Ghost Fire
Page 1
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Ghost Fire
G.G. Andrew
Chapter One
Laney
Laney smoothed down her auburn curls and walked into Station 58, Dallas Fire and Rescue.
It was a hot day for Texas in early October, but Laney guessed nothing was on fire because when she entered the station, nobody was running around and all eyes were instantly on her.
“Hi,” she said. “Is Lucas Moore on duty today?”
Three firefighters were stretched out on benches, their bodies slack with heat. Their shirtsleeves were rolled up and their big palms cupped water bottles or sodas.
The blond man closest to her blinked once, twice. “You’re sure you’re here for Lucas?” he finally asked.
“Yes.” She paused. “He works here, right?”
“Yeah, he works here,” another man said, his feet propped up on the bench. He shouted deeper into the station. “Hey, Lucas! Someone’s here to see you.” He squinted at her. “You his cousin or something?”
“No.” Laney shook her head. Maybe smoke inhalation had gone to these guys’ heads, because of all the visits she’d had with survivors of the 1997 Cattleman’s Crossing Inn Fire, this was one of the weirder welcomes. And that was saying something, because one of the survivors had not only claimed to have seen an apparition that night, but the ghost of her dead iguana, too.
“Lucas doesn’t get many visitors,” the first man said, “of the female persuasion.”
Laney said, “It’s a—a personal matter. Don’t worry, it won’t take long.”
Before she could rephrase that, one of the men guffawed, and another, the big one with his feet up, bit back a grin. Laney was about to tell them where to stick their fire hoses when a dark-haired man walked up from the back.
“Hey,” he said. “Do I…”
Laney had never met Lucas before, so she hadn’t known what to expect. He wasn’t the sort of handsome that sparkled in a suit, nor the red-carpet level of charismatic that would make most women unable to form complete sentences. Instead Lucas Moore, dressed in a plain gray t-shirt and pants, had a quiet kind of attractiveness: a strong build, dark eyes, and a kind face. It might not have made most women swoon, but already Laney sensed that if she were stuck in burning building, Lucas’s eyes were the ones she’d rather see before any celebrity’s or tycoon’s.
“Hello,” she said softly. Then, remembering herself, she walked toward him, thrust out her hand, and raised her voice. “I’m Laney Stonewater.”
He put out his own hand, confusion knitting his brows together. “Hello, Laney Stonewater.”
As they shook hands, something sparked between them. It wasn’t the kind of fire Lucas and his buddies put out, but something made Laney’s skin feel tingly and warm nonetheless. She removed her hand from his strong grip.
After an awkward turn of silence, Laney remembered there was a point to this. “I’m here with a few questions. And a strange request.”
“Okay.”
“Do you remember the Cattleman’s Crossing Inn?”
Lucas’s gaze—which only moments before had been interested, almost dancing—darkened. “Not often.”
“I’d love to talk to you about your experience there as a child,” Laney continued.
He glanced back at his fellow firefighters, who were ogling them both, and gestured with his head. “Outside.”
She reluctantly followed the man out the door, to where the sweltering heat made the horizon of the city hazy.
Lucas turned to her and crossed his arms. “Talk,” he said—but he seemed like he wanted to do anything but.
“I’m writing an article about the Cattleman’s Crossing Fire,” she said. “In particular, I’m connecting with people who’ve claimed to have experienced something unusual that night.”
He shifted his weight. “You some kind of ghost hunter?”
Laney laughed. “God, no.” To cover up that bit of honesty that’d shined through, she wiped the smirk off her face and continued. “How much do you remember about that night?”
“Not much,” he said. “And there’s a lot less that I’m willing to share.”
Far from the interest he’d shown when they first met, Lucas’s expression was now shuttered, his body defensive. Unlike Adele and the other people she’d interviewed from that night, he was unwilling to share what he’d experienced when the fire had ravaged Cattleman’s Crossing from the inside out—an inferno that some thought utterly unnatural, and one that claimed the life of a man that night. Or so it seemed.
Laney softened her voice and stepped closer to him, trying to get the firefighter to open up. “Of course, you were only a kid,” she said. “It must’ve been a pretty scary experience. I understand if it’s hard to talk about.”
Of all the supposedly haunted places there in Texas, Cattleman’s Crossing was one of the most famous. Of course, what happened at the inn was probably just some bizarre fire caused by faulty wiring, but the strangeness of the story would get clicks on the article she was writing, for sure. Laney needed clicks, not to mention the dollar-and-a-half-a-word rate the magazine was offering her.
So what if ghosts were bullshit? If the magazine had suggested she write a firsthand account of an alien abduction, she’d be signing herself up for the next probe.
As if sensing her thoughts, Lucas’s eyes narrowed. “What do you want from me?”
“Just to hear your perspective,” Laney said. “And…”
“And?”
“I want you to spend the night with me,” she finished.
Lucas’s eyebrows shot up. His gaze dropped to her mouth for one fleeting second that made her toes curl.
“I mean, at the inn,” she said. She was flushing, and it wasn’t just the Texas heat. “To provide some color to the article. Like a twenty-years-ago retrospective thing. You do know that tomorrow it’ll have been twenty years to the night, right?”
“Vaguely.”
His eyes cut to the side, and Laney could tell he damn well was aware of the date.
But he didn’t even meet her eyes when he turned around to walk back inside, leaving her sweaty and disappointed, her mouth agape.
“The answer is no,” he called over his shoulder.
Chapter Two
Lucas
It figured that the most attractive woman Lucas had seen in years would turn out to just want a guy for his ghost stories.
When he strode back into the station, he was almost relieved to hear the siren go off. He didn’t care if it was some damn cat stuck in a tree, it was better than being asked to relive memories he’d rather forget.
“Who was that?” Jake called over the siren as he pulled on his turnout gear.
Tory and Jax looked over curiously, and Lucas pretended not to notice.
“Somebody wanting something I wasn’t about to give.”
Jax cocked his head. “You sure about that, man? She was pretty hot.”
Lucas shook his head and swung his gear on. Since Jax had married his wife Skye, he’d been keen to play Cupid with the single guys at the station. He’d even invited Lucas over to dinner a couple times when a single friend of Skye’s was there. But, like so many of his other relationships, it had fizzled out.
As the firefighters moved quickly to gather the rest of their gear and ra
ce toward the fire truck, Lucas shifted into emergency mode and tried to turn his thoughts away from Cattleman’s Crossing and that damn anniversary.
Twenty years later, and he was still trying to forget it.
How had she gotten his name? His place of work?
She must be some kind of journalist. She had that sort of stubbornness. She was hot in the best ways—a curvy body, wavy reddish brown hair that Lucas could almost imagine sliding his fingers through—but the way she held herself told the world she didn’t take no for an answer.
She didn’t seem to believe in ghosts, but Lucas knew she’d be back. He was already regretting it at the same time his heart thudded with the thought of seeing her again.
“Moore!” Jake shouted. “You coming with? Or are you too busy kicking yourself for not getting her number?”
“Whatever,” Lucas said, fumbling for his helmet. If he’d been somebody like Jake, he would have asked her out. It was hard to tell which his buddy had more of, biceps or bravado. He slept with women who liked thick necks and good times, and he’d probably never believed in monsters under the bed.
“We’re going!” Tory shouted.
He jumped up on the truck just as it roared out of the station. The sirens blaring in his ears, he held on tight as it lurched through the wall of heat and the dense smells of the city. Trash and taco trucks blended over the stench of hot pavement as Lucas felt himself sweat underneath his layers of protective clothing. Texas hadn’t seemed to have gotten the memo that it was fall. He never minded the mild winters, but they’d been baking in the heat for going on six months now, and were all overcooked.
The smoke appeared as the truck rounded a corner. It was a five-story building downtown, and he hoped the owners had good insurance. A crowd had gathered on the street below, watching the dirty white column of smoke mix into the sky, the stench too rotten for any barbecue.
“Everybody clear!” Jake shouted as the truck squealed to a stop. First priority was getting everyone to safety, in and outside of the building. They had to move the gawkers.
Jake waved at the crowd, pushing them back across the street and down.
“Anyone inside?” Lucas shouted, grabbing his breathing apparatus.
“We’re not sure,” his chief said. “Possible couple on the second floor.”
“I’m on it,” Lucas said, tugging his mask on as he rushed to the building, a couple firefighters behind.
As he opened the front door, smoke poured out. It was like a fog that no sun would clear. Still, Lucas raced in. It was what he did.
If Lucas thought back to the Cattleman’s Crossing Inn Fire—and he really tried not to—it was damn weird he’d become a firefighter. He’d not been the only one to survive that night, but he was the only one with a burn mark. The only one that thing in the fire had touched and not consumed.
You’d think a nine-year-old kid who’d gotten burned so early wouldn’t have ever dreamed of becoming a firefighter, would’ve been a boy who’d have nightmares about being surrounded by blazes. Lucas did have those nightmares. But along with the fear had come a fascination.
The fire that night had been like nothing Lucas had ever seen. Before or since.
~
That night at Cattleman’s Crossing his parents had left him with a babysitter to go out to dinner. They’d been in town house-hunting and had gone for steaks. The babysitter had been blond and bored, like a lot of teenage girls her age. He didn’t even remember her face. She’d been biting her nails and he’d been watching a DVD when they first smelled it.
“Did you put something in the microwave?” the babysitter asked, turning in her chair.
He shook his head, his floppy brown hair falling into his eyes. Despite being an older building, the inn had modern appliances, a mini-fridge and a small microwave on top. His mom and dad had promised him that if he was good, he could make popcorn later when they came home.
This didn’t smell like popcorn.
The babysitter narrowed her eyes at him. She’d stepped out onto the balcony for a smoke earlier, and she thought he’d done something.
He shook his head again. “I didn’t.”
Exhaling, the babysitter stood up, walked over to the microwave, and opened it. Nothing, of course. She slammed the microwave door and drummed her fingernails on its top. She darted a quick glance to the balcony, probably thinking the cigarette she’d had out there was still burning. But all was dark.
“I’m going to check outside in the hall,” she finally said. She pointed her finger at him. “You stay here.”
She slipped out, the door closing softly behind her.
Lucas stood up, even though he suddenly felt woozy. The smell was still there. It wasn’t burnt popcorn, and it wasn’t the nicotine smell the babysitter had tried to cover up with perfume earlier. It reminded Lucas of this charred field they’d driven past the previous summer, which his parents said had been lit on fire on purpose, to help the crops. That never made sense to Lucas, but he recalled the scent then; the air was tinged with it. Except there was another smell too, underneath the burnt one. This one reminded Lucas of another drive with his parents, one when they’d caught the stench of roadkill with the windows rolled down.
The dead scent lay under the burning like an old dog under a porch. Like a dead dog.
Two minutes later, the babysitter still hadn’t come back.
The stench was beginning to turn Lucas’s stomach. He didn’t think he wanted popcorn when his parents got home anymore. He wondered where the babysitter went. He wondered if he should go looking for her.
The door to the hall creaked open a sliver.
Hadn’t the babysitter shut it?
Lucas took two steps forward and froze. Fear danced along his spine. He didn’t know why, and that made it worse. His arms and legs trembled in his pajamas. He was more scared than he’d been in his life.
Then it got worse.
~
Two decades later, Lucas was still trying to figure out what had happened that night. Maybe that’s why he’d started working for Dallas Fire and Rescue. To make sense of those nightmares. To feel the fear and rush forward, knowing that he could conquer it, like he did rushing into the burning building today. He almost wanted that more than he wanted anything else. Sure, he had a good relationship with his parents there in Dallas, and he had friends like Jake and the guys—but never anyone close, and not any girlfriends that lasted more than a couple of months. Part of him felt like he lived on borrowed time. He should have died that night. Why hadn’t he? If he’d be only one step forward, and Mr. Lyons one step back…
There in the city, he pounded up the steps hard, puffing into his breathing apparatus. A graceful staircase curled upward, and the smoke billowed down artlessly. Lucas plunged ahead into the fear and the fire.
Survivor’s guilt, a therapist had called it in college, when the nightmares had crept back and his sleep disappeared as the ten-year anniversary of the fire came round.
Lucas shook his head as he climbed toward the landing. He might’ve been guilty, but he could do something about it. Save others.
Sure enough, on the second floor an older couple was in the hallway, gripping each other and almost bent over double, coughing.
“Here!” Lucas ripped off his mask and gave it to the woman, who looked worse off. “We need to get you to safety.” He draped a blanket around their shoulders and moved them towards the staircase, all the while staying as low as possible to avoid the smoke. In their fear, they probably had been paralyzed, hadn’t known where to go. He got that.
At least it was only a fire this time.
As the three of them stumbled down the steps, Lucas’s arm around the woman in case she passed out, he repeated the mantra he used when the old fear reared its head.
You’re safe. It’s not here.
You’re safe. It’s not here.
He’d seen articles during the past decade about the old inn in local magazines and papers. People
claimed to sense, hear, or even see the spirit that skirted the edges of his consciousness when he was in those moments between awake and asleep.
You’re safe. It’s not here.
He didn’t like to read those articles, but sometimes he did. Sometimes he wondered if those people had really seen the thing he’d seen, had come close enough to not only smell it but touch it. Because if they did, he doubted they’d be so quick to share.
The three of them safely exited and the paramedics rushed forward, putting a mask on the man and ushering them to an ambulance. Lucas knew they’d probably be okay, but inhaling that much smoke could do a number on your lungs. They needed oxygen.
As the firefighters contained the blaze, Lucas’s mind drifted back to Laney Stonewater.
If she didn’t believe in ghosts, what did she believe had happened at the inn?
Chapter Three
Laney
A cold sweet tea in hand, Laney walked swiftly to the Cattleman’s Crossing Inn to confirm that everything was a go for tomorrow night. Between sips of the sugary drink, Laney shook her head and mumbled to herself, not caring how she looked to the good people of Dallas.
Lucas Moore had said no to her? There had to be a first time for everything. No one said no to a Stonewater.
It was both a relief and incredibly annoying.
Laney was the daughter of con artists. Karl and Sandy Stonewater were deeply in love by the time she was born—not just with each other, but the lies they told, the pretty fictions they wove to keep gourmet food on the table and a roof over their heads. The scams they ran were less Ocean’s Eleven and more used car salesman, but they formed the roots of Laney’s childhood. From insurance schemes to tales of woe to their fellow man, the Stonewaters almost always walked away with thicker wallets and placid grins.
Laney had her father’s undeniable smile and her mother’s tenacity. And Lucas Moore had told her no?
His swift dismissal aside, Laney was also frustrated that along with the firefighter not answering her inquiries into his experience at the inn, she’d somehow wound up with even more questions.