The fire didnโt start with an explosion. It began quietly, almost politely, as if asking permission before it decided to take everything. A faulty heater. A single spark. A curtain that caught flame. By the time anyone realized what was happening, smoke was already crawling along the ceiling, thick and suffocating, filling the small apartment building with the sharp smell of burning plastic and wood.

People screamed. Doors flew open. Footsteps thundered down the stairwell as residents fled in panic.
Evan froze in the parking lot, his jacket half on, his lungs burning from the smoke heโd already inhaled. Fire alarms shrieked above him. Someone grabbed his arm and shouted, โDonโt go back in! Itโs spreading!โ
But Evan wasnโt listening anymore.
He turned toward the building, eyes locked on the second-floor window where black smoke poured out in violent waves. Flames licked the curtains from inside, bright orange against the darkness. The yelp came again, weaker this time.
He knew that sound.
Three weeks earlier, Evan had met the husky puppy by accident. Heโd been taking out the trash when his upstairs neighbor, Lila, struggled down the stairs with a bag of dog food and a squirming ball of gray-and-white fur. The puppyโs paws were too big for his body, his ears unsure whether they wanted to stand tall or flop over.
โHe doesnโt know his own strength,โ she had laughed.
The puppy had wriggled free and sprinted straight toward Evan, skidding across the concrete before crashing into his legs. Instead of barking, he looked up with ice-blue eyes and sneezed.
Evan had knelt down without thinking.
โHey there,โ heโd said softly.
The puppy climbed into his lap like he belonged there.
From that day on, Evan saw him every morning. The puppy โ named Ghost โ waited at the window when Evan left for work, tail thumping against the glass. When Evan came home, Ghost greeted him like heโd been gone for years, not hours.
He pulled his jacket over his mouth, lowered his head, and ran.
The heat slammed into him the moment he burst through the entrance. Smoke pressed down like a living thing, heavy and relentless. His eyes burned. The hallway lights flickered, then died, leaving only the violent orange pulse of flames at the far end.
โGhost!โ Evan shouted.
His voice vanished into the roar of the fire.
He forced himself up the stairs, gripping the railing as it burned his palm. Every breath felt like knives in his lungs. His legs screamed at him to stop, to turn back.
Smoke rolled out like a wave. Flames had already reached the far wall, devouring furniture, cracking and popping as they spread. Evan dropped to his knees, crawling low, coughing so violently his vision blurred.
โGhost!โ he yelled, his voice breaking.
A small shape darted out from behind the couch.
The husky puppy ran toward him โ then skidded to a stop, confused and terrified by the smoke, the heat, the noise. His fur was singed at the tips. His eyes were wide with panic.
โCome on, buddy,โ Evan said hoarsely, holding out his arms. โCome on.โ
Ghost hesitated.
The ceiling cracked.
Burning debris crashed down, sending sparks flying. Ghost yelped and backed away, trapped between Evan and the flames.
Evan didnโt think.
He lunged forward, scooping the puppy into his chest and wrapping his jacket around Ghostโs small body to shield him from the heat. The puppy squirmed, then pressed his face into Evanโs neck, whining softly.