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Authors: Andrew Pyper

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The Wildfire Season (31 page)

BOOK: The Wildfire Season
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‘He was good?’ Tom would ask. Not because he doubted the fact but to have it repeated.

‘He was the best,’ Miles would tell him. ‘Next to me, of course.’

It amazes Miles how unreadable he’d found
Tom only days ago—how unreadable others still find him—and the future he can see in the kid now. Miles will recommend him for the training program in a couple of years, if Tom wants him to. A born firefighter. All bound-up intensity, a longing for escape and the desire to do something at once good and understandable. The same mischievous glint in his eyes as his father. An indication of humour that, under hard circumstances, could be translated into courage.

Dennis Parks and two government officials arrived to conduct a preliminary investigation into the cause of the Comeback Fire.

The Ross River attack team were interviewed first, one at a time, the little church by the river turned into an interrogation room. They asked about the crew’s whereabouts on the days before the fire’s discovery, the potential motive each of them might have had to light a smoker of their own. Little was revealed, as little was known. Miles was subject to the longest sessions, answering the same questions over and over about taking the pumper out for a drive around the time the fire would have been started, and whether he had any ‘special regrets’ about losing the kid on the Dragon’s Back years ago. Despite his frequent longing to lunge across the desk and take Parks by the throat, Miles remained calm. He told them he often took drives on his own to clear his head. His questioners nodded and looked doubtful, but it was all they could do. After a breakfast of
Bonnie’s sausages and eggs the following morning, all three of them were gone.

No one spoke of firestarters after that, though Miles knew that there was one, and who it was. A fire started not for money, he felt sure, but for the town itself. A reason for the few who found themselves at this end of the road to stay.

Miles’s certainty on this count was based not on evidence but on instinct, the small shifts and compensations you can sense in someone you know well enough. He told no one except Alex. There were a dozen good reasons not to pursue further disclosures than this, and only one to compel him: every fire has to be started somehow, and knowing the Comeback’s cause would advance the completeness of the official record. Miles was prepared to let the paperwork show another checkmark under Cause: Unknown. He’d keep everything else to himself. Alex and Miles both.

It wasn’t the only secret between them now.

The doctors had recognized the injury to his shoulder as a bullet wound, and the police had been called to his hospital room to ask about it, and about Wade Fuerst. It was Miles’s first day of consciousness after twenty hours of morphined sleep, and he had yet to speak to Alex or anyone else. There could be no planned corroboration with her in advance, and he knew that whatever version of events he told them now would be vulnerable to not only the physical evidence he’d
left behind but Alex’s—and perhaps even Rachel’s—statements. So he told the truth, up to a point. Wade had tracked them after the bear attack, picking up Bader’s rifle along the way. When he came upon them, he had shot Miles in the shoulder. A struggle followed. The gun spinning between them. When the stock hit the ground it fired, taking Wade’s head off his neck.

Alex told them the same thing. The easiest and most credible fabrication had occurred to both of them without discussion. As to Wade’s motive, Margot confirmed Miles’s speculations. Wade had been a betrayed man. Denied not only his woman but the promise of a child, a family. Everyone in Ross River had been witness to his attacks on Miles. Things had escalated to gunplay. A set of circumstances hardly unfamiliar to the police.

In his truck parked on Whitehorse’s Main Street, on a shared break from Rachel’s bedside, eating takeout sandwiches off their laps, Miles told Alex what she already knew. There was no forgiveness. No oath of secrecy. It was as it had been between them. All they were trading was the truth. And now that it was shared, they saw how it might be carried.

Rachel shivers on Miles’s lap again. From the cabin’s back step, Alex watches the girl curl up inside his sweater, almost disappearing completely except for the top of her head that glows pale where the regrowth hair has yet to blanket her scalp. Alex smooths her own returning strands
over her flame-bitten ear. Soon it will be hidden. Not for the first time she thinks that, no matter what happens, the three of them will carry the mark of fire. In plain view or not, its shape will be known among themselves.

She listens to Miles telling the girl it’s time to put her coat on, followed by Rachel’s reply of groans, and hears it as the performance of an already old routine. Miles turns to Alex and she can make out his shrug, his helpless
What-canyou—do?
look through the twilight. Even before she laughs she is aware of how awake she feels in this place. Not sleepless or nervy, but open to all signals, her senses keen-edged as she imagines the bear’s had been.

The temperature drops another degree. It’s time that all of them put on another layer before the party. It was Miles’s idea. A welcome-home barbecue in honour of Rachel’s return from hospital. All the simple, backyard rituals would be performed. Scorched patties and bottles stacked like logs between the fridge shelves. A gathering of friends to watch the night come on.

They will soon be here. Jerry and Crookedhead, the last members of the attack team left in town (King had taken off for the new term at university), Margot, Tom, Terry Gray and Bonnie. All of them except Margot would be seeing the inside of Miles’s cabin for the first time.

Before he lifts Rachel in his arms and walks back into the cabin, Miles has another of his
premonitions. What he envisions is nothing special, but its pleasures haunt him even before they have passed. They will eat too much, and tell stories they have all told before. Miles will be the first to notice the northern lights. He will sweep his hand over the underbelly of sky as though it is this gesture alone that creates the trailing curtains of spectral green. The aurora will fall close enough that even the adults will consider reaching their fingers up to touch it. For a painless moment they will allow themselves to remember. Runaways. Fire. They will draw their circle of chairs tighter around the barbecue’s warm ashes, quiet now, their faces flushed by the unspoken truth that they are among the lucky ones, people who know where they are and that they belong.

Author’s Note

Ross River is a real place.
The Wildfire Season
, on the other hand, is a work of fiction in its entirety. Many geographic distances, buildings, road layouts and other topographical details, within Ross River and without, have been altered from what one might find on a map or see if one walked down its streets. However, the behaviour of wildland fires and grizzly bears described here is based on the available science, reading of personal accounts, and interviews of those who have experienced contact with either or, in some cases, both.

Acknowledgements

First, thanks to my editors, Iris Tupholme and Julia Wisdom, as well as Anne McDermid for her early insights and enthusiasm. Readers of drafts along the way—David Rittenhouse, Sean Kane, Leah McLaren, Shaun Oakey, Lorissa Sengara—also offered helpful responses and encouragements.

During my time in the Yukon, I received counsel, stories and companionship from many friends and near strangers alike. For setting my mind on fruitful paths, I must acknowledge in particular Jackie Bazett, Belinda Smith, Al Macleod, Julia Finlay and all who have worked to establish the Berton House Writers’ Retreat in Dawson City.

For his Kaska and Northern Tutchone translations, I am indebted to J. T. Ritter, Director of the Yukon Native Language Centre at Yukon College, Whitehorse.

Finally, I am grateful to Heidi Rittenhouse for riding shotgun the whole way.

About the Author

Andrew Pyper was born in Stratford, Ontario in 1968 and currently lives in Toronto. He is the author of the novels
Lost Girls
(selected as a
New York Times
Notable Book of the Year) and
The Trade Mission
, as well as
Kiss Me
, a collection of short stories.
Lost Girls
was an international bestseller, and is currently in development for a feature film adaptation.

For three of the past five summers, Andrew has lived in the Yukon, researching and writing
The Wildfire Season
, which is set in the Territory.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

By the same author

Lost Girls
The Trade Mission

SHORT STORIES

Kiss Me

Praise

People continue to tame and subjugate nature. But when we visit the few remaining scraps of wilderness where bears roam free, we can still feel an instinctive fear. How precious that feeling is.

MICHIO HOSHINO
(1952-1996),
wildlife photographer,
killed in a grizzly bear attack

Copyright

HarperCollins
Publishers
77-85 Fulham Palace Road, London W6 8JB

www.harpercollins.co.uk

FISRT EDITION

First published in Great Britain by
HarperCollins
Publishers
2005

Copyright © Andrew Pyper 2005

Andrew Pyper asserts the moral right to
be identified as the author of this work

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub Edition © SEPTEMBER 2009 ISBN: 978-0-007-34747-6

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BOOK: The Wildfire Season
8.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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