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.)
from her pack. The lawn chairs were gone, the r)iles burned down to
ash, the ash cooled with water and raked over with needles and debris.
Shining the narrow beam as far as it would reach into the recesses
between the thinly scattered oaks, Anna noted the mature plants were
missing as well. Those plants had achieved the stature of small trees,
twelve or fifteen feet high and carrying enough dope to retail for
$1,500 to $2,500 a plant. They were gone as if they'd never been. Even
the roots had been dug up, or the stems cut flush and covered with leaf
litter. The Hansons had been busy little bees.
Confusion swirled, turning Anna's thoughts into a tornado that
threatened to rip up what little equilibrium she'd regained. How long
had she been down the rabbit hole? It was night. Which night) The
ashes still gave off heat and she took comfort in that. She'd not lost
a day. Screwing up her courage, she dug out her pocket watch and shined
the flash on it: 2:42. Four or five hours had passed since she'd
crawled into the hog pen. For at least three of that she'd been asleep.
Lost time. It made her nervous. She put the watch and flashlight away
and began to massage her legs.
Twenty minutes later she had her body back, such as it was. It was not
pleased with her, nor she with it. During her protracted sabbatical
from reality, she'd become home to a thriving colony of chiggers,
Several times she tried to count the bites but always lost her place.
She'd find herself, numbers gone from her mind, head hanging, trouser
legs rolled, wondering what she'd been trying to prove. Conceding
victory to the chiggers, she turned her limited attention span on ticks.
By the light of her flash she began detaching engorged insects from her
person. One or ten or a hundred-she couldn't tell. At first she
crushed them between her nails. The death penalty: not revenge, just
discouraging recidivism. It wasn't long before the gore upset her
stomach and she stopped, satisfying herself with flinging the bugs into
the darkness and trusting she'd have moved before they had time to crawl
back.
Like a tape loop on video, she saw herself taking the same action over
and over again. Having no idea whether or not she was making any
progress, she finally stopped but she doubted she'd gotten them all.
Minutes ticked by as she sat in the dark, trying to decide what to do
next. Eyes and lungs burned, the pressure in her head had transmuted
into a dull ache. There weren't three square inches of skin anywhere on
her body that did not itch with such viciousness it took all her
self-control not to claw the flesh from bone. Anna hated the South and
everyone and everything crawling around in it.
A solution came to her: she had to get the hell out of there .
When she tried to stand it came home to her how thoroughly ripped she
was. Many shects to the wind. Vertigo made the forest whirl .
She fell to her knees and vomited up the water she'd consumed .
Nausea: she didn't remember that from the good old days. Her body had
outgrown its tolerance for recreational poisons.
Stomach empty, she felt marginally better and pushed herself to her
feet, achieving the vertical on the second attempt. Around her, black
trees were spinning, she could feel them, and dared not look .
Eyes down, she fished out her compass and shined the flashlight on it.
Looking only at the controlled world of the compass face, she began
pushing determinedly east.
Distance was as relative as time had become. Anna followed the needle
in her palm as a true believer would follow the star. Navigation around
obstacles was beyond her mutant mental powers. Gone was her fear of
noise or thickets. What was one more bite? Merely an addition to her
already splendid collection. She bulled her way through the brush,
trusting the rattlers had retired for the night and calling down curses
on the head of any spider who wouldn't give her a tucking break.
An eternity of scratches and bumps and confused dreams later, she
staggered out onto the dunes. Silver light bathed her and she dropped
to all fours ." Thankyoubabyjesus," she whispered without thought of
irreverence. Always before, away from the haunts of man she'd found
solace. Fear of wild places had been alien to her. Control having been
stripped away, the darkling woods took on a different face. Crumpled on
the sand, the ocean at peace as far as she could see, she felt the soft
light penetrate her soul, lift the darkness from within, and she
understood at last why the ancients had condemned the wilderness as the
walks of the devil.
Beauty, true and lasting beauty, was personified by the squatting bulk
of the pumper truck. She'd come out of the woods just three hundred
yards south of where she'd parked. She ran to it as to a long-lost
love.
Before she left the denuded marijuana plantation, she'd finished the
last ol' her water. It was with relief she downed half a liter from the
canteen on the seat. Water cleared her head marginally. Motion had
restored her muscles. She knew her lungs would hurt for a while. She'd
consider herself lucky if she didn't come down with bronchitis. Of her
myriad ills all were somewhat alleviated but for the ticks and the
chiggers.
Having doffed only her boots and pocket watch, Anna waded fully clothed
into the sea and let the ocean close over her head. Salt water
purified, weightlessness calmed her spirit. Time warped again but this
time she could live with it. She luxuriated in the warn] surf .
Bobbing like a bit of kelp on the tide, she lay at the surface,
\vatching the panorama of beach.
The nesting sites of the loggerheads were invisible in front of oat
grass, thrust up black and spiky, the light of the moon behind the
blades. A trail, something dragged, cut between two of the nests,
breaking down a lip of sand carved by high tide. The Hansons, Anna
thought, dragging their harvest. Wind and water would obliterate the
track by noon. An ideal setup: a couple on a houseboat known to anchor
in different places to savor island views. A few nights a year they
anchor just off the beach, drag their goods in, stow them aboard, and
motor sedately away.
Dragging the booty over Marty Schlessinger's prize cache of turtle eggs:
Anna pressed the heels of her hands to her temples and squeezed as if
she could wring the dope smoke from her system and glimpse what flash of
thought that image had engendered. Had Marty known of the marijuana
plot, found it perhaps in her wanderings? Would she kill to protect the
eggs? Possibly. But killing Todd or Slattery-or both-wouldn't stop the
harvest, whereas one word in the right NPS ear would have shut the whole
operation down .
Besides, looked at realistically, assuming Schlessinger still retained
that capacity, two people dragging a few bales of weed over the top of
the nests would do them no harm.
If it occurred on a night the little loggerheads were hatching, making
that first perilous journey to the ocean, interference might do some
damage. The turtles were slated to hatch within the next week. Had
Marty tried a preemptive strike to keep the traffic off the beach? Had
the Hansons guessed and harvested early?
"Builshit , Anna said, and splashed salt water in her face. Taking a
deep breath, she submerged until a fit of coughing forced her to the
surface ." Work, damn you, work," she said aloud, and smacked the side
of her skull. The jolt seemed to do some good. The flaws in her line
of thinking became apparent. The night the turtles came out was marked
on calendars all over the island. The beach would be alive with rangers
and volunteers come to assist and celebrate .
That would be the last night the Hansons would choose for any illicit
activity.
Nothing made sense.
Her ability to think was spent. Her brain unraveled and she floated,
her clothing waving about her like Ophelia's shroud.
Anna reached Plum Orchard before sunrise and squished up the stairs. The
door was unlocked as she had left it and no one stirred within. Another
small blessing duly noted. What with one thing and another, she was out
of patience. She doubted she could bear the whey-faced sorrow of Tabby
Belfore with equanimity. And given the way she looked at the moment,
Tabby's laying eyes on her couldn't be good for the baby.
Standing at the sink, she downed another sixteen ounces of water, loaded
the electric coffee maker for eight cups and clicked it on. Its little
electronic eye was scarcely redder than her own. On the way to the
bathroom, she left a trail of soggy clothing.
Hot water, then cold; she. switched back and forth, applying age-old
remedies for sobering up. The passage of time was the only way to
cleanse the body of drugs but the wives' tales were rooted in a modicuin
of fact. Cold showers and hot coffee could transniute a dopey,
knee-walking drunk into a wide-awake, alert, knee-walking drunk if
assiduously applied. Anna would settle for that.
Two more ticks were dislodged by repeated shampooing. Her legs from
midthigh down were a mass of red bumps that itched like the devil.
Chiggers. A little red bug that lived in the South and, not
surprisingly, was a relative of the tick. According to Dijon, an expert
on all things repulsive, the little buggers burrowed in and lived there.
The thought gave Anna the willies, so though she suspected it was true,
she pretended it wasn't.
Five-fifteen found her dressed in clean clothes-two cups of coffee
roiling in her stomach, wet hair hanging in witchy ropespacing around
the tiny living room trying not to scratch. The black fog that clogged
her brain had yet to dissipate. Anxiousness bordering on panic licked
around the edges of her awareness and she was consumed by irritability.
At 5:17 a.m. she banged open the door to Tabby's bedroom.
"Who on this island cuts hair?" she demanded when the sleepy young woman
peered over the bedclothes.
"Huh?" Tabby blinked, her eyes round and rabbity.
Everything about the woman so aggravated Anna's strained nerves that she
had to fight down an urge to slap her.
"Cuts hair. Snip, snip. Every park I've ever worked in has somebody
who cuts hair." Anna knew she was irrational. She knew she was
growling. She didn't care.
"Cuts hair?" Tabby echoed stupidly.
Anna began to count to ten, Silently, in her head. At seven Tabby
managed: "Lynette. Lynette'll do it."
Anna closed the door with a bang and left.
Lynette was up. When Anna drove in she was out on her diminutive front
porch in a gold and black kimono feeding the dog. If she was surprised
to see Anna, red-eyed and chigger-gnawed, walking up her front steps
before sunrise, she was too polite-or too wise-to say so.
"Tea?" she offered.
" Can you cut hair?" Anna asked without preamble.
Ten minutes later she was seated on a stool on the porch, a towel draped
around her shoulders and a cup of sugared tea steaming in her hand. A