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[ Smoke x Annie ]
Saltwater
Summary, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11,12
Blackwater Promises Summary,1 2,3,4,5 ,6,7,8,9
The Last Vow
Summary,

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Master List
Comment here for general tag list
[ Smoke x Annie ]
Saltwater
Summary, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11,12
Blackwater Promises Summary,1 2,3,4,5 ,6,7,8,9
The Last Vow
Summary,
The Last Vow: TEASER (Coming Soon)
READ WITH CARE. | READ WITH CARE.| READ WITH CARE.
Seven-year-old Aubin's laugh drifted through the open kitchen window, followed by the sound of eight-year-old Aubrey tackling his little brother in the grass. It was the soundtrack of a beautiful life.
Smoke gripped the edge of the granite counter until his knuckles turned white, praying the violent tremor in his left hand would stop before Annie walked in. It didn’t.
The violent, pulsing ache behind Smoke’s left eye was a reminder. The tumor was growing. The doctors said it would take his motor skills first, then his memories, and finally, his dignity. He would become an infant in a grown man’s body, leaving his wife to wipe his chin and explain to their three little kids why Daddy couldn't remember their names.
Forcing his wife to become a grief-stricken nursemaid, draining their life savings just to watch him slowly suffocate in his own body.
He would not let his children's last memory of their father be a terrifying, hollow-eyed ghost. And he would not let his wife sacrifice her future to rot alongside him.
He had to set her free.
And the only way to make a woman like Annie let go, was to make her hate him.
"The papers are on the counter. I’ve already signed them."
His voice was a dead, flat thing. He didn't turn around to look at her. He couldn't. If he looked into those soft, brown eyes, his resolve would shatter.
"Stop it," Annie whispered. Her voice was trembling, thick with a week’s worth of unshed tears. She walked up behind him, wrapping her arms around his waist, pressing her face into his back. She felt so small, so warm, so desperately familiar. "Smoke, please. Just tell me what’s wrong."
Smoke kept his hands shoved deep into his jacket pockets so she wouldn't see the tremors. He forced his face into a mask of bored indifference, staring at the kitchen tile rather than looking at the woman who had been his entire universe for fifteen years.
Annie didn't even look at the divorce papers on the kitchen island. Instead, she stepped into his space, her trembling hands reaching up to cup his face. Her wedding ring pressed cool against his jaw.
"Look at me," she pleaded, her voice cracking, completely stripped of pride. "Smoke, please, just look at me."
Every instinct in his body screamed to pull her into his chest, to bury his face in her hair and confess everything.
I'm dying, Annie.
I'm so scared.
Please hold me.
Instead, he forced his eyes up. He met her gaze with dead, hollow ice.
"I know you," Annie whispered, tears finally spilling over her lashes, tracing the worry lines he had put there over the last month. "I know this isn't you. You’re stressed, you’re pulling away, but I am your wife. We swore for better or worse, Smoke. Whatever is broken, we can fix it. I will fight for us until my last breath. Please, don't throw us away."
She pressed her forehead against his chest, right over his violently racing heart, and let out a broken, desperate sob. "I love you. I know you still love me."
God, I love you so much it’s suffocating, he thought, his throat tight with suppressed agony.
But her devotion was a death sentence. If he let her stay, the disease would drag her down into the dark with him. She was too fierce; she would spend her life savings on hopeless treatments. She would sacrifice her joy, her youth, and the kids' childhoods just to keep his corpse breathing an extra month.
He needed to destroy her love for him.
Completely.
Brutally.
Terminally.
I'm doing this for you, he chanted in his mind. I am burying myself so you can live.
He forcibly peeled her hands off his waist and stepped away, putting the kitchen island between them. He finally looked at her. Her face was flushed, her eyes wide and begging, entirely stripped of her pride.
"There is no us to fix, Annie," Smoke lied, forcing his jaw to unlock. "I'm not depressed. I’m just suffocating. I am tired of this house. I'm tired of this life."
"You're lying," she choked out, shaking her head frantically. She reached across the marble counter, desperately trying to grab his shaking hand. "I know you. You are a good man. You love me. You love our kids. You’re just lost right now—"
"I don't love you anymore!" he shouted.
The echo of his voice violently silenced the kitchen. Outside, the kids kept playing, entirely unaware that their universe had just been assassinated.
With a hand that felt like it was made of lead, Smoke reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone. He unlocked it, opened a text thread he had spent an hour agonizingly faking with a burner phone, and slid it across the island to her.
Annie looked down.
[Elena]: Can’t wait for tonight. Did you tell her yet?
[Smoke]: Doing it now. I’m packing a bag. I’ll be at your place by six.
Smoke watched her read the words. He watched the exact, excruciating millisecond where her fierce, relentless hope snapped. Her knees gave out. She grabbed the edge of the counter to keep from hitting the floor, a guttural, agonizing wail tearing out of her throat. It wasn't just a cry; it was the sound of a soul being ripped in half.
"Fifteen years," she gasped, clutching her chest, looking up at him with a face so pure and complete it made his vision go black at the edges. "We built a life... and you threw it away for nothing."
"Sign the papers, Annie," he whispered, his voice completely devoid of emotion.
He didn't pack a bag. He just turned and walked out the front door, leaving everything he had ever loved behind. He climbed into his truck, drove three blocks down the street, and pulled over.
Only then did the mask crack.
Smoke slammed his fists into the steering wheel until his knuckles bled, screaming into the empty cab of the truck, tears pouring down his face as the physical pain in his head merged with the catastrophic agony in his chest.
He had six months left to live.
But as he sat alone in the driveway, listening to the silence of a future he would never get to see, Smoke knew the truth.
The cancer wouldn't kill him. He was already dead.
A/N: I hope y'all are ready for this one. Sit back, grab a box of tissues, and get ready for a deep dive into the darkest sides of unconditional love, betrayal, and anticipatory grief. I am so incredibly excited to write this series for you all. Let me know what you think so far! Let me know if you'd like to be tagged!
I done gave y’all a warning in advance!
The Last Vow: TEASER (Coming Soon)
READ WITH CARE. | READ WITH CARE.| READ WITH CARE.
Seven-year-old Aubin's laugh drifted through the open kitchen window, followed by the sound of eight-year-old Aubrey tackling his little brother in the grass. It was the soundtrack of a beautiful life.
Smoke gripped the edge of the granite counter until his knuckles turned white, praying the violent tremor in his left hand would stop before Annie walked in. It didn’t.
The violent, pulsing ache behind Smoke’s left eye was a reminder. The tumor was growing. The doctors said it would take his motor skills first, then his memories, and finally, his dignity. He would become an infant in a grown man’s body, leaving his wife to wipe his chin and explain to their three little kids why Daddy couldn't remember their names.
Forcing his wife to become a grief-stricken nursemaid, draining their life savings just to watch him slowly suffocate in his own body.
He would not let his children's last memory of their father be a terrifying, hollow-eyed ghost. And he would not let his wife sacrifice her future to rot alongside him.
He had to set her free.
And the only way to make a woman like Annie let go, was to make her hate him.
"The papers are on the counter. I’ve already signed them."
His voice was a dead, flat thing. He didn't turn around to look at her. He couldn't. If he looked into those soft, brown eyes, his resolve would shatter.
"Stop it," Annie whispered. Her voice was trembling, thick with a week’s worth of unshed tears. She walked up behind him, wrapping her arms around his waist, pressing her face into his back. She felt so small, so warm, so desperately familiar. "Smoke, please. Just tell me what’s wrong."
Smoke kept his hands shoved deep into his jacket pockets so she wouldn't see the tremors. He forced his face into a mask of bored indifference, staring at the kitchen tile rather than looking at the woman who had been his entire universe for fifteen years.
Annie didn't even look at the divorce papers on the kitchen island. Instead, she stepped into his space, her trembling hands reaching up to cup his face. Her wedding ring pressed cool against his jaw.
"Look at me," she pleaded, her voice cracking, completely stripped of pride. "Smoke, please, just look at me."
Every instinct in his body screamed to pull her into his chest, to bury his face in her hair and confess everything.
I'm dying, Annie.
I'm so scared.
Please hold me.
Instead, he forced his eyes up. He met her gaze with dead, hollow ice.
"I know you," Annie whispered, tears finally spilling over her lashes, tracing the worry lines he had put there over the last month. "I know this isn't you. You’re stressed, you’re pulling away, but I am your wife. We swore for better or worse, Smoke. Whatever is broken, we can fix it. I will fight for us until my last breath. Please, don't throw us away."
She pressed her forehead against his chest, right over his violently racing heart, and let out a broken, desperate sob. "I love you. I know you still love me."
God, I love you so much it’s suffocating, he thought, his throat tight with suppressed agony.
But her devotion was a death sentence. If he let her stay, the disease would drag her down into the dark with him. She was too fierce; she would spend her life savings on hopeless treatments. She would sacrifice her joy, her youth, and the kids' childhoods just to keep his corpse breathing an extra month.
He needed to destroy her love for him.
Completely.
Brutally.
Terminally.
I'm doing this for you, he chanted in his mind. I am burying myself so you can live.
He forcibly peeled her hands off his waist and stepped away, putting the kitchen island between them. He finally looked at her. Her face was flushed, her eyes wide and begging, entirely stripped of her pride.
"There is no us to fix, Annie," Smoke lied, forcing his jaw to unlock. "I'm not depressed. I’m just suffocating. I am tired of this house. I'm tired of this life."
"You're lying," she choked out, shaking her head frantically. She reached across the marble counter, desperately trying to grab his shaking hand. "I know you. You are a good man. You love me. You love our kids. You’re just lost right now—"
"I don't love you anymore!" he shouted.
The echo of his voice violently silenced the kitchen. Outside, the kids kept playing, entirely unaware that their universe had just been assassinated.
With a hand that felt like it was made of lead, Smoke reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone. He unlocked it, opened a text thread he had spent an hour agonizingly faking with a burner phone, and slid it across the island to her.
Annie looked down.
[Elena]: Can’t wait for tonight. Did you tell her yet?
[Smoke]: Doing it now. I’m packing a bag. I’ll be at your place by six.
Smoke watched her read the words. He watched the exact, excruciating millisecond where her fierce, relentless hope snapped. Her knees gave out. She grabbed the edge of the counter to keep from hitting the floor, a guttural, agonizing wail tearing out of her throat. It wasn't just a cry; it was the sound of a soul being ripped in half.
"Fifteen years," she gasped, clutching her chest, looking up at him with a face so pure and complete it made his vision go black at the edges. "We built a life... and you threw it away for nothing."
"Sign the papers, Annie," he whispered, his voice completely devoid of emotion.
He didn't pack a bag. He just turned and walked out the front door, leaving everything he had ever loved behind. He climbed into his truck, drove three blocks down the street, and pulled over.
Only then did the mask crack.
Smoke slammed his fists into the steering wheel until his knuckles bled, screaming into the empty cab of the truck, tears pouring down his face as the physical pain in his head merged with the catastrophic agony in his chest.
He had six months left to live.
But as he sat alone in the driveway, listening to the silence of a future he would never get to see, Smoke knew the truth.
The cancer wouldn't kill him. He was already dead.
A/N: I hope y'all are ready for this one. Sit back, grab a box of tissues, and get ready for a deep dive into the darkest sides of unconditional love, betrayal, and anticipatory grief. I am so incredibly excited to write this series for you all. Let me know what you think so far! Let me know if you'd like to be tagged!
I have another gut wrenching Sinners story in mind. But IDK if y’all can handle this one. I’ve been sitting on this one for YEARS.
Blackwater Promises: The Fire Inside
READ WITH CARE. | READ WITH CARE.| READ WITH CARE.
⚠️Content Warning: gore,trauma, flooding, life-threatening situations, graphic survival distress
The only sound Smoke could hear was the terrifying shift in his daughter’s voice.
Ruby’s initial, furious wails had slowly degraded over the last twenty minutes. The sharp, demanding cries of a newborn had turned into a weak, rhythmic, breathy mewling.
Stack gripped the massive steering wheel, his knuckles white as bone. He was navigating the forty-thousand-pound apparatus through the flooded intersections of the Central Business District, the massive tires churning through three feet of black, debris-choked water.
"Lijah," Stack yelled over the engine, his eyes darting to the floorboard. "Her cries are changing. She's getting tired."
Smoke sat on the metal floor, his massive legs splayed out. Annie’s lifeless body rested across his lap, her head cradled in the crook of his arm. He didn't look up at his brother. He was staring at Annie’s face, his thumb gently, obsessively stroking her cold cheek.
"She's just hungry," Smoke murmured, his voice completely untethered from the horror of the cab. "We're almost to the hospital, Nette. They'll get you some IV fluids. They'll get you fixed up, and then you can feed her."
Stack swallowed a sob, the bile burning the back of his throat.
"Eli, listen to me," Stack pleaded, his voice cracking. He was a first responder; he knew exactly what that weak mewling meant. "The baby is burning through her brown fat stores. Her blood sugar is tanking. She's going hypoglycemic, and she's wet. She's gonna drop her core temp. You have to put her against your skin."
Smoke blinked. The clinical words—hypoglycemic, core temp—pierced through the thick, cotton-like delusion wrapping around his brain.
He looked down at the V-neck of his turnout coat. He unzipped the heavy canvas another two inches.
Ruby was shivering violently. Her tiny chest was heaving with the effort to breathe, her skin taking on a terrifying, mottled bluish-gray tint.
Panic, icy and sharp, finally sliced through Smoke's grief.
"Okay. Okay, daddy's got you," Smoke breathed.
He didn't have a blanket.
He didn't have a towel.
With one arm still tightly supporting Annie, Smoke used his other hand to rip the buttons off his own filthy, sweat-soaked uniform shirt. He pulled the tiny, blood-covered infant out of the rough canvas pouch and pressed her directly against his bare, massive chest, right over his heart.
He wrapped his turnout coat tightly over both of them, trapping his body heat inside.
"Hold on, little bit," Smoke wept, rocking back and forth on the metal floor, holding the dead mother and the dying daughter. "Stack, push the rig! Push it!"
"I'm flooring it!" Stack screamed, the diesel engine howling in protest.
They turned onto Tulane Avenue.
Through the windshield, the brutal reality of the city's collapse rushed up to meet them. The water here wasn't three feet deep; it was five. The avenue had become a churning, black river. Abandoned cars bobbed in the current like discarded toys.
CLUNK-SCREEECH.
The heavy rescue rig violently shuddered. The front axle slammed into a submerged concrete barrier hidden beneath the black water. The engine roared, the massive tires spinning uselessly, kicking up a geyser of toxic sludge.
Stack slammed the gearshift, trying to throw the rig into reverse.
CRACK.
The transmission groaned, and the engine stalled out with a heavy, final hiss of air brakes. The sudden silence in the cab was deafening.
Stack pumped the ignition. Nothing.
"It's dead," Stack said, his voice dropping to a terrified whisper. He looked out the windshield. The massive, brutalist concrete facade of Charity Hospital loomed three blocks away, isolated in a sea of black water. "Eli, the rig is dead. We're three blocks out."
Smoke didn't hesitate. He didn't complain.
He zipped his coat up to his collarbone, securing Ruby tightly against his bare chest. He slid his massive arms firmly back under Annie’s knees and shoulders.
He kicked the heavy passenger door open. The black water immediately flooded into the floorboard.
"Let's walk," Smoke growled.
Smoke stepped down from the cab into the flood.
The water hit him mid-chest. It was freezing, a shocking contrast to the suffocating August heat above the surface. It smelled of raw sewage, ruptured gas lines, and copper.
He held Annie high, lifting her lifeless body up out of the toxic gumbo, resting her dead weight across his shoulders and collarbone so she wouldn't get submerged.
"I got you, sunflower," Smoke panted, his boots fighting for security on the slick, unseen asphalt below. "I'm keeping you dry."
Stack splashed into the water beside him, holding his heavy club, taking the lead to break the current and clear the debris.
Wading through chest-deep water is exhausting for an unburdened man.
Carrying one hundred and thirty pounds of dead weight while harboring an infant inside a heavy canvas coat was an act of pure, superhuman defiance.
Smoke’s muscles screamed. The water dragged at his legs like liquid lead. A submerged shopping cart scraped violently against his thigh, tearing his pants and slicing his skin, but he didn't even flinch.
Mew... mew...
The sound from inside his coat was getting fainter.
Ruby was slipping away.
"Stay awake!" Smoke roared, his voice echoing off the flooded, abandoned buildings. "Stack, keep moving!"
"I see the ramp!" Stack yelled back, spitting dirty water. "I see the ER ramp!"
They turned the corner toward the ambulance bay of Charity Hospital.
It was a scene from a war zone.
The basement generators had flooded days ago. The massive hospital was completely dark, a monolithic tomb rising out of the water. The emergency ramp leading up to the second-floor entrance was packed with hundreds of desperate people seeking shelter.
At the top of the concrete ramp, a makeshift triage center had been set up. Exhausted, hollow-eyed nurses and doctors in filthy scrubs were working in the brutal heat, using hand-pumped ambu bags to keep patients alive, their stethoscopes draped over their necks like heavy chains.
Smoke hit the incline of the ramp. The water receded to his waist, then his knees, then his ankles.
He marched up the concrete incline, water pouring off his heavy turnout coat in waterfalls. He looked like a titan rising from the underworld, carrying his casualties.
"MEDIC!" Stack screamed, running ahead of his brother, waving his arms at the triage desk. "NOFD! We need a doctor! We have a newborn!"
A triage nurse..
a woman in her thirties with dark circles under her eyes, wearing a scrub top stained with iodine and blood spun around. She took one look at the giant firefighter and the limp woman in his arms, and her clinical instincts fired instantly.
"Clear a stretcher!" the nurse barked, pointing to a rusty gurney near the doors. "Bring her here! Now!"
Smoke marched to the gurney. He didn't drop Annie. He laid her down with an agonizing, heartbreaking gentleness, supporting her head until it rested on the thin, plastic mattress.
"Help her," Smoke begged, his massive chest heaving, water pooling around his boots. "She had a fever. She was burning up."
The triage nurse didn't hesitate. She stepped up to the gurney and pressed two fingers deep against Annie’s carotid artery.
Smoke stopped breathing. The entire world narrowed down to the nurse's two fingers. Annie’s skin was terrifyingly pale, the blood pooling away from her extremities.
Three seconds passed. Five seconds.
The nurse’s eyes widened slightly.
"I have a pulse," the nurse snapped, her voice cutting through the noise of the ramp like a whip. "It's thready. Rate is in the forties. She's in profound hypovolemic and septic shock. Her pressure is bottomed out."
Smoke gasped, his knees buckling slightly as the words hit him.
Alive.
She is alive.
"I need two large-bore IVs, wide open!" the nurse yelled to an orderly rushing over with a trauma kit. "Get me a liter of normal saline, stat! We need to dump fluids into her to get that pressure up before her organs fail! Prep dopamine, we might need pressors!"
"On it!" the orderly shouted, tearing open sterile packaging.
Smoke grabbed the metal rail of the gurney, his hands shaking violently. He watched the orderly expertly sink an IV needle into the crook of Annie's bruised arm.
Then, a faint, breathless squeak came from inside his coat.
The triage nurse's head snapped up. She saw the slight bulge under the heavy canvas, right against the NOFD badge.
"Lieutenant," the nurse said, her voice shifting focus. "The newborn."
Smoke couldn't speak. He was drowning in the sheer, overwhelming adrenaline of the fight. He slowly unzipped the coat with trembling, bloodstained fingers.
The nurse reached in and gently lifted Ruby out of the dark, heavy canvas.
The infant was limp. Her skin was mottled blue and terrifyingly cold to the touch.
"She's hypothermic and hypoglycemic," the nurse assessed instantly, passing the baby to a second pediatric nurse running out from the lobby. "Get her to the warmer! Heel-stick for glucose, and push dextrose if she's under forty! Go, go, go!"
The pediatric nurse turned and sprinted through the dark glass doors of Charity Hospital, vanishing into the pitch-black lobby with his daughter.
"Lieutenant, step back!" the first nurse ordered, hanging a bag of fluids on a rusty IV pole attached to the gurney. "We need to elevate her legs and push this saline!"
"I'm staying with her," Smoke growled, his hand locked onto the metal rail.
"You're in the way of her surviving!" the nurse fired back, completely unfazed by the giant man. "Let us work!"
Stack grabbed Smoke's shoulder, pulling him back with all his weight. "Eli, let them do their job! She's got a pulse, Eli! They're saving her!"
Smoke reluctantly took a step back, his chest heaving violently.
He stood on the concrete ramp in the blinding August sun, watching the fluid drip rapidly down the plastic tubing and into his wife's arm. Slowly, agonizingly, the gray pallor of Annie's skin began to shift. It wasn't a miraculous recovery, but the harsh, absolute grip of death was loosening. The fluid was working.
Stack put a hand on the back of his twin's neck, squeezing hard.
Smoke lowered his head, pressing the heels of his hands into his eyes, and finally let out a long, shuddering, broken breath. The blackwater had taken the house, it had taken the city, but it was not taking his family.
Smoke stood exactly where the nurse had pushed him. He didn't move an inch. He couldn't.
The adrenaline that had fueled his march through the black water was crashing, leaving behind a cold, violent trembling that wracked his massive frame. He stood on the sun-baked concrete, his heavy rubber boots leaking toxic river water into a puddle around his feet, watching the frantic, desperate violence of emergency medicine.
There were no machines. The hospital’s backup generators had drowned. There were no steady, rhythmic beeps of heart monitors to offer comfort. There was only the brutal, mechanical reality of human hands fighting to keep a soul tethered to a body.
An orderly was standing on the lower rung of the gurney, physically squeezing the thick plastic bag of saline with both hands, forcing the fluid into Annie’s collapsed veins under pressure.
"She's tachycardic but the pressure is still in the boots," the triage nurse yelled, a stethoscope pressed hard against Annie’s chest. "I can barely hear it over the ambient noise! Squeeze that bag harder! We need volume!"
Smoke stared at Annie.
She looked so incredibly small.
The fierce, terrifying Ninth Ward woman who had weaponized a heavy iron axe and bullied an armed police officer was gone. On the rusty gurney, stripped of her torn yellow dress to allow access for the IV lines, she was just a fragile, broken shell covered in plaster dust and bruises.
Her chest was barely rising. Her head rolled limply to the side as the nurses worked, her dark, matted hair clinging to the wet plastic of the mattress.
"Annie," Smoke whispered.
The word caught in his throat, tearing on the way out.
He instinctively brought his massive, calloused hand up to his chest, right over his silver NOFD badge.
He pressed his palm against the heavy canvas of his turnout coat.
It was empty.
The ghost weight of his daughter the frantic, tiny, fluttering heartbeat that had been pressed against his ribs just five minutes ago was gone. The sudden absence of her was a physical amputation. He had carried his entire universe out of that dark hall, and now, he was holding nothing but air.
Smoke looked down at his hands. They were stained dark with river mud, dried plaster, and his wife's blood.
He was a Lieutenant of Heavy Rescue.
He had pulled men out of collapsed burning roofs.
He had ripped the doors off crushed cars with the jaws of life.
He was a giant.
But as he watched a stranger desperately squeeze a plastic bag of saltwater to keep his wife from slipping into the dark, Smoke realized the horrifying, agonizing truth: his strength was completely, utterly useless. He couldn't lift the sepsis off her. He couldn't punch the hypovolemic shock.
He was a spectator to the end of his own world.
A ragged, agonizing sob tore out of Smoke's chest. His knees finally gave way.
He collapsed onto the hard concrete of the ramp. He didn't try to catch himself. He hit the ground hard, pulling his knees up, wrapping his massive, bloody arms around his head as if trying to shield himself from a falling building.
"Eli," Stack wept, dropping to his knees right beside him in the dirty puddle of river water.
Stack threw his arms around his brother's trembling, broad shoulders. He pulled the giant man against him, anchoring him to the concrete.
"She's fighting, Eli," Stack sobbed, pressing his face against the wet, heavy canvas of Smoke's coat. "Listen to me. She's fighting. They both are. You just gotta let 'em fight."
Smoke squeezed his eyes shut, his entire body shuddering with the force of his weeping. The sounds of the triage ramp the shouting nurses, the groans of the displaced, the distant thrum of military helicopters overhead all faded into a dull, rushing roar in his ears.
"Please," Smoke begged, his voice a raw, broken whisper directed at the concrete beneath him. It wasn't a prayer to God; it was a desperate, pleading negotiation with the universe. "You took the house. You took the city. You can take the badge. Just don't make me live without her. Please. I can't breathe without her."
Ten feet away, the triage nurse tossed the empty, flattened bag of saline onto the ground.
"Hang the second liter!" she barked. "And get me a manual cuff! I need a pressure reading right now!"
He was only ten feet away. He had walked through a drowning city, he had smashed a fire engine through a concrete barricade, and he had carried her out of a tomb. But he couldn't cross those last ten feet.
He couldn't hold her hand. He couldn't wrap his massive body around hers to warm her freezing skin. He was forced to kneel in a puddle of the same toxic water that had ruined their lives, completely paralyzed, watching a stranger drive a needle into his wife’s collapsed vein.
Smoke stared at her arm hanging limply off the edge of the mattress. The silver wedding band he had slipped onto her finger three years ago was loose now, slipping down her cold knuckles.
The guilt rose up and crushed his windpipe.
She had chopped through her own ceiling. She had fought the ocean in the pitch black. She had ripped herself apart on a filthy concrete floor to give him a daughter, all while believing he was miles away at the Superdome. She had given every single drop of her life to fix his mistake.
"I'm sorry," Smoke wept, the words bubbling out in a broken, agonizing litany. "I'm sorry, sunflower. I'm so sorry I wasn't there."
He pressed his massive, dirty hands over his mouth, trying to muffle the raw, animalistic sobs that were tearing his throat apart. The invincible giant of the Ninth Ward was completely gone. He was just a terrified, broken man kneeling in the brutal sun, staring across an agonizing, impassable divide, begging a silent sky not to make him a widower on the exact same morning he became a father.
A/N: I hope you all enjoyed this much-needed chapter. Thank you so much for all the kind words, support, and messages throughout this past month — they truly mean more than you know. We’re officially nearing the end of this series, and I’m excited for you all to see how everything unfolds.
As always, let me know your thoughts below. Until next time 🤍
TagList:
@brownskincheyenne @lizbehave @issfaith @thedutifulone @slysagehurricane @lestatthelioncourt @hdfen2474 @6783tt @warybasiliskloremaster @blackgirlsrock444 @mmbee675 @tafuller @bananajoeclone
@myheartsaysyes @adultinginheels @blue4everrsworld @xeebop @juniooox
I knew she wasn’t dead! I just knew it! Come on sunflower, push through before I throw up!
Annie might make it but everyone else is free game 😈
Blackwater Promises: The Fire Inside
READ WITH CARE. | READ WITH CARE.| READ WITH CARE.
⚠️Content Warning: gore,trauma, flooding, life-threatening situations, graphic survival distress
The only sound Smoke could hear was the terrifying shift in his daughter’s voice.
Ruby’s initial, furious wails had slowly degraded over the last twenty minutes. The sharp, demanding cries of a newborn had turned into a weak, rhythmic, breathy mewling.
Stack gripped the massive steering wheel, his knuckles white as bone. He was navigating the forty-thousand-pound apparatus through the flooded intersections of the Central Business District, the massive tires churning through three feet of black, debris-choked water.
"Lijah," Stack yelled over the engine, his eyes darting to the floorboard. "Her cries are changing. She's getting tired."
Smoke sat on the metal floor, his massive legs splayed out. Annie’s lifeless body rested across his lap, her head cradled in the crook of his arm. He didn't look up at his brother. He was staring at Annie’s face, his thumb gently, obsessively stroking her cold cheek.
"She's just hungry," Smoke murmured, his voice completely untethered from the horror of the cab. "We're almost to the hospital, Nette. They'll get you some IV fluids. They'll get you fixed up, and then you can feed her."
Stack swallowed a sob, the bile burning the back of his throat.
"Eli, listen to me," Stack pleaded, his voice cracking. He was a first responder; he knew exactly what that weak mewling meant. "The baby is burning through her brown fat stores. Her blood sugar is tanking. She's going hypoglycemic, and she's wet. She's gonna drop her core temp. You have to put her against your skin."
Smoke blinked. The clinical words—hypoglycemic, core temp—pierced through the thick, cotton-like delusion wrapping around his brain.
He looked down at the V-neck of his turnout coat. He unzipped the heavy canvas another two inches.
Ruby was shivering violently. Her tiny chest was heaving with the effort to breathe, her skin taking on a terrifying, mottled bluish-gray tint.
Panic, icy and sharp, finally sliced through Smoke's grief.
"Okay. Okay, daddy's got you," Smoke breathed.
He didn't have a blanket.
He didn't have a towel.
With one arm still tightly supporting Annie, Smoke used his other hand to rip the buttons off his own filthy, sweat-soaked uniform shirt. He pulled the tiny, blood-covered infant out of the rough canvas pouch and pressed her directly against his bare, massive chest, right over his heart.
He wrapped his turnout coat tightly over both of them, trapping his body heat inside.
"Hold on, little bit," Smoke wept, rocking back and forth on the metal floor, holding the dead mother and the dying daughter. "Stack, push the rig! Push it!"
"I'm flooring it!" Stack screamed, the diesel engine howling in protest.
They turned onto Tulane Avenue.
Through the windshield, the brutal reality of the city's collapse rushed up to meet them. The water here wasn't three feet deep; it was five. The avenue had become a churning, black river. Abandoned cars bobbed in the current like discarded toys.
CLUNK-SCREEECH.
The heavy rescue rig violently shuddered. The front axle slammed into a submerged concrete barrier hidden beneath the black water. The engine roared, the massive tires spinning uselessly, kicking up a geyser of toxic sludge.
Stack slammed the gearshift, trying to throw the rig into reverse.
CRACK.
The transmission groaned, and the engine stalled out with a heavy, final hiss of air brakes. The sudden silence in the cab was deafening.
Stack pumped the ignition. Nothing.
"It's dead," Stack said, his voice dropping to a terrified whisper. He looked out the windshield. The massive, brutalist concrete facade of Charity Hospital loomed three blocks away, isolated in a sea of black water. "Eli, the rig is dead. We're three blocks out."
Smoke didn't hesitate. He didn't complain.
He zipped his coat up to his collarbone, securing Ruby tightly against his bare chest. He slid his massive arms firmly back under Annie’s knees and shoulders.
He kicked the heavy passenger door open. The black water immediately flooded into the floorboard.
"Let's walk," Smoke growled.
Smoke stepped down from the cab into the flood.
The water hit him mid-chest. It was freezing, a shocking contrast to the suffocating August heat above the surface. It smelled of raw sewage, ruptured gas lines, and copper.
He held Annie high, lifting her lifeless body up out of the toxic gumbo, resting her dead weight across his shoulders and collarbone so she wouldn't get submerged.
"I got you, sunflower," Smoke panted, his boots fighting for security on the slick, unseen asphalt below. "I'm keeping you dry."
Stack splashed into the water beside him, holding his heavy club, taking the lead to break the current and clear the debris.
Wading through chest-deep water is exhausting for an unburdened man.
Carrying one hundred and thirty pounds of dead weight while harboring an infant inside a heavy canvas coat was an act of pure, superhuman defiance.
Smoke’s muscles screamed. The water dragged at his legs like liquid lead. A submerged shopping cart scraped violently against his thigh, tearing his pants and slicing his skin, but he didn't even flinch.
Mew... mew...
The sound from inside his coat was getting fainter.
Ruby was slipping away.
"Stay awake!" Smoke roared, his voice echoing off the flooded, abandoned buildings. "Stack, keep moving!"
"I see the ramp!" Stack yelled back, spitting dirty water. "I see the ER ramp!"
They turned the corner toward the ambulance bay of Charity Hospital.
It was a scene from a war zone.
The basement generators had flooded days ago. The massive hospital was completely dark, a monolithic tomb rising out of the water. The emergency ramp leading up to the second-floor entrance was packed with hundreds of desperate people seeking shelter.
At the top of the concrete ramp, a makeshift triage center had been set up. Exhausted, hollow-eyed nurses and doctors in filthy scrubs were working in the brutal heat, using hand-pumped ambu bags to keep patients alive, their stethoscopes draped over their necks like heavy chains.
Smoke hit the incline of the ramp. The water receded to his waist, then his knees, then his ankles.
He marched up the concrete incline, water pouring off his heavy turnout coat in waterfalls. He looked like a titan rising from the underworld, carrying his casualties.
"MEDIC!" Stack screamed, running ahead of his brother, waving his arms at the triage desk. "NOFD! We need a doctor! We have a newborn!"
A triage nurse..
a woman in her thirties with dark circles under her eyes, wearing a scrub top stained with iodine and blood spun around. She took one look at the giant firefighter and the limp woman in his arms, and her clinical instincts fired instantly.
"Clear a stretcher!" the nurse barked, pointing to a rusty gurney near the doors. "Bring her here! Now!"
Smoke marched to the gurney. He didn't drop Annie. He laid her down with an agonizing, heartbreaking gentleness, supporting her head until it rested on the thin, plastic mattress.
"Help her," Smoke begged, his massive chest heaving, water pooling around his boots. "She had a fever. She was burning up."
The triage nurse didn't hesitate. She stepped up to the gurney and pressed two fingers deep against Annie’s carotid artery.
Smoke stopped breathing. The entire world narrowed down to the nurse's two fingers. Annie’s skin was terrifyingly pale, the blood pooling away from her extremities.
Three seconds passed. Five seconds.
The nurse’s eyes widened slightly.
"I have a pulse," the nurse snapped, her voice cutting through the noise of the ramp like a whip. "It's thready. Rate is in the forties. She's in profound hypovolemic and septic shock. Her pressure is bottomed out."
Smoke gasped, his knees buckling slightly as the words hit him.
Alive.
She is alive.
"I need two large-bore IVs, wide open!" the nurse yelled to an orderly rushing over with a trauma kit. "Get me a liter of normal saline, stat! We need to dump fluids into her to get that pressure up before her organs fail! Prep dopamine, we might need pressors!"
"On it!" the orderly shouted, tearing open sterile packaging.
Smoke grabbed the metal rail of the gurney, his hands shaking violently. He watched the orderly expertly sink an IV needle into the crook of Annie's bruised arm.
Then, a faint, breathless squeak came from inside his coat.
The triage nurse's head snapped up. She saw the slight bulge under the heavy canvas, right against the NOFD badge.
"Lieutenant," the nurse said, her voice shifting focus. "The newborn."
Smoke couldn't speak. He was drowning in the sheer, overwhelming adrenaline of the fight. He slowly unzipped the coat with trembling, bloodstained fingers.
The nurse reached in and gently lifted Ruby out of the dark, heavy canvas.
The infant was limp. Her skin was mottled blue and terrifyingly cold to the touch.
"She's hypothermic and hypoglycemic," the nurse assessed instantly, passing the baby to a second pediatric nurse running out from the lobby. "Get her to the warmer! Heel-stick for glucose, and push dextrose if she's under forty! Go, go, go!"
The pediatric nurse turned and sprinted through the dark glass doors of Charity Hospital, vanishing into the pitch-black lobby with his daughter.
"Lieutenant, step back!" the first nurse ordered, hanging a bag of fluids on a rusty IV pole attached to the gurney. "We need to elevate her legs and push this saline!"
"I'm staying with her," Smoke growled, his hand locked onto the metal rail.
"You're in the way of her surviving!" the nurse fired back, completely unfazed by the giant man. "Let us work!"
Stack grabbed Smoke's shoulder, pulling him back with all his weight. "Eli, let them do their job! She's got a pulse, Eli! They're saving her!"
Smoke reluctantly took a step back, his chest heaving violently.
He stood on the concrete ramp in the blinding August sun, watching the fluid drip rapidly down the plastic tubing and into his wife's arm. Slowly, agonizingly, the gray pallor of Annie's skin began to shift. It wasn't a miraculous recovery, but the harsh, absolute grip of death was loosening. The fluid was working.
Stack put a hand on the back of his twin's neck, squeezing hard.
Smoke lowered his head, pressing the heels of his hands into his eyes, and finally let out a long, shuddering, broken breath. The blackwater had taken the house, it had taken the city, but it was not taking his family.
Smoke stood exactly where the nurse had pushed him. He didn't move an inch. He couldn't.
The adrenaline that had fueled his march through the black water was crashing, leaving behind a cold, violent trembling that wracked his massive frame. He stood on the sun-baked concrete, his heavy rubber boots leaking toxic river water into a puddle around his feet, watching the frantic, desperate violence of emergency medicine.
There were no machines. The hospital’s backup generators had drowned. There were no steady, rhythmic beeps of heart monitors to offer comfort. There was only the brutal, mechanical reality of human hands fighting to keep a soul tethered to a body.
An orderly was standing on the lower rung of the gurney, physically squeezing the thick plastic bag of saline with both hands, forcing the fluid into Annie’s collapsed veins under pressure.
"She's tachycardic but the pressure is still in the boots," the triage nurse yelled, a stethoscope pressed hard against Annie’s chest. "I can barely hear it over the ambient noise! Squeeze that bag harder! We need volume!"
Smoke stared at Annie.
She looked so incredibly small.
The fierce, terrifying Ninth Ward woman who had weaponized a heavy iron axe and bullied an armed police officer was gone. On the rusty gurney, stripped of her torn yellow dress to allow access for the IV lines, she was just a fragile, broken shell covered in plaster dust and bruises.
Her chest was barely rising. Her head rolled limply to the side as the nurses worked, her dark, matted hair clinging to the wet plastic of the mattress.
"Annie," Smoke whispered.
The word caught in his throat, tearing on the way out.
He instinctively brought his massive, calloused hand up to his chest, right over his silver NOFD badge.
He pressed his palm against the heavy canvas of his turnout coat.
It was empty.
The ghost weight of his daughter the frantic, tiny, fluttering heartbeat that had been pressed against his ribs just five minutes ago was gone. The sudden absence of her was a physical amputation. He had carried his entire universe out of that dark hall, and now, he was holding nothing but air.
Smoke looked down at his hands. They were stained dark with river mud, dried plaster, and his wife's blood.
He was a Lieutenant of Heavy Rescue.
He had pulled men out of collapsed burning roofs.
He had ripped the doors off crushed cars with the jaws of life.
He was a giant.
But as he watched a stranger desperately squeeze a plastic bag of saltwater to keep his wife from slipping into the dark, Smoke realized the horrifying, agonizing truth: his strength was completely, utterly useless. He couldn't lift the sepsis off her. He couldn't punch the hypovolemic shock.
He was a spectator to the end of his own world.
A ragged, agonizing sob tore out of Smoke's chest. His knees finally gave way.
He collapsed onto the hard concrete of the ramp. He didn't try to catch himself. He hit the ground hard, pulling his knees up, wrapping his massive, bloody arms around his head as if trying to shield himself from a falling building.
"Eli," Stack wept, dropping to his knees right beside him in the dirty puddle of river water.
Stack threw his arms around his brother's trembling, broad shoulders. He pulled the giant man against him, anchoring him to the concrete.
"She's fighting, Eli," Stack sobbed, pressing his face against the wet, heavy canvas of Smoke's coat. "Listen to me. She's fighting. They both are. You just gotta let 'em fight."
Smoke squeezed his eyes shut, his entire body shuddering with the force of his weeping. The sounds of the triage ramp the shouting nurses, the groans of the displaced, the distant thrum of military helicopters overhead all faded into a dull, rushing roar in his ears.
"Please," Smoke begged, his voice a raw, broken whisper directed at the concrete beneath him. It wasn't a prayer to God; it was a desperate, pleading negotiation with the universe. "You took the house. You took the city. You can take the badge. Just don't make me live without her. Please. I can't breathe without her."
Ten feet away, the triage nurse tossed the empty, flattened bag of saline onto the ground.
"Hang the second liter!" she barked. "And get me a manual cuff! I need a pressure reading right now!"
He was only ten feet away. He had walked through a drowning city, he had smashed a fire engine through a concrete barricade, and he had carried her out of a tomb. But he couldn't cross those last ten feet.
He couldn't hold her hand. He couldn't wrap his massive body around hers to warm her freezing skin. He was forced to kneel in a puddle of the same toxic water that had ruined their lives, completely paralyzed, watching a stranger drive a needle into his wife’s collapsed vein.
Smoke stared at her arm hanging limply off the edge of the mattress. The silver wedding band he had slipped onto her finger three years ago was loose now, slipping down her cold knuckles.
The guilt rose up and crushed his windpipe.
She had chopped through her own ceiling. She had fought the ocean in the pitch black. She had ripped herself apart on a filthy concrete floor to give him a daughter, all while believing he was miles away at the Superdome. She had given every single drop of her life to fix his mistake.
"I'm sorry," Smoke wept, the words bubbling out in a broken, agonizing litany. "I'm sorry, sunflower. I'm so sorry I wasn't there."
He pressed his massive, dirty hands over his mouth, trying to muffle the raw, animalistic sobs that were tearing his throat apart. The invincible giant of the Ninth Ward was completely gone. He was just a terrified, broken man kneeling in the brutal sun, staring across an agonizing, impassable divide, begging a silent sky not to make him a widower on the exact same morning he became a father.
A/N: I hope you all enjoyed this much-needed chapter. Thank you so much for all the kind words, support, and messages throughout this past month — they truly mean more than you know. We’re officially nearing the end of this series, and I’m excited for you all to see how everything unfolds.
As always, let me know your thoughts below. Until next time 🤍
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@myheartsaysyes @adultinginheels @blue4everrsworld @xeebop @juniooox
Took a well needed break and now I’m back. Ready for more chaos? 😈
that one smoke/annie fic where they survive the flood (they both hate the fit)
Aw!
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[ Smoke x Annie ]
Saltwater
Summary, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11,12
Blackwater Promises Summary,1 2,3,4,5 ,6,7,8
Blackwater Promises: Anchor
⚠️Content Warning: gore, pregnancy-related anxiety, trauma, flooding, life-threatening situations, graphic survival distress
READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE
Smoke shoved his massive arms back under Annie, preparing to lift her. "I’m carrying you out. Stack has the rig outside. We can pack you in ice—"
"No!" Miss Veda snapped, her hand clamping down hard on Smoke’s thick wrist. "Look at her! Her heart is beating at a hundred and sixty beats a minute. Her body is cooking itself from the inside out. If you pick her up and try to run through a mob of ten thousand panicked people right now, the stress will stop her heart before you ever reach those glass doors."
"I can't let her have a baby on this concrete floor!" Smoke roared, the desperation finally cracking his stoic foundation. "It's filthy!"
"It’s too late for clean!" Miss Veda yelled back, pushing him down by the shoulder. "The baby is in the birth canal. She's crowning. You sit down, fireman, and you hold your wife, because she is going to need every ounce of strength you have to get this child out into the world!"
Smoke looked down. Annie was gripping the heavy canvas of his turnout coat so hard her knuckles were splitting. Her eyes were rolled back slightly, her chest heaving with shallow, ragged, dry breaths.
He didn't argue. He shifted his massive frame behind her, pulling her back against his chest, letting her rest between his legs. He wrapped his arms around her shoulders, creating a physical shield between her and the dark, chaotic hall.
"I'm right here, Annette," Smoke whispered fiercely, pressing his cheek against her burning forehead. "I'm your wall. Lean on me."
"It burns, Eli," she sobbed, a weak, desperate sound. The unnatural heat was consuming her.
"I know, sunflower. I know. I got you."
"Okay, baby," Miss Veda said, kneeling at Annie’s feet, her voice dropping into a rhythmic, commanding cadence that had delivered hundreds of babies in the Charity Hospital wards. "When the next one comes, you bear down. You don't scream. You push that energy down into your hips."
Annie nodded weakly against Smoke’s chest, her dark hair plastered to her face with sweat and river water.
Tighten.
The final contraction hit her like a freight train. It wasn't just an ache; it was an explosive, involuntary bearing down of her entire physical being.
Annie threw her head back against Smoke’s collarbone. She didn't scream. She squeezed her eyes shut, bared her teeth, and pushed.
Smoke held her tightly, his massive arms acting as a brace. He could feel the terrifying heat radiating off her skin through his thick coat. He could feel the erratic, frantic fluttering of her heart against his own ribs. It felt like a bird trying to batter its way out of a cage. She was giving the absolute last reserves of her life force to the child.
"Good, Annie, good!" Miss Veda encouraged, her hands positioned in the dark. "I have the head! One more. Give me one more big push for Ruby!"
"I can't," Annie gasped, her body going completely limp against Smoke. The fever had taken everything. Her vision was nothing but gray static. "Eli, I can't."
"Yes, you can," Smoke wept, his tears falling freely now, landing on her feverish cheeks and mixing with the plaster dust. "You chopped through a roof, Annie. You fought the ocean in the dark. You can do this. Bring our little girl here. Please, baby. Bring her to me."
Annie opened her eyes.
She looked up at the dark, cavernous ceiling of the Convention Center.
She thought of the black water rising in her foyer. She thought of the hot sun blistering the asphalt shingles. She thought of the torn yellow dress. She had not survived the end of the world just to fail at the finish line.
She took a shallow, rattling breath, her bloody hands gripping Smoke's forearms with sudden, terrifying strength.
She pushed with the soul of a Ninth Ward woman.
She pushed until her vision went completely black.
A sharp, piercing cry shattered the heavy darkness of Hall H.
It wasn't a weak, dehydrated click. It was a loud, angry, vibrant wail of new life.
Smoke gasped, his entire massive frame shaking as the sound hit his ears.
"She's here," Miss Veda whispered, her voice choked with tears. She quickly wiped the baby's face with a relatively clean piece of her own slip. "She's beautiful, Annie. A little girl."
Smoke looked over Annie's shoulder. In the weak, ambient glow of the flashlight lying on the floor, he saw her. Ruby. She was tiny, covered in vernix and blood, her little fists waving furiously in the hot, humid air.
"Annie," Smoke cried, laughing a broken, wet laugh. "Look. Baby, look at her."
But Annie didn't move.
Her head rested heavily against his chest. Her arms, which had been gripping his coat so fiercely just a second ago, had gone completely slack, falling uselessly to her sides.
"Annie?" Smoke whispered, the smile dying on his face instantly.
He shifted his weight, looking down at her.
Her eyes were half-open, staring blankly out into the dark hall. The agonizing, unnatural heat of the fever was still there, but the rapid, frantic beating of her heart against his ribs... had stopped.
"No," Smoke breathed. "No, no, no. Nette. Hey."
He shook her gently. "Sunflower. Hey. Look at Ruby."
Miss Veda looked up from the baby. She saw the slackness of Annie’s jaw. She saw the sudden, terrifying stillness of the young woman.
The old nurse dropped her head to her chest.
"Eli..." Miss Veda whispered softly, the ultimate tragedy breaking her voice.
"Shut up!" Smoke roared. It was a sound of such pure, visceral agony that the people lingering in the shadows of the hall physically stepped back.
He pressed two large, trembling fingers against the side of Annie’s neck, right where her pulse had been racing a minute ago.
Nothing. Just stillness.
Her heart, pushed past the absolute limits of human endurance by the flood, the dehydration, the severe infection, and the violent trauma of unmedicated labor, had simply given out the moment she knew her daughter was safe. Her body had served its purpose as a vessel, and then it had shut down.
"Come back," Smoke begged, his massive chest heaving as he pulled her lifeless body tight against him, rocking her back and forth on the concrete floor. "Please, God, don't take her. Take me! Put me in the water! Put me in the water, just give her back!"
He buried his face in her matted hair, sobbing uncontrollably. The giant firefighter, the man who couldn't be broken by burning buildings or toxic floods or live electrical wires, was entirely destroyed on a piece of wet cardboard.
Miss Veda carefully wrapped the crying newborn in a torn piece of yellow fabric—the cleanest part of Annie’s ruined dress.
She crawled over to the giant, broken man. She gently nudged Smoke's arm.
He didn't want to look up. He didn't want to let Annie go. He wanted the Convention Center roof to collapse and bury them both. But the baby was wailing, demanding the world.
Smoke slowly lifted his head, his face a mask of absolute, world-ending tragedy.
Miss Veda placed the small, warm bundle into his massive, calloused hands.
Smoke looked down at Ruby. She had Annie's nose. She had Annie's stubborn chin. She was wrapped in the yellow sundress that had survived the storm.
He pulled the baby to his chest, resting her right against his silver FDNO badge, while his other arm remained wrapped tightly around the lifeless body of his wife.
Smoke sat paralyzed on the concrete floor, trapped in a horrific liminal space. In his left arm, tucked against the heavy canvas of his turnout coat, was the frantic, squirming, hot weight of his daughter. In his right arm, resting against his ribs, was the slack, cooling weight of his wife.
The wails of the newborn bounced off the high concrete walls of Hall H, a sharp, piercing sound of life that felt entirely out of place in the mausoleum of the Convention Center.
"Lieutenant," Miss Veda said softly.
Smoke didn't hear her.
He was staring at Annie’s face.
The harsh lines of pain and fever that had contorted her features for the last forty-eight hours were gone. In death, her face had relaxed into a profound, devastating stillness. She just looked tired.
"Lieutenant Moore," Miss Veda repeated, her voice firmer this time. She reached out with a pair of trauma shears she had salvaged from a discarded first-aid kit. "I need to clamp the cord. Give me room."
Smoke blinked, pulling his gaze away from Annie’s lifeless eyes. He shifted slightly, his movements rigid and robotic, allowing the old nurse to access the space between the mother and the child.
With practiced, grim efficiency, Miss Veda tied off the umbilical cord using a torn, thin strip of Annie's yellow sundress, then snipped it. It was the final, physical severing. Annie and Ruby were no longer one entity.
"There," Miss Veda whispered, her hands shaking slightly as she wiped the shears on her skirt. "She's free."
In the shadows of the aisle, the dynamic of the crowd was shifting.
The cries of the baby had drawn attention. In a place where people were dying of thirst and despair, the sound of new life was a dangerous magnet.
Desperate faces began to appear at the edges of the flashlight beam. Hollow-eyed men, weeping mothers, and teenagers stepped closer, staring at the giant fireman, the dead woman, and the crying infant.
Leon saw the movement. The mechanic stepped forward, planting his boots firmly between Smoke and the encroaching shadows. He gripped the heavy iron tire iron with both hands, raising it slightly.
"Back up," Leon growled, his voice a low, territorial warning. "Show some respect. Back away."
Smoke looked up at the shadows. He saw the hungry, desperate eyes looking at his daughter. He saw the feral reality of the Convention Center closing in around them.
The paralysis broke. The grief didn't leave, but it hardened, compressing into a cold, diamond-sharp armor of pure survival.
He was a father now. And he was not going to let his daughter die in the same dark hole that had taken his wife.
Smoke gently laid Ruby against the center of his chest, securing the small, squirming bundle inside the heavy folds of his turnout coat. He zipped the heavy canvas jacket up halfway, creating a makeshift, insulated pouch. Only the baby's tiny face was visible, resting securely against his silver NOFD badge.
Then, he looked down at Annie.
He couldn't leave her here. He would burn the entire city to the waterline before he left her on this cardboard.
Smoke reached out with a massive, trembling hand. He brushed the matted, plaster-caked hair away from her face one last time. With his thumb, he gently stroked her cheek, committing the texture of her skin to memory.
"I'm taking you home, sunflower," Smoke whispered.
He slipped one arm under her knees and the other under her shoulders. With a deep, shuddering grunt, the giant firefighter stood up.
He rose to his full height of six-foot-four. The physical toll of holding a newborn tight to his chest while carrying the dead weight of an adult woman was staggering, but Smoke didn't waver. The muscles in his massive arms locked into place like steel cables.
He looked at Miss Veda. The old nurse was wiping her eyes, looking up at the tragic, towering figure.
"She fought like hell, son," Miss Veda said, her voice cracking.
"I know," Smoke replied, his voice completely devoid of emotion. It was the voice of a ghost. "Thank you. For not letting her be alone."
He turned to Leon. The mechanic lowered the tire iron, stepping aside to clear the path.
"Stack is outside," Smoke said to Leon. "Heavy rescue rig. We have room. Both of you. Come with me."
Miss Veda looked at the dark hall, listening to the moans of the sick and the dying. "I can't leave them, Lieutenant. There's more babies in here."
Leon looked at the tire iron in his hands, then at the old nurse. He let out a long, heavy sigh. "I'll stay with her. Make sure nobody bothers her while she works."
Smoke nodded once. A silent pact of respect between men who knew what duty cost.
He turned toward the front of the hall. It was a half-mile walk through pitch-black darkness, surrounded by ten thousand people who had lost their minds to the heat and the abandonment.
Smoke clutched his dead wife tightly in his arms, felt his living daughter breathing against his heart, and stepped into the dark sea.
The walk back to the doors was a half-mile journey through the belly of a dying beast.
Smoke walked with a slow, deliberate, heavy gait. He couldn't use his flashlight; it was left behind on the floor. He navigated by the faint, gray pre-dawn light bleeding through the distant glass facade of the building, and by the horrific crunch of debris under his heavy rubber boots.
Inside his coat, Ruby was wailing.
It was a sharp, high-pitched siren that cut through the low, buzzing murmur of the hall. It was the sound of a full belly and healthy lungs—a sound that did not belong in this place.
As Smoke walked, the shadows began to shift.
The people of Hall H had been abandoned for days. They had watched their elders die in wheelchairs. They had watched their children stop sweating. Now, a giant in a fireman's uniform was marching through their tomb, carrying life in his coat and death in his arms.
"Hey!" a man’s voice echoed from the dark, raw and raspy. "Where you going? You leaving us?"
Smoke didn't answer. He kept his eyes locked on the distant glass doors.
"Take my boy!" a woman screamed, throwing herself into the aisle right in front of him. She was holding a limp toddler. "He ain't had no water since Sunday! Take him with you!"
Smoke stopped.
He looked down at the weeping mother. The firefighter inside him—the man who had sworn an oath to save the citizens of New Orleans—screamed to put Annie down and take the child. But the widower, the father whose world had been reduced to the fragile, beating heart tucked against his chest, couldn't move.
"I can't," Smoke rumbled, his voice thick with a crushing, suffocating guilt. "I have no water. I have no radio. I can't save him."
"You're a fireman!" she shrieked, clawing at his heavy canvas pants. "You're supposed to help us!"
More figures stepped into the aisle. They were closing in. It wasn't a coordinated attack; it was a mob driven by the sheer, primal instinct to survive. Hands reached out from the dark, grabbing at Smoke's sleeves, pulling at the hem of his coat, trying to reach the crying infant hidden inside.
"Give us the baby!" someone yelled. "They'll send a chopper for a baby!"
The mob pressed closer, the smell of sour sweat and desperation washing over him. A hand brushed against Annie’s lifeless, hanging arm.
The grief that had been crushing Smoke's chest suddenly inverted, snapping outward into a blinding, violent rage.
Smoke threw his massive shoulders back. He didn't drop his wife. He didn't reach for a weapon. He simply drew in a massive breath of the foul air and let out a roar that shook the plaster dust from the ceiling.
"GET BACK!"
It was a sound so guttural, so filled with absolute, feral menace and unhinged violence, that the mob physically recoiled.
"DO NOT TOUCH HER!" Smoke screamed, his eyes flashing with a terrifying, murderous fire in the dim light. "I will kill the first person who puts a hand on my wife!"
The crowd froze. The terrifying, sheer physical mass of the man, combined with the pure, suicidal authority in his voice, broke their frenzy. They looked at the dead woman in his arms. They saw the blood on his coat. They recognized that the giant standing before them had nothing left to lose.
Slowly, the hands dropped. The people backed away, melting back into the shadows, parting like the Red Sea to give the monster room to pass.
Smoke lowered his chin. His chest heaved violently. He tightened his grip on Annie, tucked his chin over the top of his coat to shield Ruby’s head, and marched forward.
No one else stepped in his way.
The heavy glass doors of Hall H were chained shut, but there was a six-inch gap where the heavy metal links had slacked over the weekend.
Through the grimed, heat-cracked glass, the pre-dawn sky over the Mississippi River was beginning to bruise purple and gray. It wasn't the mockery of a beautiful day anymore; it was the color of a fresh internal injury.
Stack was standing on the outside of the glass.
He had his face pressed flat against the pane, his hands cupping his eyes to see into the suffocating darkness of the lobby. He had been waiting exactly twelve minutes. He was three seconds away from swinging a twenty-pound sledgehammer through the tempered glass to get to his brother.
Then, the sweep of his flashlight beam caught him.
Stack froze on the sidewalk.
Smoke emerged from the dark concourse. But he wasn't walking like the invincible lieutenant of Engine 42. He was dragging his boots, his massive frame hunched forward, curling protectively around the burden in his arms.
Stack dropped the heavy Maglite. It hit the concrete sidewalk with a sharp, hollow clack, the beam rolling away, illuminating only the garbage in the gutter.
Through the chain gap, Stack saw her.
He saw the matted hair hanging free, caked in white plaster dust and dried mud. He saw the unnatural, absolute gravity pulling her head back against Smoke's bicep. Her arm swung rhythmically with Smoke's heavy strides, the back of her hand brushing against the thick, wet rubber of his firefighting boots.
But it was the color that stopped Stack’s heart.
Wrapped around her, dark with river water, mud, and the unmistakable, heavy stain of blood, were the torn pieces of the pale yellow sundress.
Smoke reached the doors.
He couldn't use his hands.
He didn't ask for help. He turned his body sideways, and with a low, agonizing groan that sounded like tearing metal, he slammed his massive shoulder against the frame.
He forced the chained doors apart, wedging his body through the six-inch gap. He moved with an excruciating, terrifying gentleness, contorting his own massive spine so that not a single inch of Annie’s cold skin would scrape against the rough chain or the glass.
He stepped out of the tomb and onto the littered sidewalk.
Smoke stopped.
He didn't look at Stack.
He looked down at the lifeless woman in his arms.
"We're outside, sunflower," Smoke whispered. His voice was a broken, raspy plea, completely detached from reality. He gently nudged his chin against the top of her cold head. "I told you I'd come. You can breathe now, baby. We're outside."
Stack stood ten feet away, his chest heaving. The professional first responder in him saw the gray pallor of her skin and the blue tint of her lips. The brother in him felt his soul tear in half.
"Eli..." Stack choked, the tears spilling over his cheeks in hot, rapid rivulets. "Eli, she's..."
"She's just tired, Stack," Smoke interrupted, his voice dropping into a frantic, protective whisper.
He shifted his weight, rocking her slightly. "She fought the water. She chopped through the roof. She's just so tired. Don't yell, you'll wake her up."
The absolute, shattering delusion broke Stack.
Stack took a step forward, his hands trembling violently as he reached out.
He wanted to take the horrific physical weight from his twin.
He wanted to lay his sister-in-law down with dignity.
"Let me help you, Eli," Stack sobbed, his fingers brushing the wet, bloody fabric of Smoke's turnout coat. "Please, let me lay her down—"
Smoke’s grief inverted instantly into blinding, feral violence.
"DO NOT TOUCH HER!"
The roar was so raw, so filled with unhinged, murderous panic, that Stack physically stumbled backward into the gutter. Smoke twisted his body away, clutching Annie so tightly against his chest that her limp arm swung wildly. His wide, bloodshot eyes locked onto his twin with the terrifying glare of a cornered animal defending its dead.
"Nobody touches her!" Smoke wept, his massive chest heaving, the denial finally shattering under the weight of the morning light. "She's mine! She's my wife!"
The silence that followed was absolute. The noise of the thousands of displaced people surrounding the Convention Center faded into a dull, echoing blur. Smoke stood trembling in the street, the giant brought to his knees by a flood he couldn't fight.
Then, the silence broke.
"Waaaaaah!"
Stack froze.
His tear-filled eyes darted around, looking for the source of the sound.
He looked at Smoke.
The sound wasn't coming from the crowd. It was coming from inside Smoke's jacket.
Stack’s eyes dropped to the V-neck opening of the heavy canvas turnout coat, just above the silver FDNO badge. Poking out from the thick collar, pushing against the heavy fabric, was a tiny, dark, bloody fist.
Stack stared at the fist. Then he looked at dead Annie. Then he looked at the blood soaking the front of his brother's uniform.
The tragedy was a math problem the human brain couldn't survive.
Life and death were touching, separated by a millimeter of canvas, contained entirely within the embrace of one broken man.
A high, thin whimper escaped Stack’s throat.
His knees gave out.
He fell back against the massive front tire of the heavy rescue truck, burying his face in his hands, his body wracked with soundless, devastating sobs.
He was mourning the woman he loved as a sister, and he was mourning the soul of the twin brother he knew was never coming back.
Smoke didn't console him. He didn't have the space.
He looked down at the tiny fist waving blindly against his badge. He felt the frantic, fluttering heartbeat of his daughter against his chest, right next to the crushing, empty silence where his wife's heart used to be.
"Open the rig, Stack," Smoke commanded. His voice was completely hollowed out, the sound of a man speaking from the bottom of an ocean.
Stack forced himself up. He wiped his face, grabbing the heavy metal handle of the fire engine and yanking the passenger door open.
Smoke climbed into the massive cab. He refused the passenger seat. He sank down onto the metal floorboard, pulling Annie’s lifeless body into his lap, wrapping his arms around her one last time, while the wailing infant remained secured inside his coat.
Smoke leaned his head against the heavy steel door. He closed his eyes, pressing his lips to Annie's cold, plaster-dusted forehead.
"Charity Hospital," Smoke whispered to the empty cab as Stack put the massive rig into gear.
"Drive until the water stops us. And then we walk."
A/N: This chapter was a difficult one to write. I understand it may stir strong emotions, and that’s not something I take lightly. I chose not to soften or reshape reality for the sake of comfort—especially when this story is rooted in experiences that so many have truly endured.
Thank you for continuing to read, reflect, and stay with me through it all.
Your support means more than you know.
As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Stay Tuned
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Blackwater Promises: Fever
⚠️Content Warning: gore, pregnancy-related anxiety, trauma, flooding, life-threatening situations, graphic survival distress.
Word Count: 7k
READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE
The walk from the I-10 overpass to the Convention Center was only a mile and a half. On a normal Tuesday, it was a quick drive down Poydras Street.
Annie walked barefoot on the boiling asphalt. Her feet were cut, blistered, and caked in toxic, gray mud. With every step, a sharp, shooting pain traveled up her shins, settling deep into her lower back. She walked with one hand pressed hard against the side of a parked, abandoned city bus to steady herself, and the other wrapped tightly underneath her belly.
Ruby was heavy. The baby felt like a bowling ball resting directly on Annie's pelvic bone.
Just to the doors, Annie chanted in her head, her cracked lips moving without sound. Just get to the AC. Get to the Red Cross. Get a cup of water.
She was part of a shuffling, silent parade of the displaced. Surrounding her were the ghosts of the city. A teenage boy pushing his grandmother in a shopping cart. A woman wearing nothing but a soaked slip, holding a screaming, red-faced infant. Men with hollow eyes carrying black trash bags filled with all that was left of their lives.
No one spoke. The heat had stolen their voices. It was ninety-six degrees, and the humidity made the air feel like breathing through a hot, wet wool blanket.
Annie stumbled. Her toe caught the edge of a shattered storm drain.
She pitched forward, a cry tearing from her dry throat.
A strong hand grabbed her by the shoulder of her torn yellow dress, jerking her upright before her belly could hit the pavement.
"I got you, sista" a deep voice grunted.
It was a man in his fifties, wearing a mechanic’s shirt with the name Leon stitched over the pocket. He was carrying a heavy, waterlogged suitcase, but he didn't let her go until she was steady.
"Thank you," Annie wheezed, the words scraping her throat like sandpaper.
"We almost there," Leon said, pointing down the boulevard with his chin. "Look."
Annie lifted her head.
Through the shimmering waves of heat radiating off the pavement, she saw it. The Ernest N. Morial Convention Center. It was a massive, sprawling complex of concrete, steel, and glass, stretching for blocks along the riverfront.
For a single, fleeting second, Annie felt a sob of relief rise in her chest.
We made it. Smoke, I made it.
But as they drew closer, the mirage shattered.
There were no white FEMA tents. There were no Salvation Army trucks. There were no rows of green military cots or medics in crisp uniforms passing out bottled water.
There was only the crowd.
It looked like the entire population of New Orleans had been swept up by a broom and pushed against the glass doors of the building. There were ten thousand people massed on the sidewalks, spilling out into the streets, huddled under the slight overhangs of the roof to escape the brutal sun.
"Lord have mercy," Leon whispered next to her, stopping dead in his tracks.
The smell hit them a block away. It was a physical wall. It smelled of thousands of unwashed bodies, sour sweat, and the sharp, ammonia stench of urine baking on concrete. There were no porta-potties. People were relieving themselves against the walls, in the gutters, between parked cars.
Annie's stomach lurched. She dry-heaved, bringing up nothing but a string of bitter, yellow bile that burned her mouth.
She forced herself to keep walking. She merged into the sea of humanity, pushing her way toward the main entrance.
"Excuse me," she rasped, nudging past a group of teenagers sitting on the curb. "Excuse me. Red Cross?"
A woman leaning against a concrete pillar laughed. It was a harsh, dry, cracking sound.
"Ain't no Red Cross here, baby," the woman said, waving a piece of junk mail in front of her face to create a breeze. "Ain't no nobody here but us."
"But the buses," Annie pleaded, her chest tightening with panic. "The police said the buses was here."
"The police lied to get you off the bridge," an older man snapped from the ground. "They locked the doors. The inside is full. No lights. No air conditioning. Just dark."
Annie stared at the massive glass doors of Hall H. They were propped open with a trash can, but looking inside was like looking into the mouth of a cave. It was pitch black. The heat radiating out of the building was somehow worse than the heat outside.
A sharp, paralyzing cramp ripped across Annie’s lower abdomen.
She gasped, her knees buckling. She grabbed the metal handle of the glass door to keep from collapsing.
It wasn't a kick. It was a contraction.
Her body, severely dehydrated, traumatized, and exhausted, was beginning to misfire.
"No," Annie whimpered, terror flooding her system like ice water. "No, Ruby. Not now. It's too early. We ain't safe yet."
She looked around wildly. Ten thousand faces, angry, exhausted, and abandoned. There was no water. There was no help. She had crawled out of the flood only to be dumped into a desert.
She slid down the glass door, her back leaving a smear of dirt and dried blood, until she hit the concrete sidewalk. She pulled her knees up, wrapping her arms around the tight, cramping ball of her stomach, and closed her eyes as the city of New Orleans slowly went mad around her.
Annie gripped the fabric of her torn yellow dress, her knuckles white.
Tighten. The muscle of her uterus seized. It didn't just hurt; it turned her belly into a hard, rigid stone. The pain radiated around her lower back, a dull, grinding ache that stole the air from her lungs.
She bit down on her lip to keep from screaming. The sound of weeping and arguing echoed endlessly in the dark hall, and she didn't want to draw the attention of the desperate men pacing the aisles.
Release.
The muscle slowly relaxed. Annie gasped, a shallow, rattling breath.
"Breathe through your nose, baby," a voice whispered.
Annie flinched. She couldn't see the woman, only the silhouette of a wide-brimmed church hat against the hot sun bleeding through the distant glass doors.
A cool, dry hand rested on Annie’s forehead, then moved down to press firmly against her belly. The touch was clinical, practiced, and immediately grounding.
"I'm Miss Veda," the voice said. It was an older Creole woman, her tone brooking no nonsense. "Worked thirty years on the maternity floor at Charity Hospital before my knees gave out. How far along are you?"
"Thirty-four weeks," Annie croaked.
Miss Veda clicked her tongue. She kept her hand on Annie's stomach, timing the hardness.
"It's too early," Annie whispered, tears leaking from the corners of her eyes, cutting tracks through the plaster dust on her face. "I can't have her here. It's dirty. I don't have no water."
"Listen to me," Miss Veda said, leaning in close so Annie could smell the peppermints on her breath. "You ain't in active labor yet. It’s uterine irritability. Your body is bone dry, sugar. When you get this dehydrated, your blood volume drops, and the pituitary gland starts dumping oxytocin to compensate. It's making your uterus contract. The body is trying to evict the baby to save the mother."
The clinical breakdown was terrifying, but the nurse’s calm authority was a lifeline.
"What do I do?" Annie whimpered.
"You gotta lay on your left side," Miss Veda instructed, gently pushing Annie’s shoulder. "Take the pressure off that vena cava vein. Get the blood flowing back to the baby. And you gotta drink water. If we don't hydrate you, this irritability is gonna turn into the real thing, and this baby is gonna come on this concrete floor."
"There ain't no water," Annie sobbed. "I looked."
"I know," Miss Veda sighed, the heavy, tragic sound of a woman who had spent her life saving people and now had empty hands. "I know there ain't."
Annie curled onto her left side. She placed her bleeding hands over her belly.
"Lijah," she whispered into the dark, a prayer to a man she didn't know was broken. "Come find me. Please, Eli. Come find me."
Engine House 42 smelled of diesel exhaust and defeat.
The bay doors were open. The backup generator hammered loudly in the background, powering a few halogen work lights that cast harsh, long shadows across the concrete floor. Firefighters, National Guardsmen, and volunteers moved in a chaotic, exhausted blur.
Smoke sat on the back bumper of Engine 42.
He hadn't showered. He hadn't changed. He was still wearing the filthy, mud-stained undershirt. He sat hunched over, his forearms resting on his knees, staring at the concrete between his boots.
He was entirely hollow. The wailing breakdown on the boat had purged the last drops of adrenaline from his system. He wasn't a man anymore; he was a monument to grief.
Stack walked over, holding an open MRE packet—beef stew and a plastic bottle of water.
"Eli," Stack said softly.
Smoke didn't blink.
Stack set the food on the bumper next to him. He didn't push it. He just sat down on the ground beside his brother's boots, keeping watch over the shell that was left.
Delta Slim marched into the bay, holding a clipboard. He looked ten years older than he had on Monday.
"Listen up!" Slim barked over the noise of the generator. "Coast Guard is establishing a new drop zone at the cloverleaf. We need two boats back out there. Anyone who can still stand, I need you."
Before anyone could move, a flat-bottom aluminum skiff on a trailer was backed into the driveway by a lifted pickup truck.
Two civilian men hopped out.
They were sunburned, wearing duck camo and baseball caps.
The Cajun Navy.
"Captain!" the driver yelled, walking up to Slim and wiping sweat from his forehead. "Boudreaux, from Vermilion Parish. We're running dry on gas. We need a fill-up before we head back to the Lower Ninth."
Smoke didn't look up, but the words Lower Ninth registered in his brain like a faint electric shock.
"I can't spare gas for civilian vessels right now," Slim said, rubbing his eyes. "You boys did good. Go home. Leave the rest to the military."
"We can't go home, Cap," the partner said, shaking his head. "It's bad out there. Real bad. We was pulling people off roofs all afternoon. Dropping 'em wherever we could."
"Where's your drop point?" Slim asked, writing on his clipboard.
"They wouldn't let us past the parish line. Coast Guard blockaded the river," Boudreaux said, frustrated. "We had to drop 'em at the I-10 overpass near Mid-City. Must've been five thousand people on that bridge."
Smoke’s eyes slowly shifted from the concrete to the men's boots.
The bridge.
The bridge he had driven under.
"We dropped a lot of bad cases there," Boudreaux continued, his voice dropping, heavy with guilt. "Left a girl there a few hours ago. Broke my heart. She shouldn't have been on that hot concrete."
Stack looked up from the ground. "What girl?"
Boudreaux looked at Stack, taking off his cap and wiping his brow. "Found her on a roof in the Ninth. House was underwater, but she kicked through the attic. Little bitty thing. Black girl. Pregnant. Looked like she was about ready to pop."
The world stopped spinning.
The generator faded into absolute silence. The halogen lights seemed to burn brighter, searing into Smoke’s retinas.
Stack scrambled to his feet, his heart hammering against his ribs. "What was she wearing?"
Boudreaux frowned, trying to remember. "A dress. Tore up real bad. Yellow, I think. Yeah. A yellow sundress."
Smoke stopped breathing.
His mind, which had been locked in a dark, suicidal room, kicked the door off the hinges.
The yellow rag on the rebar.
The pregnant belly.
She kicked through the attic.
"Where is she?"
The voice didn't sound human. It was a low, terrifying rumble that vibrated from deep within Smoke's massive chest.
Smoke stood up. He rose breaking the surface of the water. He towered over the two Cajun men, his eyes wide, bloodshot, and suddenly, violently alive.
"Whoa, buddy," Boudreaux took a step back, intimidated by the sheer size and feral energy radiating off the firefighter. "We dropped her at the overpass. Like I said."
"She ain't at the overpass!" Smoke roared, grabbing Boudreaux by the collar of his shirt, lifting the man onto his tiptoes. "I was just at the overpass! She wasn't there!"
"Eli, let him go!" Slim yelled, rushing forward.
Stack grabbed Smoke's arm. "Eli, stop! He saved her!"
Smoke dropped the man. Boudreaux stumbled backward, coughing.
"I don't know where she went, man!" Boudreaux yelled defensively. "But the crowd up there... they was all talking about walking to the Convention Center. They said the buses was at the Superdome!"
Smoke froze.
The Superdome He remembered the people screaming down from the bridge. “We walking to the Convention Center! ” or were they walking to the Superdorme?
She was alive. She had survived the water. She had survived the attic. And she had walked into the worst place on earth.
Smoke turned on his heel. He didn't say a word. He grabbed the heavy iron Halligan bar resting against the bumper of the truck.
"Eli!" Slim shouted, stepping in his path. "Where the hell do you think you're going? The Convention Center is a black zone. Police are pulling out. There's riots. It's not safe!"
Smoke looked down at his Captain. The empty, dead eyes were gone. In their place was the terrifying, unyielding focus of a man who was going to walk through a wall of fire to get what was his.
"Move, Slim," Smoke said. It wasn't a request.
Slim looked at him. He saw the Halligan bar. He saw the ghost of the man who had laid on the floor yesterday, now resurrected into something incredibly dangerous. Slim stepped aside.
"Stack," Smoke said, walking past his twin toward the station's heavy rescue truck. "Get your gear. We're going to the Dome."
"He said the Convention Center, Eli!" Stack called out, running after him.
"I know," Smoke said, throwing the heavy iron bar into the cab of the truck. "And I'm gonna tear the doors off."
The heavy rescue truck idled at the perimeter of the Superdome, its headlights cutting through the muggy, diesel-choked night.
Stack slammed the truck into park. He grabbed Smoke by the shoulder before his massive twin could throw the door open.
"Eli, listen to me!" Stack yelled over the roar of the engine and the distant, chaotic roar of the crowd. "The Cajun boy said the Convention Center! He said the crowd from the bridge was walking to the Center!"
Smoke didn't look at him. His jaw was locked tight, a muscle ticking violently in his cheek. He had his heavy turnout coat on now over his filthy undershirt, his FDNO badge gleaming dull silver in the dash lights.
"He said the crowd was walking," Smoke growled, his hand on the door handle. "Annie wouldn't follow the crowd. She's stubborn, but she ain't stupid. I drilled it into her head a hundred times. 'If the water comes, go to the Dome.' It’s the official shelter. It's where the military is."
"Eli, the Dome is a madhouse! The roof tore off!"
"And Mr. Baptiste saw her," Smoke countered, turning his bloodshot eyes to Stack. The terrifying, manic hope in them made Stack physically recoil. "He saw the yellow dress at the Dome, Stack. It makes sense. She got off that bridge, she remembered the plan, and she walked here. She's waiting for me."
Before Stack could argue the logic of a delirious old man, Smoke kicked the heavy door open and jumped out onto the pavement.
Stack cursed, grabbing a heavy Maglite flashlight, and chased after him.
They walked toward the stadium. It looked like a crashed spaceship. Huge, jagged sections of the white roof had been peeled back by the wind, exposing the dark skeleton of the dome beneath.
But the real horror was on the ground.
Thirty thousand people were trapped inside and outside the perimeter. The National Guard had set up barricades, young soldiers standing nervously with M-16s, sweat pouring down their faces as they looked at the sea of desperate citizens pressing against the fences.
The smell hit Smoke like a physical wall. It was the stench of backed-up plumbing, rotting garbage, and tens of thousands of unwashed, terrified bodies trapped in a concrete bowl with no air conditioning.
Smoke walked straight up to a barricade near Gate C.
"Back up, sir!" a young Guardsman yelled, raising his hand. "Nobody goes in or out! Shelter is on lockdown!"
Smoke didn't slow down. He stepped right up to the barricade, towering over the terrified soldier. He tapped the silver NOFD badge on his chest.
"Lieutenant Moore, Engine 42," Smoke's voice was a low, dangerous rumble that cut right through the noise of the crowd. "I'm looking for my wife. Thirty-four weeks pregnant. Yellow sundress. She came in today."
"I... I can't let you in, Lieutenant," the kid stammered, his eyes darting around. "We have orders. It's a riot inside. There's no lights. We can't guarantee your safety."
"I run into burning buildings for a living, son," Smoke said, his hand gripping the cold steel of the barricade. "I don't need you to guarantee my safety. I need you to move this gate before I throw it in the river."
Stack arrived, flashing his own badge, putting a calming hand on the soldier's arm. "We're going in, man. Just let us through the side."
The soldier looked at the two massive firemen. He swallowed hard, unhooked the chain, and pulled the barricade back just enough for them to squeeze through.
"God be with you," the kid whispered.
Smoke and Stack stepped into the Superdome.
It was pitch black, illuminated only by the sweeping beams of a few military flashlights and the glow of lighters. The noise was deafening—a continuous, echoing roar of arguments, crying babies, and the hollow crunch of boots on trash.
People were sleeping on the ramps. They were huddled in the concourses. Families had built makeshift tents out of garbage bags and stadium blankets.
Smoke clicked on his heavy right-angle turnout flashlight. A brilliant beam of white light cut through the gloom.
"Annie!" he roared.
The name was swallowed instantly by the cavernous echo of the Dome.
He started walking. He didn't walk like a rescuer; he stalked like a predator. His flashlight beam swept over the faces of the damned. He was looking for one color. He was looking for yellow.
He checked the concourse. He checked the medical triage area, which was nothing more than a few cots covered in blood and vomit. He checked the ramps leading up to the terrace section, stepping over sleeping children and exhausted elders.
"Annie Moore!" Stack yelled, joining the chorus, his voice cracking. "Pregnant! Yellow dress!"
Faces looked up at them, blinded by the lights, then turned away in apathy. No one cared. Everyone had lost someone.
Smoke walked for two hours. He walked until his boots were slick with the filth on the floor. He walked until the frantic, violent hope in his chest began to rot, turning back into that cold, familiar ash.
He stood at the 50-yard line of the football field. He shined his light into the stands. Thirty thousand faces.
None of them were hers.
"She ain't here, Eli," Stack whispered gently, coming up behind him, putting a hand on his brother's trembling shoulder. "We searched the whole plaza level. She ain't here."
Smoke slowly lowered the flashlight. The beam hit the turf at his feet.
The realization was a slow, twisting knife.
She didn't follow the plan. "The Convention Center," Smoke whispered, the words tasting like poison. "Boudreaux said they were walking to the Convention Center."
"We'll go," Stack said immediately. "We'll go right now."
"It's on the other side of the Central Business District," Smoke said, his voice breaking. He looked at his watch. It was past midnight. "We lost three hours, Stack. We lost three hours in the wrong hell."
Three miles away, Annie was losing her war.
The baby wasn't coming. Not yet.
The human body is a brutal, calculating machine. Annie was severely dehydrated, and now, a strange, deep heat was blooming under her skin. The jagged cuts on her arms and legs from the attic window throbbed with a heavy, angry pulse, tight and hot to the touch.
Her body, registering this new, invisible threat and the severe shock, had stalled the labor. The contractions were still there vicious, agonizing spasms that seized her lower back every ten minutes, but her cervix refused to yield. It was a cruel biological stalemate: her uterus trying to evict the baby, and her nervous system locking the doors to keep the trauma contained.
Annie lay on the cardboard, shivering so violently her teeth chipped against each other. Her skin was burning, radiating a dry, unnatural heat into the muggy air of the hall.
"Your heart is racing like a freight train, Annie," Miss Veda whispered, her cool fingers pressed against the rapid, thready pulse at Annie's throat. "You're burning up."
"I'm cold," Annie gasped, her eyes rolling back slightly. "Miss Veda, I'm freezing."
"That's your body fighting itself, sugar," the older nurse said grimly, wiping the cold sweat from Annie's face with a dry rag. "You're running a severe fever."
A few feet away, in the pitch-black aisle, a sound cut through the low murmur of the hall.
It was a baby crying.
But it wasn't a normal cry. It was a weak, dry, clicking sound. Like a bird with a broken wing. There was no moisture in it. There were no tears.
Annie turned her head, the movement sending a spike of nausea through her stomach.
In the shadows, a young girl—no older than seventeen—was sitting against a concrete pillar, rocking an infant wrapped in a dirty t-shirt. The girl was crying quietly, her own tears long since dried up.
"He won't latch," the teenage mother sobbed to no one in particular. "My milk is gone. He's so hot. Please, somebody."
Annie stared at them. The sound of that dying, dehydrated infant bypassed the fever and the pain, striking a primal, vibrating chord deep in her maternal marrow.
She looked around the immediate area. In the dim moonlight filtering from the distant glass doors, she saw three other mothers. All of them hollow-eyed. All of them holding listless, silent children.
Ruby, Annie thought, a fierce, terrifying clarity cutting through the haze in her mind. If we stay on this cardboard, we all die right here.
She pushed herself up on her elbows. The world tilted violently. Black spots danced in her vision.
"What are you doing?" Miss Veda hissed, grabbing her shoulder. "Lay down! You're in no condition to move!"
"There's water," Annie rasped. Her voice sounded like crushed glass.
"There ain't no water, sugar," Miss Veda said sadly. "They checked."
"Yes, there is," Annie wheezed, forcing herself to sit up. The effort made her vision gray out for a terrifying five seconds. "When Leon brought me in... I saw it. Hall G. The catering corridor. They got rolling metal gates over the concession storage."
Leon, who had been sitting a few yards away, leaned in. "I saw them too, sister. But they locked tight. Heavy-duty padlocks. And there’s two NOPD officers sitting right in front of them with shotguns, guarding the stash for the suits upstairs."
"I know," Annie whispered. A terrifying, cold focus settled over her burning features. She looked at Leon. She looked at the heavy iron tire iron protruding from his waterlogged suitcase. "Leon. You from the Ninth?"
"Born and raised, baby," the mechanic nodded.
"Then you know how to break a lock."
"I know how," Leon said, his eyes widening. "But I ain't looking to get shot by no panicked cop over some Dasani."
"They ain't gonna shoot," Annie said, gripping her swollen belly, her jaw setting into a hard, stubborn line that Smoke would have recognized instantly. "Because they ain't gonna be looking at you."
Miss Veda realized what the girl was suggesting. "Annie Moore, you are out of your mind. You are burning up with fever. You are having contractions. You can barely stand!"
"I don't need to stand," Annie said, her chest heaving as she gathered every ounce of strength she had left. "I just need to scream."
he concourse connecting Hall H to Hall G was wide, lined with locked, dark vendor kiosks. At the far end, behind a heavy, rolling metal security gate, were pallets of bottled water, Gatorade, and snacks meant for a convention that would never happen.
Two police officers sat on folding chairs in front of the gate. They looked terrified, exhausted, and on edge, their hands resting on the grips of their shotguns.
From the darkness of Hall H, a scream shattered the silence.
It wasn't a fake scream. The contraction that hit Annie was a ten out of ten—a vicious, tearing agony amplified by whatever fire was raging in her blood.
"HELP!"
A woman’s voice—Miss Veda’s—echoed down the cavernous hall. "HELP US! THE BABY IS COMING! SHE'S DYING!"
The two officers jumped to their feet, their flashlights clicking on, the bright beams sweeping the dark concourse.
Stumbling out of the shadows, illuminated by the harsh white light, was Annie.
She was a vision of absolute horror. The yellow dress was shredded and stained dark with mud and dried blood. She was barefoot, her hair wild, her skin shining with a sickly, febrile sweat. She was clutching her massive belly, her face contorted in a mask of pure agony.
She collapsed to her knees right in the middle of the concourse, twenty feet from the cops.
"Help me!" Annie shrieked, her voice echoing off the high ceilings. She arched her back, letting the genuine pain of the contraction take over her entire body. "My baby! Please, Jesus, my baby!"
Miss Veda ran up behind her, kneeling in the dirt, playing the role perfectly. "Officers! She’s in labor! She's burning up! We need a medic!"
The younger cop lowered his shotgun. The sheer, overwhelming reality of a pregnant woman screaming in agony broke his defensive posture. It was human instinct.
"Stay here," the older cop ordered his partner, his voice shaking. But he couldn't take his eyes off Annie.
Both officers jogged forward into the concourse, their flashlights focused entirely on the screaming woman on the floor.
"Ma'am," the older cop said, kneeling a few feet away, reaching for his radio. "We don't have medics. Dispatch is down."
"Feel her skin!" Miss Veda yelled, grabbing the cop's sleeve. "She's on fire! Look at her!"
The cop instinctively reached out.
Thirty feet behind them, in the pitch-black shadow of the locked metal gate, Leon and two other men from the aisle moved with the silent, practiced efficiency of ghosts.
Leon slid the heavy iron tire iron through the U-bar of the thick padlock. He didn't hit it. He used leverage. He braced his boots against the metal grate, gripped the iron with both calloused hands, and twisted with every ounce of mechanic's torque he possessed.
SNAP.
The thick metal shackle popped with a loud, metallic crack.
The younger cop spun around, his flashlight beam swinging wildly toward the sound.
"Hey!" the cop yelled, raising the shotgun. "Step away from the gate!"
It was too late.
Leon threw the padlock into the dark. He and the two men grabbed the bottom of the rolling metal grate and heaved it upward. The metal shrieked in protest, echoing through the hall like a train braking.
The gate flew up.
"I said freeze!" the young cop racked the shotgun, the sound deafening in the enclosed space.
"Don't you do it!"
The voice didn't come from the men. It came from the floor.
Annie forced herself up onto her bleeding hands and knees. The roaring in her ears was deafening, making the edges of her vision blur with dark static. But her voice was steady. It was the voice of a Ninth Ward woman who had nothing left to lose.
The young cop looked down at her, the shotgun trembling in his hands.
"You shoot them," Annie rasped, staring directly into the harsh glare of his flashlight, "and you gotta shoot me. And you gotta shoot every mother in that hall."
The cop hesitated. He looked at the pregnant woman, trembling, bleeding, burning with an unnatural heat on the dirty concrete. He looked at the shadows behind her, where hundreds of people were beginning to stir, drawn by the noise, their eyes reflecting the flashlight beam like a pack of starving wolves.
If he pulled the trigger over a pallet of Dasani, he and his partner would be torn to pieces in seconds.
He slowly lowered the barrel of the shotgun.
"Take it," the older cop whispered, backing away, putting a hand on his partner's shoulder. "Just take the water and get back to your section."
Leon and the men didn't hesitate. They rushed into the storage area. They grabbed entire cases of bottled water, tearing the plastic wrap with their teeth, passing the heavy bottles out to the shadows.
Annie collapsed onto her side, the adrenaline draining from her system in a sudden, sickening rush. The contraction faded, leaving her gasping, her heart hammering dangerously against her ribs.
Leon ran over. He dropped a cold, sealed bottle of water right against Annie’s burning cheek.
She flinched at the cold, then grabbed it with weak, trembling fingers.
She didn't open it.
She looked up at Miss Veda.
"The baby," Annie whispered, her eyes fluttering shut as the dark haze threatened to drag her under. "Give it to the girl with the baby."
Miss Veda took the bottle. She looked down at Annie, her eyes shining with a profound, awestruck respect.
"I'll give her one, Annie," Miss Veda said gently, cracking the seal on a second bottle. "But this one is for you. Drink. For Ruby."
Annie let Miss Veda lift her head. The cool, clean water hit her cracked lips. It tasted like a miracle. She swallowed, ignoring the sharp pain in her throat. She drank half the bottle before she slumped back against the cardboard, utterly exhausted.
She had won the battle. But as the unnatural heat spiked again, sending violent shivers down her spine, she knew she was losing the war.
I kept 'em alive, Eli, she thought, the darkness finally pulling her into unconsciousness.
Your turn.
Smoke sat in the passenger seat. He was a statue carved out of granite and rage. He had the heavy iron Halligan bar resting across his knees. He hadn't said a word in twenty minutes. His eyes were locked on the windshield, staring through the sweep of the wipers at the dark canyons of the skyscrapers.
Every second that ticked by was a physical agony.
The Convention Center. He knew the building. He knew its layout. He knew that without power, it was a sealed concrete tomb. He imagined Annie in that heat. He imagined the physical toll the stress would take on a thirty-four-week pregnancy.
"Debris field ahead, Eli," Stack yelled over the roar of the engine.
Smoke leaned forward.
Blocking the intersection of Tchoupitoulas and Poydras—the main artery leading to the Convention Center—was a massive pile-up. The floodwaters had jammed a city bus sideways across the avenue, pinning two abandoned police cruisers and a tangle of downed traffic lights against a concrete median.
It was a solid wall of metal.
Stack instinctively took his boot off the accelerator, reaching for the air brakes. "I gotta back up. We gotta find a detour down St. Peters."
"No detours," Smoke growled, his voice vibrating with a terrifying, absolute authority. "We don't have time."
"Eli, it's a city bus! It'll rip the front axle off the rig!"
"Put it in four-wheel low," Smoke ordered, his eyes never leaving the barricade. "And hit the gas."
Stack looked at his twin. He saw the cold, unyielding fire in Smoke's eyes. It was the look of a man who would gladly die in the wreckage of this truck if it meant getting one foot closer to his wife.
Stack swallowed hard. He slammed the heavy shifter down.
"Hold on," Stack grunted.
He stomped on the accelerator.
The Heavy Rescue truck surged forward. The heavy steel grill bumper, reinforced to smash through brick walls, made contact with the side of the abandoned police cruiser.
SCREEECH-CRUNCH.
Metal tore like wet paper. The massive weight of the fire truck shoved the cruiser violently into the side of the bus. The tires of the rig spun in the black water, catching purchase on the submerged median.
"Push it!" Smoke roared.
The diesel engine howled. The heavy rig shuddered, groaning under the strain.
For three agonizing seconds, it felt like the truck would stall.
Then, the bus gave way.
The heavy rescue truck scraped along the side of the bus, shattering all its windows in a cascade of safety glass, pushing the twisted police cruiser completely out of the lane and into a flooded parking lot.
They broke through to the other side.
Stack let out a breath he didn’t know he was holding, upshifting as the road cleared.
"Take the next right," Smoke said, his voice dropping back to that dead, mechanical calm. "Convention Center Boulevard."
Stack turned the massive steering wheel. The truck swung wide, its headlights cutting through the pre-dawn darkness, illuminating the front of the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
Stack hit the brakes. The truck hissed to a halt.
"Mother of God," Stack whispered.
Even Smoke’s breath hitched.
The Superdome had been a nightmare, but this was the apocalypse. The sprawling concrete complex stretched for eleven blocks. And every single inch of the sidewalk, the loading docks, and the street in front of it was covered in bodies.
There were thousands of them. Huddled under blankets. Sleeping on pieces of cardboard. Sitting on the hoods of flooded cars. Small fires burned in metal trash cans, casting flickering, demonic shadows against the towering glass walls of the exhibition halls.
It was a sea of the forgotten.
"She's in there," Smoke whispered, his chest tightening. The sheer scale of the crowd was paralyzing. It was like looking for a single grain of sand on a dark beach.
"Eli, how are we gonna find her?" Stack asked, the despair creeping into his voice. "There’s ten thousand people here. It's too big. And they ain't gonna take kindly to men in uniform right now. They've been abandoned."
Smoke didn't answer. He opened the heavy door of the cab.
He stepped out onto the running board, the humid, foul air of the staging area hitting his face. He grabbed the Halligan bar.
He wasn't going to ask permission. He wasn't going to negotiate with the crowd.
"Lock the doors behind me, Stack," Smoke said, stepping down onto the pavement. "Keep the engine running."
"I'm coming with you," Stack protested, unbuckling his seatbelt.
"No," Smoke said, turning to look at his brother. The streetlights caught the tears standing in his eyes, defying the hard set of his jaw. "If I find her... if she's... if I gotta carry them out of here, I need you ready to drive. You don't leave this cab."
Stack looked at the ocean of desperate people, then back at his brother. "Ten minutes, Eli. If I don't see you in ten minutes, I'm coming in."
Smoke turned his back to the truck. He gripped the heavy iron bar. He looked at the massive glass doors of Hall H, smeared with dirt and barricaded from the inside.
"I'm here, Annette," Smoke whispered to the dark building. "I'm coming."
Smoke slipped through a gap in the chained glass doors of Hall H, stepping from the humid twilight of the street into absolute, suffocating darkness.
He clicked on his heavy right-angle turnout coat flashlight. A thick beam of white light stabbed through the pitch-black air, immediately illuminating a swirling cloud of dust, plaster, and human desperation.
The smell hit him like a physical blow. It was worse than the Superdome. It was the smell of rot, sickness, and a profound, terrifying abandonment.
He stepped forward. His heavy boots crunched on discarded plastic and shattered glass.
"Turn that light off!" a voice growled from the shadows.
"You bring food, fireman?" another yelled, the tone hostile, bordering on violent.
Shadows shifted in the periphery of his beam. Hundreds of eyes reflected the light, glaring at his NOFD uniform. To them, he was the city that had left them to die. He was a target.
Smoke didn't flinch.
He didn't turn the light off.
He held the heavy iron Halligan bar in his right hand, resting the head of it against his shoulder. He didn't raise it like a weapon, but the sheer size of the man and the casual way he held the iron spoke volumes.
"I ain't here for you," Smoke’s voice rumbled, deep and resonant, bouncing off the cavernous ceiling. "I'm looking for my wife. You stay out of my way, and I stay out of yours."
He started walking.
He moved down the central aisle, his flashlight beam sweeping methodically side to side.
Look for yellow. Look for a belly. He stepped over sleeping bodies, weaving through the maze of abandoned luggage and broken chairs. Faces looked up, blinded by the beam, then turned away. He saw things that would haunt him for the rest of his life—elders drawing their last rattling breaths, men with hollow, predatory eyes, children too dehydrated to cry.
He walked for twenty minutes. The hall seemed endless. The panic, which he had boxed up in the truck, began to leak back into his chest.
What if Boudreaux was wrong? What if she went to a different hall?
He swept the flashlight to the left, toward the wall where the shadows were deepest.
The beam caught a flash of bright blue plastic.
Smoke stopped. He moved the beam back.
Sitting against a concrete pillar was a teenage girl. She was rocking a silent infant. But what caught Smoke’s eye wasn't the baby.
It was the bottle of Dasani water resting beside her knee.
It was half-empty, the plastic still slightly beaded with condensation.
Smoke knew the logistics of the city's collapse. There was no clean water in this building. The military hadn't dropped any. The city hadn't delivered any. A fresh bottle of water in Hall H was impossible.
He stepped out of the aisle, his heavy boots thudding against the concrete as he approached the girl.
The teenager flinched, pulling the baby closer to her chest, shielding her eyes from the glare of his light.
Smoke stopped five feet away. He lowered the beam, pointing it at the floor so he wouldn't blind her, but keeping the ambient light on her face.
"Where did you get that?" Smoke asked. His voice was rough, trembling with an emotion he couldn't name.
The girl looked at his uniform. She looked at the iron bar. She snatched the water bottle, hiding it behind her back like a feral animal protecting a scrap of meat.
"It's mine," she hissed, her voice cracking. "I ain't giving it back to no cops."
"I'm not a cop," Smoke said, dropping the Halligan bar to the floor. CLANG. He held up both of his large, empty hands. He dropped to his knees, bringing himself down to her eye level. "I'm a fireman. And a husband. I just need to know where that water came from."
The girl stared at him, her chest heaving. She saw the tears standing in the giant man's bloodshot eyes.
"The lady," the teenager whispered, pointing a trembling finger toward the dark expanse of the hall. "The lady who fought the police."
Smoke's heart stopped beating. "What lady?"
"The pregnant one," the girl said, her voice full of awe. "She screamed, and the men broke the lock on the gate. She gave it to me for my baby. She said... she said her name was Ruby."
Smoke couldn't breathe. The air in the hall vanished.
"Ruby is the baby," Smoke choked out, a hot tear finally spilling over his cheek, cutting through the soot. "The mother. What was she wearing?"
"A dress," the girl said. "Yellow."
Smoke didn't ask another question.
He scrambled to his feet, leaving the Halligan bar on the floor. He grabbed his flashlight.
"Which way?" he demanded.
The girl pointed toward the south wall. "By the loading dock doors. With the older nurse lady."
Smoke ran.
He didn't care about the noise. He didn't care about the glares. He sprinted through the dark, leaping over piles of trash, his heart hammering against his ribs like a battering ram.
He swept the flashlight along the south wall.
"ANNIE!" he roared. It wasn't a call; it was a demand.
"Quiet down!" a sharp, authoritative voice snapped from the darkness ahead. "There's sick people here!"
Smoke's beam locked onto the source of the voice.
Standing in front of a piece of broken cardboard, her arms crossed defensively, was an older Creole woman wearing a wide-brimmed church hat. Next to her stood a man in a mechanic's shirt, holding a tire iron.
They were forming a wall.
Smoke approached, his chest heaving. He pointed the flashlight down at the cardboard behind them.
The beam illuminated a torn, filthy pile of yellow fabric.
Smoke’s knees gave out.
He hit the concrete floor hard, the impact jarring his teeth. He dropped the flashlight. It rolled away, the beam casting long, eerie shadows against the wall.
He crawled the last three feet.
Miss Veda and Leon didn't stop him. They saw the patch on his shoulder. They saw the absolute, crushing devotion breaking his face apart. They stepped aside.
Annie was lying on her side.
She was unconscious. Her breathing was shallow and rapid. Her beautiful dark skin was covered in a horrifying layer of white plaster dust, dried river mud, and blood. Her arms and legs were slashed and scabbed from the attic glass.
But it was the heat that terrified him.
Smoke reached out with a trembling, calloused hand. He touched her cheek.
She was burning.
It felt like touching a radiator.
"Oh god," Smoke whispered, his voice breaking into a sob. "Annette. Baby. I'm here. Eli is here."
He carefully slid his massive arms under her, one beneath her shoulders, the other supporting the heavy, tight weight of her pregnant belly. He pulled her against his chest, burying his face in her matted hair. She smelled of swamp water and fever.
"You her husband?" Miss Veda asked quietly, kneeling beside him.
Smoke could only nod, his massive shoulders shaking as he wept into his wife's neck. "I told her to go to the Dome," he choked out. "I looked in the wrong place. I left her."
"She survived the water, son," Miss Veda said, her voice gentle but firm. "She chopped through her own roof to save that baby. Then she robbed the NOPD to get water for this hall. Don't you dare pity her. She's the strongest thing in this building."
Smoke lifted his head. He looked at the cuts on her hands. He saw the blistered soles of her bare feet.
The guilt was a physical weight, but the pride he felt for her was a blinding light.
Annie stirred.
The deep, rumbling vibration of Smoke's chest against her back pierced through the dark haze of the fever.
Her eyelashes fluttered. She opened her eyes. They were glassy and unfocused.
She looked up at the dirt-stained face of the giant holding her.
"Eli?" she whispered. Her voice was so weak, just a raspy breath.
"I got you, sunflower," Smoke wept, kissing her burning forehead, her cheeks, her cracked lips. "I got you. I'm never letting you go. We're going home."
"House is gone, Eli," she mumbled, a confused, feverish tear slipping down her cheek. "I broke the ceiling."
"I don't care about the house," Smoke said, tightening his grip on her. "You're my house."
Annie closed her eyes, a faint, exhausted smile touching her lips. "I kept her safe. But I'm so hot, Eli."
Suddenly, Annie’s body went rigid in his arms.
Her back arched. A low, agonizing groan tore from her throat, her hands clawing blindly at Smoke's turnout coat.
The contraction was massive.
Smoke’s eyes went wide with panic.
He looked at Miss Veda.
"What's happening?" he demanded.
She grabbed Annie's wrist, checking her pulse. "The fever stalled the labor, but she just got a massive dump of adrenaline from seeing you. It jump-started the process."
Miss Veda looked the giant firefighter dead in the eye.
"The stall is over, Lieutenant," the old nurse said grimly. "Her water just broke. That baby is coming right now, and if we don't get her body temperature down, she's going to seize."
Smoke looked around the pitch-black, suffocating hall. There was no medical gear. There were no IV fluids. There was just a floor covered in filth and ten thousand desperate people.
He had found her, but the real nightmare was just beginning.
AN: Y’all have been tearing me up in these messages 😭 — I appreciate every single one of you. Apologies for the delay in posting… life has been moving fast lately.
I’m a little emotional knowing the Sinner’s universe is coming to a close with awards season wrapping up. Still, I’m so happy to see Ryan and Michael take their wins — and while I wish Delroy had taken home Supporting Actor, his legacy speaks for itself.
As always, thank you for reading and staying with me through this story. Let me know what you think.
More coming soon.
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Blackwater promises: Distance
⚠️ Content warning: Death, gore, pregnancy-related anxiety, trauma, flooding, life-threatening situations, graphic survival distress.
READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE
The sky was a cloudless, mocking blue. The sun beat down on the submerged city with the brutal, unforgiving weight of a brass hammer. It was ninety-five degrees, with humidity so thick the air felt like warm saliva in the lungs.
Annie lay on the pitch of the roof.
She was baking alive.
The black asphalt shingles were soaking up the August sun, turning the roof into a frying pan. The heat radiated up through the thin cotton of her yellow dress, blistering the skin on the back of her thighs.
She opened her eyes. They were swollen, the lashes crusted with dried tears, plaster dust, and river mud.
She tried to swallow, but her tongue felt like a piece of dry felt. Her lips were cracked and bleeding, the copper taste of her own blood the only moisture in her mouth.
Every inch of her body was a map of the escape. Her palms were sliced deep from the wooden rafters. Her arms and shins were a crosshatch of jagged, weeping cuts from the broken attic window. The blood had dried into dark, itchy scabs.
She slowly pushed herself up into a sitting position, straddling the peak of the roof to keep from sliding down the steep incline into the water.
She looked out.
The Lower Ninth Ward was a graveyard of rooftops. The water was perfectly still now, a flat, oily mirror reflecting the blinding sun. It was choked with the detritus of ten thousand lives.
A floral sofa cushion floated by. Then a child's plastic wading pool. Then, something bloated and pale that Annie refused to look directly at, turning her head until it drifted out of sight.
THWACK.
A sharp, violent kick right under her ribs.
Annie gasped, wrapping her bleeding hands around her belly. It wasn't the rhythmic, playful rolling of the day before. These were frantic, jerky spasms.
Ruby was trapped in an oven. The maternal water was heating up. The baby was thirsty, panicked, and fighting.
"I know, baby," Annie croaked. Her voice was entirely gone. It was just a dry rasp of air. "I know. Mama's sorry. Mama's so sorry."
She leaned forward, pressing her cheek against her knees, trying to make herself as small as possible to escape the sun.
Then, she heard it.
Thump-thump-thump-thump.
It started as a vibration in her chest, then grew into a roar.
Annie’s head snapped up.
Coming out of the glare of the sun was an orange and white Coast Guard Jayhawk helicopter. It was flying low, skimming over the drowned neighborhoods.
Adrenaline, dormant and hollowed out by dehydration, surged back into her veins.
"Hey!" Annie croaked. She tried to scream, but her dry throat tore. "HEY!"
She had to be seen. She looked down at the yellow sundress. She grabbed the hem where it was already torn from the attic hatch. She bit down on the fabric, tearing it with her teeth and her hands until a long, yellow strip ripped free.
She forced herself to her feet.
It was a terrifying balancing act. Standing heavily pregnant on a slanted, blistering roof, twenty feet above a toxic ocean. Her bare feet slipped on the loose gravel of the shingles.
She waved the yellow cloth frantically over her head.
"OVER HERE! PLEASE! OVER HERE!"
The helicopter banked. The nose turned toward her.
Annie sobbed, a dry, heaving sound. "Thank you, Jesus. Thank you."
The massive machine hovered closer. The deafening roar of the rotors beat the air into submission. The downwash hit the water, kicking up a hurricane of oily spray that lashed against Annie’s face. She squinted through the mist, waving the yellow flag.
She could see the rescue swimmer sitting in the open door. He was wearing a green flight suit. He was looking right at her.
Annie reached her hand out toward him. I'm pregnant. Please.
The swimmer held up a hand. A signal. Stay put.
Annie nodded frantically, dropping to her knees so she wouldn't be blown off the roof.
The helicopter didn't lower a basket.
Instead, it pivoted. It rotated on its axis, the tail swinging around, and it drifted fifty yards to the left, hovering over a green shingled roof that Annie recognized as the Delacroix house.
Annie watched in confusion.
Through the spray, she saw the metal rescue basket lower from the winch. It dropped onto the green roof. Two figures—Mr. and Mrs. Delacroix, both in their eighties—scrambled into it.
"No," Annie whispered, her heart stopping. "No, wait."
The basket was hoisted up. The rescue swimmer pulled the elderly couple into the cabin.
Annie watched the man in the green flight suit look back down at her. He made a gesture—tapping his chest, then pointing away.
We're full.
He slid the heavy door shut.
The engine pitched up. The helicopter banked hard to the west, accelerating away toward the Superdome, shrinking into a small orange dot against the blue sky, until it disappeared completely.
The silence rushed back in, heavier and more complete than before.
Annie stayed on her knees. Her hand, still gripping the torn yellow fabric, slowly dropped to her side.
The sun beat down on her back. The baby kicked violently against her ribs.
She was entirely, utterly alone.
She looked down at the black water lapping against her gutters. It looked cool. It looked so quiet. For a terrifying, fleeting second, the water didn't look like death anymore. It looked like relief.
Annie closed her eyes, lay back down on the burning asphalt, and waited for her mind to break.
The I-10 Underpass, Mid-City
Elijah Moore was dead. The thing operating his body was just muscle memory and rage.
The flat-bottom aluminum skiff idled through the toxic soup of Mid-City. The water here was different from the Ninth Ward. It was choked with the chemical bleed of the city—a shimmering, iridescent slick of gasoline, battery acid, and raw sewage baking in the ninety-five-degree sun. It smelled like an open grave.
Smoke stood at the bow.
He had stripped off his heavy uniform shirt. He wore only a white cotton undershirt that was now stained completely brown and black. He wasn’t wearing a life jacket. Stack had tried to force one on him an hour ago, and Smoke had looked at him with eyes so empty and violent that Stack had backed away.
Smoke held a heavy iron bar. He was staring into the water.
He wasn't searching. He was hunting.
"Eli, you gotta take a break," Stack called out from the outboard motor. Stack’s voice was trembling. He was terrified of the water, but he was more terrified of his brother. "You swallowed half a gallon of that sludge. You're gonna catch somethin. You're gonna die."
Smoke didn't turn around. "Keep the boat straight."
In the last three hours, Smoke had pulled seven people out of the water. But it wasn't a rescue operation; it was a man playing Russian roulette with the ocean.
When they found a man trapped in the branches of a submerged oak tree, surrounded by a tangle of live, sparking power lines, Smoke didn't wait for the pole hook.
He dove in.
He swam through the sparking water, grabbed the man by the collar, and hauled him back.
Stack watched his twin drag himself over the gunwale and realized the horrifying truth.
He isn't trying to save them. He's trying to let the water take him.
Smoke wanted the live wire to hit him. He wanted to drown. He was weaponizing his grief, using the NOFD badge as an excuse to die a hero rather than live as a widower.
"Up ahead," Smoke’s voice was a flat, mechanical bark. "Under the overpass."
Stack squinted against the blinding glare of the sun.
Pinned against the concrete pillar of the I-10 overpass was a silver Honda sedan. The water was up to the roofline, but the rear of the car was pitched upward, elevated by a submerged pile of debris.
Thump. Thump.
A weak, muffled sound came from the sliver of the rear window that remained above the black waterline.
"Someone's in the backseat," Stack said, his blood running cold. "The water's filling the cabin."
Smoke didn't speak. He didn't assess the structural integrity of the submerged car. He didn't wait for Stack to kill the motor.
He just stepped off the bow into the ten-foot-deep water.
Splash.
"Eli!" Stack screamed, killing the engine and grabbing a rope.
Smoke vanished beneath the toxic, oily surface.
Under the water, it was a dark, burning hell. The gasoline stung his open eyes. He swam blindly toward the submerged metal of the car. He found the rear passenger door. He yanked the handle. Locked.
His lungs burned. His muscles screamed for oxygen.
Good, a dark voice whispered in his mind. Breathe it in. Go to sleep. She’s waiting.
He almost opened his mouth. He almost let the black water fill his chest.
But the firefighter in him—the man he was before the storm—reflexively swung the iron Halligan bar.
CRASH.
The tempered glass of the rear window shattered. The water rushed into the air pocket of the cabin with a violent, sucking roar.
Smoke reached into the jagged hole. His large hands grabbed fistfuls of fabric. A shirt.
He planted his boots against the side of the sinking car and pulled with all the strength in his massive shoulders. He ripped the occupant out through the broken window, tearing the person's clothes on the glass.
Smoke kicked hard, breaking the surface.
He gasped, spitting a mouthful of sewage, hauling the sputtering, coughing survivor up with him.
"Got her!" Stack yelled, leaning over the side of the boat, his arms outstretched. "Bring her here!"
Smoke paddled toward the skiff, keeping the woman’s head above the waterline. She was crying, a high, hysterical sound of pure terror. She was clinging to Smoke’s neck, pushing him under in her panic.
"I got you," Smoke rasped mechanically. "You're safe."
hey reached the boat. Stack grabbed the woman under the armpits.
"Push, Eli! Push her up!"
Smoke put his hands on the woman's waist to hoist her over the gunwale.
His large hands slid over her wet clothes.
He felt the hard, unmistakable, swollen curve of a third-trimester belly.
Smoke froze in the water.
The mechanical numbness shattered. It exploded like glass.
He looked at the woman as Stack pulled her into the boat. She was young. She was wearing a wet, floral sundress. She fell onto the metal floor of the skiff, clutching her round stomach, sobbing and coughing up river water.
Smoke stayed in the water, his hands still raised, his fingers still curled around the phantom shape of her belly.
It was the exact size.
It was the exact shape.
"Annie," Smoke whispered.
"Eli, give me your hand!" Stack yelled, reaching down for him.
Smoke didn't move. He stared at the pregnant woman weeping on the floor of the boat. She was alive. She had a future. Her baby was going to be born.
The injustice of it hit him with the force of a physical blow.
Why her?
Why did I save her?
Why couldn't I save my own?
A terrible, ugly wail ripped out of Smoke's throat. It was a sound that didn't belong in the human world. It was the howl of a wolf caught in a trap, chewing its own leg off.
"NO!" Smoke screamed, beating his fists against the black water. "NO! NO! NO!"
He thrashed in the water, the grief finally cracking his mind in half. He wasn't a firefighter anymore. He was a broken, dying thing.
"Eli!" Stack sobbed, leaning over and grabbing Smoke by the back of his shirt, terrified his brother was going to let himself sink.
Stack pulled with everything he had, hauling the screaming, thrashing, weeping giant over the side of the boat. Smoke collapsed onto the metal floor next to the pregnant stranger.
He curled into a fetal position, pulling his knees to his chest, pressing his face against the wet aluminum, and sobbing until he choked.
Stack fell back against the outboard motor, his hands covering his mouth. He looked at the vast, sun-drenched ocean of New Orleans, and he realized the water hadn't just taken their city. It had taken his brother's soul.
Ruby had stopped fighting.
That was what broke Annie’s spirit. The frantic, violent kicks from the morning had slowed, settling into a sluggish, weak flutter every half hour or so. The baby was conserving energy. They were both dying of thirst.
Annie lay flat on her back against the blistering asphalt shingles. Her yellow dress was stiff with dried sweat, river mud, and her own blood. Her lips were cracked so deeply they bled every time she tried to wet them with a tongue that felt like dry cotton.
She stared up at the mocking, cloudless blue sky. She didn't have the energy to swat away the large green flies that buzzed around the cuts on her arms.
I'm so sorry, Lijah, she thought. Her mind was drifting. I kept her safe from the water. But I can't save her from the sun.
Rrrrrrrrrr.
It was a low, whiny buzz. Like an angry mosquito.
Annie didn't open her eyes. She thought it was another helicopter that would look at her and fly away. She refused to let them break her heart twice.
But the buzz grew louder. It didn't come from the sky. It came from the water.
"Hey! We got one over here! On the yellow house!"
It was a man’s voice.
Thick, Cajun accent.
Not military.
Civilian.
Annie’s eyes snapped open.
She rolled onto her side, the rough shingles tearing at the scabs on her shins. She pushed herself up on trembling, bloody hands.
It was a flat-bottom aluminum skiff. The side of it was painted with duck camouflage. Two white men in ball caps and sunglasses were at the helm. They looked sunburned and exhausted, surrounded by coolers and gas cans. The Cajun Navy.
"Hold on, cher!" the man at the front yelled, tossing a rope around Annie’s submerged chimney to anchor the boat. "We comin' to get you!"
Annie tried to speak, but only a dry wheeze came out. A tear, hot and stinging, leaked out of her swollen eye.
The man scrambled up the slope of the wet roof. He took one look at her—the pregnant belly, the shredded yellow dress, the bleeding cuts—and his face paled.
"Jesus, Mary, and Joseph," he muttered, reaching out for her. "Come here, mama. I got you. You're safe."
He wrapped his thick arm around her waist. Annie leaned all her weight into him. She felt like an empty husk. He practically carried her down the slope, passing her gently to his partner in the boat, who eased her onto a hard metal bench.
The partner immediately cracked open a plastic bottle of water. It was warm, but to Annie, it looked like liquid gold.
"Slow," the man warned, holding it to her cracked lips. "Don't puke it up. Just a sip."
The water hit her tongue. It was painful. It burned her cracked throat, but as it hit her empty stomach, it felt like life itself rushing back into her veins. She choked, coughed, and drank more.
"We gotta go, Boudreaux," the driver said, looking at the gas gauge. "We runnin' on fumes. Where we takin' her?"
"Can we get her out the parish?"
"No way. The Coast Guard got the parish line blocked off. We gotta drop her at the staging area."
The engine roared to life, masking Annie’s weak voice. She wanted to ask for Smoke. She wanted to tell them to take her to Engine House 42. But she couldn't string the words together.
They didn't take her to a hospital. They didn't take her to high ground.
They took her to the Interstate.
The boat bumped against the concrete incline of the I-10 on-ramp.
Annie looked up, and the relief of being rescued vanished, replaced by a cold, suffocating dread.
The overpass was a concrete island in the sky, and it was packed with the damned. Thousands of people—families, the elderly, children—were crammed onto the baking asphalt of the highway. There was no shade. There were no FEMA tents. There was no water. Just a sea of desperate, sweating, traumatized humanity baking in the hundred-degree heat.
"I'm sorry, cher," the Cajun man said, his eyes filled with genuine guilt as he helped her out of the boat onto the hot concrete. "This is as far as they lettin' us go. They say the Army is bringin' buses here. You stay with the crowd."
"Wait," Annie rasped, grabbing his sleeve. "My husband... NOFD."
"I don't know, mama," the man said, pulling away gently. "Tell the Guard when they get here. Good luck."
The boat reversed, the engine whining as it disappeared back into the drowned city to find more bodies.
Annie stood on the highway. The heat radiating off the blacktop burned the soles of her bare feet.
The noise was overwhelming. Babies screaming. Old women praying aloud. Men arguing furiously with a lone, terrified National Guardsman who was holding a rifle and backing away. The smell of human waste, sweat, and infection hung in the stagnant air.
Annie waddled forward, her hand protectively shielding her belly. She was a ghost walking through purgatory. She needed to sit down. Her legs were trembling so violently she thought her bones might snap.
She found a small patch of open concrete near the center divider and collapsed against it, pulling her knees up.
"Excuse me," Annie croaked to an older Black woman sitting next to her, fanning herself with a piece of cardboard. "Is they... is they bringing water?"
The woman looked at Annie’s pregnant belly and her shredded dress. Pity softened her hard, exhausted eyes.
"They ain't bringing nothing, baby," the woman said, her voice dry as dust. "We been up here since yesterday. Ain't seen a single bus."
"The Superdome," Annie whispered, remembering the emergency plans Smoke had drilled into her head. "Smoke said... go to the Dome."
"The Dome is flooded," a man standing nearby interrupted, wiping a dirty towel across his bald head. "Roof tore off. Toilets backed up. They lockin' people inside. You don't want to go to the Dome, sister."
"Then where?" Annie asked, panic fluttering in her chest like a trapped moth.
"Word just came down the line," the man pointed toward the downtown skyline shimmering in the heat haze. "The Convention Center. They say they staging the buses at the Convention Center. They got food and AC down there."
"You sure?" the older woman asked.
"That's what the police on the boat said," the man insisted. "I ain't dying on this bridge. I'm walking."
Annie looked at the man. She looked at the brutal, unshaded stretch of highway.
She felt a weak, butterfly flutter against her ribs. Ruby.
I can't sit here and let her bake, Annie thought. If there's buses... if there's water... I have to go.
Annie put her bloody hands on the hot concrete and pushed herself up. Her joints screamed. The muscles in her thighs, cramped and dehydrated, threatened to give out.
"You walking, baby?" the older woman asked, reaching out to steady Annie's arm.
"I have to," Annie whispered, her eyes fixing on the distant, gray bulk of the Convention Center. "I have to find my husband."
Annie Moore joined the tragic, slow-moving caravan of the displaced. A procession of ghosts dragging their feet across the burning concrete, walking away from the river, away from the bridge, and straight into the jaws of hell.
The aluminum skiff cut through the black water, leaving a sluggish, oily wake behind it.
They passed from the blinding, brutal glare of the afternoon sun into the sudden, cavernous shade of the I-10 overpass. The temperature dropped ten degrees instantly, but the air here was worse. It was stagnant, trapped beneath the massive concrete belly of the highway, reeking of diesel exhaust, mildew, and human desperation.
Smoke sat on the middle bench of the boat.
He was a shell.
The breakdown he’d suffered after pulling the pregnant woman from the car had burned out his central nervous system.
He didn't hold the bar anymore. His large, calloused hands hung between his knees. He stared at the floor of the boat, his eyes fixed on a puddle of dirty water vibrating with the hum of the outboard motor.
"Eli," Stack said softly from the tiller. His voice echoed strangely in the concrete tunnel. "Look up."
Smoke didn't want to. He didn't want to see any more of the world. But the mechanical obedience of a firefighter forced his chin to rise.
Thirty feet above their heads was the lip of the highway.
It was a nightmare of sound and motion. The scraping of thousands of feet against asphalt. The wails of children. The frantic, hoarse voices of people screaming down at the dark water.
"Hey! FDNO! Up here!" "Y'all got water? My grandmama passing out!" "Take my baby! Please, just take my baby!"
Faces peered over the concrete barrier—a jagged line of exhausted, traumatized silhouettes backlit by the sun.
"God almighty," Stack whispered, throttling the engine down to an idle so he wouldn't hit the submerged concrete pillars. "There gotta be ten thousand people up there. Where did they all come from?"
"Everywhere," Smoke rasped. His voice sounded like it was coming from a corpse. "The water pushed them all up."
An empty plastic water bottle dropped from the bridge, splashing into the toxic gumbo a few feet from their boat.
Then a dirty diaper.
The people above were shedding the last of their belongings, stripping down to raw survival.
"We walking to the Convention Center!" a man yelled down at them, his voice echoing off the concrete pillars. "They got buses there! They leaving us here to rot!"
Smoke heard the words "Convention Center." They washed over him without sticking.
He didn't care about buses.
He didn't care about staging areas.
He knew where his wife was.
His mind had done the terrible math. The water in the Ninth Ward was twenty feet deep.
The roof was fifteen feet high.
The hatch was jammed.
In his broken mind, Annie was floating in the dark triangle of their attic, her beautiful face pressed against the fiberglass insulation, her lungs full of black water.
He was sure of it.
He had accepted the absolute, crushing certainty of her death.
He looked up at the edge of the bridge, right where the concrete barrier met the sky.
Caught on a piece of exposed, rusted rebar jutting out from the concrete was a strip of fabric.
It was pale yellow cotton.
Torn at the edges.
Fluttering weakly in the hot breeze blowing over the highway.
It was the exact piece of her sundress Annie had ripped off to flag down the Coast Guard helicopter. She had dropped it when she stood up to walk toward the Convention Center not even an hour ago.
Smoke stared at it.
The yellow fabric danced against the gray concrete, a bright, desperate flare of color in a monochromatic world of misery.
Stack followed his brother's gaze. He saw the rag.
"Eli..." Stack started, his voice catching. He remembered the yellow flannel. He remembered the body in the water yesterday.
Smoke’s dead eyes remained locked on the strip of fabric.
He was thirty feet below the exact spot his wife had been sitting. If he had driven this boat under this bridge sixty minutes earlier, he would have heard her voice. He would have looked up and seen the woman he loved, pregnant and bleeding, looking down at him.
But timing is the devil's playground.
Smoke looked at the yellow rag.
His mind, protecting him from a hope that would surely kill him if it were dashed again, refused to make the connection.
It’s just trash, Smoke thought, his heart a stone in his chest. Just another piece of garbage in a dead city. My Annette is in the water.
Smoke lowered his head. He looked back at his empty hands.
"Keep moving, Stack," Smoke whispered to the floor of the boat. "There ain't nothing for us here."
Stack swallowed the lump in his throat. He turned the tiller.
The outboard motor roared, echoing violently in the underpass. The boat accelerated, slipping out from the shadow of the bridge and back into the blinding sunlight, heading west toward the staging area at the firehouse.
Above them, the yellow piece of fabric finally slipped off the rebar. It fluttered down, twisting in the air, until it hit the black water and sank into the wake of Smoke’s boat.
The distance between the firefighter and his wife widened, as Annie marched east into the suffocating madness of the Convention Center, and Smoke rode west, drowning in his own skin.
A/N: I hope you all enjoyed this chapter as much as I enjoyed writing and editing it. This story has so many possible turns and twists that choosing a path sometimes feels like the hardest part. As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts. Until next time.
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Blackwater Promises: The Waterline
⚠️ Content Warning: flooding, life-threatening situations, graphic survival distress.
READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE | READ WITH CARE|
The dream always started with the click of the lock.
Smoke was standing in the foyer.
The house was entirely empty no brown microfiber couch, no lace doilies from her grandmother, no pictures on the walls. Just bare, scuffed pine boards.
He wasn’t wearing his FDNO uniform. He was wearing a sharp, dark suit that she didn’t recognize, and he was holding a black leather duffel bag.
"Eli, where you goin'?" she asked, but the words felt like they were coated in molasses, heavy and slow.
"I can't do this, Annie," he said. His voice wasn't his. It was flat, stripped of that deep, rumbling Louisiana warmth that usually vibrated right into her chest. "I can't wait for you no more. I'm leaving."
"But the baby!" She reached out to grab his sleeve, but her fingers passed right through the fabric like he was made of cigarette smoke. "Ruby needs you! I need you!"
He didn't look back.
He turned the deadbolt.
Click.
Annie jolted awake with a sharp, ragged gasp.
"No!"
She sat up so fast her stomach muscles screamed in protest. Her hands flew to her chest, trying to catch a heart that was hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She sucked in the humid, stagnant air of the bedroom.
The room was pitch black. The power had flickered and died hours ago. The only light was a sickly, bruised gray filtering through the edges of the taped-up window blinds.
She blinked hard, letting her eyes adjust to the gloom.
The heavy oak dresser was still there. The silver frame holding their wedding photo was still catching the faint light.
"You a foolish woman, Annie Moore," she whispered to the dark, exhaling a long, shaky breath. "Stop letting the devil ride your back. He ain't went nowhere."
She swung her legs over the edge of the mattress, her bare feet seeking the familiar comfort of the floorboards. She stood up, her center of gravity pulled forward by the massive, solid weight of thirty-four weeks. She pressed a hand to her lower back, wincing as a dull ache radiated down her spine.
She wobbled toward the closet, needing proof.
She opened the louvered doors. She reached her hand into the dark, feeling the fabrics until she touched the stiff, heavy canvas of his spare turnout coat. She buried her face in it.
It smelled of him. Old Spice, heavy starch, and that faint, permanent undercurrent of ash.
Her shoulders dropped. The terror of the dream began to recede, replaced by the heavy, practical reality of her bladder.
The baby she knew in her bones it was a girl, and they were naming her Ruby, no matter what Lijah said was currently using her bladder as a pillow.
Annie waddled to the en-suite bathroom.
Without power, she left the light switch alone, navigating by memory.
After she finished, she washed her hands in the dark, splashing some cool water on the back of her neck, careful not to mess up her silk bonnet. She paused, leaning her heavy frame against the porcelain sink.
Tap. Tap. Tap. Whoooosh.
She listened to the storm.
It was just rain and wind. Steady, rhythmic.
A heavy summer drizzle.
Not a roar.
Not a monster.
Just water hitting the roof like it had a thousand times before.
She looked at her shadowy reflection in the mirror.
"Look at you," she muttered to herself, shaking her head. "Shaking like a leaf over a little water. Everybody running for the hills, sitting in traffic backed up to Baton Rouge for a thunderstorm. If they want to leave, let 'em leave. Drama queens. More red beans for us."
She was a Ninth Ward woman. She had ridden out Georges, she had ridden out Ivan. You taped the windows, you bought the good snacks, and you stayed put. That was the rule.
She rubbed her belly, feeling the smooth, tight skin through her cotton nightgown. A sharp little heel dragged across her ribs.
She chuckled, a rich, warm sound in the dark bathroom.
"I know, I know," Annie cooed, patting her stomach. "You hungry, little bit. All this tossing and turning got us burning calories we ain't even ate yet. Come on. Let's go downstairs and see if Daddy left us any of them Zapp’s chips in the pantry."
She turned and headed for the bedroom door, completely ignorant of the fact that three miles away, the levees were already beginning to scream.
Annie took the stairs one at a time, her right hand gripping the wooden banister tight, her left hand supporting the heavy, low-hanging weight of her belly.
The house was dark, but it was a familiar dark. It was the dark of late-night water runs and early-morning shifts. She knew exactly how many steps it took to reach the landing, exactly where the floorboard squeaked right before the kitchen linoleum.
She waddled into the kitchen, the air feeling thick and humid without the AC running. She bypassed the refrigerator—no power meant opening it was a sin—and headed straight for the tall pantry in the corner.
"Zapp's," she whispered, running her hands along the dark shelves. "Come to Mama. I know Eli didn't eat that whole bag of Crawtators..."
Her fingers brushed the crinkly foil of the chip bag hidden behind a sack of flour. She smiled, a small victory in the dark.
Then, the world broke open.
BOOM.
It wasn't thunder.
Thunder rolled.
Thunder lived in the sky.
This sound came from the earth.
The entire house jumped.
"Jesus!" Annie screamed.
She lost her balance, stumbling backward. She threw her hands out, catching the edge of the kitchen island just in time to stop herself from hitting the floor. Behind her, a glass jar of Ragu vibrated right off the pantry shelf and shattered, sending thick red sauce splattering across her ankles like a warning.
The house began to groan.
A deep, structural moan, like an old man trying to stand up with bad knees.
Annie’s breath hitched in her throat. She pushed off the counter, her heart hammering wildly.
"What was that?" she panted, rubbing her chest. "Lord have mercy, what was that?"
She waddled as fast as her hips would allow out of the kitchen and into the living room. She pulled back the heavy beige curtain of the front window.
Rain.
Just sheets of gray, driving rain washing over the glass.
But her stomach twisted.
Something was wrong.
The air pressure in the living room had dropped so fast her ears popped with a sharp crack.
She unlocked the deadbolt and pulled the front door open, stepping out onto the covered porch. The wind whipped her cotton nightgown around her legs.
She looked out at Tennessee Street.
"Oh, no," she whispered, the chips forgotten.
The street wasn't flooded.
The street was gone.
There was no curb.
There were no sidewalks.
The water was a churning, angry black river rushing down the block.
She looked to her left.
Mrs. Mabel’s house was a shotgun single, built low to the ground. The water was already swallowing Mrs. Mabel’s front porch, lapping at the woman's front door.
Annie gripped her own wooden railing, the wood wet and slick under her palms. Last year, Smoke had fought her tooth and nail, using their savings to raise their house three feet higher on reinforced cinder blocks. “Just in case, Annie. I see the pumps failing. Just in case.”
She looked down at her own stairs.
The bottom step was underwater.
As she watched, the water climbed over the lip of the second step. It wasn't rising like a tide. It was filling up. Fast.
Panic, icy and sharp, finally pierced through her denial.
Annie rushed back inside, slamming the heavy door shut behind her. She threw her weight against it and locked the deadbolt, a useless gesture against the ocean.
The power lines were dead. The house was a tomb of silence underneath the roar of the rain outside.
She scrambled to the coffee table and grabbed her cell phone. She flipped it open. The little screen glowed weakly in the dark.
Battery: 4%. No signal.
"Damn it, Lijah!" she yelled at the phone. He hated having his phone on him. He always left it in the locker at the station.
She threw it on the couch and grabbed the receiver of the landline on the end table. She dialed 9-1-1.
Nothing. Not even static. The line was dead.
She dropped the receiver. It dangled off the table, swinging back and forth.
Squish.
Annie froze.
She looked down at her feet.
A thin, black tongue of water was seeping under the crack of the front door, spreading out over the hardwood foyer and creeping toward the edge of her brand new area rug.
"No," she said.
The Queen of Denial flared up one last time. "Not my rug. We just bought that couch."
She rushed over to the beige microfiber sofa. She grabbed the armrest. "Move," she grunted, her pregnant belly pressing uncomfortably against the fabric. She pulled with all her might, trying to drag it away from the creeping puddle. It slid three inches.
She stopped, panting, sweat beading on her forehead.
She looked down again.
The water wasn't just coming from the door anymore. It was bubbling up through the floor vents. It was black, thick, and smelled like raw sewage and gasoline.
It washed over her bare feet. It was shockingly cold.
"Stupid," she whispered, tears finally welling in her eyes. "You stupid, stubborn woman."
She thought of Mary.
Mary, who was sitting high and dry in a brick house in Mississippi right now, drinking sweet tea and complaining about the wind.
Annie cursed herself.
She cursed her pride.
She cursed every argument she'd had with Elijah about leaving.
The water was rising impossibly fast.
It was at her ankles now. The hem of her nightgown soaked it up, becoming heavy and foul.
She backed away from the sofa, the cold water splashing around her calves.
"Okay," she breathed, her hands instinctively wrapping around her belly. "Okay, Ruby. We going upstairs. We just gonna go sit on the stairs."
She turned toward the wooden staircase leading to the second floor.
She took one step.
Then, she stopped dead in her tracks.
The axe.
“If you go up, Annie, you take the axe. Promise me.”
She turned her head slowly, looking back toward the front door. The water was swirling there, picking up Smoke's work boots and floating them across the foyer.
Leaning in the dark corner, right next to the door where the water was coming in the fastest, was the heavy red fire axe.
She looked at the dry stairs leading up to safety. She looked at the axe, thirty feet away, sitting in knee-deep black water.
She hadn't swam in years.
Her center of gravity was completely off.
The water was rising by the minute.
Annie stood at the bottom of the stairs, the cold water swirling around her shins, and realized that if she made the wrong choice right now, she and her daughter were going to die in this house.
Annie stood on the second step.
The water lapped at the wood just an inch below her bare feet.
She stared into the dark foyer.
The water was rising with terrifying speed. It wasn't creeping anymore; it was surging, pouring in through the floorboards and under the doorframes like black blood from a severed artery.
It won't reach the second floor, her mind whispered, a desperate, childish lie. Just go up, Annie. Just go sit on the bed. It'll stop.
But she looked at the water. It was already midway up the front door.
If it didn't stop, and she went upstairs without that axe, she was locking herself in a wooden coffin.
She wrapped both arms tightly under her belly, feeling the frantic, rolling kicks of her daughter.
Ruby knew.
The baby could feel the adrenaline dumping into her mother’s bloodstream.
"Okay," Annie whispered, her voice shaking. She took a deep, shuddering breath of the foul air. "Okay. We gotta go get it."
She stepped off the stairs and into the water.
It was thick.
It didn't feel like rain; it felt like cold, oily gumbo. It dragged at her legs instantly. The hem of her cotton nightgown soaked it up, wrapping around her thighs like a wet, heavy blanket.
She trudged forward. Her center of gravity, already thrown off by the thirty-four-week pregnancy, made every step a battle. She threw her arms out, using the floating coffee table to balance herself as she waded deeper into the living room.
The water was at her mid-thigh.
Then her hips.
The house was pitch black.
The only light was a sickly, bruised gray leaking through the edges of the taped windows. Furniture was bumping into her—a lamp, a sofa cushion, a pair of Smoke's heavy work boots floating by like dead fish.
She reached the corner by the front door. The water was waist-deep now, pressing against her belly with a shocking, icy pressure.
"Where is it?" she panicked, her hands sweeping the surface.
She remembered Smoke leaving it leaning against the wall, its bright red handle a stark contrast to her floral wallpaper.
But it wasn't there. The rushing water had knocked it down.
It was somewhere on the floor.
At the bottom of this black soup.
Annie looked down. The water was rising faster now, cresting over her belly button, reaching for her ribs. She couldn't see past the surface. It was a dark, impenetrable mirror reflecting her own terror.
She realized what she had to do.
"Lord, please," she whimpered.
She had to go under.
She took a massive gulp of air, pinched her nose, and forced herself down.
The shock of the cold water closing over her head made her chest seize. She opened her eyes.
It was a mistake. The water was a toxic cocktail of sewage, ruptured gas lines, and river mud. It burned her eyes instantly, a sharp, chemical sting that made her squeeze them shut. She gasped in shock, a reflex she couldn't control, and a mouthful of the foul water rushed into her throat.
She gagged, coughing bubbles into the dark. She was drowning in her own foyer.
Calm down, a voice commanded in her head. It sounded like Smoke. Panic kills you faster than the water, Annie. Focus.
She forced her eyes to open to slits, ignoring the burn. It was useless. Pitch black.
The water was so high now her feet lost contact with the floor. She was floating. A five-foot-two pregnant woman bobbing in the dark.
She kicked her legs, ignoring the pain in her swollen ankles. She reached her hands down, sweeping blindly over the submerged hardwood floor.
Her fingers brushed against the soggy corner of the rug. She felt the wooden leg of the console table.
Then, cold, hard metal.
The axe head.
"Got it," she tried to say, but it just came out as a flurry of bubbles.
She gripped the thick wooden handle. She kicked hard, trying to break the surface.
She didn't move.
The axe was a fireman's tool.
It was built to smash through roofs and deadbolts. It weighed a solid ten pounds, and in the water, dragging against her soaked clothes and her pregnant belly, it felt like an anchor.
Her lungs began to burn.
A tight, hot band of pressure wrapped around her chest.
She looked up. Through the murky water, she saw the ceiling. It was terrifyingly close. The water was almost to the top of the first floor. If she didn't get out now, there wouldn't be any air left to breathe.
Adrenaline—pure, primal fight-or-flight energy exploded in her veins. She wasn't just Annie Moore anymore; she was a mother. And nothing was going to take her child.
She planted her bare feet against the submerged front door. She gripped the axe handle with both hands.
She pushed off with all the strength she had left.
She broke the surface.
"GAHH!" Annie screamed, sucking in a massive, ragged breath of air.
She broke the surface coughing, spitting black sludge and gasping violently. The water was at her collarbone. The ceiling was only two feet above her head. The first floor was gone. It was an indoor swimming pool of death.
"Move!" she screamed at herself.
She kicked. She held the heavy axe in one hand, paddling wildly with the other. The weight of the tool kept pulling her under, water washing over her face, but she refused to let go.
She dog-paddled through the debris, dodging the floating sofa. Her belly scraped against the top of the submerged dining table.
She reached the staircase.
She grabbed the wooden banister with a slick, bloody hand—she hadn't even realized she'd cut herself. She hauled her heavy, soaked body out of the black water, dragging the axe behind her.
Clang. Clang. Clang.
The heavy metal head bounced against the wooden steps as she crawled up on all fours, sobbing, shivering, and victorious.
She reached the second-floor landing. She collapsed onto the carpet, rolling onto her side, clutching her belly and coughing up river water.
She was soaked to the bone.
She was freezing.
But she had the axe.
Annie layed on the carpet of the second-floor landing, her chest heaving, her lungs burning with the sharp ache of swallowed river water.
She rolled onto her side, coughing up a mouthful of black, oily sludge that stained the beige carpet. Beside her, the heavy red fire axe rested like a dormant beast.
She was freezing. The kind of deep, bone-rattling cold that starts in the marrow and makes your teeth clack together violently. The cotton nightgown, soaked in the foul gumbo of the first floor, clung to her skin like a second, heavier gravity.
"Get it off," she chattered to herself, her hands shaking so badly she could barely grip the fabric.
She peeled the nightgown over her head. It landed with a wet, heavy slap on the floorboards. She stood up, shivering, stripping off her soaked underwear.
She walked into the master bedroom naked, her dark skin goosebumped and slick with contaminated water. She wrapped her arms around her heavy belly, a protective shield against the drop in temperature.
She opened the bottom drawer of her dresser. She didn't want sweatpants. She didn't want pajamas. She wanted something that smelled like before.
Her fingers found it. A simple, pale yellow cotton sundress. Smoke had bought it for her at a boutique on Magazine Street. “Makes you look like a sunflower, Annie,” he had said, his hands spanning her waist.
She pulled it over her head. It was tight over the thirty-four-week bump, but the cotton was dry. It smelled like lavender detergent and safety.
She walked back out to the hallway.
She stepped to the top of the stairs and looked down.
The first floor was gone.
It wasn't flooding; it was an aquarium. The black water had swallowed the living room entirely and was now silently, relentlessly eating its way up the staircase. It was halfway up the wooden steps. There were no ripples. No rushing sounds. Just a steady, terrifying rise.
Annie took a step back, her hands clamping down hard on her belly.
"The attic," she whispered, the words trembling on her lips. "Gotta get to the roof."
She spun around, looking up at the ceiling of the long hallway.
Where was it?
Her mind went entirely blank. A white, blinding panic erased the blueprint of her own home. She never went up there. That was Smoke’s domain. Smoke changed the filters. Smoke checked the insulation.
She squeezed her eyes shut.
Think, Annie. Where does he go up?
it was November. Unseasonably cold.
The heater had tripped, and Smoke was up in the attic trying to coax the pilot light back to life. Annie had been downstairs, missing him. He had been working double shifts, coming home smelling of diesel and exhaustion, falling asleep before his head hit the pillow.
She had walked upstairs, wearing just a silk robe. She stood in the hallway under the open square of the attic hatch.
The house was quiet, save for the heavy thud of his boots on the rafters above. She felt a sudden, wicked thrum of heat in her blood. Hormones and longing.
She leaned her back against the wall, right outside the guest bedroom. She slipped her hand under the silk.
She closed her eyes, imagining his large, calloused hands. She thought about the weight of him, the rough slide of his thumbs. She let out a soft, shuddering moan, her fingers finding a rhythm that made her knees weak.
"Eli..." she breathed, whispering his name into the empty hall.
Above her, the heavy footsteps stopped.
She heard the rustle of fiberglass insulation. Then, the creak of the ladder.
She opened her eyes, breathless, hovering right on the edge.
Smoke’s head and shoulders were poking down through the ceiling hatch. He was covered in gray dust, a flashlight gripped in one hand. He wasn't mad. He was staring at her, a slow, dark, arrogant grin spreading across his face. It was that smug look that always made her want to slap him and kiss him senseless.
"You need some help down there, Mrs. Moore?" he drawled, his voice dropping an octave, thick with intent.
Annie yelped, snatching her hand away and crossing her arms over her chest. Heat flared in her cheeks.
"I thought you were fixing the heat!" she shouted, trying and failing to sound indignant.
"I think," he said, dropping down the ladder with the grace of a much smaller man, his eyes locked on hers, "the heat is working just fine."
Annie’s eyes snapped open.
"Parallel to the guest room," she gasped.
She ran down the hall. She looked up. There it was. The faint outline of the square panel, flush against the ceiling.
She reached up, rising onto her tiptoes.
She jumped, swiping at the little dangling string.
Her fingers grazed it, but her heavy belly pulled her back to the floor with a heavy thud.
She jumped again. She grabbed the string.
"Thank you, Jesus," she panted.
She yanked it.
Nothing happened.
She wrapped the thin cord around her fist and pulled with all her body weight. The string dug into her palm, threatening to slice the skin. The panel didn't budge. The humidity, or the shifting of the house's foundation off its blocks, had jammed the wooden frame tight.
"No, no, no," Annie whimpered, pulling frantically. "Open! Please!"
Sploosh.
Annie froze.
She looked down.
The water had crested the top stair. It was spilling over the lip of the landing, a dark stain spreading rapidly across the beige carpet, soaking into the fabric and touching her bare toes.
Panic, feral and absolute, seized her throat.
She let go of the string and spun around. She needed height. She needed leverage.
She ran into the master bedroom and grabbed the edge of the heavy oak dresser. She dug her heels into the wet carpet.
"Move!" she screamed, her vocal cords tearing.
She pushed. The dresser groaned against the floorboards, but it didn't slide. It was solid oak, filled with Smoke's heavy clothes. She pushed until her vision went white around the edges, her belly pressing dangerously hard against the wood.
It wouldn't move.
She let go, collapsing to her knees in the doorway. The water was a quarter-inch deep on the second floor now.
"I can't," she sobbed, burying her face in her hands. "Elijah, I can't do it. I'm sorry."
She surrendered. For three seconds, she let the ocean win. She imagined the water rising over her head. She imagined the quiet.
THWACK.
A sharp, violent kick struck her ribs.
Annie gasped, her hands flying to her stomach. Ruby was fighting. Ruby was kicking the walls of her own dark room, demanding to live.
"Okay," Annie wept, wiping her face, a fierce, terrifying maternal rage replacing the surrender. "Okay, little bit. Mama ain't giving up."
She scrambled to her feet, water splashing around her ankles. She ran out of the master bedroom and sprinted toward the nursery.
Annie splashed through the rising water, dragging her heavy legs toward the nursery.
The door was already swollen, sticking to the frame. She shoved it open with her shoulder. Inside, sitting in the corner next to the empty crib, was the heavy, dark-wood rocking chair she’d found at an antique shop on Royal Street. It was supposed to be where she nursed Ruby. It was supposed to be safe.
She grabbed it by the armrests.
"Come on," she grunted, her teeth gritted in pain.
She hauled the heavy chair backward out of the nursery and into the hallway. The water was rising with impossible speed and it wasn't creeping anymore, it was surging. It was halfway up her calves, swirling with dark, oily foam.
She positioned the rocking chair directly beneath the square outline of the attic hatch.
She hiked up the wet yellow dress, lifted her heavy foot, and stepped onto the seat of the chair. It wobbled violently beneath her. The curved rockers weren't meant to hold a pregnant woman standing on them in a flood.
She threw her hands up against the ceiling panel to steady herself.
She pushed flat-palmed against the wood. She pushed until the veins in her neck popped, until her arms shook with exhaustion.
The panel didn't give a fraction of an inch. The house was shifting off its foundation, the framing twisting and locking the hatch tight.
Annie let her arms drop. Her shoulders slumped.
She stood on the chair, the black water rising up to the wooden seat, swallowing the rockers. She listened to the symphony of her life ending. The wind was shrieking against the siding. Downstairs, the water was smashing her china cabinet against the walls.
A hot tear spilled over her eyelashes, cutting a clean track through the gray plaster dust on her cheek.
I didn't think I would die like this, she thought, a profound, crushing sadness settling over her. I wanted more years, Eli. I wanted to see you be a daddy.
She looked at the black water swirling around the chair. It was inevitable. It was the ocean. You can't fight the ocean.
THWACK.
Another kick. Harder this time, right against her lower ribs. A desperate, angry flutter.
Fight or flight.
The sadness vanished, burned away by a surge of pure, feral adrenaline. She wasn't dead yet, and she wasn't letting the river take her baby.
"The axe," she gasped.
She had left it by the top of the stairs when she stripped off her nightgown.
She stepped off the rocking chair into the water. It was shockingly deep now. It was at her waist. The yellow sundress billowed out around her in the dark water like a lily pad.
She waded toward the staircase, her hands sweeping out in front of her. The hallway was completely dark, the weak morning light swallowed by the storm.
"Where is it?" she panicked, splashing her hands.
She took another step.
Slice.
"Ah!" Annie cried out, her knee buckling.
She had stepped on something sharp. A stinging, biting pain flared across the arch of her bare foot.
She reached down into the murky, waist-deep water. Her fingers brushed against the cold, heavy metal of the axe blade. She wrapped both hands around the thick wooden handle and hauled it up, dragging it out of the black water.
She waded back toward the rocking chair. It was almost completely submerged now, only the top of the backrest poking out.
She couldn't stand on it anymore. She would have to do it from the water.
Annie squared her stance in the flooded hallway. She adjusted her grip on the wet wood of the handle. She looked up at the jammed ceiling panel. She was thirty-four weeks pregnant, exhausted, bleeding, and terrified.
She let out a guttural, primal scream, and she swung the heavy red axe over her head.
CRACK!
The blade bit deep into the ceiling panel. Splinters of pine and chunks of white plaster exploded downward, raining into her eyes and hair.
She ripped the axe free.
She swung again.
CRACK!
More woodchips flew, scratching her cheeks and shoulders. She didn't care. She swung with the strength of a woman possessed. She swung for Smoke. She swung for Ruby.
CRASH!
The blade shattered the locking mechanism. The wooden panel splintered completely, giving way. The folding attic ladder, finally released from its jammed frame, dropped down with a heavy, metallic clatter, splashing into the waist-deep water right in front of her.
Annie dropped the axe. It sank to the bottom of the hallway.
She grabbed the bottom rung of the ladder.
"Up," she commanded herself. "Go up."
She climbed. It was agonizing. Every muscle in her body screamed. Her heavy belly scraped against the wooden rungs, catching on the jagged splinters of the broken hatch. The wood tore at the yellow dress, cutting angry red scratches across her brown skin.
She dragged herself over the lip of the ceiling, collapsing onto the rough floorboards and pink fiberglass insulation of the attic.
It was an oven.
The heat trapped in the roof hit her like a physical blow. It smelled of old dust, dry rot, and rat droppings.
She lay on her side, panting violently, her lungs burning.
She forced herself to look back down through the hole.
The water was rushing up the ladder. It was devouring the second floor. It wasn't stopping.
"It's gonna fill the attic," she realized, the horror fresh and sharp.
She couldn't stay here. If the water reached the roof, this dark, sweltering triangle would become her tomb. She would be trapped against the rafters with nowhere to breathe.
She scrambled to her hands and knees. She crawled across the itchy insulation, coughing on the dust, heading toward the front of the house.
There was a small, hexagonal louvered window set into the gable.
Annie didn't hesitate. She rolled onto her back, bringing her knees up past her heavy belly.
She kicked outward with both feet.
SMASH!
The old glass shattered outward, the wooden slats splintering into the storm. Rain immediately blew into the stifling attic, cool and violent.
Annie crawled toward the opening. She squeezed her head and shoulders through the jagged frame. Broken glass bit into her forearms, slicing her palms, but the pain was completely eclipsed by the roar of the hurricane outside.
She pushed, wriggling her pregnant belly through the tight space, scraping her thighs on the wooden sill.
She tumbled out into the howling storm, sliding down the wet, slick asphalt shingles.
She slammed her hands flat against the roof, her fingernails digging desperately into the grit of the shingles, stopping her slide just feet from the edge.
She was outside.
The rain hit her in blinding sheets.
The wind screamed in her ears, a deafening, mechanical roar.
She flattened her body against the slope of the roof, wrapping one bleeding arm tightly around her stomach, pressing her face against the cold, wet shingles.
She slowly turned her head and looked out.
The Lower Ninth Ward was gone.
There were no streets. There were no cars. There were just the peaks of a few roofs poking out of a vast, churning, dark ocean that stretched endlessly in every direction.
Annie Moore pressed her cheek against the roof of her yellow house, closed her eyes against the apocalypse, and wept into the rain.
A/N:
I see the comment section has been… lively lately. It seems the internet is currently very interested in debating what counts as “writing” these days. I’ll simply say this: stories still live or die by voice, heart, and the ability to make someone feel something — and that part can’t be automated.
As always, I’m just here to tell a story and let you experience it however it lands with you. Thank you to everyone who continues to read, engage, and sit with these characters.
Let me know what you think of this chapter — and I’ll see you in the next one...
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Blackwater Promises: The Worst Prayer
⚠️ Content Warning: Disaster-related trauma, Psychological distress, Morally distressing thoughts, Death
READ WITH CARE. | READ WITH CARE.| READ WITH CARE.
Monday,August 29, 2005 11:00 AM FDNO Engine House 9
Smoke was a stain of a man on concrete.
He laid on the floor of the locker room, curled into a shape that human bones shouldn't make. He had soiled himself hours ago—a dark, spreading dampness on his uniform pants that smelled of ammonia and shame. He didn't care. He didn't even feel it.
He was staring at a dead cockroach near the drain. Its legs were curled up, stiff and dry. Smoke felt a profound kinship with the insect.
That’s me, he thought, his mind sluggish and thick. Just waiting to be swept away.
Inside his head, the screaming wouldn't stop. But it wasn't a scream of fear. It was a scream of mundane things.
Did I turn off the stove? Did I leave the porch light on? Did I kiss her?
No. The memory rose up, jagged and bloody. I didn't kiss her. I walked out. I heard the lock click. I didn't turn around.
"Eli."
The voice came from far away.
Underwater.
Stack was kneeling beside him. Stack was crying, but it was an ugly, snot-nosed sobbing. He reached out and touched Smoke’s shoulder, then recoiled at the smell. The hesitation broke Stack’s heart more than the sight.
"Please, man," Stack choked out, wiping his nose on his sleeve. "You smell like death, Eli. You gotta get up. You gotta wash your ass."
Smoke didn't move. He whispered to the concrete.
"The water is in my lungs, Stack."
"No, it ain't!" Stack yelled, grabbing Smoke’s face, forcing him to look up. "You are dry! We are in the station! Breathe!"
"I can't," Smoke whispered, his eyes rolling back, seeing the attic ceiling. "It’s dark in here. The water is at my neck."
Stack scrambled back, terrified. His brother wasn't just sad; he was hallucinating. He was drowning on dry land.
"CAP!" Stack screamed toward the door. "HELP ME!"
The door didn't just open; it was kicked in.
Delta Slim filled the frame. The old Captain looked like he had crawled out of a grave. His uniform was torn, soaked in black mud up to the thighs. He held a Halligan bar in his hand, gripping it like a weapon.
He took one look at Smoke the fetal curl, the urine stain, the fly on his lip.
Slim didn't show pity.
Pity was a luxury for yesterday.
Today required cruelty.
"Get up," Slim growled.
Smoke didn't move.
Slim crossed the room in two strides. He dropped the heavy iron bar—CLANG—inches from Smoke’s head. The vibration rattled Smoke’s teeth.
Slim bent down, grabbed a handful of Smoke’s uniform—right where the name tag said MOORE—and hauled him up. It was like lifting a corpse. Smoke’s head lolled back, his eyes unfocused.
"Look at me!" Slim roared.
SMACK.
Slim backhanded him. Hard. Smoke’s lip split. Blood bloomed, bright red against the gray skin.
"You think you get to check out?" Slim hissed, shaking him so hard Smoke’s teeth clacked together. "You think you get to lie in your own piss and quit? You selfish son of a bitch."
The insult pierced the fog. Smoke blinked. His eyes focused, just for a second, on Slim’s face.
"My wife..." Smoke rasped.
"Could be gone," Slim cut him off. He didn't soften the blow. He drove it in like a nail. "If she’s still in that house, Elijah, she is gone. The water is twenty feet deep. Physics don't give a damn about your feelings."
Stack gasped. "Cap, don't—"
"Quiet!" Slim snapped at Stack, never breaking eye contact with Smoke. "He needs to hear it. She could be gone. She could be alive. She could be safe. But we don't know that. What we do know is your alive. And you are here. And right now, there is a grandmother on a roof in the Seventh Ward who is praying for a man like you to show up. Are you gonna let her drown too because you're too busy feeling sorry for yourself?"
Smoke trembled. The truth was a physical weight, crushing his chest. She is gone.
"I can't save them," Smoke whispered, tears cutting tracks through the grime on his face. "I couldn't save her."
"I didn't ask you to save her," Slim grabbed Smoke’s face in his rough, calloused hands, squeezing hard enough to bruise. "I asked you to do your job. You are a Lieutenant of the New Orleans Fire Department. Put your grief in a box, nail it shut, and get on the damn boat."
Slim shoved him backward. Smoke hit the lockers and slid down, but he stayed on his feet. He stood there, swaying, smelling of ammonia and tragedy.
Slim turned to the door. "Wash him off, Stack. Get him a new uniform. Burn that one. He looks like a victim. I need a soldier."
Slim walked out.
Smoke stood in the silence. He looked at his hands. They were shaking violently. He brought them to his face. He could smell the iron scent of the blood on his lip.
He was alive. God help him, he was alive. And that was the worst punishment of all.
"Come on, Eli," Stack whispered, reaching for the hose in the corner sink. "Let's get you clean."
Smoke didn't answer. He just stared at the drain, watching the dead cockroach finally wash away.
The Seventh Ward
The aluminum cut a V-shape through the brown skin of the water.
The outboard motor, manned by a terrified National Guard kid from Arkansas, droned with a monotonous, drilling vibration that settled deep in Smoke’s teeth.
Smoke sat at the bow. He was clean now, or as clean as he could be. He wore a fresh uniform shirt that was two sizes too big, the fabric billowing around his hollow frame. He held a boat hook in his right hand. His grip was iron. His eyes were dead.
They were moving through the Seventh Ward, but Smoke couldn't prove it.
The geography of his life had been erased. The street signs were gone. The stoops where old men drank warm beer were gone. The fences, the rose bushes, the corner stores—all swallowed.
It wasn't a city anymore.
The water was thick. It looked like gravy. It smelled of gasoline, pesticide, and something sweet and terrible that Smoke refused to name.
"Is that St. Bernard?" Stack shouted over the engine, pointing to a cluster of oak trees drowning in the distance.
Smoke looked. He tried to triangulate. He tried to find the map in his head.
"I don't know," Smoke whispered.
The admission terrified him more than the water. He was a fireman. He knew every hydrant, every shortcut, every pothole in this parish. And now, he was lost.
"Kill the engine!" Smoke raised a hand.
The kid cut the motor. The silence rushed in, sudden and violent.
And then, they heard it.
“Help me! Please! Help!”
It was a thin, high voice. A child’s voice.
Smoke pointed the boat hook. "Two o'clock. That yellow roof."
They paddled closer. The water lapped against the shingles.
Huddled against the chimney was a little girl. She couldn't have been more than five. She was wearing a dirty pink t-shirt and underwear. Her hair was matted with mud. She was alone.
Smoke didn't wait for the boat to touch the roof. He vaulted over the gunwale, his boots splashing onto the submerged gutter.
"I got you," Smoke said, his voice rough. "I got you, baby."
The girl didn't hesitate. She launched herself at him. She was a projectile of pure terror.
Smoke caught her. She wrapped her tiny arms and legs around him, burying her face in the crook of his neck. She was shivering so hard she vibrated. She smelled of river water and urine.
Smoke froze.
The weight of her. The smallness of her bones. The way her hair tickled his chin.
Daddy's girl.
The thought hit him like a physical blow to the sternum.
He and Annie had argued about names for months. “If it’s a girl, Eli, we naming her Ruby. After my mama.” “Ruby Moore? That sounds like a blues singer.” “Exactly.”
He had imagined it.
He had imagined the weight of a daughter in his arms.
He had imagined braiding hair with his clumsy, giant fingers.
He had imagined sitting on the porch with a shotgun when the first boy came around.
He held this stranger’s child, and he felt the phantom limb of the daughter he would never hold. He felt the ghost of Ruby.
The grief tried to rise up. It tried to buckle his knees. Smoke swallowed it down. He turned his heart into stone. He had to. If he felt this, he would drop her.
"I got her," Smoke called out to the boat. His voice was flat. Robotic.
He waded back to the skiff and passed the girl to Stack. Stack took her gently, wrapping a blanket around her shoulders.
Stack looked at Smoke. He saw the transaction that had just happened.
He saw the light in Smoke’s eyes—the spark of the man who used to laugh at crawfish boils—flicker and go out. It was replaced by something ancient and cold.
"You okay?" Stack asked softly.
Smoke climbed back into the boat. He didn't look at the girl. He couldn't look at her.
"She ain't mine," Smoke said to the water.
"Eli..."
"Start the engine," Smoke commanded the kid. "We ain't done."
The motor roared to life, drowning out the sound of the little girl weeping into Stack’s chest. Smoke turned back to the horizon, scanning the black water for the next tragedy, his face set in a mask of terrible, efficient duty.
The boat moved into the canyons of downtown.
Here, the water was different. It wasn't just muddy; it was black, shadowed by the skyscrapers that loomed like tombstones on either side. The current was faster, funneling debris down the concrete chute of Poydras Street toward the Superdome.
Smoke sat on the bench, his eyes scanning the water with the precision of a predator. He wasn't looking for movement anymore. He was looking for stillness.
Then, he saw it.
Fifty yards away. Drifting near a submerged parking meter.
It was a bloom of pale yellow fabric.
It swirled in the dark water, ballooning out like a jellyfish. Or a flower.
Smoke stopped breathing. The air trapped in his lungs turned hot.
Yellow. Flannel.
He knew that shade of yellow. He had bought it at Walmart. He had washed it. He had folded it.
"Turn the boat," Smoke said. His voice was a whisper, but it carried over the drone of the engine.
The National Guard kid, sweat dripping from his helmet, shook his head. "Negative, sir. We have orders. Live rescue only. We are not on recovery detail yet. We have to get to the interchange."
"I said turn the damn boat." Smoke stood up.
The skiff rocked violently. The boat hook in Smoke’s hand clattered against the metal hull.
"Sit down!" the kid yelled, his voice cracking with panic. "I am the commander of this vessel, and I said we are moving on!"
Smoke turned on him. He didn't look like a rescuer. He looked like a man who had already died and was just looking for his grave.
He stepped over the bench. He grabbed the kid by the tactical vest and yanked him forward. The boat swerved, the engine sputtering.
"You listen to me, you little son of a bitch," Smoke hissed. "That is my wife. Dat my lady floating in that water ya. You turn this boat, or I will throw you in the river and drive it myself."
The kid looked at Smoke’s eyes. He saw the murder there. He saw the absolute, terrifying clarity of a man with nothing left to lose.
The kid looked at Stack for help.
Stack was pale, staring at the yellow fabric. He nodded slowly. "Do it, man. Just do it. We gotta know."
The kid swallowed hard. He turned the tiller.
The boat swung around. The engine cut to an idle.
They drifted toward the yellow shape.
The silence on the water was heavy. The only sound was the slap of the wake against the hull and the distant wail of a siren that would never come.
Smoke leaned over. The water smelled of death.
He extended the boat hook.
His hands were shaking so violently that the metal pole vibrated.
Don't be her. Be her. Don't be her.
He didn't know which prayer was worse.
The hook caught the fabric. He pulled gently. The body was heavy. Waterlogged. It resisted, sluggish and cold.
The body rotated in the black soup.
First, the torso broke the surface.
Smoke gasped. A sound like a knife in the gut.
She was pregnant.
The belly was high and round, straining against the wet fabric. A mound of life that had become a tomb.
"Oh god," Stack choked out, covering his mouth. "Oh god, Eli."
Smoke’s vision blurred. The world narrowed down to that swollen belly. It was the right size. It was the right shape.
It’s her. She didn't make it to the attic. She tried to swim.
Smoke pulled harder, his tears splashing into the river. He needed to see her face. He needed to say goodbye.
The body rolled over. The face washed clear of the water.
Smoke froze.
The woman’s eyes were open, staring blindly at the burning sun. Her mouth was slack. Her skin was dark. Darker than Annie’s. Her hair was braided in tight cornrows that floated around her head like snakes.
It wasn't Annie.
The air rushed back into Smoke’s lungs in a painful, ragged gasp.
"It ain't her," Stack sobbed, his knees giving out. He slumped against the gunwale. "Thank you, Jesus. It ain't her."
Smoke stared at the stranger.
He felt a rush of relief so potent it felt like a drug. She is safe. She is still out there.
And then, immediately, the guilt crashed down on him. It was a crushing, suffocating weight.
He was happy this woman was dead. He was grateful that this stranger, this mother, this wife, was the one floating in the gutter, just so his Annie could have a few more hours of possibility.
He looked at the dead woman’s open eyes. He looked at the child she would never deliver.
Smoke reached out with a trembling hand. He didn't touch her skin. He couldn't. He touched the yellow fabric of her gown. He unhooked the pole.
"I'm sorry," Smoke whispered to the corpse. His voice broke. "I'm so sorry, sister. I'm sorry nobody came for you."
He pushed the body gently away.
She drifted back into the current, turning face down again, resuming her slow, silent march toward the Gulf of Mexico.
Smoke sat back on the bench. He put his head in his hands. He didn't cry. He was done crying. He just shook.
"Let's go," Smoke said to the floor of the boat. "Get me away from here."
The engine roared to life, drowning out the silence of the dead.
Hell had an address, and it was 900 Convention Center Boulevard.
The boat ramp didn't lead to safety. It led to a circle of the Inferno that Dante forgot to write down.
The heat hit them first. It was a physical wall—one hundred degrees of stagnant, humid air radiating off the asphalt. But it wasn't just heat. It was the smell.
It smelled of unwashed bodies. It smelled of spilled diesel. But underneath that, sharp and eye-watering, was the smell of human waste. Thousands of people trapped on a concrete island with no water, no food, and no toilets.
The boat scraped against the ramp. Smoke didn't wait for the rope. He vaulted over the side, his boots hitting the dry pavement.
He stood up and looked at his city.
There were thousands of them. A sea of Black faces. Grandmothers sitting in wheelchairs that had run out of battery. Mothers fanning babies with pieces of cardboard. Men standing shirtless, staring at the helicopters that hovered overhead but never landed.
It wasn't a shelter. It was a holding pen.
Smoke ran. He didn't run like a rescuer; he ran like a madman.
"ANNIE!" he screamed.
His voice was swallowed by the roar of the crowd. A low, constant hum of misery. Babies crying. People praying. People arguing.
Smoke grabbed the shoulder of a man sitting on a cooler. He spun him around.
"Have you seen her?" Smoke demanded, his eyes wild. "Annie Moore? Short? Pregnant? Yellow dress?"
The man looked at him. His eyes were glazed, red-rimmed with exhaustion. He looked at Smoke’s uniform—the badge, the patch. He laughed. It was a broken, ugly sound.
"Man, I haven't seen water in two days," the man croaked. "You got water, officer? Or you just got questions?"
Smoke recoiled. He reached into his pocket, found a warm bottle he’d grabbed from the station, and shoved it into the man’s hands.
He kept moving. He was a shark swimming through a school of the damned.
"Annie!"
He checked faces. He checked the shadows under the overhang. He saw a pregnant woman and his heart leaped, but when she turned, she was a stranger.
"Mr. Moore?"
The voice was a whisper. A dry rattle.
Smoke froze. He spun around.
Sitting against a concrete pillar, wrapped in a wool blanket despite the heat, was a small, withered figure.
"Mr. Baptiste?" Smoke dropped to his knees. The concrete tore his pants.
It was Mr. Henri Baptiste. The deacon. The man who had sat in the front row at Smoke and Annie’s wedding. The man who had slipped a hundred-dollar bill into Smoke’s pocket and told him to “buy that girl something pretty.”
Now, he looked like a skeleton dipped in wax. His skin was gray. His lips were cracked and bleeding.
"Mr. Baptiste," Smoke choked, grabbing the old man’s hands. They were cold. "Mr. Baptiste, what are you doing here? Where is your family?"
"They went to get water," Mr. Baptiste wheezed, his eyes struggling to focus on Smoke’s face. "They said... the buses are coming, Eli. Are the buses coming?"
Smoke felt a tear slide down his nose. "I don't know, Mr. Baptiste. I don't know."
"Eli," the old man gripped Smoke’s hand with sudden, surprising strength. "I saw her."
Smoke stopped breathing. The world narrowed down to the old man’s cracked lips.
"Who?" Smoke whispered. "Who did you see?"
"Your Annie," Mr. Baptiste nodded, his head lolling slightly. "The pretty one. With the belly."
"Where?" Smoke was shaking him now, desperate. "Where is she? Is she here?"
"I saw a girl in yellow..." Mr. Baptiste’s eyes drifted past Smoke, looking at something far away. "She was walking... she was walking toward the Dome."
"The Dome?" Smoke turned, looking toward the Superdome in the distance. "She’s at the Superdome?"
"She was with the crowd..." Mr. Baptiste frowned. Confusion clouded his face. "Or maybe... maybe that was on the TV. I saw a girl on the TV..."
"No!" Smoke yelled, squeezing the old man’s hands. "Focus, Mr. Baptiste! Did you see Annie? Did she speak to you?"
"I'm thirsty, Eli," the old man whispered. The clarity vanished, replaced by the fog of dehydration. "Is the service over? I want to go home."
Smoke stared at him. The hope that had flared up in his chest turned to ash. The old man didn't know. His mind was cooking in the heat.
"ANNIE!" Smoke screamed at the sky. It was a primal roar of frustration.
Stack was there. He grabbed Smoke under the arms.
"We gotta go, Eli," Stack shouted. "We can't stay here. It’s getting dangerous. The sun is going down."
"He saw her!" Smoke yelled, pointing at the delirious old man. "She’s at the Dome! I have to go to the Dome!"
"He doesn't know what he saw!" Stack dragged him backward. "He’s hallucinating, man! Look at him!"
Smoke looked back. Mr. Baptiste had closed his eyes. He was humming a hymn, rocking back and forth, alone in the crowd of thousands.
"I can't leave him!" Smoke fought against Stack’s grip. "We have to take him!"
"The boat is full!" Stack yelled, shaking Smoke. "We can't take everybody, Eli! We have to go back to the station and check the manifest! If she’s at the Dome, she’s on a list!"
Smoke stopped fighting. The logic cut through the panic.
The list.
If she was at the Dome, she registered.
He looked at Mr. Baptiste one last time. He looked at the thousands of people staring at him- the firefighter who had come, given one bottle of water, and was now leaving them to rot.
The shame burned hotter than the sun.
"I'm sorry," Smoke mouthed to the crowd.
He turned and let Stack drag him back to the boat. He didn't look back. He couldn't.
He left the Convention Center, but he took the sound with him.
The sound of a city begging for a glass of water.
Smoke walked into the station. He didn't walk like a man; he walked like a machine that was running on fumes. His uniform was stiff with dried river water and sweat. His eyes were wide, unblinking, staring at nothing.
Delta Slim was at the whiteboard. The red marker squeaked against the porcelain—a sound like a mouse screaming.
Smoke stopped. He scanned the board.
LAKEVIEW - SUBMERGED (ROOF RESCUES UNDERWAY) GENTILLY - 8FT WATER MID-CITY - ACCESSIBLE BY BOAT TREME - PARTIAL
Smoke’s eyes frantically searched the bottom of the list. He was looking for the numbers. He was looking for the checkmark.
LOWER NINTH WARD.
It wasn't there.
The line was blank. No checkmark. No water depth. Just a void.
"Where is it?" Smoke’s voice was a croak. He walked up to the board, his boots heavy on the concrete. "Where is the Ninth? Why ain't there no writing next to it?"
Slim stopped writing. He capped the marker. He didn't turn around. His shoulders were hunched, the posture of a man carrying a mountain.
"Slim!" Smoke yelled, the sound echoing off the brick walls. "Did you send a boat? Did you check Tennessee Street?"
Slim turned slowly. His face wasn't angry anymore. It was destroyed. It was a face that had seen too much and could never unsee it.
"We can't get boats in there, son," Slim said softly. "The current at the breach is too strong. It’s a whirlpool. The Coast Guard pilot... he did a flyover."
"And?" Smoke stepped closer, his hands balling into fists. "What did he see? Did he see the house?"
Slim looked at Stack, then back at Smoke. He took a breath that shuddered in his chest.
"He didn't see anything, Eli."
"What do you mean he didn't see anything?" Smoke spat. "It’s a neighborhood! It’s twelve thousand people! You can't just not see it!"
"The towers are underwater," Slim whispered. "The telephone poles are underwater."
The room went silent. The kind of silence that rings in your ears.
Smoke shook his head. "You're lying."
"Eli—" Stack reached for him.
"You're lying!" Smoke screamed. "The poles are thirty feet high! You're lying to me!"
He turned and ran.
He burst out of the station doors, into the humid, dying light. He didn't run to the truck. He ran toward the on-ramp of the I-10 overpass.
"Eli, stop!" Stack yelled, chasing him. "Don't go up there!"
Smoke didn't listen. He sprinted. His lungs burned. His boots hammered against the asphalt. He needed to see. He needed to prove them wrong. He needed to see the roof of the yellow house.
He reached the crest of the bridge—the highest point in the city.
He stopped.
He looked East.
He fell to his knees. Crack.
There was no neighborhood.
It wasn't just flooded. It was erased.
The water wasn't a river. It was an ocean. A flat, brown, terrifyingly calm sea that stretched to the horizon.
There were no rooftops. There were no chimneys. There were no trees.
The water was black and glassy, reflecting the purple sky. It covered the stop signs. It covered the fences. It covered the world.
Smoke scrambled to the edge of the concrete barrier. He gripped the rough stone until his fingernails broke.
He tried to map it. He tried to find his life.
The corner store was there. Gone. The church steeple. Gone. The yellow house on cinder blocks. Gone.
"Oh god," he whispered. The sound was ripped out of him.
He did the math. The terrible, unforgiving math.
If the water was covering the telephone poles, it was twenty feet deep. Maybe twenty-five.
The house was fifteen feet tall at the peak.
Smoke stared at the spot where his kitchen should be.
"She didn't float," he choked out.
The realization hit him like a physical blow, doubling him over on the asphalt.
If the water rose that high... and if the house held together...
She ran to the attic. She climbed the ladder. She pulled it up.
"It wasn't quick," Smoke gagged, clutching his chest, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. "She waited."
He saw it. He saw the water rising in the dark. He saw it coming up the ladder. He saw her trapped against the rafters, the air pocket getting smaller and smaller. He saw her screaming for him in the pitch black.
"She waited for me," Smoke sobbed, slamming his forehead against the concrete barrier. "She waited for me to come and I didn't come."
Stack walked up behind him. He looked at the ocean that used to be their home. He looked at his brother, who was curled on the road, broken into a thousand pieces.
Stack didn't say a word. He couldn't. He just sat down on the yellow line of the highway and wept into his hands.
Smoke stared at the black water. His eyes were wide and dry now. The horror had burned the tears away.
He started to pray. But it wasn't a prayer for rescue.
Please, God, Smoke thought, staring at the abyss. Let the house have broken. Let a beam have hit her. Let the bridge have smashed it.
He prayed for violence. He prayed for a crushed skull. He prayed for anything, anything other than the slow, suffocating torture of waiting in the dark for a husband who was never coming.
"Let it be quick," Smoke whispered to the dying sun. "Please, Jesus. Let her be dead already."
A/N: Thank you for trusting me with this story. The response to Blackwater Promises has meant more than I can say.
As always, I’m grateful for every read, message, and moment you spend with these characters.
More soon.
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Blackwater Promises: Breaking
⚠️Content Warning: panic attacks, intense emotional distress, feelings of helplessness/suffocation, survivor’s guilt
READ WITH CARE. | READ WITH CARE.| READ WITH CARE.
Monday, August 29, 2005 04:30 AM N. Claiborne Avenue
The cab of the Battalion truck smelled of stale coffee, diesel fumes, and the sharp, metallic scent of nervous sweat.
Smoke drove. His hands were wrapped around the steering wheel at ten and two, gripping the leather so hard his knuckles had turned the color of ash. He wasn't driving; he was wrestling a beast. The wind buffeting the side of the heavy truck wasn't just weather anymore. It was personal. It was a heavy hand shoving them toward the shoulder, daring them to correct.
Beside him, Stack was hunched over in the passenger seat. The glow of his flip phone illuminated his face—the same face Smoke saw in the mirror every morning, but softer now.
Unbroken.
Stack was pressing the phone against his ear, shielding it with a cupped hand as if he could physically protect the voice on the other end from the storm outside.
"Yeah, baby," Stack whispered.
The intimacy of the tone grated against Smoke’s nerves like sandpaper. It was a bedroom voice. A safe voice.
"You there? You in the driveway? You see the big oak tree?"
Smoke stared straight ahead. The headlights cut through the gloom, lighting up the corpses of the neighborhood. Every house they passed was blindfolded with plywood. Every porch was empty. The city looked like it had been abandoned by God and the government in the same hour.
"Good," Stack let out a long, shuddering breath. His shoulders, which had been up by his ears for twelve hours, finally dropped. "Good. You kiss Grandma for me ya?. You tell baby I’m comin’. Yeah. Tuesday. Red beans on Tuesday."
Red beans on Tuesday.
The phrase hit Smoke in the chest. It was a promise of normalcy. It was a promise of a future. It assumed there would be a Tuesday. It assumed there would be a stove to cook on.
Smoke felt a dark, ugly thing uncoil in his stomach.
It wasn't anger.
It was worse.
It was envy.
Pure, corrosive envy.
He looked at his brother out of the corner of his eye. He saw the relief washing over Stack’s face, smoothing out the worry lines. Stack had won. He had won the argument. He had convinced Mary to get in the car. He had put his wife and his unborn child on the high ground in Biloxi, safe behind brick walls, while Smoke had left his wife in a wooden box in the bowl of the city.
You failed, a voice whispered in Smoke’s ear. He’s the younger twin, but he’s the better man. He got his family out.
"I love you too, Mary," Stack murmured, oblivious to the war happening in the driver's seat. "Yeah. Go inside. Lock the door."
Snap.
Stack closed the phone. The sound was final.
"She made it," Stack said, slumping back against the seat. He looked at Smoke, his eyes wet with gratitude. "She safe, Eli. Her and the baby. They at her Grandma’s."
Smoke nodded. He tried to swallow, but his throat was dry.
"That’s good," Smoke said. His voice sounded hollow, like it was coming from the bottom of a well. "That’s real good."
"Man," Stack rubbed his face with both hands, laughing a shaky, hysterical little laugh. "I felt like I was holding my breath for ten hours. I can breathe now. You know?"
Smoke tightened his grip on the wheel until the leather creaked.
No, Smoke thought. I don't know.
He wanted to reach over and punch his brother. He wanted to shatter that look of peace. He wanted to scream, Don't you dare breathe. Don't you dare feel good while Annie is sitting in the dark.
It was a sin, feeling this way. He knew it. This was his blood. This was his twin. He should be rejoicing that Mary was safe. But the envy was eating him alive. It tasted like bile. It felt like betrayal.
Stack looked at him, the smile fading slightly as he read the tension in Smoke’s jaw.
"She’s gonna be alright, Eli," Stack said softly. "Annie’s tough. She’s a tank."
Smoke didn't look at him. He couldn't. If he looked at him, he might cry, or he might swing.
"Don't," Smoke warned, his voice low and dangerous.
"I'm just saying—"
"I said don't."
Smoke stared at the windshield wipers slashing back and forth. Swish. Swish.
Counting down the seconds.
He was the older brother. The protector. The Lieutenant. And yet, sitting in this truck, he felt small. He felt powerless. He was driving a half-million-dollar fire truck through a city he couldn't save, while his brother sat next to him, holding a pocketful of peace that Smoke would kill to have.
"Just watch the road, Stack," Smoke whispered. "Just watch the damn road."
Stack fell silent. He looked out the window, chastised.
The silence between them grew heavy, filling the cab. It wasn't the comfortable silence of twins who shared a brain. It was a wall. For the first time in their lives, they were on different sides of the line.
Stack had a future. Smoke only had the storm.
FDNO Engine House 9
The station felt like a church where God had stopped returning calls.
It smelled of burnt coffee, damp turnout gear, and the sour, metallic funk of fear. The fluorescent lights overhead buzzed with a dying, flickering rhythm, casting long shadows that stretched across the concrete floor like fingers.
Delta Slim stood at the whiteboard. The Captain was a man carved out of mahogany and iron, a veteran of thirty years who usually carried the station on his back. But this morning, he looked old. His shoulders were slumped. His eyes were red-rimmed maps of exhaustion.
He held a fax paper in his hand like it was a death warrant.
"Listen close," Slim’s voice was gravel grinding on bone. "Wind is at sixty sustained. As of right now, we are in refuge mode. Cardiac calls only. If the wind hits seventy, we ground the fleet. No wheels roll. If Jesus himself calls for a ladder, he’s gonna have to wait."
"What about backup?" Miller asked from the back of the room, his voice small and childish. "The Guard? FEMA?"
Slim laughed. It was a dry, rattling sound, like dry leaves skittering on pavement.
"FEMA?" Slim looked at the paper, his eyes hard and wet. "Brown asked for two days. Two. Days. The storm is knocking on the door, kicking it in, and the federal government said they’ll be here on Wednesday."
"Two days?" Smoke stepped forward, his boots striking the concrete with a heavy, dull thud. "The water ain't waiting two days, Slim. The water is at the porch steps right now."
"And they sending six helicopters," Slim continued, reading the numbers like an autopsy report. "Six birds. For the whole Gulf Coast. And no outside personnel allowed without a permission slip from the state."
The silence in the room was suffocating. It was the silence of men realizing they were not soldiers to be deployed; they were sacrifices to be spent. They were the buffer between the storm and the assets, and the buffer was meant to break.
Slim turned to the map of the city pinned to the wall. He picked up a red marker. His hand trembled, just a fraction.
He didn't look at Smoke. He couldn't.
"Smoke, Stack," Slim said to the map. "You take Algiers. You cover the West Bank."
The air left the room.
Smoke felt the floor tilt beneath his boots. The blood rushed to his ears, hot and deafening.
"Algiers?" The word hung in the air, thick and wrong. "Slim... you got that backward. My house is here. My family is here. My wife is here."
"I know where she is," Slim said to the wall.
"Then why you sending me across the river?" Smoke’s voice rose, cracking the quiet. "You sending me to the bricks? You sending me to protect the high ground while the Ninth sits in the bowl?"
It was the unspoken geography of New Orleans. The money sat high. The culture sat low. Smoke knew exactly what this order meant. It meant his neighborhood—his history, his life—was being designated as a loss leader.
Slim finally turned around. The look on his face stopped Smoke cold. It wasn't the face of a Captain. It was the face of a grieving father.
"It’s a conflict of interest," Slim said, his voice trembling. "If I leave you here, Eli... you gonna abandon your post. You gonna try to save her."
"She’s my wife!" Smoke screamed. The facade of the Lieutenant cracked, shattering on the floor. He stepped into Slim’s personal space, towering over the older man. "She is thirty-four weeks pregnant! She is alone in a wooden house on Tennessee Street! You want me to drive to Algiers and check blood pressures while she drowns?"
"I want you to live!" Slim roared back, grabbing Smoke by the front of his uniform shirt.
The sudden violence shocked the room. Slim shoved Smoke back, not with anger, but with desperation.
"You think I don't see her?" Slim’s eyes were spilling over now, tears tracking through the gray stubble on his cheeks. "I close my eyes and I see her, Eli. I see her serving me gumbo. I see her laughing. She reminds me of Rose."
Smoke stopped fighting. The name hung between them. Rose. Slim’s wife. The woman who died in 1965 during Hurricane Betsy. The woman whose body they didn't find for three days because the water refused to give her back.
"I lost my Rose in the Ninth," Slim whispered, his hands still gripping Smoke’s shirt, shaking him gently. "I was on shift. I was following orders. I was saving a white family in Lakeview while my Rose was floating in the kitchen."
Slim choked on a sob. "I ain't gonna let history repeat itself, son. I ain't gonna let you watch it happen. If the water comes... I want you on the other side of that river."
"You sending me away to save me?" Smoke whispered, the realization hitting him like a physical blow. "You sending me away so I don't have to see it?"
"I'm sending you away so you don't die trying to stop the ocean with a fire hose," Slim said. He released Smoke, smoothing the younger man's collar with a trembling hand. It was a tender, fatherly gesture. "Go to Algiers, Eli. Please. Don't make me order you."
Smoke stared at him. He saw the terror in the old man’s eyes. He saw the ghost of a drowned woman in the reflection of his Captain’s pupils.
Smoke hated him for it. He hated him for being right. He hated him for taking the choice away.
"You wrong for this, Slim," Smoke said, his voice broken. "You wrong."
"I know," Slim whispered. "Now get on the truck."
Smoke turned away. He walked to the back of the station, his body vibrating with a rage he couldn't release. He sat on the wooden bench and rubbed his hands together furiously, trying to scrub the feeling of betrayal off his skin.
He was used to the system failing him.
But he never thought the man he loved like a father would be the one to lock the gate.
It didn't announce itself with a roar. It announced itself with a death rattle.
Smoke and Stack sat in the Battalion truck, parked on the high rise of the Crescent City Connection overpass. From this vantage point, they were kings of a dying kingdom. They could see the entire sprawl of New Orleans—the curve of the river, the grid of the streets, the white dome of the stadium.
The wind was no longer just air. It was a physical presence, a woman screaming in a pitch too high for human ears to fully register. It shook the heavy fire truck, rocking it on its suspension like a cradle.
"Here she comes," Stack whispered. He was staring out the windshield, his eyes wide.
Below them, the city lights flickered.
It started in the East. A ripple of darkness. Streetlights winked out one by one, like candles being snuffed by a wet thumb. The darkness rushed west, swallowing the Ninth Ward, swallowing the Treme, swallowing the Quarter.
Then, the Superdome. The massive white bubble, which had been glowing like a beacon of safety, blinked. Once. Twice.
Then, black.
The pumps failed. The hum of the grid vanished. New Orleans was erased from the map.
"There it goes," Stack said, his voice trembling. "We in the dark now, brother. We off the grid."
Smoke didn't speak. He felt a coldness settle in his marrow. The light going out felt symbolic. It felt like the city was closing its eyes.
He reached for the radio knob. His hand was shaking. He turned it up. He needed a voice. He needed to hear that someone, somewhere, was still in charge.
"...Eye of Hurricane Katrina making landfall in Plaquemines Parish... sustained winds of 135 miles per hour... storm surge estimated at eighteen to twenty-two feet... heavy rain reported inside the Superdome... roof integrity is compromised..."
Smoke closed his eyes.
Eighteen feet.
His house sat on cinder blocks, three feet off the ground. Annie was five-foot-two.
Do the math, Eli. Stop praying and do the math.
He leaned his head back against the headrest. The smell of the rain hitting the hot asphalt outside... it triggered something. A scent memory.
Six months ago. A Saturday in March. The air smelled of cayenne pepper, lemon, and boiling crab.
Smoke was driving the sedan. The windows were down. The sun was golden.
Annie was in the passenger seat. She was wearing a yellow sundress that barely contained her belly. Her arms were crossed. She was pouting. She looked beautiful and furious.
"No spicy food," the doctor had said. "And absolutely no shellfish. The sodium is too high. Her ankles are swelling."
Smoke had stopped for gas. When he came back to the car, he saw it.
Annie had her purse open. She was sneaking a crawfish tail she had hidden in a Ziploc bag. She was sucking the spicy juice out of the head, her eyes closed in ecstasy, red pepper smeared on her lips.
Smoke tapped on the window.
Annie jumped. She looked at him, guilty as sin, a claw hanging from her mouth.
"Annie!" Smoke laughed, opening the door. "The man just said no bugs! You trying to give that baby hypertension?"
Annie burst into tears. Full, heaving, hormonal sobs that shook her whole body.
"But the baby wants it!" she wailed, holding up the claw like it was evidence in court. "He wants the grease, Lijah He wants the spice! Why you starving us ya?"
Smoke had laughed until his ribs hurt. He climbed into the car, grabbed her face, and wiped the cayenne pepper off her lips with his thumb. Then he put his thumb in his mouth and tasted the heat.
"One more," he whispered, kissing her forehead. "Just one more. Then I'm confiscating the bag."
She smiled through her tears. It was the brightest thing he had ever seen.
A single tear leaked out of Smoke’s eye. It was hot on his cheek. He smiled in the dark cab of the fire truck.
"She’s a tank," Stack said softly. He had turned the radio down. He was watching his brother break apart in slow motion. "Don't you worry about Annie Moore. She’s probably cussing out the wind right now. Telling God to wipe his feet before he comes in her house."
Smoke nodded. He wanted to believe it. He wanted to live in that memory forever.
Crack.
The radio sparked to life, shattering the moment.
"Engine 42. Medical emergency. 1400 block of Opelousas. Algiers. Elderly female, diabetic shock. Priority Two."
"That’s us," Stack said, putting the truck in gear. "Let’s go."
The house in Algiers was dry, but it smelled of old age—peppermint, mothballs, and fear.
Mr. Tibbs was pacing the living room floor with his cane. He was eighty if he was a day, wearing suspenders over a t-shirt.
"I told her to eat!" Mr. Tibbs yelled, pointing at his wife with the cane. "I told this hard-headed woman to eat her grits! But no! She busy worrying about the windows!"
Mrs. Tibbs was slumped in her armchair. She was gray, sweating. Smoke knelt in front of her, his large, dark hands moving with gentle precision. He pushed the glucose gel into her mouth. He checked her pulse.
"Hush up, old man," Mrs. Tibbs mumbled, her eyes fluttering open.
"I ain't gonna hush!" Mr. Tibbs shouted. But he stopped pacing. He reached out and grabbed her hand, squeezing it with a desperation that shook his whole arm. "You trying to leave me? Is that it? You want me to face this storm by myself? You know I can't do this without you, Louise. Who gonna tell me where I put my glasses?"
Smoke watched the color return to Mrs. Tibbs’ face. He watched the way her thumb stroked the back of her husband's hand.
"She’s okay, Pop," Smoke said, his voice thick. "She’s back."
Mr. Tibbs wiped a tear from his cheek, trying to look angry but failing. He looked at Smoke.
"She scare me, son," Mr. Tibbs whispered. "It’s bad enough she light-skinned, now she light-headed too. Can't trust these NOLA women. They stubborn. They think they know everything."
Smoke chuckled. It was a deep, guttural sound. It was the laugh of a Black man recognizing the specific, tender headache of loving a Creole woman.
"I know that's right, Pop," Smoke said, standing up. "I married one myself. Hard-headed as a mule."
"Then you know," Mr. Tibbs nodded sagely. "You gotta watch 'em. You gotta watch 'em close or they’ll slip away on you."
The words hit Smoke like a fist. Or they’ll slip away on you.
He looked at the couple. The knot of hands. The tether of sixty years of arguments and grits and storms.
He felt a pang of longing so sharp it nearly doubled him over. He wanted this. He wanted the right to be an old man terrified of losing his wife to old age, not to water. He wanted to argue about grits in 2045.
"You watch her," Smoke said, packing his medical bag. His hands were shaking again. "You watch her close, Pop."
"I always do," the old man said, kissing his wife’s hand.
Smoke walked out to the truck. The wind almost knocked him over. It was howling now, tearing shingles off the roof next door. The rain was sideways, stinging like pellets.
He looked back toward the river. Toward the Ninth.
I'm watching you, Annie, he thought. I'm watching you.
The rain wasn't falling anymore; it was being driven into the earth like nails.
Smoke steered the Battalion rig through a curtain of gray steel. The wipers were useless, thrashing back and forth against a deluge that blurred the world into a smear of wet charcoal.
He felt... steady. Or maybe just numb. The adrenaline from the diabetic call had faded, leaving a cold, mechanical focus.
Drive. Avoid the wires. Get to the station. Wait for the wind to die.
Then.
BOOM.
It wasn't a sound. It was a fracture.
The earth didn't just shake; it buckled. The heavy fire truck, weighing twenty tons, was shoved three feet sideways, the tires screeching against the wet asphalt as if a giant, invisible hand had slapped it off the road.
"Jesus!" Stack yelled, grabbing the dashboard with both hands. "What was that? Did we hit a wall?"
"No," Smoke whispered. He fought the steering wheel, his biceps straining to keep the rig from spinning out.
The air pressure in the cab dropped instantly. It was a violent, sucking sensation. Smoke’s ears popped—a sharp, painful crack deep in his skull.
He looked at the digital clock on the dash. 08:14.
He felt a vibration travel up through the tires, through the chassis, into the seat of his pants. It wasn't the rumble of rubber on road. It was a deeper, uglier sound. It was the sound of something massive giving way.
"Something broke," Smoke whispered. The dread was cold and absolute, pooling in his stomach like lead. "Stack... something broke."
They pulled into the station. The bay doors were gaping open like a scream.
The station was silent. Too silent.
Delta Slim wasn't at the whiteboard. He was hunched over the desk in the corner, the red emergency phone pressed to his ear. His back was to them.
His shoulders were heaving. Violently.
Stack moved fast. Instinctively, with the quiet grace of a man who knows trouble when he smells it, he reached over and pulled the keys from the ignition. He slid them into his pocket.
Smoke didn't notice. He stumbled out of the truck. His boots hit the concrete, but his legs felt heavy, like he was walking through deep mud.
"Slim?"
Slim lowered the phone. He didn't hang it up. The cord dangled, swinging back and forth like a pendulum counting down time.
Slim stood up. He turned around.
Smoke stopped breathing.
The Captain’s face was a ruin. A mask of absolute, wet despair. Tears were streaming down his face, dripping off his chin onto his crisp white shirt. He looked like a child who had just watched his mother die.
Slim looked at the wall where the wooden plaque hung—FDNO Brotherhood: In God We Trust.
With a sudden, guttural scream, Slim grabbed the plaque and threw it.
CRACK.
It shattered against the brick wall. Splinters rained down on the floor.
"It broke," Slim whispered. The voice didn't sound like him. It sounded broken.
"What broke?" Smoke walked forward. The room was tilting. The air felt too thick to inhale. "Speak plain, old man. What broke?"
"The levees," Slim choked out. He walked toward Smoke, his hands out, trembling. "The Industrial Canal. The floodwall. They broke, Eli. They gave way."
Smoke stopped. The words hit him, but they didn't penetrate. They bounced off the armor of his denial.
"No," Smoke said. He shook his head. A nervous, terrified smile twitched on his lips. "No. That ain't right. That’s reinforced concrete. The Corps said it holds a Cat Three. The government... they wouldn't let it break."
"The government ain't here!" Slim cried, grabbing Smoke’s shoulders. "Brown ain't here! The Guard ain't here! It’s gone, son! The Lower Ninth is gone!"
"Gone?" Smoke whispered.
"It’s eighteen feet of water, Eli," Slim sobbed, shaking him. "It’s the ocean. It’s topping the roofs."
Smoke stood there.
He heard the math in his head. The terrible, firefighter math.
Eighteen feet. Annie is five-foot-two. The house is on blocks. Three feet high. The ceilings are ten feet. 18 minus 13...
He saw the yellow house. He saw the attic pull-cord. He saw Annie, heavy with his child, standing in the kitchen.
"Annie," he gasped. The name tore out of his throat, raw and bloody.
He turned. He bolted.
"NO!" Stack screamed.
Smoke grabbed the door handle of the truck. He yanked it. Locked. He reached for his pocket. Empty.
"Keys!" Smoke slapped his chest. The sound was a wet, meaty thud against his ribs.
He didn't feel metal. He felt nothing.
"Where are my keys?!"
He clawed at his pockets. He ripped the lining. He was feral. He was a wild thing unmaking itself.
"You can't go out there!" Stack tackled him from behind, locking his arms around Smoke’s waist.
Smoke roared. It wasn't a scream; it was the sound of a soul snapping. He spun, putting his entire weight into the turn, and punched his brother in the chest.
THUD.
Stack groaned, the air leaving his lungs, but he didn't let go. He held on like he was holding Smoke back from a cliff edge.
"GIVE ME THE KEYS!" Smoke screamed, swinging wild, desperate blows that connected with Stack’s helmet, with his shoulders, with the air. "SHE IS ALONE! SHE IS IN THE HOUSE! GIVE ME THE DAMN KEYS!"
"It’s twenty feet deep!" Stack yelled, burying his face in Smoke’s back, sobbing into the turnout gear. "It’s over, Eli! You’ll drown! You can't save her!"
"YOU CANNOT TAKE HER AWAY FROM ME!" Smoke thrashed, dragging Stack across the concrete floor. His eyes were wide, white-rimmed, seeing things that weren't in the room. "SHE IS ALL I HAVE! SHE HAS THE AXE!"
Smoke froze for a split second, the horror clarifying in his mind.
"I GAVE HER THE AXE BUT I DIDN'T SHOW HER HOW TO SWING IT!" he screamed, the realization tearing his throat raw. "IT'S TOO HEAVY, STACK! SHE CAN'T LIFT IT ABOVE HER HEAD! SHE'S GONNA TRAP HERSELF!"
"I got you," Delta Slim slammed into Smoke from the front, pinning his arms to his sides. The old man was crying, his face slick with tears and snot. "I got you, son. Don't look. Don't look at the water."
"Let me go!" Smoke begged. The fight drained out of him, replaced by a cold, liquid terror. His legs gave out. He slumped into Slim’s arms, sliding down the brick wall to the cold, dirty concrete.
"Please, Slim. Please. She’s calling me. I can hear her screaming my name."
"I know," Slim wept, rocking the big man back and forth like a baby. "I know."
Smoke lay on the floor of the station, pinned by the two men who loved him, while the man he was—the protector, the husband, the father—died right there on the concrete.
He closed his eyes.
He didn't see the dark.
He saw the yellow house. He saw the water bursting through the floorboards. He saw Annie, belly round and heavy, standing on a chair in the dark, swinging a heavy red axe at a ceiling that wouldn't break. He heard the wood splinter. He heard her gasp for air that wasn't there.
And then, he saw nothing but black water.
It rushed into his mind. It filled his nose. It burned his lungs.
He opened his mouth to scream, but no sound came out. Only a bubble of silence.
He was dry. He was safe. He was three miles away.
But Elijah Moore was drowning.
A/N: Thank you all for reading. I had to take some time away from social media to reconnect with this story. Writing this brings up some really dark memories for me, and for many of you who have messaged me privately.
Please ensure that you allow yourselves space to breathe and recalibrate after this one. It’s heavy.
As always, let me know what you think below. See y’all for the next chapter.
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Blackwater Promises: The Last Supper
⚠️ CW: Emotional distress, marital conflict, pregnancy, hurricane-related anxiety. Read with care
Word Count: ~ 4K (Next chapter will be longer, I promise)
FDNO Fire Station 9
The coffee in the breakroom tasted like battery acid and anxiety.
Smoke sat at the scarred laminate table, his hands wrapped around a mug that said WORLD’S OKAYEST FIREMAN. He wasn't drinking. He was staring at the television mounted in the corner, his jaw set so tight his teeth ached.
On the screen, the weather map was bleeding red. The storm, now officially Katrina, was a swirling buzzsaw covering the entire Gulf of Mexico.
"...mandatory evacuation," the reporter was saying. "We are looking at a direct hit. This is the scenario we have feared for years."
"Man, turn that damn thing off," Smoke snapped.
Bo, a younger firefighter from Algiers, jumped. He was standing near the TV, holding the remote. "Just trying to hear the track, LT."
" The track is 'Here', Bo!" Smoke slammed his mug down. Coffee sloshed over the rim. "It's coming here. Watching it spin ain't gonna change the wind speed."
The room went quiet. The air was thick, smelling of turnout gear, floor wax, and fear.
Cornbread, a massive man who usually had a joke for every occasion, was sitting on the bench by the lockers. He looked small today. He was staring at his boots.
"I'm out, Smoke," Cornbread said quietly.
Smoke turned his head slowly. "What?"
"I'm taking the indefinite leave," Cornbread said, his voice shaking. "Therise... she ain't right, man. Ever since the flooding last year, she wakes up screaming if it rains too hard. She can't swim, Smoke. She terrified of the water."
Cornbread looked up, tears in his eyes.
"We live in Saint Bernard Parish, same as you. If that water comes... she gonna drown. I can't leave her there by herself while I'm out here sandbagging."
Smoke felt a flash of white-hot jealousy. It was an ugly feeling. He was jealous that Cornbread’s wife was scared. He was jealous that Therise wanted to leave.
"You gotta do what you gotta do," Smoke grunted, looking away.
"Grace and I are heading to Memphis," Bo added, stepping away from the TV. "We live in Algiers, so we got some elevation, but... she’s panicking. I promised her I’d get her out."
Smoke stood up. The chair scraped violently against the floor. He walked to the window and looked out at the gray sky.
He wanted to scream.
He wanted to be Bo. He wanted to be Cornbread. He wanted to pack his truck, grab Annie, and drive west to Lafayette where his mother was waiting with a dry house and a hot meal.
But he was married to Annie Moore.
Annie, who was five-foot-two but built like an Amazon in spirit. Annie, who could swim the Mississippi backwards. Annie, who carried the history of her family like a shield and treated the Ninth Ward like it was Jerusalem.
She wouldn't go. He had begged her this morning. He had yelled. He had pleaded. She just rubbed her belly and said, “I ain’t birthing this baby on a highway, Eli.”
He felt impotent. He was a Lieutenant. He could order men into burning buildings. He could cut the roof off a car in two minutes flat. But he couldn't make his pregnant wife get in a damn car.
"Attention on deck!"
The voice boomed from the doorway.
Delta Slim walked in.
At the station, he wasn't "Slim," the neighbor who drank spiked tea on the porch. He was Captain Williams. He was wearing his white shirt, crisp and pressed despite the humidity. He was the oldest man in the department, a living legend who had pulled people out of Betsy in '65.
Every man stood up. Even Cornbread.
Slim walked to the center of the room. He didn't look at the map. He looked at his men.
"I just got off the horn with the Chief," Slim said. His voice was gravel and iron. "Mayor Nagin is issuing the mandatory evacuation order in an hour. Contraflow is opening on I-10."
He paused, letting the weight of it settle.
"The Department is enacting the Emergency Protocol. But I know who you are. I know you got families. I know you got wives, babies, and mamas."
Slim looked at Cornbread specifically. "If you cannot be here—if your mind is on your house and not on the hose—you are a liability to me. You are a liability to your brothers."
He took a breath.
"If you are leaving, you leave now. Drop your badge on the desk. No shame. You go protect yours. But if you stay... you are staying for the duration. We will be locked in. We will be the last line of defense for this city. There is no going home for dinner."
Silence.
Cornbread walked up. He took his badge off his shirt. He placed it on the table. "I'm sorry, Cap. I can't let Therise drown."
"Go," Slim said gently. "Get her out."
Bo followed. "Grace is waiting in the car."
"Go."
Then, Slim looked at Smoke.
Smoke stood there, his chest heaving. He felt the conflict tearing him apart. The man in him—the provider, the protector, the head of the household—was screaming GO.
But the oath... the oath held him. And the sickening realization that even if he went home, Annie was staying. If he stayed on duty, at least he would have a radio. At least he would have a truck.
"Smoke?" Slim asked. "What's the word, Lieutenant?"
Smoke looked at his hands. He clenched them into fists.
"My wife is dug in," Smoke said, his voice thick with frustration. "She’s stubborn as a mule and she thinks this house is Noah’s Ark. She won't leave."
"Annie always was hard-headed," Slim nodded.
"I'm staying," Smoke spat out. It sounded like a curse. "I'm staying because if I leave, I'm just gonna be sitting in that house watching the water rise. At least here... at least here I can do something."
"You sure, son?" Slim asked.
"I'm sure," Smoke lied. He wasn't sure. He was terrified.
"I'm staying too," a voice said from the back.
Stack stepped forward. He looked at Smoke. He didn't look at the Captain.
Smoke turned on him. "No. You go. Take Mary. Get her the hell out of here."
"Mary's packing," Stack said calmly. "She’s going to Biloxi. She’ll be safe. I’m staying with you."
"I don't need a babysitter, Stack!" Smoke snapped, losing his temper. "I need you to get your pregnant wife to safety! Why is everyone in this family so damn stupid?"
Stack didn't flinch. He knew Smoke wasn't yelling at him. He was yelling at the situation.
"Mary made her choice," Stack said. "She’s going to her grandma's. I made my choice. I ain't leaving my brother in a Category Five."
Smoke stared at him. He wanted to punch him. He wanted to hug him.
"Fine," Smoke growled, turning back to the window. "Suit yourself. But when the water comes, don't come crying to me."
"I won't," Stack said.
Slim picked up the badges from the table. "Alright. Skeleton crew. Smoke, Stack, Jones, and Miller. We lock the doors in one hour. Make your phone calls. Say your prayers."
Smoke pulled his cell phone out of his pocket. He stared at the screen. He needed to call Annie. He needed to hear her voice.
But he was so angry—so terrified and so angry—that he couldn't bring himself to dial.
Why won't you just leave, Annie? he thought, staring at the gray sky. Why do you have to be so brave?
He shoved the phone back in his pocket and walked to the truck bay, kicking a trash can on his way out.
St Claude Avenue
The grocery store was a war zone.
It smelled of nervous sweat, stale air conditioning, and desperation. The aisles were clogged with shopping carts that had been turned into battering rams. People were shouting, fighting over the last loaf of Bunny Bread, and clearing shelves of batteries like locusts.
Annie Moore pushed her cart through the chaos with the serene, annoyed expression of a woman who just wanted to buy her groceries in peace.
"Excuse me," Annie said, nudging a man who was hoarding six cases of beer. "Coming through."
She wasn't panic-buying. She had her list. A few cans of soup. A bag of rice. Tea bags. Maybe a little Debbie cake if she felt like it.
"Annie, look at this!" Mary grabbed her arm, her eyes wide and frantic. She tossed a family-sized pack of AA batteries into Annie’s cart. "You need batteries for the flashlights. And candles. They out of candles, Annie! I saw a woman fighting over a Jesus candle in aisle four!"
Annie picked up the batteries and put them back on the shelf.
"We got flashlights, Mary. Smoke brings them home from the station. We got batteries in the junk drawer."
"But what if they run out?" Mary wheezed. She was hyperventilating, her chest heaving under her sundress. "They saying the power could be out for weeks!"
"Then we sit on the porch and tell stories," Annie said, rolling her eyes. She steered the cart toward the water aisle. "Stop letting these people spook you. They acting like they never seen rain before. It's New Orleans, Mary. We live in a bowl. It rains. The pumps turn on. The water goes down. End of story."
Annie stopped at the water aisle. It was decimated. There were only a few heavy cases left on the bottom shelf.
Annie sighed. She put a hand on her lower back, arching it to relieve the constant, dull ache of carrying a thirty-week passenger. She looked at the water. It looked miles away.
"Oof," she grunted, bending her knees, trying to squat without tipping over.
"Stop, stop, I got it!" Mary lunged forward, hoisting the heavy case of Dasani into Annie’s cart.
Mary stood up, breathless, brushing a strand of hair out of her face. She looked at Annie—really looked at her. She saw the swollen ankles. She saw the way Annie winced when she straightened up.
"Annie," Mary whispered, her voice cracking. "Please. Just look around."
Mary gestured to the store—the screaming mothers, the empty shelves, the frantic energy.
"This feels different," Mary said, tears welling in her eyes. "I got a bad feeling in my spirit, Annie. A real bad feeling. It ain't just rain this time."
Annie softened. She reached out and tucked a piece of hair behind Mary’s ear.
"You got pregnancy hormones, sugar," Annie soothed. "They make everything feel like the end of the world."
"Come to Biloxi with me," Mary begged. She grabbed Annie’s hands, squeezing them tight. "Please. I can't... I can't leave you here. I love you more than a sister-in-law, Annie. You my sister. If something happens to you..."
Annie squeezed back, but she didn't move. She stood planted on the linoleum floor like a tree.
"Nothing is gonna happen," Annie said firmly.
She looked around the store. She didn't see panic; she saw her people. She saw Mrs. Higgins, whose grandson just graduated high school. She saw the butcher who always saved the best pork chops for her.
She thought about Baton Rouge, where she had gone to college at Southern University. That’s where she met Elijah, tall and serious in the library. She thought about Lafayette, where Smoke’s people were from—all swamps and French accents and fiddle music.
Those places were nice. But they weren't home.
Home was the humidity. Home was the way the ground felt soft under your feet. Home was the cemetery where her grandparents were buried above ground because even in death, they refused to leave the city.
"I ain't running, Mary," Annie said, her voice dropping to that low, stubborn register that Smoke knew so well. "I was born in the Ninth. I watched my Granddaddy die in the bedroom I sleep in now. I watched Black folks build this city from the mud up. Some wind ain't pushing me out of my own house."
She rubbed her belly, feeling the baby turn.
"And this baby?" Annie smiled, fierce and proud. "She’s a NOLA baby. She gonna breathe this air. She gonna hear the brass bands ya. I ain't havin her in some sterile hospital in Mississippi. She come into the world here."
Mary stared at her. She saw the pride. She saw the deep, ancestral stubbornness that ran through Annie’s veins like the Mississippi River itself.
Mary’s shoulders slumped. She realized she had lost. She couldn't fight the city for Annie’s soul. The city had already won.
"You stubborn, Annie Moore," Mary whispered, wiping a tear. "You so damn stubborn."
"I know," Annie winked, turning the cart back toward the checkout. "Now come on. All this talk about disaster is making me hungry."
"Hungry?" Mary sniffled, following her. "For what? We got food at the house."
Annie paused, a dreamy look crossing her face.
"Boudin," Annie sighed. "I need some boudin and some saltine crackers. And maybe a grape soda."
Mary let out a wet, incredulous laugh. " The world is ending, and you want boudin."
"Baby wants what the baby wants," Annie said, marching toward the checkout line, head held high, ignoring the panic swirling around her.
The living room smelled like seasoned pork, rice, and secrets.
Annie and Mary were sprawled on the sofa, a butcher-paper-wrapped package of boudin between them. The TV was on mute, showing a silent weatherman gesturing frantically at a red blob, but neither woman was looking at it.
"Okay, but be for real," Mary whispered, picking a crumb of cracker off her lip. "How is it? With the... you know. The belly?"
Annie threw her head back and laughed, a rich, throaty sound. She took a swig of her grape soda.
"Girl, let me tell you," Annie smirked, lowering her voice. "It ain't normal. I’m feral. It’s like something took over my body. All I think about is him. His smell. His hands."
Mary’s eyes went wide. "Really? I thought you’d be tired."
"Tired?" Annie scoffed, biting into a cracker. "Last night? I woke him up crying. Real tears, Mary. He thought the baby was coming. I told him, 'No, I just need you to handle this.' I cried until he gave it to me rough. I scared him a little bit, I think."
Mary covered her mouth, giggling scandalized. "Annie! You are terrible!"
"I'm hormonal," Annie winked. "And he didn't complain once he got—"
SLAM.
The front door opened and hit the wall with a violence that rattled the picture frames.
The laughter died instantly.
Smoke walked in. He didn't say hello. He didn't smile. He looked like a thunderhead that had decided to walk on two legs. His FDNO work bag hit the floor with a heavy, thud. His boots followed, kicked off with unnecessary force.
Stack trailed in behind him, looking awkward, his eyes darting between his angry brother and the women on the couch.
Annie didn't flinch. She didn't even look up from her boudin.
"Hmm," she hummed, unbothered. "Door works fine, Eli. No need to test it."
Smoke ignored her. He walked to the coffee table, his shadow falling over them. He reached down and ripped a piece of boudin from the casing. He tossed it into his mouth, chewing aggressively while staring at the muted TV screen.
Then, he stopped chewing. His eyes narrowed. He swallowed hard.
"This is the spicy one," Smoke said. It wasn't a question.
"It has flavor," Annie corrected, reaching for another cracker.
"The doctor told you no spice," Smoke snapped. "He said your heartburn is out of control. He said bland foods."
"The doctor is a man," Annie said dismissively. "He don't know what my baby wants."
Smoke let out a heavy, ragged sigh. He leaned down, bringing his face inches from hers. The smell of smoke and frustration radiated off him.
"Have you lost the last piece of mind that is in that smooth-ass brain of yours?" he whispered, his voice dripping with venom.
Annie whipped her head around. Her eyes flashed.
"Excuse me?"
"You heard me," Smoke growled, standing up. "You sitting here eating spicy pork, drinking sugar water, acting like it’s a picnic while the whole damn city is packing up."
"Oh, here we go," Annie muttered. She stood up, grabbing her grape soda. "I ain't doing this with you, Elijah."
She walked toward the kitchen.
Stack quietly walked over to the coffee table.
He gave Mary a look that said Don't ask. Then, he shrugged and broke off a piece of the spicy boudin, chewing silently as he watched the show.
Smoke followed Annie into the kitchen.
"Don't walk away from me!" Smoke yelled.
Annie popped the tab on a fresh grape soda.
Ck-psssh.
The sound was aggressively refreshing. She took a long, slow sip, maintaining eye contact like she was daring him to smack the purple mustache off her upper lip.
"You being selfish, Annie!" Smoke shouted, wearing a hole in the kitchen linoleum. "It ain't just your life anymore! You got a baby in there! You being careless! You got Mary hyperventilating, you got Stack confused—"
"I got Stack confused?" Annie cut him off, her voice smooth as silk and sharp as a razor. "Stack is a thirty three-year-old man with a mortgage and a mustache. If he’s confused, that’s between him and Jesus."
"You acting like a damn child!" Smoke roared, gesturing at the wrapper. "Eating spicy pork! Drinking sugar water! Ignoring orders like I’m talking to a brick wall!"
Annie slammed the soda can down. Purple fizz hissed over the rim onto the counter.
"Cut the bullshit, Eli!" She switched effortlessly into that fast, chopping Creole, her neck rolling just a little. "Tell me what you really mad at! ya ? Because you left this house dis mornin with a grin and an empty nut sack! So why you returnin like ya been abstinent for centuries? You acting real tight for a man who got exactly what he wanted eight hours ago! Did it grow back that fast?"
In the living room, Mary choked on her water. Stack just shook his head, chewing faster.
Smoke stopped pacing. His chest was heaving.
He looked at her—his beautiful, stubborn, infuriating wife.
He tried to stay angry. He tried to hold onto the rage because the rage was the only thing keeping him from falling apart.
But then, his face crumbled.
"They locked it down," Smoke whispered.
Annie paused. Her anger faltered. "What?"
"Skeleton crew," Smoke said, his voice cracking. "Slim gave the order. We stay. We locked in for the duration."
Annie rolled her eyes, turning back to her soda. "So? You done storm shifts before, Eli. You stay, you sleep at the station, you come home when the wind stops. Same old song."
She tried to shoo him away with her hand. "Go take a shower. You stink like stress."
Smoke didn't move. He stepped in front of her, blocking her path.
Annie looked up, ready to snap at him again.
She froze.
There were tears in his eyes.
Real tears. Thick and heavy, pooling in his dark lashes.
Annie felt her heart stop. She had known Elijah Moore for ten years. She had seen him angry. She had seen him tired. She had seen him in pain.
She had only seen him cry once.
It was senior year at Southern. He had gotten blackout drunk at a Que party—Omega Psi Phi, gold boots and all—, he had picked up her little mentee, Pearline, spinning her around. It was innocent, but Annie had been young and jealous and had broken up with him on the spot. He had come to her dorm room the next morning, hungover and weeping, begging her to take him back.
That was the last time. Until now.
"Eli?" Annie whispered, her hand hovering in the air.
"I'm scared, Annie," Smoke choked out. The confession fell out of him like broken glass. "I ain't never been scared of a fire. I ain't never been scared of a storm. But I'm scared to leave you."
He grabbed her hands, pressing them against his chest.
"If I go to that station... and water comes... and you are here alone..." A tear slipped down his cheek. "I can't breathe, Annie. I feel like I'm dying."
Annie softened. The boudin, the soda, the stubbornness it all faded for a second. She reached up and wiped the tear from his face with her thumb.
"I ain't gonna be alone," she soothed, her voice low and gentle. "I got the house. I got the Lord. And I got the plan."
"The plan?" Smoke let out a wet, humorless laugh. "Your plan is to sit on the sofa and pray?"
"My plan is to wait for you," she said firmly. "Like I always do."
Smoke looked at her. He saw that she still didn't get it. She didn't understand the violence that was coming.
He pulled away from her. He walked to his work bag in the living room.
Stack and Mary watched, frozen, as Smoke reached into the bag.
He pulled out the axe.
It was a fireman’s axe. Heavy. Red-handled. The blade was scarred from breaking down doors.
He walked back into the kitchen. The sound of the heavy metal hitting the linoleum floor was terrifying. CLANG.
"You want a plan?" Smoke whispered, his eyes wild. "Here is the plan."
He pointed to the ceiling.
"If the water comes inside... you don't go to the basement. You don't get on the table. You go to the attic."
"Eli, you scaring me," Annie said, backing up against the sink.
"Good!" Smoke grabbed her face, forcing her to look at him. "You need to be scared! If you go to the attic, you take this axe. Do you hear me? You take it with you."
"Why?" Annie breathed.
"Because if the water keeps rising," Smoke said, pressing his forehead against hers, shaking with the force of his terror, "you are going to trap yourself. And if you are trapped, you are gonna drown. So you take this axe... and you chop your way to the sky."
Annie stared at him. She looked at the ugly red tool on her clean floor. Then she looked at her husband.
She saw the desperation.
She saw the love that was so big it was turning into fear.
She realized then that he wasn't trying to control her. He was trying to arm her.
"Okay," Annie whispered, her voice trembling. "I'll take the axe."
Smoke let out a shuddering breath. He kissed her.
It wasn't gentle. It was a collision. He kissed her like he was trying to breathe his own life into her lungs. He lifted her up, pressing her against the refrigerator.
Annie wrapped her arms around his neck, pulling him closer, needing to feel the solid weight of him. She let out a moan loud, desperate, and echoing in the sudden silence of the house.
In the living room, Stack stopped chewing. He looked at Mary. Mary looked at Stack.
We leaving," Stack whispered.
"Immediately," Mary agreed.
They grabbed their bags and scrambled out the front door, leaving the boudin, the grape soda, and the sound of a desperate, terrified love behind them.
Sunday, August 28, 7:30pm
For an hour, the house didn't feel like a bunker. It felt like a block party.
Annie had outdone herself.
The dining table was groaning under the weight of the feast. A platter of golden-fried chicken, seasoned so perfectly the skin shattered when you bit it. A massive pot of red beans and rice, thick and creamy with andouille sausage. A tray of pralines (pecan candy) cooling on wax paper.
Cornbread and Bo were there with their wives, Therise and Grace. Stack and Mary were squeezed onto a bench. Smoke sat at the head, a bottle of dark liquor in front of him.
"I’m telling you," Cornbread laughed, his mouth full of cornbread (ironically). "If the wind gets too high, I’m just gonna tie Therise to my back. I got enough gust for both of us!"
Therise smacked his arm, giggling. She was sipping a frozen strawberry daiquiri that Annie had whipped up in the blender. "You barely got gust to get off this chair, fool."
The room erupted in laughter. For a moment, the fear was gone. The humidity, the evacuation orders, the "cone of uncertainty"—it all dissolved in the smell of grease and sugar.
"Pass that bottle, Smoke," Bo said, holding out his glass. "One for the road. We hitting the road at midnight."
Smoke poured the drink. His hand was steady, but his eyes were tight. He was participating in the meal, but he wasn't in it. He was watching the television in the corner.
The Saints game highlights were interrupted. The screen cut to a podium.
The room didn't go quiet immediately. But then, the face of Mayor Ray Nagin filled the screen. He looked tired. He looked terrified.
"Ladies and gentlemen," Nagin said, leaning into the microphone. "I wish I had better news for you. But we are facing the storm that we have always feared."
The clinking of forks stopped. Therise put her daiquiri down.
"I have ordered a mandatory evacuation for the city of New Orleans," Nagin continued as Kathleen Blanco stood next to him. "We are looking at a catastrophic event. This is not a test. This is the real deal. Leave. Please, just leave."
The silence that followed was heavy. It sucked the air out of the room. The fried chicken suddenly looked cold.
Annie looked around the table. She saw the fear creeping back into Therise’s eyes. She saw Mary gripping Stack’s hand so hard her knuckles were white.
Annie hated the silence. She needed to break it.
"Lord, look at him," Annie chuckled, waving a chicken wing at the TV. "Ray Nagin acting like he Moses parting the Red Sea. 'Leave, leave.' Man, if he don't sit his dramatic behind down somewhere..."
She looked around for a laugh. "Right? He acting like we ain't seen rain before."
Nobody laughed.
Smoke turned his head. He looked at Annie.
It wasn't a loving look.
It wasn't the look from the bedroom.
It was a cold, dead stare.
It was the look of a man watching his wife dance on a grave.
"Smoke?" Annie whispered, her smile faltering.
"Is it funny?" Smoke asked. His voice was barely a whisper, but it carried across the table.
"I'm just saying, Lijah," Annie stammered. "He’s a politician. They get paid to scare people."
"He’s begging you to save your life," Smoke said. "And you making jokes ya?."
"Hey, hey," Stack interjected, sensing the violence in the air. He raised his cup. "Let's lighten up, Smoke. Annie just trying to keep spirits high. Let's have a toast. To the Saints."
Smoke looked at Stack.
Then he looked at the bottle of liquor sitting on the table.
With a sudden, violent backhand, Smoke swept the bottle off the table.
SMASH.
The glass shattered against the hardwood floor. Amber liquid sprayed over Mary’s shoes. The smell of alcohol filled the room, sharp and stinging.
Therise screamed. Annie froze.
Smoke stood up. He didn't say a word. He turned and walked out the front door, the screen slamming shut behind him.
Smoke gripped the railing. He was breathing hard, staring at the empty street. The wind was picking up now, rattling the chimes.
He hated himself for breaking the bottle. But he hated the laughter more.
The screen door opened.
Smoke didn't turn around. "Go back inside, Annette. I don't want to hear it."
"It ain't Annie."
Smoke stiffened. He turned his head.
Mary stood there.
Smoke and Mary had never been close. In Smoke’s mind, Mary was "bougie." She was a light-skinned girl from a Creole family in the 7th Ward—the kind of family that checked the paper bag test. He always felt she looked down on the Moores, on their dark skin and their rough, Lafayette ways. He thought she was high-maintenance trouble for Stack.
"What you want, Mary?" Smoke grunted, turning back to the street. "You come to tell me I ruined dinner?"
"I came to tell you to breathe," Mary said softly. She walked up to the railing, standing next to him but not too close. She smelled like expensive perfume and fear.
"I can't breathe," Smoke admitted, his voice rough. "She won't listen, Mary. She thinks she's stronger than the water."
"She is," Mary said.
Smoke looked at her, surprised. "You supposed to be on my side. You the one leaving."
"I am leaving," Mary said, rubbing her arms against the wind. "Because I'm scared. Because my spirit is shaking. But Annie?"
Mary looked toward the door where the laughter used to be.
"You gotta understand something about Annie, Smoke. You see her stubbornness as pride. But it ain't pride."
"Then what is it?"
"It's love," Mary said. "Annie don't just live in this city. She is the city. Her grandmama’s blood is in that soil. Her daddy’s sweat is in these beams. Asking her to leave this house is like asking her to cut off her own arm."
Smoke stared at her. He had never heard Mary talk like this. He always thought she was shallow. He realized he was wrong.
"She’s carrying my child, Mary," Smoke whispered. "I don't care about the soil. I care about them."
"I know," Mary said. She reached out and placed a trembling hand on Smoke’s forearm. It was the first time she had ever touched him with genuine affection. "But you can't break her spirit to save her body, Eli. If you drag her out of here kicking and screaming... you might save her life, but you'll kill the thing that makes her Annie."
Smoke looked down at her hand. It was pale against his dark skin.
"Trust her intuition," Mary whispered. "Annie feels things deep. If she says she needs to stay... maybe she knows something we don't. Maybe God told her to hold the line."
Smoke swallowed the lump in his throat. He looked at the house. He imagined Annie inside, embarrassed, cleaning up the glass.
"You take care of Stack," Smoke said, his voice thick. "You get him to Biloxi. You keep him safe."
"I will," Mary promised. She squeezed his arm. "And you take care of my sister. Don't let her drown, Smoke."
"Never," Smoke said.
They stood there for a moment—the 9th Ward fireman and the 7th Ward Creole girl—united by the terrible weight of loving a Moore brother.
"Go on," Smoke said gently. "Go finish your food. I'll be in a minute."
Mary nodded. She wiped a tear from her cheek and went back inside.
Smoke stayed on the porch. He looked at the sky. It was pitch black now. No stars.
He reached into his pocket and touched the key to the shed where he kept the axe.
"Trust her," he whispered to the wind. "Okay, Annie. We do it your way."
Sunday, August 28, 2005 11:00 PM
The wind had teeth now. It whipped down N. Claiborne Avenue, stripping dead leaves from the oak trees and tumbling empty trash cans down the street. The sky was a bruised purple-black, suffocating the city.
In the driveway, Mary’s red Honda Civic was idling. The headlights cut through the gloom, illuminating the swirling dust.
Mary sat in the driver’s seat. She looked small, pale, and sick. Her hands gripped the steering wheel so hard her knuckles were white.
Stack stood by the open window. He was leaning in, his forehead pressed against hers.
"You call me when you cross state lines," Stack ordered, though his voice was shaking. "Don't stop for nothing. If you hit traffic on the I-10, you stay in the car. You lock the doors."
"Come with me, Stack," Mary pleaded, tears streaming down her face. "Please. Just get in. Forget the station. Forget the hero stuff. Just get in."
Stack closed his eyes. He kissed her—hard, desperate, tasting of salt and terror.
"I can't," he murmured against her lips. "I can't leave Eli. You know I can't."
He pulled back, placing a hand on her belly. "You keep him safe. Tell him his daddy loves him."
"It's a girl," Mary choked out. "I know it's a girl."
Stack smiled, but it looked like a wound. "Then tell her I love her too. I'll see you Tuesday. I'll drive down and pick you up."
"Tuesday," Mary whispered.
Smoke stood ten feet back, near the porch steps. His arms were crossed over his chest. His jaw was set so tight his teeth ached. He wasn't saying goodbye. He was angry. He was angry that Mary was leaving alone. He was angry that Stack was staying. He was angry that his own wife was currently ignoring him.
Smoke looked toward the porch.
Annie was there.
She wasn't crying. She wasn't waving.
She was calmly, methodically taking down the hanging ferns.
She moved with a slow, deliberate rhythm, ignoring the wind whipping her skirt around her legs. She unhooked a fern. She set it down by the door. She unhooked the wind chimes. She set them down. She didn't look at the car. She didn't look at Smoke.
She was acting like she was tidying up for a dinner party, not preparing for a catastrophe. It was a silent, stubborn performance of normalcy.
"Look at her," Smoke muttered to himself, disgusted. "Just... unbothered."
Stack pulled away from Mary’s window. He wiped his face aggressively, trying to hide the tears. He tapped the roof of the Honda.
Bang. Bang.
"Go," Stack ordered, his voice breaking. "Go now, Mary."
Mary nodded. She didn't look back. She put the car in reverse.
The Honda backed out. The gears ground slightly. The car swung around, headlights sweeping across the front porch, blinding Annie for a split second.
Annie didn't wave. She didn't smile. She just shielded her eyes with her hand, waited for the light to pass, and then picked up a potted geranium to move it closer to the wall.
She was refusing to say goodbye.
Because saying goodbye made it real.
Stack and Smoke stood side-by-side in the middle of the street. They watched the red taillights shrink. They watched them turn the corner onto Tennessee Street. They watched them fade until they were just two bloody pinpricks in the dark, and then... nothing.
The brothers were alone.
The silence between them was heavy, filled only by the low moan of the wind in the power lines.
"She's safe," Smoke said, though he didn't believe it.
"Yeah," Stack whispered. He looked at the empty driveway. "She's safe."
Thunder rolled, shaking the pavement beneath their boots. A heavy drop of rain hit Smoke’s cheek. Then another.
"Let's go," Smoke said, his voice cold.
They walked back toward the house.
Annie was waiting by the screen door. She had finished moving the plants. She stood with her arms crossed, resting on top of her belly.
"They gone?" she asked. Her tone was casual. Too casual.
"Yeah, Annie," Stack said quietly. "They gone."
"Well," she said, opening the door and turning her back on them. "I'm going to bed. Don't stay up all night watching the news. Y'all gonna drive yourselves crazy."
She walked into the house, leaving the door unlatched for them.
Smoke stopped on the porch. He stared at her retreating back. He wanted to shake her. He wanted to scream.
"She thinks this is a game," Smoke hissed to Stack.
"She's scared, Eli," Stack said wearily, walking past him. "Let her be."
Smoke followed Stack inside. The house was quiet. The smell of the fried chicken and burnt sugar was still in the air, a ghost of the dinner they hadn't finished.
Smoke walked to the door. He locked the handle. Then he slid the heavy brass deadbolt home.
Click.
The sound echoed through the house like a jail cell closing.
Smoke looked at the axe leaning in the corner of the hallway. He looked at the closed door of his bedroom, where his wife was pretending to sleep.
He didn't go to the bedroom. He sat down on the couch, fully dressed in his uniform, and stared at the dark ceiling.
Outside, the rain began to fall. Hard.
A/N:
Thank you all so much for the kind words, comments, and reblogs. I’m honestly overwhelmed—in the best way—by the support after the first chapter. I read every single comment, like, and reblog, and it truly means more to me than you know.
This story is a heavy one, so please read with care and take breaks if you need to. I’m so grateful that y’all are holding this story with me as I write it.
I’d love to hear your thoughts—how are you feeling about Annie and her stubbornness so far? And what about Mary stepping in as the unexpected voice of reason?
Thank you for being here. I hope you’re looking forward to the next chapter 🤍
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Blackwater Promises: Humidity
Content Warning: Sexual intimacy; pregnancy; emotional tension
| Read with care. |
August 23, 2005 The Lower Ninth Ward, New Orleans
The heat in the Lower Ninth didn't just sit on you; it owned you. It was a physical thing, a heavy, wet hand resting on the back of your neck, smelling of river mud, jasmine, and asphalt.
Inside the small back bedroom on N. Claiborne Avenue, the air conditioning unit was rattling in the window, dying a slow, noisy death against the August sun.
Elijah "Smoke" Moore was shirtless. His brown skin was slick with sweat, gleaming like polished mahogany in the afternoon light. The muscles in his back shifted and coiled like snakes under the skin as he reached up with the roller, coating the wall in a shade of yellow that Annie had insisted on.
"Lemon Meringue," she called it. To Elijah, it looked like the inside of a school bus, but he would paint the whole house neon green if she asked him to.
"You missed a spot."
Smoke didn't turn around immediately. He let the roller rest against the wall. His shoulders rose and fell with a heavy breath, the sweat dripping down his spine and disappearing into the waistband of his low-slung work pants.
"I don't miss, Cher," he rumbled. His voice was a low vibration that shook the small room.
He turned slowly.
Annie stood in the doorway. She was supposed to be resting, feet up, fan on. Instead, she was standing there watching him, wearing one of his white undershirts that stretched tight over her thirty-week bump and ended just mid-thigh.
She was barefoot, her toes painted a chipped fire-engine red. Her hair was wrapped tight in a silk scarf to save her edges from the devilish humidity. Her skin was glowing with that specific, radiant sheen that only pregnant women in the 504 seemed to master—she didn't look sticky, she looked glazed. A mix of cocoa butter and August heat. Dewy, salty, and edible.
"You staring, Mrs. Moore," he said, stepping off the ladder.
"Maybe I like the view," Annie murmured, not moving as he stalked toward her.
He loomed over her. Smoke was a big man broad, calloused, built from lifting beams and breaking down doors. But when he reached her, his hands were terrifyingly gentle.
He placed his paint-flecked hands on her hips, his thumbs rubbing circles into the soft skin through the fabric. The heat coming off him was intoxicating. He smelled like paint fumes, musk, and hard work.
"You suppose to be off ya feet," he whispered, stepping into her space until her belly pressed against his abs.
"My feet fine," Annie breathed, looking up at him. She reached up, tracing the line of sweat on his chest with her fingernail. "It's the rest of me that's bothered."
Smoke groaned, a low sound in his throat. He dipped his head, burying his face in the crook of her neck. He inhaled deeply, biting lightly at the sensitive cord of her muscle.
"You dangerous, Cher," he mumbled against her skin. "You know that? I got work to do."
"The wall ain't going nowhere," she said, tilting her head back to give him better access. "But I might if ya don't kiss me."
"Doctor say elevation." Smoke whispered in her neck as he peppered kisses down her neck.
"Doctor ain't here," Annie challenged, her eyes dropping to the V-lines of his hips. "And the view is better in here."
He loomed over her, trapping her between his body and the doorframe. The heat radiating off him was intoxicating. He smelled of turpentine, musk, and hard, honest work.
Smoke captured her mouth. It wasn't a sweet kiss. It was a claiming. It was wet, heavy, and deep. His tongue swept into her mouth, tasting the lemonade she’d been drinking, tasting her defiance. He kissed her with the desperation of a man who knows, deep in his bones, that nothing this good lasts forever.
He lifted her effortlessly, his hands cupping her heavy backside, and sat her on the drop-cloth-covered dresser. Annie wrapped her legs around his waist, pulling him flush against her, ignoring the paint on his pants.
"Eli," she gasped, breaking the kiss to breathe. "You gonna get paint on me."
"I don't care," Smoke growled, his forehead resting against hers. His eyes were blown wide, black and bottomless. "Let me mark you. Let the whole world know you mine."
He closed his eyes as he felt the baby kick against his hand.
"She know her Daddy's home," Smoke smiled, the tension in his jaw finally breaking.
"She knows her Daddy is procrastinating," Annie teased, though her voice was breathless.
Smoke chuckled, leaning in to kiss the corner of her mouth, then her jaw, then the pulse point of her throat. "I ain't procrastinating. I'm taking a union break."
"Mmm," Annie hummed, closing her eyes as his lips traveled lower, kissing the top of her chest. "Longest break I ever seen."
"Management can file a complaint," Smoke murmured, his hands roaming over her curves, memorizing her.
For a moment, the world outside didn't exist. There was just the sticky heat of the room, the smell of lemon paint, and the heavy, electric weight of a love that had survived everything so far.
"Lijah," she gasped, breaking the kiss to breathe. "The window is open."
"Let 'em look," Smoke growled, his forehead resting against hers. His eyes were blown wide, black and bottomless. "Let the whole parish know you mine."
Smoke pulled back, breathless, his eyes searching hers. "You want me to stop?"
Annie looked at him—at the sweat on his brow, the paint on his hands, the adoration in his eyes.
"Don't you dare," she whispered.
The lust had settled into a comfortable, simmering domesticity.
Smoke was at the sink, scrubbing the dried "Lemon Meringue" paint off his knuckles with a stiff brush. The water turned a pale yellow as it swirled down the drain.
Annie was at the stove, stirring a heavy pot of red beans that had been soaking since yesterday. The smell was rich and grounding—thyme, bay leaf, garlic, and the sharp vinegar tang of hot sauce.
It smelled like Tuesday in the Ninth Ward.
It smelled like safety.
"Pearline called again," Annie said, not turning around. She tapped the wooden spoon on the side of the pot. Tap. Tap. Tap. "She say the news is talkin about a cone. Say it shifted west."
Smoke paused, the scrub brush hovering over his knuckles. He looked at his reflection in the dark window above the sink.
"Pearline is an alarmist, Annie," he said, shaking his head. "It's barely a Tropical Depression. It's in the Bahamas. She think a thunderstorm is the apocalypse."
"She’s packing the car, Eli," Annie said softly. "She say the pressure is droppin. Mary got her spooked."
Smoke shut off the water. He dried his hands on a dish towel, his movements slow and deliberate. He walked up behind her, wrapping his massive arms around her waist, resting his chin on her shoulder. He breathed her in cocoa butter and spices.
He looked at the pot of beans; thick, creamy, and bubbling slowly.
"You wanna leave?" Smoke asked quietly against her ear.
Annie stopped stirring. She leaned back into him, letting him take her weight.
"And go where?" she scoffed softly. "Houston? Mississippi?! Sit in a motel room fo three days with a rigid back, spending money, while my beans spoil?!"
She turned in his arms to face him. Her eyes were fierce. This was the Annie he knew. The Annie who was born in the Ninth, who knew the smell of the river better than she knew her own blood type.
"This is my kitchen, Eli," she said, poking a finger into his chest. "My Grandmama cooked in this kitchen. I ain't running from some wind. We got shutters. We got supplies. We got you."
Smoke looked down at her. He admired her grit. He loved that she was hard-headed; it was one of the reasons he married her. But the fireman in him—the part that knew fire and water didn't respect history—felt a prickle of unease on the back of his neck.
He caught her hand, stopping her from poking him again. He held it against his chest, over his beating heart.
"If it gets to a Three," Smoke said seriously, holding her gaze. "If the pressure drops and it hits a Cat Three, we talk about it. Okay? No stubbornness. We talk."
Annie stood on her tiptoes. She kissed him—a quick, confident peck on the lips that tasted of salt and promise.
"If it hits a Three, you can board up the windows," she conceded. "But I ain't leaving my house. And I ain't leaving you."
Smoke sighed, the tension draining out of his shoulders. He pulled her tight, kissing the top of her head-wrap.
"You stubborn woman," he murmured into the silk.
"I'm a Moore," she smirked against his chest, her hands rubbing his lower back. "Stubborn is on the marriage certificate. Right next to 'For better or worse.'"
Smoke laughed, a low rumble in his chest, but he held her a little tighter than usual. He looked out the kitchen window.
The sun had set. The sky was turning a strange, bruised purple over the rooftops. It was beautiful, but it looked like a bruise.
"Yeah," he whispered, closing his eyes. "I guess it is."
Smoke and Annie sat on the porch swing. The air had cooled slightly, but the humidity was still thick enough to chew. Annie was tucked under Smoke’s arm, her legs thrown over his lap. He was rubbing her swollen ankles with a slow, rhythmic pressure.
"That feel good?" he asked, his voice low.
"Mmm. Don't stop," Annie murmured, eyes closed.
Across the street, Pearline was pacing, her radio crackling with static.
"I'm telling ya, Smoke!" Pearline shouted, waving the antenna. "They say it's speeding up! It's gonna be a Category Three by morning!"
"Pearline, turn that mess off," Delta Slim rumbled from the porch next door. The old man was rocking slowly, a mason jar of sweet tea (spiked with bourbon) balanced on his knee. "You gonna give the baby anxiety."
"I ain't worried about the baby," Pearline snapped. "I'm worried about the Gulf!"
Smoke didn't look up. He kept massaging Annie’s ankle, his thumb digging into the arch of her foot just the way she liked.
"Let her talk, Slim," Smoke said easily. "Pearline just likes the sound of her own voice."
"I heard that!" Pearline huffed, marching back inside her house.
Slim chuckled, a dry, rattling sound. He looked over at the couple. He saw the way Smoke was looking at Annie—like she was fine crystal from Royal Street he was terrified of shattering. He saw the way Annie was leaning into him, trusting him to hold her up.
"Y'all make a old man jealous," Slim said, lighting a cigarette. "Young love. Thinking y'all invincible."
"We ain't invincible, Slim," Annie said softy, opening her eyes. She looked at Smoke. "We just... anchored."
Smoke stopped rubbing her foot. He squeezed her hand. His face was serious again, that dark intensity returning.
"Ain't nothing moving this house," Smoke said, looking at the street. "And ain't nothing moving us."
He leaned down and kissed her temple. It lingered. It was possessive.
"I promise," he whispered into her hair.
The spell was broken by the sound of a car door slamming. Hard.
"I don't care what he say, Stack! Open the trunk!"
Annie pulled away from Smoke’s chest, breathless. "That's Mary."
Smoke sighed, resting his forehead against Annie’s for a second before stepping back. "Sounds like they starting early today."
Stack’s red Honda Civic was parked crooked in the driveway.
Mary was standing by the trunk. She was small, beautiful, and vibrating with anxiety. She was holding a grocery bag so tight her knuckles were white.
"Baby, just listen to me," Stack said, reaching for her. "We don't need to load the car yet. It's just a watch. It ain't even a warning."
Mary screamed, pulling away from his hand. "My sister called from Miami. She say this thing is a monster. It’s size of the whole Gulf!"
"And it's three days away!" Stack shouted back, his patience snapping. "Why you always gotta go to ten? Why can't we just wait and see?"
"Because waiting kills people!" Mary threw the grocery bag into the backseat. A jar of pickles shattered, but she didn't flinch. "You want to wait? Fine. You wait. I'm going to Biloxi."
"Mary, stop," Stack pleaded. He looked embarrassed, glancing up at the porch where Smoke and Annie were watching. "You making a scene."
"Oh, I'm making a scene?" Mary laughed, a high, hysterical sound. "I'm trying to save our lives, and you worried about the neighbors?"
She looked up and saw Smoke. Her face hardened.
Smoke walked down the stairs, Annie waddling carefully behind him.
"Everything good?" Smoke asked, his voice calm, steady. The big brother voice.
Mary turned on him. She pointed a shaking finger at his chest.
"You," she spat. "This is your fault."
Smoke blinked. "Mary, slow down. What did I do?"
"You got him brainwashed, Eli," Mary hissed, tears welling up in her eyes. "He won't leave because you won't leave. He thinks he has to be a hero because his twin is a hero."
"Mary—" Stack warned, stepping forward.
"No!" Mary spun on her husband. "I see it, Stack! You waiting for him to give the order. You can't even take a piss without checking if Smoke approves it first!"
The air on the porch went cold. Even the cicadas seemed to stop buzzing.
Smoke looked at Stack. Stack looked at his shoes, his jaw tight. He didn't deny it. That was the problem. He didn't deny it.
"Mary," Smoke said softly. "Nobody is staying yet. We just tracking the storm. If it gets bad, I'll tell him to go."
"I don't need you to tell him to save his wife!" Mary screamed, her voice cracking. "He’s supposed to be my husband, not your soldier!"
She choked on a sob, covering her face with her hands. "I'm pregnant, Stack. We been trying for two years. I finally... I finally took the test this morning."
The silence that followed was deafening.
Stack froze. His face went pale, then filled with a sudden, overwhelming wonder. "You... you pregnant?"
"Yes," Mary whispered, looking at him with terrified eyes. "And I ain't raising a baby alone because you wanted to play fireman in a hurricane."
Annie stepped forward then. She didn't say anything. She just wrapped her arms around Mary. Mary collapsed into her, sobbing into Annie’s neck.
"Shh, shh," Annie cooed, rubbing Mary’s back. "It's okay. We got you."
Stack stood there, paralyzed.
He looked at Smoke.
He looked helpless.
He loved Mary—God, he loved her—but he didn't know how to talk to her the way Smoke talked to Annie. He didn't know how to calm the storm inside her.
Smoke walked over to his brother.
He gripped Stack’s shoulder hard.
"Go inside," Smoke murmured. "Fix this."
Stack nodded. He walked over and gently touched Mary’s arm. "Baby. Come inside. Please."
Mary pulled away from Annie. She wiped her face, but she didn't look at Stack with love. She looked at him with exhaustion.
"I'm going inside to pack," Mary said coldly. "You decide if ya coming with me."
She walked past him, into the house. The screen door slammed shut.
Stack stood alone on the porch. He looked at Smoke, his eyes pleading for an answer.
"Go," Smoke said.
Stack followed her inside.
Annie sighed, leaning heavily against the railing. She looked at Smoke. The sensual heat from the bedroom was gone, replaced by a heavy, ominous dread.
Smoke looked at the sky. The sun was setting, turning the clouds a bruised, ugly purple. He felt the weight of it then. The weight of being the older brother. The weight of being the Lieutenant. The weight of the axe he hadn't picked up yet.
"We'll be fine," Smoke lied. He reached for her hand, needing to touch her, needing to anchor himself.
A/N: And so it begins. I had such a great time writing this chapter and setting the scene. I hope you guys enjoyed reading it just as much!
Drop a comment below and let me know your thoughts.
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I dont think I can take another heartbreak, but I’m fine stick beside ya !
Buckle Up honey, No promises 🫣🩵🩵