I carried my elderly neighbor down nine flights during a fire, and two days later, a man showed up at my door and said, “You did it on purpose. You’re a disgrace.”
I’m 36, a single dad to my 12-year-old son, Nick. It’s just been us since his mom died three years ago.
Our ninth-floor apartment is small and loud with pipes, and way too quiet without her.
The elevator groans, and the hallway always smells like burnt toast.
Next door lives Mrs. Lawrence. Seventies, white hair, wheelchair, retired English teacher.
Soft voice, sharp memory. She corrects my texts, and I actually say “thank you.”
For Nick, she became “Grandma L” long before he said it out loud. She bakes him pies before big tests and made him rewrite an entire essay over “their” and “they’re.” When I work late, she reads with him so he doesn’t feel alone.
That Tuesday started normally.
Spaghetti night. Nick’s favorite because it’s cheap and hard for me to ruin. He sat at the table pretending he was on a cooking show.
“More Parmesan for you, sir?” he said, flicking cheese everywhere.
“That’s enough, Chef.
We already have an overflow of cheese here.”
He smirked and started telling me about a math problem he’d solved.
Then the fire alarm went off.
At first, I waited for it to stop. We get false alarms weekly. But this time it turned into one long, angry scream.
Then I smelled it—real smoke, bitter and thick.
“Jacket. Shoes. Now,” I said.
Nick froze for a second, then bolted for the door.
I grabbed my keys and phone and opened ours. Gray smoke curled along the ceiling. Someone coughed.
Someone else yelled, “Go! Move!”
“The elevator?” Nick asked.
The panel lights were dead. Doors shut.
“Stairs,” I said.
“Stay in front of me. Hand on the rail. Don’t stop.”
The stairwell was full of people—bare feet, pajamas, crying kids.
Nine flights doesn’t sound like much until you’re doing it with smoke drifting down behind you and your kid in front of you.
By the seventh floor, my throat burned. By the fifth, my legs ached. By the third, my heart was pounding louder than the alarm.
“You okay?” Nick coughed over his shoulder.
“I’m good,” I lied.
“Keep moving.”
We burst into the lobby and then out into the cold night. People huddled in small groups, some wrapped in blankets, some barefoot. I pulled Nick aside and knelt in front of him.