MICHAEL Smoke billowing up the staircase, we race down to the lower floors. Using the lifts is unthinkable.
Alarms are ringing, and there is chaos, as panicked workers try to escape the building.
Up the staircase, coming towards us, are firefighters in full kit and mask.
Shit!
Weâre on fire?
James sees me looking upwards. âDonât worry. You can be sure sheâs getting the hell out as fast as she can. Sheâll not sit helplessly by.â
âBut she wonâtâ¦â
He skids to a halt, hovering between one step and the next. âWhat? Why not?â
Breathing heavily now. âI told her to stay put. And I made her promise to obey. I think sheâll try to keep the promiseâ¦â
James rolls his eyes. âFuck! What a time to disable herâ¦.â He stares at me, hard. âAnd you accuse me of treating her as a subâ¦â He pats his pockets. âDamn! No phone. Got yours on you?â
âNo. I just ran from the apartment. You?â
âSo, sheâs promised to stay put, in a burning building, and we canât contact her?â
âYes.â
Oh God, Babe. What have I done?
James turns heading upwards again, but above us, there is a crashing noise. A few seconds later, we meet a group of the firefighters, descending again. âGet moving downward.â yells one of them as he comes past. âThe floor above hereâs on fire. The whole buildingâs coming apart. You canât go that way.â
From below there is a rushing sound and the smoke turns black. Coughing, we keep moving downwards.
And will Charlotte try to keep the promise I forced her to make?
*****
BETH Charlotte dashes to the stairwell, but acrid, black smoke billows up from below. Quickly, she slams the door closed, coughing and spluttering. âNo way out that way.â
âDown the garbage chute?â I ask. âLike they do in movies?â
She gives me an old-fashioned look. âNot a chance. Too narrow, and itâs anyoneâs guess what weâd land in.â
âI donât mind a bit of dirt if itâs to escape a fire.â¦â
âHow about landing in a compactor, or a waste recycler? You got any idea whatâs at the bottom?â
âEr⦠noâ¦â
âWell thenâ¦. Having said thatâ¦. letâs have a look at the laundry chute.â
Smoke surges up, flooding the room, a bitter-sweet chemical smell, and she jerks her head backwards, hastily, slamming the hatch closed âMust have taken hold in the dry-cleaning stuff.â¦â.
She circles, looking for options, a way to escape. âJeezâ¦â she mutters, her face white, and for the first time since I have known her, I see real fear in Charlotte.
Her phone rings and she snatches at it.
âItâs James,â she says with it pressed to her ear. âYesâ¦. Master, weâre trappedâ¦. We canâtâ¦. Right?
Wonderful! Yes, Bethâs with me. Richard sent her up hereâ¦. Yes, I will.â
She taps off the phone, then yells at me, âOut onto the roof. Thereâs help comingâ¦.â
Grabbing a couple of mobiles lying on the desktop, Michaelâs and Jamesâ I assume, she stuffs them in a pocket, and we dash out to the terrace garden. Even as we burst out into the fresh air, a helicopter is descending to us, a harness winching down.
Other choppers are buzzing the higher floors, scanning windows, but there is no-one in view other than ourselves.
Charlotte clips the harness onto me, and immediately I am hoisted away and up. Within a minute, the harness lowers again, and Charlotte too is winched to safety. As she is pulled into the cockpit, the âcopter tilts, turns and sweeps away. âWhere are we going?â she yells to the pilot.
He shouts over the engine noise. âSorry, I was told not to tell you. Mr Haswellâs instructions.â he shouts back.â Just, away from the City.â.
And below us, a rush of buildings, highways and the river vanish, as we sweep along the coast and off.
*****
MICHAEL Will Charlotte try to keep the promise I forced her to make?
The Haswell Building on fire and she is trapped in the penthouse apartment. Does she even know yet that she is trapped?
Passing a firefighter, James snags him by the arm. âThereâs a woman trapped in the Penthouse. Weâre not sure she even knows yet, that sheâs trappedâ¦â
The fireman whips out his two-way, talking urgently into it, then clicking it off. âThereâs helicopters coming in to help on the top floors. Can she get onto the roof?â
âGot a phone on you?â
The firefighter passes a phone to James, who stabs at the screen. Phone pressed to his ear, staring into space, he mutters. âPick up your phone, Charlotte, pick up yourâ¦. Charlotte! Where are you? Yes, get the Hell out of there. Get out to the roof terrace. Helicopters are flying inâ¦. What..?â
He glances over at me. âBethâs with herâ¦. Richard sent her up there for safety.â¦â Then, âYes, weâll catch up with you. If you see mine or Michaelâs phones, bring them with you.â
James and I descend the stairs at speed. At every floor, black smoke surges and curls on to other side of glass plating.
Outside is a chaos of police cars, armed officers, fire engines, medical workers and ambulances, but oddly, very few other people. Will Stanton, the Police Commissioner, is there, shouting instructions. A familiar face in a squad car, Corby, who first bungled the interview with Charlotte, looks to be relaying messages from the car, and a large area is cordoned off, police widening the cordon as we watch.
Above us, is the clip-clip of helicopter blades moving in on the upper floors of the office block.
Where are all the people? The office workersâ¦. Trapped?
Richard is here, by Will, phone to his ear. Seeing us, he gestures us over, then waves up at the âcopters. âThereâs help on the way to the girls. Donât worry.â
âWhere is everyone?â I ask. âI thought theyâd be teeming outâ¦â
Richard almost laughs. âThereâs almost nobody in there, Michael. With the holiday break, no-oneâs here.â
âHoliday break?â
He stares at me. âItâs Christmas Day.â
Christmas Day?
With everything that has happened, Iâd lost track of the date entirely.
Richard waves over the scene; the tower block, chimneying smoke upwards, the mess of emergency vehicles, the choppers high above us, now lowering winches to the roof-top. âIf thereâs a blessing to be had in all this, itâs that we and the women were almost the only people in here. Had it been an apartment blockâ¦.â He shivers. âAs it is, the only real injured party is going to be the insurance companyâ¦â
James, scanning the scene, âAnd the attackers? Where are they?â
Will looks sick. âThey seem to have simply faded away. They attacked, did the damage andâ¦. âHe holds up his hand helplessly. âIâve got units out searching, but thereâs been a breakdown of the central computer. No-one can coordinateâ¦.â
âA convenient time for a failure,â comments James. âSabotage? Hackers?â
âI think so, yes.â
âYour spy in the camp again?â
Will nods, lips pressed white.
âHey!â Thereâs a yell from one of the fire-fighters. âStretcher-bearers, over here, fastâ He waves wildly at the green-uniformed medics waiting by the ambulances. âWeâve got one of them.â
Will comes alive. âIâll be back.â Then dashing over to where the fire-fighter is dragging an unconscious man out of the building, yells âCan he speak?â
*****
He returns, ten minutes later, looking disheartened. Head-pointing us to a quiet spot, âRichard, James, Michael, come with me. Letâs get some privacy.â
âHeâs unconscious, suffering from smoke inhalation, but the medics say he should survive. It seems he was trapped in the chaos and didnât get out with the others. Iâm having him taken to a secure medical facility and there, as soon as heâs fit to speak, heâll be interrogated. Iâll keep you informed.â He takes a deep breath. âDid you get Charlotte and Beth away safely?â
âYes.â says Richard, âAnd right now, I and the pilot are the only ones who know where they are. âIâve had them taken out of the City and, no offence, Will, but Iâm not telling you where to.â
Will nods. âI understand. Iâll be in touch.â Turning, he shouts out, âCorby! I want to know the minute we hear from the hospitalâ¦.â
*****