As if its ears were burning, the laptop emitted a suitable here-comes-Tinkerbell strumming sound.
"Come on," Heath said as she pivoted her chair toward the counter. "Hallelujah." The sender's address was "ssdennis." The message was short and to the point.
"Come get us." No salutation, no "Love, Sharon."
Though Heath had been awaiting a communication for so many hours her anticipation muscles-and she swore such anatomical oddities existed, she could feel them at the base of her skull and between her shoulder blades-fairly ached with the burden, her hand shot out and closed the laptop, shutting it down. She should never have gotten tangled up in these crazy people's twisted schemes. While cursing herself for a sucker and a coward and a fool, her mind raced after plausible, or even merely possible, excuses she could use to get herself off the hook: never got the e-mail, computer down, cell phone not working, batteries dead. Crippled.
The last smacked her upside the head as smartly as her dad's second wife had been in the habit of doing when she'd had too much cheap wine.
How very handy this being paraplegic could become if she let it. How easy to blame character flaws, spiritual emptiness or sloth on the fact that she no longer walked. Seductive not to be challenged, differently abled or disabled-appellations she'd earlier scorned as mere semantics-but to be crippled as in broken, less than, excused from having to compete, cope and strive like everybody else.
"Damn," Heath whispered. This epiphany didn't leave her feeling any less cowardly, suckered or foolish. It merely spoiled the escape plans she was busily hatching. Quickly, before she could change her mind and choose to be a victim and the abdication of responsibility that road offered, she opened the laptop and sent off two quick e-mails. The first was to her aunt informing her she was leaving for New Canaan. The sec-ond to "ssdennis": "I'm on my way."
t w e n ty -two
Before Anna could recover and snatch up this macabre trophy, a pup pounced on it with a ferocious growl, snatched the bones up and ran back beneath the rock overhang, the other three little wolves in plump and gangly pursuit. No wonder they were so fat, Anna thought. Elk and Homo sapiens. She couldn't but hope they preferred elk as she lay on the wet ground, Mag-Lite in one hand, and reached into the furry fracas to retrieve what might be the only evidence of a girl's murder.
The struggle was quick and fierce. Anna got one painful nip on the heel of her hand but emerged the victor. If one couldn't take candy from babies, taking fingers from puppies had to be the next best thing. From a habit of many years in law enforcement, she always carried a couple of small evidence bags in her shirt pocket. If used for nothing else, during the long idyllic spells when the parks were quiescent, the bags were handy for storing cigarette butts found along the trails.
"Sorry, guys," she whispered as she dropped her gory acquisition into one and sealed it up. "Have a hoof." By way of restitution she tossed a well-chewed elk's foot gently into the growling darkness.
The gnawed finger she stowed in a side pocket of her pack. She was rising to her feet when Rita reappeared in the narrow gateway flanked by the rocks.
"We really can't be getting the pups used to human-" Rita began in that half-exasperated, half-apologetic voice people adopt when admon-ishing a superior officer. She stopped when she noticed Anna's bedraggled, mud-soaked clothes, needles from elbows to boot heels.
"What happened?"
"I fell."
"We'll walk out slow," Rita promised. Anna could sense that, had Rita been a Boy Scout, she would have harassed perfectly good old ladies in her zeal to help them across streets.
Anna said nothing, just followed her out. When she had passed the homemade wicket gate, she picked it up and turned to Rita. "Do me a favor," she said. "Hold this for a second."
Dutifully Rita took the gate in both hands. Anna reached under her rain jacket and drew her service weapon from its pancake holder on her belt.
"Get mud in your gun?" Rita asked.
For a perpetrator of murder and dismemberment, she was breath-takingly unconcerned. Either she was innocent, a psychopath or a fine actress. Anna wasn't sure which of the three was the most dangerous and was in no position to gamble.
"Back up a tad," she said.
Rita did. When there were a couple of yards between them, Anna moved out from the tight embrace of the granite and leveled the gun at Rita's middle.
"What are-"
"You can go ahead and put the gate in place," Anna said. "Keep the pups from getting away. Carefully. Hands where I can see them. Roll the rocks in place with your foot. Good."
"This isn't necessary," Rita said, somewhere between shock and right-eousness. "I doubt it's a felony. You'd shoot me for doing something that the park needs so desperately?"
"Take your weapon off. You know the drill. Carefully. Don't scare me into pulling the trigger."
With a "Humph!" that struck Anna more as that of a snotty teenager than a raging homicidal maniac, Rita complied.
Anna then had Rita hug a good-sized pine and cuffed her wrists together. Cuffing suspects to inanimate objects was against regulations, but no other solution came to mind. With every minute of delay, evi-dence was being devoured by wolves. Dogs eating my homework, Anna thought.
"Where do you keep your handcuff key?" Anna demanded.
"Watch pocket."
Anna took it. "Where's your spare?"
Rita said nothing.
"Bugger all," Anna muttered and began searching her seasonal. The spare was in her right breast pocket. Anna took it as well.
The sun was close to setting and the sky overcast, making it difficult to pick and choose between one lump of meat and the next, but it appeared as though, had more of the finger's original owner ever been in the enclo-sure, it was now transformed by the alchemy of digestion into sharp teeth and warm fur coats. Not a bad end, Anna couldn't help thinking. Burial was barbaric and cremation struck her as clean but wasteful.
To be on the safe side, she bagged every gruesome bite that wasn't clearly elk meat, then returned to her prisoner, unlocked her from her forced romance with the tree and recuffed her hands in front so she could steady herself on the hike out and so the cuffs would be hidden in the sleeves of her rain parka. It wouldn't do to have the public see a ranger marched out of the wilderness in chains, so to speak. During the process Rita complained with scathing bitterness that she should be treated like a common criminal, ready to tear out Anna's throat merely because she fed an already dead elk to a few needy puppies. Throughout this diatribe Anna didn't catch so much as a whiff of remorse or guilty knowledge that she was being arrested, not for a resource violation, but for murder.
Rita once again secure in bracelets, Anna told her to lead the way out. Not cross-country the way they'd come, but down around Loomis Lake on the improved trail.
The younger ranger refused to budge. "Take the cuffs off me. This is stupid. I only did what somebody had to for the park. I won't be made to go in in handcuffs when all I did was feed wolf pups."
Anna lifted the first evidence bag she'd taken from the man-made den. "You're not cuffed because you fed them but because you fed them this." She held the clear plastic bag out so Rita could see the contents.
Removed from mud and puppy jaws, the finger looked more patheti-cally human than it had when it first came to Anna's attention. The bones were crooked slightly from the remaining knuckle joints, giving it the aspect of a spectral and rotting hand beckoning one to the unspeakable.
"Jesus H. Christ," Rita murmured.
Anna was pretty sure that qualified as taking the Lord's name in vain.
"It's a finger," Rita said.
"Your pet wolf pups were chewing on it."
Rita didn't answer. Turning she stumbled, righted herself, and led the way down the trail.
She hadn't gone more than a dozen yards before she suddenly sat down with a thump.
Thinking she had slipped, Anna stopped and waited for her to get up. She didn't so much as try. "Y
ou okay?"
"Other than being under arrest for murder?" Rita said without turning to look at Anna.
"Other than that," Anna replied with more patience than she felt. Floundering about in the wolves' den, fighting for scraps of human flesh, had gotten her wet. With the closing of the day she was getting cold and cranky.
"Yeah. Fit as a fiddle." Still Rita didn't look back.
"Get up. We're losing the light."
"No."
"What do you mean 'no'?"
"No. I won't get up. I won't hike out. I didn't kill anybody and I won't do it. No."
Damn, Anna thought. She'd always dreaded this moment, waited for it. By some miracle she'd managed to avoid it for a long time. She remem-bered when she'd first gone to seasonal law enforcement training in an abandoned women's prison in Santa Rosa, California, asking one of her teachers, a strapping park policeman from the Presidio in San Francisco, "What do you do if people don't do what you say?"
"They'll do what you tell them to," he'd said smugly. "You've just got to tell 'em the right way." There'd been a titter of masculine laughter as the men in the class pretended they weren't worried about the same thing.
From that Anna learned two things: not to admit weakness in front of the boys and that the big park policeman hadn't the faintest idea what to do in the face of a refusal that couldn't be met with brute force.
It was the secret of passive resistance.
Rita was too big to drag or carry. Much as she was tempted to at the moment, Anna couldn't shoot her and Rita knew it.
"Damn," Anna voiced her thought. "Just sit here all night freezing half to death?"
"I don't mind."
Rita never once looked over her shoulder at the captor she was effec-tively taking captive. Anna didn't need to see her face, she could hear the calm finality in the words. Nothing better to do, she sat as well, her back against a kindly tree, and ran through her options. Once again she could cuff Rita to a tree, hike out and bring back help. That wasn't only against park regulations but was dangerous. A stunt like that would get her fired
She could try and radio to request backup, backup which wouldn't arrive till way after dark, in which case they could all spend the night by Loomis Lake. Carrying out a good-sized woman at night was too risky to try if it wasn't life or death. Not to mention that nasty part where Anna would have to broadcast over the airwaves that her prisoner-her sea-sonal employee, for heaven's sake-wouldn't obey her and could some big strong somebody please come make her.
This being the twenty-first century, it might be expected that a heli-copter could be called on to swoop down and carry them both to civiliza-tion, but Anna knew that wasn't the case. Night landing, no lights, roving storm cells wreaking havoc with the air currents: pilots weren't willing to risk their lives nor owners their machinery under such conditions. Pos-sibly not even if it were a life and death situation.
"How about just down to Fern Lake?" Anna compromised. There was no sense in blustering or playing at heavy-handed authority. Being rational was the lesser of evils. "At least we'd be warm and dry and fed."
"No."
"I'll just call for backup and first thing in the morning you'll be hauled ignominiously out, a spectacle for all your friends. Wouldn't it be better to walk out quietly? Who knows, maybe you'll get off easy. A slap on the wrist. Hailed as a hero. Restoring the natural order and what not."
"What about the finger?"
"That's going to be a problem," Anna admitted. They sat in silence for a while. Soon Anna would have to radio dispatch and report the situation. Not yet, though. She still had hopes of getting Rita back on her feet and moving. Silences were usually easy for Anna, a boon in an overly noisy world. This one was not. It was full of the racket of questions she wanted to ask about the finger, the pups, the girls, Proffit. As soon as the cuffs went on and Rita was officially under arrest as in no longer free to come and go as she pleased, Anna didn't choose to ask a single one. Rita had yet to request a lawyer but judges tended to look on interrogation post arrest with a jaundiced eye. Law enforcement had become a good deal more complicated since Matt Dillon first rode into Dodge.
"What do you hope to gain by sitting here all night? Other than a cold butt and a lousy end-of-season review?" That question seemed safe enough.
Rita said nothing for a while. Then: "I haven't thought it through. I just know I'm not going out like this. I don't know where that finger came from. If it's even a finger."
The last rang hollow. They both knew it was a finger.
"ROMO, Two-oh-one," Anna radioed dispatch. There wasn't light to drag Rita out but someone could hike in with a flashlight to bring food, sleeping bags and the comfort of backup. "ROMO, Two-oh-one."
"Can't get out from here," Rita said with weary satisfaction. "You'll have to hike back up the way we came. On the ridge you can get a signal."
Anna had been afraid of that. In a world of soaring granite peaks and deep stone canyons, radio accessibility was spotty at best.
"Don't suppose you'd come with me?"
"Nope."
More time passed. Dusk became dark. Anna got colder, achier. Her thoughts grew more sinister. She had found blood in Rita's patrol vehicle, followed her, caught her flagrantly breaking park regulations, discovered a human finger amid the scraps of meat Rita fed to her pups, arrested the woman and yet, through all that, she'd not seen Rita as a threat. Not really.
Why would Rita plop down on a trail, putting herself and Anna through a long cold night for nothing? The confusion of innocence? The stubbornness of righteousness?
Or because she expected a friend to come along and help her even the odds?
Again Anna considered her options. It was a good twenty-minute hike to the ridge where she could establish radio communications. Forty min-utes there and back. During that time the annoying Miss Perry would have to be tethered to a tree.
In Rocky's backcountry there were a few remaining predators-not counting the four Rita had imported from Wyoming-black bears, cougars. There was little chance that one would come upon one particu-lar ranger tied to one particular tree. If this did transpire, chances were the beast would run away rather than attack.
The chances of whomever or whatever Rita waited for coming by and freeing her, then waiting in ambush for Anna to return in the dark, were incalculable.
"You're a royal pain in the patootie, you know that?" Anna said irritably.
"Uncuff me and we'll walk out."
Anna levered herself up from the cold damp earth and unlocked the cuff from Rita's left wrist.
"Thank-"
Before the woman could finish, Anna clamped her thumb and elbow in a pain compliance hold, forced her to the nearest tree and recuffed her with the trunk in her embrace.
"I'll be back as soon as I can," Anna said. "Don't feed the wildlife."
t w e n ty -t h re e
Heath hadn't degenerated into a total idiot. Before she dashed into the coming night for a rendezvous with destiny in the guise of the New Canaanites, she put in one call to her Aunt Gwen and left a message and another to Anna Pigeon. Again she left a message. It would have given her greater courage to have talked to a real live person but she could think of no one else to call. Certainly not the Loveland police. They were probably fine fellows all in all, but she wasn't a hundred percent sure what she was doing was legal and she was damn sure the cops, like most authority fig-ures, had been trained to believe citizen action was a bad idea; that it smacked of anarchy and vigilantism at best and made them look bad at worst. Citizen action by a middle-aged, female paraplegic? She'd be head-patted and kid-gloved and pooh-poohed right out of her mind.
Part of her knew it would be a relief to be put on the shelf. Part of her knew it would be another little death. She pushed fear aside and drove. The RV rattled and shuddered down the dirt road, the headlights catch-ing the dust, and Heath felt as if she moved through a fog idiosyncratic to her mind rather than to the outside world. This blurring of menta
l and ocular vision deepened a sense of unreality that had been growing since she'd returned Sharon's e-mail. Surely she was out of her head.
Commuting through the world in a wheelchair brought with it a host of concerns she was not yet accustomed to addressing. Would the girls be waiting outside? If she were expected to go in, help them pack or unchain them from their prayer benches, would the compound be wheelchair friendly? Did her enemies have handicapped-accessible dwellings?
Panic began to rise, a welling up of liquid terror so cold it tightened her scalp and blurred her already impaired vision. Then Heath suddenly laughed. Grumbling down a one-lane road to nowhere in a vehicle half the size of Rhode Island to rescue three sisters from an old goat of a patri-arch bent on bedding them all: a sense of unreality was the sanest re-action she could have. Discovering herself to be sane did nothing to alleviate the fear.
Nevada Barr - Anna Pigeon 13 - Hard Truth Page 21