
Five minutes. She should be out soon.
Seven minutes. Did she have to find a different route?
Ten minutes. Something is wrong.
Twelve minutes. Rynwick could no longer contain himself. Every fiber of his being was
screaming at him that something was wrong. She was stuck inside the hospital. Rynwick was frenzied, every hair on his body on end.
“You have to go back in.” He pleaded with the first responders, “You can’t leave her there. Not her.”
The firemen couldn’t find it within themselves to respond. Rynwick, hardly thinking, grabbed one by the upper arm. “You can’t let her die in there – not after she’s helped so many other people escape…” His eyes burned with an intensity no one had seen before. His piercing gaze fixated on the fireman, clawed hand still desperately clutching the man’s arm. “Not here. Not her. Please.”
The man refused to meet Rynwick’s eyes. Pulling his arm away and turning his back to Rynwick he mumbled, “I’m sorry… it’s too dangerous.”
“LIKE HELL IT IS.” Rynwick snarled, storming towards the barriers keeping passerby away from the scene.
He whipped around to face the first responders once more. “If none of you cowards will find her, I’ll do it my damn self” he hissed.
Rynwick jumped over the barrier and ran through the doors before the men on scene could respond. The roar of the fire and the blood pounding in his ears drowned out the world around him. He was alone now. If he screwed this up, no one would come looking for him. He was as good as dead.
No time for that now. Death sentence or otherwise. I couldn’t live with myself if I sat idly while the one damn good thing in this world was left to burn.Rynwick lurched forward, forcing down the cacophonous racquet of his racing thoughts.
Focus. Memoir is a smart girl. She would have a strategy. There’s no way she hasn’t cleared the upper floors by now. She’d be on the last patient floor… she would have taken the most critical patients first. That leaves… second floor. West wings. Farthest from the stairway.Rynwick dropped to the ground, crawling through the corridors, desperately trying to navigate through the smoke. The stairwell. Where is the damn stairwell? The fire had started on an upper floor, and hadn’t yet reached the first. What had, however, was the crumbling foundations of the building. Smoldering tiles, linens, and plastic wrappings flitted down from the upper floors, lazily adrift of the updrafts. A stark contrast to the world ending inferno surrounding Rynwick.
The adrenaline pounding noisily in his head did little to quell the searing pain of the ablaze debris clinging to his fur. Every breath hitched on the smoke in his lungs and the panic rising in his chest. Come. on. Please. I have to be close. I can’t lose her.
The gut wrenching minutes felt like eons as Rynwick fumbled blindly across the floors he had come to know so well. Then he hit it. The groove of the stairs on his scorched paw pads, in that moment, were salvation of their own. Forcefully swallowing the amalgamous mass of dread, horror, and panic, Rynwick pressed on.
One stair. Two. On his hands and knees, Rynwick continued. The flames became more intense, the vile smell of burning plastic and god knows what sunk into his skin. The second floor was worse, when he finally made it up. His paw pads were raw. He didn’t care.
West Wing. Memoir. She has to be there. In the furthest room? The closest? How do I get us out? Is she still alive? Each step was excruciating. Each breath moreso. The smoke on this floor was the worst. Rynwick’s eyes stung, not that seeing would have helped him navigate. He wiped away the tears welling at the corners of his eyes.
There isn’t time to dwell. Rynwick poured everything into his steps. Right. Left. Hand. Knee. The hallway on the left. First room on the right. He worked his way back slowly. The last room on the unit. Why was the door closed? It didn’t matter. She had to be there. She WAS there.
Rynwick dragged himself down the hallway. One. More. Step. Up. Get up. Come on. The handle. Please. Please get up. I have to make it to the door. To her. Rynwick could only plead with himself. The handle glinted. Daring him. He willed himself to move. Up. Up farther. He could hardly grasp the handle. The world around him was hazy. Spinning. And yet… he was through.
She was there. If there was a God, Rynwick was thanking him. She wasn’t conscious, but there. Rynwick gasped for air, pushing himself further towards her. His heart swelled, seeing her had given him just enough clarity to find them a way out. Rynwick knew they couldn’t go back through the floors. The window was their only option. Rynwick rose to his knees, scanning the room for anything that hadn’t been burnt. Nothing. It’s only the second floor. That or we burn together. Staggering towards the window, he mustered the last of his strength to pull Memoir alongside him. The glass on the window had burst in the heat, they would have to go through. Rynwick cradled Memoir in his arms, holding her tightly against his chest before shifting his weight.
Over the windowsill. Out the second story window. It hurt like hell… but they were safe. He had broken their fall. The world was blurry, but it was there. The sirens. The voices. They’d find him. Rynwick let himself pass out.