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  Praise for the Birdwatcher’s Mystery series by Christine Goff

  “Very entertaining. Birders and nature lovers alike will enjoy this new twist on the cozy mystery.”

  —The Mystery Reader

  “You don’t have to be a bird lover to fall in love with Christine Goff’s charming Birdwatcher’s Mysteries.”

  —Tony Hillerman, New York Times bestselling author of the Navajo Mystery series.

  “The birds of the Rocky Mountains will warm the binoculars of birders who have waited a lifetime to see real stories about birds in a popular novel.”

  —Birding Business Magazine

  “Christine Goff’s Birdwatcher’s mysteries are engaging.”

  —Mystery Scene

  “A wonderfully clever, charming, and addictive series.”

  —David Morrell, New York Times bestselling author of Murder as a Fine Art.

  Death of a Songbird

  “A most absorbing mystery.”

  —Virginia H. Kingsolver, Birding Magazine

  A Rant of Ravens

  “Everything you expect from a good mystery—a smart detective and a plot that takes some surprising twists… a terrific debut!”

  —Margaret Coel, New York Times best-selling author of the Wind River Mystery series.

  “A Rant of Ravens is a deft and marvelous debut mystery set in the complex and colorful world of bird-watching.”

  —Earlene Fowler, national bestselling author of Seven Sisters

  “A Rant of Ravens stars a gutsy heroine in fast-paced action with a chill-a-minute finale… A fine-feathered debut.”

  —Carolyn Hart, award-winning author of the Death on Demand and Henrie O mysteries.

  This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this novel

  are either fictitious or are used fictitiously.

  A SACRIFICE OF BUNTINGS

  Astor + Blue Editions

  Copyright © 2014 by Christine Goff

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof, in any form under the International and Pan-American Copyright

  Conventions. Published in the United States by:

  Astor + Blue Editions

  New York, NY 10036

  www.astorandblue.com

  Publisher’s Cataloging-In-Publication Data

  GOFF, CHRISTINE. A SACRIFICE OF BUNTINGS. —2nd ed.

  ISBN: 978-1-941286-24-1 (epdf)

  ISBN: 978-1-941286-23-4 (epub)

  Mystery—Thriller—Fiction. 2. Park mystery—Fiction 3. Cozy mystery—

  Fiction 4. Mid-life—Mystery—Fiction 5. Birdwatchers—Fiction 6.

  Women & Family—Fiction 7. Colorado I. Title

  Jacket Cover Design: Didier Meresse

  Printing History

  2007 Berkeley Prime Crime

  The Berkeley Publishing Group New York, NY

  Published by Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  Originally published under title Death Shoots a Birdie

  This digital document has been produced by Nord Compo.

  To my dad, Harry McKinlay,

  who helped me explore the swamp.

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Praise for Christine Goff

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Title Page

  Introduction

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  About the author

  Acknowledgments

  A SACRIFICE

  OF BUNTINGS

  Christine Goff

  Introduction

  In A Sacrifice of Buntings, Book five, I took several of the birders on the road. Birders love to travel to see new species. In this book, Rachel Wilder meets her friends at a birding convention on Hyde Island (a.k.a. Jekyll Island), Georgia.

  Every year birders spend upwards of $20B on birdseed, birding paraphernalia, and birding excursions. When I asked my original editor if I could take the birders on the road, she reluctantly agreed. When I suggested Costa Rica, she told me no and came back with, “How about Illinois?” We finally agreed on Georgia.

  Jekyll Island is a beautiful island off the coast of Georgia. Names were changed to protect the innocent, thus Hyde Island became the setting for A Sacrifice of Buntings and the birding convention destination for an EPOCH reunion.

  The bird chosen for this book was the painted bunting. It’s a colorful bird that has been negatively impacted by the land development happening along the Eastern Seaboard. One characteristic of the bird is their willingness to battle, sometimes to the death, over their territory—a theme echoed in the book’s storyline.

  Birding conventions are like any other. There are hierarchies among the attendees. There are speakers (who are considered the best), there are wannabes, and there are those who move through the venue oblivious to the jockeying for position that goes on around them. And like in most professions, you find those experts who are willing to teach and those experts who look down on anyone who operates beneath their level.

  In A Sacrifice of Buntings, Rachel Wilder and her friends find themselves in the crossfire as two of the experts jockey for position. When one ends up dead, Rachel sets out to prove his innocence, only to wonder if—like the painted bunting—one man did kill another who was encroaching upon his turf.

  CHAPTER 1

  Rachel Wilder studied Guy Saxby’s photograph in the Hyde Island Birding and Nature Festival brochure and compared it to the man standing near the bird feeders. He had the same square jaw, the same sharp eyes, and the same light hair, though he looked blond in the photograph and gray in the sunlight. She would swear it was him. Tamping down her excitement, she drew a deep breath of the humid Georgia air and pushed back an errant curl.

  “Rae, are you coming?”

  “Lark!” Rachel called in a stage whisper, waving her hand in the universal signal for come here. Her friend stood her ground. Anchored to the bottom step leading to the entrance of the Hyde Island Nature Center, Lark planted her hands on her hips. “What is it?”

  Rachel gestured again, and Lark reluctantly stepped down. Rachel met her halfway.

  “Isn’t that Guy Saxby?”

  “How should I know?” Lark said. “I’ve never met him.”

  “Lark, you have to have seen him at some point, or at least seen pictures of him.” Guy Saxby was a big birder, huge, and so was Lark. Their paths must have crossed somewhere. “Look at his photograph.”

  Rachel shoved the brochure into Lark’s hands. She looked down at the photo, then at the man nearby. “Now that’s what I call a really old headshot.”

  “Granted. But is it him?”

  Lark scrunched up her face and tipped her head sideways, her long blonde braid whipping side to side. “I think so.”

  “Yes!” Rachel shot her arm into the air, then dropped her elbow to her waist.

  “He’s the guy, isn’t he? The one Kirk wants you to cozy up to?”

  “In a manner of speaking.”

  Rachel had briefed her traveling companions on her assignment during the ride up from the airport. Lark Drummond, Cecilia Meyer, and Dorothy MacBean had flown in from Colorado to attend the Hyde Island Birding and Nature Festival. It had been two years since she’d seen them, and they had been more interested i
n hearing about what she had been up to than what she had planned. They wanted to know how she liked living in New York, how well she liked her job. Was she in love with Kirk Udall?

  To their credit, they had a vested interest. They were all there when she met him during the investigation into his colleague’s murder in Elk Park. A reporter for Birds of a Feather magazine had been murdered, and Rachel’s aunt was implicated in the crime. Rachel had been staying with her. Together, Rachel and Kirk, with the help of the Elk Park Ornithological Chapter, had cracked the case. She and Kirk had been dating ever since.

  “He asked you to spy on the man,” Lark said.

  “Kirk didn’t actually use the word spy.”

  But that was the gist. He had been all set to join them himself when the magazine decided to send him to Sri Lanka at the last minute. They wanted a piece on how bird populations weather natural disasters, which left her to ferret out Saxby’s secret.

  Kirk was doing an exposé on Saxby, an icon in the birding world. As a young professor, he had written a book entitled A Sacrifice of Buntings about the plight of the painted bunting on the Eastern Seaboard, and his observations had proved prophetic. Now he was a world-renowned expert on endangered species, and set to unveil a new project. Something big. Something that would “rock the bird world.” Kirk wanted the inside scoop.

  “Now that we’ve identified the guy, no pun intended, can we go?” Lark asked. “Dorothy and Cecilia are already inside.” Lark looked wilted in her jeans and flannel shirt, and Rachel felt a stab of sympathy. The others were dressed for Colorado weather. It was only late April, but the temperatures in Georgia were already into the eighties. At this point, all any of the Coloradoans cared about was air conditioning.

  Rachel wasn’t exactly dressed for birdwatching herself. She’d worn black silk crop pants and a tank top on the plane, but at least she was cool. “You go ahead. I’ll follow you.”

  “Don’t tell me. You’re going to go and introduce yourself, aren’t you?”

  “In a manner of speaking.”

  Lark climbed the stairs while Rachel retrieved her binoculars from the car. Creeping up to stand beside Saxby without scaring the birds on the feeder, Rachel adjusted her binoculars.

  A brightly painted bunting squatted at the base of the broken-down bird feeder, seemingly oblivious to the aesthetics of its surroundings. Georgia greenery touched the sky to the south and east. To the north and west were the parking lot and a Dumpster. The medium-sized finch kept a watchful eye as he ate, peering out from behind a scarlet eye ring and swiveling his blue-violet head side to side.

  “Beautiful, isn’t he?” Saxby asked.

  Rachel kept her binoculars trained on the bird. “Gorgeous.”

  A light breeze molded the painted bunting’s bright apple-green feathers flat to its back and ruffled its scarlet underparts as though underlining her statement. Behind him, two lime-green females twittered like schoolgirls enamored with a new beau.

  Out of the corner of her eye, Rachel gave Saxby the once-over. Based on the gray that peppered his hair, he had to be in his mid-fifties, maybe twenty years older than she. Tanned and fit, he was of average height, average build. His shorts zippered at the knees, and he wore a state-of-the-art, long-sleeved, vented shirt straight out of the BigPockets catalog.

  He seemed to sense her scrutiny, and returned it. “Are you from around here?” he asked.

  “No.” She kept her answer short and simple. She figured it was obvious by the way she was dressed—no colorful T-shirt and shorts like the locals. “I’m from New York.”

  “City?”

  The question sounded rhetorical, so she didn’t answer.

  “You’re not down here for the festival, are you?”

  Rachel lowered her binoculars. “Do you find that so hard to believe?”

  “A pretty, young businesswoman…” He half-shrugged, then straightened and focused sharply on something beyond her. “Whoops! Here comes trouble.”

  He pointed, and Rachel glanced left. In a flash of rainbow colors, a second male painted bunting swooped into the trees, rousting the first male off the bottom of the feeder. Hopping up the cylinder, the feeder bird perched at the topmost point and belted out a song.

  Saxby joined in with a husky baritone. “This land is my land. It’s not your land.”

  Rachel grinned. He had scored a direct hit on the painted bunting psyche. It was one of the species Lark had said they would see on this trip, and Rachel had boned up on the bird. The males of the species were territorial and had even been known to kill their competition in defense of their breeding ground. The females tended to choose the best provider, even if it meant sharing a mate. Obviously, the bird in control of the feeder had the edge.

  The interloper dived out of the live oak, swooped past the Dumpster, and landed on the graveled driveway, cutting a swath past the wax myrtles. Pressing himself close to the ground, he shook out his wings.

  “He’s making a challenge!” Saxby raised his binoculars and twisted them into focus.

  Rachel followed suit.

  The painted bunting flitted across the Georgia dirt and hopped a few inches closer. Defiantly, the feeder bird flaunted his scarlet rump and sang louder, his voice jerky and off key. The females stopped eating and huddled closer together on the backside of the feeder.

  In a riot of colors, the male birds flew. Rachel lost track of which bird was which as they fluttered their wings in each other’s faces, grappling mid-air before tumbling to earth.

  Rachel leapt forward. “We have to stop them before one of them ends up dead.”

  “What do you think you’re doing?” Saxby yelled. He grabbed her arm, but it was too late. The birds broke apart. One bird flew into the trees. The other hopped up on the feeder.

  Saxby’s body tensed. “Do you know how many people would kill for the chance you just had, to see two painted buntings in battle? Very few people ever have the opportunity to witness life in action like that.”

  Rachel felt her hackles go up. “One of them was sure to be hurt. It seemed only right to stop them.”

  Saxby looked disgusted. “Have you ever heard the saying ’survival of the fittest’? By interfering you’ve upset the ecological balance.”

  Rachel felt the heat rise to her cheeks. “I’m sorry. I just…”

  Saxby’s body language softened. “You’re new to birding, aren’t you?”

  She nodded. She had started birding just three years ago and only had the opportunity now and then. She’d been doing more serious birding with Kirk, but only for the past year.

  “Well, what’s done is done. I wouldn’t worry about it if I were you.” Saxby dangled his binoculars against his chest. “Besides, it looks like the older bird would have won.”

  Rachel frowned. “How can you be so sure?”

  “Check out the face of the bird on the feeder. The incoming male was a young bird. The feeder bird bears a few scars. He’s learned to defend himself in a turf war.”

  “By eliminating the competition?”

  Saxby shrugged. “It works for him.”

  “That sounds a bit cavalier if death is the usual outcome.”

  “Not usual.” He paused and studied her. “You disapprove. Is a fight to the death not romantic or idealistic enough for you? Sometimes life is like that.”

  Rachel wondered if Saxby’s cynicism had to do with his age. Maybe it was time to change the subject. “You’re Guy Saxby, aren’t you?”

  “In the flesh.” He seemed pleased that she had recognized him.

  “I’m Rachel Wilder.”

  “Rachel.” He had just reached for her hand when a pretty brunette in a green Honda pulled up and tooted the horn. Squeezing Rachel’s fingers, he nodded toward the vehicle. “My chariot awaits. Enjoy your stay on the island. Perhaps I’ll see you at the festival.”

  Before Rachel could think of something clever to stop him, Saxby had walked away and climbed into the car.

  The brunette
gunned the engine and pulled away.

  “Rae!”

  Rachel turned and spotted Lark galloping back down the steps of the Hyde Island Nature Center.

  The tall blonde lolled out her tongue and fanned the collar of her flannel shirt. “Whew boy, it’s hot. I’m ready to check into the hotel and change into my shorts.”

  Rachel nodded absently and watched the Honda speed away.

  “Guy Saxby and friend?” Lark asked.

  “Guy Saxby and driver.” The girl was obviously too young to be his friend. Wasn’t she?

  “Did you learn anything?”

  Rachel remembered his lecture and she felt herself blush. “Nothing Kirk would be interested in.”

  “He didn’t look anything like I’d expected,” Lark said.

  That struck Rachel as odd. “Why? What did you expect?”

  “I don’t know, someone more dashing. He has a reputation, you know. He is the Indiana Jones of the birding world.”

  Was she being facetious?

  “Are you saying he doesn’t look roguish enough?”

  “I just thought he’d be cuter, younger, that’s all. More like…”

  “Colin Farrell?” Rachel supplied.

  “Right,” Lark said, tugging at her long braid. “He’s too Sean Connery-ish, minus the English accent and the sex appeal.”

  Lark sat down on a bench, and Rachel sat down beside her. “What else do you know about him?”

  “Not much.”

  “Come on, Lark. You have to know more than I do.”

  Kirk hadn’t had much time to brief her. He’d given her Saxby’s bio and copies of two or three articles about the man. She knew he was a gifted writer and teacher and that he’d once held the record for a “Big Year.” The logic behind a competition to see the most North American birds in one year escaped Rachel, but Saxby’s second book, Chasing the Feather, immortalized his adventure, detailing how he had stalked the birds and ended up besting James Vardaman’s 1979 record of 699 species by one—a record that had stood until 1983.