In the northern reaches of Eldridge County, a maximum-security prison built half a century ago. Mira Alden, a 28-year-old former veterinary student, had been sentenced to twelve years for a crime she still claimed she didn’t commit — poisoning a wealthy client’s prized racing dog.
Her conviction was surrounded by media frenzy, betrayal, and silence from those who once called themselves her friends. Days passed in silence. Nights crept by like shadows afraid to move.
Until the tapping started.
At first, Mira thought it was rats. But the rhythm was too deliberate — a knock, a pause, a double tap. She froze, heart racing. Then came a whisper.
“Hey… anyone there?”
Her mouth went dry. Slowly, she crouched near the vent and whispered back. “Who are you?”
A pause. Then: “Call me Jace.”
He was on the other side of the solitary wing, in a cell almost identical to hers. Jace had been in and out of Graystone for years — mostly for theft, a few fights.
What started as accidental contact became daily ritual. They talked about their lives before prison — her dreams of opening a clinic, his love for classic novels. They invented games, shared stories, and over weeks, they became more than just voices in the dark.
Months passed. Mira’s mental fog began to lift. She started journaling again on scraps of toilet paper, drawing sketches of animals on her cell wall using tea grounds and a toothbrush.
Then one night, everything changed.
Jace whispered something unusual. “I need to give you something… tomorrow. Through the vent. It’s important.”
“What is it?” she asked, heart pounding.
“You’ll see.”
True to his word, the next day she heard the quiet rustle through the duct — something being pushed, tied to a string. She reached in, careful not to make noise. Wrapped in plastic and cloth was a small tube — like those used in medical clinics — sealed tightly. She didn’t understand at first.
“Jace… what is this?”
He whispered, “It’s part of me. So we can make something that lasts beyond this place.”
Her breath caught. The idea was insane. But somehow, she just sat in silence, the tube warm in her hands.
Over the next week, the prison was unusually quiet. No guards came by. No calls for meals. Mira barely noticed. Her mind was racing.
And then she made the decision. Using a thin plastic glove and a makeshift applicator she’d once used to treat a cat’s ear infection years ago — something she’d kept hidden — she did what no one would believe.
Weeks later, Mira felt off. Nausea. Dizziness. A warmth she couldn’t explain.
She was pregnant. Warden Hale stormed into the solitary wing with disbelief written all over his face. “This is impossible,” he muttered. “No physical contact. No male staff. No breaches.”
Investigations followed. Rumors spread like wildfire. When nothing turned up, they searched the vents.
That’s when they found the remnants — cloth strips, plastic wrappings, improvised tools. It was crude, almost absurd. But real.
Mira was moved to the infirmary wing. She refused to name the father. She simply said, “It was through the vents. That’s all I’ll say.”
Months later, she gave birth to a healthy baby boy — the first child ever born in Graystone. Inmates across the prison cheered quietly from their cells, passing notes through cracks in the wall. They called him “The Airborn.”
Jace? He was never seen again. Some claimed he was released early. Others said he had been transferred. Mira never found out. But every so often, she would hear a soft knock at night, deep in the ducts, like a ghost tapping to remind her — I’m still here.