Night Smoke by Nora Roberts(2).pdf

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Prologue
Fire. It cleansed. It destroyed. With its heat, lives could be saved.
Or lives could be taken. It was one of the greatest discoveries of
man, and one of his chief fears.
And one of his fascinations.
Mothers warned their children not to play with matches, not to
touch the red glow of the stove. For no matter how pretty the
flame, how seductive the warmth, fire against flesh burned.
In the hearth, it was romantic, cozy, cheerful, dancing and
crackling, wafting scented smoke and flickering soft golden light.
Old men dreamed by it. Lovers wooed by it.
In the campfire, it shot its sparks toward a starry sky, tempting
wide-eyed children to roast their marshmallows into black goo
while shivering over ghost stories.
There were dark, hopeless corners of the city where the homeless
cupped their frozen hands over trash-can fires, their faces drawn
and weary in the shadowy light, their minds too numb for dreams.
In the city of Urbana, there were many fires.
A carelessly dropped cigarette smoldering in a mattress. Faulty
wiring, overlooked, or ignored by a corrupt inspector. A kerosene
heater set too close to the drapes, oily rags tossed in a stuffy closet.
A flash of lightning. An unattended candle.
All could cause destruction of property, loss of life. Ignorance, an
accident, an act of God. But there were other ways, more devious
ways.
Once inside the building he took several short, shallow breaths. It
was so simple, really. And so exciting. The power was in his hands
now. He knew exactly what to do, and there was a thrill in doing it.
Alone. In the dark.
It wouldn't be dark for long. The thought made him giggle as he
climbed to the second floor. He would soon make the light.
Two cans of gasoline would be enough. With the first he splashed
the old wooden floor, soaking it, leaving a trail as he moved from
wall to wall, from room to room. Now and again he stopped,
pulling stock from the racks, scattering matchbooks over the
stream of flammables, adding fuel that would feed the flames and
spread them.
The smell of the accelerant was sweet, an exotic perfume that
heightened his senses. He wasn't panicked, he wasn't hurried as he
climbed the winding metal stairs to the next floor. He was quiet, of
course, for he wasn't a stupid man. But he knew the night
watchman was bent over his magazines in another part of the
building.
As he worked, he glanced up at the spider-like sprinklers in the
ceiling. He'd already seen to those. There would be no hiss of
water from the pipes as the flames rose, no warning buzz from
smoke alarms.
This fire would burn, and burn, and burn, until the window glass
exploded from the angry fists of heat. Paint would blister, metal
would melt, rafters would fall, charred and flaming.
He wished… for a moment he wished he could stay, stand in the
center of it all and watch the sleeping fire awaken, grumbling. He
wanted to be there, to admire and absorb as it stirred, snapped, then
stretched its hot, bright body. He wanted to hear its triumpha nt roar
as it hungrily devoured everything in its path.
But he would be far away by then. Too far to see, to hear, to smell.
He would have to imagine it.
With a sigh, he lit the first match, held the flame at eye level,
admiring the infant spark, mesmerized by it. He was smiling, as
proud as any expectant father, as he tossed the tiny fire into a dark
pool of gas. He watched for a moment, only a moment, as the
animal erupted into life, streaking along the trail he'd left for it.
He left quietly, hurrying now, into the frigid night. Soon his feet
had picked up the rhythm of his racing heart.
Chapter 1
Annoyed, exhausted, Natalie stepped into her penthouse
apartment. The dinner meeting with her marketing executives had
run beyond midnight. She could have come home then, she
reminded herself as she stepped out of her shoes. But no. Her
office was en route from the restaurant to her apartment. She
simply hadn't been able to resist stopping in for one more look at
the new designs, one last check on t he ads heralding the grand
opening.
Both had needed work. And really, she'd only intended to make a
few notes. Draft one or two memos.
So why was she stumbling toward the bedroom at 2:00 a.m.? she
asked herself. The answer was easy. She was compulsive,
obsessive. She was, Natalie thought, an idiot. Particularly since she
had an eight-o'clock breakfast meeting with several of her East
Coast sales reps. No problem, she assured herself. No problem at
all. Who needed sleep? Certainly not Natalie Fletcher, t he thirty-
two-year-old dynamo who was currently expanding Fletcher
Industries into one more avenue of profit.
And there would be profit. She'd put all her skill and experience
and creativity into building Lady's Choice from the ground up.
Before profit, there would be the excitement of conception, birth,
growth, those first pangs and pleasures of an infant company its
own way.
Her infant company, she thought with tired satisfaction. Her baby.
She would tend and teach and nurture—and, yes, when necessary,
walk the floor at 2:00 a.m.
A glance in the mirror over the bureau told her that even a dynamo
needed rest. Her cheeks had lost both their natural color as well as
their cosmetic blush and her face looked entirely too fragile and
pale. The simple twist that scooped her hair back and had started
the evening looking sophisticated and chic now only seemed to
emphasize the shadows that smudged her dark green eyes.
Because she was a woman who prided herself on her energy and
stamina, she turned away from the reflection, blowing her honey-
toned bangs out of her eyes and rotating her shoulders to ease the
stiffness. In any case, sharks didn't sleep, she reminded herself.
Even business sharks. But this one was very tempted to fall on the
bed fully dressed.
That wouldn't do, she thought, and shrugged out of her coat.
Organization and control were every bit as important in business as
a good head for figures. Ingrained habit had her walking to the
closet, and she was draping the velvet wrap on a padded hanger
when the phone rang.
Let the machine get it, she ordered herself, but by the second ring
she was snatching up the receiver.
"Hello?"
"Ms. Fletcher?"
"Yes?" The receiver clanged against the emeralds at her ear. She
was reaching up to remove the earring when the panic in the voice
stopped her.
"It's Jim Banks, Ms. Fletcher. The night watchman over at the
south side warehouse. We've got trouble here."
"Trouble? Did someone break in?"
"It's fire. Holy God, Ms. Fletcher, the whole place is going up."
"Fire?'' She brought her other hand to the receiver, as if it might
leap from her ear. "At the warehouse? Was anyone in the building?
Is anyone in there?"
"No, ma'am, there was just me." His voice shook, cracked. "I was
downstairs in the coffee room when I heard an explosion. Must've
been a bomb or something, I don't know. I called the fire
department."
She could hear other sounds now, sirens, shouts. "Are you hurt?"
"No, I got out. I got out. Mother of God, Ms. Fletcher, it's terrible.
It's just terrible."
"I'm on my way."
It took Natalie fifteen minutes to make the trip from her plush
west-side neighborhood to the dingy south side, with its
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