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Maya shone her light all around the stairs to confirm there was nothing on them, then lifted her pipe so it wouldn't bang on the steps while she ascended. Careful to be careful; quite the concept, yet she'd failed at it earlier. Maya was unused to exercising caution in hallways.
That was the excuse, at the very least. On the contrary,
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Once in the stairwell, Lana rolled the notebook and tucked it back in her pocket. "The files downstairs, as far as I could tell, covered current patients. First half of the alphabet on the right, as you face the door. Alphabetic by false names, of course."
There were several reasons to be interested in those files; any hints as to what, precisely, had been done to some patients at night were welcome, both to friend and foe. So was the full list of names and false identities; a census and a notification system for arrivals and departures would boost morale significantly, though it would be a lot of work, none of it guaranteed to succeed.
But if that was all that was in the two small rooms downstairs, what was upstairs? It could be substantially more informative than a set of fairy tales, no matter how artfully constructed.
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As they made their way up the stairs, Ema turned back to her sister. Even though Ema had been a patient for slightly longer, there was no denying that Lana was the better informed of the two. "You don't think that the files upstairs will contain anything on released patients or on our real lives, do you?" The question was mostly directed at her sister, but she made sure to glance back toward Morgan to get his input as well. Not that Ema was able to imagine what other kinds of files there could be. M-U and Special Counseling data, perhaps? If that turned out to be the case, Ema didn't really want to know what was in her own file ( ... )
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