Duke leaned over to Nora. “Is that true?”
She nodded. “I hope we find them all quickly.”
Duncan resumed pacing, then glanced up at a van whose driver was showing credentials to the deputy manning the entrance. “Finally!” She strode over to the car that had just been waved through by the deputy.
Nora assumed it was the veterinarian and said to Barry, “Are you ready to go? I think that’s the vet with the equipment.”
“Almost.” Barry pulled a map from his pocket. “These nuts could have taken the birds anywhere. Do you have any idea which direction they’d go? Looking for a dozen ducks in the Gold Country is harder than finding a needle in a haystack.”
Nora considered what she knew about how these people operated. “Maybe not as hard as you think,” she said slowly as she looked at the map and the areas the Fish and Game staff had already marked. “First, they’re not going to keep the ducks for too long. They left here between one-thirty and two in the morning. They wouldn’t take the ducks anywhere near their work, school, or residence. That would increase the odds that someone they know would see them releasing them.”
“And you know where they live?” Barry asked sarcastically.
She ignored his comment and put herself in their shoes-easy to do, since she’d learned from one of the best animal liberators: her mother. “They won’t take them to the closest lake-they’d assume that’s where we’d go.”
She remembered the times she’d freed research animals with her mother. When she was little she thought she’d been doing the right thing, the humane thing. But she’d learned far too quickly that freedom didn’t mean safety, at least not for animals who were raised and cared for by people.
If Nora had taken the ducks, she would have found a place for them where people came to toss bread crumbs. A place with a lot of water, so the ducks could escape little kids who didn’t know better when they chased them, and teenagers who did. But people were a must, because anyone worth their salt in the animal-rights movement knew that captive animals would have a difficult time fending for themselves. These birds needed food, water, safety.
“They won’t be able to tolerate any quacking, thinking they were hurting the animals by caging them,” Nora said. “And the ducks would have been crammed tight in the cages they took-they can’t hold more than four ducks each. The arsonists would be nervous as well, having evidence in their possession.”
“Well-how many miles?”
“I’m not sure, but not more than thirty minutes away. They wouldn’t risk being pulled over if someone called in the arson quickly and the police were looking for a specific vehicle. A body of water off a freeway-preferably a protected area.” That reminded Nora to check with Sanger about the canvass his men were doing earlier and if they had tracked down any potential witnesses.
“Hmm.” Barry pondered his map.
Nora looked at the map upside down. If she had a dozen semidomesticated waterfowl and wanted to give them the best chance of survival in the wild, what would she do?
Steady supply of food. Lots of water. A park.
Finding such a place would be secondary to getting out of the vicinity, so they would pick a place along their escape route. She speculated that the route would be in the opposite direction of their final destination.
Barry said, “There are several ponds in this area. Some are seasonal and dry now, but-” He pointed to three less than two miles away. There wasn’t anything special about them-no parks, no people. They bordered industrial areas. No, the arsonists would be concerned about toxins in those ponds.
She shook her head.
“How about Lake Arthur?” Barry pointed to a larger pond-hardly what Nora would call a lake-east of their location, right off I-80.
That was a possibility, ideal for escape. So was a group of man-made ponds in Newcastle, about ten minutes west. Except there wasn’t a nearby park. It was also a new development near a light industrial area. Less pollution from business, convenient to dump the ducks, but it wasn’t good enough for the animals. Nora would never have left them there.
“Here.” She pointed to Lake of the Pines. “That’s it.”
“There’re at least a dozen locations just as good that are closer.”
The more Nora thought about it, the more convinced she was that she was right. The other locations just weren’t
Nora said, “From Lake of the Pines they can head up Highway Forty-nine to Highway Twenty and cut across to Maryville, then head north to Chico or south to Sacramento. It’s longer than going virtually anywhere via I-Eighty, but it gets them out of the area and they don’t have to backtrack past the scene of the crime.”
“You’re amazing,” Duke said.
Surprisingly she’d forgotten Duke was standing next to her. He usually wasn’t so quiet. “Thanks.” She was trying to be sarcastic, but it came out differently, almost as if she cared what he thought of her. Which she didn’t.
All right, she did. But she wasn’t about to admit that to him.
“This is a huge recreational area,” she continued. “There are people, pets, kids-the ducks will be well fed. They’ll be concerned about that. They don’t want the ducks to die of starvation, and that’s always a risk.”
“Well,” Barry said, folding up the map, “they’ll be dead any way you slice it. And all the other ducks on that lake. We’re talking hundreds of ducks. I hope you’re wrong.”
Nora’s heart thudded in her chest and she felt sick. It pained her that innocent animals had to die, but the risk of the virus getting into the duck population was far too great to chance it. Thousands of wild ducks could die, species decimated from Canada to Mexico, and there was the additional risk to humans if they didn’t quickly eliminate the threat.
“We’d better go now,” she said.
“I hope you’re wrong,” Barry repeated as he folded his map.
“Me, too.” But Nora knew she was right. “I’ll meet you there. Take Dr. Duncan and Dr. Thomsen with you. They’ve agreed to assist.”
“It’ll take us a bit to set up, and I hope Dr. Thomsen’s reader works. I’ve never heard of one working more than a couple feet away from the source.” He walked off to dispatch his team.
To Duke, she said, “Did you see Pete?”
“He’s talking to Jim Butcher across the street.”
Duke followed her. He’d seen the worry on Nora’s face. He was hugely impressed with her analysis, and not a little curious how she came up with it. He’d always admired Nora’s intelligence and quick thinking, but this was different. It was as if she could read the minds of the anarchists. But of course that was silly. And Duke knew, from working with Kane, that good soldiers became great warriors when they could put themselves in their enemies’ shoes and anticipate their every move.
Good cops weren’t much different.
They stopped outside the building where Jim had set up temporary shop.
“We’ll find them,” Duke said.
“The ducks or the arsonists?”
“Both.” He reached out and touched her chin, lightly, but he couldn’t help himself. She was so sad. “Chin up, Nora.” She was so drained. Not a surprise; she’d been up since before dawn.
“Jonah Payne was murdered.”
“I know. We-” He stopped. “You mean he was intentionally murdered? That his death wasn’t an accident?”
“Pete and I came here from the autopsy,” she said. “Dr. Payne was dead long before the fire started-six hours or more. And based on the evidence, he was killed somewhere else.”
Duke tried to wrap his mind around what Nora was saying. He spoke almost as if to himself.
“It’s far too coincidental that someone disconnected from the arson killed Jonah and dumped his body in his office the same day that a group of anarchists came to burn down the lab and free research animals.”
“That’s exactly what I thought. But this behavior is completely out of character from what I know about