<h2 id="XIX">CHAPTER XIX. <br/> <small>A WELL OF FIRE.</small></h2>
<p>“So you are living in this brick house, and running
the delicatessen store as well?” said Nick the next
evening, as he and his two assistants stood outside
Bonesy Billings’ home. “This is better than being
in a flat house downtown.”</p>
<p>“You bet it is,” assented Bonesy. “Besides, my
work is up here in this section, and I’ve no reason to
go downtown to live. There’s plenty of these old
brick houses up here that can be rented for about
what you’d pay for a flat around Ninety-seventh
Street, and it’s much more airy and nice here. Then
we have some roomers, that help out.”</p>
<p>“Who are they? Anybody I know, I wonder?”
ventured Nick.</p>
<p>“Not likely. There’s a musician and his daughter—a
nice young girl, and I have another one—that
fellow the gang was trying to do up at Partrom’s
last night. His name’s Gordon.”</p>
<p>“All!” remarked Carter, trying to be calm. “I’d
like to see him again.”</p>
<p>“Well, I guess you can. I think he’s up in his room<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
now. He isn’t working to-night. The superintendent
of the mill has laid him off until inquiries are made
into that fuss where you took a hand. It’s a rotten
shame! Gordon wasn’t to blame for that. The others
jumped on him, and he had to hold ’em off. He’s
told me often that nothing can make him fight—and
he ain’t no coward, either.”</p>
<p>“Look, chief. What’s that?” shouted Patsy Garvan
excitedly, running toward the house. “Fire!”</p>
<p>“Heaven save us!” ejaculated Billings wildly. “It’s
my house!”</p>
<p>He dashed into the store, and through to the back
room, where he saw at once what had happened. His
wife had put kerosene on the kitchen range, and there
had been an explosion which meant destruction for
the house.</p>
<p>Billings lifted his unconscious wife from the floor
and ran out to the street. Then he went back to save
what few pieces of furniture he might hope to get
back before the fire took everything its own way.</p>
<p>The only hope lay in the fact that it was a brick
structure, and not a frame one. The house had been
built after the fire laws had forbidden the putting
up of wooden buildings in that area. But there had
been many brick houses put up before the era of iron-frame
skyscrapers, and this was one of them.</p>
<p>An alarm had been turned in, and already members
of the fire department were dashing up with their
machines. It looked as if the fire would soon be overcome,
when somebody shouted:</p>
<p>“Look! There’s somebody up top!”</p>
<p>The firemen, with their ladders, had already rescued
a woman and two children from another window.
But these people who were shouting for help from an
attic were in the next house, which also had caught
fire.</p>
<p>The firemen—efficient and cool-nerved, as all New
York firemen are—put their ladders up. But owing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
to the formation of the house, it was impossible to
get at the attic quickly.</p>
<p>Nick Carter had seen that it was a young girl at
the window, and his wonderful memory carried him
back to that night at Maple, where he had seen the
girl they called Bessie Silvius, with her father, Roscoe
Silvius, who had played and sung in the garden of
the Savoy.</p>
<p>“That only confirms my belief that Howard Milmarsh
is here,” he told himself. “It would be likely
for them to live in the same house in New York if
they could, after being friends in the wilds of Canada.”</p>
<p>This passed his mind like a flash as he looked
to see how they might be rescued. He had seen that
the firemen could not do it from the outside, and he
made up his mind to a desperate undertaking.</p>
<p>Fortunately, Nick was known to all the battalion
chiefs of the fire department, and to most of the other
men. They all recognized him as a wonderful detective,
and he was allowed privileges that ordinary citizens
do not possess, even though they may have influence
and great wealth.</p>
<p>It is not an easy thing to get inside the fire lines
and be permitted to move about freely—unless you
happen to be a newspaper man.</p>
<p>“Keep back, Patsy!” shouted Nick, as he dashed into
the house, amid a shower of sparks and through a
flood of water pouring from two or three lines of
hose. “I’m going alone!”</p>
<p>“Come back!” bellowed a battalion chief. “You
can’t get through there!”</p>
<p>Patsy and Chick would both have followed their
chief, but firemen held them back, and they were
obliged to yield.</p>
<p>As they looked up, they saw a man lean from the
attic window of Billings’ house and Patsy yelled that
it was Potter.</p>
<p>“It’s either Potter or Howard Milmarsh,” called<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
out Chick. “I don’t know one from the other these
days.”</p>
<p>“He’s going to try and save that girl!” said Patsy.</p>
<p>“Sure enough!” assented Chick. “But where’s the
chief?” he added, in a tone of agony. “That’s what
he went into that house for. I wish we’d never heard
of this Milmarsh case!”</p>
<p>“Come down out of that attic!” roared a chief
through his megaphone at Potter or Milmarsh, whichever
it was. “You can’t reach the girl. Hurry down,
and you may save yourself. Another moment will
be too late!”</p>
<p>But the man at the attic window paid no heed. His
eyes were on the girl, who still leaned from the other
window, and who was uttering scream after scream
of despairing terror.</p>
<p>The roar of the fire, the hissing of the water, and
the thud of the fire engines all made up a deafening
confusion of sounds. But, through it all, Chick heard
the man at the other window call out cheerfully:</p>
<p>“Don’t give way, Bessie! I’m coming to save you
by the roof!”</p>
<p>“Oh, Howard! Howard!” responded the girl, shrill
with horror. “My father is here, and he’s helpless!”</p>
<p>“Keep up your heart!” responded the man. “I’m
coming!”</p>
<p>“Say, Patsy, she called him ‘Howard.’ Did you
hear it?”</p>
<p>“Sure!”</p>
<p>“Then that looks as if he is the real thing, doesn’t
it?”</p>
<p>But Patsy did not reply. He was wondering
whether the man would reappear. He had vanished
from the window, and he might have fallen back, exhausted,
into the awful caldron of flame and smoke
behind him.</p>
<p>“We’ll have to get a ladder up there!” cried a fire
chief. “Up with her, boys! The third house is on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
fire now. We must get this fellow out somehow.
There’s a better chance with the ladder at this house
than either of the others.”</p>
<p>It was Bonesy Billings’ house in which the young
man called “Howard” by the girl had just disappeared
from the attic window. It was not burning so fiercely
as the other two.</p>
<p>Whether the firemen succeeded in getting the ladder
to the window where the young man was believed
to be, neither Chick nor Patsy could see for the smoke.
Besides, their attention was distracted from it in their
anxiety for their beloved chief.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Nick was bounding, head down, up the
flaming stairs. As he reached—barely reached—the
landing of the second floor, the whole staircase collapsed
behind him. As it did so, it sent a great gush
of flame and burning embers far upward and out of
the front door. Several firemen, who had been trying
to follow him, tumbled out, half suffocated, into
the arms of their comrades outside!</p>
<p>Nick glanced over his shoulder as he heard the crash.
He saw the well of fire where the stairs had been, and
he knew that death in its most appalling form had
missed him by only a few inches!</p>
<p>He pressed on still upward, with smoke and sparks
around him, and death—almost certain, as it seemed—ahead!</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />