They    soon    went    to  bed.    Just    before  three   in  the morning,    a   man
who lived   nearby  heard   a   loud    explosion.  The force   of  the blast
radiated    through the neighborhood,   bending trees   and signposts
and blowing out windows.    In  a   Fairfax hotel,  a   night   watchman
sitting by  a   window  was showered    with    broken  glass   and thrown  to
the  floor.  In  another     room    of  the     hotel,  a   guest   was     hurled
backward.   Closer  to  the blast,  doors   on  houses  were    smashed and
torn    asunder;    wooden  beams   cracked like    bones.  A   witness who
had been    a   boy at  the time    later   wrote,  “It seemed  that    the night
would   never   stop    trembling.” Mollie  and Ernest  felt    the explosion,
too.    “It shook   everything,”    Ernest  later   recalled.   “At first   I   thought
it  was thunder.”   Mollie, frightened, got up  and went    to  the window
and could   see something   burning in  the distant sky,    as  if  the sun
had burst   violently   into    the night.  Ernest  went    to  the window  and
stood   there   with    her,    the two of  them    looking out at  the eerie
glow.
Ernest   slipped     on  his     trousers    and     ran     outside.    People  were
stumbling    from    their   houses,     groggy  and     terrified,  carrying
lanterns    and firing  guns    in  the air,    a   warning signal  and a   call    for
others  to  join    what    was a   growing procession—a    rush    of  people
moving, on  foot    and in  cars,   toward  the site    of  the blast.  As  people
got closer, they    cried   out,    “It’s   Bill    Smith’s house!  It’s    Bill    Smith’s
house!” Only    there   was no  longer  a   house.  Nothing but heaps   of
charred sticks  and twisted metal   and shredded    furniture,  which
Bill    and Rita    had purchased   just    days    earlier from    the Big Hill
Trading Company,    and strips  of  bedding hanging from    telephone
wires   and pulverized  debris  floating    through the black   toxic   air.
Even    the Studebaker  had been    demolished. A   witness struggled   for
words:  “It just    looked  like,   I   don’t   know    what.”  Clearly,    someone
had planted a   bomb    under   the house   and detonated   it.
The flames  amid    the rubble  consumed    the remaining   fragments
of  the house   and gusted  into    the sky,    a   nimbus  of  fire.   Volunteer
