On the other side of the patch of burning floor.
Sachs could barely see it, the smoke was so thick. A wall collapsed in front of them, the old joists and posts behind it snapping and firing sparks and jets of hot gas, which hissed into the cloudy room. She hesitated, then started for the basement door.
The minister took her arm. "Wait." He opened a closet and grabbed a fire extinguisher, yanked the arming pin. "Let's go."
Sachs shook her head. "Not you. Keep checking up here. Tell the fire department there's a police officer and another victim in the basement."
Sachs was sprinting now.
When you move . . .
She jumped over the fiery patch of floor. But
because of the smoke she misjudged the distance to the wall; it was closer than she'd thought and she slammed into the wood paneling then fell backwards, rolling as her hair brushed the fire, some strands igniting. Gagging on the stink, she crushed the flames out and started to push herself to her feet. The floor, weakened by the flames beneath, broke under her weight and her face crashed into the oak. She felt the blaze in the basement lick her hands and arms as she yanked her hands back.
Rolling away from the edge she climbed to her feet and reached for the knob to the basement door. She stopped suddenly.
Come on, girl, think better! Feel a door before opening it. If it's too hot and you let oxygen into a superheated room it'll ignite and the backdraft'll fry your ass good. She touched the wood. It was scorching hot.
Then thought: But what the hell else can I do?
Spitting on her hand, she gripped the knob fast, twisting it open and releasing it just before the burn seared her palm.
The door burst open and a cloud of smoke and sparks shot outward.
"Anybody down there?" she called and started down.
The lower stairs were burning. She blasted them with a short burst of carbon dioxide and leapt into the murky basement. She broke through the second-to-last step, pitching forward. The extinguisher clattered to the floor as she grabbed the railing just in time to save her leg from snapping.
Pulling herself out of the broken step, Sachs squinted through the haze. The smoke wasn't as bad down here--it was rising--but the flames were raging all around her. The extinguisher had rolled under a burning table. Forget it! She ran through the smoke.
"Hello?" she shouted.
No answer.
Then remembered that Unsub 823 used duct tape; he liked his vics silent.
She kicked in a small doorway and looked inside the boiler room. There was a door leading outside but burning debris blocked it completely. Beside it stood the fuel tank, which was now surrounded by flames.
It won't explode, Sachs remembered from the academy--the lecture on arson. Fuel oil doesn't explode. Kick aside the debris and push the door open. Clear your escape route. Then go look for the woman and the girl.
She hesitated, watching the flames roll over the side of the oil tank.
It won't explode, it won't explode.
She started forward, edging toward the door.
It won't--
The tank suddenly puffed out like a heated soda can and split down the middle. The oil squirted into the air, igniting in a huge orange spume. A fiery pool formed on the floor and flowed toward Sachs.
Won't explode. Okay. But it burns pretty fucking well. She leapt back through the door, slammed it shut. So much for her escape route.
Backing toward the stairs, choking now, keeping low, looking for any signs of Carole and Pammy. Could 823 have changed the rules? Could he have given up on basements and put these vics in the church attic?
Crack.
A fast look upward. She saw a large oak beam, rippling with flames, start to fall.