Vertical Burn - Part 1
Library

Part 1

Vertical Burn.

by Earl Emerson.

This book is dedicated to the brave men who've been a.s.signed with me on Ladder 3-C over the years: George Ramos, Jerry Travis, Craig Davillier, Greg Mejlaender, Mark Buck, Dan Bachmeier, Dave Iranon, Jay Mahnke, Matt Hougan, Ron MacDougall, Erik Lawyer, Chris O'Reilly.

He had never been more alone. Smoke and flames engulfed him in dizzying waves. The truest form of death, the knowledge that death is imminent and unavoidable, pressed on him from every side. Such fear sends a torrent of chemicals raging through the body, numbing every thought except concern for self.

-JOHN N. M N. MACLEAN, Fire on the Mountain Fire on the Mountain

We are all dead men on leave.

-EUGENE L LEVINE

AUTHOR'S NOTE

Because this novel was written over a period of three years, various sections of the narrative were created while the Seattle Fire Department was undergoing fundamental changes in equipment carried, staff, and operating procedures. The author has taken the liberty of leaving several anachronisms in the story. For instance, the novel has a Battalion 1 and a Battalion 1 aide, while the department has eliminated these positions. The novel operates with three-person engine companies while most engine companies in Seattle now operate with four firefighters via the NFPA two-in/two-out rule. This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance the characters have to real people is purely coincidental.

PART ONE.

LEARY WAY.

1. I WAKE UP SCREAMING.

When the lights came on, John Finney found himself admiring the arch of Diana's lower back through her ribbed undershirt, admiring her supple thigh muscles as she swung her legs over the edge of the bunk and the way two hours of sleep had frizzed her chestnut hair. Her back was to him as she stepped into her boots and pulled her pants up over blue silk running shorts.

It was 0304 hours, June 9.

On their way out of the bunk room they pa.s.sed evidence of Engine 10's earlier departure: twisted blankets, pillows darkened with swirlies of drool, a set of reading gla.s.ses askew on a Fire Engineering Fire Engineering magazine. Finney always turned his pillow over when they got a run in the middle of the night. He reached the hole just as Moore grabbed for the thick bra.s.s pole. In a voice husky with sleep and as rough-edged as Rod Stewart's, she said, "I guess this is the most dangerous thing we'll do all night, huh?" magazine. Finney always turned his pillow over when they got a run in the middle of the night. He reached the hole just as Moore grabbed for the thick bra.s.s pole. In a voice husky with sleep and as rough-edged as Rod Stewart's, she said, "I guess this is the most dangerous thing we'll do all night, huh?"

"It's a long drop," he joked.

She wrapped herself expertly around the pole and vanished. They'd been bantering back and forth all evening, flirting really, and she was teasing him for warning her about the long drop at Station 10. Finney cautioned everyone. Two years earlier a sleep-addled firefighter let go of the pole ten feet too soon and woke up screaming.

By the time the bearlike captain lumbered around the front of the rig and climbed into the high cab, Finney had fired up Ladder 1's diesel engine and turned on the department radio. Reidel, the tillerman, checked in through Finney's headset. "Ready to rock 'n' roll, boss." Reidel kept at his fingertips an ample supply of the worst action movie lines. Finney grinned.

"How the h.e.l.l could we possibly be the first-in truck all the way out on Leary Way?" asked Captain Cordifis.

"I don't know," Finney said. But it had surprised him, too. There were thirty-three engine companies and eleven aerial truck companies in Seattle, and at least five of those truck companies should have been dispatched ahead of them.

As they traveled north through downtown on Third Avenue, the electronic whoop of the siren reverberated off the tall buildings. Finney heard the familiar clinking of the alarm bells on the MSA air masks Moore and Baxter were donning in the crew cab behind him. Then, from the east sh.o.r.e of Lake Union on Westlake, he saw smoke in the northern sky. Lots of smoke. They had a good one. This was what Finney was bred for, fighting fires.

He glanced at Cordifis, who was putting a piece of chewing gum into his mouth. Bill Cordifis had been to the Ozark Hotel fire, where they lost twenty-one civilians. He'd been at the Villa Plaza apartments, where eight hours of fire burned more than two hundred people out of their homes. He'd seen a woman jump six hundred feet off the s.p.a.ce Needle. Smoke in the sky didn't bother Cordifis any more than it bothered Finney.

Engine 22's radio report came over the air. "Engine Twenty-two at Leary Way Northwest and Eight Avenue Northwest. We have a three-story warehouse approximately seventy by fifty. Constructed of tilt-up concrete. Heavy black smoke coming from the rear of the building. Engine Twenty-two laying a preconnect and establishing Leary Command."

Captain Vaughn was riding Engine 22 tonight, and if Cordifis didn't take command from him, he would be the Incident Commander until a chief showed up.

The building was set back from the north side of Leary Way, a couple of blocks north of the Lake Washington Ship Ca.n.a.l in a neighborhood that was evenly divided between residential and commercial properties. When they got close, the smoke in the street forced Finney to slow to a crawl. He didn't want to run over anybody.

Then the wind shifted, and it became clear that Vaughn had underestimated the size of the building by at least half. In front were several moving vans parked close enough to the loading dock that radiant heat would ignite them should the fire grow worse. But it wasn't going to grow worse. They would go inside and put it out just like they always did.

2. THE GIRL WITH THE FAN.

Although no flame was showing, heavy black smoke floated off the roof area, curled down the walls, and blotted out large portions of the street. As far as Finney could tell, n.o.body had approached the building yet. Engine 22's crew was off somewhere in the smoke, probably looking for a hydrant. Standing in his thick yellow bunking pants and coat, the captain from Engine 22 was surveying the building and evaluating their resources. One engine company. One truck company. By now the street should have been swarming with units.

On the rig radio, Cordifis said, "Ladder One at."

"Okay, Ladder One," answered the dispatcher.

"Moore, Baxter," Cordifis said, "get a door open. Reidel, follow me."

After parking the ladder truck, Finney strapped on an MSA backpack and regulator with thirty minutes of compressed air in the cylinder. Then he grabbed a chain saw and a pike pole out of their respective compartments and approached the building, crossing paths with Diana Moore as she headed back to the apparatus. As the driver, Finney was almost always the last one ready. "What's going on?" he asked.

"A fan. I got it."

Baxter broke a large window in front of the building with the Halligan tool, the falling gla.s.s sounding like an armload of dropped plates. Captain Cordifis, who had been speaking with Captain Vaughn near Engine 22, turned and walked toward the broken window. "Supposed to be somebody trapped inside," he said. "I guess a band practices in there all night."

"h.e.l.l," said Baxter. "We'll never find them in that smoke."

Near the front of the building the four of them, Finney, Cordifis, Baxter, and Reidel, were suddenly enveloped in a pall of smoke that made their eyes water. Cordifis began masking up as Baxter and Reidel, already covered, disappeared through the opening. Speaking to their backs, Cordifis said, "Tommy and Art, you guys go left. Find an exit for that smoke. John, you and I'll go right. The girl's going to stay with the fan."

Cordifis was an old-timer who meant no disrespect by calling Moore a "girl," or by leaving her outside to tend the fan. Finney hoped she realized that, but thought she probably didn't.

Finney put down the chain saw and pike pole. He wouldn't be needing them to search. Now his tools consisted of the small department-issued flashlight on a clip on his chest and the four-pound service axe in a scabbard on his belt, the axe no truckman was ever without.

Inside, Finney could see Cordifis's lantern for about four feet, after which it vanished. He kept track of the captain through the Darth Vader sound of his breathing in the facepiece and the casual conversation they always maintained when they worked together. He liked to keep a leash on the captain so he didn't get into trouble. Cordifis had seen better days and sometimes couldn't keep up with the rest of the crew.

It wasn't too many minutes before Finney heard the wooden-bladed, gasoline-powered fan firing up behind them, sounding like a small airplane. The racket would serve as a marker for their entrance point. They were searching a forty-five-thousand-square-foot building, but Finney couldn't see past the end of his arm.

Department protocol decreed that fans wouldn't be set up without hose lines in position, lest the additional fresh air being pushed into the building feed the fire, but Finney knew Cordifis wasn't afraid to bend the rules whenever the rules didn't suit the situation. Finney had worked under by-the-book officers before, and he would take Cordifis's commonsense approach any day. At least Cordifis knew how to think for himself-a quality Finney valued in emergency situations. Once the fan was running, the air would clear and they could finish their search before their rescue operation turned into a body recovery. If it turned out they were fanning the fire, they would turn it off after their search was complete.

The building would begin clearing as soon as Baxter and Reidel opened an outlet for the fumes, preferably smaller than the entrance and near the seat of the fire. The structure would become like a balloon with a pinhole in it, smoke rushing out that pinhole. The technique was amazingly effective. Finney heard a second fan rev up and knew Moore had set it up in tandem with the first to generate additional pressure inside the building. Still, the smoke wasn't clearing. What the h.e.l.l were Baxter and Reidel doing? They should have had an outlet hole by now.

Finney and Cordifis searched a series of small interconnecting rooms along the front side of the building, and as they exited each room, Finney placed a piece of white tape diagonally down the outside of the door to signal that the room had been searched.

Even though they weren't doing much more than walking, Cordifis was breathing with effort. Their PPE-personal protective equipment-weighed more than fifty pounds; when fastened, their heavy coats were as warm as Arctic expedition parkas. Just walking was a ch.o.r.e. Much as he wanted to move more quickly, Finney forced himself to adapt to the captain's pace. There was no point in wearing him out.

They moved about in the smoke for five minutes before they both b.u.mped into a high counter and found themselves treading on material that felt like gravel. Moments later, the smoke abated somewhat and Finney suddenly realized he was outside the building, walking on nuggets of broken gla.s.s from the window Baxter had broken. They'd circled back through the interconnecting rooms without realizing it. It was easy to do and embarra.s.sing as h.e.l.l.

"Where's that d.a.m.ned fan?" Cordifis asked irritably, when he realized they'd screwed up. "This place should be clear by now." Both fans were gone, as was Diana Moore. It surprised Finney. Usually you could count on her.

"You want to go back in and search, or do you want me to get the fans back?"

Cordifis's reply was to head back inside. Bypa.s.sing the rooms they'd already searched, they moved along the front wall of the building. Minutes later, they found a door at the right corner of the building on the far side of a loading area. When Finney opened it, he was greeted by a long flight of descending concrete steps.

In the bas.e.m.e.nt they found a huge subterranean s.p.a.ce with a high ceiling and a floor of rough concrete. There was no smoke. By the time they'd searched the area, Cordifis's five-minute warning bell was ringing, though Finney had two thousand pounds left in his bottle, a little less than half what he'd started with. Cordifis generally ran out of air before he did, but Finney was thinking this was too soon even for him. They would get fresh bottles together.

When they'd made their way outside, a ragged group of spectators in robes, T-shirts, and slippers were congesting the smoky area where Captain Vaughn had set up his command post. Finney grabbed a battle lantern for more light and two spare bottles off Ladder 1. He looked up the street for additional units but saw none. By now they should have had two chiefs-three, counting the safety chief. There weren't even any additional engines on scene. What the h.e.l.l was going on? Finney carried the spare bottles over to Cordifis and changed the bottle on his back while Cordifis spoke to Vaughn.

"But she was right there," Cordifis said angrily. "She could have shut it off in two seconds."

"You know that's not the way we fight fire," answered Vaughn.

"With the fan up, we'd be able to see something. What we're doing now, this is like playing Pick Up sticks with our b.u.t.t cheeks."

"I've got Ladder Five going to the roof from the other side of the building. If you want them inside searching with you, I can do that."

"More b.u.t.t cheeks isn't going to help. I want ventilation is what I want. I want those fans."

Vaughn walked away. A chain saw started up somewhere, the two-stroke engine screaming as the crew of Ladder 5 cut holes in the roof. Cordifis gave Finney a disgusted look, while Finney shrugged out of his own backpack and laid it on the ground to change the bottle. Bill was right, as usual. This would be a whole lot easier with the fans.

Cordifis stepped around Ladder 1 and addressed someone Finney couldn't see. "Hey, you b.a.s.t.a.r.d . . ." Finney missed whatever insults came next as Engine 22's engine and built-in pump roared.

As Finney slung his backpack and tightened the shoulder straps, Robert Kub stepped into view from around the front of Ladder 1. He wasn't the one Cordifis was giving a hard time to, for Finney could still hear Cordifis's loud, angry voice.

Finney had come into the department with Kub, the only African American in his recruit cla.s.s, and as with most of those he came in with, he felt a special bond toward the man. For the past twelve years Kub had been working for the fire investigation unit, Marshal 5, so he often didn't arrive at a fire scene until the firefighting units were packing up to leave. Finney thought it was unusual to see him this early in a fire. "What are you doing here?" Finney asked, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g his low-pressure hose onto the regulator at his waist.

"Dispatcher called me at home. There's another good fire down on Oth.e.l.lo, but I came here." He wagged his eyebrows. "More potential."

"Oh, we got potential all right." Finney grinned, as he left Kub and walked around the nose of Ladder 1 in time to see Cordifis heading toward the building and away from another off-duty firefighter, Oscar Stillman. Finney knew Cordifis and Stillman were good enough friends that a greeting of "Hey, you b.a.s.t.a.r.d!" often served as an endearment between them. Just like every other big fire, this was turning into a reunion.

Stillman, who had nothing to do here but watch, turned around and flashed his gapped teeth at Finney. "G.o.d, how the h.e.l.l are you, young man?"

"A little early to be up, isn't it?" Finney followed Cordifis while Stillman tagged along behind him.

"I was coming back from my biannual Tuesday-night card game when I saw the smoke from Aurora. I was the first motherf.u.c.ker on the scene."

"You see any band members come out of there?"

"I ain't seen nothing but this G.o.dd.a.m.n smoke. Thought maybe my first wife was in there cooking dinner."

When Finney caught Cordifis, they donned their face masks and stepped into the building just as Baxter, Reidel, and Moore emerged, accompanied by ringing alarm bells. The trio told them they had searched along the left wall of the building and found only storage racks and empty rooms.

Diana Moore stepped up to Cordifis as he was pulling the straps tight on his blue rubber facepiece and said, "Sorry about the fans. The IC told me to put them back. I didn't know what to do, so when I saw these guys through the smoke, I joined up."

"Don't worry about it, darlin'. You did right." Finney thought he detected an amused twinkle in Diana's eye at the word darlin' darlin'. He had to hand it to her. She had enough self-confidence to let things pa.s.s.

Finney was beginning to get a bad feeling about this building. Even though he could hear more units rolling up the street behind them now, he knew you didn't find this much smoke in a building and then squander fifteen minutes without putting water on it. You found the seat of the fire as expeditiously as possible. You stormed in and you tapped it. Ninety seconds could make the difference between a tapped fire and a grounder. They'd already been here ten minutes. Engine 22's pump was running, but the lines on the ground were not yet flowing water. So far, n.o.body had found the seat of the fire. Or any fire at all.

In a building this large there was too much s.p.a.ce for superheated gases to acc.u.mulate. Finney knew that if those gases got hot enough and blended with oxygen in the proper ratio, they would ignite, and anyone luckless enough to be inside would be trapped in a flashover. In a house fire the rooms would go from two or three hundred degrees to twelve hundred in the time it takes to snap your fingers. In a place this big the higher temperatures would chop a man down where he stood. The body recovery team would find the soles of his rubber boots melted to the concrete floor.

3. REARRANGING DECK CHAIRS ON THE t.i.tANIC t.i.tANIC.

Back inside, Finney and Captain Cordifis found the door to the bas.e.m.e.nt they'd already searched and, using the east wall as a benchmark, they moved north from there. The building was filled with home furnishings shrink-wrapped in thick plastic and loaded onto wooden pallets, the pallets stacked on huge metal racks, the racks extending higher than they could see in the smoke.

They were moving faster now and they both knew they needed to cover as much ground as possible. The wall they were using as a reference point was mostly bare, as was the s.p.a.ce nearby, and they moved almost without impediment.

Sooner than Finney thought possible, they arrived at the far right corner of the rear wall and worked their way along it, Cordifis an arm's length from the wall, Finney an arm's length from Cordifis. They were heading west, paralleling their original traverse across the front wall.

Finney was beginning to feel warm from the movement, so he knew Cordifis had probably been sweating profusely in his bunkers for some time. Although the manufacturers boasted of breathable fabrics in the liners, anyone who actually bothered to put on a set of bunking clothes and do any work knew that firefighters were sealed up like fresh-cooked m.u.f.fins in a plastic bag. It could be like running a marathon in the desert, and some tolerated it better than others. Finney loved it. Cordifis sweated nearly to death each time they had a working fire.

"This way," Cordifis said. "I got a door here."

Finney stepped through the half-open door and for the first time in more than five minutes he could actually see his partner. Wrapped in a coc.o.o.n of smoke, the two men had been communicating by touch and sound alone. Now Finney followed Cordifis's gaze and was startled to realize he was looking at stars. They were standing in a closed, rectangular well, the high, windowless walls of the warehouse behind them, a lower wall of red brick in front, the structures cobbled together by walls at either end.

From time to time pockets of filthy brown smoke from the roof dipped down into their canyon. An orange glow reflected off smoke in the sky, though it was hard for Finney to tell whether the glow came from behind or in front. Wherever it was, the fire was growing larger.

"This is where the G.o.dd.a.m.ned band is," said Cordifis, looking at the smaller building across from them. "n.o.body's going to let a bunch of punk-a.s.s kids mess around with all that furniture back there. h.e.l.l, they'd be banging their girlfriends on the sofas. They're in here."

He was right, Finney thought. There were three doors; two of them looked impenetrable. Finney took his axe out of its scabbard and approached the third, knocking off the paint-splattered two-by-fours nailed across the edges. He ended up demolishing the entire door when he found it had been screwed to the frame.

Devoid of smoke, the s.p.a.ce appeared to be an abandoned machine room with steel counters built into the walls, a dilapidated drill press on its side on the floor. Maybe the fire hadn't touched this side. It was possible the band members were unaware even that the building was on fire.

The room had two interior doors, both closed and locked, one of which looked as if it led farther into the building. Finney used his axe again.

The door opened onto a long pa.s.sageway, a small ghost of smoke hovering near the ceiling at the far end. They worked their way down a row of doors, searching the rooms one by one. The rooms to the left were clear, the rooms to the right increasingly smoky. It was disconcerting to be this deep into a building without a hose line, even worse to realize the smoke was compartmentalized in a manner they didn't often see. Finney could tell it bothered Cordifis, too.

When Cordifis opened an unlocked door near the far end of the corridor, torrents of smoke poured out over their heads, the first really hot smoke they'd encountered. Visibility in the room was near zero and the smoke swirled in angry circles. Finney stepped inside and stumbled into a set of drums.

A pair of cymbals crashed to the floor. "You go right," Cordifis said from behind. "I'll go left."

"I don't like this," Finney said.