The Fire Beside
the Road
by Anita Kestin
They had been driving for a while on
back roads after leaving the main highway when they came upon the fire.
"Stop," she said as he
continued on. "Stop. Stop. We need to do something."
He stopped but they were already a
thousand feet beyond the curve in the road where they had spotted the fire.
"You aren't thinking," he
said. "We have only one water bottle in the car and the fire is too big to
stamp out. Now what? What's your grand plan?"
He had a point. Her cell phone had
lost reception a few miles back. There was one small water bottle in the car. He
had removed the blanket from the car before they left on their trip. Perhaps
they should push on and call when the cell phone reception picked up. Maybe
there was nothing more to be done.
The road was dark. Had they passed a
house recently?
She looked for information about
fires on her phone but there was no service at all.
Up ahead, a pine tree leaned to the
side just before the road curved again.
"Go back."
He was very cross with her now. She
saw his hands tap the steering wheel and his face tighten as it always did
before he hit her.
"Go back!" she said, the
words coming from a part of her brain she had forgotten existed.
He turned the car around. His face
no longer bore that tight look but he was unmistakably angry.
She saw the fire, burning a bit
brighter and higher than before, leaping to the side of the road where the brush
and trees began. It now ran along a dry tree limb that led into the forest. She
followed the branch with her eyes until she could see it no more. Sparks darted
off the narrow shard of wood. The darkness parted as the fire streamed forward and
engulfed the branch.
"Happy?" he said. "Pour
the water on it and lets go. Getting late."
She poured the water on the fire,
but, as he had predicted, nothing much changed. In the firelight, she could see
the familiar way he set his jaw and the way his eyes turned in her direction.
"Let's go. Get in the car right now or I will leave without you!"
She braced herself against his
anger.
Out of the same place in her brain
that she had forgotten existed, she heard herself say: "Go on, then. I
will think of something."
She saw him walk down the road. In
his walk, she saw fury. In the way he bent his back, she also saw sadness.
She heard her suitcase smash on the
road and then the car engine. She stood as still as she had ever stood watching
the car accelerate towards the curve in the road and the leaning tree and then
turned to see the fire.
Everything around her reverberated
and cracked in the flames as she said to herself: Go on, then. I will think of
something.
* * * * *
Anita Kestin, MD, MPH, has worked in academics, nursing
homes, hospices, and locked wards of a psychiatric facility. She is a daughter
(of immigrants fleeing the Holocaust), wife, mother, grandmother, progressive
activist. She has been writing for years but just started submitting her non-scientific
work during the Pandemic when she was in her sixties. She is delighted that
several stories (fiction and creative non-fiction) and one poem have now been
accepted for publication/published.
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