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Brave Changes
1
The new fire engine was a true beauty. The firefighters and I stood in a silent semicircle as my father, the captain, climbed into the driver's seat. We'd been waiting months for this. Still, as I gazed at the gleaming Model T, I couldn't help feeling a little nostalgic for the old days. The station's fire horses had been the fastest and strongest in Boston. I was going to miss them. I was pretty sure the firefighters were already missing them. It's not easy to watch the world change under your feet.
2
When my father cranked the engine, it was loud enough to break the spell. The guys grinned and clapped, and Dad said, "Time stops for no one. Neither does progress."
Everyone nodded. My father commanded respect; he had been at Station 3 for twenty years, and his courage was practically legendary. Maybe that was why Henry and Lou, the dispatchers, let me hang around so much. Or maybe they just liked having company during those long stretches when they were alone in the station. Whatever the reason, they always seemed glad to see me when I burst in after school. They even taught me how to play chess to fill the time.
After we got the Model T, it seemed like the fire station got busier. Maybe that, too, was a mark of progress. Sparking trolley poles, someone's new refrigerator smoking from the back, an overheating conveyor on the assembly line— the Model T quickly earned its keep. As for me, I spent a lot of time playing chess, waiting for my father's return.
As soon as the fire engine pulled into the garage, I would run down the three flights of stairs to meet him. (Much as I hate to admit it, I couldn't take the dizzying, three- story drop down the fire pole.) Dad's smile always shone from his sooty face, as his sure hand turned the switch to shut off the engine. I wondered what it was like to be that confident and calm. That brave.
One blustery winter afternoon, the alarm screamed just as I came in the door. One by one, the company's firefighters slid down the pole. Dad flashed me a grin and gave me a quick salute before disappearing with the rest of them.
"White moves first," Henry called over to me, already setting up the chess pieces. I pulled up a chair, and we played for what seemed like an hour. Finally, as I was putting Henry's king in check, the radio crackled, and Henry and I both leaned forward.
"Automobile accident," Dad said. We could hear the wind ripping across his radio microphone. "Delivery truck and, uh, several automobiles. Hold on."
Henry waited a minute, two minutes. "Captain? Are you there? Over."
Finally, Dad's voice came through again. "Several automobiles," he repeated through the wind. "Icy conditions. Petroleum fire spreading to . . . 25 Dorchester Avenue."
"Captain? Confirm your location, 25 Dorchester Avenue, over."
Dorchester Avenue was just over the bridge. I walked past crumpled napkins and half- finished bottles of cola to the front windows of the fire station. The cloud of smoke took my breath away. Fireboxes flashed red on the sidewalk, and passersby had stopped in their tracks, staring at the enormous, dark cloud.
"Henry," I said. But he was concentrating on the radio.
High winds are a firefighter's worst enemy, my father had told me, even worse than the fire itself. I looked out the window and watched the cloud of smoke rise and expand.
"Backup needed!" Dad's voice crackled. It was high- pitched and wild, lacking its usual restraint. Lieutenant Mitchell's voice took over, and that's when my heart began to pound. Eventually, the static became too thick for any transmissions at all. Henry joined me at the window. We barely spoke as the winter sun set.
Hours later, the Model T chugged into the garage. Did it sound slower than usual? Less sure of itself? Perhaps. All I knew was that this time, my father needed me. I shut my eyes and slid down the cold metal pole.
The engine was still running, although the firefighters had already climbed off. Dad was sitting in the driver's seat, covered in soot. I climbed up and sat next to him. His soot- covered hand moved toward the ignition switch but quickly dropped back down to his lap. Finally, he looked at me. He didn't say anything. I nodded, reached over, and turned the switch for him. Then we headed upstairs together.
Based on the first paragraph, when does the story take place?
in the past
in the future
in the present
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