FIRE HAZARD by Kevin Hearne

The most important question in this life, I’ve heard it said, is whether you have the sausage to achieve your goals. Sausage being a metaphor for courage, in this case, instead of the many other things it could be, including actual sausage.

Okay, okay: I’ve never heard that said. I’m the one who said it—or at least thought it, because I can’t vocalize like humans do. Irish wolfhounds are okay at barking and howling, but speaking English, not so much. Druids can hear my thoughts, though, and my personal Druid agrees with me that sausage can be a metaphor, thereby making it the finest of all foods.

I’m equating sausage to courage because Atticus told me to think about the nature of courage, and I realized it was so much easier if I just thought about sausage instead. This is working out great and I can understand why humans like metaphors so much. I think about courage as sausage pretty much all the time, so I expect to be recognized as an expert on courage any minute now.

Apparently I’m going to need some courage because we’re going to Australia and it’s on fire. Really on fire, Atticus said, not metaphorically.

I asked him through our mental link.

“Why? Because there’s a terrible drought. There are lots of fires and not enough firemen to put them out, so they need some rain to help them extinguish the flames. But the drought means there won’t be rain for weeks, or even months, and in the meantime all this habitat is being lost for Australia’s creatures.”

“Because we’re in a position to help, so we should.”

“We technically are. We’re in Tasmania and it’s considered part of Australia, even though it’s an island off the coast. We can get to the main continent without too much trouble.”

I knew that Atticus was leaving something out. Without too much trouble means there’s going to be at least some trouble. What kind of trouble is it to get there?>

Starbuck said, sneezing at the end of his sentence. He’s my snorty Boston terrier buddy and he shares the mental link with Atticus too.

“We’re going to take a ferry and cross the ocean from Devonport to Melbourne. It’s nine and a half hours, and they will put you two in kennels for the journey. You can just sleep through the night.”

I had to ask for clarification on that because I’m not very good with time, except for two bedrock principles:

It keeps passing, and

There is no time like the present for a little something to eat.

Hours and months and seconds and weeks and minutes, however, tend to confuse me.

“Just one night,” Atticus assured me.

I’m a pretty big dog—pretty much the biggest—and have discovered through experience that most places haven’t planned for me to be there.

“Yes, they’ll be fine.”

Of course there was more trouble than that, though Atticus insisted it was all not too much. There were farewells to deliver to Inspector Rose Badgely in Launceston, who liked us a whole lot and made very high-pitched sounds for a human whenever she snuggled with us. She liked Atticus too, and he liked her back, but she made different sounds with him.

Starbuck and I overheard him explaining to her that he felt he had to go volunteer, and it was a tricky business because he couldn’t reveal that he was a Druid and bound to the earth, and he truly needed to help the elementals when they said they needed it. We’d been in Tasmania to prevent the Tasmanian devils from going extinct because of a contagious face cancer, for example, and while Rose knew about that, she didn’t know Atticus was actually curing them and helping them develop a resistance to it. She thought he was just counting the population, identifying diseased dens, stuff like that. Fighting wildfires was a completely different sort of thing. To Rose, it must have sounded like he was looking for an excuse to leave. She said these weren’t as bad as the fires of the Black Summer of 2020, whatever that was, and Australia always burned in the summer.

“I’ll be back when the rains come,” Atticus said.

“What are you gonna do, exactly?” she asked, her Australian accent tight with tension. “You’re not gonna be on the front lines, are you?”

“No, no. I can hardly use a shovel well with only one arm. But I can provide support in other ways.”

Atticus was doing pretty well with his disability since losing his right arm. He focused on what he could do instead of what he couldn’t, and he did quite a lot. We couldn’t move around the world quickly anymore, and he couldn’t shape-shift into animal forms like he used to, but he still had all his other powers and—most importantly—access to meats.

“So you’ll still have work to do here afterward?” Rose asked.

“Yes. There’s always something to be done. I may have to travel to mainland Australia from time to time for emergencies like this, but other members of my organization can handle problems in the rest of the world. My plan is to stay in Tasmania as long as the Australian government lets me. Part of that means periodically leaving the country for a while and then returning, until I can get a work visa that lets me stay longer.”

His organization was a nonprofit nature charity he made up so that he and the other Druids would have an excuse to show up wherever disasters were happening.

Rose seemed reassured by that, but her eyes slid over to me and Starbuck.

“You’re taking the dogs with you?”

“Yep. They go where I go.”

Starbuck said. He had difficulty separating the two words since he always approved of food.

“Can they go outside for a bit, if this is the last time I’m going to see you for a while?”

I said.

Gods below, Oberon, Atticus said via our link, I really wish you wouldn’t call it that.

That’s worse.

You mean euphemisms? No, I don’t.

Starbuck said.

The phrase is “knocking boots,” Oberon, and please, just . . . don’t mention it.

I left him alone after that because I’d managed to embarrass him sufficiently. Rose drove us to the ferry the next day in Devonport, and we endured the kennels in the belly of the ship like very good boys by sleeping through most of the ride over, and spending the rest of the time discussing what kind of food we’d get as a reward for being so good. Starbuck was convinced we’d get steak, but I didn’t think so. We were going to arrive in the morning and humans didn’t eat steak for breakfast as often as they should. They preferred sausage, and that was just fine by me.

We didn’t get anything super special, though; Atticus hired a car once we deboated (is that a word? I know you can deplane but can you deboat or dejetski or demotorcycle?) and he had the driver take us to a drive-thru to get sausage breakfast sandwiches.

After that he had the driver stop in a forested mountainous patch of country called the Dandenong Ranges. It smelled like flowers and butterfly dust and wombats underneath all the smoke. We could smell the fires even though they were miles away. Atticus stepped out on the side of the road and we got out with him.

I asked him, even though Starbuck was already turning it into one by lifting his leg on a nearby tree.

Yes, but also a chance for me to talk to the elemental and figure out where exactly we’re going. Give me a few minutes of quiet, and stay close, please.

He stood still and faced the forest, his sandals kicked off and his bare feet planted on the earth. He shoved his hand into his pocket and remained still, closing his eyes as he established communication with the elemental. The driver was looking at him with a worried expression, perhaps wondering what kind of client he had picked up, but after a few seconds of staring he shrugged and got out his phone, probably concluding that Atticus was paying for the time so he could stand around doing nothing if he wanted.

But Atticus was bound to the earth, the tattoos on his right heel allowing him to speak directly to the local manifestation of Gaia, so he wasn’t doing nothing. He could get a bit lost in that communication sometimes, though. That was why I always made sure to stand guard when he did that so nothing could sneak up on him. He said I didn’t need to worry, no animals would ever try to hurt him, but I wasn’t worried about animals. I was worried about other humans, which is what everyone should be worried about.

When Atticus moved again—it was only like fifteen years or five weeks or something—his face was tight with stress and stuff. I don’t always get human emotions perfectly right from just looking at their faces, but I knew he wasn’t happy.

“Let’s go, pups,” he said, even though we weren’t pups. We piled back into the van and Atticus gave the driver better directions. We were going to someplace called Kanangra Walls in New South Wales, whatever that was. Once we were moving again he leaned back and spoke to us in our minds.

We have a bit of a journey ahead of us. Eight hours or so. Would you like to hear a scary story?

Starbuck shouted, his mouth opening and his tongue lolling out in a smile. He loved stories.

I said.

The story was about snakes, and we loved it when he told us snake stories, because you got to eat the scary poison bad guys at the end and it was a delicious victory that tasted like chicken. Plus the heroine of this particular snake story was a fluffy entrepreneurial poodle named Gwyneth, who had made her fortune by hiring some humans to manufacture candles featuring the scent of her own ass.

That’s right.

Well, you’re not Gwyneth.

They’re all sold out, unfortunately.

Starbuck and I whimpered softly at this disappointment, but we thrilled at the adventures of Gwyneth the snake slayer and admired her courage. Atticus reminded us we’d need to be every bit as courageous as Gwyneth when we got to where the fire was.

We could tell we were getting closer because the smell of smoke got worse as we went, penetrating the vehicle. I couldn’t tell how long the ride was, unfortunately, but it seemed like a good while, and we stopped again in a town called Albury to grab some food and stretch our legs. Atticus also visited a hardware store and returned quickly with a hatchet. The driver looked at him a bit more suspiciously after that, and I wondered what was up too.

I asked him.

It’s for unnatural causes, he replied, but I think he realized that didn’t answer my question very well, and he explained. Most of the fires raging across the country right now are naturally occurring. That is to say, they got started as a lightning strike or something like that, even if the conditions that make them burn so long are a result of human action. The problem is that all these fires may have attracted some other beings that like to watch things burn, and if so, they’re making an already terrible situation just a little bit worse. That’s what the elemental is worried about.

may have attracted other beings? The elemental isn’t sure?>

The elemental is weak and suffering tremendously right now. A couple of years ago they had unprecedented fires during what they now call the Black Summer. The damage done was incredible; billions of plants and animals died, and their collective lives were giving the elemental life. And now it’s happening again.

Right, sorry, I forgot your difficulty with numbers. Let’s just say the elemental is very sick, and because of the sickness they’re not sure whether something is encouraging the fires or not. There could be a legitimate otherworldly threat ahead. Or it could be the equivalent of delirium, a fever dream, something the elemental imagined. They’re just not sure. Our job is to make sure.

After another long drive, during which Atticus told us some more stories about a band of noble dog rangers battling an evil council of squirrel wizards, he asked the driver if we were outside Kanangra-Boyd National Park and we weren’t quite there. They talked back and forth a lot about some specific spot Atticus was looking for, a landmark of some kind, and eventually he thought he saw it and pointed into the haze.

“There. Drop us off there, please.” He indicated a huge mountain ash tree with a boulder in front of it. I thought either or both would be pretty good places to pee.

The driver looked worried. “You sure?”

“Absolutely.”

“It’s nasty here, man. Not safe.”

I agreed. The smoke was really bad and kind of burning my nose from the inside, even though we were still in the van.

“I’ll be fine, thanks.”

“You need a tank of oxygen, mate, seriously. We’re too close to the fire. I don’t feel comfortable leaving you here.”

“I have an oxygen mask for both myself and the dogs cached behind that boulder,” Atticus lied. I knew he was lying because who buries oxygen masks in Australia just in case? Well—hold on. I bury bones sometimes just in case. But that’s because they’re delicious, and as far as I knew, oxygen masks weren’t. Still, Atticus has done weirder stuff.

“Oxygen masks for the dogs?”

“Modern times, man. We have all the things for pets we could ever need.”

“Whatever, mate.” He pressed his thumb on his phone and then held it up to Atticus. “Do me a solid and put it on record that you want me to leave you here and not hold me responsible for whatever fiery death awaits you.”

Atticus basically promised not to blame the guy for anything that happened to us and we got out. The smoke made me and Starbuck hack, and Atticus suggested we hold our breath for a bit. Once the guy drove away, Atticus started speaking in Old Irish and doing his binding thing. He can bind most anything to anything else, really, as long as it doesn’t have a large iron content, and in this case he bound the smoke and ash particles in the air to stay out of our noses. He created a little bubble of clean air around us, and our eyes stopped stinging once it retreated and we could see clearly.

Starbuck added.

“We need to wait here for a while,” he replied, “because we’re meeting someone. But I’ll keep making sure the smoke doesn’t bother us.”

I said.

“No, it’s going to be a bit of a hike to get there. We’ll move as quickly as we can and hopefully get there before sundown.”

I was just about to ask who we were waiting for when he showed up. He startled me and Starbuck by shifting planes from Tír na nÓg, causing us to flinch and yip in surprise. I recognized him by scent as much as by sight: Coriander, Herald Extraordinary of the Fae Court, smelled like a light puff of lime and cilantro that always reminded me of street tacos. Atticus told me that humans considered him to be a very pretty man, sort of like Legolas in the Lord of the Rings movies, his flawless features always ready for a high-definition close-up.

“Greetings, Siodhachan,” he said, addressing Atticus by his original Irish name. He held up a bottle of ink and a fine-tipped paintbrush one might use for detail work on a canvas. “I’ve brought the requested materials.”

“Excellent,” Atticus said, and laid his hatchet down on the boulder. “Apply it to that blade, if you please.”

Starbuck observed.

I said.

he wondered. My Boston buddy tended to be suspicious of people who did not have any food for him and assumed that they must be allied with cats.

Coriander stepped forward but really floated since his feet didn’t quite touch the ground. He unstoppered the ink bottle and dipped the brush in there. I snuck forward to see what he was doing. He drew some squiggly knots on the blade of the hatchet and Atticus asked him about it.

“So this sigil that you’re applying here—how do I activate it?”

“It activates on contact with any denizen of hell,” the faery replied.

“There are no words required to initiate the unbinding?”

“None. Merely embed the blade in the flesh of your target.”

“Right.”

Coriander has drawn a Sigil of Cold Fire on my hatchet blade to unbind any demons we might run across.

Brighid, yes. She granted me that power. But when I use it, the unbinding weakens me to the point that I can hardly move. That’s suboptimal in the middle of a fire. This sigil will do the job for me.

They are magical bindings made with potent inks, but they are also painted swirlies. We’re going to paint some on you. Or your collar, anyway.

Well, Coriander is going to do it.

The faery discarded his brush—it was just wood and horsehair—and put the stoppered bottle of ink in a pocket. He removed a different one and produced another brush and came over to me.

“Hello, Oberon. Please remain very still while I apply a Ward Against Fire to your collar.”

I said, though I don’t think he heard me. Atticus told him I understood, though.

“That cold iron talisman you have dangling from your collar will protect you against hellfire,” Coriander explained as he worked, “because that has a magical origin. But this is regular old fire you’re walking into, so we need a bit of magic to protect you against that.”

I didn’t feel any different when he had finished, but Atticus said I wouldn’t. I think you’ll appreciate not getting burned, though, he told me. Coriander repeated the process for Starbuck and I was proud of him for remaining still the whole time and not sneezing. That’s really hard for him to do.

Coriander and Atticus bowed to each other afterward and the faery wished us well before shifting away to Tír na nÓg.

“The Fae are supposed to limit their presence on the earth, and directly engaging beings from other planes would violate some treaties and maybe even start an interplanar war. If there is anything ahead of us to be banished from the earth, it’s my responsibility.”

“That’s right. Let’s go. Stay close to me and I’ll keep the air bubble moving with us.”

We jogged for about six thousand feet or six hundred fathoms or furlongs or whatever, yeah, I’m not good with distances either. But we saw a whole lot of animals running away from what we were running toward, and one wallaby clearly thought we were just uninformed and tried to warn us with some strangled sounds that there was a fire up ahead. We kept going.

I have to admit that I had an idea of what a forest fire might be like, but the real thing is so much more powerful than the two words imply. It’s a forest—all its life and energy—violently transforming itself to heat and light and poisonous fumes. And up close, it’s terrifying.

When I saw the wall of flames silhouetting the eucalyptus trees like blackened matchsticks and felt the heat on my nose and fur, threatening to singe both, I realized that there is quite a lot of difference between sausage and courage. They are, in fact, not the same thing at all, and metaphors can only take you for a short walk on a tight leash. Wait. Is that a metaphor too? Whatever. I didn’t want to walk into that fire, even if Atticus somehow made a path through it and kept a bubble of air around us and I was supposedly protected by magic swirlies and a cold iron talisman. All my instincts screamed at me to turn around and run away, like all the wallabies and wombats and koalas were doing.

Starbuck said, summing up his feelings about going forward. Just as he had trouble separating the affirmative from food, he had difficulty separating the negative from squirrels.

I asked.

“Unfortunately not. We have to go in. Or at least I do. Would you rather wait here?”

I told him. And apart from that, if there was something behind all this destruction, ruining the homes and lives of so many creatures, it needed to get got.

Starbuck said.

“Okay. I’m going to have the earth smother a path through the fire for us and we’re going to run through, single file. Once we get through this first leading edge, we should reach a burned-out area where it won’t be so hot.”

“Pretty sure.”

There was nothing else we could say. Mostly because Atticus didn’t give us a chance. He bound the earth to rise up and smother a strip of land ahead of us, effectively churning it so that what was underground was now on top and all the burning leaves and things were buried. It was kind of a biblical event, if I were the sort of hound or human who read the Bible—and I wasn’t—but I knew it wasn’t the sort of thing you talked over. The flames still rose in a wall on either side of that narrow strip, though.

Atticus took off, hatchet swinging in his left arm, and hollered at us to stay on his heels. We trotted easily behind, ears back, sphincters puckered. Great green gobs of catsick, the heat was terrible! It dried out my nose and eyes, and my skin felt like it was going to ignite. I didn’t think I would ever stop panting once I started.

Starbuck said, and I worried about him. Bostons don’t do well in the heat. Their smashed faces don’t allow them to cool off very well.

But the intensity lasted only a short while, I think, because we got through the wall, and the firescape changed to isolated trees still burning while the ground cover was all turned to char and ash, and then past that it was a blackened, smoking wasteland where it still felt hot but was cool by comparison to the inferno. Atticus paused there to check on us.

“My goodness. Your fur is smoking a bit.”

Starbuck said.

I told him, but left out the part that his eyebrows were pretty much gone and some of his hair and goatee had curled up and crisped.

“Let’s do something about that.”

He did more of his Druidry, moving the earth again in front of us, but differently this time. A circular sinkhole formed and deepened and I realized he was drilling down to reach the water table. Once he hit it, he pulled some out to rain down on us, and it was marvelously cold. My nose was wet again, and I felt like I could breathe once more.

Starbuck said. He was still panting but didn’t look as distressed.

“Okay, we’re looking for anything moving, basically,” Atticus said. “Because nothing should be alive here unless it’s up to no good.”

“I hope so.”

“Somewhere in this area; it’s been some time since it felt a hint of what might be hellish.” He gave us one more splash of water and petted us a bit and then stood up, surveying the ruin. We weren’t inside a perfect circle or anything; the shape of the fire was a splattery business many acres or meters or whatever long.

Atticus pointed to the west, where we could dimly see flickers of flame beneath billowing clouds of black smoke. “We are basically on top of Kanangra Walls here, but in that direction they fall off into a gorge. If I were going to be busy doing evil, I’d want a view of the destruction. So let’s head that way. Tell me if you see or hear anything.”

We trotted to the west across a blasted landscape, stumps and twigs looking like scorched French fries. That made me think how nice a basket of poutine would go down right then, but I doubted I’d be getting any of that here.

Atticus saw it first and told us to hold up. He squatted down next to us and pointed with his hatchet, whispering. “See that moving through the trees?”

We all went still and watched. Something was there, but it wasn’t any animal or human I’ve ever seen before.

Okay, good, I’m not imagining it, Atticus said in our minds. Let’s move closer, but slowly and quietly. No barking or growling. I think it’s holding something.

Atticus stayed low and we crept along next to him, keeping our eyes on the target. The intervening trees kept me from seeing what it held in its hand—I couldn’t even see arms, most of the time. But then it moved slightly and I finally caught a glimpse. Its arms were as thin and sticklike as the legs, but the hands held a squishy accordion thing.

It’s called a bellows. That’s exactly what it is. I think I know who that is, and he’s definitely trying to make the fires worse.

If I’m not mistaken, that is Xaphan, a fallen angel who is supposed to be fanning the furnaces of hell.

The ones who fell mostly lost their beauty during the fall. Lucifer was an exception.

Starbuck observed. He’d noticed, like I had, the smell of sulfur that accompanied most anything that came from hell. They should definitely not be allowed to have any artisanally crafted ass candles made of their scent.

I asked.

I don’t know. Maybe the new furnaces of hell are just . . . Australia in the summertime. This Blue Mountains region was already hit hard in the Black Summer of 2020 and maybe he’s come to finish the job.

What do you mean?

Oh, yes, I think that’s right. How’d you hear about that?

Right, right. Okay. I’m going straight at him because he has to go. Circle around to his flank but do not engage unless I’m in trouble.

Starbuck added.

Atticus set off in a sort of duck walk, trying to stay low and unobserved to surprise Xanax or Xaphod or whatever, I’d already forgotten his name. I nipped at Starbuck to get his attention and the two of us took a course headed to the right, which would eventually intersect the fallen angel’s path if he kept going. Atticus would engage him before that, though, and once he faced Atticus, we’d be coming at him on his left side. That was usually what you wanted if you were tracking humans, since most of them were right-handed, but I didn’t know if that was true for angels. Were they all ambidextrous?

I didn’t need to wait for a signal because there wouldn’t be one. When Atticus decided a thing had to be done, he did it. And he wouldn’t try to engage the fallen angel in negotiations to leave peacefully, because that would never happen, and he wouldn’t seek a fair fight either, because there was no honor to be had here. There was only a forest to save, and all the creatures who lived in it.

The best possible outcome would be that Xaphoo never saw Atticus coming and he’d just get an axe in the back and that would be it.

The best possible outcome never happens, though.

The fallen angel heard Atticus coming—or maybe smelled him, because what I thought was a plague mask beak from a distance was actually a super long nose—and whipped around to face him. Atticus rose and charged at that point, the element of surprise lost. But he was too far away. The beanpole arms hefted the bellows and pointed it at Atticus and squeezed the handles together. I immediately sped up to a sprint because that looked like trouble if anything did.

A powerful stream of air shot out of the bellows and ignited like a flamethrower and the evil thing laughed as Atticus was blown backward off his feet in a gust of fiery wind. He lost his grip on his hatchet and that was most definitely trouble.

Atticus didn’t make any sound, but he was rolling to extinguish the flames. I hoped his wards and cold iron aura were working properly. Xaphudge laughed, a screechy cackle, and pried apart the handles of the bellows for another go. He never saw me coming until I was a blur of motion in his peripheral vision. He made a startled noise and started to turn my way as I was in midair. It was enough to make me miss him, but I tore the bellows right out of his grasp and ran with it grasped in my jaws. His cry of outrage was epic and he gave chase, so he missed a couple of things: one was Atticus getting to his feet, his clothes all crispy and his hair smoldering but otherwise okay, extending a hand toward the fallen angel and saying something in Old Irish, and the other was Starbuck coming up behind him to nip at his chicken legs.

They weren’t really chicken legs—he had feet instead of talons, it’s just that they were super skinny and appeared to have no muscles. Starbuck’s efforts were enough to trip him up and he executed a graceless face-plant accompanied by a roar. He really did look like a large avocado that way and I dreamt for a fleeting moment of smashing him to guacamole.

I paused to look back and saw that not only had the fallen angel fallen, but Atticus had too. He’d just been standing a few seconds ago, so I didn’t understand what had happened. Xantac rose and whirled around, locating me and then Starbuck, who was barking at him not far away and calling him a terrible cat person. His scarecrow arms rose and hellfire gushed out from them, one stream for Starbuck and one for me.

There was no avoiding it.

The sulfurous heat blasted over me and I squeezed my eyes shut and hoped it wasn’t my time to die.

I said to Atticus, because if this was the end, I wanted to be grateful for the good times and not say something obvious like

I did let loose with a yipe, because it hurt more than anything ever had, and Starbuck did the same, but after a second of intense heat, most of it was gone. That cold iron talisman I wore on my collar had warded off the hellfire, leaving me and Starbuck very toasty and with lots of singed fur, but otherwise unharmed.

The fallen angel couldn’t believe it. His jaw dropped open, some pink and off-white bits in there like jagged landscaping rocks, and he looked at both of us to make sure we were still alive, and then he looked down at his hands, wondering how they could have misfired so badly. He snarled and clenched his fists as he looked up at me, clearly deciding he should just try again. He said something in a language I didn’t recognize—maybe the fell speech of Mordor or something, because it sure wasn’t French—and then his eyes popped open in surprise and he belched. And shortly thereafter, he screamed, as much in surprise as in pain, as his avocado body began to bubble and hiss, and I understood what was happening: he was being consumed from the inside by Cold Fire. Atticus had gotten him after all, and that was what he’d done before he collapsed. Something about that particular unbinding drained my Druid like nothing else.

Fissures appeared in the fallen angel’s body and yellow goo squirted out from them, which caused Starbuck to leap backward in alarm. Xaphig pretty much exploded after that, quickly turning into molten yuck that cooked down into greasy slag.

Starbuck? Oberon? Are you two okay? Atticus asked in our minds.

Starbuck said, then added,

I replied, trotting over to him. He was lying spread-eagled on his back.

I’m wiped out. The hatchet wasn’t much use after all, and I had to use my own strength to cast Cold Fire.

Not much. My muscles don’t want to work at the moment, but I’ll recover eventually.

It could be a good while. Overnight, probably.

The sun had pretty much set and there was some farewell light in the sky, the kind that allowed you time to reflect and judge the kind of day you’d had before darkness fell. We wouldn’t get full dark, of course, because of the fire expanding all around us. Our little pockets of air were still okay, but it remained hot and uncomfortable.

I agree that it’s not ideal.

Starbuck hopped around.

We had to explain that no deliveries of any kind could be made to where we were, and Starbuck shivered as he realized what that meant.

Dinner can still happen. It just can’t happen here. You have to get me to where the food is. Through the fire, in other words.

I’m going to bind together some torched wood to make a rough sled—a travois, really—and you’re going to pull me out. It’s going to be a lot of work for a long time, but I’ll try to give you energy.

Some. But this fatigue isn’t something I can recover from quickly. This is why I would have preferred to use the hatchet with the sigil. Speaking of which, I need you to find that and bring it with you. The bellows too. Can’t leave those here.

I knew where the bellows was and Starbuck found the hatchet after a bit of a search. Atticus used his Druidry to move some charred wood around and bind it together into a travois, which looked like a sort of torched trellis when he was finished. That took a while, and then we had to help him roll on top of it, pulling on the shreds of his clothes. That was how weak he was.

It was designed with a couple of branch leads and then a short branch connecting them that I’d have to take into my mouth, which would allow me to pull him behind like I was a horse. As a test, I dragged him a little way to the sinkhole he’d made earlier. He pulled up more water and got us all good and soaked, and then he had Starbuck crawl under his shirt so he’d have a wet layer of cloth around him as we entered the fire.

That was the part I didn’t want to think about. When I came through it the first time, I was following Atticus. And when the fallen angel zapped me, I didn’t have a chance to think about it. But now I had to enter the fire on purpose by myself, and I wouldn’t be able to run at full speed.

There was a yippy Chihuahua voice in my head that said, Don’t do it, just go hungry for a night and maybe skip breakfast too and wait until Atticus can move on his own. But what kind of wolfhound would I be if I listened to my inner Chihuahua?

The voice got pretty loud as I got nearer the fire, though. It burned with the rage of five grizzly bears on energy drinks fighting to drink the last one of a six-pack. I was thinking that maybe this one time, the Chihuahua was wise.

But then Atticus said, I don’t think I told either of you how awesome you were back there. You saved my life and ran through fire for me, and now you’re going to do it again. You helped me protect the earth. There simply aren’t any better dogs than you. You’re the best.

Well, I couldn’t listen to the Chihuahua after that, because I was the best dog.

But fire wasn’t a Scooby-Doo villain that you cease to fear once you pull the mask off. It’s an elemental force against which my only chance of survival was to avoid it. No matter how much I told myself that I was the best hound, my instincts insisted that I run the other way.

I found the path through the fire that Atticus had made before and slowed, because I couldn’t see the end. Smoke and distance made the flames seem to close up in an impenetrable wall.

It should be. Hold on. I dropped the lead out of my mouth and turned to see what he was doing. He twitched his foot onto the ground so he could check things out with the elemental.

It’s clear, he confirmed. Even if it doesn’t look like it. Just take us through as fast as you can.

That was when I learned the true difference between courage and sausage. A big plate of sausage might fill my belly, but it wouldn’t help me take a single step toward that fire. I needed courage first, and then, if it served me well, I might get served some sausage on the other side.

I picked up the lead in my jaws again and flattened my ears against my head.

I said.

My first two steps were small things, not very courageous at all. But I realized that if I took small steps we’d all die from the heat and lack of oxygen if not the actual flames. The best hope we had was for me to use the full stride of an Irish wolfhound.

I leapt forward, startling both Atticus and Starbuck at the sudden lurch, but toppling neither. I pulled as hard as I could, fully aware that the weight was slowing me down, but still going at the top speed I could manage, right toward the most frightening thing I could think of besides a world ruled by squirrels.

I tried to think about things that made me happy, like belly rubs and poodles and gravy and every single time Atticus told me how good I was. I’ve had a very long life thanks to him, and a super delicious one, but I supposed all good things must be paid for somehow. The bill for our blessings always comes due in some fashion, and there’s no way to avoid it.

The fire did its best to burn everything away as I plunged into it, flames rising well above my head on either side. My memories, my fine gray coat, the best human ever, my snorty Boston buddy, and my courage: it wanted everything to become ashes.

The ground scorched the pads of my paws and I could hardly breathe, the flames sucking up all the air, but there was nothing to do but churn forward.

Courage, I realized, only revs your engine at the starting line. It doesn’t keep you going for the long haul. What keeps you going is something else: stubbornness, perhaps, or fear of what would happen if you stopped. In my case it was probably a whole lot of both. Once into the suffocating heat of the inferno, the only answer to any of my thoughts—like it’s too hot, I can’t breathe, or I’m so tired—was to keep going until I got through it.

It spurred me everywhere, not just on my flanks.

It toasted me from nose to tail.

It threatened to kill me. And Starbuck, despite being soaked and protected by Atticus, had trouble breathing, and let me know. he cried.

I needed air too. And if I gave up it wouldn’t just be me who burned away—my best friends in the whole world would die as well.

The path kept going and going the way pain keeps going, hot and orange and urgent, until it suddenly stopped. And when it did, the relief was so acute I almost wondered why I ever felt distress, like the pain was a hallucination or something.

When we got past the leading edge of the fire, Atticus told me to stop and he did his water trick again to cool us all down.

Thank you, Oberon. You saved us all, he said, even though he had saved me from death too many times to count.

Starbuck said.

Then Atticus declared we could move at a slower pace to get to a ghost town called Yerranderie many miles away, where there was shelter, at least, if little else. It was deep night or early morning when we got there, and we crashed underneath an old tree until dawn, when Atticus could struggle to his feet and call for help to other humans who might have food or water but mostly food.

There were only a few buildings around, but an oldish woman eventually appeared and asked what in God’s name had happened.

“Fire,” Atticus said, though he didn’t say it in God’s name, and that was enough. Nobody was unaware of the fire. She invited us back to her place, where she gave me and Starbuck sausage and gave Atticus this stuff called Vegemite. Sausage is vastly superior to Vegemite, in my opinion, so I felt a bit sorry for Atticus, but he didn’t appear unhappy.

He spoke with the lady for a long time while I lounged outside with Starbuck.

Starbuck said. His tongue licked out and lapped once against my snout. Then he turned and curled up next to me, sorting himself along my side between my front leg and my back leg.

I said.

Starbuck said, and he sighed once before settling into a comforting series of snores.

I laid my head down between my front paws for a nap, knowing that Atticus would wake us when he wanted to leave. As I drifted off, I thought: I have courage and sausage and friends. If I ever get an ass candle, I will have it all.

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