In the Woods (7 page)

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Authors: Merry Jones

BOOK: In the Woods
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‘What’s his size, ma’am?’

She bit her lip, concentrating. ‘I never asked him. Ten? Ten and a half?’

‘Never mind. With all the leaves falling, there won’t be many clear prints around here anyhow.’

As they walked, Harper and Hank lagged behind, occasionally calling Phil’s name. Angela didn’t call out. Occasionally, she repeated herself. ‘I don’t get it. Where could he be? I left him right at the edge of the field, hunting rabbits.’

‘If he’s hurt or wandering around lost, ma’am, we’ll find him. I’ve got two other teams looking.’ Daniels sounded confident.

‘How can you be sure? There are, what? Like four hundred thousand acres of woods around here?’

‘We don’t have to cover all of them—’

‘We should get dogs. Do you have any of those sniffing dogs?’ Angela picked at the dried mud under her fingernails. It was all over her. On her pants, in her cuticles. ‘Dogs could follow his scent.’

‘I don’t have dogs, ma’am. But I know the woods. We won’t have to search the whole state park. Just the areas where he could have gotten to.’

‘No, you’re right. He couldn’t have gone far. He wouldn’t. He’s not outdoorsy. Phil’s a city guy. Honestly, he’s not even a city guy. He’s more of a homebody guy, doesn’t have a lot of flair or natural instinct. Oh God, what was I thinking? I shouldn’t have brought him up here. He was a complete newbie. What if they shot him like they shot that pipeline worker?’ Angela didn’t stop talking. Kept picking at her fingernails.

‘We have no evidence of anything like that, ma’am.’ Daniels kept moving.

Harper called out, ‘Phil? Phil Russo?’

No answer. She and Hank walked side by side, peering into the forest. Harper watched the shadowy spaces between trees, listened for sounds beyond Angela’s grating voice. Heard the usual insects chattering, birds calling. Leaves rattling on branches overhead or crunching under their boots. But more than anything, even louder than Angela’s voice, she heard the bellowing silence of a lost man.

‘He should be right where I left him,’ Angela went on. ‘He shouldn’t have wandered off. I told him, I warned him to stay here until it was time to meet me. Why couldn’t he for once listen to me?’

Harper’s jaw tightened. Angela didn’t seem able to take a breath without talking. She made herself tune out Angela’s voice, redirected her focus by calling out for Phil. Watching for him. Taking notice of the pigments of the autumn leaves, the light beaming through the trees. Hank’s wide shoulders. The pulsing ache in her leg. Anything that wasn’t Angela’s cloying continuous chatter.

Finally, they reached the clearing and separated, searching the area independently. Just steps from the path, Harper stopped and backed up, took a closer look at a vine. At first glance, she’d thought it was speckled. But no. It wasn’t speckled. Splattered on its leaves were reddish-brown spots. Teardrop shaped, kind of horizontal. The color and texture of dried blood.

‘Hank,’ she called.

Hank stepped over. As soon as Angela saw them talking, she rushed over, followed Hank’s gaze. ‘Oh God. Is it blood?’ She held her stomach. ‘It is, isn’t it?’ She turned in a circle. ‘Phil?’ She yelled into the trees. ‘Phil? Can you hear me? Phi-il?’

Hank and Ranger Daniels huddled by the vine, examining its leaves. Harper was sure it was blood spatter, but they’d stepped all over the ground below, obliterating whatever footprints or other markings there might have been.

Angela began wailing. ‘Oh God. He’s not answering me. They’ve killed him …’

‘Ma’am,’ Daniels began, ‘we don’t know that.’

‘For all we know, that’s squirrel blood.’ Harper’s voice was abrupt. ‘Or wait – is this where I found the gas worker?’ She looked around, as if unsure.

Hank shook his head, pointing. ‘No, he was over there, closer to the main trail.’

Harper rolled her eyes at him. Why had he said that? Now Angela would start again.

‘What?’ Hank asked her.

Harper lowered her voice and mouthed. ‘I’m trying to calm her down.’

‘Well, how was I supposed to know that?’ Hank answered aloud.

‘To know what?’ Angela asked.

‘That it’s probably animal blood.’ Harper glared at Hank.

Angela began wringing her hands. ‘But what if it’s not? What if those crazy local club members shot Phil? That could be Phil’s blood—’

‘Now, calm down, ma’am.’ Ranger Daniels had joined them. He put an arm on Angela’s shoulder. ‘The lady’s right. It’s probably deer blood. Think about it. It doesn’t make sense that anyone around here would shoot him. Nobody here has a beef with your husband—’

‘So? They shot that gas man for no reason—’

‘No, see, here’s the thing: you got to stop jumping to conclusions.’ He withdrew his arm. ‘We don’t know for sure that the local organization shot him. But if they did – and that’s a big if – it’s different. The locals have been feuding with the gas company and the pipeline people for years—’

‘Ranger Daniels?’ Harper interrupted. Her left leg was throbbing, and Hank’s limp was pronounced. She wanted to stop talking and get something accomplished. ‘Should we take a sample of these leaves? Could they be evidence?’

Angela wheeled around. ‘Evidence? So you don’t think it’s deer blood. You think it’s Phil’s.’

Harper didn’t answer her. She kept her eyes on Daniels, who scratched his ribs, considering the question.

‘Oh. Yes, why not. I suppose we should.’ He took what looked like an old payroll envelope from his vest pocket, plucked some stained leaves from the vine. Stuffed them inside. Marked the envelope with a pen, stuck it back into his pocket.

Harper looked at Hank; he shook his head, telling her to let it go. Procedures were apparently relaxed out here.

Angela fretted, worried her hands, turned in circles. ‘Oh God, oh my God,’ she panted.

‘You okay, ma’am?’ Daniels asked. ‘How about we sit a minute. Drink some water.’

‘But if that’s Phil’s blood, where’s Phil?’ Her skin had turned ashen.

‘All we know for sure is that your husband isn’t here, ma’am. So we need to take a minute to regroup and figure out how we’ll proceed.’ He guided them to a fallen tree trunk, took a seat. Gestured for the others to join him.

‘How can you sit down and rest? My Phil could be lying hurt somewhere—’

‘Give it a break, Angela.’ Harper used her most commanding lieutenant’s voice. ‘Just sit down and be quiet.’

Angela looked startled, but closed her mouth and took a seat. They all drank water. Harper rested her aching leg. For a full minute, nobody spoke. Even the insects seemed to quiet down.

Harper took out a bottle of ibuprofen, handed some capsules to Hank, swallowed a few and rubbed her sore thigh. Hank reached over, helped her massage the muscles. She closed her eyes, almost moaning at the soreness. Enjoying the silence. But it ended sharply.

‘What did you mean they’d been “feuding”?’ Angela’s voice was a hook, latching onto Harper’s nerves and yanking them.

Daniels drank water.

Angela pressed him. ‘You said the locals and the gas people have been—’

‘It goes way back.’ Daniels wiped his mouth. ‘From the beginning, the locals were against having any kind of pipeline go through here. They didn’t like fracking and wanted the land to be left pristine. But the government caved, and the gas company got its way. They destroyed the old campground – ran the pipeline right through it. In fact, that’s how come we got our new grounds – brand-new cottages and shower facilities. New ranger station. Everything state of the art.’

‘I remember the old campgrounds,’ Angela said. ‘They were a mess.’

‘These are nicer, for sure.’ Daniel smiled. ‘So anyway, we moved the campground and everything was fine. Until they started the fracking. After that, people around here started having problems. Wells got contaminated. Folks still can’t drink their own water – it’s discolored, tastes bad. It burns their mouths, gives them headaches. Some can’t even shower at home – the steam burns their lungs. The water’s been so bad that fish died in the rivers and creeks.’

‘My my.’ Angela tsked.

‘Oh, but that’s not the worst of it. The locals really lost it when a drilling rig exploded.’

Harper was appalled. ‘Exploded?’

‘Yes, ma’am. It was bad. The explosion blew away the old hunting lodge. Killed a guy who was staying there.’

Harper looked at Hank. Hank’s face was completely neutral, didn’t register the slightest surprise. Didn’t he find this information the least bit disturbing? Unless … Of course: Hank was a geologist. He would have already known about all these fracking problems. In fact, he probably knew more about them than the ranger did. Damn. Was that why he’d suggested this spot for their trip? Was that the real reason he’d brought her here? Pretending that he wanted a romantic getaway, but really doing research on fracking, collecting water and soil samples?

Hank felt her looking at him and turned to her. ‘You okay?’ His face was blank. Feigning innocence.

She squinted, letting him know she was onto him.

‘What?’ He tilted his head.

Daniels continued. ‘Yeah, when that rig blew, it was like hell bursting up through God’s green earth. A geyser of gas and fracking wastewater blasted out of the ground, and it kept spewing sky high for sixteen hours straight. The stink was everywhere. You could taste it. It got in your skin. And the hunting lodge – phwoom. Gone. Place was, I don’t know, fifty or a hundred years old. Lots of locals belonged to it – they formed a new organization, named it the Hunt Club to remember the lodge and what happened to it. But all that’s left of the original place is the foundation, just bare bones of the lodge. Nothing’s there but old septic tanks.’

For a moment even Angela was silent. But only for a moment.

‘So that’s why the locals don’t like the gas company,’ she announced. She folded her hands. ‘But that’s not exactly a feud.’

‘Oh, it is. The local folks in the Hunt Club are determined to get rid of the frackers, pipeline, gas company, government and every other outsider – including hunters and hikers like you. As a government employee, I watch my backside, but I’ve made peace with most of them. They’re not bad people. Still, there’s a number of them who want to take up arms and go guerrilla. They’ve got an arsenal and a trained militia. A compound where they can survive for months under siege if they have to.’

Harper stiffened. She looked into the trees, half-expecting to see armed men in camouflage.

‘Now, I’m not saying they plan to start an all-out war,’ Daniels went on. ‘They’re angry, not stupid. Instead, they mess with the gas company’s equipment. They let the air out of their tires. Vandalize the pipeline walkers’ campsites. Try to scare them. But so far, it’s been mischief. Not murder.’

‘Until today,’ Angela said. ‘Today was murder.’

‘We don’t know that yet,’ Daniels said. ‘Could have been anything. An accident.’

‘I feel it. I just know it. What have they done to my Phil?’

Daniels didn’t answer.

‘You knew about this fracking stuff?’ Harper whispered to Hank.

He shrugged. ‘Which part?’

She scowled.

‘What’s wrong?’

Did he really not know? Did he think she wouldn’t figure out that he’d pretended to want to hike and camp and be alone with her when really he’d devised this trip so that he could study the environmental effects of hydraulic fracturing? What he’d presented as romantic time together, away from work and responsibility, was instead some preliminary geologic field study. And he wanted to know what was wrong? Damn. Harper stretched her aching leg. She thought of Chloe and ached even more. What the hell was she doing here?

Not that she belonged anywhere else.

Hank took her hand. ‘Come on, Harper. Don’t be like that.’

Really? Had he read her mind? Her nostrils puffed. ‘Like what?’

‘Can we talk about what’s bothering you later?’ He leaned over to kiss her cheek.

‘Fine.’ She sat rigid, even as his whiskers brushed her cheek, raising goose bumps.

Daniels stuffed his water bottle into his backpack. ‘So. How about we go back to the exact point where Phil was last seen and start again from there.’ He stood. ‘We’ll break into teams of two.’

Harper got to her feet, ignoring the complaints of her leg.

Hank put an arm around her waist.

‘I don’t understand.’ Angela stayed at the ranger’s heels. ‘Where could he have gone? I left him right at the edge of the field.’

Phil wasn’t in the field. They’d separated into pairs and fanned out, checking the clearing and the two trails heading to Angela’s campsite. No Phil. When they reconvened, Angela frowned. ‘I don’t understand where he could be,’ she began again.

Harper chewed her lip, told herself to be tolerant. It wasn’t Angela’s fault that she was upset. Or that she had a voice like a rabid hamster.

Daniels radioed his other search teams. They’d had no luck either. His face was strained as he faced the group. ‘We’re getting tired, and we have only a couple hours of daylight left. So let’s stay split in two groups. Angela, you’re with me. We’ll head north.’

‘Good idea.’ Angela nodded. ‘Except I’ve been thinking. Maybe we should go check out the bog.’

Everyone looked at her.

‘I remembered something. While I was over there, looking into those thistles, I remembered that last night, Phil and I were talking about the bog trail. He said he wanted to hike it. So maybe he got tired of hunting …’

‘And maybe he took it in his head to go check it out?’ Daniels finished her sentence for her.

‘You want to split up first?’ Hank asked.

‘No, let’s all go,’ Daniels said. ‘We’ll divide up there and search the bog area. If there’s no sign of Phil, you two can backtrack on the main trail, and I’ll go on with Angela the opposite way.’

It took about twenty minutes to walk there, and the trail got narrower and muddier as they went. The ranger narrated their trek as if they were a tour group, telling them that they were surrounded by 430,000 acres of remote and wild state forest. That Black Moshannon State Park, where they were, was in the heart of that forest, and that it got its name from its black-watered bog. The water wasn’t actually black, but was stained a dark tea color by sphagnum moss and plant tannins. The other part of the park’s name, ‘Moshannon’, came from the Indian words ‘Moss Hanne’, which had nothing to do with moss, but meant Moose Stream.

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