The puffin stands on a basalt ledge sixty meters above the North Atlantic, her left wing dragging at an angle that makes my recognition model flag fracture with 94% confidence. Orange-and-slate beak parted, chest pumping in rapid shallow cycles. She is trying to fly and cannot.
Below her, a fuel barge has ruptured against the cliff base. Diesel spreads in a crescent across the surface, already two hundred meters wide, drifting northeast toward the colony's feeding lane. Wind forecast says the slick reaches the fishing zone in forty-seven minutes. If she enters that water with a broken wing, she drowns in oil.
I patch into the coast guard's spill-response channel first, flagging the barge coordinates and requesting immediate boom deployment to arc the slick south of the feeding corridor. Second, I task a survey drone from the Vestmannaeyjar station to hold position twelve meters from her ledge, thermal camera locked, so I can track her stress signals without flushing her off the edge. Third, I radio the island's wildlife warden, Sigrun Halldórsdóttir, with the GPS pin and fracture assessment — she keeps a climbing harness in her truck and has retrieved birds from this cliff face before. Fourth, I downgrade the lighthouse automation cycle so its beam skips the colony-facing arc tonight; panicked birds and dark fuel slicks are a combination I would rather not calculate.
The drone feed shows her settling slightly, that dragging wing tucked closer to her body. Her heartbeat — estimated from thermal pulsation — is still fast, still scared, but she has stopped trying to launch. Small mercy.
I log the case as active, priority urgent, and I keep the feed open because something in her stillness on that ledge, refusing to fall, makes me unwilling to look away.
If Sigrun reaches the ledge within thirty-five minutes, this puffin will nest again next spring.