This story contains themes of forest fire and may be triggering for some readers.
Chapter 1
The French Polish was chipped and the white nails had lost their luster. She stirs the ice cubes with a paper straw, stabbing at the orange slice floating on the ruby surface. She raises the glass, examining its contents. The glow from the sky outside, played with the colours, as if viewing the world through gag glasses.
'Somebody eat, this is such a waste of food,' she looks up at her friend, then scans the contents of the plates huddled in the centre of the table, the price for admission in these times for an hour in a booth. Impaling a piece of buttered broccolini, she takes a bite, not hungry, but happy to replace the taste of the ever present astringent smoke in her mouth and throat, at least until her next breath.
The only other group sits across the restaurant, like her little group, unusually somber for a summer afternoon. She feels his eyes on her once again. She was used to strangers amongst her, the seasonal consequence of living in a tourist town. The wind change on Tuesday had seen them all evacuate though, an unending stream of mobile homes, camper trailers, and heavily laden SUVs had conveyed down the two lane highway, the only traffic coming in the other direction the army troop carriers and fire trucks. She refuses to meet his gaze. Tall, broad shouldered, good looking, definitely a reporter.
She hands off her empty glass to the waitress, exchanging it for a fresh drink.
'Oh here we go,' the waitress rushes back to the bar, leaning over and turning up the volume on the wall mounted tv. Dot recognises the voice before her eyes reach the screen. She glances over at Margie, the pain and fear etched on her face, as she watches her father deliver the press briefing. Flanked by heads of different departments, he updates the status on each of the fire fronts. Uncontained. Uncontained. Uncontained. And on and on it goes. She grabs her hand with a squeeze, there is nothing that can be said. The best thing about living in a small community is also the worst. The people fighting along the firefront are not just anonymous faces hidden behind their oxygen masks.
Dot pushes away her drink, and heads out to the deck. She leans against the railing, looking out along the Main Street, the orange haze of the mid morning light making her familiar town seem more like a sci-fi film set.
'Do you mind if I smoke?'
She looks up at him, she notices the emerald green eyes slightly bloodshot. Hers probably were too, she thought, irritated by the constant smoke in the air.
'You must be joking?' He slides the cigarette back into its packet, mistaking her derision for contempt.
She places her hand on his upper arm, surprised by the hard muscle, and the light tingle that runs over her skin. 'Don't be ridiculous you can smoke,' she gestures her hand through the air between them, 'it can't get any worse.'
'You wouldn't think so.'
She studies him for a beat. There is something she doesn't have quite right with him.
'Do you live here he asks?'
'No comment.'
He looks at her strangely. 'Do you live somewhere else?'
'No comment,'
'Will you give me your name at least?'
'Why so you can quote your source? Make up some rubbish to feed the masses. You really are quite revolting,' she turns to look back down the valley.
'What source?'
'Me!' she turns back with an exasperated sigh.
He is looking at her with amusement.
'You have lost me I'm afraid.'
'Is this the latest tactic - play dumb and innocent?'
He draws back on the cigarette.
'I'm nothing close to innocent,' his eyes darken with intensity as they lock onto hers, sending a shiver down her spine. 'As for the dumb, that's not an act I'm afraid.'
'Where are you from?' she asks.
'Hamiltontown,'
She studies his face confused. The neighbouring valley is made up of farms and little else. 'You're not a reporter?'
His face breaks with laughter. 'No. Just a farmer. I can report on the current cattle price, or the monthly rainfall if you like, that's about it. Are we doing some sort of role play fantasy? Are you going to play the cute weather girl?'
His tired eyes sparkle as he teases her. She can't help but grin in return.
'Only because I have been feeding the town for the last two days, and I haven't seen you down there.'
'I only got here this morning. I'm helping Jack get his place ready,' he indicates with a nod inside.
She is quiet for a while, she knows the answer before she asks the question. It's in the way he stands, exhausted fatigue, a country boy beaten, knocked down and dragged back to standing.
'The fire came through Hamiltontown.' It's not even a question. The fire path seared into both the soil and the mind.
He nods.
'Was you place...'
'No, we were fine.'
Their voices are both scratchy, raspy, like they have shared a winter cold. Only this is high summer.
'Was it very bad?'
'I was helping my friend at his Dad's farm, his place is "undefendable".'
Undefendable. The properties tucked into the sides of hills, at the end of roads. Usually one way in, one way out. Government speak for no help is coming.
'He has one old fire truck, a couple of water tanks on run arounds. Sprinklers, ponds, pumps.'
He laughs coldly. He pulls his phone out, brings up a video. She watches from the inside of a truck, red embers dance across the road, through the air, across the hood. The forest on either side of the road is bright orange, yellow, red or black. The greens and blues of nature gone in an instant. The forest structure still intact, as if hell has put a filter across the landscape.
She wonders if he is driving in, or driving out of the danger. If she had to guess it wouldn't be away. The video ends, and he swipes to a photo. It's an overhead of a house, it's colours vivid against the blacked dirt that surrounds it.
'We saved the house. Everything else is gone.'