Chasing Fire Page 94
“I guess I have to call my father. Word travels, and he’ll get worried.”
“I talked to him before I came up. We went over it.”
“He came by? Why didn’t he—”
“I called him.”
She faced him with one quick pivot. “You did what? What do you mean calling my father about all this before I—”
“It’s called male bonding. You’ll never get it. I believe women are as capable as men, deserve equal pay—and that one day, should be sooner than later, in my opinion, the right woman can and should be leader of the free world. But you can’t understand the male bonding rituals any more than men can understand why the vast majority of women are obsessed with shoes and other footwear.”
“I’m not obsessed with shoes, so don’t try to make this something cultural or—or gender-based.”
“You have three pairs of jump boots. Two is enough. You have four pairs of running shoes. Again, two’s plenty.”
“I’m breaking in a third pair of jump boots before the first pair gets tossed so I don’t get boot-bit. And I have four pairs of running shoes because... you’re trying to distract me from the point.”
“Yes, but I’m not done. You also have hiking boots—two pairs—three pairs of sandals and three of really sexy heels. And this is just on base. God knows what you’ve got in your closet at home.”
“You’ve been counting my shoes? Talk about obsessed.”
“I’m just observant. Lucas wants you to call him when you get a chance. Leave him a text or voice message if he’s in the air, and he’ll come by to see you tonight. He likes knowing I’ve got your back. You’d have mine, wouldn’t you?” he asked before she could snap at him.
So she sighed. “Yes. You defeat me with your reason and your diatribe over shoes. Over which I am not obsessed.”
“You also have a good dozen pairs of earrings, none of which you wear routinely. But we can discuss that another time.”
“Oh, go away. Go study something.”
“You could give me a rigging lesson. I want to work on getting certified.”
“Maybe. Come back in an hour, and we’ll—”
When the siren sounded she stepped back. “I guess not. I’m switching to Ops.”
“I’ll walk you over. Here.”
He handed her her cap and sunglasses, then put on his own while she frowned at them.
“What is this?”
“A disguise.” He grinned at her. “Dobie wants you to wear them. Let’s give him a break, or he might order fake mustaches and clown noses off the Internet.”
She rolled her eyes, but put them on. “And what, this makes us look like twins? Where are your tits?”
“You’re wearing them, and may I say they look spectacular on you.”
“I can’t disagree with that. Still, everybody should stop worrying about Rowan and do their jobs.”
By four P.M., she was jumping fire, doing hers.
23
July burned. Hot and dry, the wild ignited, inflamed by lightning strikes, negligence, an errant spark bellowed by a gust of wind.
For eighteen straight days and nights Zulies jumped and fought fire. In Montana, in Idaho, Colorado, California, the Dakotas, New Mexico. Bodies shed weight, lived with pain, exhaustion, injury, battling in canyons, on ridges, in forests.
The constant war left little time to think about what lived outside the fire. The manhunt for Leo Brakeman heading into its third week hardly mattered when the enemy shot firebrands the size of cannonballs or swept on turbulent winds over barriers so effortfully created.
Along with her crew, Rowan rushed up the side of Mount Blackmore, like a battalion charging into hell. Beside her another tree torched off, spewing embers like flaming confetti. They felled burning trees on the charge, sawed and cut the low-hanging branches the fire could climb like snakes.
Can’t let her climb, Rowan thought as they hacked and dug. Can’t let her crown.
Can’t let her win.
So they fought their way up the burning mountain, sweat running in salty rivers in the scorched air.
When Gull climbed up the line to her position, she pulled down her bandanna to pour water down her aching throat.
“The line’s holding.” He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “A couple of spots jumped it, but we pissed them out. Gibbons is going to leave a couple down there to scout for more, and send the rest up to you.”
“Good deal.” She took another drink, scanning and counting yellow shirts and helmets through the smoke. On the left the world glowed, eerie orange with an occasional spurt of flame that picked out a hardened, weary face, tossed it into sharp relief.
In that moment, she loved them, loved them all with a near religious fervor. Every ass and elbow, she thought, every blister and burn.
Her eyes lit when she looked at Gull. “Best job ever.”
“If you don’t mind starving, sweating and eating smoke.”
Grinning, she shouldered her Pulaski. “Who would? Head on up. We’re still making line here so—” She broke off, grabbed his arm.
It spun out of the orange wall, whipped by the wind. The funnel of flame whirled and danced, spinning a hundred feet into the air. In seconds, screaming like a banshee, it uprooted two trees.
“Fire devil. Run! ” She pointed toward the front of the line as its wind blasted the furnace heat in her face. She grabbed her radio, watching the flaming column’s spin as she shouted to the crew, “Go up, go up! Move your asses. Gibbons, fire devil, south flank. Stay clear.”
It roared toward the line, a tornadic gold light as gorgeous as it was terrifying, spewing flame, hurling fiery debris. The air exploded with the call of it, with its lung-searing heat. She watched Matt go down, saw Gull haul him up, take his weight. Keeping her eye on the fire devil, she shifted, got her shoulder under Matt’s other arm.
“Just my ankle. I’m okay.”
“Keep moving! Keep moving!”
It snaked toward them, undulating. They’d never outrun it, she thought, not with Matt stumbling and limping between them. Behind Matt’s back, Gull’s hand gripped her elbow, and in acknowledgment, she did the same.
This is it. Even thinking it she pushed up the ridge. No time for emergency gear, for the shelters.
“There!” Gull jerked her, with Matt between them, to the right, and another five precious feet. He shoved her under the enormous boulder first, then Matt, before crawling under behind them.