Seraphina's Revenge: A Rebirth In The Apocalypse Novel

Chapter 159: Between The Floors



Chapter 159: Between The Floors

They took the stairwell down in a single file, rope through harness points, gloves to the rail where the frost let them have it.

The air changed by the second landing down. Up in the penthouse the cold bit clean; here it lay on the tongue like a film. Wet carpet. Old coffee gone sour. Rust.

"Spacing," Zubair clipped out above her.

They widened to the length he wanted, a quiet fan in a narrow place: Zubair in front, palm to wall when the concrete changed note; Sera behind him; Alexei drifting right whenever the corridor allowed; Lachlan left; Elias rear guard, counting under his breath the way he did when he didn’t trust his heart to keep its own cadence.

The emergency lights were long dead.

The stairwell’s glow came from the smear of day through a wire-reinforced pane. Frost cobwebbed the glass. On the landing door someone had once taped plastic. It hung in a torn skirt now, rimed to uselessness.

Zubair tested the door with his shoulder. It gave a centimeter before it got stuck. He put more heat into the hinge and waited. The smell of warmed metal came up, sharp; the door shrugged and let them through.

They stepped into an office floor that had drowned and then frozen and then thawed and then given up.

Cubicle fields stretched in gray rows, fabric panels dark with moisture halfway up like tidelines.

Ceiling tiles bulged with ice, drooping into soft bellies that wept with condensation. Paper had melted into skin on every flat surface—memos welded to desks, calendars fused to walls, handbooks wrinkled into shells.

Where glass walls had frosted, the frosting had slid in ripples and then refrozen. Chairs lay at angles, casters jammed by grit. The only sound was a metronome drip and the occasional ping where a duct adjusted to the weight of its own frost.

No dust to move when they passed. The air was too wet to carry it.

Sera breathed through her mouth. Not because she needed to. It kept the sweet rot off her tongue.

Her creature hummed low—not warning, just awake. Places like this held nervous energy. Too many right angles for a clean escape.

Zubair gave a hand sign, and they flowed into it without question.

Rope slack where it should be slack, tight where it needed to be tight. No one ran the line under a heel. No one crossed where the carpet heaved around a bubble of ice.

They passed a break room with an open fridge and a slick of something black at its threshold. Alexei flicked a look inside, nose wrinkling, and kept moving.

Down the hall a glassed-in boardroom had been taped into a panic room—duct tape Xs across the glass, desks pushed as barricades. The tape had peeled at the edges like old scabs.

A thump hit the inside of that door—dull, then again, harder.

Lachlan grinned before he caught himself. "It’s friendly," he mouthed.

Elias’s "No," came out too loud. He caught it, swallowed, and tried again. "Leave it shut."

Zubair didn’t nod, didn’t shake his head. He moved up on the jamb and set his palm flat to the seam.

Heat leaked into the metal in a breath, just enough to make it talk. Whatever pressed from the inside pressed back with more than gravity. The glass ticked in its frame, a small complaint.

He lifted his hand an inch. The sound inside didn’t stop.

"Pass," he murmured.

They passed.

Sera kept her eyes forward and her weight under control. The rope brushed her hip in an interval that had become comforting. Behind her, Elias matched that rhythm. His hiss had been quiet since the ice. Down here it was restless and watchful. It didn’t like ceilings.

They reached a cluster of executive offices.

The doors were wood, swollen in their frames, latch plates torn from one side like someone had tried the handle too many times and then tried teeth. A receptionist’s desk listed on its screws. Phones lay face-down in a row with their cords braided, a ritual that had not helped their owners.

The ceiling above the corridor quivered where a bulging tile tried to make a decision. Water tapped the carpet in steady tempos. Then, overhead, something scuffed.

They all stopped.

Not a duct ping. Not melt. A weight moving.

Another scuff. A slow drag. Then a series of light dull thuds, irregular, like knees and elbows.

Lachlan’s smirk slid off his face. He tilted his head. A drop hit the back of his neck and ran under his collar.

"Cold?" Alexei breathed, too soft to be a joke.

"Warm," Lachlan grimaced.

Sera tightened her grip on the rope without thinking. Warm meant blood. Fresh enough. From above.

Zubair pointed, two fingers, eyes on a service vent halfway down the hall. Its screws were gone. The grille had been jammed back into place at an angle. The metal twitched.

"Move," he ordered, and meant three slow steps, not a scramble.

They did it like practice. Weight low. Rope quiet. No one under the sagging tile. No one near the vent’s arc if it swung.

Elias’s pencil was in his hand even as his other hand found the wall.

He left a small, neat mark at the edge of the safe path. Another mark ten feet ahead. His breathing stayed on a four-count until the hiss inside him sniffed the air and broke the cadence with a pleased, hungry sound he pretended not to hear.

A hundred feet of corridor later, something hit the ceiling hard from the other side. A panel gave with a wet tear and dumped slush and clotted insulation onto the carpet. Something moved inside that hole—fast, wrong, jointed in a way no person should be.

Zubair raised his burner an inch. He didn’t light it. Not until he knew where fire would go.

"Rope," he warned.

They tightened again, the fan closing in by a fraction without tangling. Sera let her creature slide up behind her eyes. The contacts made the black into brown for other people. For her, the world sharpened whether she wanted it to or not.

A copier room yawned to the right, door stuck at half. Toner smell sat cold under the mildew. A poster above the machine had once told employees how to clear paper jams. The corner of it pulsed with water from a leak. Something had chewed the bottom of the poster into fringes.

Another thud. Two offices back. Then the vent cover down the hall rasped against its seat.

"On me," Zubair breathed. "Slow."

They slid another ten meters. The carpet changed texture under Sera’s boots—flat, then ridged. She looked down without moving her head.

Staples.

A sea of them, loose in the fibers, glinting. Someone had dumped a box and kicked it into the floor to make a field of pain. Barriers that had felt like solutions in the first week.

Elias tapped her elbow once and pointed to the left with the tip of his pencil.

Through an interior window—frosted and cracked—she could see the glow of a security room. A bank of monitors, dark. A map on the wall, edges curling with damp. Another door beyond, painted a flat industrial gray with a bolt run from the outside.

Good. Later.

She nodded. The corridor air shifted. The thuds stopped.

Silence opened up, big and greedy.

Sera took one step. Another. One more.

Above them, ceiling tile collapsed in a wet dump. The vent grille shot outward and hit the far wall with a clang. Something dropped.

It didn’t fall like a person.

It stuck the landing in a four-point sprawl, bare feet and hands slapping carpet. It was thin and mottled, skin cracked where frost had had its way and then pulled back. Fingers were too long because tendons had shrunk under cold. Nails were black. Its beachball like head cocked in a series of too-fast ticks, hunting by motion.

Its eyes found them. Not their faces—the line.

Sera had already moved.

She dropped her weight down, the rope slack away from its reach.

Zubair’s burner clicked, fuel huffing into the cold. Alexei shifted right to keep the line clear. Lachlan’s breath went out in a curse that squared with his grin when he was about to do something stupid and brave. Elias froze, then remembered his legs.

The thing climbed, not on a wall—on the door it had just landed in front of. It scrambled up the veneer like a spider on a ice-slick tree, nails squealing, knees pistoning, head twisting down to keep them in its view as it rose.

Another vent rattled behind them.

"There’s two of them," Elias got out.

Sera didn’t look back. Zubair didn’t either.

The first one let go.


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