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.)
ENDANGERED SPECIES
BY NEVADA BARR
Water slammed into Anna's back, Brushing over her shoulders and down the
front of her shirt. Closing her eyes against the salt sting, she clung
to the turtle's carapace and concentrated on keeping her footing as the
wave dragged against her legs, sucked the sand from beneath her
sneakers.
The loggerhead wouldn't be washed unwillingly back into the Atlantic.
There was little the turtle couldn't handle in the sea. It was land,
that unfamiliar and ever-changing universe, that had baffled her. For
miles she'd swum from God knew where to lay her eggs on the beach of
Cumberland Island, one of the Golden Isles off the coast of Georgia. In
her tiny brain-or perhaps her great heartinstinct had programmed a map
with such precision that out of thousands of miles of coastline she'd
found her way back to this narrow ribbon of sand.
Anna ducked as another wave broke across her shoulders, and embraced the
animal hard against her. The ripples of the loggerhead's armored back,
nearly a yard across, dug into her cheek where flesh thinned over bone.
She could feel the powerful scrape of the creature's back flipper
against the sodden fabric of her trousered thigh.
Water flooded around her, warmer on the back of her neck than the mild
summer air, and Anna wondered how turtles thought, how this turtle
thought. On the chart that instinct tattooed on her soul, was there a
picture? In whatever passed for a loggerhead's mind's eye, had she
seen, remembered the flat welcoming beaches?
" Sorry, old girl," Anna muttered as she heaved against several hundred
pounds of sea beast. A capricious tide had trenched out a
four-foot-high sand and shell escarpment along fifty yards of ocean
front. A week ago the sand had been flat; two weeks hence it would be
again. Tonight it was proving impassable. Still, with the eternal
patience that seemed endemic to turtles, rocks, and other longlived,
slow-moving creatures, the loggerhead had beached herself and started
her trek inland.
Loggerheads coming ashore north and south of the ephemeral cliff were
making their appointed rounds. Between drenchings, Anna could hear the
delighted cries of park rangers, volunteers, and researchers celebrating
the renewed cycle of this threatened species.
Over the past hour, since she'd been drafted into the turtlemidwifing
business, Anna had received a crash course in the reproductive habits of
the loggerhead. In an ideal world, they made their way up onto the
beach, above high tide, dug a nest, laid the eggs, and buried them.
Their role in the universe completed, they returned to the sea, and, it
was presumed, never looked back until four or five years rolled by and
they again felt the urge to come home to nest.
The Turtle Anna danced with in the crashing surf could not negotiate the
sand cliff and was exhausting herself with the effort.
Too tired to fight any longer, she was giving up.
"Dear Lord, she's laying. Give me your hat," came an exasperated cry
near Anna's ear. The words were carried on a gust of foulsmelling air.
For an instant Anna thought she'd shoved her face too near the east end
of the westbound turtle. When she realized it was Marty Schlessinver's
breath, she began to believe the rumors that the biologist ate roadkill.
The Atlantic drew back and the full weight of the loggerhead was laid
again in Anna's and Marty's arms ." Don't hurt her," the biologist
warned as Anna felt the little muscles in her sacroiliac stretch and
complain.
"Fat chance," she grumbled, but she braced herself, forearms on thighs,
shoulder against shell, and held on.
In a sudden peace left behind by the receding waters, the moon pushed
over an inky horizon to paint a path in silver over the ocean and onto
the back of turtle under Anna's chin.
By the clear light she could see Marty Schlessinger's face inches from
her own. Fifty years were etched in the lines of determination carved
on either side of an uncompromising mouth. Long hair, worn in pigtails
like an aging Pippi Longstocking's, fell in white ropes across the
loggerhead's shell.
The returning ocean forced Anna to her knees. Her thigh was wedged
against the turtle's carapace, the animal's flipper hard against the
outside of her leg.
"Hat, hat, hat," Schlessinger growled.
Anna snatched off her baseball cap and poked it into the biologist's
groping fingers.
"Hold her," Schiessinger ordered.
"Christ!" Anna breathed as the other woman relinquished her grip on the
turtle to gather the eggs.
Unlike many sea turtles, the loggerhead's egg-laying machinery was
recessed beneath the rear of its shell, and Anna could not see the eggs.
By the ecstatic chirps percolating from the biologist, she guessed the
laying was a success.
"No!" Schlessinger cried suddenly. Such was the pain in her voice that
Anna was unpleasantly reminded that the coast of Georgia was the
breeding grounds for the great white shark.
"What?" she demanded.
"Lost a baby."
Anna was relieved but had the good sense to keep quiet. Schlessinger
would consider the loss of a ranger's leg somewhat less heartrending
than that of an embryonic loggerhead.
Minutes ticked by. Waves banged at Anna's back, tried to buckle her
knees. Sand gritted between her teeth and salt sealed her eyes. The
muscles in her arms and shoulders had progressed from ache, to jelly, to
constant torturous throb. All sense of glamour. and adventure was long
since gone.
"This is getting to be work," she grunted.
"Quiet," Marty said.
Anna \wedged her knee more firmly under the loggerhead's shell and began
counting back from one hundred. When she reached zero, she decided,
Marty and the little loggers were on their own.
Time came and went and still she held on. Numbers blurred .
"I'm losing it," she said.
" No. Not yet."
Various retorts bottled up behind Anna's teeth but she lacked breath to
voice them.
A wave rushed between her knees, buoyed up the turtle, and gave her
shoulders some respite. When the water receded and the weight settled
again, she cried out.
"Hold her still," Schlessinger snapped.
Anna tried ." In my next life I'm gog to be bigger," she hissed.
Quiet Schlessinger said again. Then: "Okay. I guess that's the lot.
Let her down. Gently. Gently."
Anna couldn't unlock any part of her body ." Can't," she said finally.
"Oh for Christ sake." With the next wave Schlessinger eased the weight
of the turtle from the tripod Anna had made of her body ." At least you
can hold these." The biologist proffered Anna her National Park Service
cap. It was full of leathery orbs a little larger than golf balls ."
Careful," she warned as Anna stretched stiff arms to receive them ." I
counted."
There was no mistaking the threat. Marty knew how many eggs were there.
Should one turn up missing on Anna's watch, there would be hell to pay.
She held the cap between her hands as if it were the Holy Grail.
Cooing, the biologist turned the massive turtle back toward the sea and
watched her shining shell till the ocean took her ." Fun's over," she
said curtly ." Time to get to work."
Oddly, Anna felt invigorated. The magic of the turtle eggs she carried
was seeping into her tired bones. The glory of the loggerhead's fight
and her part in it filled her with a sense of accomplishment that
diminished the ache in her back and legs. Slopping sand and water with
every step, she squished up the darkened beach after Marty Schlessinger.
just above the high-tide line Schlessinger stopped, locked folded arms
across her chest, and surveyed the dunes between the water and the
tangle of oak and palmetto that choked the interior of the island.
A three-quarter moon, free now of the sea, cast its light over the sand.
Each twig and blade of grass was etched on one side with unnatural
clarity, and on the other plunged into impenetrable shadow. The jungle
beyond was lightless, a jagged wall of pine and live oak silhouetted
against a faint glow from the mainland.
" This'll do," Schlessinger said, and dropping on all fours, began to
dig like a dog after a particularly tasty bone. Sand, first dry, then
clumped and wet, sprayed out between her legs and over Anna's shoe tops.
A shovel would have expedited the process. Anna didn't know if
Schlessinger was unprepared, a purist, or a fanatic. She suspected the
latter two.
On Cumberland Island just over a week and already Anna knew all about
the marine biologist. To be more precise, she knew all the gossip.
Tonight was the first time she'd actually laid eyes on the woman, though
the first day she'd arrived the tarpaper shack Schles singer called home
had been pointed out along with other island landmarks.
The residents of Cumberland granted Marty Schlessinger the status
usually reserved for witches and mad scientists. In her mid fifties,
she lived in a ramshackle house she'd inherited when wid owed by a crash
some fifteen years before.
Schlessinger's bizarre reputation was not unearned. In her wake
headless turtle carcasses and the mutilated corpses of animals killed on
the island's rudimentary road system turned up with nauseating
regularity.
The loggerheads, Anna knew from watching, washed up on the beach with
all parts intact. Shrimpers plied their trade offshore .
Turtles were caught in the nets and drowned. Schlessinger retrieved the
skulls and brains, Anna guessed, for dissection and study.
The butchered roadkili was a little harder to explain. Maybe
Schlessinger did eat it. Behind her house Anna had noticed a hog pen.
Maybe they were the beneficiaries.
Rumors of varying morbidity and credibility dwindled down from these two
provocative habits. The rumor Anna dearly hoped was true was that
Schlessinger ate blood-fat ticks from the carcasses of the animals ."
Pops 'em like M and M's," Guy Marshall, her crew boss on this venture,
had assured her. That was something she wanted to see. The poetic
justice of it tickled her.
Eccentricity made Schlessinger well suited to Cumberland Island National
Seashore. Once a vacation home for the very rich, Cumberland had been
privately owned until the 1970s. In the past fifty years most of the
flashier millionaires had moved to more fashionable addresses, leaving
only a handful of moneyed and powerful families behind, but the ghost of
those glory days remained in the crumbling mansions and burned-out
relics.
In the early 1970s, eighteen thousand acres of the twentythousand acre
island was deeded over to the federal government to be preserved as a
national park. Those who were less than charitable suggested the land
had been given to the NPS more to keep the riffraff from buying up
parcels the rich were tired of paying taxes on than to "conserve the
scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wildlife therein .