The Naturalist (The Naturalist Series Book 1)

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The Naturalist (The Naturalist Series Book 1) Page 1

by Andrew Mayne




  PRAISE FOR ANDREW MAYNE

  “In Mayne’s exciting second Jessica Blackwood novel, the cunning FBI special agent applies her magician training to investigating a bizarre explosion . . . A fast-moving thriller in which illusions are weapons for both good and evil.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Name of the Devil

  “Science supersedes the supernatural in this action-packed follow-up . . . With snappy prose and a smart protagonist, this is an adrenaline-fueled procedural with an unusual twist. Great reading.”

  —Booklist (starred review) on Name of the Devil

  “Mayne, the star of the A&E show Don’t Trust Andrew Mayne, combines magic and mayhem in this delightful beginning to a new series . . . Readers will look forward to Jessica’s future adventures.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Angel Killer

  “Professional illusionist Mayne introduces a fresh angle to serial-killer hunting . . . Mayne forgoes gimmicks, instead dissecting illusions with human behavior, math, and science without losing sight of the story’s big picture.”

  —Booklist on Angel Killer

  OTHER TITLES BY ANDREW MAYNE

  JESSICA BLACKWOOD SERIES

  Black Fall

  Name of the Devil

  Angel Killer

  THE CHRONOLOGICAL MAN SERIES

  The Monster in the Mist

  The Martian Emperor

  Station Breaker

  Public Enemy Zero

  Hollywood Pharaohs

  Knight School

  The Grendel’s Shadow

  NONFICTION

  The Cure for Writers Block

  How to Write a Novella in 24 Hours

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2017 by Andrew Mayne

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published by Thomas & Mercer, Seattle

  www.apub.com

  Amazon, the Amazon logo, and Thomas & Mercer are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.

  ISBN-13: 9781477824245

  ISBN-10: 1477824243

  Cover design by M.S. Corley

  To my friend Gerry Ohrstrom, for his contagious support and enthusiasm for science.

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER ONE 1989

  CHAPTER TWO ICE MACHINE

  CHAPTER THREE SAMPLE

  CHAPTER FOUR SELF-INCRIMINATION

  CHAPTER FIVE INDEX

  CHAPTER SIX FIELDWORK

  CHAPTER SEVEN ISLANDS

  CHAPTER EIGHT FRONTIERS

  CHAPTER NINE MIDNIGHT

  CHAPTER TEN THE BEAST

  CHAPTER ELEVEN THE PHILANTHROPIST

  CHAPTER TWELVE BUTTERFLIES

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN WALKING DISTANCE

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN YELLOW LINE

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN RESTING PLACE

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN SNIPER

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN GENBANK

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN APEX

  CHAPTER NINETEEN ALL CLEAR

  CHAPTER TWENTY FRAMED

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE TROUBLEMAKER

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO THE GRAPH

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE THE HUMAN CIRCUIT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR THE PITCH EXPERIMENT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE HUDSON CREEK

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX THE LAWN MOWER MAN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN TROUBLED YOUNG THINGS

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT CHERRY PIE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE OPEN WOUNDS

  CHAPTER THIRTY LOST GIRLS

  CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE STALKER

  CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO BESTIES

  CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE BAD PRINCE

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR FIELD TRIP

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE DARK PATHS

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX BIODIVERSITY

  CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN REMNANTS

  CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT INFORMANT

  CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE ACCESSORIES

  CHAPTER FORTY PROBABILITY

  CHAPTER FORTY-ONE STASIS

  CHAPTER FORTY-TWO RESURRECTIONIST

  CHAPTER FORTY-THREE FALL GUY

  CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR INPATIENT

  CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE DEPARTURES

  CHAPTER FORTY-SIX ACADEMIC

  CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN BAYESIAN CASUALTIES

  CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT INERTIA

  CHAPTER FORTY-NINE BODY COUNT

  CHAPTER FIFTY ANTHROPOLOGIST

  CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE SHARK TEETH

  CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO UNSOLVED

  CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE SHADOWS

  CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR ENCOUNTER

  CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE GEOSPATIAL

  CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX THE RAVINE

  CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN LAIR

  CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT EXTREMOPHILE

  CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE HAUNTED

  CHAPTER SIXTY SCENERY

  CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE INTERNIST

  CHAPTER SIXTY-TWO NEXT OF KIN

  CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE HOMESTEAD

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FOUR ACCOMPLICE

  CHAPTER SIXTY-FIVE JUNKER

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SIX ALIBI

  CHAPTER SIXTY-SEVEN FOUNDLING

  CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT COUNTERMEASURE

  CHAPTER SIXTY-NINE ADMISSION

  CHAPTER SEVENTY SURROGATE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-ONE FATALITY

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-TWO BREAKING

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-THREE DEAD MAN

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-FOUR REALITY CHECK

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-FIVE STALKER

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-SIX PROTECTION

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-SEVEN PERIMETER DEFENSE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-EIGHT SAFE HOUSE

  CHAPTER SEVENTY-NINE CRASH

  CHAPTER EIGHTY VALIANT

  CHAPTER EIGHTY-ONE HUNTED

  CHAPTER EIGHTY-TWO VIGILANT

  CHAPTER EIGHTY-THREE ADAPTATION

  CHAPTER EIGHTY-FOUR THROMBOSIS

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  CHAPTER ONE

  1989

  The woods were wrong. That was the only way Kelsie could describe it. There was just something not right. She stared off in the direction Trevor had gone, unsure if she should try to track him down or stay put next to the tiny red tent and wait for him to return from his bathroom break.

  He’d laugh at her if she said she was scared, so Kelsie dug through her backpack, searching for the roll of toilet paper she’d borrowed from the Conoco station restroom thirty miles back. She found it wrapped up in the cords of her Walkman, resting on the mixtapes Trevor had made for her back at Boston College.

  Trevor was a lanky journalism major with a mop of black hair that usually covered his eyes. They’d met at an off-campus party and bonded over a mutual love of prog rock and board games. The first evening they spent in his dorm they listened to Tubular Bells, played Stratego, and drank cheap wine. She was pretty sure she was in love right there but waited two months to tell him.

  Her parents hated him. Her father, a bank executive, couldn’t get over the phrase journalism major and her mother still hadn’t gotten over her own first marriage, made in college. Trevor was just another fling to them. No more significant than Kelsie’s date to junior prom.

  Trevor’s parents were divorced and lived abroad. He barely spoke to them, and Kelsie soon followed suit with her own. When he proposed
a cross-country hiking trip during summer break, she said yes without hesitation. To further her independence from her parents, she only told them she wouldn’t be returning home for the break. She ignored the phone messages left at her dorm. To hell with them.

  That was two weeks and a thousand miles ago. As Kelsie looked out into dark-blue forest, she wished very much she’d gone home and tried to talk them into accepting Trevor. The trip had been fun, mostly. But she saw Trevor’s temper occasionally and was terrified of doing anything that might make him roll his eyes and remind her of how ignorant she was of the most basic hiking and camping skills.

  “Trev?” Kelsie called out as she started along the path she’d seen him go down.

  There was no reply.

  “You bring any TP, babe? I got you a roll . . .”

  She walked ten yards, looked back to make sure she could still see the tent, then went a few more.

  The woods were transitioning from day to night. Crickets chirped, and some enormous, shadowy bird—an owl?—flew overhead, returning home or heading out somewhere.

  Kelsie still got chills thinking about their hike in the Appalachians, when she saw a huge flock of black birds and pointed them out to Trevor as they flew across the dusky sky. There were so many of them. She’d stared up in awe as they swarmed past.

  “Those are bats, babe,” he’d explained.

  “Bats?”

  “Yep. There’s probably a huge cave nearby.”

  “Cool,” she’d replied, trying very hard to pretend she meant it. She didn’t sleep at all that night. Every flicker of shadow on the wall of the tent sent a shiver down her spine.

  That was nothing compared with now.

  She reached the spot where Trevor should have been. It was a V formation of logs and formed a natural barrier where even she’d feel somewhat comfortable.

  But he wasn’t there.

  Maybe he took another way back?

  Her body was half-turned when she noticed the pale leather of his hiking boot. She knelt down and picked it up.

  It had been wedged under a root, as if he’d tripped and slid out of the shoe. Only he wasn’t lying in front of it. He wasn’t anywhere.

  “Trev?” she called out timidly. She was too afraid to raise her voice.

  The trees were growing darker and the twilight fading. Kelsie decided to go back to the tent and tried to visualize Trevor waiting for her, smiling. She took the boot and headed back to the campsite.

  For a moment she panicked when the tent wasn’t visible, but as she got closer she could make out the red fabric in the dim light. There was still no sign of her boyfriend.

  “Babe?” she called out.

  He’d pranked her once, and she’d denied him sex that night in retaliation. She was pretty sure he’d gotten the message but hoped that this was just a relapse.

  Kelsie set the boot by the front of the tent and tried to decide if she should go inside and wait or try to make a fire.

  Make a fire, she decided.

  It was when she knelt down to the small circle of rocks to ignite the dry leaves that she noticed a tree stump that hadn’t been there before. Half the height of a man and as black as night, it was standing between two evergreens in a spot she would have sworn was empty a moment ago.

  Her breath frozen in her lungs, she quickly looked to her left and then her right to make certain that she wasn’t mistaken. When her gaze returned to the stump, it was gone.

  The woods were moving.

  There was an explosion of motion, as if a shadow leaped out at her.

  The next thing she knew, she was on her back and the frozen breath was trapped under the incredible weight of something standing on her chest.

  Her fingers felt thick, coarse hair, like on her mother’s paintbrushes. The smell was coppery and rancid.

  She saw the flash of claws but didn’t understand what happened until seconds later when she felt her warm blood drip down the cold flesh of her stomach.

  Trevor had told her that there were bears and mountain lions in these woods. Kelsie had no idea what attacked her. All she knew as she lay paralyzed, bleeding out, was that she’d never heard of an animal that wounded you, then just sat there, watching you die.

  CHAPTER TWO

  ICE MACHINE

  A scientific man ought to have no wishes, no affections, a mere heart of stone.

  —Charles Darwin

  Red and blue police lights splash off the chipped chrome letters spelling ICE MACHINE. I’m standing in front of the motel vending machines with my plastic pail in my hand, lost in thought. Where does the water for the machine come from? Is it from some local stream? Do they filter it? Is the water sealed inside an internal reservoir before it’s frozen into cubes?

  I just read a paper that described a new bacterium found deep inside ice caves. It evolved from photosynthesis to chemosynthesis—literally eating the rocks to survive. It could also chew through the charcoal used in most filters like soft ice cream.

  So far it hasn’t been shown to be harmful to humans . . . which makes me wonder if it would be useful for dissolving the mineral buildup of kidney stones. So many questions . . .

  So many questions . . . I barely notice the squeal of tires as a vehicle comes to a stop behind me. I turn and see that it’s an armored van and that the parking lot has filled with a half dozen police cruisers, each with a pair of county deputies ducked behind, guns drawn and shotguns pressed to their shoulders. Every eye and weapon is trained on the rooms across the lot from me.

  “Get down,” someone whispers harshly.

  A man in black slacks and a tie covered by a bulletproof jacket is hiding behind the driver-side door of a Ford Bronco parked beside me. I can see a badge on a pendant, but his gun isn’t drawn.

  He waves me away. “Go back to your room.”

  Everything is happening in slow motion, but I can’t move. All I can do is crouch and watch from behind his rear bumper.

  Four men in black tactical gear with metal face masks leap out of the back of the van and run toward the row of rooms across from us. One of them is carrying a thick metal cylinder. He rams it against a lock, and the door bursts open. Guns pointed inside, two men rush into the room while the others keep them covered.

  There’s a tense silence.

  From inside someone shouts, “Clear!”

  One of the armored men steps outside and makes some kind of hand signal while shaking his head.

  The other armored men exit after him, letting three deputies enter, followed by a tall woman wearing a jacket and a cowboy hat. She’s got tan skin, like leather, with laugh lines and crow’s-feet I can see across the parking lot.

  After peering into the motel room, she steps back into the parking lot and scans the cars in the lot. She points to one, and a deputy calls out its plate number on his radio. Everyone is quiet as his voice carries across the parking lot.

  The man who told me to get back relaxes and stands up from behind his door. He catches my reflection in his driver-side mirror and wheels around to face me. “Didn’t I ask you to go to your room?”

  “I . . . can’t.” I look to the deputies surrounding the door. “I don’t think they’ll let me.”

  It takes a moment for this to register with him. I’m still processing what just happened.

  “Holy shit.” He narrows his eyes. “Are you Dr. Cray?”

  “Yes . . . Theo Cray. What’s going on?”

  His hand touches his hip where a gun sits. He doesn’t draw but keeps his palm on the handle.

  The man’s voice is low and measured. “Dr. Cray, for your safety, may I ask you to slowly set down the ice bucket and place your hands in the air where I can see them?”

  I don’t think. I just follow his directions.

  “Now would you get on your knees?”

  I’m wearing shorts, so gravel digs into my knees, but I’m too numb to feel any pain.

  He steps over to me, his hand never leaving his pistol at his side.
“I’m going to stand behind you to make sure you don’t have a weapon.” I watch him out of the corner of my eye. His free hand goes to his other hip. “May I put handcuffs on you for my safety?”

  “Okay.” He has a gun. I’m not sure I can say no. I’m too afraid to ask why he feels the need to cuff me.

  After the cold metal restraints are quickly, but not forcefully, clicked around my wrists, he asks, “Is it okay if I lift your shirt?”

  “Sure,” I say weakly.

  I feel cold Montana air on my sweaty back.

  “I’m going to pat your pockets now.”

  “Okay.”

  He puts a hand on my shoulder, pinning me down as he feels both my pockets. “What’s inside there?”

  I panic as my mind blanks. “Um . . . my room key. Wallet. Um . . . phone.”

  “Anything else?”

  I think for a moment, afraid of getting the answer wrong. “Uh . . . a Leatherman.”

  I smell the scent of latex as he pulls on a pair of gloves. “May I remove them from your pockets?”

  “Yeah. Yeah . . . of course.”

  In movies there’s a lot of yelling when this happens. This man talks to me like he’s a doctor. He never raises his voice. He never threatens me.

  He removes everything from my pockets and sets them several feet away from me. Close, but out of my reach.

  “I need you to wait here for a moment while we clear this up.”

  “Clear what up?”

  He doesn’t answer. Instead, he puts his fingers to his lips and makes a loud whistle. The woman in the cowboy hat looks to see who made the noise.

  Her eyes narrow on me. “Cray?” she shouts.

  The man nods. Dumbly, I nod, too.

  Everything up until now has unfolded with the disorienting calm of a medical exam. Now things go into overdrive as all the energy and attention aimed at my motel room pivot toward me, like the barrel of a cannon.

  I feel scores of eyes staring at me.

  Some of them angry.

  I’m being scrutinized. Judged.

  I have no fucking idea why.

  “What’s going on?” I ask again.

  The woman in the cowboy hat walks over in quick strides. She’s imposing as she stares down at me like I’m a sample in my lab. I catch a glimpse of a blade on her belt.

  “Did he try to run?” she asks with a slight drawl, never breaking eye contact with me.

 

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