Resonance by Olo

Zack Morris is a disaffected veteran who volunteers for a shrinking experiment that lasts longer than expected. He meets Dr. Irina Hart, who helps him find a meaning to life beyond mere survival.

Story Notes:

Many thanks to Aborigen for his assistance with this story.

Rated: 🟡 - Sexual Themes | Reviews: 1 | Table of Contents
Tiny Perspective Age 25-34 F/m Sci-Fi Adventure Hands Unaware Breast Shrink Heterosexual Gentle Consensual Instant Size Change Coercion

1

Word Count: 5090
Added: 03/28/2025
Updated: 04/05/2025

What is it they say about the unexamined life?  Well, I think I’ve been examining my life too goddamn much lately.  Joined the Army and got married right outta high school, did three tours overseas, got divorced between the second and the third.  Tried to sign up for a fourth tour, got hit with a PTSD diagnosis and an involuntary medical discharge.  Back in the so-called real world, no one actually seems real.  After all the futile job interviews and empty happy hours, just once I’d like to hear a genuine human voice.

Nothing human about the voices on any of the corporate radio stations that are the only thing you can get out here in darkest exurbia where my appointment was.  As I drove past the endless strip malls and besieged greenbelts, I kept hopping stations until I found a steady pounding pulse to keep me focused.

I’d met with this outfit before, but at an office back in the city.  The name on the building directory there said “Orbital Solutions,” so I thought it had something to do with space research, but the recruiter said, “Not that kind of orbital.”  Once we got down to the paperwork, however, all the forms said “V-Labs” at the top.  That’s where I was heading now, if I could find it out here in the dark.

The directions were really sketchy.  I was supposed to find this public storage facility, then go to the back of the parking lot.  Sure enough, an unlit access road ran from the lot through the trees for a half-mile before ending at a one-story windowless slab of a building.  No signs, just one set of metal doors illuminated by a single sodium lamp.

I parked next to the other dozen cars in the lot, over half of which sported DoD permits.  I eyed the tree-line warily as I walked toward the building.  The doors were unlocked, but immediately inside was a serious security checkpoint manned by three armed guards, all of whom exhibited a familiar alertness as I entered.

“Hi, I’m Zack Morris,” I said amicably.  “I’m looking for V-Labs?”

“Sure,” one of them said.  “Just hold there a minute.”  He walked around behind a desk while the other two watched me motionlessly.  The first guard clicked on something and looked at a screen, then back at me.  Finally he keyed his chest-mike.  “Morris is on site,” he said.

He came back out in front of his desk and took a position exactly halfway between his squad-mates.  “You’re good,” he said with the same mirthless smile as the others.  “Just be a sec.”

“Cool,” I said, reflexively trying to match their bravado.  After a few moments, however, I remembered how fatiguing it was to keep up that face, and I stared blankly through the bulletproof glass door.

I heard her heels first, echoing down the featureless corridor.  I tried not to move suddenly as I craned my head up to look in the direction of the footsteps.  What was I expecting?  I thought I was done expecting things forever.

A woman wearing a lab coat turned the corner and looked straight at me as she approached the checkpoint.  She had pale skin with shoulder-length blonde hair.  Without the heels I guessed she came to about five and half feet.

I squared my shoulders as she swiped her card to unlock the door, but I didn’t move from my position.  She stepped through and held the door open.

“Sergeant Morris?” she said with a genuinely warm smile.  There was a trace of an accent there, but I couldn’t place it.

“Just Zack, please,” I said, slowly approaching her.  I kept my eyes on her face, pointedly ignoring any reactions the guards might have had to the mention of my former rank.  If they had read the daily briefing, there shouldn’t have been any.

I was about to offer my right hand but the woman was quicker and extended her left.  How did she know I was a southpaw?  They must have pulled my weapons qualification records.  Her grip was firm and warm.

“I’m Dr. Hart,” she said.  “Thanks for coming on time.”  Her curt nod to the desk guard was both rote and civil.

She pulled another security card out of her coat pocket and handed it to me.  It bore a copy of the photo I had posed for back at Orbital Solutions, my name in tiny type, a bar code, a magnetic strip, and in bright red 24-point letters, the word “SUBJECT.”

She smiled toothlessly as I clasped the badge to the collar of my polo shirt.  “Follow me, please,” she said and turned on her heels.  A floral whiff hit me as her hair swept around.  Gardenias, I thought.

We proceeded back around the corner and down the hallway from which she had emerged, then a secured elevator ride down three floors, where the lighting was noticeably brighter.  Apart from Dr. Hart and the entry guards I hadn’t seen anyone else on the ground floor, but Sublevel 3 was a hive of activity.  Two more security checkpoints, lots of lab techs, and at least two guys who dressed and carried themselves like the special contractors I had run into overseas.  Those guys would do anything if the price was right.

Dr. Hart led me into what she called a briefing room.  Table, chairs, coffee, someone’s workstation, and a very poorly concealed one-way mirror.  “Please have a seat,” she said.  “Can I get you some coffee or water?”

“No, thanks,” I said, sitting down at the table and ignoring the mirror.  I had nothing left to hide.

She sat down across from me and picked up a familiar-looking stack of paper.  “I realize you signed the Affirmation of Consent and all these releases with the notary,” she said, “but the protocol requires me to re-apprise you of the basic parameters of tonight’s experiment.”

I nodded wearily.  Her generous smile stuck with me as she began her recital.  “The first phase of the experiment shall consist of your body being exposed to the proprietary process known as Asymmetric String Molecular Refraction.  We estimate that this phase will last from thirty to sixty minutes.  You will be under general anesthesia and unconscious for this and all other phases of the experiment.  At the end of Phase 1, your body will be greatly reduced in size.”

It sounded like bullshit back in the city and not even Dr. Hart’s clinical tones could make it sound any more plausible.  They claimed they couldn’t tell me how it worked or show me the apparatus because they were “trade secrets.”  They did show me a video of a dog being prepped for the experiment, then a bug-sized dog in someone’s palm, and then they trotted out the dog restored to full-size for me to pet.  I’d seen more adroit throws in the barracks back in boot.

“We anticipate that your reduced height will be four percent of what it is now,” she continued, “and your weight will be at 0.16 percent.  Phase 2 will consist of recording your basic measurements and vital signs and general observation for approximately one hour.  Phase 3 will be a mirror-negative exposure of your body to the process that will restore your body to its original size.”

Yeah, sure.  I was going to be knocked out for the whole thing, so as far as I would ever know they could give me anal probes and post videos of my gape all over 4chan.  I went through worse, two weeks into my first tour.

“Do you consent to participate in the experiment I just described?” she asked.

I rolled my eyes in the direction of the one-way mirror, then smiled at Dr. Hart.  “Sure.”

“Please sign here,” she said, sliding across the table a form identical to the one I had signed back in the city.  I signed again.  She collected the papers and stood back up.  “Thank you, Sergeant.  And now it’s time to get you prepped.  This way, please.”

I followed her back out into the hall and around two more corners.  Everyone I encountered spotted my badge, darted a look at my face, then averted their eyes, all in the space of 1.5 seconds.  Just like that last walk off the base, my discharge papers in my pocket.

We arrived at what looked like a small hospital room with an adjustable bed and vitals monitors, a chair, and a small set of drawers.  Dr. Hart gestured to a flimsy gown at the foot of the bed.  “If you would like to change into this, Sergeant, a technician will be in shortly to administer the preparatory medications.”

“Zack, please.”

She tilted her head and smiled, then extended her left hand again.  As I shook it, she said, “Good luck, Zack.”

“Thanks.”

She closed the door behind her as she left.  The room seemed chillier even before I began to disrobe.  I had barely finished changing into that pointless gown when the tech entered without knocking.  He was wheeling a small cart with an IV pole attached.

“Lie down,” he said dully.

I lay on the bed and watched him get his injections ready.  The stubble on his scalp was almost as short as that on his chin.  He stuck me four times and never once made eye contact.  Must have been the good stuff because I was out before he left the room.


I returned to awareness in that antechamber of consciousness where you discard your dreams and remember who you are.  I hadn’t dreamed, however, and I felt no urgency to remember myself, either.  I was hiding out where no one could find me.  There were no responsibilities in that subconscious limbo, no debts, no insistent memories.

They say dreams transpire very rapidly, a few seconds for hours of subjective experience.  Who knows how long I managed to ward off wakefulness, pressing my mind’s temple against a stone floor, but all at once I was re-floated by a tide of recognition.

“Za-ack,” said a voice from no discernible direction.  It surrounded and lifted me, loosening my limbs and energizing my spine.  It was a woman’s voice, but no woman was ever so commandingly present.  Her gentle call was more than enough to bear me up into consciousness.

I opened my eyes to a dark room, lit only by a thin square of light outlining the edges of the far wall.  It was immediately obvious that I wasn’t in the same bed where Igor had put me out.  The mattress was wider and stiffer, and the blanket was made of some weird scratchy fabric.  I could tell it wasn’t the same room, either; different smell, felt stuffier.

“Hello, Zack,” came the voice again.  I thought I was awake, but the voice still surrounded me, as if I were in a movie theater.  She must be on a speaker system, as I couldn’t see anything resembling a person in the dim light.

“This is Dr. Hart,” she said.  “We met the day that you arrived.”  Day?  How long had I been out?  I sat up and felt for my extremities to make sure they were all there.  There was no pain, but every muscle took extra effort to move, even some I didn’t know I had.

“Zack,” she continued, “I must ask that you remain lying down for the moment.”  Despite the urgency of her words, her cadence and tone shut out all anxieties and put me instantly at ease.  She could be explaining evacuation procedures during an actual plane crash and I would calmly hang on her every word.

“The experiment has been interrupted,” she said, as if my bus had been delayed.  “For reasons we still don’t know, the sensors did not accurately record the resonances of the particle strings of your body as they interacted with the refraction process.  Consequently, we cannot presently apply the correct inverse resonance of the final phase of the experiment.”

I had no idea what that meant but she made it sound like they knew what they were doing.  I could have laid there listening to her lecture on calculus until they figured it out, however long it took.

“Do you understand what I said, Zack?  I can hear you; just speak normally.”

It took me a minute to get any words out because my throat was so dry.  “Not really,” I croaked.  “What happens next?”

“Well, Dr. Singh thinks he can apply a series of transformations to the recorded data to arrive at the correct resonance, but there is disagreement amongst the team.  Some want to try with an animal subject first, while others insist on determining the cause of the faulty recording before proceeding with anything else.”

“Okay,” I said, baffled.

“We are going to do everything we can to help you, Zack.  We have the smartest people in the world here.”

“What, why do I need help?”

There was a brief pause.  “The experiment isn’t over, Zack,” she said calmly but deliberately.  “We have only completed Phase 1.”

“So?”

“So,” she replied patiently, “your body is still only 0.16 percent of its original mass.”

A chill gripped my chest, and my inner ear warned me not to try standing.  I looked around the gloom, trying to recognize anything.

“Where am I?” I asked weakly.

“You’re in a cupboard on top of a table in one of the biology labs.  I am seated at the table about a half-meter away.”

I turned the phrase You’re in a cupboard over and over in my mind.  It was simultaneously both more immediately real and ridiculously far-fetched than 0.16% of original body mass.  Any attempt to dismiss the full implications of Dr. Hart’s words was quashed by the all-encompassing timbre of her voice.

Fuck, a cupboard?  I instinctively scooted back along the mattress until my back was against the wall.  No, not a mattress.  A sponge.

Oh shit.

My heart began to race and I might have started hyperventilating, but Dr. Hart spoke again.  “Zack?  Are you alright?”

“Uh-um,” I said, taking deep breaths as I could.  “Just how tall am I?”

“As a matter of fact,” she said softly, “I need your help with determining that, as well as a few other measurements.  When you’re ready, I’ll open the cupboard so you can come out onto the table.”

The light creeping in from the edges of the far wall seemed to intensify.  Not a wall, I reminded myself.  A cupboard door.

As I contemplated standing up, I finally realized that I wasn’t even wearing the gown that I had on when Igor knocked me out.  As if being small enough to fit inside a cupboard wasn’t humiliating enough.

“Zack?”  Dr. Hart’s soothing voice again commanded my attention.  “Are you coming out soon?  Should I come back later?”

“Don’t go!”  The words blurted out before I could think.  Her calm, even voice was the only source of mercy in this nightmare.

“Are you alright?” she asked.  The relief I felt was dramatic and immediate.

“Yes,” I said apologetically.

“Are you coming out?”

“Gimme a minute.”  I stood up and grabbed the not-a-blanket and tried wrapping it around my torso like a toga, but it was too wide and too stiff.  I ended up just wearing it like a hoodless cloak.

Without moving toward the door, I took a couple of breaths and said, “Okay, you can open it now.”

She opened the cupboard slowly, but by the time my eyes had adjusted to the light the entire wall was gone.  I looked around the cupboard first, but the only other object besides the sponge was a plastic bottle cap half-filled with water.  I’m glad I hadn’t used it as a bedpan.  In one of the upper rear corners was a black metallic bulge, probably a night-vision camera and a mike.

Turning to the open door, I felt another chill as I identified Dr. Hart’s upper torso and arms.  She was wearing the same lab coat and badge, probably a different top, but I couldn’t remember.  She was holding very still, but I could nonetheless determine that this enormous person was sitting just over there, waiting for me to come out into the light.

Oh my god.

I don’t know how long I stood there frozen, but eventually she spoke again.  “Zack, it’s okay.  I’m going to take care of you.  I just need to examine you and take some measurements.”

Each word surrounded me and warmed my chest.  She spoke at a regular pace, her unidentifiable accent spinning off her words with unimpeachable sincerity.  Her voice awoke in me a level of trust of which I had forgotten I was capable, and it drew me out.

At first I kept my head lowered as I negotiated the step down to the metal table without losing either my balance or my grip on my fabric wrap, which I finally identified as a dried-out sanitary wipe.  Only after both my bare feet were firmly planted on the cold surface did I look up.

From my perspective, seated she still towered over me by fifty feet or more.  Her hands were folded before her on the tabletop, and her long blonde hair was tightly bound up behind her head.  I was immediately seized, however, by her kind and curious face.

It was slightly rounded at the cheek bones, narrowing along her decisive jaw to her strong chin.  Her wide smile would have been disarming if it weren’t capable of engulfing me whole.  Most reassuring, however, were her slate-blue eyes, wide with attention and care.

“It’s nice to see you, Zack.”  Hearing my name issue from her enormous throat and watching her tendons flex as her mouth formed the words was fascinating.

Looking up at her, suffused by her mindful gaze, I momentarily forgot my terror.  “This is a dream,” I said, almost to myself.

“I’m afraid not, Zack,” she replied, startling me with both her volume and her earnestness.  “Please follow my instructions in order to collect the necessary data.  The entire team is waiting for it to proceed with their computations.”

I whirled around, expecting to be surrounded by giant scientists staring down at me, but there was only Dr. Hart in the room.  My heart started pounding again.

“It’s alright, Zack,” she said, lowering her face closer to me.  “No one’s going to hurt you.”

I turned back to face her house-sized head and felt my shoulders relax.  “Thank you, Dr. Hart.”

“Please, call me Irina.”

Her words were a warm shower of solace.  “Thank you, Irina.”

“Now,” she said softly, sitting up straight, “let’s get you weighed.”  She reached to one side with an arm the size of an 18-wheeler and picked up a digital scale, setting it gently in front of me.  “Do you think you could climb up on that?” she asked without a hint of condescension.

It seemed an odd question—it was a trivial height, provided my muscles still worked the same at this size and gravity had no surprises for me—until I realized the implied alternative was to be picked up and placed on the scale.  By Irina.

“Uh, sure,” I blurted, not too forcefully I hoped.  Clutching my “cloak” together with my right hand, I stepped onto the base of the scale and reached up with my left hand to pull myself high enough so I could throw one leg up over the edge of the top.  I gracelessly rolled the rest of my body onto the cold instrument and stood up.

Glancing up at Irina, she still had that beatific smile even as she paused to clarify her instructions.  “Uh, Zack, we need to find your weight without—without your wrap.”

Of course.  I knew that.  I started to turn away from her, but then I realized that was silly.  It was just a physical exam and she was a professional, albeit twenty-five times taller than my last examiner.  Standing sideways to Irina, I released the sanitary wipe and let it tumble over the side of the scale.

I turned to face her and she was all business, entering the data on a laptop the size of a three-car garage.  I diverted myself from my surreal situation by trying to guess what kind of database the lab was using.  I couldn’t recognize it; it seemed very primitive, but Irina didn’t seem to have any difficulty with the interface.

“Now,” she chirped, “let’s see how tall you are.”  She reached past me and selected an aluminum ruler and stood it behind me, the metal cool against my bare shoulder blades and ass.  To read my precise measurement, she brought her face lower and closer to me than she had ever before.

The scrutiny was overwhelming.  My knees buckled.

“Stand up straight, please, Zack,” she said, like an infinitely patient mountain.

My hand instinctively moved to cover my crotch, but I quickly dropped it as I became lost in her immense face.  Everything about me felt so insignificant when confronted by her magnified features.  I marveled at the infinitesimal blemishes on her skin and the ultrafine hairs along the underside of her chin and her delicately sculpted eyebrows.  Her full lips remained empirically pursed, but her eyes sparkled with perception.

“Seventy-six millimeters,” said Irina softly, her warm breath flowing over me.  She lifted her head back up and I briefly felt abandoned.  Turning back to her laptop, Irina typed my puny height into the database.  Concentrating on her work, she seemed like a distant monument, but soon enough she turned her attention back to me.

“I need to take your pulse, Zack, and I think that will work best with you lying on your back.”  She lunged forward and I took an involuntary step backward, but she was only reaching into the cupboard to retrieve my “bed.”  Her scent enveloped me as a loose lock of her hair dropped over her shoulder.  I furtively glanced at her looming clavicle until I realized that I was beneath her field of vision.

Irina leaned back but the fragrance of gardenias lingered, mixed with a distinct laundry scent.  She set the sponge on the tabletop close enough to the scale that I was tempted to jump straight down onto it.  However, I remembered that she wanted to take my pulse, and exertion would probably distort that.  I therefore clambered down slowly, only slightly conscious of how my extended limbs must have appeared to Irina.

I lay down on the sponge, and from my supine position Irina looked even more gigantic, a tower of strength, intelligence, and curiosity.  Lying naked before this titanic woman, I felt my heart-rate start to increase, threatening to spoil her data after all.

She fitted her stethoscope into her ears then favored me with a reassuring smile.  “It’s going to be okay, Zack,” she said with that steadying voice of hers.  “We’re going to get you back to normal.”

I took a few calming breaths and imagined her kindness flowing into my lungs and my bloodstream.  My heartbeat slowed but remained strong.  I nodded imperceptibly, but she caught it nonetheless and returned it with a gentle nod of her own.

She raised the end of the stethoscope with the diaphragm facing down, then brought it over my torso and carefully lowered it until it was touching but not weighing on my chest.  As her huge fingers bracketed the instrument, I could feel their heat and strength, imagining how easily they could curl and enclose my entire body into her palm.  Oh please yes.

After she had counted enough of my heartbeats, Irina lifted the stethoscope away, but not before brushing the stiffy I hadn’t realized I had.  Did she touch it with the instrument, or with the side of her finger?  I searched her expression, but it remained calm and seemingly unaware of the contact.  Again I moved my hand toward my erection, and again I overrode the instinct lest I draw her attention.

I sat up and swiveled my legs over the edge of the sponge, hoping my cock was sufficiently concealed.  Irina turned back to me with a professional regard.  “Now, Zack, I need to take your temperature.  I think I can apply my digital thermometer to your back.”

I just nodded and gave her a thumbs-up.  She pulled the thermometer out of a drawer and polished the reader surface with a wipe.  It was still cool but I steeled myself not to jump when she pressed the device to my back.  The beep was startlingly loud in my tiny ears, however.

Irina entered my temperature into the database, then let out a deep breath.  “I’d love to get your blood pressure, but I think even an infant sphygmomanometer wouldn’t be sensitive enough.”  It would also probably break my ribs when it inflated.

She nodded her decision to herself, then broke out a beaming smile.  “How about some lunch?  Are you feeling hungry?”

I was.  I’d had a very light dinner the evening of the experiment, and I couldn’t remember who many hours Irina had said had elapsed.  I should be ravenous, but it wasn’t until Irina brought it up that I felt any pangs at all.  “Yes,” I said distinctly.

“I have some food in my office, just down the hall.  Go ahead and get, uh, wrapped again.”  My stomach dropped as I saw her stand up to her full height and walk out into the hall.  Only when I felt my stiffy pressing against my belly did I remember to get up and retrieve my “cloak.”

Standing and facing the door of the lab, I found myself strangely excited for Irina’s return.  I craved the protection and reassurance she promised, not to mention the offer of food, but her sheer extent and mass was entrancing to watch in motion.

Then I heard her footsteps approaching, a hundred times more daunting than when they had preceded her at the checkpoint upstairs.  Irina re-entered the lab with an expression of calm concern, but her face lit up when her eyes found me.  I felt too warm for my wrap, but I dared not discard it again.

She was carrying a mundane lunch box, collapsible and insulated.  She set it down on the far side of the scale as she returned to her seat.  Unzipping the container, she brought out a small tub of yogurt and a plastic box containing granola.  “I also have an apple,” she offered.  “I’d be happy to cut some slivers for you.”

It was a bit overwhelming, but hunger won out.  “I’d like to try some granola, I think.”

“Sure,” she said kindly.  “Let’s see if I can’t make it more bite-sized for you.”  She removed the box lid and laid on the table, poured some granola out onto the plastic surface, then took a metal spoon from the lunchbox and rolled the bowl of the spoon over the chunks of granola, expertly powderizing it like an apothecary.

Clutching my wrap, I shuffled over and sat down next to the pile of granola dust, scooped a handful and shoveled it into my mouth.  The sweet carbs felt so familiar and comforting that I had to consciously remember not to gorge myself.

Irina anticipated my thirst and filled a bottle cap with water and set it down next to me.  I had to hunch over it and cup it with my hands, but I didn’t care.  A sudden torpor hit me as the food and water settled into my stomach, and I struggled to sit up to avoid heartburn.

“Would you like some apple?  Or perhaps some yogurt?”

I shook my head, but then I worried that she couldn’t discern the tiny gesture.  “No, thanks,” I managed.

She started to return the items to her lunchbox, and I asked, “Aren’t you going to eat?”

For the first time I saw a moment of hesitation or uncertainty in Irina’s eyes.  Then her kindly smile returned and she replied, “Not at this time.”

I heaved myself to my feet and watched Irina finish packing up her lunch.  I felt strangely disappointed, and it wasn’t until much later that I realized I had been morbidly curious to see someone so gigantic chewing and swallowing food.  I’m sure I would have gawked openly, making it all very awkward.

“How do you feel, Zack?  Did the food help?”

“Yes, but all of a sudden I’m very tired.”

“Perfectly understandable,” she said, nodding.  “You have a lot to process.”  She leaned forward again to return the sponge to the cupboard.  Once she withdrew, I made my way back and stepped up into it.  I looked around “my room,” trying to normalize it in my mind.

“Oh, I almost forgot,” said Irina, swiveling in her chair and opening a drawer.  She turned back and delicately placed two more containers inside the cupboard near the door.  They looked like small petri dishes, only about an inch in diameter; to me they were about two feet across.

“Zack, we need to get stool and urine samples from you.  Please use these two specimen dishes, um, separately, if you know what I mean.”

I turned around and tried to be casual about this clinical detail.  I hoped she could see my smile as I replied, “I understand.”

Somehow her smile broadened.  “Do you need anything else, Zack?”

I needed asylum from the world before I came to this place, and now I needed it even more.  I was torn between the relative safety of the cupboard and the constant reassurance of Irina’s presence.  In the end, fatigue made the decision for me.  “No, thank you.”

“You’re going to be alright, Zack,” she said calmly.  “We’re working around the clock on this.  Just take care of yourself and don’t worry.”

I raised a hand and waved my acknowledgement of her sentiment.  She nodded and smiled as she leaned forward to close the cupboard door.  The last thing I saw before I was enclosed in darkness was her steady concerned gaze.

I stood there while my eyes re-adjusted to the faint light seeping in around the edges of the door.  I found my water dish and took a few gulps, then sat on my bed.  Sleep had always been a refuge for me, but as I lay in that little box on a table in a lab in the middle of nowhere I found myself curiously reluctant to let go of consciousness.



2

Word Count: 3087
Added: 03/29/2025
Updated: 04/04/2025

Of course I had nightmares.  I was back in-country, separated from my unit.  I was trying to get back to them, even though I knew most of them were dead.  For some reason, my wife was with my unit and every time I thought I had caught up with them, it turned out that they had just moved on.  I could never figure out if my wife wanted me to find my unit or if she was keeping them from me.

I opened my eyes in the dim interior of the cupboard, and I immediately remembered where I was and what had happened.  I even felt relieved to touch and identify the sponge and my “wrap.”  I sat up and waited, and sure enough I was greeted by Irina’s voice.

“Hello, Zack.  Are you feeling well?”

I smiled in the direction of the night-vision camera in the upper corner.  “Better than expected, I think.”

“Are you ready to come out?”

“Um, let me get you those samples first.”

I drank some water and splashed my face, then turned my attention to my “bedpans.”  I noticed that there had been an addition while I had slept: someone had placed a pile of shredded sanitary wipes nearby, small enough for me to use as toilet paper.

I provided my samples and washed up, then addressed the microphone.  “You may open the door now, please.”

Light flooded into the cupboard, but the welcome visage of Irina’s smile found before the glare overwhelmed my eyes.  I stepped down cautiously but curiously out into the world of giants.

I immediately noticed that Irina had had a change of clothes.  “Did you stay up all night?” I asked.

“No, Dr. Darrington monitored you while I went home and slept.”

“How long was I out?”

“Just over seventeen hours this time.  I guess you really needed the sleep.”

I didn’t know what I needed.  I was just glad Irina was there when I woke up.

We repeated the measurements from the first “day,” and Irina had a surprise for my breakfast.  In addition to the crushed granola, she had brought bacon crumbs, slices of scrambled eggs that she reheated on a Bunsen burner, and finely chopped carrots.

I was predictably hungry after my long sleep, but seeing the effort that Irina had gone to doubled my appetite.  I happily stuffed myself while she typed up some notes and favored me with the occasional warm glance.  I had several gulps of water after I was finished, then stood up and walked over to her laptop and craned my neck back to admire her at work.

At last she finished entering data and smiled down at me. “Has your fatigue returned, Zack, or do you feel up for some basic fatigue and endurance tests?”

I wasn’t experiencing the same torpor as I had after my previous meal, nor was I eager to return to my subconscious.  Following Irina’s directions suited me just fine.  “Sure.”

“I made something for you,” she said with a modest shrug.  “Let’s see if it works.”  She brought a small length of navy-blue cloth and offered it to me.  Her colossal hand descended toward me with alarming quickness, and her fingertips seemed exceedingly warm as I reached forward to take the fabric.

“I thought you might be able to use it as a kind of, um, loincloth.”

I looked up sharply to see her hopeful smile with a trance of anxiousness.  I returned her smile and pulled the cloth through one hand to gauge its length.  To me it was about an inch thick, ten inches wide, and well over six feet in length.

After a moment of contemplation, I shrugged off my wrap and threaded the cloth between my legs, covering my junk and my asshole.  It was still warm from Irina’s grasp.  I held the front end to my belly while I twisted the longer back end around one leg and my waist in front then around the other leg and under itself above my ass.  The two ends draped over the “belt,” doubly covering all the naughty bits.

I placed my hands on my hips just above the makeshift garment and looked up at Irina.  “What do you think?”

She beamed down at me with obvious relief.  “That’s better than I imagined it.”

I pulled the loincloth tight and started some warmup stretches.

“Do you run often, Zack?”  When I was in top form, I went for a five-mile run every morning, but that seemed like a lifetime ago.

“I used to.  These days I’m lucky to get a couple of miles in maybe once a week.”

“Well, we don’t want to over-exert you.  This table is eight feet square.  Let me clear a space and we’ll see how many laps you can run.”

I just stood there and watched her pick up all the giant instruments and lift them to a nearby counter like an impossibly fast and beautiful construction crane.  Once one end of the table was clear, I started my first lap.

The first thing I noticed was that running barefoot was going to hamper my performance.  My loincloth stayed secure, and I was grateful for it as I kept my eyes on the horizon of the table edge and tried to ignore the skyscraper-sized woman watching my efforts.

I finally had to stop and rest my hands on my thighs.  After I indicated that I was done for now, Irina took my pulse again.  She worked out that, at my scale, I had run just short of a mile before becoming winded.

“I don’t think that indicates anything very profound,” she said reassuringly, “but I’ll record it anyway.”

I couldn’t hold it in any longer.  “Is there any update on getting me back to normal?”

Irina responded without hesitation or equivocation.  “Not yet.  They still haven’t determined whether they need to replicate the error before proceeding with their estimate for the reverse resonance.”

“What do you think my chances are?”

“I’m very optimistic, Zack.  The people working on this are the best in the world in their fields.  They’ve been working with this technology for over two years.  They’ll work it out.”

I drank in her assurance with a half-liter of water, gazing at the uncanny landscape of common desktop and laboratory objects the size of an obstacle course.  I wasn’t exactly comfortable with my situation, but I started to appreciate it from a more detached perspective.

Irina then took the conversation in an unexpected if not wholly unwelcome direction.  “If you don’t mind my asking, Zack: why did you join the Army?”

It was clear that they had a sophisticated file on me, and I don’t mind saying I was somewhat flattered that Irina had studied it.  I wasn’t even put out by the sudden personal and seemingly unrelated question.  I had a ready answer, and it didn’t seem any less plausible then than the dozens of other times I had given it.

“My mom’s uncle was in Vietnam.  She told me he enlisted voluntarily, that he wasn’t drafted, but later I found out that he had some trouble with the law, and back then they would often give you the choice of the Service or go to jail.  I didn’t know that when I was a kid, I just knew he had cool gear and got to jump out of helicopters.  When high school drove me crazy, I became obsessed with getting out and joining up.  Like so many others, I fell for the propaganda.”

“And yet you re-enlisted, even after everything that happened on your first tour.”  How detailed was their file on me?

“I’m not a quitter,” I said reflexively.  I stood up and looked into her giant face, which she had lowered to better read my expression.  Her gaze was complex.  There was no pity (I had become very attuned to that sentiment), but there was a guarded concern that made me doubt myself, beyond my absurd size.

No, I wasn’t a quitter, but I suspected Irina was wondering if I had learned anything from those experiences.  Not for the first time, so was I.

“Zack, my shift ends in just over an hour, and I have quite a few reports to file.  Will you be alright here by yourself until Dr. Darrington arrives?”

“Dr., Dr. Darrington?” I squeaked.

“Yes, he’s very punctual.”

He?  “Uh, I think I’m ready to return to the cupboard now, actually.”  I had somehow forgotten that the world was full of giants now, and I was in no shape to meet another at that point.

Irina nodded, and if she noticed my sudden anxiety she didn’t show any indication.  After gathering her notes and instruments, she placed two fresh specimen dishes just in the cupboard.  She also refilled my water reservoir.  I felt like a pet hamster.

“Good night, Zack,” she said with her familiar smile.

“Thanks for looking after me,” I said sincerely before turning and stepping up into my cupboard.

“Don’t worry, I’m sure we’ll have a plan tomorrow.”  I turned back and waved my affirmation again before she slowly closed the cupboard door.

I sat on the sponge in the darkness and focused on the cupboard’s spare contents lest I become overwhelmed by the uncomfortable memories stirred up by Irina’s questions.  My water dish had gradation marks in milliliters.  My platoon was never at full strength for any of my tours.  The veneer on the particle-board walls smelled like an airport restroom.  Residential walls do not stop HE rounds.  I’m currently knee-high to a G.I. Joe action figure.  They were just kids.

There’s no question I was a fool when I joined up, and I thought I had lost all my illusions before I was a year in.  I’m not a quitter.  Quitters don’t make it through boot, let alone two full tours and ask for more.

Look where that got me.  I wasn’t the only idiot in the history of the world who had to learn the hard way that war is hell, but I suspected I might have been the first to end up as a literal lab rat.

Nothing had prepared me for this.  Nothing could prepare me for this.  There’s no drill, no manual.  No rear echelon, no refuge.

Just me.  And Irina.


I was much less disoriented when I woke the next “morning.”  The lab smell was still dominant, but it was becoming familiar.

I was taking a shit in one of the specimen dishes when someone sat down at the table and jostled it.  Was it Irina?  Or Dr. Darrington?

“Good morning, Zack,” said Irina through the closed cupboard door.  My bowels immediately relaxed.  I started to wave at the camera, but then I realized I hoped she wasn’t watching.

Once I had finished up, I found myself eager for Irina to open the door.  Her sunny face welcomed me out onto the tabletop.  Something about her hair seemed different.  It was still securely bound up, but it was somehow fancier, more artfully swirled and stayed.

As she leaned and reached to lay out both my breakfast and her instruments, I noticed that Irina’s top—previously modest and unremarkable—was both tight and had a low neckline, exposing deep cleavage.  A shot of adrenaline ran through me as I averted my eyes and prayed she hadn’t noticed my stare.

After an expanded (and exhausting) exercise regimen, I again asked Irina about the experiment and reversing the effect.  She raised her eyebrows and sighed, but she didn’t break eye contact.

“There’s a team meeting set for this afternoon to review the data.  I’d expect them to make a decision about how to restore you then.”

“Could I attend this meeting?”

“In all fairness, you should.  I’ll ask Dr. Singh right now,” nodded Irina, starting to compose an email.

“It’s always easier to get forgiveness than permission,” I said.  She didn’t take her eyes from the screen, but my heart soared to see that my words made her smile and (yes!) blush.

“Very funny, Zack.”

“Seriously, I could just stowaway in your pocket.  Any bit of recon would help.”

She stopped typing, and for the first time I saw apprehension in Irina’s face.  She recomposed herself and turned to look down at me.

“Trust me, Zack, I wouldn’t expect a lot of forgiveness from these people.”

That brought me up short.  I could tell that Irina instantly regretted saying it, which gave me even more pause.  I swallowed and lowered my gaze, torn between trying to give Irina a way out of this conversation and wanting—needing—to know more.

Irina resumed typing her email to Singh.  I looked up and watched the tendons in her jaw tighten as she weighed each word and phrase.  I felt as if I had somehow gotten her in trouble.

“How’d you end up on this team, anyway?” I ventured.

She gave no sign that she had heard me, continuing to type with determination.  Finally, she screwed her mouth to one side and clicked Send.  Only then did she turn her eyes—and only her eyes—to me.

“That’s a long story,” she tried to warn me, knowing as soon as she said it that it was pointless.  I just stood there and let the mocking silence hang in the air.

“In my country,” she began, utterly suppressing any trace of an accent, “there aren’t many opportunities for women in science.  Lots of talk about equality, but no one wants to mentor you or let you get your foot in the door.  I wasted a lot of time on dishonest people before I decided I needed to move to the States.

“That was also very difficult, until I met a man named Roger.  It’s obvious now he was a recruiter looking for desperate people like me, but at the time I thought he was the answer to my prayers.  He got me my visa, he put me in contact with a lab that was hiring, he even found my first apartment.  I should have known there would be a catch.

“Any scientific career involves a certain amount of grunt work, especially at the beginning, and since it was well-paid (or so it seemed to me) I didn’t question it.  Eventually I started talking to my colleagues and discovered that no one ever left for another job in the same field.  No one could ever tell me what the precise problem was, but the lab had some reputation that made its employees untouchable.  If I tried to leave, I’d have to start over in a foreign country with no network of peers.

“So I stayed.  The lab changed names a half-dozen times, but the work got more interesting.  This project is the first time that I’ve had the sense that we were doing truly pioneering work, even if no one else knows what we’re accomplishing here.  I have no idea where they’d publish these results.  The talent and vision on this team simply don’t exist anywhere else.

“So you see, Zack,” she concluded with a faint smile, “we’re your only hope, but we’re the best in the world.”

Nothing that had happened in the last few days had made me feel as small and dependent as what Irina said to me just then.  I watched her serve my lunch, looming over and reaching past me, effortlessly lifting immense weights and covering vast distances, and I was deeply grateful just to be near her.

I was happily munching on a nugget of cornbread when the laptop chirped.  Irina glanced at the screen and her face fell.

“Oh,” she said after a pause.  “Dr. Singh has declined your request to attend the meeting.  I’ll have to tell you about it afterwards.”

I nodded and shrugged.  I didn’t try to suggest that she smuggle me in again.  She knew these people better than I did.

We conducted some more exercises and measurements until it was time for the meeting.  There was no particular reason for me to return to my cupboard, but I was a little tired and more than a little nervous.

I had started to make my way across the table when Irina lowered her hand directly into my path, palm up.  I looked up to see her winning smile again.

“Zack, do you mind?  I’d like to get a closer look at you.”

I nodded reflexively and stepped into her palm.  It wasn’t until I was settling into a seated position that I realized what an extraordinary request that she had made—and that I had agreed to without hesitation.

I placed my hands out to the sides for balance, touching her warm palm as she slowly lifted me off the table.  My environment heated up rapidly as Irina brought me closer to her chest and her face, her warm breath washing over my flushed skin.  I was briefly distracted by my proximity to her throat, conduit for her mighty breath and pulse.  She swallowed, to her a mere reflex but to me a convulsion of daunting force.

She brought me so close I had to decide which of her eyes I would look at.  There was no way I could track all the tremors and twitches from every corner of her expression as I sat helpless in the palm of her hand, under her intense scrutiny.

“Zack,” she began softly, sensitive to my minuscule eardrums, “I can’t possibly know what you’re going through right now.  But I want you to know that this is not just a groundbreaking experiment to me.  I have a ton of respect for the expertise of this team and I’m grateful for the opportunity to contribute to this field, but right now I’m prioritizing your safe and complete restoration over the goals of the project.  Fortunately, I think we can pursue both.”

I believed her utterly.  Her words were so considerate and heartfelt and her demeanor was so earnest and kind, she would have eased the worries of anyone, let alone a mouse-sized man in her hand.

I was struck dumb, of course, but I managed a smile and a nod.  Her eyes twinkled as she returned my nod, then she slowly lowered her hand back to the table, letting me disembark next to the cupboard.

Stepping up over the threshold, I turned and flashed a thumbs-up at Irina, earning another beaming smile.  I felt light, as if I were aboard a floating vessel.  She closed the door, leaving me alone with the darkness.



3

Word Count: 4301
Added: 03/29/2025
Updated: 04/04/2025

The light in the cupboard was dimmer than it had ever previously been when I awoke.  I couldn’t hear anyone out in the lab, and I glanced in the direction of the NV camera.  What did I expect to find there?

Without conscious decision, I sat up and spread my limbs out in the precise posture I had adopted when sitting in Irina’s palm.  I tilted my head back and summoned my memory of her soaring, doting face.  The grace of her kind regard still lingered, and I resolved to be worthy of it.

Eventually I hauled myself to my feet, found the dishes, and provided another specimen.  For some reason, the darkness and the silence from outside the cupboard began to unnerve me.  After I had retied my loincloth, I walked over to the door and held still, listening for any sign of activity.  I couldn’t be sure that silence wasn’t to be expected, having no knowledge of the hour or the lab’s normal routine.

Did I dare venture out onto the tabletop on my own?  It wasn’t like I was going to go very far.  Might there be someone out there who didn’t know about me, like a janitor or something?  Perhaps the darkness combined with my size would allow me to move about unobserved.

Could I even open the cupboard door by myself?  No reason not to find out.  I imagined myself proudly reporting this feat of strength to Irina, and I smiled in the dark.  I set my shoulder against the door edge opposite the hinges, took a deep breath, and shoved.  Gloriously, the door pivoted easily out for a quarter of a second, and then halted abruptly with a metallic clack.  A latch.

I stepped back to confirm the slight progress my strength had achieved before hitting the latch.  Had Irina ever latched the door before?  I was sure I would have heard it and remembered if she had.  Even allowing her the motive of trying to protect me, I still couldn’t remember her ever locking me in.

I shoved the door once more in frustration, then turned and glared at the NV camera.  Closing my eyes, I took a deep breath and relaxed my shoulders.  What were ya gonna do, bug boy?  All you can do is sit tight.  You’ve done it before.

Returning to the sponge, I lay down on my side and faced the wall.  There’s nothing I needed out there anyway.  Irina will be here soon with news.  I curled up and tried to go back to sleep.


Sentry-duty flashback hit me as I came instantly alert.  Someone was moving a chair out in the lab.  Definitely more light seeping in from the outline of the cupboard door.  I fought the instinct to roll off the sponge and hit the floor in a crouch.

Irina’s back.  I looked blankly at the NV camera, waiting to hear “Good morning, Zack,” but it never came.

Someone inserted a key in the door latch and turned it, which was a sound I was sure I hadn’t heard before.  Blinding light filled the cupboard as the door suddenly opened.

“Come on out,” a giant voice barked.  It sounded feminine, but it was difficult to be certain at this scale.  I could see part of their arm, but the white coat could belong to any of the lab’s staff.

“I haven’t got all morning,” came the voice again, a distinctly different and stronger accent than Irina’s.  “Come out or I’ll drag you out.”

The fingers on the one hand I could see flexed against the palm, and I got up and walked toward the opening.  My eyes had adjusted to the light by the time I had my new custodian in full view.

She wasn’t much older than Irina, probably in her mid-30s at most.  Light skin, short dark brown hair (with a hint of red?), prominent nose and heavy, arched eyebrows.  Dark eyes and pursed lips found me somehow disappointing.

“What are you wearing?” she sneered.

“Iri—Dr. Hart made it for me,” I said meekly.  From her incredulous expression I wondered if she had heard my minuscule voice.  Then she snorted and shook her head.

“Get rid of it at once,” she ordered.

“But why?” I sputtered.  I bridled at her words and tone.

“This is a clinical examination,” she said, raising her severe eyebrows.  “There is no room in science for convention or . . . sentiment.  Dr. Hart seems to have forgotten that.”

“Where is Dr. Hart?”

“She is occupied with other duties.  This project is not her only responsibility here.”

“I see,” I said, raising my head and squaring my shoulders, “and who, exactly, are you?”  She cocked her head, startled by my impertinence.

“I am Dr. Parvisi,” she said slowly, confirming her accent as Persian in origin.  She opened a nearby drawer and selected a sharp-looking pair of tweezers.  “Now, are you going to remove that diaper or am I going to have to do it for you?”

A single glimpse of her haughty expression was sufficient to convince me of her sincerity.  I untied my loincloth, wadded it up as best I could, and turned and tossed it onto the sponge.

To maintain what little dignity I had, I chose not to look Parvisi in the face as I stepped down onto the tabletop.  I could only stare at the metal surface for so long, however, before I raised my gaze to her waiting smirk.  Standing before this towering woman, holding my hands before my junk, I felt even smaller than my three inches of height.

She set the tweezers down on the table and reached back into the drawer, bringing out a magnifying glass and raising it to her eye.  She leaned forward to bring her scrutiny to bear.

“Hands at your sides,” she commanded.

I cringed inwardly as my arms reflexively obeyed.  It was already absurd to try to parry her gaze, but the distorting lens made it unbearable.  The focus of her attention roamed over my naked body like a beam of contempt.

Finally she lowered the magnifying glass to the table and sat back up.  She gave an audible sniff, then reached into a shelf and brought down a standard petri dish, setting it on the table before me.

“Some data is missing from your reports.”  “We need your sperm motility.  Give me a semen sample.”

I hesitated while I convinced myself I had heard her correctly.  Her fixed eyebrows quelled all doubt.

“Now?” I asked incredulously.

She sighed impatiently.  “Yes, now.”

Still I balked.  “You want me to…” I grabbed my cock and gave it a half-hearted tug.

“I can extract it with a syringe if you prefer,” she replied with a mirthless smile.

My chest ached as my breath deserted me in defeat.  I shuffled over to the edge of the petri dish and held my cock over the lip.

“At your size we can’t afford to lose any,” she interrupted me before I began.  “Get in the dish.”

I swallowed hard, then placed one hand on the lip of the dish as I lifted one leg then the other inside.  The plastic was warm against the soles of my feet.  Another deep exhale, and then I spat in my shooting hand and got to work.  Early on I made the mistake of glancing up at Parvisi and was rewarded with the sight of her staring impishly down at me and licking her lips.

I closed my eyes and tried to imagine myself anywhere else, with anyone else.  Images and memories flashed through my mind, but they are all eclipsed by Irina’s kind eyes and soothing voice.  She held me and comforted me and encouraged me to my joy.

I came hard, but I kept my eyes closed until I was finished pulling and squeezing, desperate not to let Parvisi into any part of that sweet new memory.  I finally opened my eyes to see that I had jizzed up to three feet away, subjectively reckoned.  It had been a while.

Above me, Parvisi’s snort was audible.  “Is that all?  How pathetic.”

She didn’t wait for me to meet her mocking glare before plucking me about my upper torso and lifting me out of the petri dish.

“There’s sure to be a few more drops,” she said, pinching my deflating cock between the rough pads of her thumb and index finger.  She milked me like an unproductive cow until I thought she was going to rip it off.  She gave a disappointed sigh.

“I know,” she said, finally releasing my bruised member and spreading my legs apart.  She rammed her pinky into my ass, pressing and probing for my tiny prostate.  Her first jab made me see stars and almost knocked the wind out of me.  It was like riding a pile-driver for a bicycle seat.

I looked up into the face of the giant woman torturing me.  While I could see she was certainly enjoying this on one level, she was also quite serious about extracting my every last drop of cum.  Eager to end my torment, I closed my eyes and gently grasped my aching cock and tried to coax out an emission that would satisfy her.

There was nothing erotic about the process; it was purely hydraulic.  Parvisi’s pounding was an unhelpful distraction, and I can’t swear my bladder didn’t make a contribution.  In the end, I was able to squeeze the last dregs up and out, just a small pearl perched on my pisshole.

Blessed relief as Parvisi’s digit withdrew from my anus and swooped up to my abused prick.  I don’t know how she spotted my puny production, but she delicately eased it onto her fingertip and brought it up under her exacting gaze.  My jaw dropped in disbelief as she inserted her pinky between her lips and licked it clean.  The twinkle in her eyes as she watched my reaction was unmistakable.

“You actually thought we needed your pitiful jizz for our data?” she cackled at me, licking her lips.  “I knew you were stupid enough to volunteer for this experiment, but that is truly moronic.”

My heart froze and it was a struggle not to void my bowels.  Parvisi easily sensed my distress and tightened her pinch.  My horror anticipated her widening grin.  I frantically searched her eyes for some respite from her scorn, but I accomplished nothing more than inviting more mockery.

“You still don’t get it, do you?” she sneered.  “Dr. Singh has finally accepted that finding the inverse resonance is impossible.  Accordingly, your test case has been terminated.”

My blood pounded in my ears as each terrible word raked my brain.  My lungs ached to breathe as her pinch amplified her sadistic glee.  Somehow, I blurted out a despondent protest, “No!”

“Oh, yes,” she said with supreme satisfaction.  “The team is moving on to more rewarding avenues of research.  This farce is over.”

With her free hand, Parvisi reached into my cupboard and swept the contents out onto the tabletop.  I lost all orientation as she desultorily tossed me into the cupboard.  I landed painfully on my left shoulder.  Darkness enclosed me as the door was shut and locked.

Ohfuckohfuckohfuck.


I huddled in the corner of the cupboard directly underneath the NV camera by the door on the hinge side.  I doubted they were actively monitoring me at that point (if they ever were), but I guessed that the impromptu nature of my accommodations meant that they hadn’t made sure that the camera view completely covered the entire cupboard.  Even so, a diligent observer could probably deduce my location.  They weren’t going to think I had escaped.

I rubbed my throbbing shoulder.  I knew what a dislocated shoulder looked like and mine wasn’t, but it still hurt like hell.  Everything did.  I had already looked for broken bones, but my despair at my impending doom made me less than methodical.

What happens to me now?  Parvisi’s callousness implied I no longer held any scientific value to them.  Even if they had given up on restoring me, couldn’t they learn something from observing a permanently shrunken person?  Who knows what the real goals of the project were.

In any event, my life was over.  I was stuck at this size forever, and no one knew where I was or cared.  Lab animals are not placed in good homes after the experiment.  They are destroyed.

How would they do it?  I had no doubt that Parvisi could come up with a dozen entertaining methods.  They almost certainly had an established protocol for disposing of specimens, even personnel assigned to the task.  It was probably beneath Parvisi’s station.  I almost vomited in horror when I realized the task would likely fall to Igor.

Well, they won’t take me without a fight, I thought grimly.  My position by the door maximized my warning time before someone opened it.  I planned to race out of the cupboard as soon as the opening allowed and then evade capture as long as I could, even jumping from the tabletop if given the opportunity.  I had absolutely nothing to lose by being defiant until the end.

I shifted onto one side to prevent my legs from cramping.  Fuck, my hips hurt.  The prospect of actually running anywhere seemed ridiculous, but desperate people can surprise you.  Anyway, I was sick of this damn cupboard.

Fear and outrage chased each other around my head, stiffening my resolve along with my limbs.  Time still had no reckoning.  Who knows when Igor or whoever would get around to disposing of me.  Perhaps Parvisi would have time for one more humiliation.  I was thirsty but I also had to piss.

I literally crapped on the floor when an enervating alarm started buzzing throughout the lab and the faint light around the cupboard door cut out. I had been so alert to any sound of someone approaching that the raucous alarm stabbed me in the chest.  I stood there frozen in the dark, my heart pounding, until the stench of my own shit reached me.

I remembered seeing some shredded wipes on the floor that Parvisi had neglected to sweep out.  I found them and though they were mostly dried out I was able to clean myself while waiting for my pulse to come back down.  I was totally unprepared to bolt when I heard the cupboard door being unlocked.

My eyes had adjusted to the darkness sufficiently to see the giant hand enter immediately as the door opened.  It groped blindly and hurriedly, but there was no room for me to dodge it.  The implacable fingers found me and shoved me into the palm.

I remembered my defiance and pressed against the digits, but it was futile.  Something about the scent of the enclosing skin tugged at my brain as I was swiftly extracted from the cupboard and thrust between tight fabric and the heat of a giant body.  As I was pinned by more and more of my captor’s flesh, it became apparent that they had stashed me inside an undergarment.  At last I recognized the familiar scent:  Irina.

I was in constant motion and could hear the rapid clicking of her heels on the tile floor.  From the hydrodynamic swaying of my enclosure, I eventually deduced that Irina had tucked me deeply into one of her bra cups.  I finally embraced the identity of my rescuer and let relief flood over and through me.

Even the continuing alarm buzzing faded as Irina’s breath and pulse surrounded me.  Her pace became less steady as she started navigating crowded corridors and stairwells.  Other giants shouted questions, but Irina only answered, “I don’t know.”

Irina’s exertion and proximity to others raised the temperature dramatically.  Her perspiration and mine mixed freely, creating an intoxicating humidity.  I hoped she was too preoccupied with evacuating the facility to notice my tiny stiff prick pressing against the underside of her breast.

Eventually Irina came to a stop and I could hear a confused hubbub all around her.  The giant voices were both loud and muffled, but I’m pretty sure I heard the word “fire” several times.  I felt my limbs stiffening from holding the same position for so long, but I dared not shift around lest I reveal myself or disturb Irina.

I gasped in relief when the alarm finally ceased, so deeply had I internalized it.  Shortly thereafter Irina began to walk again, somewhat slower than before.  Then her pulse accelerated as she slowed and stopped, and I could tell from the ambient sounds that she had entered a smaller space than previously.

A single giant voice, probably male, began interrogating Irina.

“Do you know anything about this fire?”

“No.”

“Where were you when the alarm sounded?”

“Uh, north ladies’ room, sublevel F.”

“Did you see anyone coming out of the green wing?”

“I don’t think so.”

“What did you do after hearing the alarm?”

“I headed straight for the stairs.  Stairwell B.”

“Give me your purse and empty your pockets.”

A slight swaying and a series of clatterings as Irina complied with the directions.  Another giant loomed close, either to collect her purse or ensure that her pockets were empty.  An awkward pause for rummaging, and Irina’s heart raced and she fought to control her breathing.

“Fine,” the voice barked finally.  “You may go.”  I’d heard friendlier dismissals from my company CO.

Irina walked briskly again, and then we were outside.  Her heel clicks shifted from concrete to gravel, and I pictured the isolated parking lot at the end of the road through the woods.

She slowed and stopped, and I heard what must have been a car fob.  I grunted as more of Irina’s mass fell on me when she lowered herself into her car seat.  More compression as she reached for the seat belt and pulled it across her body.  It was like being tossed by a warm and soft yet unstoppable surf.

Irina started the car and my puny mass was unaffected by the reverse acceleration and then forward motion.  After about five minutes of driving, I resolved to squirm upwards for some answers and fresh air.

I hadn’t made much progress when two of Irina’s fingers reached into her bra and pushed me back underneath her breast.  Not gonna argue with that.

I don’t know how long she drove with me buried in her bra cup.  There was no other distinctive sound, not even music from the car stereo, so I might have dozed off.  Eventually we slowed down and started a series of low-speed turns, then finally came to a full stop.  Irina shut off the engine and got out of the car, subjecting me to another tidal wave.

More steady walking as Irina seemed to be navigating a large space filled with (giant) people, including what seemed like children.  Food smells filtered into my enclosure, including the unmistakable scent of popcorn.  A pang of hunger struck me so hard I gasped.

Through all this time, Irina spoke to no one.  Certainly not to me.  While I still felt immensely relieved by Irina’s rescue of me, I remained puzzled at her conduct since we first got in her car.  I finally decided I had to stop trying to figure everything out.  There were bigger things at work here.

The ambient sounds changed reverb as we passed through tighter and then more open spaces.  Occasionally faint mechanical sounds like compressors and automatic doors loomed close but did not linger.  Irina’s steady pace produced a regular sway that rocked me into a trance, for which I was grateful.

I returned to alertness when Irina stopped again.  The jingle of keys and the rattle of a car door being unlocked.  No fob this time, I noted.  I braced for the tumble as Irina boarded the vehicle.  She closed the door and I waited for the crush of the seatbelt only to be surprised by Irina’s fingers invading my torrid repose and pulling me out.

“Oh, Zack, are you alright?”  Irina’s hushed by insistent voice cut through the mental fog and filled my heart.  Her cradling hand and caring face were the same, but everything else was different.  Her hair was contained and covered by a dark purple headscarf like a babushka, and her lab coat had been replaced by a navy-blue windbreaker.  Instead of the lab we were in the cab of a rather old pickup truck.

“I’m better than alright!” I shouted up at her.  “Thanks for getting me out of there!  I owe you my life!”

“We’re not safe yet,” she said worriedly.  “They’ve been watching me and it’ll get even worse now.”  She placed me in a cup holder suspended from the dashboard with a swivel that pivoted with the truck’s motion.  “We need to keep moving.”

Irina put the keys in the ignition right above my perch and started the truck.

“I left my phone in the mall, but it can’t stay there too long or they’ll figure it out.”

“Where are we going?”

“Somewhere they don’t know about.”  She furrowed her brows, then gave me a sidelong glance.  “I’m afraid I have to leave you there alone for a while.”

A buzzing started in my ears as I stood there rocking in the cupholder, looking up at this immense woman driving the truck.  I was going to lose her again so soon?

Irina looked down at me past her knees, dangling next to an abandoned mount for a CB mike.  Her jaw was set and her eyes wide with seriousness.

“We have to plan on them searching my place.  I’m sure it’s bugged, my car too probably.  I’m their prime suspect, so I got a lot of acting in front of me.”

Perhaps it was the motion of the cupholder, but I felt dizzy trying to take in all the threats Irina had been contemplating and devising countermeasures for.  I wanted to protect her, but of course I couldn’t.

“This truck belongs to a neighbor,” she continued.  “I asked to borrow it this morning—to move some furniture I said—and when I return it I’m going to leave you in her garage.”

My apprehension must have been obvious.

“Don’t worry, Zack.  Her name is Dorothy, her husband’s gone, and her children have all moved out.  She spends most of her time in her garden and then posting pictures of it on Instagram.  She’ll never know you’re there.”

A garage?  How safe is that?  I tried not to look too stunned and let her proceed.  She had clearly given this plan some thought.

“There’s some shelves in there that haven’t been disturbed since her husband died,” Irina explained.  I can put your crate up high where no one will see it.  You can hide out there until I can come back for you.”

It sounded safe enough, but I was still struggling with the concept of being separated from Irina indefinitely.  My crate?  Irina’s resourcefulness so far made that sound intriguing.

Nevertheless, I couldn’t hold it in any longer.  “For how long?”

“I honestly don’t know,” she replied, shaking her head.  “It could be weeks, even months.”

She watched for my reaction, and I didn’t want to say or do anything to alarm her.  Pausing too long might raise unhelpful doubts.

“Okaay…” was the best I could manage.  She exhaled and gave me a faint smile.

“We’re almost there,” she said, her enormous arms pulling the steering wheel into a turn above my head.  “We don’t have long before Dorothy comes out to get her keys.  There’s three gallons of water and a bunch of food, and a kind of cabin that you can latch from the inside—you’ll see what I mean.”

Another slow turn into a driveway.  As soon as she engaged the parking brake Irina jumped out of the cab and raced around to the passenger side.  She hauled the door open and bent over the seat to collect the crate on the floor I hadn’t noticed until then.  It was an actual plastic milk crate filled with what looked like old cardboard boxes.  She slipped her hands into the grips at the top and lifted it out with ease.  She then vanished from my view, but I heard the sounds of her hastily shelving the crate behind other items.

With no less haste Irina reappeared at the open passenger door and leaned into the cab, this time reaching for me with a smile.  I practically jumped into her hand.  Walking back to the shelves in the garage, Irina held me so close to her face that it filled my entire field of vision.  Her expression was a mix of tentative relief, selfless concern, and deferred anxiety.

“Zack,” she started, only to be interrupted by the sound of a door opening at the rear of the garage.  Irina pursed her lips then quickly raised me to the dust-covered top shelf.  My heart was as dry as the shelf as I clambered onto it out of Irina’s hold.

I hid behind what looked like an ancient tackle box as Irina turned to greet Dorothy.  She was a white woman in her sixties, wearing jeans and a pale green blouse.  Her short hair might once have been auburn, but it had mostly gone to gray.  I still had no standard for judging giant voices, but Dorothy’s seemed startlingly deep.

“Did Ron’s truck give you any trouble?” she asked.

“The lack of power steering was difficult at first,” replied Irina, “but I got used to it.”

“Great.”

“Thanks again,” said Irina, handing over the keys.  “I gotta run.”

“Anytime,” said Dorothy with a wave as Irina trotted down the driveway.

And like that, I was alone again.



4

Word Count: 3147
Added: 03/29/2025
Updated: 04/04/2025

No matter what happens, I will always be grateful to Irina for getting me out of that lab and setting me up here.  I don’t know how much time she had to come up with this plan and put it together, but I’ve been able to make it work.  I hope I’ve made her proud.

My “cabin” was actually a wooden jewelry box, about six inches high and eight inches wide and deep.  The lid opened on hinges at the back, and there was a lock on the front.  Unlike the lab cupboard, however, I could reach the metal latch from the inside and shove it into the locked position and back as needed.

The lid also had a decorative pattern cut into the top, sort of a stylized sunflower, which proved much-needed ventilation.  Inside I found grooves in the walls that used to anchor slats that had divided the box into several compartments.

The box’s current contents were few but invaluable.  A decorative pillow four inches square and almost an inch thick was obviously intended as a bed.  A terrycloth pocket—originally used as a washcloth—could be an oversize sleeping bag for me.  Irina had also cut a bedsheet or a pillowcase into six four-inch squares and spread them on my “bed.”  A cotton ball could serve as a pillow, but it would be rather scratchy until I could find something to wrap it in.

There was a one-inch cube of rubber that puzzled me until I realized it was an old-fashioned eraser, slightly worn.  My first use for it was as a platform to stand on when I latched the box lid, but it also worked as a stool or chair when set against a wall.  It also took me some time to figure out the light button: a two-inch-diameter plastic lamp, powered by a watch battery, that I could switch on and off by pressing with all my weight onto the top.  I could also, if I chose, remove a layer of film from the back to expose an adhesive strip and affix it to an interior surface, but I decided it was more useful as a portable lamp.

The most sentimental objects were a pair of fabric strips that I eventually determined must have been early precursors to the loincloth that Irina had presented to me in the lab.  With more reverence than it probably warranted, I tied one about my waist.  I also wistfully noted that almost all the box’s contents carried Irina’s scent.

My bivouac secure, I ventured out to see what else Irina had provided.  The food was a five-pound bag of trail mix: nuts, raisins, M&Ms.  The water was in a plastic jug with a spigot at the bottom, which I opened too far the first time, inundating the (porous) floor of the milk crate.  She also included a resealable package of sanitary wipes.

I tore open the bag of trail mix, pulled out a raisin, and took a bite while I contemplated my new environment.  The garage didn’t look insulated, and while it was still summer, I had better plan on it getting colder.  I was going to need a way to transport and store small portions of water, and I would need some sort of latrine.  I already regretted making an irreparable hole in my food store, although I couldn’t think of any other way to get at it.

With some food in my stomach and water restoring my tissues, I realized how long it had been since I had a truly restful sleep.  I was in a new and unfamiliar environment, and I had no idea of what the threats were nor any plans for how to defend against them.  I was just so tired.

I walked to a corner of the crate against the wall and pissed through an opening.  This is just for today.  I’ll find a real latrine tomorrow.  Returning to my “cabin,” I tucked two of the sheet squares into the washcloth, leaving the bottom sheet out far enough to cover my cotton ball pillow.  I stood on the block eraser and closed the lid over me, then turned the latch.

I felt like a burrowing animal as I crawled into my terrycloth nest.  Irina’s faint scent was all around me, and when I closed my eyes I saw her compassionate face hovering over me, but what truly transported me to a place of safety and calm was the memory of her voice, reassuring by its timbre and cadence alone, saying that I deserved my place in the world and that nothing bad would happen to me.

I slept like a log.


I was awakened by the sound of Dorothy entering the garage again by the interior door.  She had also turned on the overhead fluorescent light, but that had much less impact on me enclosed in my cabin.  I sat up and listened, but she didn’t seem to approach my shelves and she switched off the light when she left.

I was going to have to adjust my eyes to seeing in much less light.  All of the ambient light came from the edges of the garage door, wryly reminiscent of the cupboard in the lab.  The light button helped at night, but I wasn’t eager to engage in nocturnal activities in any event.

The first order of business was to secure my food supply.  The punctured bag hadn’t attracted any vermin yet, but eventually it would.  The plastic tackle box I had hidden behind earlier seemed like a secure repository, but opening it revealed additional resources.

To the inside of the tackle box lid was affixed a label bearing four words, the first two in printed type and the last two in a spidery cursive: “Property of Ronald Plunkett.”  Ron had a more fastidiously-organized tackle box than any other I had ever seen.  The flies and lures and floats and plain hooks were all stowed in their separate compartments, and I actually felt a little bad evicting them to make room for the trail mix.

I was seized by a mania to find uses for all those pieces of metal and plastic small enough for me to handle.  Split in half, the bobbers made excellent vessels for ferrying trail mix and water to my cabin.  The thin metal edges of the spinners were very useful for turning screwheads and generally prying things apart.  I wondered how best to make tools from the hooks, and then I discovered the most useful treasure of all: a spool of fishing line.

I soon had some rudimentary utensils and dishes, as well as a couple of bedpans.  Once I figured out how to cut the fishing line, I could use it and the hooks to haul heavy items up to my shelf.  The sinkers were small and hard enough to serve as crude hammers.

On my first day of exploration I determined that the main posts holding up the shelving had regular perforations to allow the height of some of the shelves to be adjusted.  These small holes made perfect hand- and foot-holds for me, and the corner posts provided cover in two directions, allowing me to climb between shelves without being noticed by a casual observer.

The shelf immediately below mine contained a box-cutter, which I disassembled with a spinner.  The extracted blade was primarily useful for cutting the fishing line, but I also used it to cut my way into cardboard boxes that I couldn’t otherwise access.  A jar containing nails of various sizes yielded more tools, once I had tipped it on its side and wedged it between two boxes to give me the leverage necessary to loosen the lid.

I saw my first spider on the second day.  It was probably less than an inch long and it fled as soon as I saw it.  Nevertheless, I quickly fashioned several spears using small nails for the tips and kept them handy in several locations within my new domain.

One of the larger nails solved my latrine problem by letting me poke a hole in the drywall and expand the hole wide enough to let me dump the contents of my bedpans.  I had no idea whether my waste would repel or attract vermin, but I had already pissed in enough spots to sufficiently advertise my presence.

My real concern was rodents, specifically rats.  I had no experience in identifying rat droppings or other signs, but I couldn’t find anything that aroused my suspicions.  However, Dorothy had a bad habit of leaving the garage door open and unattended for hours, and it wasn’t long before I began to stand watch during those periods of vulnerability.  I was primarily on guard for any vermin, winged or quadrupedal, that might intrude and present a threat, but I also entertained the foolish hope that I might glimpse Irina out for a walk.

Even though no bugs had so far tried to make a meal of me, the thought of it gave me the willies.  In the open, alert and armed with a spear, I felt like I could safely repel most bugs likely to be found in the garage.  I was more concerned about the possibility of a surprise encounter, either the bug or myself exploring the shelves and suddenly coming upon each other.  Even worse, a bug might crawl through the carved holes in the lid of my cabin while I slept.

It was this nightmare that occasioned my first expedition off the shelves entirely when I spotted a disused screen door on the other side of the garage.  Equipped with the box-cutter blade and armed with a nail-tipped spear, I descended the post and made way underneath Ron’s truck, noting with misplaced concern the spot of oil beneath the crankcase.

Arriving at the base of the screen door, I wasted a few moments trying to determine why it had been abandoned here.  Was the screen torn?  Was the frame bent?  I then realized I was worried that the screen I was about to vandalize might otherwise still be useful to someone else.

“Sorry, Dorothy,” I said to myself as I started to cut a lid-sized patch from one corner of the screen.  It was when I shifted the door to get at it from the rear that I saw the rodent droppings.  I almost lunged for my spear where I had left it propped against the wall, but then I looked again at the dusty pellets.  Light was scant behind the frame, but I could nevertheless see the dry pellet crumble when I tapped it with my foot.

Despite the obvious age of the droppings, I had to fall back on my training to complete the excision properly while remaining alert.  My time in the garage had already far exceeded my longest solo detachment, and I had had to find a new balance between diligence and vigilance.

Returning to my cabin with my prize, I pounded some staples I had salvaged from Ron’s staple-gun into the inside of the lid, affixing the patch of screen over the sunflower pattern of holes.  That night, while the peace and calm evoked by my memory of Irina’s voice and face came more easily than ever, I somehow also got a premonition that I would never see her again, that I would spend the rest of my life a tiny scavenger in this garage.  I guess it was better than being terminated with the rest of the experiment.

The days had passed faster at the beginning, when I was still familiarizing myself with the shelves and discovering new uses for their contents.  I had found a stub pencil (that Ron had presumably used for carpentry) and used it to make daily hash marks on the wall next to my latrine.  Sometime after I had made the thirtieth hash mark, I found myself bored.

Boredom is deadly, either on patrol or standing watch.  There weren’t really any human enemies to worry about, and the bug sightings had been few.  Feeling rather primitive, I wondered if I should take up hunting.  My food supply remained ample, so there was no need to hunt for food even if I was interested in dining on raw bug (I wasn’t).

I quickly dismissed the idea, but it returned several times.  I had to devise complicated routines of exercise, patrol, and inspection to pass the time while remaining alert.  If only Ron had stored a collection of magazines on these shelves.  I’d kill for even a single issue of Popular Mechanics or Field & Stream.

As I ranged further and further abroad in search of materials with which to fortify my position on the top shelf, I felt like I got to know Ron Plunkett a little.  At my scale it was easy to determine which items had remained untouched and which had been plundered by Dorothy and their children.  The condition and organization of the tools was impeccable, and I became mildly offended on Ron’s behalf that his family hadn’t put them to greater use.

I had no firm idea of how many children Ron & Dorothy had nor how much use they actually had for Ron’s tools.  I wondered if any of them thought that Ron had been too much of a perfectionist, that they couldn’t possibly live up to his example, and that’s why they avoided these shelves.  That they did so was to my great fortune, but I couldn’t help wishing that I could honor Ron’s legacy a bit by showing them what they could do with all this stuff.

I reached the last uninvestigated box on the bottom shelf on Day 52.  It was densely packed, so I had to cut a hole in the wall of the box and clamber inside with my lamp to identify each of the contents.  Most promising was an old tool belt, if only because I might have been able to salvage some small bits of useful metal.

Even deep within the musty box I recognized the sound of the interior garage door being opened.  The fluorescent light flickered through the hole I had made, and Dorothy’s familiar flats echoed off the concrete floor.  It was difficult to determine her proximity, but eventually a slight tremor communicated through the box and its contents forced me to conclude that Dorothy was, finally, rummaging through “my” shelves.

I was well out of sight and safe, unless this box happened to contain the item she was seeking.  I looked around at the objects illuminated by my lamp, but I didn’t see anything that might be uniquely useful to Dorothy.  I cocked an ear, and it seemed that she was looking around a shelf above my current location.

Would she identify my crate as a new arrival?  There weren’t any other milk crates on the shelves, nor elsewhere in the garage that I could recall.  The crate’s contents weren’t particularly obscured or camouflaged, primarily because I couldn’t imagine fabricating anything within my power that wouldn’t attract more attention than it would deflect.  I (and Irina) had been relying solely on Dorothy’s neglect to hide me.

“I could have sworn I left it right here,” Dorothy muttered to herself.  After a pause, her voice rose in pitch, “What on earth?”

No.  Not my crate, please.  My cabin, all my water.  All my food, too, if she opened Ron’s tackle box.  My mind raced through all my options for survival without the crate.  It was very grim.  My stomach flipped as I considered that I might have to reveal myself to Dorothy or perish.

“Who would take a box-cutter apart?” Dorothy asked the garage.  Of course.  I had just left the other pieces strewn about the shelf where I had disassembled it.  Careless.

“Where’s the blade?”  Oh fuck.  I had left it just outside, next to the hole I had made in the box.  The hole itself might have looked like normal wear and tear, but Dorothy seeing the blade next to it (and four shelves down from the rest of the casing) could well provoke some dangerous curiosity.

I prayed my minuscule movements didn’t create any noise audible to Dorothy as I scrambled down toward the hole, constantly glancing at the exterior light to look for any ominous shadows darkening the shelf.  I abruptly halted my momentum when I reached the opening, trying to ascertain the location of Dorothy’s attention by sound alone.  When I decided that she was still busy with the upper shelves, I took a deep breath and poked my head out.

All I saw were her polyester-covered legs and her humble sneakers.  Without hesitation I scurried out, grabbed the blade, and jumped back through the hole.  I was too panicked to take care to avoid cutting myself, but I was unscathed nonetheless.  I lay there, afraid to take a breath, until I noticed that I had left my portable lamp on.

There’s no way Dorothy could have detected that tiny light, entombed in miscellaneous hardware, even if she were looking directly at the hole in the box.  Nevertheless, I couldn’t let the oversight go uncorrected, and I crawled silently up and over the tool belt to shut the lamp off.

“Oh well, I’ll just have to buy a new one,” sighed Dorothy as she turned away from the shelves and exited the garage.  I had no access to a watch or other chronometer, but it seemed like I sat there on the tool belt for an hour, trying to visualize every spot on the shelves where I might have left evidence of my presence or salvage.  No glaring examples came to mind, and eventually I resumed investigating the box’s contents.

Now that Dorothy had examined them I dared not disturb the disassembled box-cutter components, but aside from that I added inspecting for and clearing my detritus to my daily routine.  Dorothy didn’t return to the shelves, either in search of another item or to further investigate the mystery of the box-cutter, but I always had to be prepared for it anyway.

The possibility of revealing myself to Dorothy never left my mind, either.  My food and water wouldn’t last forever, and the unheated garage would get very cold when winter came.  At the very least I would have to fashion some warmer clothing, which would require ranging farther for materials.  Whether I could trust Dorothy became a more and more urgent question.

She certainly didn’t spend enough time in the garage to reveal much about her character.  I was fairly certain she didn’t have a dog or a cat, but I didn’t want to find out the hard way.  Leaving the garage to conduct reconnaissance on Dorothy was too daunting to actively contemplate, but subconsciously my vigil changed, adding a long-term aspect to all of my observations and preparations.

Hurry up and wait.


5

Word Count: 4868
Added: 03/29/2025
Updated: 04/04/2025

It was on the eighty-third day and I was two shelves below my crate when Dorothy opened the garage door from the outside.  I let my eyes adjust to the increased daylight and was about to return to the collection of wooden dowels I had just re-discovered when I heard her voice.

I hadn’t given up hope of ever hearing it again; I just couldn’t quite believe it.  I heard it all the time in my head, whenever I needed assurance or calm, so at first I thought it was just my own invocation.  But then she spoke to Dorothy about the truck and my head snapped up.

Irina was standing just under the open garage door, facing Dorothy.  She was wearing white sneakers, jeans, and a crew-necked shirt under a pale-red hoodie.  Her hood was down, but her blonde hair was pulled up and tied behind her head.  I stood there stunned for a couple of moments before I realized I was out of position.

Foolishly, I wasted another moment looking longingly at the dowels I was about to abandon.  I started sprinting between the boxes toward the corner post, and I had to force myself not to go back for my spear.

As I heard Irina speaking again, I threw myself into my ascent, quite heedless if Dorothy might spot my frantic limbs swinging wide and poking through the post’s perforations.  I wasn’t furtive at all when I pulled myself onto the shelf beneath the one where Irina had placed my crate months ago.

I had just started climbing between the top two shelves when I heard the unmistakable jingle of the truck keys.  How stupid would it be if I survived all this time only to miss my ride when she came by.  I poked my head out from behind the post and saw that Irina was still facing Dorothy, who just at that moment looked straight at me.

I froze, staring at my unwitting landlady for the last three months.  I wasn’t in the direct sunlight, but I was convinced that my head must have been glaringly obvious to anyone as close to the shelves and as familiar with the garage as Dorothy was.  Her eyes narrowed, and I swallowed hard.

Irina once again came to my rescue, asking Dorothy for something.  The moment the older woman averted her gaze I ducked back behind the post and scampered up to the top shelf, pulling myself over on the side of the post that obscured me most.

Safely behind Ron’s tackle box, I peered out to see Dorothy turn and walk back to the front door, presumably with no further suspicions.  Irina turned toward the shelves, and I stepped forward to the edge and waved my arms like a castaway on a beach.

My heart skipped a beat when I saw Irina’s gaze light upon me and she voluminously exhaled her relief.  I didn’t know if her plan was to simply reach up and collect me with her hand, but I was overcome by a reluctance to abandon the outpost I had so laboriously established.  Somehow I needed Irina to see the extent of my efforts.

I ran back and vaulted into the milk crate, then stuck my head and shoulders through an opening and beckoned Irina to me.  She raised her eyebrows for a moment, then smiled and grasped the milk crate with both hands and lifted it off the shelf.  The ride to the floor of the cab of Ron’s truck was turbulent, but nothing was going to break my grip.

I remained out of sight as Dorothy returned and handed Irina a tupperware tray containing some freshly picked strawberries, which Irina set on the passenger seat.  Then the door closed and I waited with growing excitement for Irina to take the driver’s seat.

She was all business as she drove out of the garage and down a couple of blocks, then turned into someplace to park.  She set the parking brake and switched off the engine, then looked down at my milk crate with the anticipation of Christmas morning.

I climbed atop my cabin and looked up at her, hands on my hips, my heart so full I thought it might burst.  I will never forget Irina’s expression as she leaned down and extended her open hand toward me: the joy in her spreading smile, the triumph in her twinkling eyes, the relief in her resounding sigh.

I almost swooned when the heat from her hand suffused my body just before I was enclosed in her fingers and palm.  I must have felt as cold as ice to her.  I raised my arms above her fingers and rested them on the top of her fist.  With just-remembered caution, Irina slowly sat back and lifted me up to hold me about four inches from her face, my head level with her chin.

“Oh, Zack,” she exclaimed, “I’m so glad to see you again!  Are you alright?”

“I’m fine!” I replied.  “You gave me everything I needed.  I can’t thank you enough!”  My words caused her to blush, a reaction I didn’t have time to savor.

“I think we’re okay now,” she said with raised eyebrows.  “A lot has happened at the lab—it’s a long story.  The main thing is I got another job and a new place.  That’s my excuse to borrow the truck again: I’m moving!”

“Great!  I’ll be happy to give you a hand with the couch.”

I did have time to savor the momentary confusion that furrowed her brow before she burst into a glorious giggle.  I had forgotten what laughter sounded like.

“I can’t believe I’m actually holding you,” she said, shaking her head slightly.  “I had to pretend not to know where you were for so long, I had partially convinced myself of the lie.”

“I knew you’d come back,” with more conviction than I felt.

“To be honest, Zack, I wasn’t at all sure I’d be able to.  The main reason I picked Dorothy’s house was that I thought you’d be able to make it on your own there if something happened to me.”

I had no reply to that.  I had weeks ago accepted the possibility of living out the rest of my days in that garage, but I had kept those thoughts strictly separate from my memories of Irina, to keep hope of rescue unsullied by preparations for the worst.  To hear Irina echo my own cynical calculations seemed like a sacrilege.

“Um, I think Dorothy might have actually spotted me back there,” I sheepishly admitted.

“I thought so.  She looked really confused at one point, and I already knew I needed an excuse to get her out of the garage so I asked her for the strawberries.  I’m sure she thinks she was just seeing things.”

“Well done!  As much as I might have adapted to garage glamping, I’m still very relieved and grateful that you came back for me.  It’s all good.”

Irina averted her eyes briefly, then returned to looking at me.  She bit her lower lip to signal her discomfort.

“Zack, I don’t know how to tell you this,” she began, “but I don’t see a way to get you restored to your normal size, at least not for the time being.  They suspended the entire line of research, then they fired everyone and shut the whole lab down.  No one has any access to any of the equipment, research, or data.  It was all secret proprietary research, and I don’t know anyone else who might have been working along the same lines.  There’s just no one that I know of who can help us.”

This was much less of a shock to me than Irina might have been expecting.  Ever since my encounter with Parvisi, my focus had been entirely on survival.  The possibility of restoration was, at best, over the horizon.  Now that it was all-but-certain that I would remain three-inches-tall for the rest of my life, I was curiously untroubled.  One thing Irina said did intrigue me, however.

“Us?” I asked.

Irina blinked a couple of times, then slowly gave a wry smile.

“Well, yes, Zack, I’m in this too.  It’s my responsibility to help you after the experiment went wrong.  It was the whole team’s responsibility, but they wouldn’t listen.  So I had to do something.”

“I am forever grateful that you did.”  We had a nice moment as I tried to express gratitude with my tiny features while she favored me with a gentle smirk.  “How long after you pulled me out of there was it before they closed the lab?” I asked, wanting to learn more about Irina’s bravery.

“A few weeks.  First they halted all activity by our team and questioned us individually.  They also searched my apartment then, and presumably everyone else’s.  They made sure, however, to let me know I was their primary suspect.”

“Did they hurt you?  In any way?”

“No, but for a while there I wasn’t sure what they were going to do.  They reassigned me to pointless grunt work, and I know they searched my place at least one more time.  I knew if I stayed there they wouldn’t let me work on anything interesting.  One way or the other, I had to get out of there.”

“Why didn’t you just quit?”

“Then I would never know if they had stopped watching me.  My only hope was to somehow outlast their suspicions, and if I quit, that would only look bad.  So I had to tough it out.”

I marveled at the nerve it must have taken for Irina to return to that lab every day, knowing she was being watched and might be subjected to who knows what kind of interrogation.

“The atmosphere there was extremely tense,” she continued.  “I didn’t see any other team members again, except for Dr. Singh once.  It was three or four days after I took you to Dorothy’s.  It was a chance meeting in a supply room; I don’t think he was looking for or expecting to see me.

“At the last team meeting before your disappearance, Dr. Singh let himself be convinced by some others to give up on trying to restore you.  When I asked what was to become of you, no one said anything.  Dr. Singh wouldn’t even look me in the face.

“When I saw him again that last time, he looked at me but I knew he wasn’t going to say anything for fear of being overheard.  Everyone in that place was paranoid, with good reason.  He kept looking at me with this haunted expression, like he had finally acknowledged that we had failed in our ethical responsibilities.  I don’t think he suspected me of having taken you out of the lab, and perhaps I was just seeing what I wanted to see, but I somehow got the feeling that he thought whoever was responsible for your disappearance had done the right thing.”

I could tell that Irina thought highly of Singh and was relieved to have found a way to distinguish him from the rest of the team.

“A couple of days later, I heard a rumor that Dr. Singh had suddenly quit.  I didn’t dare inquire further, but a brilliant man like that doesn’t just vanish without causing a stir.”

Vanish, or was vanished.

“Two weeks later, everybody got fired.  We had already signed a bunch of non-disclosure agreements when we started there, but they made us sign a bunch more.  The severance was less than thirty days’ pay, but I didn’t complain.  I just wanted out of there.

“The day I got fired, I told myself I would go get you the very next day.  But when I got up in the morning, my paranoia got the better of me.  I couldn’t quite believe I was free of the lab.  I didn’t know how much longer I needed to wait, but I knew I wasn’t ready then.  I told myself, ‘If he’s held on this long, he can hold on a few more weeks.’  I’m sorry, Zack.”

Damn if the most reliable person I’d met in my whole wretched life wasn’t feeling like she had let me down.

“You have nothing to apologize for,” I said.  “I could have—and I would have—held on for months.”

From the vulnerability in her eyes at that moment, you might have thought I was holding Irina in my hand rather than the other way around.  Relief flooded her face and she pressed me gently to her cheek.  I reached up with one hand and stroked her cheekbone.

“So what happens now?” I asked once she had brought me back under her gaze.

“Well, if you agree, you can stay with me until we can figure out something better.”

If I agreed?  I don’t think I’d ever had to make an easier decision.

“Sounds great to me!” I shouted with undisguised enthusiasm.  Irina’s face lit up with a divine smile, and she set me down in Ron’s old cup-holder.

“Let’s go see our new home!” she gushed with a shiver of excitement.


Irina’s new apartment was still mostly empty, just a few boxes, not even a mattress on the floor.  She started to show me around, but it quickly became obvious that I would need to see her furniture in place before I could really appreciate it.  The only elevated surfaces were the kitchen counters, so she set me down there.

At my insistence, she had brought my crate in from the truck.  With anticipatory pride I asked her to bring my cabin up to the counter.  She opened the lid with equal measures of respect and delight.

“This is so clever!” she exclaimed, peering at one of my utensils pinched between her fingertips.  She beamed at my stores of food and water, and I was unembarrassed when she identified my bedpans.  When I explained why I had covered the lid with a patch of screen, her eyes went wide with horror.

“Did you really see a spider?” she asked with alarm.  “Omigod, I never even thought about that.  I never would have left you there, I’m so sorry.”

“Nowhere’s 100% safe at my size,” I reassured her.  “It was a necessary risk.”

“I just had so little time to plan,” she fretted, looking distantly at the empty kitchen and shaking her head.  “They were going to terminate the experiment, and I wasn’t even sure you were still in that cupboard.  It was the best I could think of.”

“Hey,” I said, trying to sound authoritative.  “I was fine.  I’m used to dangerous situations, remember?”

Irina looked back down at me and let out a deep exhale.

“You did your best,” I continued, “under absurd circumstances, and it was more than enough.”  That earned me a small but genuine smile.

Irina had to get on with moving in.  She was having “Kate from the gym” help with the furniture, so I had to stay out of sight.  Irina agreed that putting my cabin in one of the remote kitchen cabinets would make for a good hiding place, but not before she took a flashlight and made sure no spiders were in residence.

I never saw Kate, and I wouldn’t have been able to recognize her voice based on what few muffled fragments I heard while sitting in the familiar gloam of the unlit cabinet.  They made two deliveries of Irina’s furniture before calling it a day.

Irina took Kate home and returned Ron’s truck, then got some takeout shawarma for dinner.  The smell of the food lingered on her hands as she carried me over to the dining table, still in a temporary location.  I fell ravenously upon the tiny serving Irina apportioned for me; I don’t think I’d ever gone that long without hot food.

I was too busy stuffing myself at first, but as the hot beef and onion settled in my stomach, I looked up to take in the sight of Irina taking bites as big as my whole body, grinding them between her powerful jaws and swallowing them audibly.  I tried not to stare, but I had to admire her appetite.

When we had both reached that first pause for digestion, I asked Irina about her new job.

“It’s at a research hospital near here.  I’m doing some pretty tedious lab work now, but it’s in my field and I like the people so far.  Once I get a grasp on the protocols, I can try to get into QC, which will hopefully lead to some networking opportunities.”

“They didn’t have a problem with your last employer?”

“Apparently not.  I think the job market has tightened up enough that they were just happy to get someone qualified.  And the compensation package they were offering wasn’t great.”

“I’m sorry you had to take a pay cut.”

“If it helps launder my resume, I’m fine with it,” she said with a shrug.  “Also, Dr. Singh used to serve on the board there.  I have this silly hope that I might run into him again one day.”

“Hope is never silly,” I replied.  She smiled at that, but the flash in her eyes was totally new to me.

It took us a while to finish eating.  We amused ourselves by trying to calculate how much I had eaten proportionate to my normal size.  Irina was impressed, but I suspect I would have hit the wall earlier if I had had much more of the pita bread.  Carbs have always been my downfall.

Irina got up from the table and went to the kitchen to retrieve Dorothy’s tray of strawberries.  Each of them was as big as a beach ball to me, but of course much heavier.  I picked one up and lifted it toward Irina, who happily plucked it from my grasp.  I hefted another.

“To Dorothy,” I said, then buried my face in the rough fruit to take a bite.  My tiny teeth were barely strong enough to break the skin, and I had to burrow a bit to get at the sweet flesh.  By the time I had put the strawberry down with a minuscule dent in one side, my face and hair were stained red.

Irina leaned down to snicker at my appearance.  “Zack, when would you say was the last time you had a hot bath?”

I sniffed one of my armpits, then looked back up at her with a nonplussed if sticky face. “You think I need one?”

She raised her eyebrows at my smart-assery and stood up from her dining chair.  “I’ll be right back,” she said, and walked to the bathroom.

Surrounded by takeout containers, I wondered if I should stand up to see what was going on.  Then I wondered if I could.

I leaned back against one of the cartons and rested my hands reflectively on my full belly.  It was somewhat reminiscent of my first day of leave after a long forward deployment.  On my first tour I’d rush through the amenities as soon as I got to a friendly city.  By the end I had learned to slowly savor each luxury in turn.

I absently listened to Irina filling the bathtub with water, teasing myself with memories of previous rapturous immersions.  It was only after she shut off the tap and I could hear the total volume of water in the echoes off the bathroom tile that I remembered that a bathtub might be too large for me.

Irina returned and placed an open hand on the table.

“Ready?”

“Am I taking a bath or a swim?”

“I just wanted to determine the speed and capacity of my new water heater,” she said, wrapping her fingers around me.  “I think you can take care of yourself.”

I digested that comment in silence as Irina carried me into the bathroom and set me on the ledge of the bathtub at the corner near the faucet.  She had excavated a couple of bottles of soap or shampoo or something from the moving boxes, and I spotted a pink washcloth that I suspected had been the replacement for the one in my cabin.  Sadly, there was no rubber duck I could mount when I got tired of swimming.

Without a word, Irina stepped back out of the bathroom.  For a few moments I just stood there, contemplating the traces of foam on the surface of the bathwater.  Do I just dive in?  What about my loincloth?  It needed washing as much as my body did.  To hell with modesty.  I pulled it free from my waist and let it fall to the ledge.

I heard a sharp knock on the bathroom door and I turned around.  Nothing in my fevered, traumatized, or dazzled imagination could have prepared me for the sight of Irina standing in the doorway, wearing nothing but an effulgent smile.  She kept her confident eyes on me as she advanced toward the tub.

Curiously, she held one hand covering her groin, but her other arm swung free for her otherwise immodest march.  Her blonde hair fell freely and danced about her shoulders.  I had already made the close acquaintance of one of her breasts, but now I got a full view as they swayed toward me.  I suppose most any woman’s breast would dwarf me now, but I was staggered to think that I had been pinned by just one of those boobs for the better part of two hours.

I craned my neck back to take her all in.  I didn’t know if she could tell at that distance, but I did my best not to let my gaze wander too far from her face, at least until she reached the side of the tub and her wide hip obscured her face as she lifted one mighty thigh into the water.

The fiberglass tub transmitted the tremors to my feet as Irina’s titanic legs touched the bottom.  She deftly kept her groin covered with her hand even as she lowered her torso into the tub.  The bathwater displaced by her voluminous derrière rushed up, enveloping me in a cloud of steam.

When my vision had cleared, Irina had settled her massive frame along the whole length of the tub.  Her arms were resting on each ledge and her legs were entirely submerged.  The water came up to just above her navel, and she fixed me with a casual stare.

“I hope you don’t mind if I join you,” she said drily.  I shook my head vacantly, and she smiled her acknowledgement.

Is this really happening?  I mean, of course I’d had sexual thoughts about Irina, but it was ridiculous to suppose she reciprocated those feelings, right?  And yet there she was, topless and wet, letting me look and expecting me to jump in with her.

Fuck it.

I walked along the short ledge until I was directly underneath the faucet, then I turned to face Irina straight on.  She kept her expectant eyes on me for a few more moments, then dunked the washcloth in the water and started to slowly wash her upper arms.

I dove in.  The heat of the water tempted me to relax and enjoy the immersion, but I needed to discover what Irina’s intentions were.  I started swimming between her legs, conscious of her bent knees on either side of me just below the surface.  My strokes churned the water and I was concentrating on staying on course, but I still found myself having to avert my eyes from the underwater portion of Irina’s body.

When I thought I had approached close enough, I let my legs sink and my arms drift out to my sides.  I started treading water and leaned back to look up at Irina.  Her face was both familiar and not; she maintained her expression of doting concern, but flickers of excitement tugged at her eyebrows and the corners of her mouth.  She seemed to be breathing heavily, but my impression was probably influenced by the corresponding motion of her breasts hanging over me and framing our mutual gaze.

She had finished washing her arms, both of which were half-submerged.  Why doesn’t she say something?  As heavenly as the view was, I felt completely out of my depth.  I was just about to speak when a soft bed of moss rose beneath me and lifted me entirely out of the water.

Irina had brought her washcloth-covered hand underneath me, and she enclosed me in the warm fabric as she lifted me closer to her face.  A delicate concentration came over her expression and she began to gently rub the cloth over my body, starting with my face and hair where there was the most strawberry juice.  She proceeded to work her fingers over every surface and into every hollow of my body.  Her expression didn’t lose any of its diligence when her fingertips encountered my unabashed hard-on.

I managed to catch her eye and I found my voice.  “Irina, what are we doing here?”

She blinked, then broke into an adorable, almost embarrassed grin.  “I don’t know, Zack. Continuing the experiment, I guess.”

What a hopeful way of putting it.

“Well, I might not be trained as a scientist, but I think I can come up with a couple of new protocols.”

She must have been somehow surprised by my ready enthusiasm, because her eyes popped and she gasped.  With a mischievous smirk, she inverted her hand and I plummeted into the bathwater.

In addition to the kinetic plunge, a disorienting turbulence told me that Irina was shifting her position in the bathtub.  I swam upward, trying to avoid her colossal body.  When I resurfaced, I found that I had turned around to face the faucet.  Irina’s bent knees were now above the water, her sheer thighs rising like cliffs on either side of the tub.

I twirled in place to see each of her elbows resting on the ledge of the tub, her hands dangling into the water.  Her head was much lower, the surface of the water just below her chin.  Her face always drew me in, and this almost-level perspective was irresistible.  I started swimming toward it.

I had closed about half the distance when her smirk blossomed into a grin and her head started to rise.  Once again my progress was arrested by an object emerging beneath me, but this object was slicker and much less flat than her washcloth-covered hand.  Without ceremony I found myself prostrate on the upper slope of Irina’s left breast, looking up into her satisfied face.

Despite my ridiculous circumstance—or perhaps because of it—my last inhibitions fell away.

“Irina,” I said, pushing myself up on her slippery skin, “I feel like I have spent my whole life waiting for you.”

I felt her pulse accelerate and I was elevated when she took a deep breath.  Somehow her eyes became even more tender, and her smile went from triumph to wonder.

She carefully moved her right hand toward me, but her boob still swayed enough to start me sliding toward the water.  She noticed immediately and her hand darted across to catch me.  I clung urgently to her fingers as they curled around me and lifted me to her face.

Irina’s pliant lips came together and covered my entire face as I received the biggest and wettest kiss of my life.  Her tongue did not participate on that occasion, but I had no doubt there would be others.

“Zack,” she said, pulling me away from her enticing mouth far enough that I could take in her whole face again.  “I know we’ve just been making the best of a weird situation, but I keep thinking it just fits, you know?”

I could only nod in reply.

“When I saw you again on that shelf in the garage,” she continued, “I was relieved, of course, but I was also excited, like I had something to look forward to.”

“Me too,” I said reflexively.  “Something beyond just survival.”

Irina gave me a look then, each of her blue eyes as big as my head but also impossibly deep, as if she had opened a window into every moment she had ever thought about me.  It was simultaneously both humbling and aggrandizing to be the subject of such regard by so immense and benevolent a person.

With her familiar kind smile, Irina sat up a bit and lowered me back to her breast, with me still facing her and each of my legs on either side of her nipple, as secure a perch as I could hope for.  I spread my arms wide and embraced her tit, pressing the side of my face into her glistening skin.

A low drone started in Irina’s throat and resonated through her breast, rising in pitch to form a simple melody.  Her lips parted to emit sounds that I could not parse, and I couldn’t tell if they were words from her native language or just inarticulate fragments.  Nevertheless, I knew in my heart exactly what she was saying.

It was a promise of peace.