The roll lights switched on, and the siren sounded.
I tapped my brakes and waved the cruiser around.
“Come on, come on,” I said, “the road’s clear.”
The cop hit the strobe lights. The siren squawked.
I caught the cop's eyes in the rearview.
Me? I mouthed.
The deputy jabbed a finger at the shoulder of the road.
“Damn it,” I said and pulled off.
The foothills were an odd place, sort of a landmark of contrasts where several counties touched, each one with its own way of doing things. In Allegheny County, which was on the east side, people tended to be plain folks. They went to high school—most of the time finishing— then either worked on a farm, for minimum wage in town, or else drove down the other side of the mountain to Manchester or Winchester where they got jobs in the mills. They went to church on Sundays and Wednesdays like good Baptists and voted Democrat because Lincoln was a Republican, and they knew how to carry a grudge.
Unless your name was Boone Childress, and you expected public officials to earn respect.
The deputy slammed his door. He walked up to my truck, adjusting his gun belt. “License and registration.”
I opened my wallet. Handed them over.
The deputy clicked his ballpoint pen. “Where’s the fire?”
“Box 425 Route 9, Tin City, North Carolina.”
“Excuse me?”
“The fire, Route 9 in Tin City, sir. I’m a firefighter.”
“I know all the firemen in town. You ain’t one of them.”
“I’m new, and I’m a firefighter. That’s why my license plate says firefighter and why there’s a flasher on the roof.” I patted the seat. “And why I have turnouts and a hooligan tool next to me.”
“Don’t get smart with me.”
“Can I get a rain check on the ticket? This is my first fire, and I’d like to respond before the owners put it out with a garden hose.”
The deputy’s lip started to jump. He unclipped his Taser. “Get out of the vehicle.”
“A Taser? Come on!”
The deputy pulled the door opened. He signaled me out with an officious wave.
I slid to the rocky clay of the shoulder. My boots sank a half-inch in the soil, but I still towered over the deputy, being six-four with hands wide enough to palm a medicine ball.
The deputy waved the Taser. “You’ve got an attitude problem, boy.”
Judging by his dentition and light facial hair, the deputy was less than twenty-five, probably in his first couple of months on the job. It was obvious he cared more about me respecting the badge than doing what was right.
“Face the vehicle. Hands on the hood.”
“We’re on the same side,” I protested. “I was only speeding to respond to a call.”
“Don’t sass me!”
A second siren sounded, and a smile slowly formed on my face.
Down the highway, behind the deputy’s car, I saw the familiar sight of Sheriff Hoyt’s gold and white cruiser pulling off the pavement.
Paul Davis Hoyt was an ex-state trooper, a box of a man sporting a plush gray-brown flattop and jowls dappled with ancient acne scars. He hitched his britches over a hickory-hard gut and stuck out a wide, flat hand. The palm was so red, it looked like he had been picking blueberries. He wore a dark blue uniform and a thick, leather belt that creaked when he walked alongside the empty highway. He was also a vet, just like me.
As Hoyt reached the truck, I noted that I smelled of aftershave and starch and a touch of body odor.
“What in blue blazes is going on here?” The sheriff spat a stream of tobacco juice. “Deputy Mercer, why’re you frisking a Navy Medal recipient?”
The deputy jumped back like he had been zapped. “A what?”
“You heard me. This boy’s a war hero.”
Mercer bobbled the Taser, and it bounced from hand to hand.
I snatched it out of the air with my big mitts an handed it over. “You dropped this.”
The deputy snatched it back. “Sheriff Hoyt, I apprehended this hoodlum traveling at a high rate of speed. While writing his citation, he became agitated and aggressive.”
Hoyt pointed at the Taser. “Looks like you’re the one got agitated, Pete. Didn’t you see the cherry top on the boy’s car? He’s on a call.”
“Which I tried to explain to him,” I interjected.
“Thought it was fake.”
The sheriff raised his hand.”Tell you what, Pete, you head on back into town, and I’ll take care of the ticket on this one. Stop by the Red Fox Java and get yourself a slice of pie. My treat.”
The deputy rubbed his neck. “My shift ain’t over for another two hours.”
Hoyt took the ticket book from him. “I’ll take care of it.”
The deputy grimaced, but there was nothing he could do but return to his cruiser.
Hoyt and I silently watched as he hit the siren, made a sharp U-turn in the highway, and roared back toward Galax.
Hoyt whapped my arm with his ticket book. “That Pete, I tell you what. Two months on the job, and he’s written more tickets than the other deputies combined. Now, about that fire.”
“Yes sir,” I said, “that.” I’d given up being first responder. All I wanted was to respond at all.
Hoyt nodded for me to get in the truck. “Then let’s not keep the old boy waiting. You know the rules. No passing. No tailgating. And son?”
“Yeah?”
“I drive fast. Try to keep up.”
3
The dilapidated house sat atop a slight rise, next to a man-made pond. The pond had once been used for irrigation, back when the overgrown lot had been part of a family farm. Past the pond and up a rise, a half dozen tobacco barns and a derelict chicken house had been left to rot.
They were no longer rotting. They were on fire. All of them. The barns. The chicken coup. The farmhouse.
Eight plumes of smoke drifted into the cloudless sky.
The only structure not ablaze was a rusted out Airstream. The white and blue trailer had a tattered canopy, a picnic table, a TV antenna stretched thirty feet into air.
By the time I drove down the long dirt driveway to the fire, the roofline of the house was engulfed in flames. If the roof was gone, the rest of the house would be lost.
A stack of spent kindling.
The air smelled like fire, a mix of ash and burned fat that left me with a sweet taste in my mouth and a sick feeling in the gut.
I loved it.
The rest of the Allegheny VFD was already on the job. The six-person squad had set up hoses to the pumper engine. The engine drew water from an abandoned cow pond. Otto and Jimmy had trained hoses on the roof of the house, and Julia was manning the pumper.
The only woman in the crew, Julia was a fitness instructor and adrenaline junkie. She stood over five seven, had the shoulders of an Olympic swimmer, and could kick harder than a pissed off mule. The other firefighters knew that because she won every mud-wrestling match in the county.
Two other Allegheny firefighters had containment detail. They were busy smashing the windows on the left side so the hoses could reach inside.
“Lamar!” I parked beside the tanker. “Hey, Cap!”
Lamar was the captain. He was also my stepfather. He stood fifty feet from the tanker, talking to the captain of Galax VFD and Sheriff Hoyt, who had beaten me by a good three minutes.
“Julia! I’m here!” I pulled on my fire pants. Grabbed my jacket, gloves, and helmet. “What’s my duty spot?”
“Ask Cap!”
“He didn’t answer me!”
“You know the procedure!” Julia shouted over the mechanical clunk of the pumper. “Unless you need help getting dressed!”
“Very funny!”
I knew the procedure. But knowing it and doing it automatically were two separate things.
Lamar had preached the same sermon all during training: Firefighters had to know procedures so well, they could react without having to think. When a two-thousand-square-foot roof was collapsing on your head, there was no time to consult the manual.