Exit Strategy

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Exit Strategy Page 26

by Jen J. Danna

The foyer ceiling was at least twelve feet high, but the whitewashed patterned tin, originally lovely curling scrollwork, was torn apart with whole sections ripped clean away, and the remaining areas were invaded with creeping rust stains. Paint peeled in ribbons from the walls around slabs of plaster that had lost their battle with gravity and crumbled to the floor years ago. The floor, once a utilitarian linoleum, was now an uneven spongy layer that tore in soft spots under their steel-toed hiking boots and was littered with papers and scraps of wood. The wall opposite the door was covered in clashing colors of spray paint, with the most recent artistic offering, WRekeR, in large red block letters with a white border over older faded stylings.

  Webb whistled. “You weren’t kidding. It’s a mess. It looked way better from outside.”

  “This is nothing,” said Smaill. “Wait until you see some of the hospital wings. Come this way.”

  Turning to the right, they entered a cramped office with a rubble-covered floor. Open cubbyholes of worn, faded wood lined the walls above where desks once stood. Overhead, a gaping gash in the ceiling revealed a glimpse of the floor above, and pipework for the sprinkler system and wiring for the ceiling lights dangled, free-floating, overhead. A single intact bulb hung from a rusty fixture.

  Meg and Hawk wandered over to where a pile of heavy, yellowed papers was tossed carelessly in a corner. She squatted down for a better look at reports edged with mildew. “When did this place close?”

  “Sometime in 2003.”

  “These are handwritten ward reports from the 1970s. I’d have thought this stuff would have been destroyed because of privacy regulations.”

  “Apparently not.”

  Meg turned to her dog, who was pulling slightly against the leash, his head turned to peer down a long hallway stretching into the men’s wing. “Do you smell something, buddy?”

  “Mildew, dead critters, and rotting wood.” Smaill picked up a curled black-and-white photo from inside one of the cubbies, holding it out by one corner for them to see. The picture showed a section of brain with a long, thin protrusion thrust deep inside. “For sure he smells something. You say you’ve explored ruined buildings before?”

  “Yes, but usually freshly ruined. Explosions, fires, natural disasters. Nothing like this. It’s something new, which is good for him.” She gave his leash a light tug as she got to her feet and Hawk came to stand beside her. She pointed up at the ceiling and the rooms visible overhead. “Are we going up there?”

  “You bet. Down into the basement too. It’s pretty creepy down there.”

  “Lead the way.”

  They made their way down a hallway where paint curled from the walls as if bubbles had formed and popped, revealing the scarred wall beneath. Overhead, a line of rusted fluorescent lights marched in a drunken line along the gloomy ceiling. Weak daylight tumbled over the floor through open doorways leading to exam rooms.

  “Hawk, come.” Meg paused in the doorway of an exam room, scanning the interior. Lines of rust ran down one wall in rivulets to disappear behind a steel gurney. An overturned wheelchair with only one rubber wheel remaining sat beneath a cracked window. Beside it, ragged holes in a tangled pile of moldering blankets indicated the resident rodent population. A rippling, faded poster listing the classification criteria of DSM-IV mental disorders was still tacked to one wall, and a vacant doll head lay on top of a narrow white-laminate medical cabinet, the gash of its mouth grinning into eternity.

  “That’s creepy as hell.”

  Meg glanced over her shoulder to find Webb close behind her. “The doll?”

  “The doll head. What happened to the rest of it? I thought this place was for adults.”

  “There were women,” Smaill replied. “So there may have been kids too.” He paused, frowning at the doll. “That’s a nasty thought.”

  “Sure is.”

  Farther down the hallway, their progress abruptly halted at the gaping hole that stretched the width of the hall and dropped all the way down into the depths of the basement. Long slats of wood subfloor drooped into the gap, hanging nearly to the floor below.

  Meg stopped a few feet back and was surprised when Hawk didn’t stay with her but instead leaned toward the hole. A gentle tug at the leash brought him to her side. “How do we get around that?”

  Smaill pushed open a door to their right that was nearly invisible in the gloom. “Up this way. Get out your flashlights and watch your step. Things are going to get a lot less stable. I’d recommend taking Hawk off his leash now. He’s going to need complete freedom to navigate.”

  Meg pulled a flashlight from her backpack and shone it past Smaill. Not only was the stairwell beyond the doorway dark due to the lack of windows, but most of the middle of the staircase had collapsed, leaving a curl of steps clinging to the outer wall as it rose up into the shadows. She stepped into the stairwell to peer at the pile of torn wooden steps, fractured railings, and crumbling plaster. “That’s more like what I thought we’d be dealing with. You’re sure it’s safe?”

  “The steps are built right into the wall. Use your light, watch your step, stick to the wall, and you’ll be fine. Don’t trust the railing on the wall to hold you if you slip, or you’ll end up on the pile below.” Smaill gestured at Hawk. “He’ll be able to manage?”

  “Better than us. He has four feet and a lower center of gravity.” She unhooked Hawk’s leash, coiled it, and stuffed it in an outside pocket of her backpack. “Todd, you go first, and I’ll send Hawk up after you.”

  Webb pulled a compact flashlight out of one of the pockets of his cargo pants and turned it on. He started up the stairs, his long legs carrying him easily over the first step piled high with rubble. The step groaned under his weight, but held. Keeping his light trained on the step above, Webb moved slowly and carefully into the dark. He stopped partway to push enough debris off the step to make room for his boot, and it tumbled onto the wreckage below with a crash. Halfway up, he turned around. “It’s more stable than it looks. Send Hawk up.”

  “Hawk.” Meg waited until the dog’s gaze swung up to hers. “Go to Todd.”

  Hawk neatly jumped over the first step and then continued toward Webb, who shone his flashlight down on each step to guide the dog’s way.

  “You’re right,” Smaill said. “He’s more sure-footed than I am. You next, and I’ll bring up the rear.”

  Climbing the stairs was a slow, precise process. Place a foot, test your weight on the step, then transfer that weight. No sudden moves; just gradual, steady progress. But within three minutes they were on the upper landing gazing down at the ruins below.

  “Are we going to be getting down the same way?” Webb asked.

  “No. The other flight of stairs in this section is at the end of the wing. It’s cut off from the main entrance by that cave-in, but there are a couple of emergency exits with crash bars on the ground floor we can force open to get out. Come on, things get interesting up here.”

  Smaill led them through the upper areas of the wing. Each room was lined with windows, and the light streaming in chased away the gloom. But the remnants of life here only accentuated the creepiness hinted at below:

  A multistall bathroom where the sinks had been ripped from the wall and thrown to the floor in front of stalls so rusted, it were as if they’d been sprayed with blood.

  A wooden prosthetic leg lying alone in a corner of the corridor, its painted surface so old and worn that it looked like mummified skin.

  A ward room with the twisted remains of a bedstead crumpled near a pockmarked radiator sagging away from the crumbling wall.

  A skeletal stainless steel table in the middle of a surgical suite, standing beneath a darkened lamp.

  But creepiest of all was the morgue they discovered in the basement after they had descended a much sturdier flight of stairs. The room retained most of its working components, so it felt as if the staff had just stepped out and would return momentarily. A compartment door stood open, the stainless steel slab with
its integrated neck support pulled out, ready to accept the next corpse. Sturdy glass organ jars were clustered on a nearby countertop beside heavy rubber gloves, tossed over the edge as if just removed. An organ scale dangled beside a deep sink, its needle several degrees off plumb as if ghostly flesh lay within its bowl.

  But throughout their exploration, Hawk seemed distracted, his attention always focused down the corridor or out the nearest door. Meg was constantly calling him to her side when he wanted to wander away from the group.

  “What’s up with Hawk?” Webb crouched down beside the autopsy table and gave Hawk’s back a good rub. “I’ve never seen him this distracted. Do you think he’s picked up on something?”

  “As Chuck said, I think he’s smelling a dead rodent somewhere.” She held still for a moment, considering her dog. “But his head is definitely not in the game. So why don’t we let him show us?”

  Webb straightened. “Let him lead the way?”

  “Sure, why not? We don’t have a set search plan here. We haven’t found whatever he smells yet, so he’ll only lead us somewhere new.”

  “That works for me, as long as it’s safe,” Smaill said. “And you said he’ll come if you call him if he gets into trouble.”

  “Definitely. We’re in the basement, so there shouldn’t be any gaping holes dropping a story or two. But he’s a wizard with voice commands, and on top of that, we have his ‘don’t mess with me’ name.”

  Smaill glanced at the dog and then back at Meg. “ ‘Don’t mess with me’?”

  Webb laughed and clapped him on the shoulder. “Don’t worry. This is your first foray into canine search-and-rescue. Spend time with Hawk and it’ll become second nature.”

  “That’s the name I use when Hawk has to follow my commands with zero hesitation, even if it looks like I’m throwing him straight into the path of danger,” Meg said. “Like the time we were doing a search on a railway trestle and got caught near the middle of it with a train coming straight for us. We were closer to the side with the oncoming train, so I ordered him to sprint directly for it.” She extended both arms to include herself and Hawk. “As you can see, we both made it. So if I think he’s getting into trouble, I say ‘Talon’ ”—Hawk jerked to attention and she laid her hand gently on his head in acknowledgment—“and he’ll do whatever I say.”

  “Handy. I wish we could train our candidates at the house like that.”

  “Amen to that,” Webb said with a grin.

  Meg knelt down next to Hawk. “Hawk, something’s got your attention. Find it.”

  Hawk’s ears perked up and his head tilted at her.

  “He’s a little confused because he’s not in his work vest,” Meg explained to the men. “But he doesn’t need it here. Come on, Hawk, we’ll follow you. Find it.”

  Hawk turned and trotted through the open doorway melting into the darkness beyond.

 

 

 


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