"Grant!" I threw myself into his arms, just to make sure he was real. "Oh, what have they done to you?" I asked, reaching out to touch his battered face.
"I'm fine. What about you? Are you okay?" he whispered, his voice cracking as he squeezed me against his chest.
"Yes, I'm fine," I told him, clinging to his shoulders, "but I've missed you so much. I was afraid I'd never see you again."
The stranger fidgeted, grimacing. "Get control of yourselves. Jebus ryste; what is it with you people?" she hissed through clenched teeth. "We're not out of this yet. Come on; this way."
"Why are you helping us?" Grant asked as the three of us scurried down the abandoned corridor.
"I don't have to explain myself to you."
"Well, whatever the reason, thank you for freeing us," he murmured.
Reaching the end of the hall, the woman stopped and looked in both directions, making sure the coast was clear. "Don't thank me yet," she said, spiriting us into a darkened room as the sound of footsteps approached from a neighboring corridor.
After the footsteps receded, the woman turned and looked at us both, brow furrowed, her face tight with worry. "Look, deviants, I have no great love for your kind. Frankly, your primitive nature disgusts me. If you insist upon indulging your need for...tactile stimulation, do so someplace where I don't have to see it." She paused. "Someone I trust believes it's imperative you escape, that your freedom benefits a greater good. That's why, despite my personal misgivings, I'm helping you. Understand?"
We nodded, though her response raised more questions than answers.
"On the count of three, we need to exit the room. Run down the corridor and take the fourth door to your left. Got it?"
"Yes."
"Good. One, two,..."
~*~*~
We stood in the dark, hidden among piles of linens. Grant peered down the opening in the wall.
"You're certain this will lead us to the maintenance bay?" he asked our companion.
"Yes," the young woman confirmed.
"But doesn't it go straight into a sanitizing unit first?" I asked, chewing my lip.
"Thanks to the power outage, we should be able to exit the sanitizer without fear of being cooked by it first," she assured me.
I gulped. "Great."
"Look, I'm not exactly thrilled with the thought of landing hip deep in a mass of filthy linens, either. I can promise you it repulses me far more than it does you. But it's the quickest way out of here, and every second counts."
"Of course." I took a deep breath to calm myself, but when I exhaled it came out sounding like a sigh.
"I'm sorry if the way out isn't to your liking," the woman snapped, "but we don't have time to take a more pleasant, leisurely route. You remember those footsteps we heard a minute ago? Those were made by security guards, the ones coming on shift. Any time now they will be discovering that the two of you are missing. Trust me; you want to be long gone before they do."
"No doubt. I'll go first," Grant volunteered, hoisting his lower body into the narrow opening. "Should I tap when I reach the bottom, signaling it's safe to follow?"
"No, I have a better idea. Why don't you shout up the chute, 'This way, guards; I'm in the basement, down in the laundry chamber!'"
"Well then, what do you suggest?"
"You go first, we wait fifteen seconds then I'll send her," she instructed. "I'll follow fifteen seconds after that. And when I do, you both better be well out of the way. Don't add insult to injury by making me..." She shuddered. "slam into you. The last thing we need is for me to vomit when the power's down."
I jerked my head to look at the woman. She stared at us with narrowed eyes, jaw thrust forward. My glance shifted over to Grant. His face was also tense, but his eyes twinkled; I knew he was trying just as hard as I not to laugh.
We were about to throw ourselves blind into a metal tube that, if we were lucky, would sweep us past five levels in as many seconds, landing us inside a massive sanitizing unit, which, with any luck, would be nonfunctioning due to the power outage
and
filled with sufficient linens to keep us from breaking our necks. All that, and her primary concern was preventing physical contact with one or both of us.
Grant cleared his throat. "Got it. We'll do our best to stay out of your way. See you on the other side," he added, giving me an encouraging smile before he pushed off, disappearing into the wall.
"All right; you next." The woman gestured to me.
"What's your name?" I asked as I sat on the ledge, waiting for the seconds to count down.
"I already told you; there's noโ" She stopped and cocked her head, studying me. "Caley."
"Thank you, Caley. Thank you for helping us."
"You're welcome, devโ. You're welcome. Now, go; you're late."
Closing my eyes, I held my breath and pushed off.
My eyes flashed open as the bottom dropped out of the world. On instinct I tried to cling to the tunnel's slick shiny surface with the tips of my gloved fingers. Realizing my effort to slow the rate of my descent was futile, I fought the urge to scream, though whether from excitement or terror at that particular moment I didn't know.
The far end of the chute appeared all at once, coming much too fast, and the next thing I knew I was propelled into the air, freefalling for a scant few seconds before landing with a grunt in a thick pile of smelly fabric.
"Are you all right?" Grant whispered, rushing to help me up.
Heart pounding, I staggered to my feet. "Yes," I gasped, holding onto his arm. I looked up and almost squealed, "That, that wasโexhilarating!"
His eyes shining, he embraced me, chest quivering from his own suppressed delight.
Our reunion was interrupted a few seconds later by the arrival of our mysterious ally. "Ugh! Jebus ryste! That...is so...
foul."
"Don't touch me," the young woman snapped when Grant reached out to help her onto her feet. "I can get up on my own." Her legs wavered as she tried to regain her equilibrium. "Are you both unharmed?"
"Yes," I answered.
"Good, because just before I left the storage room I overheard the guards shouting; they know you've escaped."
~*~*~