Abby, on the hard carpeted floor, stared at the small sign beside the panel of buttons on the grey wall. In red capital letters on a white background it read:
WHEN BROKE DOWN
CALL 013 228 7828
OR DIAL 999
The grammar did not exactly fill her with confidence. Below the button panel was a narrow, cracked glass door. Slowly, one inch at a time, she crawled across the floor. It was only a few feet away but, with the lift rocking wildly at every movement, it might as well have been on the far side of the world.
Finally she reached it, prised it open and removed the handset, which was attached to a coiled wire.
It was dead.
She tapped the cradle and the lift swayed wildly again, but there was no sound from the handset. She dialled the numbers, just in case. Still nothing.
Great, she thought. Terrific. Then she eased her mobile from her handbag and dialled 999.
The phone beeped sharply at her. On the display the message appeared:
No network coverage.
‘Jesus, no, don’t do this to me.’
Breathing fast, she switched the phone off, then a few seconds later switched it back on again, watching, waiting for just one signal blob to appear. But none did.
She dialled 999 again and got the same sharp beep and message. She tried again, then again, jabbing the buttons harder each time.
‘Come on, come on. Please, please.’
She stared at the display again. Sometimes signal strength came and went. Maybe if she waited…
Then she called out, tentatively at first, ‘Hello? Help me!’
Her voice sound small, bottled.
Taking a deep lungful of air, she bellowed at the top of her voice, ‘HELLO? HELP ME PLEASE! HELP ME! I’M TRAPPED IN THE LIFT!’
She waited. Silence.
Silence so loud she could hear it. The hum of one of the lights in the panel above her. The thudding of her own heart. The sound of her blood coursing through her veins. The rapid hiss-puff of her own breathing.
She could see the walls shrinking in around her.
She breathed in slowly, then out. She stared at the display of her phone again. Her hand was shaking so much it was almost impossible to read it. The figures were just a blur. She breathed in deeply again, and again. Dialled 999 once more. Nothing. Then, putting the phone down, she pounded hard on the wall.
There was a reverberating boom and the lift swayed alarmingly, clanging into one side of the shaft and dropping a few more inches.
‘HELP ME!’ she screamed.
Even that caused the lift to rock and bang again. She lay still. The lift settled.
Then, through her terror, she felt a flash of hysterical anger at her predicament. Hauling herself a few feet forward, she began pounding on the metal doors and yelling at the same time – yelling until her ears hurt from the din, and her throat was too sore to go on, and she began coughing, as if she had swallowed a whole lungful of dust.
‘LET ME OUT!’
Then she felt the lift move, suddenly, as if someone had pushed down on the roof. Her eyes shot up. She held her breath, listening.
But all she could hear was the silence.