He was a single drop of water. But he was him . A tiny, perfect sphere of consciousness wrapped in surface tension.
He began to roll, not towards the outflow, but towards the wall. He found a rough patch of brick, a vertical ladder of microscopic crystals. He started to climb.
He hit the grease and didn't slip. He stuck . Panic welled. He was a drop of water on a hydrophobic surface. He was immobile.
At the 6th junction, he met The Warden. A greasy, iridescent slick of motor oil, sprawling and arrogant. flushed away 1 10
"New blood," the oil gurgled, its voice a slow, poisonous purr. "Lost? They all get lost. Stay here. The dark is safe. The light evaporates you."
The drop felt the pull of the oil's embrace. It would be easy to merge, to lose his tiny, frantic self in that oily, indifferent calm. No more counting. No more climbing.
The number was 10. He didn’t know why, but the number hummed inside him like a second heartbeat. A countdown. A destination. From the moment he’d coalesced from the spray of a leaking pipe, the number had been there: 10 . He needed to get to the 10th junction. The one where the main outflow split into a hundred tiny channels, each leading to a different, smaller pipe. Somewhere down one of those pipes, he was sure, was a way out. A way back to the light. He was a single drop of water
He came to rest on a sandbar of congealed… something. He didn’t have a word for it. He was new.
The rain fell in sheets, a percussive drumming against the London cobblestones. Beneath the city, in the great churning arteries of the sewer system, it sounded different. There, it was a muffled roar, a constant white noise that blended with the hiss of steam and the distant, rhythmic thump-thump-thump of the great pumps.
He didn't need a pipe.
He passed the Temple of Rust, a magnificent arch formed by an old tin can. He navigated the Perilous Currents of the 5-Way Split, dodging a flotilla of dead matches. Each junction he passed, the number inside him ticked down. 9. 8. 7.
He looked at the hundred dark tunnels. Then he looked up, at the faint, watery light from the manhole cover.
"No," he said, and his voice was a high, clear chime. He jumped . He launched himself over the oil's slick back, a perfect parabola of distilled courage. He landed on the other side with a splash and didn't look back. He began to roll, not towards the outflow,
He started to climb anyway. Because 10 had taught him the rule, and 1 had shown him the truth: It only takes one. One moment of impossible, stubborn, tiny hope. And the courage to fall, just so you can learn to climb.