They waded in. The water was cold, reaching their calves. Above, the vent stacks appeared as dark, vertical throats leading up to street level, capped by ornate iron grates that pedestrians took for decorative history. Their job was to use a long, flexible camera probe to inspect the vent’s interior, then deploy a spinning brush head attached to a high-pressure hose.
“Not a ghost. A man .” Del pointed a gloved finger at a moss-eaten grate set into the tunnel wall. “Back in the Depression, a guy named Silas Hatch lived down here. Ran a whole operation—stole copper wire, sold it through the grates. They say he knew every vent, every branch. When the city tried to clear him out, he vanished into the main outfall. Never found the body. Just his tools, arranged in a circle. And a smell.” Del took a final drag from a cigarette he’d snuck before the respirator went on. “Not methane. Something… sweet.” sewer vent cleaning
“Del, look,” Marcus whispered, pointing at the vent stack’s base. A slick, oily sheen covered the brick, but it wasn’t grease. It was a fine, dust-like film, the color of rust and bone. They waded in
Marcus took off his gloves and looked at his own hands. They were clean. But he could still feel the pulse. Slow, patient, and very, very old. Their job was to use a long, flexible
Back on the surface, Del lit another cigarette with shaking hands. Marcus sat on the curb, staring at the manhole cover. They would write the report. “Partial obstruction, organic material.” They would let the next shift handle it. And maybe, in another hundred years, some other vent cleaner would find a tangle of yellow rubber, a respirator, and a headlamp, all woven into a quiet, breathing mat in the dark.