Project Hannibal Kathryn Hoff (best free e book reader TXT) đ
- Author: Kathryn Hoff
Book online «Project Hannibal Kathryn Hoff (best free e book reader TXT) đ». Author Kathryn Hoff
He nodded toward the labs. âAnd what about all the equipment? The government paid for itâtheyâre bound to want it back.â
âWeâll tell the staff weâre moving to larger quarters. Weâll give everyone the summer off and put the equipment in storage. Henri and I will . . . take a holiday. Someplace no one expects. How do they call it? âOff the gridâ?â She twitched a feline smile. âIf the army is determined to close us down and recover the equipment, theyâll have to find us first.â
Luis raised a brow. âHow long do you think you can keep out of sight? As soon as either of you uses a charge card or a cellphone, youâre traceable.â The idea of Anjou forgoing restaurants and comfortable hotels was laughable.
âWeâll manage. It wonât take long for a âsave the mammothsâ movement to begin. But the first step is to move the mammoths to the wild.â
âAll right.â Luis drummed his fingers on the desk, thinking of the logistics of moving the herd six weeks earlier than heâd planned. âIâll call the trucking company. Brandon can round up the camping gear . . .â
âAbout Brandon . . .â Ginger cocked her head like a chubby sparrow. âI know heâs your friend, but weâd like to keep the mammothsâ location secret.â
âSorry, I need Brandon.â As her eyebrows rose, he added, âNot just for personal reasons, but for safety. Iâm not experienced in wilderness camping. He is. It wouldnât be smart for me to go charging off, hundreds of miles from the nearest town or doctor, without some backup.â
Ginger nodded. âVery well. But you must keep our funding difficulties confidential, even from him.â
Luis waved away the concern. âDonât worry. I can handle Brandon.â Their relationship had about run its course anyway.
âIâm sure you can,â Ginger said sweetly. âOne more thingâSilver and Gold will not go with the rest of the herd.â
Luisâs head jerked up. âWhy?â All the females had been impregnated with Anjouâs specially engineered embryos. Most were only a few weeks along, but Silver and Gold were both halfway through a year-long pregnancy.
âItâs always wise to have a backup plan,â Ginger said. âWeâll move Silver and Gold to someplace out of the way. Should there be difficulties with deploying the main herd for any reason, weâll have two mammoths and the calves they are carrying as the core of a new herd.â
âNot ideal,â Luis mused. âBut I suppose itâs a reasonable precaution.â
It occurred to Luis that with the projectâs funding in jeopardy, he needed a backup plan, too.
He fixed Ginger with a steely stare. âSo, the mammoths go into the wild while you and Anjou hide out until the government sees the light and reinstates the project. In the meantime, what am I supposed to do?â
Ginger blinked, eyes wide. âMy dear friend, this will be only a temporary setback, Iâm sure. As soon as the funding is restored, weâll be in touch.â
Luis wasnât quite that naive. Gingerâs loyalty was to Anjou, and Anjouâs only loyalty was to making himself rich and famous.
âI want six monthsâ pay,â Luis said, âin advance, for both me and Brandon.â Their relationship wouldnât last six months, but if Brandon had a financial cushion, heâd be less resistant to the coming breakup.
Gingerâs smile wavered. âWe can give you three months, through the end of the summer.â
âNot enough. Six months, and in the bank by tomorrowâor your mammoths stay here.â
After a pause, Ginger nodded. âVery well. How soon can you leave?â
Luis ran through his mental to-do list: hiring livestock carriers for transporting the mammoths; stocking the trucks with food and water for the overnight journey to a carefully selected drop-off point; and packing everything he and Brandon would need to spend up to three weeks in the bush guiding the herd to the target location.
Releasing the mammoths to the wild was the goal Luis had worked toward for years, but the moment would be bittersweetâsaying goodbye to the family Luis loved better than his own.
Luis sighed. âGive me five days. Weâll be ready.â
CHAPTER 3
The uselessness of being sorry
On the patio of a scenic lodge nestled among Alaskaâs Wrangell Mountains, Estelle Dupris glared at her niece, ignoring both their cooling coffee and the majestic vista of snow-capped peaks. Like a mirror from twenty years ago, Serafina reflected Estelleâs own bronze Creole coloring, upturned eyes, and delicate chinâand the stubborn set to her jaw.
Estelle banged her mug onto the table. âYou planned this all along, didnât you? âGo visit Aunt Estelle, do some sightseeingââand all the time you were planning not to go back to New Orleans?â
Blast the girl. When Sera had arrived in Fairbanks with three huge suitcases for a two-week visit, Estelle had just assumed sheâd overpacked like a typical teenager, imagining Alaska would be freezing even in June.
Sera ducked her chin and sucked her lower lip. Estelle felt a pang of painâMarie used to look just the same when Estelle caught her little sister trying on her clothes or sneaking a peek at her diary.
âI didnât exactly lie,â Sera said. âI did want to see Alaska. I didnât say anything earlier because I wanted to see if weâd get alongâand we do! Please. I wonât be any trouble.â
No trouble? Just when Estelle had been congratulating herself on being a good auntie. Sheâd played tour guide, showing the seventeen-year-old the high points of Fairbanks. Theyâd visited the Museum of the North and admired the huge blossoms and giant vegetables at the University of Alaskaâs botanical garden. Theyâd stood in line at Hot Licks for the cityâs best ice cream. Theyâd strolled through Pioneer Park till midnight to watch the sun go down, leaving a dusk barely dark enough
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