No one tells you the basics about being a woman in the New York City Fire Department. Sure, it’s the usual stuff. Proving you’ve got guts. Not getting bent out of shape over some Penthouse pinup in the locker room or the water-filled condom tucked into the pocket of your turnout coat. But it takes a woman to truly understand the most fundamental problem with being female in the FDNY.
There’s no place to pee.
Not in the firehouses with their communal bathrooms. Not at a fire scene where you can stand for hours, kidneys burning, while the guys sneak around the corner and do it against a wall. And God knows, not when you are a fire marshal speeding to an eight-alarm blaze right after downing two large mugs of coffee.
It wasn’t like Georgia Skeehan had a choice in the matter. The big guns would be at a fire this size—Frank Greco, the chief of department; William Lynch, the commissioner. Her partner, Randy Carter, wasn’t about to hang around the Dunkin’ Donuts while she lined up for the bathroom. (Is there ever not a line in a ladies’ room?)
Carter drove, leaning on the horn of their dark blue, department-issued Chevy Caprice as it barreled south down Ninth Avenue, sirens wailing. Through the windshield, Georgia made out the cloud of dense gray smoke rising above Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood. A static of dialogue crackled across the department radio. Dispatch confirmed a 10-45, code one. Then another. And another. There were bodies in this fire, and it sounded as if no one knew how many.
“Did you see the progression on this thing?” Georgia asked Carter, studying a rough chronology she’d scribbled from dispatch reports. “The fire went from a second alarm to an eight in under ten minutes.”
Carter nodded, tugging at the sleeve of his gray pinstriped suit. He was the only marshal Georgia knew who wore anything better than a Sears sports jacket to work.
“Body count’s up to eighteen already.” He frowned, deep lines etched into dark skin.
Georgia could deal with the carnage. It was the smells she never got used to. Rancid human smells. The sickly-sweet stench of charred flesh. The bitter, coppery odor of burned hair and coagulated blood. She popped a peppermint Tic Tac in her mouth and offered one to Carter. He waved it away.
“Artificial flavors and sweeteners,” he explained in a voice still tinged with the rural North Carolina of his boyhood.
“You’re going to be getting a mouthful of carbon monoxide and God knows what else in a moment, anyway. What’s the difference?”
“You choose the way you want to die. I’ll choose mine.” Carter floored the accelerator through a red light, narrowly missing a yellow cab. Georgia braced herself against the broken glove compartment.
“I don’t have a choice about the way I die,” she reminded him. “You’re driving.”
He allowed the faintest grin to cross his lean, craggy features, which pleased her. They had been partners for nearly a year now. Georgia never asked, but it didn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that somewhere in this ex-Marine drill sergeant’s seemingly spotless thirty-year career with the FDNY, he must have ticked off some well-connected chief. Anybody that senior who got stuck with a female rookie partner had to be on someone’s shit list. Of course, it also didn’t help that he was black.
“At least I don’t ride some Hells Angels motorcycle,” he ribbed her. “Next thing I know, you’ll be getting a tattoo—”
“If I do, it’ll be in a place you’ll never see.”
One-thirty-one Spring Street was cordoned off for two blocks in every direction. Trucks, engines, and rescue rigs jammed the pavements, their ruby flashers throbbing with almost physical force against the low, darkened buildings. An early-April drizzle pearled across the Caprice’s windshield, refracting the red lights like splatters of blood. Georgia shivered. Easter was less than two weeks away, but it didn’t feel warm enough yet to be spring.
“Better put your gear on,” Carter cautioned. “This one’s gonna be a doozy.”
“Doozy, right.” Georgia watched Ladder Nine’s tower ladder rain high-pressure water on the smoldering ruins. Her bladder felt like Niagara Falls behind a dam of Popsicle sticks.
“Randy,” she ventured hesitantly. “I gotta go.”
“Go where?” His gaze narrowed as it sank in. “Man, Skeehan. I’m gonna start calling you The Faucet. Seems every time we get a run, so do you.”
“Start wearing Depends.”
“Not helpful.”
Georgia stared at the men in fire helmets and bulky black turnout coats swarming the pavement. Each thickly padded coat boasted three stripes of gray reflective tape across the torso, sandwiched between fluorescent yellow bands, plus two more on each sleeve. The tape gleamed in the spotlights of hovering camera crews. So much for privacy. Georgia relieved herself behind a foul-smelling Dumpster as a television chopper whirred overhead. Her son would probably pick her out on tomorrow’s news.
Carter was fumbling around in the Caprice’s trunk for the PET—physical examination tools—kit when Georgia returned. The kit contained tape measures, hammers, claw tools, and screwdrivers, everything needed to pull apart the wreckage to determine how and where the fire started. Determining a fire’s cause and origin, or C&O, is the first step in any investigation.
“While you were, uh, you know—” Carter stammered. “Relieving yourself…”
“What?”
He shrugged on his turnout coat without meeting her gaze. His deep-set eyes had the sorry look of a basset hound’s. “Word’s gone around. One of our guys didn’t make it.”
She would always be twelve when she heard that phrase. “Who?” she asked softly.
Carter slipped his gold marshal’s shield on a chain around his neck. “A brother named Terry Quinn. From Fifty-seven Truck. Twelve years on the job. You didn’t know him, did you?”
“No, but that’s Jimmy’s company. You know, Jimmy Gallagher? My mother’s…” Georgia hesitated. She always felt funny saying “boyfriend.” “My mother’s companion.”
Carter nodded. “Humdinger, this is. Some kind of fancy party was going on on the top floor. A lot of important people were inside, including this Chinese dude—Wong or Wing or something—”
“Wang? Rubi Wang? Holy…The founder of Nuance?” Only a man over fifty, like Carter, wouldn’t instantly recognize the fashion designer’s name or his magazine.
“Yeah.” They finished suiting up. At the police barricade, they flashed their badges and picked their way across the spongy ash, past firefighters packing up hose lines. Shattered glass crunched underfoot like soda crackers. On a charred side wall were small mounds of what appeared to be human body parts—some of them black with burns, some greasy and grayish-white.
In order to uncover the fire’s point of origin, Georgia and Carter knew they would have to trace the blaze’s V-pattern—its widest path of destruction back down to its narrowest and lowest—in this case, the basement.
The basement, or what was left of it, was as filthy as a coal mine. Charred and melted debris. Ankle-deep puddles of black water. Air gauzy with smoke and oily with the residue of burning plastics. Carter squatted before a cast-iron radiator, grimacing at a newly acquired stain on his pants.
“We’re doing the grunt work so those Arson and Explosion guys over at the NYPD can waltz in here tomorrow and grab all the headlines,” he complained. Only marshals are allowed to examine physical evidence at a fire. If an arson includes a homicide, however, jurisdiction can often turn into a political slugfest between cops and firefighters. “If A and E takes this, they’re buying me a new pair of pants.”
“Hey, they have extras,” Georgia noted dryly. “You can’t go on TV as much as they do in the same suit.”
Carter grinned as he pulled on a pair of latex gloves and brushed a hand across the radiator. His smile abruptly vanished. One of the coils was encrusted with white ash, as fine and brittle as chalk. Two others were partially fused together.
“What kind of fire melts cast iron?” Georgia had meant the question to be rhetorical. She forgot Carter was the only marshal who could recite the flashpoint of almost any substance.
“A fire with a core temp of at least twenty-eight hundred and fifty degrees Fahrenheit,” he said without meeting her gaze. Georgia started. Fires that level whole buildings average no more than about 1,500 degrees. This blaze was nearly double that. Mother of God, what are we dealing with here?
Carter swept water off a patch of concrete and shone his flashlight across it. Georgia noticed an irregular black stain, darker at the edges and clear in the center, like a dye that had bled outward.
“That looks like a pour pattern,” she told him excitedly. Pour patterns are stains left when an arsonist uses a flammable liquid to start a fire. The liquid—typically gasoline or kerosene—tends to protect the surface beneath when it burns, charring mostly at the edges.
“Something burned here,” Carter agreed. “But it’s not a pour pattern.” To prove his point, he directed his flashlight to a grouping of identical stains on another part of the floor, then to a similar drip down a brick wall burned clean from the intense heat. “Pretty clever torch to get a fire started halfway up a wall, I’d say.”
“If it’s not a pour pattern, what is it?”
“Probably tar stains from when the roof melted. We’ll get it tested, but I’ll buy you lunch if it’s anything else.”
Georgia looked up through what had once been the rafters to the halogen-lit night. Roofing tar. She wondered if she’d ever get good at this job.
A thick Brooklyn accent crackled over Carter’s handie-talkie. “Carter, Skeehan, come in.”
Carter rolled his eyes and mouthed the words, “Man of Action.” Frank Greco’s nickname. Georgia grinned. In five years as the chief of department, Greco’s most notable accomplishment was changing the shade of blue in the officers’ dress uniforms.
Carter depressed his speaker button. “Here, Chief.”
“The commissioner needs a COA for the cameras. So does Mr. Michaels. What can you pull together in fifteen minutes?”
“What’s a COA?” whispered Georgia. She thought she knew all the department jargon.
“Condensed overview analysis,” said Carter, shaking his head. “Greco-speak. Gives the chief something to do at headquarters all day besides play with himself. Rest of us peons call it a briefing.”
“Oh. Who’s Mr. Michaels?”
“Beats me.” He shrugged, then depressed the speaker button. “Chief? This Mr. Michaels? Does he own the building?”
“And the Knickerbocker Plaza Hotel. And half of New York besides. That’s Sloane Michaels. You copy, Carter?”
“Ten-four. We’ll get right on it.” Carter clicked off the speaker button, then added, “You bald-headed, butt-kissing, can’t-decide-your-way-out-of-a-paper-bag bureaucrat.”
Georgia laughed. “So that’s how you ended up with me, huh? Forgot to turn off the speaker first?”
“Something like that.”
They split up to look around. Georgia shone her flashlight across a pile of rubbish where one of the building’s timber support beams should have been. Hundred-and-twenty-year-old lofts typically boast beams thirty to forty feet long and a foot thick. Even in the worst fires, the wood does little more than become blackened and segmented on the surface—a condition known as alligatoring. Yet here all she could find was a huge mound of charred splinters, none more than six inches in length.
“Randy, this is incredible,” Georgia called out, sloshing over. “I think the fire disintegrated the timber supports.”
Carter had his back to her. He was staring at something in his hand. She was nearly on top of him before he looked up, startled. He slipped whatever he was looking at into his coat pocket.
“Is something wrong?” she asked.
“I’m trying to do my goddamned job here. How ’bout doing yours for a change?”
Georgia froze. Not once in all their time working together had Randy Carter ever lost his temper—not the tour when he took a shot to the jaw from a drug dealer. Not the night some bozo firefighter started peeing on crime-scene evidence. Not even when the other marshals ribbed him about having a rookie girl for a partner.
“Are you all right?” she asked softly.
He tipped back his black fire helmet and ran a hand from the top of his receding hairline to the bottom of his graying mustache. “Yeah.” He exhaled. “I’m sorry. I’m just having a bad tour. Look, maybe y’all better handle the briefing.”
“Me? Brief the commissioner?” In the eighteen months since she’d been promoted from firefighter to marshal, Georgia had investigated nothing bigger than a few tenement torchings. Though on paper they were equal partners, in practice she almost always let Carter take the lead. “What do I say?”
“As little as possible.”
“We don’t even know if it’s arson.”
“Yeah, we do. I do.” The statement stopped Georgia cold. Carter never made definitive judgments this early in a case. He must have read the shock on her face, because he beckoned her over to a swirling bluish-green depression on the basement floor, about fifty feet from the stains they’d noted earlier. It was shiny and sleek, almost like glass. And it was etched deep into the concrete, as permanently as a tattoo.
“You see this pretty burn?” He ran his fingers across the mark. “Something very bad and very deliberate caused it.”
“Nothing burns concrete,” Georgia insisted. “That’s why they call concrete buildings fireproof.”
“Fireproof,” Carter mumbled. “Well, maybe y’all gonna have to change the term.” He straightened with the groan of a man who suddenly felt too old to be crawling around burned buildings on his hands and knees. “Go to the command post and talk to the brass for me, will you? I’m going to get some air, see if I can round up any witnesses.”
As Carter hoisted himself out of the basement, something fell from his turnout coat pocket. Georgia picked up a tiny piece of blackened metal melted around a pinkish stone and called to him, but he was already out of earshot.
Georgia frowned at the stone flickering lazily in her palm. Randy Carter could tell the difference between accelerant and roofing tar from ten feet away, yet he hadn’t bothered to bag evidence even a rookie would know how to handle. She couldn’t read him tonight.
The command post was like a war zone. Cigarette butts and foam coffee cups littered the ground. High-ranking chiefs and aides conferred on handie-talkies. Big men in helmets and turnout coats pushed past Georgia, their faces granite masks of concentration.
What am I doing here? she wondered. No one in the upper echelons of the FDNY knew her, least of all the commissioner. And all she knew about William Lynch was what she’d heard from other firefighters—namely that Lynch, a lawyer by trade, had never come within fifty feet of a speck of ash. That’s why his white helmet stayed so shiny.
He was talking to Frank Greco, the chief of department, when she came upon him. Georgia introduced herself to both men and saluted. Lynch gave her a puzzled look. The chief of department, a head taller, frowned.
“Where’s Carter?” Greco asked, squinting into the crowd on the assumption that a gray-haired black man would be easy to spot in a sea of Irish and Italian faces.
“Talking to witnesses, Chief. He asked me to brief you, but I can radio him, if you’d prefer.”
Greco’s enormous black handlebar mustache twitched nervously. The Man of Action hated decisions.
“Oh, for Chrissake,” Lynch said finally. “Look, young lady, just tell me what you know. I’m doing the goddamned press conference in five minutes.”
Georgia launched into a brief description of the melted cast iron and burned concrete found at the scene, and the 3,000-degree temperatures the evidence suggested.
“A gas leak?” the commissioner interrupted.
“There’s too much destruction—”
“So you’re thinking arson?”
“At this point, yes,” said Georgia. Greco shot her a murderous look. She hadn’t realized she wasn’t supposed to offer opinions. The chief quickly stepped in.
“What the marshal is trying to say is that the department will need a specialized task force to assess the impact of the damage and prioritize the various scenarios—”
“Put a lid on it, Frank,” the commissioner growled. Georgia stifled a grin. She was beginning to like Bill Lynch, lawyer or not. He turned to her now.
“Arson, you say…Then what’s the motive, Marshal?”
“Motive, sir…?” Georgia stammered.
“Wouldn’t the building have been just as much of an insurance loss at fifteen hundred degrees as at three thousand?”
“I suppose,” said Georgia.
“And wouldn’t everyone inside have been killed from carbon monoxide in a fire with a core temp of only eight or nine hundred?”
“That’s true…” She’d forgotten that Lynch, a former DA, had probably prosecuted a fair number of arson cases in his day. Motive would’ve been one of his first considerations.
“So how do you explain a three-thousand-degree inferno? It’s like using ten bullets to kill a man you could’ve killed with two.”
A cloud of stinging smoke drifted overhead. Georgia stared at the pavement where body bags were being stacked like carpet remnants. The death toll was now up to forty-three.
“Maybe,” she ventured softly, “someone really liked pulling the trigger.”