Summer of Fire (37 page)

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Authors: Linda Jacobs

BOOK: Summer of Fire
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“When?” Her voice sounded small.

The pressure changed in his ears as the outer door opened, then slammed. “As soon as I can . . . “ From the front room, he heard Karrabotsos talking and Garrett’s deep baritone.

“What does ‘soon’ mean?” Georgia asked.

“Tonight,” Deering promised, “I’ll be there tonight.” He’d breathe the blessed smokeless air and listen to the Portneuf’s peaceful chatter.

Heavy footsteps came down the hall. “Deering?”

“A minute,” he called, and more softly, “I love you, hon. I’ll see you this evening.”

Garrett rapped on the door. “Where are you? I thought you were taking a leak.”

“Who’s there with you?” Georgia went suspicious.

Garrett opened the door and boomed, “We need to get in the air.”

“I see,” she said.

“See what?” Deering held up a hand at Garrett, who nodded and pulled the door closed.

“I have to go, Georgia. The North Fork is going to hit Old Faithful today and I have to fly Garrett Anderson . . . “

“It’s always the same, isn’t it? No matter what I need from you, there’s always a fire somewhere that’s more important.”

For a moment, Deering thought she’d hung up, but there was no dial tone. He heard muted strains of music from the little stereo he’d given her a few years ago to listen to while she quilted. There was a subtle change in the sound, as though she’d put the receiver down on the table and walked away. “Georgia!” Deering shouted.

She hadn’t hung up, but he did, slamming Johnny’s phone onto the cradle.

He sat for a long moment with his head in his hands. He had to fly. His livelihood depended on it, and whether Georgia liked it or not, hers did too. He’d make this one flight, he bargained, like he’d planned, and then go home to her. He’d made a promise.

When he came out, Garrett was polite enough not to ask questions. They walked in silence to the Huey, where Deering did his preflight and runup and hoped his hands weren’t trembling noticeably.

 

 

 

 

Devon thought that if Clare were still at the geyser basin, she would be out there with the firefighters. Through the glass rear door that led out of the Old Faithful Inn lobby, the sky looked even darker than it had when she’d come inside just after one p.m.

Her mother’s accusations still made her chest ache. For years, both her parents and Elyssa had believed the worst of her. According to Annalise McIntyre, whose folks had dumped her in the loonie bin for acting out inappropriately, group therapy was full of “dysfunctional families.”

Last night when it had gotten too cold and scary, Devon had sneaked, shivering, into the hotel. Near dawn, a patrolling security guard had rousted her from a couch on the lobby balcony. “Go on now, miss, we don’t have no sleeping in here.”

He’d thought she was a vagrant.

This afternoon the smell of smoke permeated even inside the Inn. Members of the press came out from filming the vacant dining room. With a small shock, Devon saw they wore white napkins tied around the lower half of their faces as filters.

“You think maybe we should get out of here?” she asked a red-haired woman reporter in a jeans jacket. Maybe she and her ponytailed companion with the video would give her a ride out. She’d looked for Mom until all the buses had gone.

The reporter shook her head and headed with the others toward the stairs. Devon checked out their conversation.

“Superlative vantage point . . . “

“Special exception . . . “

Devon ducked into the cavernous dining room with wagon wheel chandeliers and a huge fireplace. Like the others had, she grabbed a napkin off a table setting. Hurrying to keep up, she chased the press upstairs.

On the third floor, she followed the journalists as they stepped over a chain and went up rickety-looking stairs through the open atrium. Devon didn’t look down as she climbed. At the top was a tree house, complete with gingerbread scrollwork. Out through a door so small she had to duck, and onto the inn’s roof. Forceful gusts of wind struck. She stopped and stared at the column of smoke pouring up from the fire that seemed to be just beyond the horizon. One more set of wooden stairs took her to the widow’s walk astride the highest peak of the inn.

A mounting roar announced the approach of a plane from the west. Flying low, the tanker dumped a load of red liquid in a long sweeping pass. A rosy fog hung, streamers emerging from the bottom of the cloud as it fell to earth. The smoke lay down and Devon breathed relief.

In a moment, it swirled up black with the fire’s renewed fury.

The North Fork couldn’t be half a mile away.

With the rising wind and deepening darkness, it grew colder. On the opposite side of the roof, the ponytailed man videotaped the people wearing napkin masks. Even though the smoke stung her eyes and throat, Devon clutched her own napkin in a sweaty hand.

The woman reporter began taping. “This is Carol Leeds, Billings Live Eye,” she intoned importantly. “Only a handful of tourists remain to watch the geyser’s show at Old Faithful Inn this afternoon, where formerly there were hundreds of spectators.” A double ring of empty benches surrounded the geyser. “The evacuation was announced at dawn. All morning, busloads of visitors and employees have pulled away from the loading zone in front of this landmark hotel. This does not mean that all is quiet, though, for firefighters have ringed the inn.”

From below, they sent flaring arcs of water to break on the roof and sheet down. Farther away, another group covered small wooden cabins in foam that looked like shaving cream.

Devon looked for her mother, checking for a firefighter who was a lot smaller than the others. Last night she’d slipped up and admitted to being scared when Mom went to the fire station. Pretending it didn’t matter had been part of her defense. That had worked pretty well . . . until back in July when Mom came home and said she’d seen a man die. Thinking it could have been Mom who had burned to death had shocked Devon, so much she hadn’t known what to say.

She’d said nothing. Gone to her room and cried. Come out later with her eyes kohl-rimmed to hide the evidence.

If her parents hadn’t cared enough about her to stay together, she sure wasn’t going to let them know anything bothered her. Her Dad had prissy, flat-assed Elyssa who sat on his knee and acted like Devon had bad breath when she went to hug her hello. Now, Mom had taken up with some Steve guy who lived thousands of miles away.

That scared her more than anything else. She’d seen Mom go on some dates since the divorce, but there was something very different about the way she looked at Steve.

And he at her.

The sky grew more garish by the minute. The sun appeared as an occasional bloody disc. Behind the southwest ridge, Devon caught a glimpse of orange, the barest tongue of color licking forth and then being swallowed by smoke.

The reporter continued. “The employee dormitory stands in the shadow of the larger inn.” The cameraman filmed the dark shingled barracks. “If it survives this day, the summer workers will not be back until spring, for the Park Service has determined that no matter what happens, they will close the Old Faithful complex for the season.”

Devon heard the roar of a plane, but she couldn’t locate it. Another flame leaped the ridge, and she realized that the sound was coming from the fire, an unearthly shriek that sounded as though she were standing in front of a jet engine. There were plenty of firefighters here, but the fire didn’t look as though anybody could do anything about it.

Some still tried. Helicopters ferried back and forth, dipping their canvas buckets into the Firehole River, then flying to dump their loads and return. As the North Fork crested the ridge, the choppers looked like angry insects, impotent before the screaming monster.

 

 

 

 

Deering took off into the wind and was reminded of Black Saturday when he’d flown Garrett and been forced to turn back. As before, they flew into the park along the Madison River, with blackened forest beneath. To get to Old Faithful, he made a wide swing northwest around the fire front. He still felt shaky after his close call with the tanker.

Garrett sat stolidly in the left seat, swiveling his bald head. From the Hellroaring at the far northeast corner of the park to the Snake River Complex in the Teton National Forest, the entire horizon had exploded with mushroom clouds.

Deering tried to concentrate on flying. He came in toward Old Faithful from the northwest, crossing the Firehole and flying along the open meadows crisscrossed with boardwalks. Garrett pointed to the lower parking lot where several TV vans were parked, satellite antennae on their roofs. “Look at those bloodsuckers. Hoping this place burns so they can get their shot at the big time.”

A sudden downdraft gripped the Huey and the negative Gs increased. Deering rolled on throttle and steered to get out of the convection system before the fire front. He wished he could take his attention off flying and check Garrett’s face. They said these fire generals had nerves of steel.

The helicopter jittered and shook.

Of course, a lot of folks thought Deering had brass balls, as well, but he could feel . . .

The thing was, he didn’t want to feel. Not to think about how old this chopper was, and how flying it suddenly reminded him of the turbulence over the Chu Pong massif just before he’d sweep down into the Ia Drang Valley. “Fuck you, GI.” The sound of VC Charlie, latched onto their frequency, just as Deering was about to make a tight approach. Below, in the landing zone carved out of jungle canopy, he’d take on injured soldiers no older than he was. Looking back, they’d all been kids.

Flying over Old Faithful, the trembling started in the pit of Deering’s stomach. It spread up through his chest and down his arms until he had to grip the controls hard, trying not to let his sweating palms slip. It had been a long time since he’d felt the old battle fear and it didn’t make sense.

Or maybe it did. The prospect of life without Georgia scared the living shit out of him.

He forced himself to concentrate on the turbulent sky and realized that Garrett was speaking through the headset. “ . . . thing working?”

“Yeah, Garrett?”

“Guys down there. It looks like they’re getting cut off.”

Deering looked where Garrett was pointing and tried to focus on a group of four yellow-shirted people on the ground. They were inside a roped-off area that surrounded a small meadow. Two knelt in the weeds and the others were standing, writing on clipboards. “They don’t seem to realize,” Garrett said in a worried voice.

Deering couldn’t afford this, absolutely must not fall apart in front of Garrett Anderson. If he did, his fire charter days would be over. He inhaled through his mouth and let it out slowly, imagining that he was blowing out the knots inside. Some people had panic attacks, going mindless in the middle of their kitchen, but it had never happened to him. He’d thought it a sign of weakness.

The night he’d come home from Vietnam, Georgia had cooked his favorite Greek meatballs, poured stout red wine from a jug, and lighted candles on the porch that overlooked the Portneuf. Drawing her against him in the creaking metal glider, he’d made a mental note to put some WD-40 on it in the morning. The old place had gone to hell without a man to take care of such things.

“Aren’t you happy to be home?” She snuggled close and he felt the warm curve of her breast.

“Of course.”

“You seem . . . preoccupied.”

He’d left that damned jungle, a godforsaken place where men’s feet rotted in their boots and souls were etched, on the other side of the planet. Unfortunately, he already knew that distance had failed to silence the jerky cacophony of shot-out rotors, the rattle of incoming machine gun fire, and the screams of nineteen-year-old Johnny Washington who’d died in the seat beside Deering.

“Don’t you feel better now that nobody’s going to shoot at you?” Georgia looked at him with soft green eyes, her hair a red-gold cloud around her luminous face.

He opened his mouth to tell her how wonderful it did feel to be safe, but he stopped. It was then, at that peaceful moment with the river running by and a sliver of moon peeking through the top of a cottonwood that Deering realized.

Waking up in the morning without the prospect of combat was dead boring.

It did not make sense, therefore, that on this afternoon over Old Faithful, he should be hyperventilating and sweating like a grunt under fire.

“Are you all right?” Garrett asked.

“Must have gotten hold of some bad chow,” he managed. Turning to the man in the left seat, he lifted a hand to wipe his brow. “I’m gonna have to set her down.”

 

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

 

September 7

 

 

 

Clare watched the Huey’s rotors wind down on the Old Faithful Inn parking lot.

“They’re bailing out of the sky,” Javier Fuentes said. He kept the hose from the foam tank trained onto the employee cabin near the one where Clare was staying.

With a worried glance skyward, she realized that no other planes or helicopters were in sight. Without air support, the battle could be lost.

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