They Left Their Daughter In The Fire To Hand Her Brother The Company-eirian

The fire chief did not ask me who started the fire.

He asked why I had been the only person on the second floor.

I was in a hospital bed with an oxygen mask pressing into my face, both arms wrapped in gauze, and smoke still living somewhere deep in my chest.

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Chief Daniel Ortiz spread three photographs across the tray.

The first showed my parents on the front lawn, barefoot and wrapped in blankets.

The second showed my younger brother Ryan beside an ambulance, his face clean except for one stripe of soot under his jaw.

The third showed the upstairs hallway where firefighters had found the place I should have died.

“Everyone else slept downstairs,” Ortiz said, tapping the floor plan.

I shook my head because that was wrong.

“Grandpa’s room was upstairs too,” I rasped.

Ortiz looked at me for a long second.

“Exactly.”

That was the first moment I understood the fire was not only meant to destroy a house.

It was meant to choose who walked out.

Three days earlier, Grandpa William had called me and asked me to come home for the weekend.

He sounded stronger than he had in months, which scared me more than weakness ever did.

“I have made a decision about the future,” he said.

Grandpa did not explain family business over the phone.

The Parker house sat on a wooded hill above Asheford Lake, old stone, cedar trim, and bright windows.

Everything our family had began there.

Parker Construction had started in that garage with Grandpa, Grandma Eleanor, one truck, and two men who trusted them enough to work through rain.

Ryan’s sports car was already there.

Dad’s truck sat beside it, and Mom’s SUV was in the closest space.

Ryan opened the door before I reached the porch.

“There she is,” he said, hugging me.

I stood stiff in his arms because we had not hugged in years.

He laughed like my surprise was cute.

“I am trying to be a better brother.”

The timing was not.

Inside, the house smelled like bread, lemon polish, and cedar smoke from the fireplace.

Grandpa sat near the hearth with an old engineering journal open on his lap.

When he saw me, he smiled the real smile he saved for people he still trusted.

Dinner was gentle enough to make my skin tighten.

Dad asked about the commercial project I had just finished, Mom said my dress was flattering, and Ryan apologized for forgetting my birthday.

If a stranger had walked through the dining room, they would have believed we had healed.

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