I was making breakfast when I heard the screams—sharp, panicked. I looked outside: smoke, thick and black, pouring from the house next door.
No time to think. I grabbed the hose, soaked my hoodie, and ran in barefoot.
A small boy was at an upstairs window. As I rushed through smoke, someone yelled, “Don’t go—I’ll get him!”
That voice. Aiden. My ex. We hadn’t spoken in three years.
But in that moment, none of it mattered. We ran in together.
We found the boy—maybe six—hiding under the bed. Aiden carried him, I shielded his face, and we tried to escape. But the flames were everywhere. We ended up back upstairs, smashed a window, and helped the boy onto a firefighter’s ladder.
Aiden told me to go, but as I moved, the floor gave way. I held on until they pulled me out.
Outside, the boy’s mom wept, clutching him. Aiden stood nearby. “I was coming to see you,” he said. “That’s why I was here.”
We sat on the curb, silent. Later, the boy’s mom found us. His name was Jonah.
In the weeks after, Aiden and I started talking again. Coffee turned to walks, then laughter. Eventually, he asked to come back—not just to visit, but to stay. I said yes.
We helped raise money for Jonah’s family—not to be heroes, just because it felt right.
That fire took a house. But it gave us something too: a second chance.
Sometimes, what seems like the end is really the beginning.