My Hero ~ Eddie Diaz
The call came in just as the 118 was finishing up a routine medical.
â118, weâve got multiple reports of a structure fire,â dispatch crackled over the radio. âElementary school. Possible children trapped.â
Buckâs head snapped up before the address even finished.
Then he heard it.
The name of his daughter Delilahâs school.
For half a second, everything inside him went still.
Bobby was already moving. âYou heard dispatch. Letâs roll.â
Buck was in the engine faster than he could think. It wasnât uncommon fires happened, alarms malfunctioned, kitchens sparked. It didnât mean anything. It didnât meanâŚ
âBuck.â Henâs voice was careful from the jump seat. âYou good?â
âYeah.â Too quick. âYeah, Iâm good.â
Across from him, Eddie was quiet.
Eddie had spent enough afternoons at Buckâs place to know the layout of Delilahâs school from pickup stories alone. Heâd helped with homework at the kitchen table. Sat through a first-grade recorder concert. Fixed a wobbly bookshelf in her room.
Lilah adored him.
He tried to keep his voice even. âIt could be small. Electrical. Contained.â
Buck nodded stiffly, jaw tight.
Dispatch continued: âHeavy smoke visible from east wing. Evacuation in progress.â
East wing.
Buckâs hands curled into fists against his turnout pants.
Bobbyâs voice cut through the tension. Calm. Grounded. âWe do this by the book. Everyone stays sharp.â
Eddie watched Buck from across the rig. He could see it. The way Buckâs breathing had shifted, the way his knee bounced once before he forced it still.
âSheâll be okay,â Eddie said quietly, just for him.
Buck didnât look up. âYeah.â
He had no reason to think otherwise.
They hadnât heard anything about students missing. No confirmed entrapments. Just smoke. Just fire.
Still, Buckâs chest felt tight.
The engine turned the final corner.
Smoke billowed into the sky ahead, thick and gray. Fire alarms wailed faintly even from down the block. Parents crowded the sidewalks, some crying, some clutching children to their chests. Teachers in bright vests tried to keep order on the lawn.
Flames flickered along a section of the roof near the far side of the building.
Buckâs stomach dropped.
The engine slowed.
No one had said Delilah was missing.
No one had said she was hurt.
But as they pulled up in front of the school and the full chaos came into viewâ
Buck already felt like he couldnât breathe.
The second Buckâs boots hit the pavement, he was moving.
Smoke rolled overhead in thick waves, the sharp scent of burning insulation clawing at his lungs even through the mask hanging loose around his neck. Parents were shouting names. Teachers were trying to take attendance over the wail of alarms.
âCaptain Nash!â A woman in a soot-streaked cardigan rushed toward Bobby. âWeâre still missing students.â
Buck froze.
Bobby steadied her. âHow many?â
âWeâre still confirming, butâŚâ Her voice broke. âAt least four.â
Buckâs heartbeat thundered in his ears.
âNames?â he asked, already knowing he didnât want the answer.
She looked down at the clipboard shaking in her hands.
âDelilah BuckleyâŚ.â
The world tilted.
For a split second Buck couldnât hear anything but the rush of blood in his head.
Eddieâs hand was suddenly on his shoulder. âBuckâŚâ
âNo.â Buck shook his head hard, like he could physically dislodge the words. âShe was here. She was⌠she had math today.â
âSheâs probably with another class,â Hen said quickly, but her eyes were worried.
Bobby stepped in front of Buck, firm and steady. âWe are going to find her. But you will follow orders. You will not freelance.â
Buckâs jaw clenched. His voice was tight when he answered. âYes, Cap.â
Bobby nodded once. âWe split into teams. Primary and secondary searches. We clear every room.â
âChim, Eddie you take the east wing. Reports of heavy smoke and partial collapse.â
East wing.
Buck swallowed hard.
âAnd Buck,â Bobby said quietly, meeting his eyes, âyouâre with me.â
Buck nodded, forcing air into his lungs.
They masked up.
Then they went in.
Inside was chaos.
Heat radiated off the walls. Sprinklers hissed uselessly against growing flames. Visibility was low, smoke layering thick and black near the ceiling.
â118! Call out!â Chim yelled as he and Eddie moved down the east hallway.
They checked classrooms one by one. Empty desks, abandoned backpacks, overturned chairs. The fire had already chewed through part of the ceiling near the science lab.
Eddieâs chest felt tight, but not just from the smoke.
Lilahâs laugh echoed in his head.
The way sheâd insisted he come to âDonuts with Grownupsâ last month because âEddie makes better jokes than Daddyâ
He pushed the thought away and kept moving.
âClear!â Chim shouted from the third classroom.
They regrouped in the hallway.
A loud crash echoed from farther down.
Chim glanced toward it. âThat didnât sound good.â
ThenâŚ
A faint noise.
Eddie stilled.
âHold up.â
Chim paused. âWhat?â
Eddie tilted his head. Through the crackle of flames and the shriek of metal, he heard it again.
A small thud.
From the locker room near the gym. Technically a changing area for after P.E.
âYou hear that?â Eddie asked.
Chim strained. âI just hear the building trying to kill us.â
Another sound.
Closer this time.
Eddieâs stomach dropped.
âIâm checking it.â
âEddieâŚâ Chim grabbed his arm briefly. âThat areaâs compromised. We clear together.â
But the noise came again. Softer. Desperate.
âIâve got it,â Eddie said. âJust cover the hallway.â
Before Chim could argue, Eddie pushed toward the locker room doors.
Heat intensified immediately. Flames licked along the ceiling, eating through old paint and insulation. One of the doors hung crooked on its hinge.
âFire department!â Eddie shouted as he stepped inside. âIf you can hear me, make a sound!â
Smoke swirled thick and choking. Lockers glowed hot along one wall. Part of the ceiling had already collapsed near the showers.
Another thud.
From deeper in.
âCome on,â Eddie muttered to himself.
Behind him, over the radio, Bobbyâs voice cut through sharp and urgent:
âAll units, structural integrity is failing in the east wing. We are calling for evacuation. Repeat evacuate immediately.â
Eddie froze.
The ceiling groaned ominously above him.
âEddie, copy?â Chimâs voice came through his earpiece. âWeâve gotta go!â
Eddie took a step back toward the exit and then he heard it.
A weak cough.
Small.
Too small to be an adult.
His heart slammed into his ribs.
âFire department!â he called again, moving toward the row of benches near the far wall. âKeep coughing! Iâm coming to you!â
Another cough.
From behind a toppled equipment cart.
Eddie rounded it and saw a small figure curled against the lockers, arms over her head, soot streaked across her face.
Delilah.
For a heartbeat, everything else disappeared.
âLilah?â His voice cracked inside the mask.
Her eyes fluttered open at the sound.
âEddieâŚ?â
The ceiling above them gave a sharp, splintering crack.
Smoke thickened.
Outside, Bobby repeated the order to evacuate.
But Eddie was already moving toward her.
The crack above them wasnât subtle this time.
It was violent.
Eddie had just reached her when the ceiling gave way.
âLilah!â he shouted, lunging forward.
The world exploded in sparks and falling debris.
A section of burning ceiling crashed down where sheâd been seconds before. Eddie threw himself over her, wrapping his body around hers, turning so his back took the brunt of it. Something heavy slammed across his shoulders. Heat seared through his turnout coat. The impact knocked the air from his lungs.
Lilah screamed.
âIâve got you!â Eddie gritted out, curling tighter around her as ash and fragments rained down. âIâve got you, sweetheart. Donât move.â
The fire roared louder, fed by the sudden rush of oxygen.
Over the radio, Chimâs voice broke through, frantic. âEddie! Eddie, respond!â
Eddie coughed hard, smoke forcing its way into his mask. His ears rang. His back burned.
But beneath him
Lilah was still moving.
Still breathing.
âIâm here,â he rasped into the radio. âIâve got her.â
âLocation?â Bobby demanded immediately.
âLocker room east sideâŚâ Eddie coughed again. âPartial collapse.â
âHang on,â Bobby ordered. âWeâre coming to you.â
Another beam shifted overhead.
Eddie braced, tightening his hold around Lilah as smaller pieces of debris slid down his back. He could feel the tremble in her body.
âEddieâŚâ Her voice was small. Terrified.
âYouâre okay,â he told her, even as pain flared across his shoulders. âYouâre okay. Iâm not going anywhere.â
The doorway burst open through thick smoke.
âEDDIE!â Chimâs silhouette appeared first, cutting through the haze.
Hen was right behind him.
They moved fast.
âCeilingâs unstable!â Chim shouted.
âNo kidding,â Eddie shot back weakly.
Hen dropped beside them, quickly assessing. âWe need to move now.â
Chim and Hen lifted the debris off Eddieâs back while he carefully shifted, keeping his body between Lilah and anything still falling.
âYou hurt?â Hen asked sharply.
âIâm fine,â Eddie lied.
âLiar,â Chim muttered.
Bobby appeared through the smoke next, grabbing Lilah gently as Eddie finally rolled enough to let them pull her free.
âGot her,â Bobby confirmed.
For one split second, Eddieâs heart stopped, watching as they lifted her away.
She was conscious. Crying. Reaching back toward him.
âEddie!â
âIâm right here,â he promised, pushing himself up despite the white-hot pain in his back.
Another groan from the structure.
âMove!â Bobby barked.
Chim slung Eddieâs arm over his shoulder when his knees nearly buckled. âYeah, youâre fine, huh?â
âShut up,â Eddie wheezed.
They pushed toward the exit as flames chased along the ceiling behind them. Smoke swallowed the room theyâd just been in.
The second they cleared the hallway threshold, another section of roof collapsed inward.
Outside light broke through ahead.
And together, the 118 pulled Eddie and Delilah out of the east wing just as the building gave another violent shudder behind them.
They burst through the front doors into blinding daylight and chaos.
âVictim coming out!â Hen shouted.
Parents surged forward before police pushed them back. Paramedics rushed in with a gurney.
Buck turned at the sound.
Time slowed.
He saw Bobby first, carrying a small soot-covered figure in his arms.
Then he heard it.
âDaddy!â
Buck didnât remember moving.
One second he was twenty feet away. The next he was there, ripping off his gloves, dropping to his knees as Bobby carefully transferred Delilah into his arms.
âLilahâŚâ His voice broke completely. âHey. Hey, Iâve got you. Iâve got you.â
She clung to him instantly, fingers tangling in the front of his turnout coat. âDaddy.â
âIâm here,â he whispered against her hair, pressing his helmeted forehead to hers. âIâm right here. Youâre okay. Youâre okay.â
He pulled back just enough to look at her face. Smudged with soot, tear tracks cutting clean lines down her cheeks, but her eyes were open. Focused. On him.
He let out a shaky breath that sounded almost like a sob.
âYou scared me,â he admitted softly.
She sniffled. âEddie found me.â
Buck stilled.
Only then did he look up.
Eddie was a few steps behind them, supported loosely by Chim. His gear was streaked black. One shoulder looked slightly off. He was breathing hard but he was standing.
Their eyes met.
For a moment, neither of them spoke.
Then Buck surged up, one arm still wrapped securely around Delilah as he closed the distance. He stopped just short of knocking Eddie over.
âYouâŚâ Buck swallowed hard. âYou got her.â
Eddie gave a small, tired nod. âYeah. She was⌠hiding.â
Buck didnât hesitate.
He pulled Eddie into a one-armed, fierce hug, careful of Delilah between them. For half a second, the three of them were tangled together, smoke-stained and shaking.
âThank you,â Buck said, voice thick.
Eddie huffed softly. âAlways.â
Behind them, the school groaned as more of the east wing collapsed inward, flames still licking through broken windows.
But out on the lawn:
Buck held his daughter.
And Eddie was still on his feet.
For now, that was enough.
-
The hospital room was quieter than Buck liked.
Too white. Too still.
Delilah sat propped up in the bed, a small oxygen cannula resting beneath her nose. Soot had been cleaned from her face, but her cheeks were still pink from the smoke, her voice scratchy when she talked. A respiratory therapist had just finished another breathing treatment.
âDeep breaths, sweetheart,â Buck murmured, brushing her hair back gently.
âI am,â she insisted hoarsely.
The doctor had said mild smoke inhalation. Observation overnight. She was going to be okay.
Eddie was still being evaluated.
Buck hadnât let himself fully process that yet.
A knock sounded softly at the door.
Hen stepped in. âTheyâre keeping him for observation too. Smoke inhalation, bruised ribs, shoulder strain. Heâll live.â
Buck let out a breath he didnât realize heâd been holding. âCan we see him?â
Hen smiled faintly. âHeâs asking for you two.â
Eddieâs room was dimmer.
He was propped up against the raised bed, oxygen mask resting lightly against his face. His shoulder was wrapped and braced, faint bruising visible along his collarbone. He looked tired. The kind of tired that came after adrenaline wore off.
But when the door opened and Delilah peeked around it his whole expression changed.
âHey, princess,â he rasped.
She slid off Buckâs hip before he could protest and padded over carefully in her hospital socks.
âCareful,â Buck warned automatically.
âIâm careful,â she said, with the complete confidence of a six-year-old who absolutely was not.
Eddie shifted slightly, trying not to show the wince. âArenât you supposed to be in bed?â
âYou are,â she countered immediately.
That made him smile.
She stood on her tiptoes beside the bed. âCan I come up?â
Eddie glanced at Buck.
Buck nodded.
Very carefully, Eddie shifted just enough so she could climb up beside him. She didnât curl neatly, she flopped a little, knees and elbows everywhere, then adjusted until she was tucked against his good side.
He rested his hand lightly over her back.
âYou were really brave,â he told her.
She shook her head against his gown. âI was hiding.â
âYeah,â he said gently. âSometimes hiding is brave.â
She was quiet for a moment.
Then she pushed herself up suddenly. âWait.â
Buck blinked. âWhat?â
She reached down to grab a folded piece of paper sheâd been clutching the entire time. Slightly crumpled now from being carried everywhere.
She handed it to Eddie with both hands.
âFor you.â
Eddie unfolded it carefully.
It was a crayon drawing. Bright and messy and unmistakably made by a six-year-old. A big red building with orange scribble-flames. Three stick figures holding hands.
One with curly hair labeled âDaddy.â
One with dark hair labeled âEddiâ (missing the final âeâ).
And one small one in the middle with a giant smile labeled âMe.â
Above them in wobbly letters:
My heros.
Eddieâs throat tightened.
âThis is going on my fridge,â he said seriously.
âYou donât have a working fridge,â she pointed out.
âI will now.â
Buck laughed softly, blinking away the sting in his eyes.
A knock interrupted them.
Bobby stepped into the room, hands in his jacket pockets, expression warm.
âThereâs a crew of firefighters outside demanding to see the bravest kid in Los Angeles,â he said.
Her eyes widened. âAll of them?â
âEvery single one,â Bobby confirmed.
She looked at Eddie. âWill you still be here?â
âYeah,â he promised gently. âIâm staying put.â
She leaned forward carefully and gave him a small hug around the middle, mindful of the brace.
âDonât be dumb anymore,â she whispered very seriously.
Eddie let out a soft huff of laughter. âIâll try.â
Buck helped her down from the bed, steadying her on her feat.
Bobby took Delilahâs hand gently and led her out toward the waiting 118.
The door clicked shut softly behind them.
And just like that the room felt different.
Quieter.
Heavier.
Buck stood there for a moment, staring at the closed door. Making sure she was really okay. Making sure this was real.
Then he turned back to Eddie.
Eddie was watching him.
âYou donât have to do that,â Eddie said quietly.
âDo what?â
âStand guard like the buildingâs still on fire.â
Buck let out a shaky breath and dragged a chair closer to the bed. He sat down hard, elbows on his knees, staring at the tile floor.
For a few seconds, he didnât speak.
âI wasnât there.â
Eddie frowned slightly. âBuckâŚâ
âI wasnât,â he repeated, voice tight. âShe was trapped. She was scared and I wasnât the one who found her.â
âYou were searching another hallway full of kids,â Eddie said.
âBut not her.â
The words cracked.
Buck scrubbed a hand down his face, trying to pull himself together. âThey said her name. On the missing list and I justâŚâ He swallowed hard. âI couldnât breathe.â
Eddie shifted carefully, wincing as he adjusted against the brace on his shoulder.
âI heard a kid coughing,â he said gently.
Buck looked up.
âI didnât know it was her,â Eddie continued. âI just knew it was someoneâs kid.â
Buckâs eyes were glassy now. âShe called you.â
Eddie didnât smile at that. He just nodded once. âYeah.â
âShe wasnât alone,â Buck whispered.
âNo,â Eddie agreed firmly. âShe wasnât.â
That did it.
Buckâs shoulders started to shake before he could stop them. It wasnât loud or dramatic. Just quiet, overwhelmed relief pouring out now that there was space for it.
âI thought I lost her,â he admitted. âFor a second, I thought that was it.â
Eddie reached out with his good hand and grabbed Buckâs wrist, grounding him.
âYou didnât.â
Buck let out a shaky laugh. âWeâre all okay. Sheâs okay. Youâre okay and I still feel like my chest is caving in.â
âThatâs adrenaline,â Eddie said softly. âAnd fear. And being a dad.â
Buck let that sink in.
Eddie studied him for a moment before adding, quieter, âYou think I didnât picture Chris when that call came in?â
Buckâs head snapped up.
âElementary school fire?â Eddie continued. âYeah. I saw my kidâs face, too.â
Christopher.
The thought alone made Buckâs stomach drop.
âBut thatâs the job,â Eddie said. âEvery time we walk into a building, it could be someoneâs whole world inside.â
Buckâs voice was barely above a whisper. âIf it had been ChrisâŚâ
âYou wouldâve gone through hell to get to him,â Eddie finished.
Without hesitation, Buck nodded. âYeah.â
Eddie squeezed his wrist. âI know you would.â
Silence settled between them.
Not uncomfortable.
Just honest.
Buck glanced at the crumpled drawing on the tray table. âShe spelled âheroesâ wrong.â
Eddie looked at it too. ââHeros.ââ
âSheâs six.â
âItâs still going on my fridge.â
Buck huffed out a soft laugh, wiping at his face. âYou donât even have a fridge full of normal stuff. Itâs like three condiments and expired milk.â
âFirst of all, rude.â
That earned a real laugh from Buck, small, but real.
Then his expression softened again.
âThank you,â he said, steady this time. âFor being there when I couldnât.â
Eddie didnât deflect it.
He didnât brush it off.
He just nodded once.
âAlways,â he said.
And they both knew it wasnât just about today.
Buck leaned back in the chair, exhaustion finally catching up to him.
Outside the room, nurses moved down the hallway. Somewhere farther away, Delilahâs small voice drifted faintly as Bobby kept her distracted.
Inside:
It was quiet.
They were bruised.
They were shaken.
But they were here.
And that was enough.














