Aloud she went on: "And where are the emergency people?"
"Trying to get their ambulances and fire trucks to work," Dennis said; there was a grim tone to his voice she'd seldom heard before. "Check your watch."
Juniper blinked, but did as he asked, pulling it out of her vest pocket where it waited at the end of a polished chain of fine gold links. She was wearing a sort of pseudo-Irish-cum-Highlander costume-billowy-sleeved peasant shirt and lace cravat and fawn-colored waistcoat with a long tartan skirt below and buckled shoes-what she thought of privately as her Gael-girl outfit. The watch was an old one, from her mother's father; she clicked the cover open.
"Working fine," Dennis said, as she tilted it to catch the firelight. "But mine ain't. It's digital."
He turned and switched to Sign. How about yours, Eilir?
It's an electric, she signed. Quartz. It's stopped.
"And stopped at just the same time as that one on the wall over there," he said, signing as he spoke. "Six fifteen."
"What's happening?" Juniper said, signing it and then running her hands through her long fox-red hair.
"Damned if I know," Dennis said. "Only one thing I could think of."
At her look, he swallowed and went on: "Well, an EMP could take out all the electrical stuff, or most of it, I think- but that would take a fusion bomb going off."
Juniper gave an appalled hiss. Who could be nuking Oregon, of all places? Last time she looked the world had been profoundly at peace, at least as far as big countries with missiles went.
"But I don't think that's it. That white flash, I don't think it was really light-it didn't come from anywhere, you know? Suzie at the bar, she was looking out at the street, and I was halfway into the kitchen, and we both saw pretty much the same thing."
That's right, Eilir signed. It wasn't a flash, really. Everything just went white and my head hurt, and I was over by that workbench with my back to the window.
"Well, what was it, then?" her mother said.
"I don't have fucking clue one about what it was," Dennis said. "But I've got this horrible feeling about what whatever-it-was did."
He swallowed and hesitated. "I think it turned the juice off. The electricity. Nothing electrical is working. That for starters."
Dennis shuddered; she'd never seen an adult do that before, but she sympathized right now. A beefy arm waved out the window.
"Think about it. No cars-spark plugs and batteries. No lights, no computers, nothing. And that means no water pressure in the mains pretty soon, and no sewers, and-"
"Mother-of-All," Juniper blurted. "The whole town could burn down! And those poor people on the 747-"
She imagined what it must have been like at thirty thousand feet, and then her mind recoiled from it back to the here and now.
And Rudy was flying out of Eugene tonight, she thought, appalled. If the same thing happened there-
"We have to do something," she said, pushing aside the thought, and led them clattering down the stairs again.
And we can only do it here. Think about the rest later.
"People!" she said over the crowd's murmur, and waved her hands. "People, there's a plane crashed right downtown, and a fire burning out of control. And it looks like all the emergency services are out. They're going to need all the help they can get. Let's get what we can scrape up and go!"
Most of them followed her, Dennis swearing quietly, a bucket in one hand and a fire ax over the other shoulder; Juniper snatched up a kerosene lantern. Eilir carried the restaurant's first-aid kit in both arms, and others had snatched up towels and stacks of cloth napkins and bottles of booze for disinfectants.
She needed the lantern less and less as they got closer to the crash site. Buildings were burning across a swath of the town's riverside quarter, ending-she hadn't gotten her wish, and the fire covered the Squirrel's site. Heat beat at them, and towers of sparks were pouring upward from the old Victorians and warehouses.
If the plane was out of Portland, it would have been carrying a lot of fuel…
The streets were clogged with people moving westward away from the fire, many of them hurt, and they were blocked with stopped autos and trucks and buses too. Ruddy firelight beat at her face, with heat and the sour-harsh smell of things not meant to burn.
"OK," she said, looking at the… refugees, she thought. Refugees, right here in America!
First aid could make the difference between life and death, stopping bleeding and stabilizing people until real doctors or at least paramedics got there.
"We're not going to do any good trying to stop that fire by hitting it with wet blankets. Let's help the injured."
She looked around. There was a clear stretch of sidewalk in front of a hardware store where a delivery truck had rammed into the next building down; its body slanted people out into the road like a wedge.
"We'll set up here. Dennis, see if there's any bedding anywhere around here, and a pharmacy-and anyplace selling bottled water."
He lumbered off, followed by some of his customers. The others started shouting and waving to attract attention, and then guiding the injured towards her. Juniper's stomach clenched as she saw them: this was serious, there were bleeding slashes from shattered glass, and people whose clothes were still smoldering. Her head turned desperately, as if help could be found…
Nobody's going to benefit if you start crying, she thought sternly, and traced the pentacle in the air again-the Summoning form this time, all she had time for. Brigid, Goddess of Healing, help me now!
"You," she said aloud; a young man had pushed a bicycle along as they came. "You ride over to the hospital, and tell them what we're doing. Get help if they can spare it. Hurry!"
He did, dashing off. The first-aid kit was empty within minutes; Dennis came back, with a file of helpers carrying mattresses, sheets, blankets, and cardboard boxes full of Ozonenal, painkillers and whatever else looked useful from the plunder of a fair-sized dispensary; a pharmacist in an old-fashioned white coat came with him.
"Let's get to work," Juniper said, giving Dennis a quick hug.
The best part of an hour later, she paused and looked up in the midst of ripping up volunteered shirts for bandages. The fireman approaching was incredibly reassuring in his rubbers and boots and helmet, an ax in his hand; half a dozen others were following him, two carrying someone else on a stretcher.
"What are you doing here?" he asked, pausing; the others filed on past him.
Juniper bristled a little and waved at the injured people lying in rows on the sidewalk. "Trying to help!" she snapped. "What are you doing, mister?"
"Fuck-all," he said, but nodded approval; his face was running with sweat and soot; he was a middle-aged man with a jowly face and a thick body.
"What's wrong?"
"Our trucks won't work, our portable pumps won't work, and the pressure is off in the mains! Died down to a trickle while we manhandled a hose down here and got it hitched. The pumping stations that lift from the Taylor treatment plant on the river are down and the reservoirs've all drained. We can't even blow fire lanes-our dynamite won't explode! So now what we're doing is making sure everyone's out of the way of a fire we can't stop. Lady, this area's going to fry, and soon."
Juniper looked up at the flames; they were nearer now, frighteningly so-she'd lost track in the endless work.
"We've got to get these people out of here!" she said. "A lot of them can't walk any farther."