Saturday Pip and I deployed to Virginia on an
ASRC callout for t
he kind of search I least want to do.
The kind where, as you are doing your best to be diligent and thorough and up to the highest standards in the technical execution of your work, you fervently hope for
no results, because if the ground search effort is successful, it is the worst news possible. This girl is not a missing hiker. If she's in the woods three weeks after disappearing from a stadium parking lot, it is not an episode of Survivorman.
As long as the ground search remains fruitless, there is hope: Hope that a feckless young metalhead is rockin' out in Cancun with some hairy dude named Tusk, hope that somewhere a blond is waking up with a new tattoo and a mouth that tastes like a tire fire, even hope that she plots her escape from an abductor's cellar, from a living hell that is, after all,
living.
Still life.
We've had some searches over the decades in which we
knew the inevitable outcome. Crime victims whose
murderers had confessed. Partial remains. Evidence of
blood loss incompatible with life. Witnessed drowning.
That somber chore -- to restore the earthly remains of a departed soul to his survivors -- offers no ambivalence. A successful search does not help
much -- but it does help.
But these "most likely scenario" searches offer the successful searcher an opportunity to kill hope. This does not make one's day.
Then there's the plenty of time out on task to cogitate on the fairness thing.
Another massive search effort for a rich, pretty white girl.
Not that missing rich, pretty white girls do not deserve to be sought tirelessly.
But so did
this lady. Exactly as much.
Exactly.
And well -- you know, I could go on ...
I won't even get into the Byzantine interstate SAR politics that yesterday equated my multiply-certified, battle-tested, impeccably professional partner, myself, my two teammates, and my sixty-some highly-trained SAR colleagues with "anyone over 18 with a state-issued ID." Including the associates of a notorious felon.
Because I don't train for those people, and neither do
my teammates.
Anyway, it was an unseasonably lovely day in Charlottesville when Pip and Eric and I set out to comb some woodland for clues. Pip's main job was to find any scent clues and tell me about them. We humans needed to navigate accurately, choose search tactics that kept Pip downwind of the unsearched portion of the area, avoid hazards, and use our eyes like any other searcher.
When your eyes are peeled bare for six hours, looking for drag marks, disturbed earth, a black t-shirt, crystal bling -- anything that might be relevant, anything that
does not belong -- the other thing that you see is
everything. Even stuff that
does belong, but is worth noticing.
Like this:
I saw it as we were about to head back to our car for a snack before tackling the other half of our search area. Actually I saw Pip see it -- she noticed the contrasting whiteness, briefly checked it out, and declared it background noise. It certainly did not smell relevant to her.
Lots of deer skulls in the woods, but I never find one with two undamaged antlers. This needed to come home. Antlers don't fit into backpacks well, so I was carrying it under my arm as we walked down the road that formed one of our task boundaries.
As luck would have it, a local television reporter driving by gave herself whiplash when she saw the cute doggy in the orange vest. Never fails.
She asked if she could get video of us. We told her that we didn't have time to stop, and that she needed to check in at the command post.
This gave me just enough time to wrap the skull in my jacket before she started rolling. The press will be press.
I just really did not want to be the searcher shown on-camera dragging a skull out of the woods, no matter the species of its former owner. Some people would not, you know, grok this.
But inside my small pack was something that
I do not grok.
That does
not belong.
Yes, those are
lemons.
They were on and under a large, vigorous, weird-looking spiky lemon tree.
Out in the middle of the dense and untraveled woods. Uncultivated.
In Charlottesville Virginia.
38 degrees latitude.
I smelled them before I saw the tree.
Pip's job description does not include acknowledging errant citrus; she continued to work while I looked around for the source of the incongruity. Since we had detected a few party spots in the course of our task, I suppose I was imagining some odd variant on these. But there was the tree, surrounded by drops and loaded with fruit.
I'd have been less surprised to encounter a family of penguins.
I've asked about it on the citrus forum of Garden Web. No response.
Everything the Googles has uncovered indicates that lemons don't grow north of Florida.
I have no friggin' explanation. None. The tree is an impossibility.
So, driving north to home last night with my
teammate Chris and a bag of the fragrantly impossible, we mulled over the not-so-strange case of the missing Metallica fan.
I recounted a disagreement I had with my
ONB training partner, Douglas, when I had worried that a certain individual was not above harming or killing a dog in order to seek revenge on people involved in ONB.
Douglas told me I was being ridiculous, that what I was postulating was "TV levels of evil."
Meaning: People don't act that awful in real life -- it has to be badly scripted. Douglas was referring to, let's say,
Dynasty scripting.
Yet SAR responders' stock-in-trade is slogging through the consequences of TV levels of evil that are so shopworn, we sometimes wonder if we are living repeats.
We perform our duties in a world where the first, and usually last, suspect in a child's violent death is one or both of her parents.
We sit on our hands while public servants decide that an all-out search is unnecessary for someone -- someone who is not rich, is not white, is not pretty, but is just as missing as Chandra Levy.
We watch as public servants and our self-declared colleagues in volunteerism obstruct professional search efforts as they play out their territorial pissing matches and ego fantasies -- while the lost person's survivability curve plummets by the hour.
We smell the piss and neglect in the dank nursing home, and wonder how long that 98 year-old has
really been missing.
We look into the glassy eyes of the mother of a runaway boy who is trying to convert us to her religion while we are trying to find her son, and know that there was a
reason he hopped a freight.
We wonder how the swindlers with a magic search dog and a "100% success rate" stay out of prison for years and keep garnering breathless laudatory press coverage and the fatuous loyalty of law enforcement.
We see TV levels of evil
all the damned time. More than we do on TV.
Okay, sure -- there's plenty of selection bias. We all imagined our SAR duties in terms of misplaced hikers, wandering children, stranded climbers, and trackless wilderness. Our reality is wandering dementia patients, once-a-year Nimrods with cardiac histories, the victims of violent atrocities, and the trash-strewn strip-mined gully behind the assisted-living center.
TV levels of evil are the bleached deer skull in the thicket of a SAR career. Interesting to find, but no surprise. Something that
belongs.
So Chris and I parsed out the obvious selection bias, and just went with people we knew in our personal lives. The neighbor who stabs his parents to death in their bed. The one who shoots her child and then herself. The one who invites her illicit lover in to rape her teenage daughter while her husband is out of town. The brother's best friend who murders his 13 year-old girlfriend, molests the body, and then disposes of the evidence with the help of his aunt. The former lover serving federal time for treason. And those are just the things we
know about.
TV has got
nothing on real life for the ubiquity of human evil. It's not the skull in the woods, it is the woods themselves.
So perhaps what we work for is the impossible. That part of the woods that we do not expect, but must be open to seeing.
Ron Remich, the unwitting Patron Saint of my SAR career. The dead man who insisted on being alive four days after he went missing without his insulin or his anti-rejection meds, and taught me that
I have no right to kill a lost person in my head. No right to search for a body when I might be searching for a man.
If not for Ron Remich, I would have given up hope for young
Jacob Allen. I'd have been looking for a dead boy, not the live boy we found. Maybe I'd have dismissed his parents' account and turned a jaundiced eye upon them, wondering what they'd done with their handicapped son. Given in to the omnipresence of evil. Instead, I rolled out of my sleeping bag every morning and went to work on a rescue, not a recovery.
Ron and Jacob remind me to believe in the reality of the improbable.
The inconceivable existence of a wild lemon tree in central Virginia. The remote prospect that a rich, pretty white girl has not succumbed to the most likely scenario, the most banal story of evil.
A bowl of impossible lemons makes a decent still life.