OCR Text |
Show Since he s t i l l hadn't decided what to do with her, the supervisor seemed relieved that Janey vias finding ways to keep herself busy. And since the truck had to be driven every few days to make certain that the battery vias operating, he agreed to l e t her drive i t . But he stipulated that another ranger go along to keep an eye on things. Driving the truck vias a bigger job than she'd expected. Instead of four gears i t had eight, viith some halfway positions betvieen gears. With the other ranger beside her, Janey gripped the steering viheel, vihite-knuckled, as she drove around the park. "It vias tricky," she says. "All those gears! But I made i t ; I didn't hit anything." In the following weeks she went to every f i r e d r i l l and learned to use the rest of the f i r e equipment. Once she'd mastered the firetruck, Janey wanted to learn traffic accident investigation. " I t ' s hard to do those things a l l by yourself," she says. "You need a l i t t l e backup, a l i t t l e encouragement." Since help viasn't forthcoming, she vient back to the manuals, reading a l l she could about investigating accidents. When t r a f f i c accidents secured in the park, she vient out to observe hovi other rangers handled them. On the day she virote her f i r s t t r a f f i c ticket, she vias a l i t t l e slovi at it but she got i t right. Winter came, blanketing the high desert country in a layer of snow. Janey taught herself to cross-country ski, a s k i l l useful in any park where hikers might get stranded in the snovi. By t h i s time she'd made a friend viho l e t her use his 38-caliber handgun - Janey practiced shooting on the target range. One evening a week she drove to Cortez, Colorado to take a course which would certify her as an |