His hair was almost black and
clipped so short that the crown of his head, where he was baking, had a
peculiar look of having been sanded.
Like every man Anna had ever known, Rick had to spend a minute or two
performing some inscrutable ritual before he could get out of a parked
vehicle. She slid from the seat and crouched in a scrap of shade
afforded by the truck to watch the silt-laden waves break into buttery
foam. She'd never spent much time by the sea .
Even the waters of Lake Superior had scared her. The Atlantic both
scared and fascinated. In its own way the shore was as harsh an
environment as the high deserts of Colorado and Texas. The constancy of
the August heat, the sand and salt and wind-by day's end human strength
was abraded away.
The crunch of boots let her know Rick had uprooted. Over the protest of
creaking joints she pushed herself up. It was still early and the sun
was at her back as she walked around the truck's tailgate. To the west
the green foliage showed dark behind shimmering white dunes. Clouds
were just beginning to build, as they did every day, making a promise of
rain they never kept. One of the clouds drooped, an uncharacteristic
gray. Anna cupped her hands around the brim of her ball cap to cut the
glare.
"Hey, Rick." He walked up beside her and she pointed.
" Smoke?"
" Looks like it."
"Hallelujah! Hazard pay!" With a cowboy's "Yee-hah!" he leaped two
yards and threw himself behind the wheel.
Anna was galvanized as well. Lethargy, heat, the myriad aches and pains
of hours spent patrolling over rough ground in a truck with wasted
shocks were banished.
Rick laughed as he cinched down his seat belt. Firefighters, like fire
horses, stamped and snorted at the first sniff of smoke. Anna felt the
excitement but hers was tempered with the tragic memories of the
jackknife fire the summer before. Like the sea, fire was elemental. It
would be many years before she would again underestimate its power. Or
its indifference to human life.
C K D R 0 V E like a madman, dropping from gear to gear, revving Rthe
tired engine as if more gas could give it a new lease on life .f
Bouncing like a bean in a tin cup, Anna fought to buckle her seat belt.
Between them, ricocheting from thigh to thigh across the vinyl, the
portable radio crackled for attention. Finally secured, Anna caught it
as it skittered toward the floor, and thumbed down the mike ." This is
Pigeon. Yes. We see it. We're about three quarters the way to the
north end of the island due east of the smoke. Maybe two miles."
The truck nosed over a lip of water-sculpted sand and Anna's chin
smacked into the King radio. Anna 4, Rick I, she thought as she grabbed
at the armrest for stability. Over the airwaves Dijon added to the
racket. He and AI were on the southernmost tip of the island near
Dungeness, about ten miles from the smoke. They wouldn't reach the fire
for at least twenty minutes. The frustration in Dijon's voice made Anna
smile ." Don't put it out till we get there," were his parting words.
Anna looked at the fanatic grin on Rick's face and laughed .
They would try their damnedest to kill it before the others arrived. It
was part of the game, the competition, the testosterone follies. She
loved it.
"Yee-hah!" she mimicked Rick, shouting over the engine ." Are we having
fun yet?"
Guarding the woodlands from the Atlantic was a rampart of dunes running
the length of Cumberland. Near the tips of the island, where they were
always being rearranged by the tides, the dunes were only four or five
feet high. In the center they climbed to forty and fifty feet, great
slow-moving waves of fine white earth.
In several places along the oceanfront weathered wooden boardwalks
snaked out from the jungle and across the barrier of dunes providing
access to the beach. For Anna, these, more than the crumbling mansions,