Sam felt in the gloom for the child and found her. He lifted her, and there, miraculously, was a pair of hands waiting to take the kid. Hands reaching through the smoke, seeming almost supernatural.
Sam collapsed against the sill, half hanging out of the window, and someone grabbed him, and dragged and slid him down the aluminum ladder. His head smacked the rungs and he did not mind one tiny bit because out here was light and air and through squinting, weeping eyes he could see the blue sky.
Edilio and a kid named Joel manhandled Sam down to the sidewalk.
Someone sprayed him with a hose. Did they think he was on fire?
Was he on fire?
He opened his mouth and gulped greedily at the cold water. It washed over his face.
But he couldn’t hold on to consciousness. He floated away. Floated on his back on gentle surf.
His mother was there. She was sitting on the water just beside him. Her chin rested on her knees. She wasn’t looking at him.
“What?” he said to her.
“It smelled like fried chicken,” she said.
“What?” he said.
His mother reached over and slapped him hard across the face.
His eyes flew open.
“Sorry,” Astrid said. “I needed to wake you up.”
She knelt beside him and placed somethi
ng against his mouth. A plastic mask. Oxygen.
He coughed, and breathed. He pulled the mask away and threw up, right on the sidewalk, doubled over like a drunk in an alleyway.
Astrid looked away discreetly. Later he would be embarrassed. Right now he was just glad to be able to throw up.
He breathed more oxygen.
Quinn was holding the garden hose. Edilio was racing to hook one of the bigger fire hoses up to the hydrant. There was a trickle, then, as Edilio worked the long-handled wrench and opened the hydrant all the way, a gusher. The kids on the other end had to wrestle the hose like they were fighting a python. It would have been funny some other time.
Sam sat up. He still couldn’t talk.
He nodded to where half a dozen kids knelt around the little firestarter. She was black, black by race and from the coating of soot. Her hair was gone on one side, burned away. On the other side she had a little girl’s pigtail held with a pink scrunchy.
Sam knew from the reverential way the kids knelt there. He knew, but he had to ask, anyway. His voice was a soft croak.
Astrid shook her head. “I’m sorry, Sam,” she said.
Sam nodded.
“Her parents probably had the stove on when they disappeared,” Astrid said. “That’s most likely what caused the fire. Or maybe a cigarette.”
No, Sam thought. No, that wasn’t it.
The little girl had the power. She had the power Sam had, at least something like it.
The power he had used in panic to create an impossible light.
The power he had used once and almost killed someone with.