It’s like hitting a boulder. There’s a loud crack, and the club vibrates in my hands. I still don’t let go. At the last second, he rolls with the impact, but it’s enough to send his leg buckling beneath him. Like before, he barely lets out a grunt. I’m not impressed. Feeling good, I move in closer for another swing. That’s my mistake. As he falls to the ground, he never takes his eyes off my club. Before I can even wind up again, he yanks the nine iron from my hands. He’s so fast, I barely see it happen. It’s a quick reminder I can’t beat him head-on. Still, I got what I wanted. Behind me, Viv’s turned the corner. Now we’ve got a head start.
Janos slams against the concrete floor. I turn and sprint as hard as I can up the hallway. As I turn the corner, I practically plow into Viv.
“What’re you doing?” I ask, sidestepping around her. She falls in step right behind me. “I said to run.”
“I wanted to make sure you were okay.” She’s trying to sound strong. It’s not working.
Behind us, the golf club scrapes against the concrete floor. Janos is getting up. As he starts running, the echoes of his footsteps are off beat. He’s definitely limping – but the beat’s getting quicker. He’s shaking it off.
Frantically scrambling past the stacks of old furniture scattered on each side of us, I search the hallway for help. Down here, most of the doors are locked and unmarked.
“What about that one?” Viv asks, pointing to a door that’s marked
“This one, too,” Viv says, trying a closed door on our right. I hear her panting over my shoulder. We’re running out of hallway, and unlike last time, the Capitol police are too far away. We have a short lead, but it’s not enough – not unless we do something quick.
Up ahead, on our left, there’s a loud mechanical hum. It’s the only door that’s open. The sign on it reads:
I look over my shoulder to see how we’re doing. Down the hallway, Janos tears around the corner like a wounded tiger. He’s got the golf club in one hand and the black box in the other. Even with the limp, he’s already charging fast.
“Move…” I say, tugging Viv toward the open door. Anything to get us out of his line of vision.
Inside, the concrete room is narrow but deep – I can’t even see the end of it – filled with row after row of buzzing ten-foot-tall industrial air-handlers, exhaust fans, and air compressors, all of them interconnected by a crisscrossing jungle of spiral ductwork that snakes out in every direction like the tendrils of a 1950s robot. Overhead, gas lines, copper tubing, and electrical work combine with the various pipes and ducts as they weave their way across the ceiling and block what little fluorescent lighting the room already has.
By the door, there’s a wall full of circular glass pressure gauges that haven’t been used in years, as well as two rolling garbage cans, an empty box of air filters, and an empty, filthy mop bucket with a few random tools stored inside. Behind the garbage cans, a dark green army blanket sits crumpled on the floor, barely covering a row of six metal propane tanks.
“Hurry… C’mere…” I whisper to Viv, clutching her shoulder and tugging her toward the tanks.
“What’re you-?”
“Shhhh. Just duck.” Shoving her downward, I grab the blanket and drape it over her head.
“Harris, this isn’t-”
“Listen to me.”
“But I-”
“But then you’re-” She cuts herself off. “You can’t beat him, Harris.”
“Go get help. I’ll be fine.”
“He’ll kill you.”
“Please, Viv – just get help.” Our eyes lock, and she stares straight through me. When Viv first saw me speaking to her page class, and then heard about the Lorax story, she thought I was invincible. So did I. Now I know better. And so does she. Realizing what I’m asking, she starts tearing up. After everything we’ve been through, she doesn’t want to leave.
Kneeling down, I give her a tiny kiss on her forehead. “Viv…”
“Shh,” she says, refusing to listen. “Say a prayer with me.”
“What? Now? You know I don’t believe in-”
“Just once,” she pleads. “One little prayer. My last favor.”
With no choice, I lower my head. Viv’s is already down. She grabs my hands as I close my eyes. It doesn’t do any good. My mind’s racing too fast, and then… as the silence seeps in…
“Now was that so bad?” Viv asks, breaking the quiet.
I shake my head. “You’re an amazing person, Vivian. And you’re gonna make a great Senator one day.”
“Yeah, well… I’m still gonna need a great chief of staff.”