Between Ruble and Relief.
My legs were trapped, knees down by a steel crossbeam and what felt like half the damn ceiling. Chunks of concrete pressed into the soft flesh of my thighs, anchoring me to the floor like a crucifixion built in rubble. My boots were wedged so tight I couldn’t even wiggle my toes. I’d tried. Once. The pain had screamed up through my nerves like wildfire. But it wasn’t just my legs. A second beam, thicker, heavier, had come down across my chest. It wasn’t crushing me completely, but it pressed just below my collarbone with a steady, merciless weight. Every breath felt like trying to inflate a balloon inside a vise. My ribs were fractured, maybe worse. I could feel the way they shifted when I inhaled, scraping against each other like broken glass inside a velvet bag. Blood had started to seep steadily from somewhere along my side, soaking down beneath my shirt and into the waistband of my pants. It was warm, too warm. My right arm was pinned awkwardly above my head, bent in a way that wasn’t natural. I couldn’t feel anything below the shoulder. It dangled uselessly, nerve- dead. My left hand, mercifully free, was slick with grit and blood, fingers twitching against the cold, cracked concrete. I tilted my head toward Liam’s voice, trying to keep my tone even despite the pressure on my chest.
“Trapped,” I rasped, my voice hoarse. “Legs pinned. Beam across my chest. Ribs feel like shattered glass. Right arm’s out. Breathing hurts like a bitch. But I’m conscious.”
There was a pause. A breath. Then Liam swore quietly, the word full of helplessness and fury.
“Fuck.”
“Language,” Naomi mumbled through a cough, her voice loopy but steady. “This is a wholesome group trauma experience.”
Despite the pain, a small laugh caught in my throat, sharp and cutting. I exhaled it, slow and shallow, then closed my eyes. The dust still danced in the weak beam of Liam’s fallen flashlight, swirling like ghosts. My heart pounded against the weight on my chest. We weren’t dead. Yet.
“I’ll see if I can make my way over to you,” Liam grunted, his voice strained. I could hear the shifting of debris as he tried to move, stone grinding against stone, metal creaking. Naomi made a strangled sound, half gasp, half cry as he adjusted, and the noise snapped every nerve in my spine taut.
“Put pressure on this, crazy,” Liam muttered through clenched teeth.
“But I need you,” Naomi protested weakly, voice slurred and hurt. “You’re warm. And bossy. It’s weirdly comforting.”
“No,” Liam snapped, but his voice cracked at the edges, like he hated saying it. “Don’t move. Keep pressure on her wound, alright? I need you to focus now.”
“But Sage…”
“Will still be alive when you get to her. Stay with her, Liam.” I said fiercely, cutting her off.
I couldn’t see them well through the haze, but I heard her exhale shakily. “You’re such a dick when you’re scared.”
“Yeah,” he rasped, “well, be glad I’m scared. It means I’m not giving up.”
Then, like some divine, crackling gift from the gods, the comms on Liam’s shoulder burst to life with a high-pitched pop of static and a broken whine. For a second, the noise filled the space like thunder. Then came the voice, gruff, clipped, and panicked beneath a layer of iron control,
“Liam? Naomi? Sage? Come in, I repeat, do you copy? This is Nico. I need a status. Now.”
I nearly sobbed. Relief slammed into me like a tidal wave, so sudden and sharp it stole my breath faster than the beam across my chest.
Liam scrambled to adjust the mic, breathing hard. “We’re here. We’re all here, injured, trapped. We’ve got a pocket, some space to move, but it’s bad, Nico. Sage is pinned. Naomi’s hit.”
There was a short pause on the other end, the kind filled with a thousand words unsaid.
“Alive?” Nico asked finally, the word like a prayer.
“Barely,” I croaked, trying to shift enough for my voice to carry. “But yes. I’m here.”
More static, then a low, furious curse. “I’ve got Conner. Matteo’s running point. We’re clearing debris now, but the layout’s fucked. Whole corridor collapsed.
1/2
8:10 pm P PDD.
Between Ruble and Relief.
It’ll take time to reach you.”
Liam glanced toward me, his jaw tightening. “How long?”
“Thirty minutes, maybe less. Hold on.”
“Copy that,” I whispered, barely able to get the words out. “I’ll try not to die before you get here.”
“Don’t,” Nico growled. “I swear to God, Sage, if you make me dig you out just to bury you again, I’ll fucking kill you myself, I’m not finished ghost school yet.”
A broken laugh slipped out of me. “That’s the spirit.”
Naomi coughed behind Liam. “Who’s that one? He also sounds like he folds his towels and makes death threats. Total husband material.”
I let my head fall back against the concrete, chest aching, lips cracked. Minutes felt like hours as I listened to Liam and Naomi talk to each other, little quips, broken jokes, her ragged breathing and I wanted to join in, I really did. But my body had other plans. Everything burned. My ribs, my arm, my legs. There was a deep, pulsing ache that bloomed behind my eyes like an expanding star, and I couldn’t tell if the cold wetness soaking into the back of my shirt was blood, sweat, or both. Probably both. The flashlight Liam had wedged into some rubble was dying, its beam flickering like a heartbeat as the darkness crept in, curling around the edges of my vision. The room tilted, then spun, the air thick and sour with smoke and dust. I blinked, slow and heavy, and felt myself slipping. Then came the crackle. Faint, broken, but unmistakable. A voice. His voice.
“Liam? Nico patched me through, can you hear me?”
I tried to focus, tried to hold on to that sound. Conner. I wanted to answer, scream, cry, something. But all I managed was a shallow breath and a twitch of my fingers.
“Yeah, I can hear you,” Liam said, loud and clear beside me. The relief in his voice was sharp enough to cut through concrete.
“What’s your status?”
Liam’s voice dipped low, tense. “We’re in a pocket. Naomi’s bleeding but stable. Sage is worse. She’s pinned, legs, chest, right arm. Probably internal bleeding. She’s conscious… or…” he glanced toward me, voice catching, “…she was.”
“Sage?” he called, turning toward me again. “Sage, talk to me. You with us?”
But his voice was starting to echo, distant and muffled like it was underwater. I tried to reach for it, cling to the sound, but the dark was too thick, too heavy and then it swallowed me whole.
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2/2
8:10 pm
Her Obsession.
Breached.
Conner
Lucia Morh is a passionate storyteller who brings emotions to life through her words. When she’s not writing, she finds peace nurturing her garden.

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