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call. It was the most emotional thing that had happened all night, as intense as almost losing the house. It reminded her that she still had a sister, whether she saw her or not, and no matter how far apart they had grown.

She put Robbieโ€™s pictures back on the bookshelf then, went upstairs to lie on her bed, and thought of both of them, Robbie and Hattie. She wondered what it would be like to see her sister again. It had been a long frightening night, but thank God, the house she loved was safe. It would have broken what was left of her heart if it had burned to the ground. She had lost enough. She couldnโ€™t lose the house too. Her mind was flooded with her memories of Hattie, all that they had been through and meant to each other so long ago. It frightened her to open the door to those feelings again. It brought so much with it that she wanted to forget.

Chapter 3

The fire was still raging out of control the next day, but it was well north of Melissaโ€™s house, and the wind hadnโ€™t shifted again. Firefighters were pouring in from Boston, other parts of Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire, trying to get it under control. According to news reports, it was only ten percent contained.

Norm had spent the night on the fringes of it, with a group of volunteers. It was exhausting, frightening work.

Melissa had had an email from Carson, wanting to know if she was all right, and she had answered briefly, thanked him, and said she was. She was grateful for his concern. The fire was bringing back the people and memories of the past.

On the third day of the fire, Rochester and Buffalo sent them additional firefighters, and they finally managed to get the fire sixty percent contained. There was no question by then that it had been arson. The fire chief had confirmed it. Three hundred homes had been lost, and nearly two thousand people were crowding in shelters that had been set up in local schools.

The day after the fire had been mostly contained, they showed the arsonist on TV. He had been apprehended at his motherโ€™s home. He was seventeen years old, and he looked like a frightened little boy when they arrested him. They said that he and his mother had been homeless for a while, and people who were interviewed said he had shown signs of psychiatric problems, after being bullied by his classmates in school. They had recently moved again. Given the severity of the crime, and his age, he was going to be tried as an adult. Melissa sat watching him on TV with hatred in her eyes. He had nearly robbed her of her home.

She and Norm spoke about it when he came by to see how she was. It struck her as she looked at the arsonist that he was only a year older than Robbie would have been. She couldnโ€™t imagine anyone disturbed and vicious enough to start a fire the way he had. The report said that he had started small fires before. He seemed terrified in the brief footage they saw of him.

โ€œI hope they send him to prison for a long time,โ€ Melissa said angrily when she and Norm talked about it during his visit.

โ€œHeโ€™s just a kid,โ€ he said, feeling sorry for him.

โ€œHow can you say that after what he did? Think of all the homes that burned.โ€

โ€œHe belongs in a psychiatric hospital, not jail,โ€ Norm said compassionately. Melissa had no pity for him, with so many homes lost. They had said on TV that his mother was in a rehab facility, and couldnโ€™t be reached for comment. And he had been living alone at her home, which looked like barely more than a shack.

โ€œSomeone should have picked up on how sick he was a long time ago. Itโ€™s a failure in our system,โ€ Norm said quietly. โ€œIt sounds like heโ€™s had a terrible life.โ€ There had been no mention of his father, and the boyโ€™s life sounded tragic.

โ€œOther people are victims of the system, they donโ€™t go around setting fires.โ€ There was no mercy in her voice.

โ€œHave you heard from your sister again?โ€ he asked, to change the subject, and Melissa shook her head.

โ€œShe wants to come and visit. I havenโ€™t decided what I want to do about that yet.โ€

โ€œMaybe the two of you could make peace with each other,โ€ he suggested gently, as Melissa looked off into the distance, thinking about it. It seemed too late for that, after so many years. And too painful to try.

โ€œWe have nothing in common anymore. Maybe we never did. We were always different. She was much more outgoing than I was, which made it seem even crazier when she decided to become a nun. She always wanted to be an actress, and just when she started to get the right breaks, she ran away.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t that what you did when your son died?โ€ he asked her, and she looked shocked for a minute, and shook her head.

โ€œThat was different. Our whole world fell apart. Hattie was just beginning. She was young, good things were happening for her. She had no reason to run away. It was sheer cowardice, to seek refuge in the convent, instead of dealing with life.โ€

โ€œNot everyone is as brave as you are, Melissa.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not brave, and youโ€™re right, I ran away too.โ€

โ€œWhat kind of work did you do before?โ€ It was the first he had heard of her career when she said she had given up her work.

โ€œI used to write. Articles, books. I ran out of words after my son died. Everything seemed so irrelevant after that, so small compared to him.โ€

โ€œDo you miss writing?โ€ He was curious about her now. She had shown him pieces of the puzzle, but not the whole, which had whetted his appetite to know more.

โ€œNot anymore,โ€ she said. โ€œIt

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