Pyro (29 page)

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Authors: Earl Emerson

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68. BATTALION GOSSIP

Cynthia Rideout

J
ANUARY 6,
M
ONDAY, 1259 HOURS

         
This morning everybody was talking about the firefighter in Ballard who slid off a wet roof, fell two stories, and broke her back in two places. She may end up paralyzed. Dolan almost died. Tow could have died with him. It sure makes you think about the job.

The other news is Chief Hertlein turned off another fan. Up north. It was a house fire, and apparently it was real smoky. The word was firefighters were bailing out windows and doors left and right.

Wollf convened a station meeting this morning. He said it was true his brother was in prison, his mother had been murdered, and his father had died in a fire in 1978. He said it was also true he didn’t want to talk about any of those things. He said he wouldn’t be answering any more personal questions after the meeting, so if we had any, we’d better ask now. Towbridge said he’d been called at home by a couple of media people and what did Wollf want him to say? “My friends won’t say anything,” Wollf told him.

Gliniewicz said, “Let’s be frank here. Everybody read those articles the other day. I mean, didn’t we? So what’s the big deal?”

“Anything else?” Wollf asked.

Slaughter turned around and left the room. After the door closed, Zeke spoke in that mellow voice of his. “I have a question.”

“What is it, Zeke?” Wollf asked.

“Well . . . uh . . . you talked to this person, didn’t you? Didn’t you talk to the torch workin’ our district?”

“I did.”

“Did he say he was planning to quit?”

Towbridge laughed. “He ain’t gonna quit, Zeke. He ain’t never goin’ to quit.”

“Why not?”

“ ’Cause he’s a fruit loop, that’s why not. He can’t stop hisself.”

“I don’t understand why he don’t get tired and quit,” Zeke persisted. “It’s a lot of work, what he’s doin’. It don’t make sense.”

“No shit, it don’t make sense.” Towbridge laughed. “That’s why he’s a fruit loop.”

Somebody said, “But they have the guy’s name. Surely it’s only a matter of time before he gets picked up. His face is all over the TV. I saw it this morning on CNN.”

“Maybe he ain’t a
guy,
” Towbridge said. “When the lieutenant ran him down, he was wearing a dress and a bra.”

“I didn’t see a bra,” Wollf said. We all laughed. Wollf was in a bad mood, but he was funny too.

Later in the morning Lieutenant Wollf went over last month’s report with me. He gave me above average marks and told me to stick with it. Yaaaaay!

J
ANUARY 7,
T
UESDAY, 0046 HOURS

I can’t sleep. I’ve been thinking about a phone call I received from Gwen Verdings. Gwen works at Thirteen’s on the other shift, so she’s plugged into all the battalion gossip. Her chief told them that our chief, Eddings, had just had a lawsuit filed against her by a woman from the class in front of mine. It seems Eddings used to visit this firefighter after lights-out, that she used to sit on her bed and touch her. She asked Eddings to leave, but Eddings said—and this is Gwen’s quote, “It’s just us girls here,” which is what she said when she was touching me.

Gwen said Eddings asked her to sign a statement saying she’d never done anything like that to her. “Are you going to sign?” I asked Gwen.

“I don’t know. The trouble is two years ago she did do something like that to me. I don’t know if Eddings forgot or if she wants me to lie for her or what. Maybe she doesn’t think visiting your bunk and touching you is wrong.”

“She did it to me too,” I said.

“Can you imagine what would happen if a male officer did that? He’d lose his job in a heartbeat. You think this suit has a chance?”

“If we both stepped forward and testified against Eddings, it would.”

“For a long time I didn’t understand why they don’t give her a desk job. But then I overheard a couple of chiefs talking about it. They think she’s less of a liability to the department if they leave her in operations. Out where she might get somebody killed. Isn’t that a hoot?”

“It’s not a hoot if you have to work with her. Gwen, what are you going to do?”

“I haven’t decided. I don’t want to lie, but I don’t want to get dragged into this lawsuit either.”

It’s become clear why Eddings wants to fire me. I’m just one more female firefighter who can confirm allegations of sexual harassment against her. But if I get canned, it will look like anything I say is sour grapes.

69.THE DOSIMETER

         
Right away you could tell these fires were different.

Same guy. Same technique. Same materials.

But you could tell now he was trying to hurt somebody, whereas in the past, excepting the night where Dolan and Towbridge went through the roof, the fires in our district had been pretty much haphazard targets of opportunity. You could see in our first three calls today the goal was to create confusion, tie up rigs, to hurt people.

Ladder 3’s first call was to a U.S. postal box at Twenty-third and Union outside the post office door. We took it on a single. Smoke was pouring out of the box. We tore the door off the box and retrieved the unburned mail. There wasn’t much, but it was a federal crime and we needed to keep the site secure until the feds arrived, which took us out of action for the next forty minutes, during which Crapps, our detail, went ballistic listening to the sirens all around us.

“Shit. We’re missing everything,” he said. Rideout and Towbridge exchanged weary looks. There were some people who never got enough action, and rangy, basketball-playing Crapps was one of them.

During the hour we were out of service, our section of the city had four more arsons.

While we waited for the postal inspectors, I thought about Vanessa. I’d been thinking about her for days. Thinking about how nice she was to me, how accepting of me. About how good she made me feel when we were together. Thinking about the way I’d frozen her out. The way I’d hung up on her. The way things were but didn’t have to be. The way things always ended up.

I thought about it all morning, and then when we were on our way back from the Red Apple, I had Towbridge stop the rig in the bus zone while I dashed across Twenty-third to the flower shop at the corner on Jackson. I bought flowers and had them sent to her work. I tore up three cards trying to get my apology right. I finally settled for saying I was sorry I’d acted like a jerk, that she was the best thing that ever happened to me, and that I hoped she would give me a second chance.

It would be nothing short of a miracle if she would.

By ten o’clock at night, when I still hadn’t heard from her, I realized she was either waiting for me to call or she didn’t want anything more to do with me.

When we finally got put back into service, all the units around us were out on alarms. “Damn it. We missed all the fires,” griped Crapps.

“We usually catch up,” Towbridge said, laughing.

“I don’t get it,” said Rideout. “They have his picture. Hasn’t anybody seen him?”

“Maybe he’s wearing a different shade of lipstick,” said Towbridge.

The city was on hyperalert. People were out looking for the firebug, groups of young men and women on almost every corner. Twenty-third and Cherry had so many people cluttering the sidewalks it looked like the early stages of a riot.

We parked on the ramp. There was no point in backing the rig into the station. I signed us into the daybook and was headed toward the computer in the inspection room to write my fire report when I saw Rideout and Crapps in the beanery staring at the large message board under the TV. Somebody had scrawled across the board,
You basturds!!!! feel my rath tonight!!!!!!!

A long red arrow pointed from the message to the chalk tray, where we found a small tubular object that looked like a fountain pen, dingy and worn from handling. No one else seemed to know what it was, but I knew at once.

“God,” said Rideout. “What if he’s still in the station?”

“I got a gun out in my car.” Crapps made a run for the basement stairs.

“Call the dispatcher,” I said to Towbridge. “Put us out of service and tell them we think the pyro has been in the station. We need SPD and maybe a dog team.”

“How did he get in?” Rideout asked.

“I can think of at least two ways to get into a fire station without leaving a trace,” I said.

“What if he has a gun?” Rideout asked as I launched a search of the building.

“He couldn’t possibly have enough bullets,” I replied. I could feel the same poison I’d felt the night I was seventeen years old and beat Rickie Morrison half to death in less than a minute.

I searched the officers’ quarters first, then worked my way around the floor in a counterclockwise direction, opening closet doors, checking bathroom stalls. By the time I got to the basement stairs, Crapps was pointing a .357 Smith & Wesson at my chest. “What the hell are you doing? You know you can’t have a gun in the station,” I said. “Get rid of that.”

“Jesus,” said Rideout.

The SPD dog team arrived, and a German shepherd named Otto went through the station like a blur.

“What’s this?” asked a police officer, picking up the tubular object that had been left on our chalkboard, holding it by the edges.

“It’s a dosimeter,” I said. Everyone in the room looked at me. “To measure radiation levels. Years ago department members used to carry them.” I’d seen one among my father’s effects.

This one had sfd stamped on it as well as a department ID number. Everybody in the department had a four-digit number that followed them to retirement. The number went onto all your personal paperwork and was inputted to the computer each morning to tell the dispatchers who was working on which rigs.

When Attack 6 returned, Slaughter walked into the beanery. “What?” he said. Gliniewicz and Zeke piled up in the doorway behind him.

“We had a visitor,” I said.

Crapps pointed to our message board.

“You ever see this before?” I said.

“It’s a dosimeter,” Slaughter said.

“It’s
your
dosimeter. That’s your number.”

“We turned those in years ago.”

“Somebody found an old dosimeter and decided to print your number on it?”

“I guess. I don’t know.”

LaSalle and Connor, from Fire Investigation, came through the door.

I said, “We think the pyro was in our station sometime in the last hour. He left this.”

“He coulda got it anywhere,” Slaughter said. “Who knows what the department did when we turned them in? Probably threw them in the trash out behind Station Ten.”

“So he goes through the pile, saves one for twenty-five years, and it turns out to be yours?” I asked.

“He’s a psycho.”

“Wouldn’t it be more likely you had some sort of contact with him and you dropped this? He picked it up?”

“You’re full of shit.”

“He told me a firefighter in civvies beat him up the night my father died. That wouldn’t have been you, would it?”

“Abso-fuckin’-lutely not.”

We stared at each other. I knew there was a reasonable chance Steve Slaughter was the man who put my father into that burning basement.

The main phone rang. Zeke picked it up in the watch office, listened for a moment and said, “Can the truck go in service?”

I nodded.

Zeke spoke into the phone. A moment later we began hearing the tones on the radio scanner. A fire call. It was 0122 hours. As Slaughter and I left the room, LaSalle said, “You know what I think?”

I turned back. “What do you think?”

“I think this asshole is self-destructing. I think he knows he can’t go home and he’s going to do it all in one big last fling. You guys watch yourselves.”

70. RUB-A-DUB-DUB

According to Earl Ward

         
Tonight I drive over to Cherry and park two blocks away for a good getaway, then go into The Harvey through the side entrance. Two young men step out and hold the door for me. My disguise fools them. I hobble in, making them wait.

When I get to Hollywood, my talent is going to be appreciated. Producers will pay for my meals. I’ll get blowjobs from groupies in the back of taxicabs. Jaclyn will come crawling back. I may even give her a part in my first feature.

I check my supplies on floors one and two. Paint thinner. Discarded furniture. I’ve got the oily rags all set to go in the basement. I was so lucky to find this place. The ongoing remodel and the fact that they ran out of funds and had to stop was perfect. Two units are empty on floor three, one right over the main entranceway. This is godderned perfect.

I climb stairs that smell like barbecued ribs, sawdust, and urine. When two women come out of a unit on two, I pass them in a hitching gait. I tell you, there’s no respect in the country for the elderly. Absolutely none. Ha ha ha. I walk past the sawhorses and the tools in the top floor apartment, past the items I’ve separated for my own use, the sacks of mortar mix and paint cans, the turpentine.

I take my lock off the unit and go inside.

Sometimes when I think about what I’m about to do, I feel like my bowels are going to cut loose. It scares me, but then these people haven’t given me much choice, have they? In minutes I’ll start the ball. Then we’ll dance, Mr. Wollf. We’ll dance and I’ll settle me some scores. Period.

First, I check the babies in the tub. Wrapped in pastel pink and blue blankets. Three very quiet babies.

The scanner tells me Ladder 3 and Attack 6 are both in service.

I dash downstairs to the basement, passing the young women on two. I light the oily rags and race back upstairs screaming, “Fire! Fire!”

The two young women take up the call and begin skipping up and down the hallway pounding on doors, shrieking, “Fire! Fire! Fire!”

As soon as two clears of people, I step back downstairs and light the vacant apartments, one at either end.

Now all I have to do is sit in my window with my babies and wait. Oh, yeah.

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