The lead story on page one
of the March 18, 1981 edition of The Bellevue Gazette is headlined in
boldface “Inside an inferno,” with a pull-quote beneath it: “The sensation
resembles the early stages of a bad sunburn.” The byline is mine and here is my
lede: “Entering a house trailer on fire is like walking into a flaming Molotov
cocktail.” No, it’s not. That’s a lousy metaphor and I was probably reaching
after cheap drama. I was twenty-eight and had been working for two months as
the city reporter for my first daily newspaper. Bellevue is in north central
Ohio, about seventy miles west of Cleveland.
The Bellevue and Clyde firefighters
had invited me to take part in a training exercise. In a field near Clyde (the
boyhood home of Sherwood Anderson and the model for his Winesburg), they set
fire to five abandoned house trailers and practiced firefighting
techniques. I suited up and entered one of the burning trailers: “I donned fire
gear: heavy jacket, gloves, mask, visored helmet and air tank. You feel like a
beached scuba diver. The gear is outsized and bulky, and to compensate you
develop a swaggering sort of Popeye walk.”
Like most children I had
been a budding pyromaniac, burning model airplanes, yellow jackets’ hives and
autumn leaves. Walking into a burning trailer was a boyhood dream come true: “There
is no air. The atmosphere one is accustomed to breathing has been replaced with
searing, pressurized smoke. To breathe without a mask is suicide. When ignited,
the plastics which line our environment turned into volatile gas. In minutes, a
home is turned into a gas chamber.”
I entered the trailer with
a firefighter named Ken Rospert. At one point in the story, for no good reason
I can think of, I switched from past tense to present: “Rospert set off a flare
and tossed it on a mattress lying on the floor. Vision is already obscured with
mask fog. The fire smolders and Rospert ignites another flare.” The feature story
doesn’t much embarrass me except for that muddled inconsistency and the
inaccurate lede. I remember being frightened for the first time at this point
in the story:
“The heat grows in
intensity. My ears tingle, even beneath the padded ear flaps in the helmet. The
sensation resembles the early stages of a bad sunburn.”
I tasted smoke and started
to gag. The mask wasn’t properly fitted to my face. My forehead felt as though
it were burning, and a wave of flame rolled
along the ceiling. “The fire caught all at once, exploding like a liquid
bomb. We both drop to the floor. [Again, note the arbitrary shifting of
tense.]” I like this: “The only instinct is foreward [sic] motion – and
deep, agitated breathing.” Another firefighter, a big guy I remember well,
Denny Hay, pulled me out of the trailer. I was coughing and sputtering and when
I turned around, I could see the trailer was, as they say, “fully engulfed.”
That’s when three real firefighters entered the trailer, pulling a hose.
Then I went back to the
office, wrote my story and processed the photos. The feature was published in
the next day’s edition and won a prize in the UPI newspaper
contest for Ohio.
The quoted passage at the
top is from one of my favorite Max Beerbohm essays, “The Fire” (Yet Again,
1909). At its best, Beerbohm’s prose is poetry without being falsely “poetic” –
concise, nuanced, ironic, precise. Consider these lines from the second
paragraph, in which Beerbohm wonders at how wonderous fire must have seemed
when we first saw it as children:
“There are so many queer
things in the world that we have no time to go on wondering at the queerness of
the things we see habitually. It is not that these things are in themselves
less queer than they at first seemed to us. It is that our vision of them has
been dimmed. We are lucky when by some chance we see again, for a fleeting
moment, this thing or that as we saw it when it first came within our ken. We
are in the habit of saying that 'first impressions are best,' and that we must
approach every question 'with an open mind'; but we shirk the logical
conclusion that we were wiser in our infancy than we are now.”
Beerbohm was born on this
date, Aug. 24, in 1872.
Not sure if you knew the meaning of "volatile" back then. A bugaboo of mine. Many people still fancy it as a choice substitute for "inflammable," or, metaphorically, "hot-tempered." In fact it just means "quickly dispersed."
ReplyDeleteIn the decade after you wrote your article, the PBS series Nova ran a couple of good episodes about fires and firefighting. One of them I think took for its title a slogan poularised in safety training courses, "Learn Not to Burn." Whatever the title, it went into the calculus of those plastics in our homes and the gases released, and the scary moment when a room on fire becomes totally engulfed.
The other episode was called something like "Hunt for the Serial Arsonist," a coolly factual documentary that turns into an intellectual thriller with a kicker of a twist.