—acting on instinct more than anything.
He was hardly able to see through the
billowing smoke caught up like a black
tornado. It was a small building away
from the collapsed tent. Some ash or
flaming piece of rubble must have
popped over and set it on fire. The roof
was blazing, yellow flames licked up the
wall. Black smoke, outlined by the very
blaze from which it came, roiled from
the sagging door.
“She’s in there! Patty! She’s in
there!” An older woman stood with
black streaks on her face, wringing her
hands, tears making shiny paths through
the soot. Her hair was thin and gray and
her face stretched in a shiny mask of
shock and terror. She reached an
ineffectual hand toward the fiery
building that was hardly bigger than a
garage.
“Who is it?” Wyatt demanded,
already dumping a bucket of water over
him. Soaking his clothing and hair in an
effort to keep from going up in flames
himself. Because he knew he was going
inside. “How old? How big?”
“My dog. My Patty!”
He snatched another pail and poured
it over himself again, hardly noticing the
frigid water. “Kind of dog? Where?”
The
woman
stammered
out
information—enough that he knew he
was looking for a mid-sized brown dog
. . . but she was so terrified and upset he
could hardly get details.
Wyatt started toward the smoking
black door, the cascade of water already
drying from the immense heat. A strong
hand yanked him back and he nearly
stumbled into Fence.
“You aren’t fixing to go in there,”
Fence said. “Over my motherfucking
dead body.”
“Gotta try,” Wyatt said, shaking off
the large hand.
“You’re bloody crocked.” Quent was
there, panting. His face was black and
his hair stuck up in tufts. “Nothing in
there’s still alive. If you go in, you aren’t
coming back out.”
“Gotta try,” Wyatt said again. And he
started toward the black doorway.
“It’s
a
damned
dog
!” someone
shouted. “You’re risking your life for a
dog
!”
And that was precisely why he kept
going. Because if it were Dantès . . .
Calm stole over him. Clamping a
mass of sodden shirt over his nose and
mouth, offering up a prayer, Wyatt
charged inside.
The minute he breached the wall of
ugly smoke, he felt the searing heat. It
pressed
in
on
him,
heavy
and
suffocating, instantly turning his cold wet
clothes steamy.
Pitch-dark. He took two steps and
stumbled over something. As he crashed
to the floor, he knew he’d found Patty.
And as a flaming wall collapsed,
tumbling over him in a rage of flames, he
figured this was it. He wasn’t coming
out.
C
arrying a sloshing pail, Remy pushed
her way through the crowd just in time to
see Wyatt dash into a flaming building.
“Wyatt!” she screamed, flinging her
supply of water wildly onto a patch of
flame as she ran. Someone yanked her
back and she found herself face-to-face
with Quent. “Did he just go
in
there?”
she panted.
He didn’t need to reply; his face was
set with fear, streaked with ash. He
merely shook his head, pursing his lips
as if in an effort to stave off some other
emotion.
“Bloody sodding fool
.
”
It was
a
whisper,
but
Remy
heard
it
nevertheless. “Went after a dog trapped
inside.”
She stared. There was no way any
living creature was still alive in that
building. There was no way anyone
could survive stepping even a foot
inside.
Did you really want to end it that
badly, Wyatt?
Then Quent’s words registered.
A
dog.
Oh, God, now she understood. If it
were Dantès . . .
And she knew Wyatt. He’d at least
have to try, the damned idiot.
“Keep working!” shouted someone.
The order spurred her into action—
there was nothing else she could do
other than stand there and wait. And
pray. And try to put the rest of the
damned fire out.
And try not to be terrified that it was
because of her that this fire had even
started in the first place. They’d found
her. The Strangers knew who she was.
And now the only person she really
trusted had run himself into a flaming
building. It would be a miracle—beyond
a miracle—if he ever came back out.
Numbly, Remy turned to fill her
bucket from the ineffectual hose. Just as
she spun back, taking three short steps to
hand it off to someone, there was a loud
crash followed by a rolling wave of
heat.
“Motherfucker,” someone breathed.
Her heart in her throat, already
knowing what she was going to see,
Remy looked over. The building into
which Wyatt had dashed was now
nothing more than a vee-shaped,
collapsed pile of rubble.
She dropped the bucket, running
automatically toward the renewed blaze,
into where she’d last seen him.
Wyatt.
No, please, no!
But something—
some
one
—hooked her arm, yanking her
away so hard her head snapped and the
crystal whipped sharply on its chain,
slamming against her back.
She looked up into Ian’s face. His
cold expression sent a bolt of fear
through her. She tried to pull away,
stomping down hard on him with her
bare foot, and wished she was still
wearing her silver shoes. The spiky heel
would have done some damage. “Let me
go, Ian.”
“Not a chance,” he said, edging her
away from the activity. “You heard what
they said. Turn you in or Envy’s toast.”
In the eerie light of the leaping flames,
his smile was frightening.
She opened her mouth to shout, but it
was lost in the roar of the fire battle.
W
yatt closed his eyes. The unbearable
heat from the flames seeped into him . . .
through fabric onto skin and then muscle
and bone, finally settling deep in his
organs. He felt it with every pump of his
heart, every pulse of blood in his veins.
Eating into his liver and lungs. Searing
into his very marrow.
The weight of the ceiling or whatever
it was that crashed onto him pinned
Wyatt in place. He couldn’t move even
as the fire dug into flesh and bone. He
could see the blaze dancing along his
arm, felt it nibbling on his hair and
searing into his nostrils, eyelids, and
ears.
Finally
.
He closed his eyes and the world
behind his lids was just the same: bright,
blazing light, heat, shadows. As he slid
into a final sleep, pieces of his life
filtered through his mind in a gentle
lullaby.
Cathy at the altar, sparkling in white,
glowing with love . . . the dark black
heat of a Middle East night, a heavy
weapon resting on his shoulder . . . The
weight of his fire gear, hose in hand,
boots clumping on his feet . . .
Loki as a pup, with his mischievous
eyes and too-big ears . . . holding Abby
in his arms for the first time, her soft,
fuzzy head hardly bigger than his palm
. . . watching David toddle his first steps
before falling into a soft blue sofa . . .
snatching Abby out of a fast-rushing
stream . . . holding hands with Cath by
the fire . . . flipping burgers on the
backyard grill . . .
The grateful, sad smile of a Haitian
woman when he opened her repaired
door . . . angry tears in his wife’s eyes
. . . bright pink flowers on Mom’s grave
. . . Dantès’s intelligent, amber eyes and
upright ears . . . his first glimpse of Envy
. . . Remy and her shotgun, blasting at the
rabid coon . . . Dantès and Remy asleep
on the floor . . . Brilliant blue-violet
eyes and full pink lips and comfort . . .
And then . . . nothing.
He was floating. Darkness came and
went and then there was a brilliant white
light.
Wyatt
.
Someone was calling his name.
A heavy weight was lifted from his
chest. He could move. He could breathe.
He did.
Someone shouted. Someone touched
him.
He gave a great shudder and felt the
exhaustion and ache rushing through his
body. It was like waking from a dead
sleep after the longest, hardest day of his
life. Worse than the first day of basic
training. Worse than the end of a week in
Haiti after the hurricane. His muscles
protested. His lungs hurt. His eyes
wanted to stay closed but he forced them
open.
The light was strong and bright,
bringing tears to his eyes. He had to look
away, reaching up to shield his face.
Something tickled his skin like the flutter
of fingers or something delicate falling
on his cheeks and he opened his eyes
again, still blinded by the light.
“Holy Mother of God, he
is
alive!”
Who?
Wyatt pulled himself upright,
even as something—some
one—
pushed
him back down.
“Easy now, Earp,” said a familiar
voice.
Wyatt knocked Elliott’s hands away
and sat up.
What the hell?
“My God,” someone said in a hushed
voice.
“What the hell is going on?” Wyatt
managed to say aloud this time. He
squeezed his eyes closed, still seeing the
dancing flames bright behind his lids,
and then opened them again. It was
daylight.
He happened to be looking down,
and the first thing he saw was his hands.
Jesus Christ
. They were shiny, coal-
black. The skin was peeling, curling up
in large pieces.
Beyond his hands . . . below . . . was
his torso, his legs. What was left of his
clothing was charred beyond recognition
and his skin was the same . . . soot
black. Ashy. Flaking and peeling away.
He looked up, still squinting in the
sunlight, and found Elliott. Wyatt licked
his lips—God, he was
dry
—and tasted
. . . burned skin. Charcoal. Grit. Salt.
Elliott was looking at him with an
expression he’d never seen before. A
combination of horror and wonder and
question. “Wyatt. Are you . . . how do
you feel?
Do
you feel, um . . . anything?”
Wyatt shook his head, shifted, and
felt the groan of his muscles, an achy
sort of heat trundle through his body.
And he noticed more black skin flaking
away. He drew in an experimental
breath, feeling his lungs expand, and
drew in deeply, more and more and
more. He felt as if he could inhale
forever . . . Cool, fresh oxygen surged
through his body like a lake breeze.
Energy and life tingled through him. He
felt it rush to the very ends of his
capillaries, to every neuron in every
nerve ending . . . to the well of every
hair follicle through to the tip of its
hair . . .
“Yeah,” he replied carefully. An odd
prickly comprehension was sliding over
him, like a shade being dragged away
and allowing the sun to shine through.
This was . . . wrong. He’d seen burned
bodies. They didn’t look like this.
Then he looked back at Elliott,
understanding. Yes. His friend had
healed him. Saved him from death.
“You should be . . . dead,” Elliott
said. He was crouching next to Wyatt,
and they both watched as he reached out
and gingerly brushed a fingertip over
Wyatt’s forearm. Black skin fluttered
away . . . and beneath it was . . .
“Holy crap.”
Beneath it was clean, smooth,
unmarred
skin.