FIRST
DEGREE BURN
CHAPTER ONE
Superman pulled up to
the decrepit rowhouse in a Black '78 Econoline van. The needles
crunched on the sidewalk along Avenue C when he got out. It was
a piss-numbing, sub zero night down in Alphabet City and at half-past-two
in the morning, the streets were dead. Superman looked around before
he slid the van door open. There was enough gasoline inside to take
down a city block.
The two red cans looked
black in the night scope as Eddie Burke watched him from the roof
across the street. He had been tracking the psychopath for months
now as he wreaked havoc across the Lower East Side: lighting fires;
smashing boilers and breaking water mains. Landlords would hire
the fearsome Dominican to clean out their rent controlled buildings
and Superman (born Dagoberto Rojas) did it with the efficiency of
a surgeon cauterizing a wound. Still, half a dozen people got burned
in his fires; among them an elderly woman and three-year-old twins.
When told of the death
toll, Superman would just cackle through yellow teeth and say "Muerte
a los bomberos..." Death to the firefighters who think they
can stop me.
This bothered Eddie Burke
who had a particular problem with arrogance. And when he transfered
from Brooklyn Base to Manhattan where he worked as a "catching"
Fire Marshal, he pushed Superman up to the top of his chart.
So now, on this frigid
night in December, he lay on his belly as the arsonist hauled the
gasoline cans into the vacant tenement. "Squad 4-8 to 4-1,"
Eddie whispered over the three-inch Motorola Handie Talkie clipped
to his turnout coat.
"4-1. You got him Burke?" Supervising Fire Marshal Mike
Kivlihan was on Avenue A and Houston St. standing in front of 32
Engine and 103 Truck. There were thirteen firefighters behind him,
waiting for the word.
"Yeah," said
Eddie. "And it's gasoline again, which means a fast in and
out."
"So? What about
it?"
"I asked for two
blocks. You're five minutes away."
"Who gives a shit?
The place is unoccupied." Kivlihan was a nasty little bantam
rooster. A short man in a big man's job. But Eddie kept pressing.
"A lot of crackheads
use the buildings down here."
"I thought you said
the windows were covered with tin."
"They are."
"Then it's empty..."
Kivlihan turned and played
to the men behind him.
"Look, this is your
party, asshole. I got two pieces of apparatus and we're on the clock.
Now, you gonna do this or not?"
Eddie shook his head.
Among the Marshals, Kivlihan was known as an "empty suit."
A "house" Marshal who'd gone on light duty after a minor
injury his third year in an engine company. He'd ass-kissed his
way through the ranks ever since.
"Just be there."
Eddie punched out.
He grabbed a Halligan
tool and a nylon life line and pushed down off the roof while, below
in the shadows, Superman used an eight-inch crowbar to pop open
a basement window. The building had been boarded for months now.
The end townhouse in a block of brownstones designed at the turn
of the century by McKim, Meade & White. A row of six-story bell
epoque buildings that had been granted Landmark Status in 1995.
And that was their death sentence.
You see, the law was
designed for preservation, but arson investigators like Eddie Burke
knew that it was an open invitation to burn. Landmark buildings
could only be renovated along precise lines approved by the HPD
- The City's Department of Housing, Preservation and Development.
You couldn't just do a spray job or slap sheetrock over these babies.
They cost ten times as much to bring back to life as a conventional
structure, so many landlords, finding themselves with an expensive
"old lady" to take care of, simply put out the word for
"a torch."
In this case, no one
knew that the landlord had already drawn up the plans for a 20-story
tan brick highrise of Section Eight Housing. He'd get an insurance
payout for the burn and Federal Matching Funds to replace the glorious
old brownstones that were too expensive to renovate.
And once again a little
piece of the city would die. That's how things ran in New York and
after twelve years in a truck company watching Manhattan burn away,
Eddie Burke was disgusted. He could get his revenge with a gun or
a bottle, but for now it would happen when he finally put the bracelets
on this piece of shit from Santo Domingo.
They called him Superman,
in part, because no one could touch him and in part because he'd
survived a six story jump into an alley when Eddie had cornered
him on the top floor of a tenement. The man just refused to get
hurt or get collared and he was always four steps ahead. But tonight
Eddie would grab him. Arrest him downstairs in the boiler room as
he set up the incendiary device. That way the charge would be Arson
One.
The First Alarm "Response"
was on standby with Kivlihan just in case Eddie was late or the
fire-starter beat him to the match. But Eddie Burke wouldn't let
that happen. And he had the Dominican fuck in the Trigicon sights
of his "Smith" when Rojas disappeared in the basement
doorway.
Inside, the arsonist
worked quickly. He went straight to the boiler room and switched
on an overhead bulb dangling from a cord. There was still power
in the building, so the landlord could keep the boiler on low and
prevent the pipes from freezing. In the fire investigation that
would follow, he would have to maintain that he fully intended to
renovate the landmark but that fate or some faulty wiring had intervened.
Superman switched on
a hand spotlight and unscrewed the bulb. He screwed a "Y"
extension into the socket and replaced the bulb. Then he found an
old plastic garbage can and moved it next to the oil storage tank.
He hit the side of the tank and smiled. It was 3/4's full of No.
Four heating fuel, enough of an accelerant to break windows three
blocks away when it blew.
Eddie was moving through
the alley at the side of the building now. There was a vacant lot
next door from an earlier three alarm blaze and he saw a half-dozen
rotted out mattresses where the crack addicts would lie on a summer
night and blow rock. But not tonight. The temperature was 15 below.
At the back of the building,
there was a fire escape with a "pull down" ladder. Eddie
reached up with the Halligan tool and yanked it down. Then he climbed
up and began making his away along the old rusted fire escape.
At one point it shook,
and one of the second floor bolts sheared. The thing rocked.
"Jesus Christ..."
Eddie said it under his
breath as he grabbed the rail. Fire escapes were an afterthought
on a building like this and they were the last part of the infrastructure
that ever got serviced. This one had rusted out years ago and Eddie
wasn't sure if it would take his full weight. So he moved up cautiously
to the third floor landing and headed for the roof.
Down in the boiler room
now, Superman opened a Glad drawstring trash bag and pushed it into
the garbage can, taping the mouth of the open bag around the rim
with duct tape. Then he pulled out two white extension cords. He
plugged one into the socket and took out a small house timer. The
kind people use to try and fool the home invaders when they take
a trip. Superman plugged the timer into the first extension cord
and then the second cord into the timer.
He stripped the ends
off, exposing the wires, then twisted them into a "pig's tail"
and taped the wire so that the exposed end was directly over the
open garbage bag in the can.
Eddie was two steps from
the top landing of the fire escape when it buckled again. Christ.
The thing shook. Eddie fell back a few rungs and hung on. The old
wrought iron stairwell made a creaking sound and down in the basement.
Superman stopped cold.
He looked upstairs, cocking his head like a predatory beast and
listened again. He moved his way out from the boiler room and panned
the spotlight. A rat darted across the floor and he smiled.
"El raton..."
Outside now, Eddie held
his breath and moved up the stairs, touching them like eggshells.
The fire escape creeked one more time but he lunged up and grabbed
onto the edge of the roof coping and pulled himself over. He hyperventialted,
staring up at the World Trade Center to his right. Then he got up
and moved to the bulkhead which led to the top floor brownstone
landing. He inserted the Halligan tool in the door and was about
to pop it, when he saw smoke...
"Mother of Christ."
Eddie jumped on the two-way.
"4-8 to 4-1. There's
somebody in the building."
Kivlihan clicked back.
"No shit. The fuckin' torch."
"No. I mean somebody's
on one of the floors. A civilian.
"That's bullshit."
"Hey. I'm on the
roof and there's smoke from a cooking fire coming out of one of
the chimneys."
"Maybe the maggot
decided to have a fuckin' burrito before he blew it."
"No. I'm goin' down
to see."
"That's a negative."
Kivlihan hissed at him so Eddie hit the transmit button.
"Sorry. You're breakin'
up..." He punched out and popped the door.
Now, down below, the
arsonist was certain he heard a noise. He rushed back into the boiler
room to finish the job as Eddie made his way down, two steps at
a time through the darkened building. Because Rojas was downstairs,
it was too risky to use a Mag light.
But seven years with
a forcible entry rescue crew had given Eddie an instinct for moving
in the dark. Coming in with the First Response on Four Engine when
the smoke was so thick you had to crawl across the floor on your
hands. Sucking compressed air through a Scott's bottle with temperature's
hitting 800 degrees, you felt your way through as you searched for
bodies. The smoke was so dense that you had to tie a life-line on
the first piece of iron inside the door just to pull yourself out.
Now, by instinct, Eddie
moved down along the cast iron stairwell, checking each door along
the way for a line of light. Then, he smelled it. The smoke he'd
seen on the roof. He saw the flicker of light beneath the transom.
Eddie felt the door. He turned the nob and inched it open.
Inside, there was a fire
smoldering in a rusted 55 gallon drum. Someone had started it with
the wood from a shipping pallet. Across the mouth of the barrel
there was a piece of chicken on a crude spit that was burned to
a crisp. The smoke was traveling up through the ducts of the old
forced-air heating system. Eddie flicked on a penlight flash and
shined it across the room.
"Oh Jesus..."
In the opposite corner
he saw a woman in her early 20's. Black, lying on her side, her
eyes wide, tongue out... The crack pipe was on the floor beside
her. An overdose. Eddie pushed in and rushed over to her. He felt
for a pulse.
"Fuck" he pulled
his hands away. The body was stone cold and stiff as a board. He
was about to take off for the basement, when he saw something move
under a ratty old blanket. He grabbed the butt-end of the Haligan
tool, figuring it for a rat. Then he pulled the blanket away to
smash it and...
"Holy Christ..."
It was an infant, lying
in urine soaked "feety" pajamas and turning blue from
the cold.
He pushed the two-way and whispered.
"Burke to 4-1. There's
one DOA and one living... A baby. Can't be more than three months."
"Leave it and get
down to the basement. I'll have Rescue there in five minutes."
"Christ Kivie, no.
If it blows..."
"He won't risk it.
He's got to get out first."
"But this kid's
gonna freeze to dea..."
Kivie stopped him. "That
is a fucking order, Mister. Now get down there."
Eddie hesitated. The
tiny baby was trembling now. He felt like it could die any second
in his arms. Then he looked down below where the target was and...
"Fuck it."
He ripped open his Nomex
turnout coat and shoved the baby inside. Then he pushed out, down
toward the first floor landing.
Now in the basement,
Superman moved toward the boiler. He kneeled down and looked inside
at the blue flame from the pilot light. He took a hammer and came
down on the thermostat housing. Bang. The light went out. He didn't
want any fucking fire burning when the gasoline vapors started to
come up. Next, he opened the first can of gas and poured it into
the bag.
When the garbage can
was half full, he poured in the second 25 gallon can. Then he plugged
in the timer and checked his watch. It was 2:32 a.m. He set the
timer for 2:40. Eight minutes. Plenty of time to get out. Finally,
he plugged in the second extension cord. Now, as the gasoline fumes
began to fill the room, he'd created a circuit.
The highly flammable
vapors would rise up from the can. When the timer hit 2:40 a.m.
it would trip and complete the circuit, causing a short. A spark
would flash along the twisted wire pig-tail above the can. This
would blow the gasoline and set off the storage tank full of heating
fuel.
Superman would be having
a Bustello at a social club full of witnesses six blocks away and
he'd laugh through his yellow teeth when the dominos fell on the
table nearby from the shock of the blast.
He poured a few extra
ounces of gasoline in a line from the can to the tank as a "trailer"
and then grabbed his light. He started to exit the basement when
just then:
Kajack...
He heard the sound of
a 9 mm round going into the pipe of a Smith & Wesson on the
floor above him.
Superman stopped in his
tracks. He rans his odds and thought fast. If the bomberos were
on him he would give them a little regalo for when they walked in.
Take the fucking skin off their faces. So he ran back into the boiler
room, shined the light on the timer and shortened the blast time
to 2:36.
Less than four minutes
away and just enough time for him to climb out through the basement
window.
Now, up above, Eddie
was moving down the pitch black stairwell. He was on the second
floor landing about to step down, when he stopped. Instinct held
him back. Instinct and the draft he felt at the landing's edge.
He reached out for the railing and there was nothing. The baby inside
his jacket was beginning to cry now. It was just warm enough to
feel pain. And as Eddie switched on the penlight flash, he rocked
back.
"Fuck me..."
He holstered the gun
and looked down. Scavengers had been into the building. They'd taken
out the first floor wrought-iron stairwell for scrap. Now there
was a fifteen foot drop to the first floor and Eddie had an infant
in his coat.
He hit the two-way.
"Move in..."
Kivlihan jumped on the
radio. "You got him?"
"Not exactly. But
this kid here's about to die. Send Rescue; EMS. Thermal blanket.
The full loadout."
Kivlihan almost exploded.
"Where the fuck's Rojas?"
"I don't know, but
the fire escape's gone and I'm a little short of a first floor landing
here." He looked down at the open drop to the basement when
just then, through a hole in the floor where the scavengers had
hacked away at the stairwell, he saw a light flash.
Superman.
Eddie dropped the lifeline
from over his shoulder and snapped it onto the second floor railing
with a carabiner. He held his right arm around the baby and slid
down the line with his left.... boom... to the first floor.
Superman was just at
the basement window when he heard the noise. He ducked back into
the shadows as Eddie drew the Smith and moved down the stairs to
the basement. Then he stopped and smelled it. The gasoline.
Ten feet away in the
boiler room, he could hear the the timer. Click, click, click. He
looked around left, then right searching through the dark with eyes
that few other men had. That's when he saw it. The flash of silver
as Rojas pulled out a narrow blade.
Eddie pointed the Smith
at the shadow just below the window and cocked it.
"That's it Rojas.
Come out where I can fuckin' see you.
From the dark he heard.
"Fuck you mang and fuck your mother."
Eddie turned toward the
timer which was just clicking past 2:34 with less than two minutes
to go.
"You shoot me this
whole fuckin' place gonna blow," said the arsonist.
"That's one way
to end your career," said Eddie. "Now get the fuck out
here."
Click, click click.
"Two-thirty-four
mang. It's set to blow in two minutes."
Just then, from outside,
they heard the sirens. Now Superman had to make a decision. He could
take his chances up the back stairs with a piece-of-cake jump from
the first floor landing or run into half a dozen six-foot Irishmen
with turnout gear and fire axes coming in the front door. It wasn't
even a choice.
"Fuck you mang..."
And with that he darted
out through the dark toward the back of the basement.
In a second, Eddie was
after him, drawing the baby to his chest as he chased the Dominican
psychopath down along the basement hallway toward the back. Superman
was almost at the foot of the stairwell when, suddenly...
Eddie lunged forward
and threw out the Halligan tool. The ax-like blade spun head over
head and knocked the arsonist down. Eddie ran up to him, about to
pull out the cuffs, when, the baby cried. Rojas smiled like a pit
viper. He knew that Eddie was vulnerble, so he slashed out with
the knife.
"Christ," Eddie
went down in agony.
Rojas had cut a six-inch
slice across his thigh.
"Fuck you Maricon,"
said Superman. "You coulda had me but you stopped for some
fuckin' kid that was dead before it was fuckin' born. You deserve
to blow..."
And with that, he jammed
the knife into Eddie's thigh, kicking past him and taking off up
the stairs.
Eddie was almost in shock
now from the pain. The narrow bladed stiletto was buried up to the
hilt. But the baby was crying and the Fire Marshal knew that there
wasn't much time.
He looked at the luminous
dial on his black plastic Casio. 2:35 a.m. Less than a minute to
go. With all the strength that he had, Eddie pulled himself up by
the stairwell railing. The little baby was bawling now as Eddie
backed up the stairs, one at a time. Blood was pouring from the
knife wound and across the basement, the timer clicked away.
Finally, Eddie got to
the first floor landing. He pushed to a hallway window and, with
his good leg, kicked away at the tin. A flap opened in the corner
of the window and he looked down. It was twenty feet to the pile
of rubble in the lot next store where he'd come in.
The baby was starting
to convulse now and Eddie wasn't sure if it would survive the fall.
He couldn't even feel his leg. The hilt of the stilleto was buried
down to the bone. He checked his watch - thirty seconds - and kicked
out at the rest of the tin.
A rescue unit screeched
into the lot next door and a four man FAST (Firefighter Assist)
team jumped off. They shined their lights up at the building as
Eddie climbed onto the window ledge. He looked down at the mattresses
in the lot below and yelled.
"Get back. Its about
to bl--."
And with that, the timer
clicked. The circuit was made. The line shorted out. The sparks
flashed and the gas fumes ignited, blowing Eddie Burke, arms across
his chest to swaddle the infant, out the window and down twenty
feet to the mattresses as The Fast Team rocked back from the blast
and the landmark brownstone erupted in flames...
That's all Eddie remembered.
The sight of the FAST truck and their lights and then blackness...
Until he woke up ten minutes later on a gurney. An EMS paramedic
leaned in over him and flicked on a flash light to check his vitals.
Eddie coughed up some blood and wheezed out, "The kid..?"
The paramedic shook his
head
.
"It was gone before the thing ever lit."
"What was it?"
said Eddie. "A boy or a girl?"
"Little girl. Sorry
Ed..."
Eddie started to get
up, but then felt the shooting pain in his thigh. Just then, Bobby
Vasquez pushed in smiling. Vasquez had worked with Eddie back in
Four Truck. He'd broken his back in a three alarm and was now on
"light duty." The House Watch who manned The Board at
Manhattan Base.
Bobby held up an evidence
bag with Superman's pearl handled stiletto. "Right down to
the fuckin' femur Burke. This is definitely gonna affect your golf
game."
"I don't play golf."
"That's good, cause
you sure as shit can't start now."
A half dozen firefighters
nearby laughed. Vasquez moved over and patted Eddie on the back.
"The old man'd be
proud."
For some reason Eddie
nodded bitterly, when just then, Kivlihan, the rat-faced Executive
Officer, rushed up to him.
"Goddamn you Burke. There's a chain of command here."
Eddie pushed himself
up on the gurney as Vasquez turned to Kivlihan. "Hey Kivie.
Lighten up for Crissakes. He oughta get the Bennett Medal for this."
"What he's gonna
get is a goddamn writeup with IAD." Kivlihan looked across
at the burnt-out hulk. "Landmark building. Six alarms. Half
the fuckin' block almost blew."
"So, what was he
gonna do? There was a kid in there."
"Yeah, a dead kid."
Eddie pushed himself
up on his good leg. He gritted his teeth from the pain. The morphine
was just kicking in.
"You know somethin' Kivie?"
"What's that?"
"I don't like you..."
And with that, Eddie
hauled back with his left and broke Kivie's jaw. The Supervisor
went down like a sack of shit as Eddie staggered and dropped back
on the gurney.
"Jesus Christ,"
said one of the Probationary firefighters, just pushing in to see.
"What the hell was that?"
Vasquez looked down at Eddie and shook his head smiling.
"That, my friend,
was a goddamn left cross."
The Probie smiled.
The EMS guy strapped
Eddie onto the gurney and nodded to his partner to wheel him off.
As they moved past Kivlihan, the partner looked down.
"What about him?"
Kivlihan was on the ground
now in agony. He was holding his jaw shut with his hands.
The paramedic smiled.
"This fuck can wait..."
First Degree Burn and the entire written contents of this website,
© 1997-2002, Peter Lance.
All Right Reserved. The contents of this page or website may not
be used or reprinted
without the express written consent of Peter Lance.
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