I've never felt so lost, so vulnerable as when I watched my home burn to the ground, becoming a distorted mass of melted metal and pitch black ashes. I watched as my memories went to the winds one by one, my irreplaceable diaries, photo albums, and even my half-finished book, taken and cast aside carelessly by the unmerciful flames. The careful planning of the living room decor came to mind as the flames swept about my house. It had been the first room I had ever decorated myself; everything from the wallpapering to the tiny glass figurines over the fireplace had been my own design and idea. I pictured what it must have looked like from the inside as it burned, the bluebell carpeting being eaten up first.
The flames spreading to the flower-patterned wallpaper, then to the picture of my college graduation, with my mother, father and sisters all looking particularly windswept, but pleased. The furniture must have gone next, even my cream-colored sofa, and its matching pillows with bluebell trim that I had painstakingly sewn together. The feeling of utter helplessness came over me when I recalled the only portrait I had of my brother Ken hanging over the fireplace. He had stood proudly that day, standing next to me and smiling in full confidence after his wedding to Diane. The thought of the only picture I had treasured so much in flames sent me over the edge, tears welling up in my eyes, tearing me out of my stupor and back into the world of feeling. I heard a dog's frantic barking from inside the building: my dog, Cassie. The heat, raw emotion, and pain were too much to bear; and all went black.
When I came to, I could still feel the heat on my face, in stark contrast to the cold wetness I felt underneath me. Suddenly, there was a clear voice cutting through the jumbled mutters, telling everyone to move aside. Then a cool hand rested on my forehead. "Come on sweetheart, let me know if you can hear me," came the clearly masculine voice. I tried to make my head move, but found that I seemed to have lost control of my bodily functions. I remembered vaguely reading about severe shock rendering a person in a state of semi-consciousness, where the mind works, but the body remains out of the person's control.
It was absolutely absurd, I thought to myself, that I remembered that silly little fact when I was, in fact, the one in shock. The voice cut through my thoughts again, "She is unresponsive, let's get her hooked up," and then to me, "Darling, this will be over before you know it, okay? You're gonna be okay." I wondered briefly if he knew I could hear him after all, or if he was just comforting himself with his words. I felt myself being lifted from the puddle and slipped into unconsciousness once more.
I recall having slipped in and out of consciousness for who knew how long. Every time I awoke there was someone holding my hand, and often the male voice I had heard at my rescue was there, talking to me about all manner of things. "Ashley? Oh Jesus, Ash..." The words were coming from somewhere beside me the next time I slipped back into my own mind. It was the voice of my mother, soft and comforting as it had always been. I attempted to flex my fingers, and found that not only could I think coherently, but I could move again. I cracked my eye open slightly, and shut it immediately as the light flooded in.
"Ash!" My mother had noticed my small movements, and I could feel her moving around. "How are you feeling dear?" she asked, as she took my hand, her fingers trembling slightly. An overreaction I thought, I had only fainted.
I attempted to speak, but found that the only sound I could make was a light groan, and I attempted to move my head from side to side, only to find that there was something restraining it. Oh damn, I thought to myself, now I've gone and broken my neck. Once again, I attempted to open my eyes, and found that it was too bright. Seconds later I heard a small click and saw the light fade from behind my eyelids.
"Is that better, Miss Connelly?" It was that voice again, sending shivers up my spine as it rumbled into my ears.