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Authors: Christine Goff

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BOOK: Nest in the Ashes
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CHAPTER 7

Eric followed the buses
down Highway 66, making sure the road was open, and they reached Prospect Point. He turned his truck around a mile short of the pull off. So far the fire had remained clear of the road, but somewhere on the back side of Eagle Cliff Mountain, a fire burned out of control.

Smoke lay thick in the canyon. Ash still tumbled from the sky, reminding him of the day Mount St. Helens erupted. He’d been crossing White Mountain Pass on his way from Seattle to Denver. The smoke and ash had created a flat light, then the sky had darkened, turning purplish, and the ash had fallen in blizzard-like conditions. The mountain had made its own storm.

Fire also created weather, generating wind by breathing in oxygen along the ground and spewing it thousands of feet into the air along with smoke and flames. The results were often deadly.

Eric parked on the asphalt. No one except Mountain Search and Rescue would be allowed on the road. They could easily get around him here.

The thought of the missing boys tied his stomach in knots. It was bad enough to be lost in the woods without the added danger of fire. The nights were cold. Unless one was prepared, hypothermia and dehydration could kill a man overnight.

His thoughts flashed to when he was eleven, living in a house in Lillehammer, Norway. There had been a knock on the door. A policeman stood in the entryway.

“There’s been an accident,” the policeman had told them. Eric’s father and three other climbers had been trapped on the mountain by an avalanche. Rescue crews were attempting to reach them, but it was getting dark…

Eric shrugged on his pack and clipped his radio to a loop-on strap, making it easier to monitor. If the search team hadn’t found the boys by the time he was done, he’d scout the second ridge looking for them.

He’d finished checking his tools, when Lark’s voice crackled across the radio. Eric turned up the volume. He’d spoken with her earlier regarding the young ranger from the Visitor Center. The situation had been straightened out: he’d put Lark and Harry in charge of the roadblock until an officer showed up to relieve them. Susie had been demoted to backup.

“This is Lark Drummond. Officer Klipp is on scene. Harry Eckles and I are requesting a new assignment, over.”

Butch Hanley replied. “Mountain Search and Rescue needs more help up at the Youth Mountain Camp. They have two juveniles missing. You and Harry report there.”

“Ten-four.”

Eric stepped across the ditch, relieved she wouldn’t be on the fire line but disappointed when she signed off. He liked the husky sound of her voice. Face it, he liked her.

Pushing Lark out of his thoughts, Eric scrambled up the embankment and focused on choosing the best route up the mountain. Pasqueflowers sprouted in profusion on the lower hillside. Yellow monkey-flowers grew in clumps beneath groves of aspen. Wind rattled the trees, and Eric watched them sway and bend. Several nesting cavities were visible, but no birds flitted about anywhere. It was as though they sensed impending doom and had hunkered down.

Turning up the gulch, he braced himself for a climb. Brush and juniper bushes clung to the lower slopes, giving way to heavily forested ground that rose at a six-percent grade.

He’d climbed about a hundred yards when he thought he heard his name called. He stopped and listened, hearing only the rush of the wind in the trees.

He started climbing again, then stopped, convinced he’d heard his name called again, “Errrrrrrriiiiiiiiic,” the syllables of his name drawn out in a monotone. It was Lark’s voice.

“Up here.”

He searched for a sign of her below him.

“Where?”

A thrashing in the brush precipitated her arrival. Even fire garb accentuated the round curves of her body. Her blond hair was braided loosely down her back, wisps sneaking out to curl gently around her face and soften the harsh edge of the orange hard hat perched on her head. Harry Eckles appeared on her heels.

“What are you two doing here?”

“Ouch,” Lark said, either at the tone of his voice or because a branch had scratched her. “I thought you’d be happy to see us.”

“You’re supposed to be at the Youth Mountain Camp.”

“We know,” Harry said. “But we saw your truck and thought maybe they’d moved the operation down here.”

Eric shook his head. “There’s a spot fire burning.” He noticed Lark rubbing the ankle she’d broken the summer before. “Are you all right?”

She nodded, spitting on her hand and rubbing vigorously at a spot under her sock near her boot line. “Stinging nettle. So where’s this fire?”

“Somewhere up there.” He jerked his head toward the summit. “You two should go back.”

“Why?” Harry asked. “It looks like you could use some help.” Harry patted the head of the Pulaski—a combination hoe and axe tool—that hung from his belt. Eric noticed Lark carried one too. They must have been outfitted at Prospect Point.

“Because they’re expecting you at the Youth Mountain Camp.” And because where he was headed was apt to be dangerous. In all honesty, while he would relish Harry’s company, he didn’t want to place Lark in any danger.

“We can radio them our change of plans,” Lark said, yanking her pant leg down firmly over the top of her boot. “The missing boys headed this way, right? Maybe we can head them off at the pass.”

Harry nodded.

She made sense. Short of ordering them to go back and admitting to be the chauvinist he was, Eric had little choice but to notify Butch Hanley that Lark and Harry were with him. If he’d hoped Butch would tell them to report as previously ordered, he was disappointed. The go-ahead was given, and the three of them climbed.

They followed the first wash until it dead-ended in a tangle of juniper and berry bushes and they were forced to backtrack. Not much was said. Everyone seemed to be saving their breath.

The next effort proved more successful. The second gulch wormed its way up the mountain, the slopes rising steeply on either side. Snags and dead trees littered the hillsides, and they huffed and puffed over fallen logs and around large, moss-covered boulders.

“Wait,” Lark said.

Eric turned to find her leaning against a large boulder, holding her side. “Tired?”

She made a face and pointed. Three-quarters of the way up the trunk of a dead pine tree, a male three-toed woodpecker pushed grass into a nesting cavity.

Eric raised his binoculars and trained them on the bird. The black and white barring on its sides, flanks, and back set it apart from similar species. Its black head, shoulders, wings, and rump appeared inky against the reddish-brown pine. A black tail displayed white outer-tail feathers spotted in black, and it had a white post-ocular stripe widening on the back of its neck. The three-toed woodpecker turned as though sensing the scrutiny, then cocked its head, offering Eric a clear view of its yellow cap and white mustache.

A gust of wind swirled through. The bird departed, and the trio moved on.

They’d only gone a few hundred yards when the landscape changed again. This time due to fire. Flames had ravaged the area. Smoke puddled around their boots, and the smell of charred wood assailed their nostrils. Small campfire-sized fires still burned on the hillside. The soil felt warm.

Eric radioed Hanley. Their location placed them midway up the steep ravine, and Butch told them to start scraping a fire line along the edge of the burn.

“You heard the man,” he said. “There are only three of us and no saws, so we’ll diagonal upslope on the south side. Keep the burned area on your right, and keep your eyes open. The fire’s up there somewhere.”

Pulaskis in hand, Harry and Lark started climbing, scraping a three-foot-wide boundary along the edge of the burned area with the hoe end of the tool. A narrow fire break, but in most cases enough to prevent a flare-up from jumping into unburned territory.

When Eric didn’t follow, Lark stopped digging and turned around. “Aren’t you coming?”

“I’ll be right behind you.” He gestured across the slope toward the other side of the gulch. “I’m going to scout the lower perimeter.”

“We’ll see you up top,” Harry said.

Eric turned back, working downslope along the lower edge of the burn. He wanted to make sure no fire lay below them. Like prevailing winds along a seaboard in the fall, mountain air currents followed patterns. On the coast, the winds surged toward the ocean early in the day to be pulled ashore in the afternoon by heat rising off the land. In the mountains, air flowed downslope in the morning, then roared up the gulches late in the day.

Reaching the bottom of the ravine, Eric started to turn around when a flash of yellow in the burned-out area caught his attention. Too low to the ground to be a tanager, he thought. Besides, the birds seem to have all fled.

A small spot fire, maybe?

He scrambled closer, skirting a still-glowing stump, following what appeared to be tire tracks in the dirt. Rounding a small boulder, he stopped abruptly. Bile rose in his throat, and he gagged. The charred remains of a body lay sprawled in the soot.

CHAPTER 8

Eric crabbed his way
across the slope, keeping his eye on the body.

Was it one of the missing boys?

He didn’t think so, based on the tatters of clothing that had survived the heat. The body appeared to belong to a firefighter.

Eric’s heart pounded.

Wayne?

Eric refused to believe it. Wayne might have headed up toward the mountain, but he was too experienced to be caught by the fire.

Nora?

Based on the radio conversation, she’d been out of touch for over an hour.

The closer Eric got to the corpse, the more convinced he was that it wasn’t Nora’s body. The size and stature suggested it was the body of a man. Then, from a stone’s throw, the white hard hat on the ground and the blue-handled Pulaski identified the victim as Wayne.

Eric dropped one knee to the ground and sucked in great gulps of air in spite of the smell. His boss lay faceup on the ground, bloated and puffed like a turkey after eight hours in a hot oven. The fire had cooked him.

Tears stung Eric’s eyes. Wayne had been more than his supervisor, more than a mentor, more than a friend. Wayne had stepped in and taken the place of the father Eric had barely known.

Leaning against a rock, Eric ignored the hard edges gouging his spine. Images filtered through his mind. Wayne at the office, a coffee cup clutched in his hand. Wayne catch-and-release fishing at Lily Lake, lounging in the hammock in the backyard, flashing his famous hundred-watt smile at a tourist before stopping traffic to let a herd of Rocky Mountain sheep cross the road.

“Damn it, Wayne.”

They’d been friends for seventeen years, since Eric had applied to work in the park. Wayne had seen past the young man who carried a chip on his shoulder and had helped Eric land a job in the park. For that alone Eric owed him.

Eric’s first season had been spent building campfires at the Moraine Park Campground. He enforced nightly noise curfews, policed bathrooms, and rousted raccoons out of the trash. Wayne had shown his face only once that summer, in August, when a mother bear and two cubs had hunkered down in the campground. Wayne had chased them off by shooting rubber bullets at the mother bear.

Eric smiled at the memory. The gun’s first round had clicked dry, and the mother bear had charged. Jacking the slide, Wayne explained how he always left the chamber empty for added safety.

Now Wayne was dead. Eric exhaled, then licked salt from his lips. There would be plenty of time to grieve. Right now he had a job to do, people to care for. Harry and Lark. Jackie and Tamara.

Eric tugged at his radio. “Butch, Nora, do you copy?”

“Yeah,” replied Butch.

“I found Wayne Devlin. He’s dead.”

“Where? How?” Nora asked. Eric hadn’t heard her voice on the radio since Trent had hollered for her well over an hour ago. He resisted asking her where she had been.

“Welcome back,” he said.

When she didn’t respond, he gave his approximate location. “From the best I can tell, Wayne got caught in the spot fire.”

“I’ll get someone up there as soon as I can,” replied Nora.

“What about Jackie?” Eric asked, worried Linda Verbiscar or some other member of the press might grab hold of the story and start snooping around.

“I’ll send someone over to tell her.”

“Sounds like a plan.”

“Are you okay?” The question sounded sincere.

“I’m numb.” Blood pounding in his ears filled his head with a dull roar. “I left Lark and Harry digging fire line. I need to catch up to them.”

“Maybe you need to stand down.”

Was she ordering him off the job? The roaring grew louder, and he realized that what he was hearing was not the pulsing of blood, but the wind driving fire. “Shit.”

“What?”

He stared up at the ridgeline. A column of black smoke spiraled toward a sky tinged yellow by advancing flame. He watched as fire crowned in the trees to the left of him. He dropped the radio. It caught on its hook and slammed against his chest, knocking the wind out of him. Scrambling up the north slope, binoculars banging against his ribs, he yelled for Lark and Harry. Brush tore at his clothing, scratching his bared wrist. Jumping over a fallen log, he scraped his shin. Hand over hand, he clawed his way up the mountain.

“Eric?” Nora’s voice blared from the radio.

He ignored her, shouting for Lark.

“Up here,” she answered.

He caught a flash of yellow through the trees. The arc of her arm. She and Harry had hacked their way twenty-five yards up the hillside.

Behind Eric, heat wafted up from the bottom of the gulch. Oppressive, unbearable heat. Arid and scorching, like the kind that rose in waves from the rocks of a sauna. Eric’s mouth went dry.

Harry stood above Lark on the slope, his expression indicating he had seen the blowup. He stared, mesmerized, at the spectacle, and Eric fought a desire to look behind him. From the corner of his eye, he could see flames curling and whipping as they hooked up the slope. There wasn’t time enough to turn around. Maybe not even time enough to run.

“Get into the black now,” Eric ordered. “Now!”

The words snapped Harry free of the spell, and he moved, darting for the safety zone.

Eric reached Lark and pushed her ahead of him onto charred ground. If Wag Dodge, the foreman on the Mann Gulch Fire, could save himself by lying down on the freshly burned ground, maybe they could too. Pushing Lark farther and farther into the black, Eric prayed for a miracle.

Scrambling over logs still glowing with embers, he listened to the roar of the fire grow. Like a high-speed passenger train, it roared toward them, drawn like a magnet to the spot fire burning somewhere uphill, the gulch acting as a chimney. The ravine boiled in fire, jets of flame shooting into the crowns of the trees. A wall of flame roiled toward them, burning everything in its path.

Harry stumbled and fell.

“Deploy!” Eric shouted. “Deploy!”

He dug in his pack for the foil shelter and ripped it free of its plastic cover. On his order, Lark and Harry had done the same. At this moment, bunched together on the charred hillside, each of them was on their own.

Eric anchored the shelter with his toes, yanking it over his back and pinning it to the ground in front of him with gloved hands. Embers pelted the flimsy tent. Wind ripped at the edges, spitting bits of charcoal into his face. Rifle shots rang through the air, the sound of trees exploding. The ground felt hot, his lungs burned, and he pushed his face closer to the charred dirt, rooting for cooler air.

He thought of Lark and Harry and Wayne. He thought of his mother in Lillehammer and how angry she would be if he died. He thought of Jackie and Tamara and, inexplicably, of a Norwegian potty-training song that his grandmother used to sing.

The wind took on the whine of a jet engine. Trees popped like firecrackers. The inside of the fire shelter glowed. Eric felt a sudden crushing weight as the fire rolled over them. He arched, cringing away from the heat, away from the death he feared. Then the roar diminished, the pressure ebbed, and the train passed on.

He lay quietly.

Nora’s voice crackled from the radio, then Lark called out. “Eric?”

“Don’t get out.”

“Trust me,” she said.

He smiled at the sarcasm in her voice. Humor served as first-aid cream for the soul.

“Harry,” he shouted. “Are you there?”

“Present and accounted for.”

“Everyone stay covered,” Eric ordered. “The worst is over, but there’s still fire out there.” He could feel its heat through the foil and see the glow under the edges of his tent. “It’ll be hot. We’re safer inside.”

“Now I know why they call them ‘brown and serve bags,’ ” Harry said.

Lark giggled, hysteria bubbling close to the surface. “I thought they were called ‘shake ‘n’bakes.’”

“Same difference.”

Eric thought of Wayne. He didn’t remember seeing any sign that Wayne had tried to deploy his shelter. No bag on the ground. Had he been caught that unaware?

The others didn’t know about Wayne, and Eric decided he should wait to tell them. Right now wasn’t the time to speculate on what had happened. He needed to maintain morale.

Eric maneuvered the radio out from under him and notified Nora they were okay, turning down the volume in case she said something about Wayne.

“You guys hang tight.”

“We’ll do that.”

The three of them hollered back and forth for what seemed like close to an hour before Eric’s shelter cooled enough so that he felt like sticking his head out from under the foil. After a tentative test, he sounded the “all clear.”

Harry peeled back his covering, shaking away the soot like a wet dog sheds water. His face, sandy hair, and clothes were still covered in ash.

“I should look so good,” Eric said.

“You might be surprised.”

Lark refused to come out.

“It’s okay,” Harry said.

“I feel safer in here.”

Eventually, she loosened her grip on the shelter, and Eric unwrapped her. Her blue eyes peered up at him from a blackened face streaked by tears.

“Oh, God,” she said, and he enveloped her in his arms. Sobs racked her body, and she wheezed and coughed. Finally, after a few minutes, she pulled away, wiping her face on her sleeve. “Sorry.”

“Hey, at least you waited until after the crisis to fall apart,” Harry said.

Eric brushed back a loose strand of her hair, thought of kissing her, then pushed himself up from the ground. “Does everyone still have their tools?”

Harry and Lark both raised their Pulaskis.

“Good, now here’s what’s happened.” Eric filled them in about Wayne. Lark cried again. Harry looked pained. “We’re going to hike back down the draw to his body. Keep your hard hats on. The biggest danger now is falling branches.”

The landscape looked surreal. Smoke eddied about the forest floor, like ground fog, and small fires burned all around them. Stumps flamed like candles. Logs smoldered, threatening to combust at the slightest provocation. Nora radioed to let them know a park law enforcement officer and ambulance crew were on their way.

“What about the boys?” Eric asked. She told him they were still missing.

As they hiked down the mountain, a cushion of ash stirred with every footstep, reminding Eric of the footage of Neil Armstrong’s walk on the moon. Imprints pressed into feather-fine dust left a preliminary record that man had conquered his environment. Remnants of trees twisted by fire hovered like turkey vultures over ground littered with the bones of smoldering logs. Heat hazed the air. Oddly, in some places clumps of trees stood untouched, spared from the onslaught.

Tornadoes did that, skipping over one home, wreaking havoc on another. Mother Nature unleashing her fury judiciously, or by chance.

Eric led them to where he’d found Wayne’s body. Amazingly, the fire had jumped between hillsides, skipping over the bottom of the ravine in its race to the top of the next hill, sparing an assault on the already dead. A small consolation.

Harry started forward, but Eric warned him back. There would be an investigation, and they needed to leave the scene intact. Hanging behind the others, Lark volunteered to go down and lead the ambulance crew up the hill.

Pacey Trent had arrived with the ambulance crew, a Park Service law enforcement officer, several sheriff’s deputies, and a twenty-man crew. The area was cordoned off, yellow crime scene tape wrapped around anything that hadn’t burned.

“We’ll take it from here,” Trent said. “You three look like you could use some rest.”

Eric looked at the others. “If it’s all the same to you, sir, I’d like to help look for the missing boys.”

Lark and Harry exchanged glances. “Us too.”

 

They joined the search at three, and by nine o’clock the teenagers still hadn’t been found. With the onset of night, the humidity rose, the fire laid down, and Butch Hanley declared it under control. Fifty percent contained, with a promise of full containment by the following afternoon. Doable, based on forecasts calling for rain or light snow.

An hour past dark, Vic called off the search. Lark and Harry headed into town with the other rescue team members. Eric parked himself in a leather rocking chair on the veranda of the Youth Mountain Camp lodge. He needed some time to think about things, about the day’s events, about Wayne Devlin’s untimely death. Maybe talking to Vic would help.

Anger welled up inside him when he remembered that no one had listened to him earlier when he’d expressed concern over Wayne’s absence. Maybe if someone had and they’d sent out a search party, Wayne wouldn’t be dead. Maybe if Eric himself hadn’t been so easy to convince. Maybe.

To the north, Eagle Cliff Mountain still glowed. The fire had settled down into hundreds of small fires dotting the mountaintop. The fires ranged in size, anywhere from pickup-truck-sized to as small as a campfire you’d roast marshmallows over. Eric would lay odds that somewhere up there a firefighter was roasting hot dogs.

“Whew,” Vic said, joining him on the porch. “I am sure glad this day is over.” He sat down rubbing his eyes, then stroked his hand over his mustache.

“Me too.” Eric rocked, gently, mostly because the chair sat low to the ground and his knees folded close to his chest with the motion. He jerked his head toward the mountain. “Do you think those boys are up there?”

“Nope.”

“Me either.”

“If you want my opinion, those boys lit out for home. It won’t surprise me if they pick them up in Castle Rock tomorrow.”

Eric remembered Vic saying one of the boys was from that area. “What’s the story behind these kids, anyway?”

“You mean all of the kids, or the two that are missing?”

“Either. Both.”

Vic settled back in his chair. “The Youth Mountain Camp is tied to a mentoring program run by the city and county of Denver. Our primary goal is to provide a mountain experience to kids from the inner city. Most of our campers have been in some sort of trouble, usually minor offenses. These kids are more in need of guidance than anything else.”

“Do the mentors spend time up here?”

“We try.” From the disappointment in his voice, Eric guessed not many of the police officers found time.

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