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.)
Anna talked on the radio as she ran, telling Guy of the new twist. After
she'd signed off she heard him radioing headquarters .
There was no reply. Next he tried Lynette. As the interpreter took
over dispatching duties, Anna tuned their chatter out and turned all of
her attention to breaching the flames separating them from the downed
plane.
In less than a minute she was around the screen of palmetto and into a
clearing scattered with young pines. The aircraft, a twinengine prop
plane, had rolled over onto its back and nosed into the ground. the
belly of the airplane was painted white and looked vulnerable, like the
underside of a landed fish. Wheels, popped loose from their housing,
pawed at the air. Part of the left wing was crumpled beneath the
fuselage, the metal curled and wrinkling .
That was where the fire burned hottest and Anna guessed an inboard fuel
tank had exploded on impact or shortly thereafter. Half of the right
wing was sheared off, the engine thrust skyward in an angry metal fist.
Left behind in the rush to demolition, the severed tips of the wings lay
a distance from the aircraft. A stump of the tail remained, elevators
hanging from torn cables.
From what Anna could see beneath and beyond the wings, the cabin was
partially crushed, shards of Plexiglas squeezed out from the metal
frames in the cockpit. It looked as if the airplane had cut through the
canopy at an angle, left wing pointed toward the earth.
When it struck, the force had driven the cabin into the ground,
shattering the windows and smashing in the roof.
Fire poured from the lower engine and was taken up by the palmetto.
Orange claws curved around the cabin, bubbling the paint and melting the
broken windows.
The intensity of the heat and the knowledge that the plane's second fuel
tank had yet to explode paralyzed Anna. In her mind, as it had a year
ago below Banyon Ridge, the fire mushroomed out from the trees in a
storm of destruction. Terror roared through her insides, wiping her
clean of morality, ethics, courage, and thought .
Dropping the Pulaski, she turned to run.
Rick had come up behind her. Blindly, she smacked into him and lost her
balance.
"Watch where you're going," he growled, knocking her unceremoniously
back onto her feet.
The jolt snatched her back from the coniferous forests of northern
California and the nightmare that only nine of them had survived. Breath
was coming fast and her knees were shaking so bad she couldn't move, but
the cowardly retreat had been aborted; honor and face were intact.
Though she'd never tell him, Rick had done her a great service.
Fighting to retain her equilibrium, she retrieved her Pulaski .
"Okay, okay," she said, as much to herself as to him. Somebody needed
to take charge but Anna still had the shakes. She'd locked her knees
but her insides twanged like cheap guitar strings. It was all she could
do to tic one thought to another.
"Piss pump to the passenger side. The right," Rick said, filling the
void ." Maybe somebody's alive. The fire's circling back through the
brush. You take it."
Relieved, Anna nodded but didn't move ." Cut the fuels away before the
fire gets to the plane," Rick spelled out for her, and gave her the
shove she needed. Her first steps were stumbling, her legs still
wanting to run. Movement burned away the residual fear and she began to
function.
Lest panic again blindside her, Anna attacked the flames with a fury
that, once the adrenaline subsided, would leave her with a strained back
and a hyperextended elbow. Sweat fell like salt rain to turn to vapor
on the superheated ground. Escaping from her hard hat, tendrils of hair
singed and curled.
Ignited by the explosion, fire had burned out from the downed aircraft,
cutting an angry swathe through the palmetto. Like a ravening beast,
appetite unslaked, it doubled back from the point of origin and ran
greedily toward the unburned tail of the aircraft.
In a dead-heat race with the flames, Anna chopped line, clearing to bare
soil a path a yard and a half wide between the burn and the plane.
In the cabin were the dead or the dying. She suppressed that knowledge
in her need to complete the physical task at hand .
Dimly, she was aware of paint crackling, the groan of metal shifting and
the snap of rubber and plastics, but her world had narrowed to the one
tentacle of the dragon she had been sent to hack off. The writhing of
the rest could be dealt with later.
The thicket wasn't more than fifteen feet wide at the point where the
plane had nosed in. Unless the shrubs ignited the live oaks, the fire
would slow to a creep when it hit the duff beyond the underbrush. It
wasn't long before Anna succeeded in separating the plane from the fire.
With her primary task accomplished, the scope of her world opened
somewhat and she turned back to the mangled aircraft.
On the passenger side of the inverted fuselage, Rick stood in the angle
where the wing stub met the cabin, squirting water on the metal. Not
six inches from his fanny was a fuel tank, the only one remaining
attached to the main part of the wreckage that had yet to explode.
A thin line of smoke, rising straight up in the still air, caught Anna's
eye. Beneath the duff, creeping almost unseen, fire from the palmetto
was crawling through the leaf litter toward the fuel tank .
Anna abandoned the secured left flank of the plane and, in a controlled
frenzy of hosing, began clearing away burning debris. Acrid smoke was
sucked through the bandanna tied across the lower half of her face.
Mucus ran from her nose and she breathed as sparingly as exertion would
allow.
A shovel appeared in her peripheral vision. Dijon and A] had arrived.
Dijon joined Anna and began throwing dirt on the trail of flame, broken
free of the litter now and snaking toward the wing. AI manned a second
piss pump, aiming his stream onto the metal cowling of the engine
itself. Guy Marshall must have arrived at roughly the same time as the
other two. When Anna looked past AI, he was there, Pulaski in hand.
It was good to be among friends.
Through the bite of the smoke Anna became aware of the odor of gasoline.
At that moment she lieard Guy shouting "Fall back! Fall back!"
Fire had circled around Dijon and met up with a trickle of high octane
fuel soaking through the mat of needles and leaves that had yet to be
scraped away. Flame burned narrow and high with the intensity of a lit
fuse.
" Fall back!" Guy shouted again.
Dijon threw a spadeful of dirt at the back of Rick's legs to get his
attention ." Back," he and Anna yelled in unison; then they turned and
ran.
HE EXPLOSION, when it came, was not so much heard as felt. A lheavy and
unseen hand slammed into Anna's back, lifting her off her feet. 'Fime
slowed, a break in the space-time continuum, and, for that instant, it
was as if she hung suspended in the air. To her right she could see
Dijon, hands outstretched like a young black Superman, hanging in space.
His face was set, determined, as if he flew toward a brick wall
intending to smash through.
Anna noticed her left hand stretched in front of her clutching the
Pulaski. Afraid she'd fall on one of the blades, she let it go .
There was time, in that stopwatch moment, to see her fingers ullcurl
from the handle and the two-edged tool fall away.
lime caught up with itself. Dijon, the trees blurred and Anna hurtled
to the ground. the forest floor scraped the goggles from her face,
shoved prickling needles down the collar of her shirt and dust up her
nose. Something plowed into her booted feet and she thought a chunk of
burning metal had crippled her till it began clawing its way up and she
knew it was Rick.
"Everybody okay? Are you okay, Anna?" An obnoxious finger rapped
against the plastic of her hard hat. She rolled one eye clear of the
dirt to see Guy standing over her.
" I'm not done falling," she complained.
"Learn to bounce," he said unsympathetically. He was on to Rick and
Dijon as Anna pushed herself warily to her knees, not yet sure
everything still worked.
" Up and at 'em," Marshall said.
Dijon, disgustingly young and resilient, was already on his feet and
running back toward the plane. Rick had made it to his knees .
Lest she be last, Anna dragged herself up before AI Magnus cleared the
ground, and followed Guy and the others back toward the line.
The explosion had extinguished more fire than it set. Within minutes
Rick and Dijon had the flames contained. Though it still burned it was
no longer in danger of spreading.
The task of salvaging what they could from the plane's cabin fell to
Anna and Guy. The blast had torn most of the remaining stub off the
right wing, leaving a black stain on the side of the aircraft just
below, or-as the fuselage was inverted-now above where the passenger
sat. Anna crouched down to assess the best way of getting at the
cockpit. Behind her she could hear Guy on the radio.
The downed plane was a twin-engine Beechcraft owned and operated by a
man named Slattery Hammond. Hammond worked as a freelance drug
interdiction and/or resource management plane, hiring his services out
to various government agencies. Cumberland Island National Seashore was
sharing him with the United States Forest Service in an effort to curb
the marijuana-growing industry along the coast.
Hammond had flown off the island that morning to make a lowlevel sweep
of St. Simons, jekyll Island, and Cumberland, looking for contraband
crops. Norman Hull, Cumberland's chief ranger, was slated to accompany
him.
Lynette's voice, deepened now by professional responsibility, came on to
say a medevac helicopter had been requested from jacksonville, Florida.
Lynette was attempting to contact the district ranger, Todd Belfore, to
meet the medevac unit and lead them to the burn as soon as she had an
estimated time of arrival.
Wheels were turning, the Incident Command System was gearing up. Soon
Anna, Guy, Dijon, AI, and Rick would settle back into their relatively
insignificant cog roles as the Interagency Incident Command machine took
over. There was great comfort in that .
Nothing, not even the U.S. military, could mobilize as quickly and
efficiently.
After this last transmission Guy replaced his radio on his belt .
"The pilot wasn't alone. Chief Ranger Hull was with him. There'll be
two . . . ah . . . men in there , he said. The hesitation tool,
place as he stopped himself from saying "bodies." The explosion of the
gas tank destroyed any shred of hope they might have had that anyone in
the airplane still lived, but they had to operate as if lives could be
salvaged. The concept of giving up too soon was abhorrent.
What was left of the wing and the fuselage formed a smoldering and
unstable tent of ruined metal. Leaf litter smoked beneath the wreckage.