word.â
Finally, getting the laughter under control, Cal sat up. âThanks, man, you donât know how much I needed this.â
Realizing there would be no exotic dancers, the groups went back to their previous activities, playing cards until they found a good game on TV. The party didnât break up until well into the morning and everyone left satisfied that theyâd given Cal an almost perfect send-off.
Chapter 10
C al picked his way through the debris, his thoughts centered on the fire damage that surrounded him on every side. Something wasnât right about the scene. This had been the fourth fire in the same number of days. That in itself was not so unusual, given the above-average temperatures theyâd been experiencing that summer. But combine that with the similarities in each case, and the situation reeked of foul play.
Just then, he noticed the fire marshal entering the opening that was once a doorway. âNoel!â he called to the familiar man.
Noel nodded in greeting before stepping over a crushed pile of what were once cereal boxes. âWhatâs up, man? I heard you wereâ¦out for a while.â
Cal stiffened, realizing that word of his suspension was apparently making its way through the department and into other firehouses.
âYeah, just until they complete their probe.â He waved it off, hoping he sounded more unconcerned than he felt. âWhatâs your take on this?â Cal gestured to the destruction surrounding them.
âDonât know. Just got here.â
âDid you work the fire at that nail shop on Gratiot yesterday afternoon?â
Noel shook his head in denial, his eyes surveying the work ahead of him. He was breaking down the scene and the way he intended to divide his manpower, even as he carried on the conversation with his friend.
âWell, letâs just say the aftermath looked a lot like this place,â Cal continued. âAnd the liquor store on Vandyke the day before, and the doctorâs office on east Jefferson the day before that.â
By now he had the fire marshalâs complete attention. âYou thinking arson?â
âIt was always after hours when the places were closed and no one could get hurt, and it was always commercial buildings, not private homes.â
Noel gave Cal an unreadable look. âHow do you know all this?â
âI visited the scenes and read the reports, as well.â
Noel just continued to stare.
âLook, Noel, the fire that got me suspended looked a lot like this. Itâs what first made me suspicious. If there is an arsonist in my district, I want to know. This guy mayâve cost me my badge.â
Okay, it was making sense now, Noel thought. If he were in Calâs shoes he would probably be doing the same thing. Tilting his head to the side, he mentally reviewed what he knew about those other fires. Many times, his subordinates went out to inspect without him, and he thought that was probably the case with the nail shop and the doctorâs office, since he had no memory of reviewing the reports. But he did remember the liquor store. He was still in the process of determining the cause. Heâd already ruled out accidental. What Cal was saying only confirmed his own suspicions, and now he knew there were probably other deliberately set fires, as well.
âI already suspected something was up with that liquor store fire, but thanks for the heads-up. Iâll definitely take that into consideration during my investigation.â He frowned, just remembering something. âDid you say the nail shop was on Gratiot?â
Cal nodded.
âAnd the doctorâs office on East Jefferson?â
Cal nodded again.
âThat explains it. Those are both outside my jurisdiction. But Iâll contact the marshal for that district and get copies of the reports.â He shook his head sadly. âThe last thing I need is an arsonist in the area. Hell, we get
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