He Blamed A Six-Year-Old—Then Firefighters Checked The Cabinet-tantan

Bella was already afraid of fire before the night everyone in the house started looking at her like she had brought it there on purpose.

She was six years old, small enough that her pajama pants still bunched around her ankles when she walked too fast, and careful enough around heat that she would not stand near the stove when her mother boiled water.

Birthday candles made her back away.

Image

The toaster popping made her flinch.

When the smoke alarm in their Los Angeles kitchen screamed after dinner, Bella did what frightened children do.

She ran.

She ran down the hallway, hands clapped over her ears, crying for her mother while smoke slid under the ceiling and a dull orange glow showed along the edge of the kitchen wall.

Her mother, Sarah, grabbed her from the hallway and pushed her out through the back door so hard that Bella stumbled onto the little concrete step without shoes.

The night air felt cold after the heat inside.

A neighbor was already calling 911.

Another neighbor came over the fence with a garden hose, but the firefighters arrived before anyone could do something foolish.

The fire was not big by the time they knocked it down.

It had climbed a section of wall near the counter and blackened the lower side of Jason’s liquor cabinet.

It had smoked up the kitchen, ruined part of the cabinet, and left the whole first floor smelling like wet ash, but it had not taken the house.

That was what the first firefighter told Sarah.

Small kitchen fire.

Contained.

No serious injuries.

For a moment, Sarah looked like those words might hold her upright.

Then Jason came in from the driveway.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *