posted on Dec, 23 2008 @ 07:18 PM
Lucy was stunned, Michael was enraged, the unknown man was fearful. He needn’t have been however for Michael turned and walked away. Lucy called for
him to stop; she had to explain everything to him, she had to tell him the affair had not been going on long.
She did love Michael though, she loved him more than any man she may have been having an affair with, but sometimes Michael reminded her too much
of her students. The same thing which had attracted her to him then repelled her from him at times of intimacy.
Michael walked back to his car, furious, but not with the man, oh no, never with the man. He could understand only too well why the man liked
Lucy, to Michael Lucy had always been perfect. No, he was angry with himself, he thought he knew Lucy, but something so major had happened between
them and he hadn’t even noticed. He didn’t even know Lucy anymore, he never thought she was capable of something like this, and he wasn’t wrong
in feeling this way. It was an act completely out of character for Lucy; nobody could have seen it coming.
It may have been of some comfort to Michael to know how Lucy really felt, but he could no longer convince himself she felt anything for him. He could
only see the bad in the situation, and now he had two whole days of time when he would be able to do nothing but think of Lucy, think of the times
they had spent together, think of the love they shared, look at the photos from Paris, remember….remember better times…
DAY 1// 0800 HOURS
63 Miller road Sampton
Michael awoke at this time, a single fresh tear sliding down his face, though he knew more would soon follow and so decided it was time for a long
shower. He would not notice the tears if he was in the shower, it was a place he might gain at least some respite from the endless tears and
depression.
// 0830 HOURS
After the shower Michael prepared a late breakfast, nothing fancy, just some cereal from the nearby supermarket. Usually Michael could not stand the
taste of cereal, he only had a box because of… well you know, because of Lucy. He did not care though, he couldn’t taste anything, he couldn’t
feel anything, he couldn’t move on.
// 1000 HOURS
It was about now that Michael gave up on possibly hoping achieving anything today; instead he resigned himself to watching day time television. The
day went by slowly, with brief periods of normality, grossly overwhelmed by floods of tears and curses. More than once Michael was on the verge of
suicide, he had even reached the point of writing a letter.
//2200 HOURS
Michael went to sleep…
The next day was much of the same, though Michael no longer verged on suicide, he was not getting over it by any means. He was merely deciding that
this person must have made her happy, and that’s all Michael wanted after all; for Lucy to be happy.
Monday was a culture shock for Michael upon his return to the military base, him having missed the political mess that had caused the fire-fighters to
strike. Though he was soon assigned to a ‘fire team’ and sent to do some basic training. He needn’t question why the fire-fighters had gone on
strike; he knew the government was only working for the benefit of its own members, and not of the country. It had happened before and it would happen
again, perhaps the one good thing that had come from the governments complete lack of leadership was Britain’s troops being brought back home,
albeit to deal with problems that the police, and indeed fire-service should have been dealing with.
By Lunchtime Michael and his team were already in a fire station joking about the ‘thoroughness’ of their training and how it would prepare them
for whatever they might face. Though secretly of course, this humour was being used to cover the fear they all shared; going into a burning building
is dangerous enough, the lack of knowledge and anybody who had done the job before made it an incredibly high risk job. But nevertheless, they knew
that many men women and children relied on them to save their lives, and they were all prepared to die for that.
If only it never came to it…
The first call of the day sent horror into ever mans eyes, or the five teams stationed at the fire-station, three had been called out, with a further
two teams being called from another station.
The commanding officer gave a small ‘pep talk’ though ended it on a highly serious note.
“Somebody will die today, it might be someone trapped in the building or it might be one of us, but somebody will die today. This fire is too big to
claim no lives. You have all been thrown into this situation very quickly and we all know you haven’t had half the training you need. I’ll regret
this, but, if you don’t want to come then go now. I shan’t stop you.”
The three teams stood there awkwardly staring at each other, and then back to their commanding officer. The government had made military punishment
much harder, it was not uncommon any more for a soldier to be shot for insubordination; the sergeant would be killed if anyone found out what he had
just said. Though this did not change any of their minds, innocent people depended on them, and none of them would ever forgive themselves if they
did not go on this fateful mission.
The roads were unusually empty, the fire engines the army had stolen from the fire service reached their target in mere minutes, oh yes they reached
their target. A large secondary school. The large secondary school Lucy worked at.
Michael’s eyes widened with terror, he didn’t know how, but he knew she was still in the building, just as he knew he would save her… and
that he would be the one man who died today.
As the team disembarked the vehicle Michael found a team from the other fire station who were already there, he of course asked if anyone was inside
to which the soldier replied with sorrow in his eyes.
“A woman went in to save a kid, she got him out threw a toilets window, but then the frame gave way and she got trapped. The flow above went down on
the window after, we can’t get to her… it’s, it’s Lucy, Mike; we can’t save her”
The man did try to apologise to Michael, but he never heard it, he had already started sprinting towards the front doors of the building. He
couldn’t hear the shouts behind him, the roar of the flames drowning them out.
As he got through the front doors he was met by a group of small fires but was surprised out how the quickly disappeared. The school hardly seemed
touched.