Chapter One
"SHE'S CHILLIER than the ice on Kilimanjaro," Clive
Willetts snorted. The lanky British pilot banked the small
aircraft and glanced at his boss, the new owner of the
flying safari company. "Not to say I don't like Dr. Thornton,
sir. It's just that she can be touchy at times. She
doesn't like people intruding."
"And I suppose she'd classify my little visit as an
intrusion?"
"More than likely."
Rogan McCullough slid back his starched white cuff
and studied his watch. Three separate dials indicated time
zones around the world. Here in Kenya, it was ten o'clock
in the morning.
His flight from London had been delayed twice, putting
him four hours late into Nairobi. After sending his
suitcases ahead to his hotel with the limousine, he had
boarded one of the two sleek and well-equipped Catalina
PBY 5As owned by Air-Tours Safaris. During this short
flight over central Kenya in clear weather, Rogan wondered
at his chances of selling a cranky, eccentric scientist
on his newest brainstorm.
He gave the watch an absentminded tap as he stared
out the side window. Far beneath the plane rolled verdant
hills covered in a tangle of vines, eucalyptus, and Nandi
flame trees. Small villages occupied clearings, their
thatched huts dark against the bright red-orange soil.
Then, as though a confectioner had neatly sliced away
the middle of a green-iced sheet cake, the fertile high-lands
stopped. The land fell sharply, and a great barren
yellow plain stretched far in the distance until it reached
the rise of the distant escarpment.
"The Great Rift Valley," Clive explained, as if sensing
his boss's interest in the abrupt change. "It runs from the
Mediterranean Sea most of the way along the east coast
of Africa. Strangest thing you'll ever see. It's a fault-as
though the continent tried to split in two a few million
years back. The whole Rift Valley is full of unusual land
formations."
Rogan nodded, well aware of the unusual configuration.
Despite his preoccupation with business, he had
always had a keen interest in natural sciences. As a small
boy, he had collected rocks and fallen birds' nests. At his
boarding school, his room had been littered with pieces of
driftwood, feathers, and pressed leaves. Even as an adult,
he'd chosen to include climbing and caving among his
pastimes. He kept a record of the mountains he wanted
to scale. Through the years, he had checked them off one
by one.
Now, seeing this land he'd always dreamed about,
Rogan felt something uncomfortable stir inside his chest.
He recognized it immediately, though he had never put
a name to it. Nature, the magnificence of the earth's
wonders, always brought up this prickling curl of awareness.
It was a touch, a voice, a sense of something .
someone . higher and greater and more intelligent than
himself.
God, he thought, and just as quickly he pushed away
the certainty of a creator. He didn't doubt the existence
of a higher power, but he felt sure that such a being could
not be interested in the minutia of human existence.
Rogan's own life was abundant proof of that.
Unwilling to continue in this train of thought, he
shifted his attention to the British pilot, whose skimpy
blond mustache wandered across his upper lip like an
uncertain centipede. "You mentioned formations," he
said. "Volcanoes?"
"Quite right," the pilot confirmed. "Some of them are
still active. And there are lakes full of pink flamingos.
Caves lined with thousands of bats. Craggy black lava
flows. Soda-rimmed marshes. Snowcapped mountains.
And escarpments."
He let the plane drop and glide along the sheer edge
of the valley.
"Can anything live down there?" Rogan asked as his
gaze traced the razor-sharp cliffs and the wide plain
between.
"The place is a regular Garden of Eden, sir. Zebra.
Gazelle. Antelope. Cheetah. Elephant."
"People?"
"Unsociable sorts. The Maasai have the run of the
place. They're a fierce, primitive lot who still carry spears
and don't think too highly of modern civilization. And, of
course, there's Dr. Fiona Thornton."
"Ah, yes," Rogan said. "Dr. Thornton." He conjured
up the image he'd formed of the woman who ran the Rift
Valley Elephant Project. He pictured her as a mixture of
his high school English teacher and his great-aunt Rose.
In the weeks spent planning his trip, he'd come to
imagine Dr. Thornton as a short, buxom woman with
steel gray hair and a thunderous voice. She would wear
a khaki dress left over from some World War II women's
corps, thick support stockings in a pale shade that skin
had never considered turning, and heavy black lace-up
boots. Her stern face would wither him from the shade of
a pith helmet as her pinched lips formed the answer she
would snap at his request. Absolutely not.
Unable to suppress a grin, he shook his head. Sorry,
Dr. Thornton, he thought, but I'm afraid you've met your
match.
Rogan leaned against the headrest and closed his
eyes. As a matter of fact, he was looking forward to the
challenge of outwitting the old battle-ax with as much
anticipation as he felt for a boardroom confrontation at
McCullough Enterprises. His persuasive style and bull-headed
stubbornness had built the company into a billion-dollar
operation, after all. And he intended to reverse the
sagging revenues of Air-Tours by applying the same
determination.
"If you'll excuse my frankness, sir," Clive spoke up,
"you look bushed. Jet lag will catch up with a man, no
matter how strong he is. I'd suggest you get a little rest.
When your father owned Air-Tours, he used to stretch out
in the lounge back there and take a nap. We've got a well-stocked
bar, a library of old maps and books, and a clean
rest room. Your father always said the rumble of the engines
did him more good than a hundred-dollar massage."
"I'm fine. Really."
The pilot smiled, showing a set of uneven teeth
beneath the wispy mustache. "Your father learned the
hard way too. But after he'd been coming to Kenya for
a few years, he once told me that Africa was the only
place where he could really rest. Africa was where he
could let go. He said it was the only place he knew of
where he was really himself-"
"If you don't mind," Rogan interrupted, "I'd rather not
talk right now, Clive. I need to review some figures."
"Yes, sir." The pilot gave him a sideways glance and
clamped his mouth shut.
Rogan flipped the gold clasps on his leather briefcase
and extracted a file. Air-Tours. The company had shown
a steep decline in the past five years. He intended to rectify
that. In many ways, resolving financial difficulties was
his specialty. Oh, he enjoyed the media operations of
McCullough Enterprises, and he liked working with the
journalists and ad men he employed. Their bright-eyed
enthusiasm kept him pushing for innovation long after
his own fiscal goals had been met.
But Rogan truly excelled in the revival of companies
on the brink of financial extinction. This was how he'd gotten
his start. And the prospect of bringing some of his
father's smaller businesses back to life helped ease the
sting of the pitiful legacy he'd inherited. Rogan was well
aware that the collection of flagging industries and the
small lump sum-a tiny percentage of John McCullough's
vast estate-were little more than conscience money.
They were his father's way of acknowledging to the world
that once, among all his other accomplishments, he'd
produced a son.
After the senior McCullough's recent death, the rest of
the estate had been parceled out among ex-wives, educational
institutions, and charities bearing his name. Rogan
didn't really care that he'd been left the financially weak
companies, he told himself. He looked on them as a challenge.
Something to keep him going.
From his office in New York, he had examined the
books and records of Air-Tours and the other companies.
He had made calls. Set up contacts. Investigated and
instigated programs. In just three months, the pizza chain
was showing a spark of life, and the hotels were preparing
for face-lifts. Now he had his sights set on the tiny flying
safari company.
Rows of numbers swam before his eyes as Rogan
stared at his father's signature scrawled across a balance
sheet. John McCullough. The ink flourishes personified
the man. They suggested extravagance. Wealth. Show.
Pomp. Scandal. Clive Willetts's recounting of talks with
the tycoon didn't fit the picture his son held of him. Rogan
rubbed a finger across his temple.
He didn't want to think about his father. When the
memories intruded, he felt six years old again. Six years
old and hiding behind the stair rail watching his parents
hurl accusations and Ming Dynasty vases at each other.
Six years old and trembling as his mother screeched and
wept and hung on to his father's coattails. Six years old
and frozen inside as he stood at the iron gate of an ivy-covered
boarding school and stared at the settling puff
of dust from his father's Mercedes as it roared off.
Rogan slammed down the briefcase lid. Clive lifted
one eyebrow.
"About Dr. Thornton," Rogan said irritably. "What's
she most likely to respond to? Money? Publicity?"
Clive sniffed. "Well, Dr. Thornton isn't your average
sort of person, if you know what I mean. She's more than
a little eccentric. Not the kind of woman who'll give you
the time of day . unless you're an elephant."
"Surely she's in need of funding or new supplies. I've
heard these research projects are always in the hole."
"Could be. I wouldn't doubt it."
"You told me she gives you tips on where the elephants
are so you can fly tourists over them. You must
know something about her. How does she operate? What
drives her?"
"She's never said a word to me about herself, mind
you. Just talks about elephants. She grew up in Kenya
as I did. But we didn't know each other in those days. My
father farmed near the coast, and we stayed fairly isolated.
She was born in Nairobi to an American father and an
English mother. There were four children in all-three girls
and a boy. I've met them, of course, but they're all living
in different places now. Tillie's an agroforester in Mali.
Jessica owns an old house on Zanzibar Island. Grant is
an anthropologist. He lives here in Kenya, but he stays out
in the bush most of the time. Their father is a professor
at the University of Nairobi-still teaching, I think. The
mother was a painter, but she died a long time ago."
"How?"
Clive shrugged. "No idea. Anyway, after university,
Fiona Thornton came back to Kenya and met a woman
studying lions in the Amboseli Game Park. Dr. Howard
sponsored her, saw that she got her doctorate, and
helped her get research grants. Since then, Dr. Thornton
has studied elephants. Elephants are her passion. It's like
I've tried to tell you, sir; she doesn't have much interest
in humans. When she does actually decide to say something,
it might be only two or three words . if you're
lucky. Odd thing about Dr. Thornton, though. The Africans
who work with her call her Matalai Shamsi. It means
Princess Sunrise."
Rogan shook his head, declining to respond as the
plane banked steeply and began its descent into the
Great Rift Valley.
* * *
Fiona Thornton stared at the neat column of figures for a
full minute. She lifted her head. "Three calves this month,"
she said.
Sentero eyed her, his face impassive.
She tapped her pen on the metal folding table. "I
want to find the M family this afternoon. Moira was in
estrus in-" she scanned the papers in her hand-"in
April. During the long rains, I saw her in consort with the
old bull James. At the time, he was definitely in musth.
Moira's had the full twenty-two-month gestation, and I've
noticed other signs of impending delivery."
"Yesterday she was restless." Sentero's voice was
deep, his English enunciation clear.
"She seemed out of sync with the others, don't you
think?"
The African nodded, then stiffened and lifted his
focus, as if he could see through the tent's olive canvas
roof.
"What is it?" Fiona had come to rely on her Maasai
assistant's keen senses. He often heard and saw things
much sooner than she did.
"Airplane."
"It won't land here. It's probably going to one of the
Mara lodges."
Sentero shrugged. "It will come here."
At that moment Fiona heard the distinct rumble of
the plane's engines. She chewed the inside of her lip for
a moment, then brushed a hand across her forehead.
Talking to a visitor . a stranger . was the last thing
she wanted to do. Standing, she replaced her records in
a metal file box and locked it.
"I didn't order any supplies from Nairobi. Did you?"
she asked.
Sentero shook his head. Framed in the opening of
the tent flap, his tall, sinewy body stood dark against the
brilliant African sunshine. He was a sinister-looking man
with a face chiseled by time into sharp angles and harsh
planes. His eyes, small and almost black, glittered with
a canny sparkle.
Sentero always wore traditional Maasai garb-draped
layers of bloodred cloths, some plaid, some checked, all
smelling of woodsmoke. Three bead necklaces circled his
throat, one a choker with a central button of mother-of-pearl,
the other two dangling down his bare chest. His
ears, each lobe pierced and stretched to form a two-inch
hole, sported beaded bands of red, yellow, white, and
blue. Occasionally Sentero plugged the hole of one earlobe
with an old black plastic film canister filled with
tobacco. Chewing tobacco was his only vice.
"Start the Land Rover," Fiona said as the plane's
engines roared over her camp. The tent trembled.
Vervet monkeys shrieked in the acacia trees overhead.
Her cat leapt down from his perch on the wardrobe and
darted under the bed. She grabbed her jacket and camera.
"I'll tell Mama Hannah to ward them off, whoever
they are."
Sentero flashed his only smile of the morning,
snatched his iron-tipped spear from beside the tent
pole, and strode out. Fiona knelt at the foot of the small
camp cot. Flicking on her flashlight, she swept its beam
through the dust until she caught the cat's green eyes.
"Sukari, are you afraid?" With small kissing noises,
she gently patted the tent's canvas floor. She snapped
off the light. "Come on, sweet one. That was just an old
airplane. I won't let it hurt you."
Sukari crept forward until he butted Fiona's cheek.
She stroked beneath his chin, smiling at the deep, satisfied
purr. The spotless white cat was nearly blind, the
casualty of a close encounter with a spitting cobra. Fiona
stroked between his ears and nestled her nose against his
furry neck.
"Now, be a good boy," she whispered. "Sentero and
I are going to see if Moira's had her calf. I'll zip you into
the tent, so mind your manners and don't chew on my
philodendron."
Continues.