him outside.”
* * *
I STOOD OUT back in the parking lot, surveying the course, and waited.
A few minutes later, the captain showed up and said, “That was a hell of a speech.”
I held still, eyes on the course.
“It could be somebody on a different shift, you know.”
“It could be,” I said. “But it isn’t.”
“I can’t imagine any of our guys would do that to you.”
“Maybe it was you,” I said, not looking over. “I’m pretty sure you told my old captain that women in the fire service would be the downfall of human civilization.”
The captain leaned forward until he caught my eye. “It wasn’t me, Hanwell. Do you want to know why?”
I shrugged, not looking over.
“I did say that to your captain. But in the short time you’ve been here, you’ve made me change my mind.”
I looked down.
I believed him. But I wasn’t going to give him the satisfaction of admitting it. “So you say,” I said.
“The guys don’t want to take your challenge. They say you don’t need to prove yourself. They want me to give you a pass.”
“I won’t take it.”
“That’s what I told them.”
“Go back in and tell them to pick somebody, then,” I said.
“Who gives the orders here, Hanwell?”
“You do, sir. So go back in and act like it.”
The captain went in, and a few minutes later, they sent out Case.
“Nope,” I said, the minute I saw him. “That’s just insulting.”
“I’m the choice,” Case said with a shrug. “Deal with it.”
“Case,” I said, “you could not run this course if your life depended on it.”
“That’s why we all picked me,” he said. “Nobody wants you to lose.”
“I’m not going to lose,” I said. “Now get back in there and pick somebody real.”
A few minutes later, the rookie came out.
“Why didn’t you call me?” he asked, referring, I supposed, to the brick.
“What would you have done?”
He shook his head, looking out at the course. “I don’t know. Helped you sweep up, maybe.”
“Maybe it was you who threw it,” I said then.
“You couldn’t possibly think that.” He searched my eyes.
I shrugged. “Maybe you’ve been nice to me this whole time to throw me off your trail. Maybe you secretly want me gone.”
“Trust me,” he said. “I want you the opposite of gone.”
I looked away. “I don’t trust anybody anymore.”
“You don’t have to do this,” Owen said. “Nobody wants you to.”
“Why are you out here, anyway?” I asked. “Shouldn’t you be inside, deciding?”
“They’ve already decided.”
I turned to him. “Who is it?”
He shrugged. “It’s me.”
I let out a bitter laugh. “Of course it is,” I said.
“What does that mean?” he asked.
I was marching toward the course. “Call the guys. Let’s get this done.”
The guys gathered near the pull-up bars.
“Who’s got a stopwatch?” I said.
Tiny raised his phone, open to the stopwatch setting.
It wasn’t a perfect plan, of course. But I just needed to do something. Anything.
The rookie and I took our places.
I’d been practicing as inconspicuously as possible. I worked on elements of the course when the guys weren’t looking, mostly because I never wanted them to see me do anything I wasn’t good at. Twice a year, the captain had said, we’d run it together, and I didn’t want to be embarrassed. More than that, I wanted to kick ass.
So now, suddenly, it was that day.
Time to see if all that on-the-sly practice and self-taught parkour would do the trick.
Necessity, as always, was the mother of invention.
I’d watched the guys do the course before. When they jumped to grab the bar, they grasped with their hands and hoisted up against gravity. But I didn’t have the option of jumping for the bar. The only way for somebody my size to grab it was to do a wall run up the pole, then a turn vault.
It was the only way for me—but also a better way.
The momentum would do most of the work for me. I wasn’t crawling up over the bar so much as grabbing it as I went by. The guys started with their heads below it, but using the pole as a kind of springboard helped me grab the bar with my head already above—then it was just a little farther to pop up into a hip catch, and then I could spin over it and drop.
I used some version of a wall run to approach every tall structure on the course, using it to shift my momentum from forward to upward. I used the cat leap to get myself over that eight-foot wall. I used the