Hey Line.
I've taken a brief (briefly long) leave of absence from you.
I'm sorry about that. 
(Did you imagine me saying that in a really creepy way? 'Cuz you should have. It's only natural.)
like I said.
and with me I've brought you some fresh content.
there's more.
It's not the usual relationship advice.
This is a little broader.
and knowing it's ok to be scared.
It's a non-fiction narrative short.
You should be.
Here it is.
Most people assume calling 911 is only for emergencies; 
while I admire their integrity, there are many others with a less 
discerning dial finger.  In five years as a professional firefighter 
I’ve been called to a parrot “stuck” in a tree he flew into, rescued 
ducklings from a storm drain three separate times, responded to a 
“parachutist drowning in a river” that was a kite boarder, and moved a 
couch at a retirement home.  And while calls as ridiculous as these are 
few and far between, there’s one specific type just as non-emergent, and
 far more common.
Whether a sprinkler pipe bursts in a warehouse, a kid pulls
 the alarm handle in a store, or a residential fire alarm is activated 
by burnt pop-tarts, it’s safe to count on at least one false alarm per 
shift.  You show up prepared for the world to be on fire, half expecting
 to see a blushing mother and her toddler at an alarm pull station, walk
 around looking serious, and try not to knock anything over with your 
air-pack or look winded carrying 100 pounds of gear.  In the end you 
reset the alarm that started blaring before you got there and give 
everyone an understanding smile as you leave.  These are some of the 
most benign calls we respond to, so of course, it had to be a false 
alarm that became the self-effacing career moment I can never decide to 
laugh at, or blush over.
The setting was perfect to the point of cliché: middle of October, 
thick cloud cover, dim moon; I feel like there may have been a black cat
 walking past the station.  I was curled up (literally, because it’s not
 possible to sprawl out on a twin bed) in Station 84 after a long day of
 nonsense when the tones sounded around 2:30 am.  I clicked on along 
with the lights, stumbled into the bays and slipped into my gear.  We 
were soon out the door and heading to an alarm in a residence, reported 
by a neighbor, and from the moment the officer hit the on scene button, 
the house before us terrified me.
This was the house where Saw was filmed, where Charles Manson lived, and
 where the Masons performed their annual blood sacrifice.  I can’t 
support any of that, but those were the vibes; something was very wrong 
with this structure.  For one thing, it was literally the creepy old 
house on the block.  This house stood decades before the introduction of
 subdivisions, and years before modern builders attempted to integrate 
it into their cookie-cutter community. Their attempt didn’t work so 
well, and the whitewashed plantation style structure puffed its 
clapboard chest out in defiance against the new construction.  The lawn 
was untrimmed, of course, and the few trees in the yard waved their arms
 in warning.  I don’t want to say the apple tree by the front gate was 
laden with poison apples, but at the same time; I think the apple tree 
out front grew poison apples.
The house was abandoned, classic, and not in the “someone 
packed up and moved on to the next stage of life” sort of way.  This 
house was abandoned in the “oh shit, let’s get outta here, forget the 
dresser” kind of way.  Still in the engine, I could see rotting 
furniture on the porch, tipped over and broken, and debris in the 
backyard.  I could also hear the smoke detectors sounding, and not the 
normal polite yet stern kind of alarm, these alarms had a piercing 
quality that made my nasal cavity hurt. Right now you’re thinking, “I 
didn’t know smoke detectors made different noises.”   Well, neither did 
I.
 
Because I was getting paid to do a job, I tried to go about business 
as usual.  I gathered my tools and met the officer at his door with 
feigned composure.  The good news was the lack of obvious fire meant 
Hell was still being suppressed by the floorboards.  The bad news was, 
because the alarm was sounding, someone would have to go inside to 
investigate.
We shined our flashlights into the windows, seeing nothing more than 
abandoned furniture, peeling wallpaper, and broken light fixtures, and 
tried all the doors.  Each one was locked, and the hair on my neck stood
 up as we walked through the back yard.  When we reached the fourth side
 of the house I saw the object that sealed my fate, sent my heart to my 
throat, and the pit of my stomach to my toes; on the second story was an
 ajar single window.  Did it have thin white lacy curtains, eerily 
floating in the wind with fraying edges?  Of course it did.
I knew what was coming before the officer said a word, and a minute 
later I was putting my tools away and grabbing a ladder so I alone could
 climb through the window, walk through the house, and open the front 
door so we could investigate and reset the alarm.  And no, I don’t get 
paid nearly enough for that.
I want to say I didn’t dawdle, or fumble with the ladder hoping someone 
else would volunteer, but I can’t.  I imagine they were both breathing 
sighs of relief knowing they were off the hook, and I cursed them for 
being cowards (under my breath) as I placed my boots on the metal rungs.
I got my first unobstructed view inside at the top of the 
ladder, but because this was the concentrated darkness of all the 
world’s evil, the beam of my flashlight was little help.   All I could 
make out was a long hallway of peeling wallpaper with three rooms on 
either side, ending in a spiral staircase.  This is when I realized the 
likelihood of Jack Nicholson popping out of a doorway and axe murdering 
me, either that or a zombie; and to think I left my axe in the engine.

The piercing alarm stung the back of my teeth and magnified the pulse
 in my temples as I leaned into the window, feet still firm on the 
ladder.  Then, with a final deep breath, maybe a quick prayer, I climbed
 in.  And in the modified pushup position that resulted from entering 
headfirst, I learned that terror smells like cat piss and wet carpet.  I
 tried to push the smell to the back of my mind, stood up, and descended
 the hallway in slow steps of false composure, throat dry, heart 
thumping, and legs shivering inside sweaty turnouts.  In the darkness, 
as the floorboards creaked under my boots, the smell of rancid stagnance
 consumed my nostrils, and the stinging noise of the detector grew, I 
may have started to whistle.
I passed the first room, and looked in to see a moldy twin 
bed with no sheets next to some dismembered furniture.  I walked a 
little quicker.
I passed the second room, and it was empty except for some 
broken wood and a shattered closet mirror.  The pieces threw my 
flashlight’s beam across the room at a thousand untrue angles, and I 
walked a little quicker.
The alarm grew louder, it’s sting filling the empty space 
between decaying walls, and the third doorway revealed another vacant 
room, in which the offending detector hung by its wires, swinging in the
 emptiness.
A broken smoke detector moving for an unknown reason must 
be exactly what it takes to break my tough guy façade.  I quit 
whistling, pointed my flashlight forward, and ran, fully anticipating 
something lethal, or at least horrible, to jump out of the remaining 
rooms.  I grabbed the stairway’s center banister, half swung half jumped
 to the first floor, found the entrance, fumbled with the lock, and 
pushed out on the inward swinging door.  I stumbled into the cool air 
flushed, sweaty, and never happier to see the lights of my engine. 
My 
crew met me on the porch with, “Wow that was fast,” and “Why the hell 
are you sweating?”
Cowards.
We stomped around the house for the next few minutes looking for 
signs of smoke or fire, and I stayed closest to the door making sure it 
didn’t spontaneously combust, or even worse, close.  The standard 
procedure for alarms is to look for any signs of fire, smoldering or 
extinguished, and check the walls, floor space, and attic space for 
concealed heat with a thermal imaging camera (TIC).
After the TIC yielded no heat, and there were no signs of 
smoke, we pulled the wires and batteries from the alarm and prepared to 
exit.  With a deep exhale I slammed the door a little too hard, maybe to
 show the house who was boss, and made a comment about how creepy it 
was, my voice full of masculine composure now that I was out and we were
 leaving. 
The officer stopped me.
“What are you doing?” 
I looked around.
“Uhh, taking my gear off so we can get out of here and never come back?”
“Someone has to lock the door.”
This was the second time my stomach dropped.
“Wut.”
“We can’t leave the door unlocked.  You gotta’ go lock it from the inside and climb out the window.”
I protested once on the grounds that it was abandoned and B
 shift could lock it in the daylight, but they don’t pay hosers like me 
to protest.  The officer said they would wait for me to butt the ladder,
 and as I dropped my helmet in a microtantrum, I realized how much I 
hated his big stupid firefighter mustache.

 
Alone at the front door, I strategized as my crew walked to the 
ladder side of the building.  I felt my pulse pounding in my wrists and 
the plan became simple: forget being a tough guy and run as fast as I 
could.  Still standing on the porch with the door open, I reached in and
 put a hand on the deadbolt, practicing turning it a few times to 
maximize efficiency.  By my calculations, I could be halfway up the 
stairs within four seconds of the lock clicking, and out the window (if I
 made it out) in another fifteen.  With a final deep breath, and a 
glance over my shoulder to make sure no one was watching: the race 
began.  I slid past the door and turned the lock as my feet hit the 
first steps.  My boots clomping filled the house and halfway up I 
started talking to myself. 
It sounded something like this: “Shit, shit,
 shit, shit!”
At the top of the stairway I swung around the bannister and
 saw the vacant hallway; my voice rose. If I was gonna’ get axe 
murdered, captured by a bad guy, or eaten by that thing from Alien Vs. 
Predator, it would happen in the hallway.  My eyes set on the nearest 
doorway as I ran, once I had passed it they focused on the next.  The 
window on the end wall shrank, moving further away with each step, and 
the light from my flashlight bounced and threw shadows onto every 
surface.
I reached the window as a blur of gear, and using the rapid
 evacuation technique reserved for emergencies, dove out headfirst, 
grabbing a rung with each hand and swinging my legs down until my feet 
found lower rungs.  When the training officer had said “emergencies” he 
had meant backdraft, structural collapse, and flashover.  In this 
instance, I used my own interpretation to include probable monster 
attacks and didn’t think twice.
I slammed the window shut with the same zealous I shut the 
front door with, and made it to the bottom of the ladder, sweaty, 
flushed, and out of breath.  The officer stared at me, squinted, started
 to ask “Wh-,” but then just shook his head and started to the engine. 
 Resuming my façade, as though it wasn’t a bit late in the game for 
that, I unzipped my coat and returned the ladder to its rack on the 
engine.  At the station, I took a shower to wash away the smell of fear 
and body odor, and watched TV with the light on until it was time to go 
home at 6 am.
A few weeks later I found myself giving a tour to a group 
of six year olds visiting our station.  An important element of such a 
tour is to teach them what firefighters in full gear look like, the 
rationale being if they recognize us, they won’t hide or run deeper into
 a burning building when we search for them.  The gear adds substantial 
bulk, and the mask creates breath sounds similar to Darth Vader.  A few 
of them are inevitably terrified.
In past tours I’d never spared much empathy on this fear-based 
reaction, accepting it as a routine part of the tour, and I’m sure my 
consolations were formal and empty.  But since the night of the fire 
alarm, the night I found myself running from nothing and yelling in an 
empty hallway, I had a more appreciative perspective. 
I knew there was 
fresh validity in my tone as I told them:  “It’s ok guys, firefighters 
get scared too sometimes.”