Into the Badlands. Caron Todd

Читать онлайн.
Название Into the Badlands
Автор произведения Caron Todd
Жанр Современные любовные романы
Серия
Издательство Современные любовные романы
Год выпуска 0
isbn



Скачать книгу

them. The trouble was, her explanation could be a lie, and then he’d have warned her of his suspicions.

      “Why did you go out to my quarry this evening?” she asked. “Were you looking for me because of the meeting?”

      “Someone from your team called the museum for help. Amy, I think? When you didn’t get back to the bonebed after looking for Matt, she went out to the road, away from the gully, where her cell phone would work.”

      “I guess we should have done that earlier.”

      “You rescued Matt. That’s the main thing. I just wish it hadn’t taken us so long to find you.”

      Susannah yawned and the mug tilted. Alex jumped up and caught it, then lifted the tray to the end table. She slid down in the bed and curled up on her uninjured side.

      “I can’t stay awake anymore,” she muttered. “Could you bring my alarm clock down, and set it? For seven?” Her eyes closed. In seconds, she was asleep.

      Quickly Alex did a few chores. He shook her clothes out the back door to get rid of the worst of the sand, then put them in the laundry room. He swept the bathroom floor and rinsed away the sand he’d left in the sink. She hadn’t managed to eat much of her meal. He put the leftover food in the fridge and washed the dishes.

      Was there anything else she needed? Painkillers. He found a bottle of acetaminophen and set it on the table beside the sofa bed, along with a glass of water. Remembering how weak her left arm was, he removed the bottle’s childproof lid. There was a pen and some paper by the phone. He scribbled a quick note and propped it against the water glass. Gently, careful not to wake her, he pulled the blanket around her shoulders.

      The blanket rose and fell slightly as she breathed. She looked soft and unprotected, as if she didn’t have an angry or defensive bone in her body. Tangled, sand-filled hair had escaped here and there from her braid. Alex was surprised by an almost overwhelming urge to trace the pattern of freckles over her nose.

      There was no way she was a fossil poacher.

      CHAPTER FOUR

      ALEX ROLLED OUT OF BED and tugged the top sheet more or less straight before heading to the kitchen. The one-bedroom suite, with its discolored linoleum and chipped porcelain kitchen sink, had been the only place he could find to rent on short notice. It was luxurious compared to his last home. During the months he spent at a quarry in Mongolia, he’d cooked over a camp stove, washed from a metal basin and shared a tent with a variety of six-legged roommates. Sometimes, especially after a few months in the city, he thought that was the best way to live.

      He shook some Cheerios into a bowl and sloshed in some milk. The kitchen window faced north, so rather than enjoying a view of the foothills or the badlands while he ate, Alex looked out at a line of beige brick buildings. In the distance, he could see deciduous woods and rolling meadows. A herd of Charolais cattle, as small as plastic toys, grazed in one of the fields, white splotches against the green.

      It was nothing like Susannah Robb’s view. Her place was small and comfortable, but sprouting on the edge of the badlands the way it did, it had a feeling of wildness, too. Maybe he could stay put and work in one place for as long as Bruce Simpson had if he lived in a house that didn’t crush him. Or maybe not.

      The sun was still low when Alex headed to the museum, fifteen minutes from town. It had been a short night, but he had too much adrenaline in his bloodstream to feel tired. He was glad to see that the staff parking lot was empty. Aware that he might not be alone for long, Alex quickly let himself into the museum, then into the prep lab.

      Labeled cupboards ringed the main room, and heavy metal shelves holding bones and rock stood in rows at one end. Most of the space was filled by wide worktables with overhead lamps the technicians could raise and lower as needed. A second room, where skeletons were put together, branched off from the first.

      Surprised that more advanced technology hadn’t found its way onto such an important door, Alex sorted through a ring of jangling keys to find the one that would unlock the fossil storage room. This room was larger than the other two. It had to be, when a single bone could be as large as an average human. On the other hand, some of the fossils could fit in his pocket.

      Security cameras recorded traffic in and out. The door was kept locked at all times. Individual drawers inside the room were locked and a locked mesh protected specimens stored on shelves. Stealing from this room wouldn’t be a casual affair, but Bruce Simpson thought someone had managed it. The board was clinging to a hope that the discrepancies in the collection were due to honest mistakes.

      Alex decided to double-check Bruce’s findings first. He opened one of the drawers of Diane McKay’s samples. They came from a black shale deposit in the Rockies, an area that had been under water millions of years ago, before the earth’s plates had crunched together, forcing it into the sky. Boneless organisms weren’t usually preserved. These gave a rare glimpse into ancient invertebrate life.

      The label on the outside said the drawer contained pieces of shale with thirty-five one-inch-long Marella imprints. The drawer looked full. Handling the specimens carefully, Alex counted. Just as Bruce had said, there were only thirty-one. He checked the next drawer, which was supposed to hold eleven Hallucigenia, a cylindrical creature with seven pairs of tentacles.

      There were nine.

      The Opabinia was the rarest of the Burgess Shale fossils. Seven specimens should be here. Aware of tension he hadn’t noticed earlier, Alex unlocked the drawer and pulled it open.

      Six.

      It was the same in several drawers that held groups of small fossils. Instead of ten oyster-laden pieces of shale, there were eight. Instead of thirty small brachiopods, there were twenty-five. Someone had been confident that a casual glimpse in the drawers wouldn’t reveal the loss of a few specimens. The brachiopods wouldn’t fill anybody’s bank account, but the Burgess Shale fossils were well worth the risk.

      Alex paced away, too angry to continue counting. He’d spent his adult life finding and studying fossils, trying to build an image of a very different world through keyhole glimpses and guesses. Most of the people he knew did the same thing. He couldn’t imagine the greed that let someone destroy that work. Not just anyone. Someone on staff, who understood the harm he or she was doing.

      He flipped through the circulation log, checking who had signed specimens in and out of the storage room. He went back days, then weeks. There was no record of the brachiopods or oysters being borrowed, but three people had recently taken out Burgess Shale specimens. Diane, of course, someone called C.W. Adams from the University of Alberta, and one of the lab technicians, who had only signed her first name—Marie. Diane and Marie had signed the fossils back in the same day they looked at them. C.W. Adams, whoever he or she was, had taken several specimens to the university. Would it help to watch security tapes from the days in question? If the images were clear enough to show the actual number of specimens being removed from, and returned to, the drawers—

      “What in the hell are you doing?” The voice was loud and angry.

      Alex looked calmly toward the open door. “Morning, Charlie.”

      “What are you doing, skulking in here—”

      “Skulking?”

      “The lights are off, there’s nobody here to see what you’re up to—”

      “The cameras can see.”

      Charlie stopped quivering at the door and stalked into the room. “There’s a system here, Dr. Blake, a rather intricate cataloguing system. Until you understand it, you shouldn’t be here alone. It’s very easy to mess things up and then the whole thing falls apart—”

      Surprised by the conservator’s rudeness, Alex said mildly, “I’ve put everything back the way I found it.”

      “As far as you know.” Charlie started pulling drawer handles. “Have you locked up after yourself? We have a security system in place—”

      “I’m