“There’s got to be some…” Jack was cut off by a groan from below. It was louder than before.
“Ben?” Stephen called. “Are. You. There?” he said slowly.
They heard a muffled reply from below. Jack pressed his ear to the floor. “What?” said Jack. This time he could make out the reply.
“I’m in a hole,” they heard Ben say from below.
“How did you get down there?” yelled Jack.
“I don’t know,” they heard Ben say. “It smells funny down here.”
Stephen looked up at Jack — “We gotta find out how to get down there,” he whispered to Jack.
“No shit,” said Jack.
“What about the map?”
“It doesn’t have that much detail — I don’t think we’re going to learn anything useful,” replied Jack.
“Fuck me,” exclaimed Stephen.
“He must have been crawling along and then done something to open up the floor,” said Jack
“Yeah, unless he’s right, and there’s someone else here,” said Stephen.
“Well, there’s nothing we could do if that’s true, so let’s assume it isn’t,” said Jack.
“What are you guys doing?” Ben asked from below. “Get me out of here.”
“Hold on,” yelled Jack. “We’re working on it.”
“Call your parents!” Ben said.
“I said hold on, Ben. We’re almost to you,” Jack lied.
Stephen looked at him reproachfully and Jack shrugged his shoulders.
“Let’s just try a couple of things,” Jack whispered. “Take this,” he handed Stephen his backpack. Jack started with flipping over onto his back and pressing against the ceiling with his feet. He thought he could feel the floor give a little where Ben sounded loudest.
“We should just break the floor,” said Stephen. “That’s all the fire department would do.”
“With what?” asked Jack.
“Don’t we have a hammer or something?”
“I don’t, no,” said Jack.
“Hey Ben, you got a light down there,” said Stephen.
“Yeah, but it doesn’t work,” Ben replied.
“Shit,” said Stephen. “What if you need to shine a light on just the right thing or something?”
“I don’t know,” said Jack. “Doesn’t sound like a reliable trap. You want it to get someone every time.”
“Yeah, unless someone’s already in there,” said Stephen.
“Hey! Maybe that’s it,” Jack was excited. “Maybe because he’s already down there, we can’t get it to open up!” Jack raised his voice again — “Hey Ben, how far apart are your walls? Can you lift up off the floor for a second?”
“I don’t know,” they heard Ben say. “Yeah, but I can’t hold here long.”
Jack backed up and waved for Stephen to do the same. Jack then tried to walk the way he had seen Ben move earlier — hunched way over with his right hand on the ground.
“I can’t hold this much longer,” Ben said from below.
The floor started to move right where Ben's voice sounded loudest. Jack braced his legs on the walls, and then leaned into his hand.
The floor fell away as a trapdoor opened. Jack began to tumble into the hole. From the other side, Stephen’s hand shot out and grabbed Jack, arresting his fall. Jack regained his balance and braced himself against the far side.
They couldn’t see Ben in the dark. Stephen let go of Jack’s hand and pointed his light into the hole just as Ben lost his grip on the walls and fell to the floor. With Ben’s weight pressing down at the bottom of the pit, the trapdoor began to rise back up into place, but Jack thrust his hand in the gap to stop it from closing.
The trapdoor shut hard on Jack’s hand and he cried out in pain. “Get off the floor!” he yelled to Ben below. Ben sprung back up, and Jack pull his hand out.
“Bag,” Jack said to Stephen, reaching toward his pack. When he had his pack propping open the door he looked down at Ben — “Okay” Jack said.
Ben lowered himself to the floor and the door closed on Jack’s pack but was unable to latch.
“Give me a hand, will you?” Jack reached his injured hand toward Stephen who took it in both of his. Stephen pulled Jack to the far side of the hole. They looked through the gap made by the backpack. Ben stood about ten feet below.
The pit was narrow enough — Ben could brace his back against one wall and his feet against the other to hold himself off the floor. Jack suggested that might be his way out.
“Can you climb up here by bracing against the wall?” Jack asked Ben.
“Maybe,” Ben said. “Catch” he said as he threw his backpack up to Stephen.
He put his back against one wall and pushed with bent legs against the opposite. Pressing behind himself, he could raise his back up several inches and then shuffle his feet up. When he got bolder with his arms, and pushed himself up about a foot, he really started to make progress.
“Get ready to grab me — I don’t know what I’m going to do at the top,” said Ben.
“Okay,” said Jack.
Jack and Stephen pressed the trapdoor out of the way completely now that Ben’s weight was off the floor. When Ben got high enough he had to step on the folded trapdoor to go higher.
“I should have started the other way,” said Ben.
“Yeah, but it would be harder to pull you out if you were sideways,” said Jack.
“Just get a little higher and we can grab you,” said Stephen. “Oh shit — you’re head is totally fucked up.”
“Yeah? It really kills,” said Ben.
Stephen shone his light on Ben’s head where his hair was matted down with blood. Ben slid his torso up as high as he could without planting feet on the trapdoor. “This is it,” Ben said. He raised his arms up to Stephen and Jack. They each grabbed a hand, and leaning over the edge of the hole, tried to grab Ben under his armpits.
“Okay, go slow,” said Jack.
With support, Ben was able to kick against the folded trapdoor and get even higher. His feet flailed somewhat when they got his head and shoulders above the floor level, but then Ben kicked off and popped out of the hole to fall in a heap with Jack and Stephen. The trapdoor closed behind him and snapped into place.
“Jesus, you okay?” asked Jack.
“I don’t know,” Ben gently patted at his head with his hand. “How does it look.”
“Bad,” said Stephen. “Were you like knocked out or something?”
“I think so,” said Ben. “I woke up in the dark and my alarm was going off. I was upside down, like resting on my head.”
“Wow, that sucks,” said Jack.
“Yeah, no kidding,” said Ben. “Which way out?”
“That way,” pointed Stephen. “We’re on the wrong side of that thing,” he waved at the trapdoor.
“I think we can stretch across,” said Jack.
Ben tried to get his flashlight to come on, but it was stubborn. Jack handed him an extra light from his pack and Ben stowed the broken one.
“So much for that stupid map,” said Ben.
“No, the map’s okay,” said Jack. “We just miscounted the number of turns.”
“My bad,” said Stephen.
“Well, whatever, let’s get gone,” said Ben.
“Yeah, too bad though,” said Jack. “It’s not even noon yet.”
“You want to keep going?” Ben was furious. “I might have to go get stitches, ass.”
“It’s not that bad, Ben,” said Stephen. “Are you sure you don’t want to just hang out for a second while we look for the next area?”
“Yeah, I’m fucking sure,” yelled Ben. After raising his voice he grabbed his head with new pain. Jack rolled his eyes at Ben’s discomfort.
“Okay, no sweat, we’ll get going then,” said Stephen.
Jack grabbed his pack and tossed it past the trapdoor. Reaching past the seam, he straddled the hole and then hopped his feet across. Once on the other side, he collected his pack and shone his light so Ben could see.