“Thank you.”
“My pleasure, Marybeth.”
—
She found her oldest daughter perched in front of one of the public monitors in the rear of the old Carnegie library. There was a bank of them separated by partitions and they were largely used by older patrons or unemployed drifters. There was one of each on either side of Sheridan—a disheveled man in a camo parka with a gray ZZ Top–length beard, and a matronly retired postal worker with steel-framed glasses and a permanent scowl—so Sheridan stood out.
“Hey, Mom,” Sheridan said. She looked lean, tan, and outdoorsy, Marybeth thought.
“What brings you here?”
“There are a couple of articles I’d like to print out and give to Nate. Is it okay to use your printer?”
Like most kids of Sheridan’s age, she didn’t have a printer at home.
“Sure, I’ll authorize it,” Marybeth said. The library charged five cents a page.
Marybeth looked over Sheridan’s shoulder to see the results of a Google search for “Falcon Smuggling.”
“That’s interesting,” she said.
“Yeah. I’m trying to do some research to share with him.”
Sheridan lowered her voice as Marybeth bent closer to hear. “I’m trying to prevent him from going medieval on whoever has been stealing birds. He takes it personally and I know he’s on legal thin ice as it is. I talked to Liv and she agrees: we need to try and intervene before someone gets hurt.”
Marybeth looked up to see that the retired postal employee, a notorious local gossip, was peering at them over the partition.
“Let me buy you a cup of coffee across the street,” Marybeth said to Sheridan. “You can print out the articles afterward.”
—
I talked with the new county prosecutor,” Marybeth said to Sheridan over a mug at the Burg-O-Pardner. “I think she’s inclined to let things go. That’s just my impression from having met with her. But if Nate draws too much attention to himself or commits another violation, all bets are off.”
“That’s what I’m trying to prevent,” Sheridan said as she winced from her first bitter sip. “I’m trying to learn as much about falcon smuggling and smugglers as I can because stealing eggs and birds and selling them overseas is totally illegal. Maybe I can help locate the guy and we can deal with him legitimately. Did you know that some falcon eggs go for up to twenty thousand dollars in the Middle East? Or that a fledgling peregrine falcon is worth fifty thousand dollars to a falconer in Qatar? This is big business, but from what I’ve learned there are only a few poachers in the world who can pull it off. I think one of them is in the area.”
“And you’d like to find him before Nate does,” Marybeth said.
“Yes, but I’d rather Dad found him. I’d rather the guy be arrested than be pulled limb from limb and left for dead. That’s what Nate would like to do to him.”
“You’re like your father,” Marybeth said. “Trouble has a way of finding you.”
“Speaking of,” Sheridan said, “where is he? I texted him this morning and he didn’t reply. I thought he might know if there’s another falconer around.”
Marybeth paused. “You don’t know, do you?”
“Know what?”
—
Marybeth told Sheridan about the assignment from the governor, the hunting expedition, about Steve-2 Price.
Sheridan’s eyes got big. “Steve-2 Price? The ConFab guy?”
“Yes.”
“He’s here and Dad is guiding him?”
“Yes.”