steel beam.â He yanked the rope but nothing happened. Looking up, whipping his arm, he said, âItâs all in the wrist,â and then, âLook out!â We leaped backward as a pointed claw hit the spot where weâd been standing.
I stared at the claw, which was attached to the end of the rope. âA grappling hook?â
âTold you. Trader Jackâs has everything.â
âWay to be prepared,â I said. âWere you a Boy Scout?â
âNo,â he said, stuffing the rope into the backpack, âbut I liked the uniforms.â
I surveyed our surroundings, seeing a hand pointing into a tunnel in a nearby wall. âReady?â I said.
âLead on,â he said, as we entered the tunnel. After a few steps, he paused, saying, âHey, how far did you drop? Ten feet?â
âFelt like it,â I said.
âHm. I guess thatâs deep enough.â
âFor what?â
He laid his hand on the cool, dirty tunnel ceiling above us. âFeel that.â
I did, sensing a not-so-distant vibration. âWhat is it?â
âThink about where we just came from. What was whizzing past behind that rusty door?â he said. âWeâre right under the subway.â
âUm . . . that doesnât seem safe,â I said.
âYouâre the one who said it might be dangerous, remember?â he said. âI sure hope Joe Little knew what he was doing when he dug these tunnels.â
âDonât hope,â I said, moving ahead, âpray.â
â¢Â â¢Â â¢
Darkness sucked up light like a black sponge, making the flashlights nearly useless. Traveling in single file, me in the lead, time began to evaporate, too, and I said, âHow long have we been walking?â
âEither half an hour or sixteen years,â Doug said. âCanât really tell. Itâs like being on a treadmill with my eyes closed.â
âItâs pretty tight in here, huh?â
âYes, itâs
still
pretty tight in here. Just like the other three times you said that.â
âSorry. I donât like enclosed spaces,â I said. âMakes me tense. Feels like a tomb.â It occurred to me then that if something fatal happened, if a train fell on top of us, for example, it really would be my final resting place. With my family gone and Max in L.A., no one in the daylight world would notice I was missing. It sparked a thought, and I said, âDoug, can I ask you a question?â
âWhy am I so cool?â he said. âBorn that way.â
âHow is it that youâre able to stay at the Bird Cage Club?â
âWith its lack of amenities? Without my own Jacuzzi and walk-in closet?â
âSeriously,â I said. âI know the relationship with your mom and stepdad sucks, and that your real dad is a problemââ
âHeâs not a problem. Heâs a pothead who lives in a station wagon.â
âOkay, but your mom . . . Doesnât she care that youâre never home?â
âI am, rarely. I stop by to get clothes and the weekly envelope of cash she leaves for me,â he said. âBut the short answer is no. Shopping and vodka are very important to her. Dougie, not so much. The only thing she ever taught me was when I was thirteen, tall enough to see over the dashboard of a car. She had this old five-speed Mercedes and she instructed me in the art of clutch, gas, and brake so I could drive her around when she was blitzed.â
âBut what if something happened to you, likeââ
âI donât know,â he said. âI was never a priority. It was always, âStick Doug in front of the movie channel with a bag of something salty while the adults party,â or, âSend Doug to the multiplex with enough money to see everything twice.â And I did, and Iâm lucky I did, because movies gave me more than my mom ever could.â We
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