I didn’t wait to see the more modest flames that would build now in the wake of the blast. Turning east again, pulling the goggles over my eyes, I sprinted toward Blue Sky Ranch.
Forty-one
To the right of the driveway were acres of meadows secured by ranch fencing infilled with fine wire mesh. The same aquifer that made possible the almond orchard provided sweet grass and clover for the breed-worthy horses that, during the day, could sometimes be seen grazing there.
Blue Sky Ranch had been for two generations one of the three or four most successful quarter-horse breeding operations anywhere in California and the Southwest. As a secondary business, they bred and trained horses for sulky racing. Bing Torbold and his wife had built the ranch and the business. His son, Bing Jr., upheld the family traditions and brought even greater glory to the storied Torbold stables. When Bing Jr. fell ill and his son, Carter Torbold, took over a decade sooner than anticipated, the slide to bankruptcy began. Carter gambled. Not on horses. In Vegas. The casinos called his kind “whales,” because of their fat bankrolls. Carter loved to gamble, but he had neither the discipline of a professional poker player nor any luck at all.
The valuable breeding stock was sold off to an operation in Arizona. Without the legendary Torbold horses to breed new champions, the property and buildings were worth less than they might have been had the bloodline been still an asset of the ranch.
Fourteen years ago, when they were twenty-five, Dave and Lauren Ainsworth had bought the ranch at a distressed price. They had modest capital, a deep knowledge of horses, a willingness to work hard, and the wisdom to know that delayed gratification was often the secret to success. In ten years, they built a business and a winning bloodline that Bing Torbold would have admired. Then Dave got cancer and was gone in six months. Lauren had been running the place ever since, doing the work of two and raising her twins, Veronica and Victoria, by all accounts succeeding at both tasks. She and Dave had brought the girls to the Pico Mundo Grille occasionally, and often they had sat at the counter to watch me perform with spatulas, whisk, pot fork, and draining spoon, which could be an entertaining juggling act, especially if I hammed it up for the kids.
As the driveway turned to the right, the residence came into view: a two-story Kentucky-style manor house, white with black trim. The place was smaller than it appeared to be, because the generous veranda that wrapped three sides created the illusion of grandness.
Most of the windows were bright, and the veranda lamps were aglow. The goggles magnified the light into a consuming green flare, and I pushed them onto my forehead again.
I glanced at the luminous dial of my watch. How long? Five minutes. Four? Maybe just three?
Lauren was standing in the side yard with her daughters, gazing west toward the colossal flames surging from the gasoline storage tank and the less dramatic fire at, possibly, a distant church. Their yellow Labrador retriever, Muggs, stood with them, alert. I called to them and identified myself as I hurried off the driveway onto the front lawn. The girls, almost twelve years old and marked by the easy ardency of that age, squealed with excitement and ran toward me, and Muggs came galloping after them. They hadn’t seen me in nearly two years, but the events of this night so astonished them and inflamed their imagination that the suddenness of my arrival seemed ordinary by comparison.
“Mr. Thomas! What’re all the fires?”
“Mr. Thomas! Did you hear the booms?”
“They were crazy loud!”
“We were watching TV!”
“The whole house shook!”
“BOOM! BOOM!”
“Muggs went Scooby Doo on us!”
“He hid under the kitchen table!”
Muggs wove among us, his tail beating against our legs, panting and grinning, having overcome his terror, now filled with the girls’ enthusiasm.
They were lovely girls, with their mother’s blond hair and their father’s gray eyes. They would turn heads when they were grown, just as their mother had turned heads—and still did.
Lauren joined us near the veranda where it cornered from the front yard to the side yard. She had none of the girls’ giddiness, and she shushed them. She was serious, and when she saw the combat rifle that I carried and then met my eyes, anxiety took possession of her face.
“Trust me,” I said.
“Of course.”
“You have a gun?”
“A pistol.”
“Get it. Fast. Take the girls to the stables. Hide there.”
She sprinted for the porch steps.
I called after her, “Leave all the house lights on.”
Veronica and Victoria remained with me. They were still excited but now also anxious.
“What’s wrong, Mr. Thomas?”
“What’s happening?”
“Are we going to be okay?”
“You’ll be fine,” I said. “Does Muggs bark much?”
Veronica said, “He hardly ever barks.”
“He grumbles sometimes,” Victoria said. “Sometimes he farts loud.”
“Hardly ever.”
Veronica said, “But when he does, it’s a window-rattler.”
“In the stable,” I warned them, “make sure he doesn’t bark.”
Veronica held the agitated dog by the collar.
Both girls looked toward the fires, and Victoria said, “Is someone gonna bomb us?”
I’m not sure how I knew which of them was Veronica, which Victoria, but I knew. “No one’s going to bomb you, but you need to be brave.”
“We can be,” Veronica said.
“We have been,” Victoria said.
Veronica said, “We had to be. Since we lost Daddy.”
Their mother hurried out of the house, closed the door behind her, and descended the porch steps. She carried a pistol and a flashlight.
I said, “Hide as best you can. Then don’t use the flashlight until I come for you.”
“All right.”