Authors: Diane Chamberlain
Tags: #Family Life, #Fiction, #General, #Literary, #Mothers and Sons, #Psychological Fiction, #Arson, #Patients, #Family Relationships, #Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, #People With Mental Disabilities
was Mom going to handle Andy without me?
As a mother, Mom was borderline okay. She was smart and
she could be cool sometimes, but she loved Andy so much that
she suffocated him, and she didn’t have a clue. My brother was
my biggest worry. Probably ninety-five percent of my time, I
thought about him. Even when I thought about other things,
he was still in a little corner of my mind, the same way I knew
that it was spring or that we lived in North Carolina or that I
was female.
I talked Mom into letting Andy go to the lock-in tonight.
He was fifteen; she had to let go a little and besides, Emily’s
mother was one of the chaperones. I hoped he was having a
good time and acting normal. His grip on social etiquette was
pretty lame. Would they have dancing at the lock-in? It cracked
me up to imagine Andy and Emily dancing together.
My cell phone vibrated in my jeans pocket and I pulled it
out to look at the display. Mom. I slipped it back in my jeans,
hoping she didn’t try to reach me at Amber’s and discover I
wasn’t there.
The phone rang again. That was our signal—the call-twicein-a-row signal that meant
This is serious.Answer now.
So I jumped
up and walked into the house. I pulled the door closed to
block out the sound of the ocean before hitting the talk button.
“Hi, Mom,” I said.
“Oh my God, Maggie!” Mom sounded breathless, as though
she’d run up the stairs. “The church is on fire!”
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“
What
church?” I froze.
“Drury Memorial. They just cut into the TV to announce
it. They showed a picture.” She choked on a sob. “It’s completely engulfed in flames. People are still inside!”
“No way!” The weed suddenly hit me. I was dizzy, and I
leaned over the sink in case I got sick.
Andy.
He wouldn’t
know what to do.
“I’m going over there now,” Mom said. Her car door
squeaked open, then slammed shut. “Are you at Amber’s?”
“I’m…” I glanced out the door at the dark ocean. “Yes.” She
was so easy to lie to. Her focus was always on Andy, hardly ever
on me. I stubbed out the joint in the sink.“I’ll meet you there,”
I added. “At the church.”
“Hurry!” she said. I pictured her pinching the phone
between her chin and shoulder as she started the car.
“Stay calm,” I said. “Drive carefully.”
“You, too. But
hurry!
”
I was already heading toward the front door. Forgetting
about the Condemned sign, I ran right into it, yelping as it
knocked the air from my lungs. I ducked beneath it, jumped to
the sand and ran down the boardwalk to my Jetta. I was miles
from the church in Surf City. Miles from my baby brother. I felt
so sick. I began crying as I turned the key in the ignition. It was
my fault if something happened to him. I started to pray, something I only did when I was desperate.
Dear God,
I thought, as
I sped down New River Inlet Road,
don’t let anything happen to
Andy.Please.Let it happen to me instead.I’m the liar.I’m the bad kid.
I drove all the way to Surf City, saying that prayer over and
over in my mind until I saw the smoke in the sky. Then I
started saying it out loud.
THERE IS ONLY ONE STOPLIGHT ON THE twenty-six miles of
Topsail Island. It sits two short blocks from the beach in the
heart of Surf City, and it glowed red when my car approached
it and was still red when I left it behind. If there’d been a dozen
red lights, they wouldn’t have stopped me. People always told
me I was a determined woman and I was never more so than
the night of the fire.
Miles before the stoplight, I’d seen the yellow glow in the sky,
and now I could smell the fire itself. I pictured the old church.
I’d only been inside it a few times for weddings and funerals, but
I knew it had pine floors, probably soaked with years of oily
cleaner, just tempting someone to toss a match on them. I knew
more than I wanted to know about fires. I’d lost my parents to
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one, plus Jamie had been a volunteer firefighter before he died.
He told me about clapboard buildings that were nothing but
tinder. Probably one of the kids lit a cigarette, tossed the match
on the floor. Why oh why did I listen to Maggie? I never should
have let Andy go. Maggie was around him so much, she thought
of him as a normal kid.You got that way when you were around
him a lot.You got used to his oddities, took his limitations for
granted. Then you’d see him out in the world and realize he still
didn’t fit in, no matter how much you’d tried to make that
happen. It was easy to get seduced into thinking he was okay
when the environment around him was so carefully controlled
and familiar. Tonight, though, I threw him to the wolves.
The street near Drury Memorial was clotted with fire
trucks and police cars and ambulances and I had to park a
block away in front of Jabeen’s Java and The Pony Express.
I’d barely come to a stop before I f lew out of my car and
started running toward the fire.
A few people stood along the road watching clouds of
smoke and steam gush from the church into the bright night
sky. There were shouts and sirens and a sickening acrid smell
in the air as I ran toward the front doors of the church. Huge
floodlights illuminated the building and gave me tunnel vision.
All I saw were those gaping doors, smoke belching from them,
and they were my target.
“Grab her!” someone shouted.
Long, wiry arms locked around me from behind.
“Let go of me!” I clawed at the arms with my fingernails,
but whoever was holding me had a grip like a steel trap.
“We have a staging area set up, ma’am,” he shouted into my
ear. “Most of the children are out and safe.”
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“What do you mean
most?
” I twisted against the vise of his
arms. “Where’s my
son?
”
He dragged me across the sandy lot before loosening his
hold on me. “They’ve got names of the children on a list,” he
said as he let go.
“Where?”
I spun around to see the face of Reverend Bill,
pastor of Drury Memorial. If there was a person on Topsail
Island I didn’t like, it was Reverend Bill. He looked no happier
to realize it was me he’d been holding in his arms.
“One of
your
children was here?” He sounded stunned that
I’d let a child of mine set foot in his church. I never should
have.
“Andy,” I said. Then I called his name. “Andy!” I shaded my
eyes from the floodlights as I surveyed the scene. He’d worn
his tan pants, olive green-striped shirt, and new sneakers
tonight. I searched for the striped shirt, but the chaos of the
scene suddenly overwhelmed my vision. Kids were everywhere, some sprawled on the sand, others sitting up or bent
over, coughing. Generators roared as they fueled the lights, and
static from police radios crackled in the air. Parents called out
the names of their children.
“Tracy!”
“Josh!”
“Amanda!”
An
EMT leaned over a girl, giving her CPR. The nurse in me
wanted to help, but the mother in me was stronger.
Above my head, a helicopter thrummed as it rose from the
beach.
“Andy!”
I shouted to the helicopter, only vaguely aware of
how irrational I must have seemed.
Reverend Bill was clutching my arm, tugging me across the
street through a maze of fire trucks and police cars to an area
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29
lit by another floodlight and cordoned off with yellow police
tape. Inside the tape, people stood shoulder to shoulder,
shouting and pushing.
“See that girl over there?” Reverend Bill pointed into the
crowd of people.
“Who?
Where?
” I stood on my toes trying to see better.
“The one in uniform,” he shouted. “She’s taking names,
hooking parents up with their kids.You go see—”
I pulled away from him before he could finish the sentence.
I didn’t bother looking for an entrance into the cordoned-off
area. Instead, I climbed over the tape and plowed into the clot
of people.
Parents crowded around the officer, who I recognized as
Patty Shales. Her kids went to the elementary school in Sneads
Ferry where I was a part-time nurse.
“Patty!” I shouted from the sea of parents. “Do you know
where Andy is?”
She glanced over at me just as a man grabbed the clipboard
from her hands. I couldn’t see what was happening, but Patty’s
head disappeared from my view amid flailing arms and angry
shouting.
From somewhere behind me, I heard the words “killed”
and “dead.” I swung around to see two women, red eyed, hands
to their mouths.
“
Who’s
killed?” I asked. “
Who’s
dead?”
One of the women wiped tears from her eyes.“I heard they
found a body,” she said. “Some kids was trapped inside. My
daughter’s here somewhere. I just pray to the Lord—” She
shook her head, unable to finish her sentence.
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diane chamberlain
I felt suddenly nauseated by the smell of the fire, a tarry
chemical smell that burned my nostrils and throat.
“My son’s here, too,” I said, though I doubted the woman
even heard me.
“Laurel!” Sara Weston lifted the yellow tape and ducked
under it, running up to me. “Why are you here?” she asked.
“Andy’s here. Is Keith?”
She nodded, pressing a trembling hand to her cheek.“I can’t
find him,” she said. “Someone said he got burned, but I—”
She stopped speaking as an ominous creaking sound came
from the far side of the church—the sort of sound a massive
tree makes as it starts to fall. Everyone froze, staring at the
church as the rear of the roof collapsed in one long wave,
sending smoke and embers into the air.
“Oh my God, Laurel!” Sara pressed her face against my
shoulder and I wrapped my arm around her as we were jostled
by people trying to get closer to Patty. Parents stepped on our
feet, pushing us one way, then another, and Sara and I pushed
back as a unit, bullish and driven. I probably knew many of the
people I fought out of my way, but in the heat of the moment,
we were all simply desperate parents.
This is what it was like
inside,
I thought, panic rising in my throat.
All the kids pushing
at once to get out of the church.
“Patty!” I shouted again, but I was only one voice of many.
She heard me, though.
“Laurel!” she yelled. “They took Andy to New Hanover.”
“Oh God.”
“Not life threatening,” Patty called. “Asthma. Some burns.”
I let out my breath in a silent prayer.
Thank you, thank you,
thank you.
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31
“You go.” Sara tried to push me away, but I held fast to her.
“Go, honey,” she repeated. “Go see him.”
I longed to run back to my car and drive to the hospital in
Wilmington, but I couldn’t leave Sara.“Not until you’ve heard
about Keith,” I said.
“Tracy Kelly’s parents here?” Patty called.
“Here!” a man barked from behind me.
“She’s at Cape Fear.”
“Is Keith Weston on the list?” Sara shouted into the din.
I was afraid Patty hadn’t heard her. She was speaking to a
man who held a pair of broken glasses up to his eyes.
“Keith Weston was just airlifted to New Hanover,”Patty called.
“Oh, no.” Sara grabbed my arm so hard I winced. I thought
of the helicopter rising into the sky above me.
“Let’s go,” I said, pulling Sara with me through the sea of
people. Tears I’d been holding in spilled down my cheeks as
we backed away, letting other parents take our places.“We can
drive together.”
“We’ll go separately,” Sara said, already at a run away from
me. “In case one of us has to stay longer or—”
“Mom!” Maggie suddenly appeared at my side, winded and
shivering.“They told me Uncle Marcus is here somewhere, but
I couldn’t find out anything about Andy.”
“He’s at New Hanover.” I grabbed her hand. “I’m parked
over by Jabeen’s. Let’s go.”
I took one glance back at the smoking church. The ragged
siding that still remained standing glowed red against the eerie
gray sky. I hadn’t thought about my former brother-in-law
being there, but of course he was. I pictured Marcus inside the
church, moving slowly through the smoke with his air pack on,
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diane chamberlain
feeling his way, searching for children who never stood a
chance. Could he have been hurt when the roof collapsed?
Please,no.
And for the briefest of moments, I shifted my worry
from Andy to him.
Maggie and I barely spoke on the way to Wilmington. She
cried nearly the whole time, sniffling softly, shredding a tissue
in her lap. My eyes were on the road, my foot pressing the gas
pedal nearly to the f loor. I imagined Andy trying to make