But when he stood he held himself with some dignity.
Caine turned toward the steps. The church had been emptied of anything that would burn. The last of the roof had come down with a sequence of crashes that sent dust billowing out to spark the bonfire. Now the tired crews were tearing handrails and old wooden office chairs, framed pictures and broken-up desks out of the town hall building.
Caine focused on the largest fragment, most of a desk. He extended his hand, palm out.
The desk rose from the ground.
It sailed through the air over upturned faces. Caine set it gently atop the burning pile.
Quinn braced himself for an announcement by Caine that he was back. That he was in charge. That he was still king. And the sad reality was that Quinn would have welcomed it: being in charge of all this was more than he wanted to handle.
“Let me know what else I can do,” Caine said quietly. Then he sat down, cross-legged, and stared into the fire.
Lana sauntered over. “Have to admit: the guy has a genius for doing the wrong thing. We actually need him to be the bad guy, and suddenly he’s Mr. Meek and Mild.”
Quinn was too tired to think of some clever retort. His shoulders sagged. He let his head drop down. “I wish I knew how long we had to keep it together.”
“Until we can’t,” Lana said.
The panic started then. There was no cause that Quinn could see. Suddenly kids on the far side of the fire were shouting and some were squealing. Maybe nothing more than a rat passing through.
But those beside them didn’t know what it was and the panic spread lightning-quick.
Lana cursed and started running. Quinn was right behind her. But the panic came to meet them, kids suddenly screaming without knowing why, running, circling back to the fire, getting spooked and running again, knocking one another over, yelling.
Sanjit’s sister, Peace, knocked into Quinn. He grabbed her shoulders and yelled, “What is it?”
She had no answer, just shook her head and pulled away.
A kid ran into the darkness. His clothing was on fire; the flames streamed behind him as he fled screaming. Dahra Baidoo tackled him like a football player and rolled him over to kill the flames.
Other kids grabbed torches and formed into knots and paranoid clusters, back-to-back like ancient warriors surrounded by foes.
And then to Quinn’s utter horror a girl ran straight into the fire. She was screaming, “Mommy! Mommy!”
He leaped to cut her off, but he was too late. The heat drove him back as he cried, “No! No! No!”
Then, as if grabbed by a divine hand, the girl came flying back out of the fire. She was rolled across the ground. It was rough but effective. The fire that had just caught onto her shorts went out.
Quinn turned, grateful, to Caine. But Caine did not look at him. Quinn heard Lana shouting at kids, telling them to stop acting like idiots, to calm down.
Some listened. Others did not. More than one lit torch went off into the darkness. Quinn wondered how long it would be before he started seeing fires throughout this poor, beaten town.
Lana came storming back, furious, practically spitting with rage. “No one even knows what it was. Some idiot yelled something and off they went. Like cattle. I hate people.”
“Do we go after the ones that got away?” Quinn wondered aloud.
But Lana wasn’t ready for a calm discussion. “I really, sometimes, really just hate them all.”
She threw herself down on the steps. Quinn noticed a slight smile on Caine’s lips. Caine favored him with a curious look. “Question for you, Quinn: how long would you have stayed on strike?”
“What?”
“Well, seemed to me like you were ready to have all these people go hungry over Cigar.”
Quinn rested his fists on his sides. “How long would you have defended Penny?”
Caine made a small laugh. “Being in charge. It’s not easy, is it?”