barely got our âtoad crossingâ signs up. But itâs an exciting time, things are changing; weâve already changed them.
We , she thinks. Who is this we ? This is his dominion, his private Eden. She looks away. Greyer clouds are heading up the valley on a brisk wind. The ground darkens beneath them. She can smell the rain coming, like tonic in the air.
You must like being home again, he says. Itâs such a special place, isnât it? Itâs somehow gloriously in us.
What do you mean?
His question feels too intimate, inappropriate. Again she feels peculiar being so close to a man of such power â even the tribal councils, with their elders of utmost gravitas and authority, do not disarm her as much. She suddenly wishes she could get out of the Land Rover and walk back to Pennington Hall.
I mean it has a resonance, he says, and sighs. I used to dislike being away, even as a young man, and I was away a lot, boarding and London and whatnot. I still dislike being away, when the House is in session. This is a unique area. âThe form remains, thefunction never dies.â We are so very lucky, you and I, to belong here, Rachel.
She has no inclination to enter into a sentimental discussion. She tries to remain focused.
Iâm not sure what that has to do with it.
Thomas Pennington smiles. His teeth are capped and polished. He is gearing up to make his case; she can see the signs, the poise, the mental garnering of argument. Let him say his piece, she thinks. Heâs paid you.
I know youâre a woman of honesty â I admire that. So letâs be honest. This is a real chance for environmental restoration in a country that desperately needs it. The whole process has been incredibly bureaucratic. All the things one has to prove about wolves: previous inhabitation, suitable territory. God forbid they should be able to hunt their own prey! Government has become extremely adept at legislating its urban squeamishness â my chaps too, Iâm afraid to say. Anyway, we got there.
He makes a dismissive, swatting gesture, as if cutting through and casting aside the opposition.
If we were going to be anything less than a self-sustaining enclosure, I wouldnât have prevailed upon you. I wouldnât have wasted your time, Rachel. Or mine.
He turns his hands over, palms facing upward. Behavioural assay of state, she thinks: humility. He is appealing to her dominant position. He is not without guile, nor lacking sincerity â the consummate politician, perhaps.
I know getting you back would be a coup. America has everything you need. But, if I may say it, America isnât the real challenge. America has wolves walking back down from Canada of their own volition. Arenât you just overseeing what already exists? Here, evenbehind my ridiculous fence, they will be able to hunt and breed; they will be able to do what they do, and for the first time in centuries! Isnât that extraordinary? Imagine what it all might lead to. Perhaps even full reintroduction.
It is raining lightly now. The windscreen begins to speckle. The shadow of the clouds arrives, darkening the Land Roverâs interior. The Earlâs eyes are greenish-brown. Thereâs Huguenot in him. His nails are manicured; his eyebrows shaped. The tweed in his coat is probably customised. Yes, she thinks, it is extraordinary. But thereâs something about him, something about his energy, that she does not trust. The waxing and waning â the peaks and troughs. Almost bipolar, and she is familiar with that condition. The mania. The terrible aftermath. They are a convincing breed, made charismatic by ideas and self-belief, with plans so persuasive that itâs hard not to be swayed. Hard too when the life gust is vented and the black mask slides down. Oran. The day she and Kyle found him sitting by the Clearwater River in his pick-up, a loaded gun on his lap, the radio blaring. Just watching the steelheads