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"Jeremy Danvers," Anita said, having obviously overheard. "I would enjoy making his acquaintance again. If only his werewolf strength could break that door. The designers took all precautions. The patients in here are very valuable. We can't let them fall into the wrong hands. The only way that door is opening is when we open it."

The door clanged once. Then twice. The walls quavered.

"Let me guess," I said. "Not many werewolves on your team to test that theory, were there?"

She backed into the corner. "I'll tell you anything you need to know. Just tell them to spare me."

"Witches," Bryce sneered. Then he glanced at me. "Sorry."

"In some cases, the insult is warranted. Now lie down before you keel over. I can keep watch on this--"

Anita reached under the counter and pushed something. I smacked her with the bedpan and sent her flying, then stomped on her arm and grabbed the syringe.

"Sounding the alarm isn't going to help unless you've got a squadron of fighters on standby."

"Help won't get here in time to stop you from leaving. So I did something that will."

I went very still and looked around, listening for any telltale ticking. The pipes overhead groaned and whistled. Then a whoosh, like someone had flipped on the air conditioner.

When I turned back to Anita, she'd grabbed a gas mask from a cupboard. Bryce tried to snatch it from her, but she scuttled out of reach. I flung open the cupboard.

"Don't bother looking for more," she said, her voice muffled as she pulled it on. "This is the only one and--" She stopped. Pulled it away from her face. Let it snap back again.

"No," she whispered. "No, no, no."

"Someone skip the routine inspections?" I said. "Guess you'd better tell us how to turn it off."

"You can't," she whispered as she pulled off the mask. "Once it starts, the room will fill with gas, killing the subjects and everyone--"

I didn't hear the rest. I ran into the next room as I called Adam.

"Gas," I said when he answered. "The fail-safe released lethal gas. Forget breaking down the door. Can you incinerate it?"

"That was my next step. Hold on."

Gas was filling the room now. I could smell it, could feel the chill of it. Bryce handed me a wet towel. "Put it over your nose and mouth."

I did. Jeremy took the phone and told me to hold on. After a moment, I heard Adam cursing in the background.

"It's not working," he called. "Just give me a second." He inhaled and exhaled loud enough for me to hear him. Then, "Fuck, why isn't it working?"

"Just relax," Jeremy murmured. "Try incinerating something else."

A pause then Adam said, "Okay, it's not me, it's the goddamned door. It's fireproof." His voice rose. "Savannah? Cover your nose and mouth and find out where the gas is coming from. Try blocking the vent. I'm going to get in there if I have to incinerate the whole damned wall. Just--"

My phone went dead. I shook it. Tried turning it on. Nothing.

"Forget that," Bryce said. "We need to stop the gas."

I looked around for the source, but couldn't even see vents. Bryce hacked so hard he doubled over. One of the machines began blipping frantically. Then it stopped and an alarm started instead.

Another machine began to blip.

"They're dying," Bryce said between coughs. "And there's not a damned thing we can do about it, so don't try. That probably means the gas is coming up from the floor. Get back in the other room and we'll stand on the bed--"

He staggered. I grabbed his arm. His eyes rolled back as his mouth worked, trying to talk. I dragged him back to his room. It was empty.

I pushed Bryce onto the bed and spun around, waiting for Anita to attack from a cover spell. But she didn't. Why would she? Fighting us would only make her use more energy, kill her faster.

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