urge to vomit.
âAh, finally .â
I felt tight and hot, like my skin was too small for my skeleton. The pain in my head slowly sank back to merely near-fatal levels, letting me think.
I was in a basementâno, a crawl space. The floor was dirt, the walls were brick, and the joists of the floor above were not even an inch above my head; if Iâd been a little taller, sitting up would have put me right back on my ass. The whole place had a damp smell, and it was freezing. The moment I realized how cold it was, I began to shiver.
There was a small opening on the far wall right at my eye level, little more than a slit for ventilation. It let in just enough sunlight to see by, making it clear that I wasnât alone. Aside from the Girl, there were at least a dozen other people with me, all proneâeither unconscious or dead.
I rolled over and scrambled to the nearest one. The Girl hissed in protest as I pushed her aside. I ignored her, inspecting the bodies around me, looking for Hiram, for Fallon, for Mags . I didnât remember a thing after Iâd taken my hit, and the battle in Hiramâs hallway hadnât exactly been going well for my side.
But none of the bodies were familiar. Sweating, head pounding, I turned back to look at my new friend. She was young, her long black hair hanging in her face, her jeans and T-shirt torn and dirty. Her face had the sunken look of someone who hadnât eaten in a while. As I stared blearily at her, she held a finger to her lips.
â Quieto ,â she whispered. âThey will be back.â
I struggled to collect myself. My brain felt scrambled, and I had to swallow three times before I could remember how to make sounds. âWhere?â
She shook her head. âI donât know. Can you move? You gotta move, man. Theyâre coming.â
âWho?â
She grimaced. âYou wake up in a fucking basement after taking a beating, and you got questions.â
She was right: The time for questions was later. Preferably years later, when I was sitting on a beach somewhere with Mags after weâd finally pulled some grift that paid.
Mags. Forget my survival, I had to get out to make sure Pitr Mags didnât starve to death hiding in Hiramâs closet, whimpering.
âHow long?â I croaked.
âYou? Couple of hours. Meâif maybe I can think you give a shitâthree days.â She shoved me. âCome on , burro , they will come soon.â
I nodded. I didnât really need to know who they were. No matter what the answer was, I wanted to be somewhere else when it came. âWhereâs out?â
She gestured and started to crawl. I scurried after her, swallowing bile and trying to ignore the head-splitting flashes of pain. Her clothes were loose on her, like sheâd shrunk. She led me to a trapdoor set in the floor above. I gave it a tentative push, but it refused to budge.
âLocks,â she whispered. âLots of them.â
I nodded again. I wanted to say that today was her lucky day, because the Intro 101 class of How to Be Idimustari was bleeding to open locks. I started searching the dirt, scooping through it with my hands. My lifestyle meant that my knowledge of basements, crawl spaces, and other dark places was extensive. Contractors tended to drop their garbage in them as they worked. In a matter of seconds, I had a nasty piece of green glass, the remnants of a long-ago beer enjoyed by a long-dead bricklayer, and used it to slice a deep cut on my forearm.
The Girl recoiled. âOf course youâre crazy !â
With some gas in the air, it would be easy to snap the locks, but I needed a light touch. Sending the trapdoor sailing into the air as though weâd lit a stick of dynamite under it might bring unwanted attention. I looked at the Girl.
âWhatâs your name?â I whispered.
She hesitated. âLarissa.â
âOkay, Larissa,â I said, wasting gasâmy