over 30 years
in infectious diseases research, Danna hung up her lab coat to concentrate on her real
love—writing “exceptional” thrillers (Publishers Weekly). She is a member of the Crime Writers
of Canada and lives with her husband and four rescued cats outside of Toronto, Ontario.
She applied the Page 69 Test to her latest FBI K-9s novel, Deadly Trade, and shared the following:
From page 69:Visit Sara Driscoll's website.“How fast will it work?”Deadly Trade passes the Page 69 Test with flying colors as it strikes at the heart of the novel—wildlife trafficking.
“Within a couple of minutes. Once I’m sure it’s stopped, I’ll hydrate and bag this one.”
Todd walked back to the circle of the clearing. “Meg called it, then? We’re looking at wildlife trafficking?”
“Definitely,” Byrne agreed. “And it’s not the first we’ve seen of it here.”
“Most people think of wildlife trafficking as the trade in animal parts,” said Hale. “Rhinoceros horns, shark fins, bear gallbladders. Many of these animal parts are used in Eastern medicine or are considered delicacies. But what happens is animals are killed, or worse, stripped of those parts and left to die a slow and agonizing death. We don’t have as much of that happening here because we’re a remote archipelago. Our wildlife either flew, swam, or were brought here as an invasive species. We don’t have the kind of desirable land mammals a lot of wildlife trafficking revolves around. We don’t have pangolins, rhinoceroses, or elephants. We do, however, have seahorses and endangered sea turtles. Then there’s the birds.”
“They’re trafficking the birds for parts?” Meg asked.
“It’s not all about parts of animals.” Hale came to stand behind Byrne, his eyes on her hands. “There are streams of wildlife trafficking. Some animals are used as food delicacies—shark fin soup, pangolin meat, or eels as unagi, a celebratory treat that’s supposed to increase stamina. Some are used in medicine—bear gallbladders, seahorses, and pangolin scales, bones, and heads.”
“Sounds like it’s unlucky to be a pangolin,” Todd murmured.
“It’s why they’re nearly extinct.” Byrne’s tone was scathing. “It’s a tragedy. And their value is incredibly overblown. There’s no scientific evidence it’s effective medicine, yet they continue to die.”
Meg Jennings and her new husband Todd Webb are on their Hawaiian honeymoon with Meg’s search-and-rescue canine, Hawk. Their first week is spent in relaxed seclusion on Lanai, but then they fly to the Big Island to delve into the island’s natural beauty and to start working out so they don’t lose their edge as a K-9 team or firefighter, respectively. But trouble always seems to find them, and in the middle of a remote fern forest on the eastern slope of Mauna Loa, Hawk alerts to something alarming. Not able to ignore the alert in case Hawk is sensing someone in trouble, they investigate and find themselves coming face-to-face with wildlife traffickers attempting to capture and bag endangered birds for a buyer on the black market.
Local FBI and US Fish and Wildlife agents are called in after the traffickers scatter, and while the wildlife agent works to rehydrate and stabilize injured birds, the teams discuss the issue of wildlife trafficking in Hawaii. This is where we are on page 69, as Special Agent Jeremy Hale, an agent of Hawaiian descent out of the Honolulu field office, explains wildlife trafficking as the world knows it. He then goes on to describe the trade in exotic birds, the rarer the better. Hawaii is the extinction capitol of the world and is a target for bad actors who dabble in the capture of extremely endangered species, selling the creatures to the highest bidder, lining their pockets while pushing species ever closer to extinction.
Sadly, this is not a fictitious issue. Real species are under threat not only from loss of habitat and climate change, but from wildlife traffickers looking to make sky-high profits no matter the cost. Deadly Trade is an exciting thriller, but it also offers a glimpse into a horrifying, all-too- real ongoing crisis alongside the hope given by those who fight against it.
The Page 69 Test: Lone Wolf.
The Page 69 Test: Storm Rising.
The Page 69 Test: No Man's Land.
The Page 69 Test: Leave No Trace.
The Page 69 Test: That Others May Live.
The Page 69 Test: Echoes of Memory.
--Marshal Zeringue


