Читать книгу Hurricane Hannah - Sue Civil-Brown - Страница 13

CHAPTER SIX

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HANNAH STARED at the woman who confronted her, taking in details swiftly. She appeared to be about Hannah’s age or slightly older, though it was hard to tell since the woman’s skin showed signs of long-term sun exposure. She was athletically built, wearing a blue work shirt, khaki shorts and hiking boots with thick socks rolled over the top. In her hand was a tool that looked like the perfect murder weapon…a strange hammer-like thing with a huge, curved ice-pick in place of the claw.

Hannah instinctively stepped back. “Who are you?”

“Edna Harkin. Volcanologist. And where do you get off going after my man?”

“I’m not going after anyone.”

“Yeah, right. I’ve been hearing stories.”

“Stories?” All of a sudden, Hannah was fed up with this island. “If you’ve been hearing stories they must be coming from the voices in your head!”

Edna waved her hammer. “I’ve been hearing them from everyone in town!”

“Well everyone in town could hardly know what they’re talking about since I only got here last night!”

“And stayed at Buck’s place.”

“And stayed in the hangar in my own plane, sleeping with a freaking alligator!”

Edna nodded. “Right, but Buster didn’t hurt you.”

“Does everyone know everything about everyone on this island?” Hannah asked in exasperation.

“Only about you,” Edna said, matter-of-factly.

“So what are your plans for that hammer?” Hannah asked.

It was as if Edna Harkin suddenly realized the thing was in her hand. She gaped at it, then swiftly tucked it in a leather holster attached to her belt. “Sorry.”

“You should be sorry! Where do you get off waving deadly weapons at total strangers?”

“I forgot I was holding it! And who the hell are you to tell me what I can do?”

“Just a passing stranger who feels as if she’s fallen down Alice’s rabbit hole. What is it with you people? Is there something in the water? In the air? Or were you all sent here by a mental hospital that had had enough?”

“Hey, you don’t have to be insulting!”

“Why not? I’ve been accused of things by people I don’t know, roped into buying supplies I don’t need, and yelled at by a mad woman waving a hammer.”

“I’m not mad!”

“No, but you are furious,” drawled a deep voice.

Hannah spun about and found herself looking into the exceedingly handsome face of Bill Anstin. In that instant, she totally forgot Edna. “Bill Anstin!” she said, feeling a little amazed. “I was at the rail when you won the World Series of Poker.”

He smiled, a wide, winning smile. No wonder his nickname in the poker world was Handsome Anstin. His looks were too good to be true. Unfortunately, he seemed to know it.

“Nice to meet you,” he said, giving her the kind of once-over that always made her skin crawl. “You must be that pilot who blew away our game last night. Sticks, isn’t it?”

“Umm, no. Hannah Lamont.” She shook his hand, wishing she didn’t feel impressed in spite of herself. Luck might have won him the World Series, but he was still a winner. He still owned the coveted bracelet—which, she noticed, he was wearing.

“Hi, Edna,” Anstin said to the volcanologist. “Come down from the mountain for the storm?”

Edna gave a short nod. “Time to hole up. I also need to get some more people out here. I think the mountain is starting to get active again.”

“Well, nobody’s going to get in here till after the storm.”

“I know that. But I still need to make some calls.” Edna looked at Anstin as if she wished he’d drop from the face of the earth.

Anstin gave Hannah another once-over. “Buy you a drink, Sticks?”

“No, thanks. I’ve got to get back to my plane.”

“Maybe you’ll come play at the casino when the storm has passed. I can give you some tips on your game.”

“Thanks. Nice meeting you.”

Anstin strolled away looking as if he owned the place. Edna sidled up beside Hannah. “Look out for that guy. He never tells the truth when a lie will do. I swear, he lives life on a bluff.”

Hannah nodded. “He seems…oily.”

“Greasy. Globs and globs of emotional grease.”

Hannah looked at her. “Are you really worried about the volcano?”

Edna shrugged. “Prediction is pretty much a guessing game. I need a team out here.”

Hannah hesitated. “This is not making me happy.”

Edna shrugged. “It’s thrilling the heck out of me. But I’m a volcanologist. We’re not wimps.”

Hannah chose to ignore the insult. “What if it erupts during the storm?”

“Then….” Edna shrugged again. “How much trouble we’ll be in depends on the kind of eruption. I mean, this mountain is sometimes explosive, like Mount St. Helens, and sometimes more like the volcanoes in Hawaii…just slow lava flows. You can outwalk those if you need to. But honestly?”

“Yes?”

“I don’t think anything’s going to happen immediately.”

“Thank God. I like excitement, but not that kind.”

“You better not like the Buck kind of excitement either,” Edna said, frowning at her in a way that suggested to Hannah the hammer had not been in Edna’s hands by accident. She took a step back.

Edna left, tossing one more warning glare over her shoulder.

Craig looked at the pallet of supplies when he pulled up in his Jeep a few seconds later. “Are you planning on moving in?”

“It’s hurricane stuff.” Hannah felt embarrassed. “Horace said we’d need it.”

“Oh.” Craig looked dubiously at it. “Buck already has supplies. And he has a couple of cisterns to catch rain water. The town never ran water up to the airport. It was too far.”

Hannah now felt supremely annoyed. “I’m going to go back in and strangle Horace. Wait for me, will you?”

Craig reached out and touched Hannah’s arm. “Don’t do that. We’ll take the stuff up with us. Whatever we don’t use, we can get Horace to take back for credit. Other folks will probably need it after the storm.”

And that’s how Hannah came to be loading a bunch of food, water and paper products onto Craig’s Jeep, muttering under her breath at the lunatics on this island.

“What did you think of Edna?” Craig asked as they drove back up the winding mountain road.

“After she got past wanting to kill me, she merely made me nervous.”

“She’s a weird one, all right. She’s a fruitcake who’s been trying to say for the last five years that the mountain shows signs of erupting. So far the thing hasn’t even vented steam. And Buck hates her.”

“Buck hates everyone.”

“No, he doesn’t. But Edna keeps coming on to him and he’s tired of it.”

Hannah cocked her eye his way. “Doesn’t he like women?”

“Not since his divorce.”

“That explains a lot. What happened?”

“I’m sworn to silence,” Craig said, drawing his thumb and forefinger across his lips as if zipping them. “But get a couple of extra beers in him sometime and he’ll probably tell you.”

Hannah didn’t like the sound of that. “Does he drink a lot?”

“Actually, no. But once in a while…well, sometimes a guy has to howl at the moon.”

BACK AT THE HANGAR, relieved—or so he told himself—to have everyone out of his hair, Buck waded through the schematics of the fuel system for Hannah’s jet and soon had some ideas of what might have gone wrong. There were things even the best mechanic might not spot before they happened, especially if he was working on a plane for the first time, and if maintenance logs had been, well, doctored.

He suspected Hannah had been taken for a ride on this particular plane, insofar as whether routine maintenance had been properly and completely performed all along. It wouldn’t be the first time someone had cut a corner. She was damn lucky not to have ditched.

Of course, he wasn’t going to tell her that. Give Delilah an inch, and she’d take a mile.

But now that he had some ideas, he was itching to get at it. Where the hell was Craig? Was he planning to take Hannah on a complete sightseeing tour of this ugly piece of rock or what?

Rising from the desk, he stretched and headed outside to take a look at the sky. Over in the east it wasn’t pretty at all. Frowning, he went to the office to get a weather update. On his way, even from this altitude, he could see that the Caribbean was probably pushing twenty-foot waves or higher, with heavy chop. Today would not be a good day to be at sea.

Soon enough he was looking at isobars again, noting how they had tightened up. Noting that Tropical Storm Hannah had finally pushed up to hurricane status. Hurricane hunters were posting winds near the center at over eighty miles an hour. Glancing at the clock, he saw he’d have to wait another two hours for the latest update.

Not pretty. Not terribly ugly yet, but not pretty. He sat back in his chair and plucked a fresh cigar from the humidor, tucking it between his teeth. He loved a good hurricane. He just didn’t love a bad hurricane. At this point Hannah was a minor threat in terms of the island. Folks here had been battening the hatches for this kind of stuff for a long time.

And sitting on a volcanic cone like this limited the problems of flooding. The rivers would get high, the pools and ponds would overflow, but there’d be no serious mudslides, and the water wouldn’t stay on the island long enough to cause real damage. Well, except for storm surge. That would depend on how Hannah hit and where her cyclone was strongest when she hit.

Storm surge might wipe out the casino. That almost made him grin, the vision of all those tiki huts washing away.

You’re evil, Buck, he told himself. Shouldn’t wish ill on anyone. But Bill Anstin drove him nuts, as did the mayor, especially since they were determined to turn this island into another carbon-copy Caribbean casino resort. A Vegas-type operation. Complete with has-been headliners.

Hence the poker game he had been playing last evening against Anstin. Everything of import on this island was decided by poker. So the city council (all of whom held their positions by virtue of their final positions in the last island-wide tournament) had dictated that the decision about a new casino would be decided by a tournament. Finally, after several weeks of play, it had gotten down to Anstin and Buck, heads-up. The rules at that point said the winner would be decided by best out of three heads-up matches. The idea was to reward skill over luck.

Luck. Yeah. He’d had some and then that damn woman had come roaring in over his head on a wing and barely enough gas fumes to cause a person to cough.

But if that new casino ever came to pass, Buck was determined to find a different volcano to park himself and his airport on. Too much civilization would run him off faster than an eruption.

Not that they were going to have one. Edna had been trying to conjure an eruption for five years now. The mountain failed to cooperate. Her constant alarms had not only resulted in folks on the island utterly ignoring her for crying wolf, but the entire volcanology community apparently had written her off.

At last he heard Craig’s Jeep roar up and pull to a stop beside the building. Rolling his cigar around in his mouth, Buck moseyed outside, looking for all the world as if he hadn’t felt a wisp of impatience.

One look at the contents of Craig’s Jeep transformed him.

“What the hell is all of that?”

Craig, who was just climbing out answered laconically, “Hurricane supplies.”

“Hurricane supplies? We don’t need any hurricane supplies.”

“Horace took Hannah for a ride.”

Hannah, her head suddenly popping up as she climbed out, said, “Actually, I didn’t want to be a burden.”

Buck saw Craig roll his eyes in a yeah, right sort of way. He debated whether to push the issue or let it go. He knew Horace Hanratty; the man could sell snow to Eskimos. If he smelled a valid credit card, there was no stopping him. Hannah had to be excused from the label of idiot simply because she didn’t know Horace.

Or so he tried to tell himself. He snorted and rolled his cigar over to the other side of his mouth. Finally he said, “I’ve got so much water in my cisterns that if the storm knocks out the water system in town, folks are going to be coming to me for the stuff.”

“That’s what I said,” Craig offered, stepping into what he apparently viewed as a brewing storm. “But Hannah didn’t know that. And I told her whatever we didn’t need, someone would need after the storm, if it hits.”

Buck squashed the cigar between his teeth, reminding himself that a little civility was a good thing. Sometimes. “Okay, let’s get it into the hangar. Hannah is getting wound up tight out there. We’ll be lucky if she doesn’t blow up to a Cat 4.”

“Really?” The other Hannah’s eyes widened. Caribbean green. Gawd.

“Really. Isobar lines near the eye are showing a rapid drop in pressure. This is going to be a wicked one.”

Craig spoke. “I guess this will put paid to the poker game, huh?”

“Not on your life.”

Craig gave Hannah a pitying look, but didn’t say any more.

Buck went to get the big flat-bed hand truck he sometimes used to cart engines around, and together he and Craig loaded the supplies onto it. Hannah stood to one side, her hands in her pockets. Staying out of the way. Good. The last thing he needed was her getting any part of herself in his way. Especially those hips. Or those breasts he was just now noticing.

He didn’t think he’d ever seen a better package climb out of a flight suit.

Things were stirring in him, things he preferred to be in control of, not controlled by. Feelings. Needs. Wants. Sheee-it!

Tugging the heavy cart into the hangar and tucking it out of the way proved a welcome bit of exercise for him, taming the beast within. At least he thought of it as a beast; it was the kind of thing that got him into trouble, and seemed to have a mind of its own.

Once the supplies were out of the way, Hannah-the-pilot was right there asking about her plane.

“I got some ideas,” Buck said. He took the cigar from his mouth and tossed it in a trash can. “Things that could’ve happened that your mechanic wouldn’t have known could happen…especially if the maintenance logs were doctored.”

Hannah’s face darkened. “I had a feeling.”

“Before you bought that thing?”

“After,” she said sharply, taking his question as a criticism. Which he supposed it was, however oblique. “Afterward. Do you know how few people really do all the maintenance? I would have expected to find some oversights. Just a few. But there weren’t any.”

“Well, some of us do it all, but I agree, a lot of private planes don’t get all the attention they should. Either because the owner is a cheapskate or the mechanics cut corners.”

She nodded, for once agreeing with him. “Look at the major airlines.”

“Exactly. There’s a lot of reasons people run close to the edge. Anyway, I went through the schematics while you were out wasting your money, and found a few things to check out.”

“Are you going to check it out?”

“Now?” He arched a brow. “Not likely, Sticks. Craig needs to get home to look after his family before Hannah hits, and I need to go down the mountain to help out. My neighbors are more important than your fuel line.”

“Did I say they weren’t?” Fire sparked in her eyes. A hot-tempered redhead. So what else was new?

“No. But I’m giving the reason before you ask. Some of the older folks are going to need help boarding up. So if you’ll excuse me….”

“I’m going with you.”

His jaw dropped. He didn’t need this. “Now look….”

“I know how to use a hammer,” she argued stubbornly. “And I’m in decent shape. If people need help, I’m going to help.”

Buck looked at Craig, as if he might find help there, but the coward just shrugged.

Which was how Buck came to be driving down the mountain behind Craig, with Hannah Lamont perched firmly in the passenger seat of his pickup truck…resisting every urge to acknowledge her generosity.

Hurricane Hannah

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