By Margaret S. Hamilton
New Year’s Eve, Jericho, Ohio
Up to her elbows in mounds of washed lettuce and spinach in
the parish hall kitchen, Lizzie Christopher assembled large bowls of mixed
salad garnished with carrot peels and dotted with sliced radishes. The parish
hall would be one of many event spaces serving dinner to the townspeople on
First Night, or New Year’s Eve, before the evening concerts, one-act plays, and
fireworks. The whole town would turn out for the family-style afternoon and
evening celebration.
Tommy Pfeiffer, a ten-year-old who did odd jobs around
town, knocked on the kitchen door carrying two tote bags. “Hi, Lizzie, Dolores
sent two containers of her special salad dressing from the diner.”
Lizzie put down her vegetable peeler to accept the salad
dressing. “Thanks, Tommy. You’re a big help.” Tommy had grown taller since the
summer, his curly hair flopping over his forehead.
“Want to grab a snack and stick around for a few minutes?”
“No thanks. I’m on my usual route, checking things out.”
“Around one-thirty, I’ll drop by the library to check on my
kids running the crafts and chess activities. Won’t you join me?”
“Yeah, sure, I haven’t seen Phillip and Claire since day
camp last summer.” He wiped his nose with a wadded tissue. “Will I need a First
Night Button?”
First Night attendees wore large metal buttons on their
coats, which gave them admission to all the events.
“I have an extra I’ll give you.” Lizzie pinned it on his
jacket.
“Thanks for the button.” Tommy flipped through a small
notebook before he tucked it into his coat pocket. “See ya later.”
Five minutes later, Paul Battelle, a local attorney,
carried twenty-four packs of soft drinks and flavored waters into the parish
hall. “Have you seen Tommy Pfeiffer?”
“He just left with his little notebook. Tommy mentioned
something about making his usual rounds.”
Paul furrowed his brow. “Tommy lives with his mother and
grandmother in one of the duplexes on the other side of Main Street. The
landlord, Stan Harrison, is harassing the tenants, trying to force them out so
he can sell the buildings as teardowns to a developer who wants to build luxury
apartments. I asked Tommy to tell me if anything is amiss, not to gather
evidence against his landlord.”
Lizzie smiled. “Tommy’s like me.” Her sleuthing skills had
served her well, particularly investigating unscrupulous townspeople and their
nefarious deeds.
“Harrison is in debt, desperate, and actively endangering
his tenants.”
“Including Tommy’s family?”
Paul’s face turned sober. “Especially Tommy’s family.
Tommy’s mother is a capable businesswoman. Not only does she run a non-profit,
but she also organized all the tenants to fight eviction. I help the group with
their legal matters.”
“Tommy promised to meet me here at one-thirty.” Lizzie
checked her phone. “That gives him an hour to snoop around the duplexes.”
Paul pulled out his car keys. “I need to find him before
Harrison does.”
“Tommy calls himself a free-range kid. I know he carries a
basic version of a cell phone.”
Paul unlocked his phone. “Good idea. I’ll ask Tommy’s
mother for his number. You have mine. Text me when he shows up.”
Lizzie peeled more carrots and chopped what was left into
tiny bits to add some crunch to the salads. She put plastic wrap on top of each
bowl and placed the containers in the walk-in refrigerator.
Paul called her at one, requesting her assistance at the
duplexes, near the intersection of Oak and First Streets.
Lizzie shrugged on her heavy down parka and wrapped a long
scarf around her neck. She raced to Main Street, which was behind barricades to
accommodate outdoor children’s activities—ice carving, a giant bubble machine,
and noise parade—on the Green.
After crossing Main Street, she strode down a side street
to the four-block section of town known as “the duplexes,” two-family clapboard
houses, each with a shared front porch, one apartment on each floor. Many
college students and staff members lived in the close-knit neighborhood.
Lizzie continued to the intersection of First and Oak
Streets. Paul waited with Tommy next to a line of fire trucks and police
vehicles.
“Hi, guys, what’s up?”
Paul kept his voice low. “Tommy told me Stan Harrison cut
the gas to several buildings, then entered the apartments and left electric
heaters with frayed or damaged cords running full blast. Stan’s not allowed to
turn off the gas—only the utility company can do that—and the electric heaters
represent a serious fire hazard. All the affected apartments are unoccupied,
because the occupants are out of town. The police have alerted the residents
who are home.”
Lizzie gasped. “But if one of the duplexes catches fire,
others will burn, too.”
“When Tommy saw what Harrison was doing, he called 911.
Fire and police responded.”
“Did the police arrest Harrison?”
“They can’t find him. He may be hiding in one of the
unoccupied units. He has a master key to all the apartments.”
Lizzie’s mouth was dry. “He might be in Tommy’s apartment.
Can you discretely call his mother?”
Paul stepped behind a fire truck and made the call. He
joined Lizzie a minute later. “No answer.”
“Tommy,” Lizzie said, “is your mom running errands today?”
“Nah, she’s working at home. After she finishes, we’re
going to one of the First Night dinners and the fireworks.”
“What a great way to spend New Year’s Eve,” Lizzie said.
“It’s time to deliver snacks to the chess and craft programs. Want to come with
me?”
“I have to check on Mom and Grandma,” Tommy said. “I’m not
going anywhere until I know they’re all right.”
“Paul, would you find a police officer?” Lizzie asked.
“Tommy, do you have a house key?”
He nodded, pulling out two deadbolt keys on a chain from
under his sweatshirt. He handed the chain to Paul. “The key with the blue dot
is our upstairs neighbor. I’m watering their plants and taking in the mail
while they’re out of town.”
“Thanks,” Lizzie said. “Tommy, you stay with me. Let the
police do their job.”
“Don’t you need to deliver snacks to Phillip and Claire?”
“I’ll text them. They can run across the street from the
library.” She patted his shoulder. “You and your family are more important.”
She smiled. “I know Dolores at the diner appreciates your help running
errands.”
“Dolores gives me take-out dinners instead of paying me, so
we save money on groceries. Wednesdays are best because it’s hot meatloaf
sandwich day.” He rubbed his nose. “Paul isn’t back yet. I need to find Mom and
Grandma.”
“Just a little while longer. First, the police need to
check all the apartments for defective electric heaters. And then the utility
company will turn the gas back on. Brrr. The apartments must be cold with no
heat.”
“Harrison’s done it before,” Tommy said. “In the summer, he
turns off the electricity so we can’t use our window air conditioners.” He
paused. “What’s a fourplex?”
“It sounds like a building with four apartments, two on the
main floor and two on the second floor.”
“Double the apartments in the same space as a duplex. And
no parking. Harrison already won’t let Mom park her car in the driveway. And
I’m not allowed to leave my bike on the front porch. Dolores keeps it in the
storage shed behind the diner.” Tommy chewed his lip. “Please, Lizzie, can we
move closer to my house?”
“Do you promise to stay with me on the sidewalk? That’s a
mom question. How would you answer your mother?”
“Yes, Ma’am!”
Tommy led the way to his duplex. Lizzie texted Paul that
they were outside on the sidewalk.
The gray clapboard building was quiet. No lights were on.
The shades on the windows were drawn.
“Tommy, do you live up or down?”
“Down. Our upstairs neighbors work for the college.” He
stared at the duplex. “In the winter, we always have the shades up during the
day. Grandma likes the sunshine. And we can lower the thermostat to save money,
too.”
Paul Battelle joined them. He knelt on the sidewalk to talk
to Tommy. “Hey, buddy, we need your help. You know all the ins and outs of your
duplex, right? Basement windows, back doors, what’s locked, all that good
stuff.”
“Come on, I’ll show you.” Tommy trotted to the far side of
the duplex. “The window on the side has a broken lock. During the summer we put
an air conditioner in it. The screen lifts out.” He positioned two plastic
recycling containers under the window and removed a chisel taped inside one of
them. “You can stand on the containers to reach the window and use the chisel
to pry it open. Sometimes Harrison locks us out of the apartment, but I can
always get in.”
Paul made a call to relay the information. “Let’s stand
across the street.”
“Did you find Mom? Where’s Grandma?”
“They’re inside your apartment. The police went upstairs.
They could hear Mom and Grandma talking from downstairs.”
“Harrison’s hiding in their apartment, isn’t he?” Tommy
asked.
“Yes. But we’re going to get him.”
Two more fire trucks screamed to a stop. The firefighters
jumped off the trucks and, carrying large fire extinguishers, entered the front
door to the upstairs unit in Tommy’s building.
“There’s a fire in the apartment! I need to get Mom and
Grandma out.” Tommy started to run after the firefighters.
Lizzie grabbed Tommy’s arm. He could move at warp speed.
Fastest mile runner at day camp. “Tommy, please stay put. My job is keeping you
safe.”
He shifted his shoulders. “I know, I know.” His eyes teared
up. “But Mom and Grandma are trapped inside with Harrison. He might hurt them.”
Lizzie whispered in his ear. “Your mom is a strong, capable
woman. Trust her.”
Tommy gulped. “Yeah, she lifts weights and does
kickboxing.”
The front door of Tommy’s apartment burst open, and Stan
Harrison emerged. He stumbled down the steps and headed straight for Lizzie and
Tommy.
“Tommy, let’s get him!” Lizzie wrapped the strap of her
crossbody bag around her hand and charged.
Tommy dove for one of Harrison’s legs and hung on, not
losing his grip, no matter how much Harrison kicked.
Lizzie whirled her bag in a circle and slung it into
Harrison’s head. He crashed to the ground. She put her hiking boot-clad foot
firmly on his back. “Paul, I could use some help.”
Paul added his foot to Harrison’s back. “I didn’t learn
this in law school.”
“You need to get out more,” Lizzie said.
Two police officers took over, cuffing Harrison before
guiding him inside a patrol car.
Tommy’s mom and grandma emerged from the apartment. “Tommy,
are you all right?”
Lizzie called to them. “Grab your coats and boots, ladies.
I’ll take you for a cup of hot coffee.”
She hugged Tommy. “We’ll drop you off at the lightning
chess tournament.”
“Checkmate and happy new year!” Tommy raced to greet his
mother and grandmother.
THE END
Margaret S. Hamilton writes the Jericho Mysteries series
about a small Ohio college town. She has also published forty short stories,
many of them featuring amateur sleuth Lizzie Christopher.
Home - The
Official Website of Margaret S. Hamilton
“Fire Alarm on First Night” was originally published in Kings
River Life Magazine in December 2024. Our thanks to Lorie Lewis Ham for allowing
publication on the blog.
Fire
Alarm On First Night: New Year’s Eve Mystery Short Story | Kings River Life
Magazine
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