would I get them to you? We haven't had boats out of here or Manta in three weeks, and-you for-get-TAME stopped running all flights last Sunday. The only thing we see of Galapagos anymore are its citizens washing up on the coast in pirated fishing boats, broke, stinking, and looking for somewhere to sleep.'

There was a long silence. Diego relit his joint.

'I am sorry, my friend,' Thomas said. 'But such is life.'

Either the line cut out or Thomas hung up. Diego toked, held the burn.

A fourteen-year-old boy ran up to the building and addressed Diego through the open window. He wore a T- shirt tied around his head, draped down over his neck foreign-legion style.

Diego instinctively lowered the joint to his side so that the boy wouldn't see it, but then he gazed about the ruin of the office and raised it in offering instead. The boy shook his head and Diego shrugged. Desperate times call for desperate measures.

'Pablo left,' the boy said.

'What do you mean, he left?' Diego's words were clouded with smoke.

'He left. As in, hopped a fishing boat to the mainland. Like everyone else.'

Diego cursed under his breath. 'Who do we have in Proteccion?'

'Pablo was Proteccion. There's no one left. Except you.'

'There must be. What about the other departments? Plantas y Invertebrados?' The boy continued shaking his head. 'Bio Mar? Proyecto Isabela?'

'Look around, Senor Rodriguez. The Station is empty. Even those earthquake guys who took over the Bio Mar building are gone. The fat guy left yesterday morning with his wife, took the new computer with him.' The boy scratched his hair behind his ear. He was an odd-looking child, with a round, squat head perched precariously atop a slender neck. The T-shirt tied around his head only served to accent its width all the more. 'Just the locals are left. And you.'

'I'm not a local?'

The boy laughed. 'The closest you can get, I suppose.'

Diego took another toke. He mashed his tongue up against his teeth.

It felt large and unwieldy. He stubbed out the joint, vowing to quit. 'So what's the bad news, Ramoncito?'

'How do you know there's bad news?'

'Because you're only around when there's bad news. You're like a vulture. Or the paparazzi.'

'Paparazzi?'

'Never mind. Tell me. Not more nonsense tales from Sangre, I hope.'

'There's no one there to tell tales anymore. Just my parents.' The boy paused, and Diego braced himself for bad news. 'Carlos just got back from Floreana, and he said he saw the Menendez family loading up on an oil tanker headed for Manta.'

'Goddamnit, I hope they killed the livestock.'

Ramoncito shook his head. 'Pigs. Loose everywhere.'

'! Chucha madre!' Diego sprang to his feet. 'They'll go after my turtles.'

For seven years, Diego had worked tirelessly to revive the dwindling Pacific green turtle population. The process had been slow; he first had to wait for the turtles to mate in captivity so that he could incubate the eggs indoors, safe from the devastating UV rays that so easily compromise the integrity of the shells; then he'd nurtured the hatchlings, keeping them in darkened boxes for the first hours of their lives to simulate nest conditions. He'd moved them to rearing pens and indoor pools as they grew, waiting for their shells to harden sufficiently to withstand the onslaught of radiation they'd meet back in the wild, and giving them time to reach sexual maturity. Only last May he'd released them off the shores of Floreana, eagerly anticipating their return to their nesting grounds at Cormorant Point.

Diego ran his hand back and forth across the front of his slacks. 'If this nesting period doesn't yield offspring…if those pigs get out there… we've got to…I'm going to…' Pulling another joint from his pocket, he lit it with a soggy match. He paced, stepping carefully over the debris on the floor, before returning to his seat on the couch. He twirled a pen around his finger and tapped it against the table, some-times holding it against the wood. Tap tap hold tap. Tap tap hold. Hold tap hold tap. Hold tap hold.

Ramoncito laughed. 'Did you just spell 'fuck'?'

'Huh? I don't…yes, I suppose I did. How do you…?'

'Maybe I listen to your lessons better than you think.'

Diego held the pen against his full lips, leaning back on the couch. Accustomed to his moods, Ramoncito watched him, waiting for him to return from his thoughts.

Before the Initial Event, Floreana, like most of the other islands in the archipelago, had a few inhabitants. As it became clear that the after-shocks would be intense and unremitting, more and more settlers had elected to move to the mainland rather than try their lot on volcanic islands caught over a hot spot near the intersection of three tectonic plates. For the most part, the exoduses had been panicked, ill-advised ventures. A few spots would open up on a fishing boat, or an oil tanker would pass nearby, and families would pack the belongings of a lifetime in a frenzied twenty minutes and crowd expectantly onto docks and into pangas. Parents kissing children goodbye, husbands embracing wives. And when families were fortunate enough to find space together, their houses and farms were left as they were-kettles on stoves, doors banging in the breeze, goats and pigs nosing their way out of pens.

If the Menendez family had left a herd of pigs behind on Floreana, given the absence of indigenous predators, the population growth would be astounding. A dozen or so feral animals could quickly grow to hundreds. The island of Santiago was already a lost cause-over 100,000 feral goats had turned it into a virtual wasteland; having exhausted the native vegetation, the goats had outlived their food sources and were dropping of starvation in tremendous numbers. Diego had sailed past the island en route to a survey on Pinta last month, and the stench from the goat carcasses reached him almost a kilometer offshore. He was determined not to let Floreana meet a similar fate.

Since arriving in Galapagos to conduct research for his masterado, Diego had developed an intense, almost obsessive commitment to the islands. They embodied the very essence of life, of selection and design. Each island to Diego was a wonder of ecological balance, a monument to the ability of species to persist, endure, adapt, and even thrive. The fragility of the islands was so extreme as to be frightening; an island's entire ecology could be irreversibly altered by the arrival of a single ant, or one wasp hitchhiking in a bait bucket on the deck of a boat. The examples were endless: six wild dogs had attacked a colony of Isabela land iguanas in June, leaving over four hundred bodies to rot; black rats that had stolen rides to the islands in the bellies of ships had quickly out-competed endemic rice rats, causing their extinction on four islands; qui-nine trees cut reddish swathes into Scalesia forests on the Santa Cruz highlands; lantana camara shrubs metastasized through the nesting areas of the dark-rumpled petrel on Floreana, choking the birds there out of existence. Changes borne of carelessness, of expediency, of shortsight-edness. To oppose them, Diego had his scientific training, an extensive background in ecology, herpetology, and the eradication of introduced species. He had the rapidly diminishing staff and resources of the Dar-win Station. He had determination, stubbornness, an uncompromising commitment to the life of the islands. And he had one carton of. 22s.

Diego flicked the joint on the floor and rose, grabbing the ammo.

Ramoncito regarded Diego suspiciously. 'What are you doing?'

Diego unearthed a rifle from beneath a pane of crumbled Sheetrock and rested it against his shoulder. 'Looks like I just added animal control officer to my list of jobs.' He wedged the carton of bullets into his pocket and headed out. When he slammed the door behind him, it left the hinges and continued right into his office.

Chapter 11

The creature drew herself to her full nine feet, rearing up on her hind legs. Pigmented a leafy green and dappled with dusty brown high-lights, she picked up the hues of the Scalesia forest, blending with the crisscross shadows of the branches.

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