Damned rattlers.
Ashley Carter knocked trail dirt from her
boots before climbing into her rusted Chevy pick-up. She threw
her dusty cowboy hat on the seat next to her and swiped a caked
handkerchief across her brow. Leaning over the gear shift, she
popped the glove compartment and removed the snake bite
kit.
With a knuckle, she tapped the radio. Static
rasped from the handheld receiver. Humming, she peeled back the
wrapper from the syringe and drew the usual amount of venom
antiserum. By now, she could gauge it by sight. She shook the
bottle. Almost empty. It was time to run into Albuquerque for
more.
After cleaning her skin with an alcohol
swab, she jabbed the needle into her arm and winced as she
administered the amber fluid. Loosening her tourniquet a notch,
she wiped iodine over the two punctures in her forearm, then
applied a bandage.
Cinching her tourniquet a bit tighter, she
glanced at the dashboard clock. Let's see, ten minutes, and
she'd have to loosen the tourniquet again.
She picked up the radio handpiece and
pressed the button on its side. "Randy, come in. Over." Static,
as she released the button.
"Randy, please pick up. Over." Her neighbor,
Randy, was still on disability from a back injury at the mine.
For the past ten weeks, he had earned a few extra bucks under
the table by supplying daycare for her son Jason.
She started the engine and pulled back onto
the parallel ruts that constituted a road. The radio belched a
garbled blast of noise, then she heard, ". . . up. Ashley,
what's going on? We expected you back an hour ago."
She raised the handpiece. "Sorry, Randy.
Found a new room in the Anasazi dig. Hidden by a rock fall. Had
to check it out before the light went bad. But a diamondback
had other ideas. So I've got to check in with Doc Marshall
first. Be back in about an hour. Could you pop the lasagna in
the oven? Over." She hooked the receiver back on the
radio.
A squelch of static. "A bite! Again! This is
the fourth time since Christmas. You're pressing your luck,
Ash. This solo venturing is going to get you killed someday.
But, listen, after you get checked up by Doc Marshall, hurry
home. There's some Marine types here waiting for
you."
She furrowed her brow. Now what did she do?
She groaned and grabbed the handpiece again. "What's up?
Over."
"D'know. They're playing dumb," he said,
then added in a lower voice, "and they're damned good at it.
Real G.I. Joes. You'd hate 'em."
"Just what I need. How's Jason handling it?
Over."
"He's fine. Eating it up. Talking the ear
off of some corporal. I think he almost got the jarhead to give
him his gun."
She smacked the steering wheel with the flat
of her hand. "What are those bastards doing bringing guns into
my home? Damn, I'll be there straight away. Hold the fort! I'm
out."
She never carried a gun. Not even into the
badlands of New Mexico. Damned if she was going to allow some
overgrown boys to bring weapons into her home. She slammed the
truck in gear, her wheels clawing at loose rock.
* * *
Ashley jumped from the truck, arm tucked in
a blue sling, and crossed through her cacti garden, hurrying
toward a group of uniformed men huddled under the small green
awning over her porch, which offered the only shade for a
hundred yards.
As she stomped up the wooden steps, the men
in front backed up. Except for one man, who sported bronzed
clusters on each shoulder and stood his ground.
She strode right up to him. "Who the hell do
you think you are barging in here with enough arsenal to blow
away a small Vietnamese village? I have a boy in
there."
The officer's mouth flattened to a thin
line. He leaned back to remove his sunglasses, revealing a cold
blue stare, void of any emotion. "Major Michaelson, ma'am. We
were sent to escort Dr. Blakely."
She glared at him. "I don't know of any Dr.
Blakely."
"He knows of you, ma'am. He says you're one
of the best paleoanthropologists in the country. Or so I've
heard him tell the president."
"The president of what?"
He stared at her blankly. "The President of
the United States."
A sandy-haired juggernaut plowing through
the uniformed men covered her surprise. "Mom! You're home! You
gotta come see." Her son eyed her sling, then grabbed the
sleeve of her other arm. "C'mon." Even though he only stood a
little higher than their belt buckles, he ushered the military
aside .
Glaring, she allowed herself to be dragged
through the door. As screen door clapped shut behind her, she
headed toward the family room and noticed a leather briefcase
parked on the table. It wasn't hers.
The scent of garlic from a baking lasagna
wafted toward her from the kitchen. Her stomach responded with
a growl. She hadn't eaten since breakfast. Randy, armed with
stained oven mittens, was attempting to extract the bubbling
lasagna without spilling it. The sight of such a bear of a man,
dressed in apron, struggling with a pan of lasagna, brought a
smile to her lips. He rolled his eyes at her.
As she opened her mouth to say hello, there
was a sudden urgent tugging at her arm. "C'mon, Mom, see what
Doctor Blakely has. It's bitchin'."
"Watch your tongue, mister," she warned.
"You know we don't allow that sort of language here. Now show
me what this is all about." She waved at Randy as she was
tugged toward the family room.
Her son pointed at the briefcase and
whispered, "It's in there."
The sound of rushing water from the hall
bathroom drew her attention. The door opened and a tall black
man, thin as a pole and dressed in a three-piece suit, entered
the hallway. He was older, his close-cropped hair graying
slightly. He pushed a pair of wire-rim spectacles further up
the bridge of his nose. Spotting Ashley, he broke out in a
sudden smile of recognition. He stepped toward her quickly,
hand out to be shaken. "Professor Ashley Carter. Your picture
in last year's Archaeology magazine failed to do you
justice."
She knew a snow job when she heard one.
Caked with trail dirt, arm in a sling, clad in mud-stained
jeans, she was no beauty queen. "Can the crap, Doc. What are
you doing here?"
He dropped his hand. His eyes widened a
moment, and then he smiled even broader. He had more teeth than
a shark. "I like your no-nonsense attitude," he said. "It's
refreshing. I have a proposal to -- "
"Not interested." She pointed to the door.
"You and your entourage can hit the trail now. Thanks
anyway."
"If you'll only lis -- "
"Don't make me toss your butt outta here."
She snapped her arm toward the screen door.
"It pays a hundred grand for two month's
work."
"Just get your -- " Her arm dropped to her
side. Clearing her throat, she stared at Dr. Blakely, then
raised an eyebrow. "Now I'm listening."
Since her divorce, she had been struggling
to keep food on the table and a roof over their heads. An
assistant professor's salary barely covered her living
expenses, let alone her research projects.
"Wait," she started. "Wait a minute. Is it
legal? It can't be legal."
"I assure you, Doctor Carter, this offer is
legit. And that's only the beginning," Dr. Blakely continued,
"Exclusive authorship of research garnered. Guaranteed tenure
at the university of your choice."
She had dreams like this after too much
sausage-and-onion pizza. "How can that be possible? There are
university statutes . . . rules . . . seniority . . .
how?"
"This is a project advocated by the highest
people. I have been given free reign to hire whomever I want at
whatever salary I want." He sat down on the sofa and crossed
his legs, arms spread the length of the sofa. "And I want
you."
"Why?" Ashley questioned tentatively, still
suspicious.
Leaning forward, he held up a hand, begging
patience. He reached for his briefcase and clicked it open.
Using both hands, he carefully lifted a crystal statuette from
its interior. He turned it upright toward her.
It was a human figure -- judging from the
pendulous breasts and gravid belly, a female figure. The fading
light caught the crystalline structure and reflected radiant
bursts.
He nodded for her to take it. "What do you
think?"
She hesitated, afraid to touch its fragile
beauty. "Definitely primative . . .Appears to be a type of
fertility icon."
Dr. Blakely nodded his head vigorously.
"Right, right . . . here look closer." He raised the heavy
statue, arms shaking with the strain. "Please examine
it."
She reached to take the
statuette.
"It's sculpted out of a single diamond," he
said. "Flawless."
Now she understood the armed escort. She
withdrew her hands from such a priceless object as she pondered
the implications. "Bitchin'," she whispered.
* * *
Across the kitchen table, Ashley Carter
watched as Dr. Blakely flipped the cellular phone closed and
returned it to his breast pocket. "Now, Professor Carter, where
were we?"
"Is anything the matter?" Ashley asked,
sopping up tomato sauce from her plate with a piece of garlic
toast. The two of them sat at her green metal kitchen
table.
The doctor shook his head. "Not at all. Just
confirming the acquisition of one of your potential teammates.
An Australian caving expert." He smiled reassuringly. "Now
where were we?"
She eyed him warily. "Who else will be
joining the expedition?"
"I'm afraid those names are confidential.
But I can tell you we're talking to a leading biologist in
Canada and a geologist from Egypt. And a few . . .
others."
Ashley could tell this line of questioning
was futile. "Fine. Back to the diamond statue then. You never
told me where the artifact was discovered."
He pursed his lips. "That information is
also confidential. Only for those involved with the research."
He folded the gingham napkin on his lap.
"Doctor, I thought this was going to be a
discussion. You're rather lean on your answers."
"Perhaps. But you still haven't given me a
concrete answer yet either. Are you willing to join my research
team?"
"I need more details. And more time to
re-organize my work schedule."
"We'd take care of such minor
concerns."
She thought of Jason, who was eating dinner
from a rickety tray in front of the television. "I have my son.
I can't just up and leave. And he's no minor
concern."
"You have an ex-husband. A Scott
Vandercleve, I believe."
"Jason's not staying with him. Forget
it."
Blakely sighed loudly. "Then we do have a
problem."
This point was going to be a stickler. Jason
had been having trouble at school, and this summer Ashley had
vowed to spend some time with him. "This is not up for debate,"
she said with as much conviction as she could muster. "Jason
accompanies me, or I have no choice but to decline."
Blakely studied her silently.
She continued, "He's been on other digs with
me. I know he can handle this."
"I don't think that would be prudent." He
smiled, like a man suppressing a laugh, strained.
"He's been on other digs with me. He's a
tough and resourceful kid."
Blakely grimaced. "If I agree to this point,
then you'll join the team?" He paused, removing his glasses and
rubbing at the indentations on the bridge of his nose. He
seemed to be thinking aloud. "I suppose he could stay in the
Alpha zone. It's secure." Replacing his glasses, he reached
across the table and held out an open palm.
"Agreed."
Relieved, she let out her breath and shook
his dry hand. "So why so much effort to get me on your
team?"
"Your specialty. The anthropology of cliff
dwelling primitives. Your work on the Gila dwellings was
brilliant."
"Still, why me? There are other
paleoanthropologists."
"Several reasons. One," -- he ticked off the
points on his fingers -- "you've demonstrated you can manage
teams on other digs. Two, your nose for detail is superb.
Three, your perseverance in solving mysteries is bone-hard
obstinate. Four, you're in excellent physical shape. Five,
you've earned my respect. Any other questions?"
Satisfied for now, she shook her head,
slightly embarrassed. She fought back a blush. Rarely did one
hear praise in her field. Uncomfortable, she changed the tack
of the conversation.
"Now that we're partners, maybe you can tell
me where you discovered this unique artifact." She rose to
clear the dishes. "Somewhere in Africa I'd guess."
He smiled. "No, in Antarctica
actually."
She glanced over her shoulder, trying to
judge if he was testing her. "There are no primitive cultures
on that continent. It's a barren glacier."
Blakely shrugged. "Who said
'on?'"
She rattled a dish in the sink. "So where
then?" She turned to him, leaned back against the sink, and
dried her hands with a damp dish towel.
He just pointed a single finger toward the
floor.
Down.