He put it away when he saw Erik Gallegos heading in his direction.
“What’s the status?” he asked the fire chief.
“Barn looks like it’s going to be a total loss,” Erik answered. “Old thing was about to fall over anyway, next time a stiff wind blew off the lake. At this point, my crew is just trying to put out the flames and make sure it doesn’t spread to the undergrowth.”
“That a concern?”
Erik shrugged. “Not really. All the rain we’ve had the last few weeks has reduced the threat level for now, but you never know.”
Cade hoped they had another six or seven weeks before fire season hit, especially since some places in the higher elevations were still covered in snow.
The chief jerked his head toward his EMTs. “Wynona okay?”
He followed the other man’s gaze, where Wynona was smiling and saying something to the younger of the Keegan boys. “Seems to be.”
He thought about leaving the situation there but figured word would spread soon anyway and he might as well get out in front of it.
“I gave her a week’s suspension for disobeying a direct order and for turning off her comm.”
Erik snorted. “Seriously? Harsh. You know you would have done the exact same thing.”
That was different, though Cade couldn’t quite pin a finger on why. “Your guys were four minutes behind her. She should have waited for somebody who could search the premises wearing proper gear.”
“Four minutes is a long time for two scared little boys,” the fire chief said.
Cade still knew he had made the right call. That had been four minutes of hell he never wanted to live through again, trying to raise her on the radio, then rolling up to the scene a half minute before the fire crews to find the place engulfed and no sign of her.
When she had burst out of that door seconds later like she was some kind of freaking avenging angel, carrying two kids with smoke and flames pouring out behind her, his blood had turned as cold as a jump into Lake Haven in January.
His stomach still felt hollow and shaky.
“It could have been a hell of a lot worse, if not for Wyn. I’ll take a little mild smoke inhalation and a broken ankle over the alternative.”
“Yeah. I know.”
“Lindy-Grace and Ron are both on their way. I asked Ed and Terri to wait a minute longer for the boys’ parents to make it here before they roll out to Lake Haven hospital.”
Erik gave him a careful look. “You going to refer the boys to juvie court for trespassing and vandalism?”
“We can cross that bridge eventually.”
He should probably have a word with the boys before they left the scene. He could always catch them at the hospital or after they were discharged, but in his experience, time sometimes had a way of distorting the truth.
He should have remembered his duty, first and foremost. Yet another reason to be pissed at Wynona.
He headed back toward the ambulance. She had risen from the grass and now leaned into the rear of the ambulance trading jokes with the boys, who still looked small and frightened.
He had gone to school with their mom, Lindy-Grace, and considered her a friend. She was a sweetheart who threw the best barbecues in town and often dropped off baked goods at the police station.
He had heard rumors that LG and Ron were going through a trial separation. That must be tough on the boys. He didn’t want to pile it on when they were already scared and one was injured, but he really did have a job to do, trying to find out what happened.
When he neared the ambulance, Wyn gave him a wary look and stepped aside, as if afraid he was going to yell at her again. He ignored her and stuck his head into the ambulance.
“Hey, boys. How we doing in here?”
The older one—Caleb—paled another shade when he spotted him. The EMTs must have given him something for the pain of his ankle, which was encased in an inflatable splint. “Are you gonna take us to jail because we started the fire, Chief Emmett?” he asked.
“We didn’t mean to do it,” the younger boy whimpered before Cade could answer. “It was just a junky old barn. Nobody used it for nothing. That’s what our dad said. So we decided to make it our clubhouse and we were gonna roast hot dogs for lunch. We were supposed to go on a campout with our dad tonight but then he said he had to work so we couldn’t go.”
“Since we already had the hot dogs and stuff, we decided to have our own campfire,” Caleb said.
As much as he liked Lindy-Grace Keegan, he had never much liked her husband, Ron. The guy had always struck him as a self-absorbed workaholic who didn’t know a good thing when it lived in his house. The story just confirmed it.
“If you have to arrest somebody, arrest me.” The older boy held out his wrists as if he expected Cade to slap cuffs on them right there. “It was my fault. All of it. I tried to start the fire and I guess I used too much kindling.”
“No, I didn’t make the ring good enough,” his brother protested. “You should arrest me.”
“But if I hadn’t fallen when we jumped down from the loft, we could have run out and called for help. I’m the one responsible. Arrest me.”
Wyn made a soft sound and he risked a glance down. Her eyes were suspiciously moist and he felt an answering tug of emotion. It would take a harder man than he was not to be touched at this evidence of brotherly love, each trying to shoulder the blame for the other.
Would any of his brothers step up to do the same for him? He wanted to think so but he wasn’t sure. Hell, his own father would have shoved every single one of his boys in front of a firing squad if it meant he could save his own skin.
“I’m not going to arrest anybody—” he started to say, but didn’t finish the sentence before a distraught female voice cried out.
“My babies! Where are they? My babies!”
“Mama,” Lucas cried out and Lindy-Grace lifted her head at the sound like a bird dog on a pheasant.
An instant later, she and Ron were both there. Lindy-Grace shoved him aside to jump into the ambulance so she could hug and kiss each boy, babbling about how much she loved them. Ron, ashen-faced, stayed next to Cade.
When she finished hugging them, she frowned ferociously at both of them. “You are in such big trouble!”
At her words, both boys burst into tears.
“We’re sorry,” the younger one wailed. “We’re so sorry, Mama.”
“We didn’t mean to,” Caleb blubbered. “It was an accident. We had a fire ring and everything but then the fire jumped out onto some hay and we couldn’t put it out. I knew we had to get out so we jumped down, only I fell hard and hurt my ankle and couldn’t get up and Luke wouldn’t go without me, even though I told him and told him to go.”
“We were so scared,” his brother interjected. “We couldn’t get out and we were crying and praying and then she came in and helped us.”
They pointed to Wynona, who smiled and waved weakly.
“Wynona Jane Bailey,” Lindy-Grace exclaimed. “You saved my boys.”
She jumped back down from the ambulance and wrapped Wynona in a tight embrace that couldn’t have felt the greatest on his officer’s smoke-seared lungs.
“If I live to be a hundred and three like my great-grandmother LuLu, I will never forget what you’ve done here today,” LG said through her tears.