There’s a Fire on the Mountain

Summary

The narrative describes a childhood game involving a pretend fire, which unexpectedly turns into reality when a fierce fire erupts on the mountain. The fire becomes devastating, destroying buildings, vegetation, and prompting a large-scale response with helicopters and firefighters battling the flames. People flee with their belongings, and the mountain is left charred and barren, evoking sadness among the community. However, hope and renewal soon manifest as new life emerges from the ashes. Vivid descriptions of regenerating plant life such as fire lilies, red flowers, and lush greenery highlight the mountain's renewal, transforming the once-blackened landscape into a vibrant scene full of new plants and growth, symbolizing resilience and the cycle of life.

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My friends and I have a game we like to play.

“There’s a fire on the mountain. Run, run! Kukh’umlilo kwezontaba. Baleka, baleka!”

Then one day there was a real fire on the mountain. It was a terrible fire that burned and burned.

Big, old buildings burned, books burned, trees and grass burned. Helicopters tipped water onto the fire and brave firefighters blasted their hoses.

And people did run. They grabbed their books and bags and ran away from the smoke and the flames.

After three long days, the last flames were out.

The firefighters could finally rest.

The slopes of the mountain were black. When we walked on the mountain, all we could see were rocks and burnt bushes.

We were very sad.

Until one day … tiny bits of red popped up through the black.

“Look, look. What is that?”

The little bits of red grew and grew until they became beautiful fire lilies, tall and elegant with drooping red bells for flowers.

Then came the big, red flowers bursting through the green like volcanoes. They looked like thick red tubes with yellow-topped spikes and big, red petals.

Dots of green grew up all over the mountainside, turning the black into green grasses and restios.

Then there were asparagus ferns unfolding in wet patches after the rain.

And the tall watsonia in orange and pink.

Soon the mountainside was covered with plants we hadn’t seen for years.

The mountain is full of new life!

Credits

Originally published by Book Dash under a Creative Commons Licensed BY 4.0. This book can be read for free on https://bookdash.org/books/theres-a-fire-on-the-mountain and was created by: Nadene Reignier (Designer), Margot Bertelsmann (Editor), Kirsty Paxton (Writer), Julie Smith-Belton (Illustrator) Book Dash logo