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* During the ''Literature/TheShipWho Dissembled'', two men are drugged, given no food, and locked into padded cells to keep them from coming to the aid of their [[LivingShip brainship partners]]. Helva's partner promptly decides that there's no hope of escape and waits placidly for rescue. The other man, the HeroOfAnotherStory, claws holds into the padding on the walls and with bleeding hands and feet struggles to the door at the top of the cell, gets through the vent set into it, and is found by the rescue party having crawled as far as the airlock.
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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of an asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, Tom removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he could easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and then flood the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a The 1958 sci-fi thriller ''Literature/{{Gold in the Sky}}'' by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining explains [[IdiotBall why no-one no one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of an asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) midst), but guards are prowling the corridors. Some of the issues are addressed--the addressed -- the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, Tom removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he could easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and then flood the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.
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* Used in the last two books of the ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be calling a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.

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* Used in the last two books of the ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be calling called a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.

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* Somewhat altered in ''[[Literature/The39Clues The 39 Clues: The Dead of Night]]'', in which Phoenix Wizard and Reagan Holt try to escape the Vespers' prison by climbing up a dumbwaiter shaft. Justified, since the characters are children.

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* Somewhat altered in ''[[Literature/The39Clues The 39 Clues: ''Literature/The39Clues: The Dead of Night]]'', Night'', in which Phoenix Wizard and Reagan Holt try to escape the Vespers' prison by climbing up a dumbwaiter shaft. Justified, since the characters are children.



* ''The Ashtown Burials'' has Nolan showing Cyrus and Antigone how to travel via the underfloor heating ducts. It's pointed out that this is dangerous, especially in winter when the ducts may well be heated to burning point, but somewhat justified in that Nolan [[WhoWantsToLiveForever can't actually die]]. AcousticLicense is averted, however, with Cyrus having to be told to shut up or anyone standing near a heating vent will be able to hear him. Later on Nolan uses an air vent to trick [[spoiler: Dr. Phoenix]], by [[spoiler: hiding in it and reading out old transcripts]], though the vent and Nolan are both [[MoreDakka rather shot-up]] when [[spoiler: Phoenix]] works out where the voice is coming from.

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* ''The Ashtown Burials'' has Nolan showing Cyrus and Antigone how to travel via the underfloor heating ducts. It's pointed out that this is dangerous, especially in winter when the ducts may well be heated to burning point, but somewhat justified in that Nolan [[WhoWantsToLiveForever can't actually die]]. AcousticLicense is averted, however, with Cyrus having to be told to shut up or anyone standing near a heating vent will be able to hear him. Later on on, Nolan uses an air vent to trick [[spoiler: Dr. [[spoiler:Dr. Phoenix]], by [[spoiler: hiding [[spoiler:hiding in it and reading out old transcripts]], though the vent and Nolan are both [[MoreDakka rather shot-up]] when [[spoiler: Phoenix]] [[spoiler:Phoenix]] works out where the voice is coming from.from.
* Played with in the ''Literature/{{Blackcollar}}'' novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk through them, in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camouflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler:They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]



* ''Literature/TheBoyWhoKnewTooMuch'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.

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* In ''Literature/TheBoyWhoKnewTooMuch'' by Roderic Jeffries. A Jeffries, a youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.



* Attempted by Rolas in ''Literature/CaptiveOfTheRedVixen'' after he figures out that his ShockCollar is only tied to the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.



* Both played straight and subverted in Creator/JohnRingo's ''[[Literature/PaladinOfShadows Choosers of the Slain]]''. They need to sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team, as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down when the air vents narrowed, so her sole job was to get to that point and release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could go the rest of the way.
* In Creator/SandyMitchell's ''Literature/CiaphasCain'' series:

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* Both played straight ''Literature/ChroniclesOfChaos'': Used and subverted {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/JohnRingo's ''[[Literature/PaladinOfShadows Choosers ''Fugitives of the Slain]]''. They need to sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team, as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down Chaos'' when Vanity -- who has the power to find-slash-create hidden passages -- finds an accessible air vents narrowed, so her sole job was to get to that point and release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could go the rest of the way.
vent.
* In Creator/SandyMitchell's ''Literature/CiaphasCain'' series:''Literature/CiaphasCain'':



** In other books, following a close call in ''Death or Glory'', Cain makes a point of always acquiring the access codes to the maintenance conduits whenever he travels by ship. In one occasion where he didn't find the time to do so, Jurgen brought to his attention the fact that he was in a civilian ship, therefore its maintenance conduits didn't require access codes.
* Averted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Literature/{{Competitors}}'', when Valentin and Lena are confined to quarters in a SpaceStation. When Valentin suggests escaping via the air vents, Lena laughs that he watches too many movies and points out that the vents are barely a foot wide. Valentin's suggestion to set off the fire alarm has Lena point out that this would cause the quarters to be depressurized to contain the fire.

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** In other books, following a close call in ''Death or Glory'', Cain makes a point of always acquiring the access codes to the maintenance conduits whenever he travels by ship. In On one occasion where he didn't find the time to do so, Jurgen brought to his attention the fact that he was in a civilian ship, therefore its maintenance conduits didn't require access codes.
* Averted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Literature/{{Competitors}}'', when Valentin and Lena are confined to quarters in a SpaceStation. When Valentin suggests escaping via the air vents, Lena laughs that he watches too many movies and points out that the vents are barely a foot wide. Valentin's suggestion to set off the fire alarm has Lena point out that this would cause the quarters to be depressurized to contain the fire.



* Used in the last two books of Creator/TimothyZahn's ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be call a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.
** Played with in Zahn's Literature/{{Blackcollar}} novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk through them, in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camoflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler: They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]

to:

* Used in the last two books of Creator/TimothyZahn's the ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be call calling a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.
** Played with in Zahn's Literature/{{Blackcollar}} novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk through them, in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camoflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler: They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]
vent.



* Justified in the sci-fi book ''Literature/{{Footfall}}'', as the aliens are twice human size and deliberately put the captured humans to work cleaning the spacecraft's air ducts. Their prison cell also doesn't contain a handy air duct, forcing them to escape before using the ducts to evade.
* Used and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/JohnCWright's ''[[Literature/ChroniclesOfChaos Fugitives Of Chaos]]'', Vanity--who has the power to find-slash-create hidden passages--finds an accessible air vent.

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* Justified in the sci-fi book ''Literature/{{Footfall}}'', as the aliens are twice human size and deliberately put the captured humans to work cleaning the spacecraft's air ducts. Their prison cell also doesn't contain a handy air duct, forcing them to escape before using the ducts to evade.
* Used and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/JohnCWright's ''[[Literature/ChroniclesOfChaos Fugitives Of Chaos]]'', Vanity--who has the power to find-slash-create hidden passages--finds an accessible air vent.
evade.



* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' when, after a character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.
-->"He was really ''upset'' when we fished him out!"

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* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' when, In ''Literature/GoingPostal'', after a character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.
-->"He -->''"He was really ''upset'' when we fished him out!"out!"''



* Slightly altered in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'', using the castle sewer-pipes for the monster to invade from -- and for the heroes to find -- the title chamber. Hogwarts Castle has got to have the most gigantic pipes ever seen... particularly for being built by wizards. [[spoiler: Somewhat justified, in that the pipe leading to the chamber was designed to be a passageway to it, and thus capable of being accessed by the Heir of Slytherin. Likewise, a massive snake would have much more success than other monsters in navigating plumbing. Both had been planned by one of the people who helped create the Castle in the first place.]]

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* Slightly altered in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'', using the castle sewer-pipes for the monster to invade from -- and for the heroes to find -- the title chamber. Hogwarts Castle has got to have the most gigantic pipes ever seen... particularly for being built by wizards. [[spoiler: Somewhat [[spoiler:Somewhat justified, in that the pipe leading to the chamber was designed to be a passageway to it, and thus capable of being accessed by the Heir of Slytherin. Likewise, a massive snake would have much more success than other monsters in navigating plumbing. Both had been planned by one of the people who helped create the Castle in the first place.]]]]
* ''Literature/HisDarkMaterials'': Lyra crawls around in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''Northern Lights''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.



* In ''Illegal Aliens'' by Nick Pollotta and Creator/PhilFoglio, abducted humans on an alien ship hide in the air vents, because all the movies say that's what you do in that situation -- only they aren't air vents; they're conduits for a horrifically deadly gas weapon, which the aliens are preparing to flood throughout the ship, because they can't locate the humans....

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* In ''Illegal Aliens'' by Nick Pollotta and Creator/PhilFoglio, ''Literature/IllegalAliens'', abducted humans on an alien ship hide in the air vents, because all the movies say that's what you do in that situation -- only they aren't air vents; they're conduits for a horrifically deadly gas weapon, which the aliens are preparing to flood throughout the ship, because they can't locate the humans....



* Golik from the ''Literature/{{Kadingir}}'' series uses the vents to infiltrate Zapp Castle and later to spy on TheResistance. He even mentions they are so convenient he'd better get rid of the air ducts in his own nightclub, lest someone tries spying on ''him''.
* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.
* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/LuckyStarrAndTheOceansOfVenus'': Bigman volunteers to use an air vent in order to access a critical relay which, once disconnected, will prevent the UnderwaterCity from drowning.

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* In the ''Literature/IronWarriors'' novel ''Storm of Iron'', this is how Hawke escapes a launching rocket and a Chaos SpaceMarine.
* Referenced in the ''Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy'' book ''Only You Can Save Mankind'':
-->"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.
* Golik from the ''Literature/{{Kadingir}}'' series uses the vents to infiltrate Zapp Castle and later to spy on TheResistance.LaResistance. He even mentions they are so convenient he'd better get rid of the air ducts in his own nightclub, lest someone tries spying on ''him''.
* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'', some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.
* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/LuckyStarrAndTheOceansOfVenus'': Bigman volunteers to use an air vent in order to access a critical relay which, once disconnected, will prevent the UnderwaterCity from drowning.



* Lyra crawls around in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''[[Literature/HisDarkMaterials Northern Lights]]''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.
* {{Justified}} in ''Literature/TheOccupationSaga''. Jason pulls this off to outmaneuver Shil'vati opponents twice (once in a military training exercise, once while {{boarding|Party}} an enemy ship). Shil'vati never see it coming because they're too big to fit through their own ventilation, whereas it's just a tight squeeze for PunyEarthling Jason.
* Subverted in Creator/ChristopherBrookmyre's ''Literature/OneFineDayInTheMiddleOfTheNight''. After an earlier discussion of action movie tropes, one of the heroes spots the "Holy Grille" as the way out when they're held hostage. Unfortunately, he didn't reckon on the fact that crawling through metal ductwork is incredibly noisy, so everyone hears him as he tries to squeeze through.
* Referenced in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'':
-->"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.
* Occurs in ''Heaven's Queen'', third book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy''. When Brenton is helping Devi infiltrate Dark Star Station, he shows her a passage to crawl through and she assumes that it's an air vent. Brenton tells her that the people who built the station weren't that stupid; the passage is a power conduit, and usually filled with plasma heated to thousands of degrees. They're only able to use it as a passage because of a power outage.
* In ''Symbiont'', second book of the ''Literature/{{Parasitology}}'' series, Sally tries escaping captivity in a mall this way. She manages to make her way through the system only to find her guard Ronnie patiently waiting for her at the end; once he saw that she'd entered the vent, he was able to casually stroll over to the exit grating while she slowly crawled her way through the duct.

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* Lyra crawls around in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''[[Literature/HisDarkMaterials Northern Lights]]''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.
* {{Justified}}
{{Justified|Trope}} in ''Literature/TheOccupationSaga''. Jason pulls this off to outmaneuver Shil'vati opponents twice (once in a military training exercise, once while {{boarding|Party}} an enemy ship). Shil'vati never see it coming because they're too big to fit through their own ventilation, whereas it's just a tight squeeze for PunyEarthling Jason.
* Subverted in Creator/ChristopherBrookmyre's ''Literature/OneFineDayInTheMiddleOfTheNight''. After an earlier discussion of action movie tropes, one of the heroes spots the "Holy Grille" as the way out when they're held hostage. Unfortunately, he didn't reckon on the fact that crawling through metal ductwork is incredibly noisy, so everyone hears him as he tries to squeeze through.
* Referenced ''Literature/PaladinOfShadows'': Both played straight and subverted in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'':
-->"I saw a film where there
''Choosers of the Slain''. They need to sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team, as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down when the air vents narrowed, so her sole job was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts to get to that point and it release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said
go the Captain.
rest of the way.
* Occurs in In ''Heaven's Queen'', the third book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy''. When ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy'', when Brenton is helping Devi infiltrate Dark Star Station, he shows her a passage to crawl through and she assumes that it's an air vent. Brenton tells her that the people who built the station weren't that stupid; the passage is a power conduit, and usually filled with plasma heated to thousands of degrees. They're only able to use it as a passage because of a power outage.
* In ''Symbiont'', the second book of the ''Literature/{{Parasitology}}'' series, ''Symbiont'', Sally tries escaping captivity in a mall this way. She manages to make her way through the system only to find her guard Ronnie patiently waiting for her at the end; once he saw that she'd entered the vent, he was able to casually stroll over to the exit grating while she slowly crawled her way through the duct.



* Averted in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/RedPlanet'' when one of the good guys proposes taking a vent grille off of a wall to get to the room on the other side. His friend points out that there will certainly be a similar grille on the other side, fastened by screws they won't be able to reach.
* ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'': Attempted by Rolas in "Captive of the Red Vixen", after he figures out that his ShockCollar is only tied to the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.
* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries The Rings of Saturn]]'': The space pirate base has an extensive air ventilation system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.

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* Averted in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/RedPlanet'' when one of the good guys proposes taking a vent grille off of a wall to get to the room on the other side. His friend points out that there will certainly be a similar grille on the other side, fastened by screws they won't be able to reach.
* ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'': Attempted by Rolas in "Captive of the Red Vixen", after he figures out that his ShockCollar is only tied to the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.
* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries The Rings of Saturn]]'': The space pirate base has an extensive air ventilation system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.
reach.



* In Creator/MichaelFlynn's ''Literature/SpiralArm'' novel ''In The Lion's Mouth'', Bridget's first guess is such an escape before she deduces that in fact Ravn hid {{Invisibility Cloak}}s in the ventilation system, and then escaped, invisible, with her companion as soon as the door opened.
* Franchise/StarTrek:

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* In Creator/MichaelFlynn's the ''Literature/SpiralArm'' novel ''In The the Lion's Mouth'', Bridget's first guess is such an escape before she deduces that in fact Ravn hid {{Invisibility Cloak}}s in the ventilation system, and then escaped, invisible, with her companion as soon as the door opened.
* Franchise/StarTrek:''Franchise/StarTrek'':



* Subverted in the final book of the ''Literature/{{Sten}}'' Series, by having the hero nearly get stuck in a claustrophobic moment.
* In ''Literature/TalesOfDunkAndEgg'', it's revealed at the end that [[spoiler: Bloodraven had a few dwarfs sneak in through the privy to steal the dragon egg. Justified, seeing as they're dwarfs]].

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* Subverted in the final book of the ''Literature/{{Sten}}'' Series, series, by having the hero nearly get stuck in a claustrophobic moment.
* In ''Literature/TalesOfDunkAndEgg'', it's revealed at the end that [[spoiler: Bloodraven [[spoiler:Bloodraven had a few dwarfs sneak in through the privy to steal the dragon egg. Justified, seeing as they're dwarfs]].



* Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/UnchartedStars''. While on the pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters the station's air ducts to do some snooping.
* ''Literature/UnderAlienStars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.

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* Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/UnchartedStars''. While on ''Literature/TimeMachineSeries'': In ''The Rings of Saturn'', the space pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters base has an extensive air ventilation system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the station's air ducts to do some snooping.
inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.
* ''Literature/UnderAlienStars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.



* Comes up in several variations (breaking in, breaking out, air ducts, hanging ceilings...) in places in the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, particularly the short story "Labyrinth" -- where it involves problems like ducts forking or being blocked by grilles, and the others being only passable by the rather less than five-foot-tall main character, not his companions.

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* Comes up in several variations (breaking in, breaking out, air ducts, hanging ceilings...) in places in the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'', particularly the short story "Labyrinth" -- where it involves problems like ducts forking or being blocked by grilles, and the others being only passable by the rather less than five-foot-tall main character, not his companions.



* In Creator/GrahamMcNeill's ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novel ''Storm of Iron'', this is how Hawke escapes a launching rocket and a Chaos SpaceMarine.





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\n* ''Literature/TheZeroStone'': In the sequel ''Uncharted Stars'', while on the pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters the station's air ducts to do some snooping.
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* ''The Ashtown Burials'' has Nolan showing Cyrus and Antigone how to travel via the underfloor heating ducts. It's pointed out that this is dangerous, especially in winter when the ducts may well be heated to burning point, but somewhat justified in that Nolan [[WhoWantsToLiveForever can't actually die]]. AcousticLicense is averted, however, with Cyrus having to be told to shut up or anyone standing near a heating vent will be able to hear him. Later on Nolan uses an air vent to trick [[spoiler: Dr. Phoenix]], by [[spoiler: hiding in it and reading out old transcripts]], though the vent and Nolan are both [[MoreDakka rather shot-up]] when [[spoiler: Phoenix]] works out where the voice is coming from.
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* Subverted in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. In Volume 17 of the novels, Touma asks if he could use the ventilation ducts in the plane, but the flight attendant says that the ducts are too small. Touma admits that wasn't the plan and asks for some hot tea and coffee to pour down the duct, causing thermal expansion and make the terrorist on the other side ''think'' that there's someone crawling through the ducts, who lampshades that the act is just as suicidal as coming in through the actual entrance he was training his gun on. As a result, the terrorist gets some boiling hot tea to the face when he shoots the ducts, which also distracts him from Touma barrelling through the door and flinging a full pot of boiling coffee into his face.

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* Subverted in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex''. In Volume 17 of the novels, 17, Touma asks if he could use the ventilation ducts in the plane, but the flight attendant says that the ducts are too small. Touma admits that wasn't the plan and asks for some hot tea and coffee to pour down the duct, causing thermal expansion and make the terrorist on the other side ''think'' that there's someone crawling through the ducts, who lampshades that the act is just as suicidal as coming in through the actual entrance he was training his gun on. As a result, the terrorist gets some boiling hot tea to the face when he shoots the ducts, which also distracts him from Touma barrelling through the door and flinging a full pot of boiling coffee into his face.
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* {{Justified}} in ''Literature/TheOccupationSaga''. Jason pulls this off to outmaneuver Shil'vati opponents twice (once in a military training exercise, once while {{boarding|Party}} an enemy ship). Shil'vati never see it coming because they're too big to fit through their own ventilation, whereas it's just a tight squeeze for PunyEarthling Jason.
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** In the [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse novel]] ''The Romulan Prize'' Riker, LaForge and a number of other officers escaped after being confined to quarters by the Romulans who took over the ''Enterprise'' using air vents. Unlike the larger Jeffries tubes and other service corridors the air vents are not meant for humanoids to crawl through, leading to Riker nearly getting stuck on several occasions.

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** In the [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse novel]] ''The Romulan Prize'' Riker, LaForge [=LaForge=] and a number of other officers escaped after being confined to quarters by the Romulans who took over the ''Enterprise'' using air vents. Unlike the larger Jeffries tubes and other service corridors the air vents are not meant for humanoids to crawl through, leading to Riker nearly getting stuck on several occasions.

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* Subverted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''[[Literature/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineRelaunch Star Trek: Section 31: Abyss]]''. After escaping her cell, Ezri Dax goes up into an air vent, which (contrary to what the holonovels of her youth would have her believe) is very dirty, dark, small and has creepy things living in it. (She is, however, successful in using the air vents to move throughout the base to important rooms.)

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* Franchise/StarTrek:
** In the [[Franchise/StarTrekExpandedUniverse novel]] ''The Romulan Prize'' Riker, LaForge and a number of other officers escaped after being confined to quarters by the Romulans who took over the ''Enterprise'' using air vents. Unlike the larger Jeffries tubes and other service corridors the air vents are not meant for humanoids to crawl through, leading to Riker nearly getting stuck on several occasions.
**
Subverted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''[[Literature/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineRelaunch Star Trek: Section 31: Abyss]]''. After escaping her cell, Ezri Dax goes up into an air vent, which (contrary to what the holonovels of her youth would have her believe) is very dirty, dark, small and has creepy things living in it. (She is, however, successful in using the air vents to move throughout the base to important rooms.)
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* ''The Boy Who Knew Too Much'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.

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* ''The Boy Who Knew Too Much'' ''Literature/TheBoyWhoKnewTooMuch'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.



* ''Under Alien Stars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.

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* ''Under Alien Stars'' ''Literature/UnderAlienStars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.
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* In the ''Literature/{{Underdogs}}'' novel ''Acceleration'', Ewan, Jack, and Kate are being pursued by clones on Grant's airship. They escape by knocking out a panel in a bathroom wall, sliding down a large pipe in the wall, and then crawling into a vent. They travel through the vent until they reach the room where [[spoiler:400 hypnosis victims are being held]], which they break into by kicking out a grille.
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-->''"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.''

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-->''"I -->"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.''
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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil an asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. corridors. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he Tom removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, ArtificialGravity plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can could easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush then flood the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.



* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they solution; instead they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.
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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's TheMothership and therefore needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's TheMothership and therefore a StarshipLuxurious that needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.
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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends, but guards are prowling the corridors. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's TheMothership and therefore needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends, friends (who don't think of using the vents until he stumbles into their midst) but guards are prowling the corridors.corridors, so he ducks into a storage room and has a EurekaMoment. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's TheMothership and therefore needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.

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to:

* ''Gold in the Sky'', a sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse was written in 1958, explaining [[IdiotBall why no-one thinks of this trope]] until the protagonist Tom Hunter does. He has to sneak on board the orbit-ship of the evil asteroid mining corporation and rescue his friends, but guards are prowling the corridors. Some of the issues are addressed--the ventilation shafts are wide because it's TheMothership and therefore needs larger ducts, he removes his boots to avoid noise, and is able to orient himself thanks to the direction of the ArtificialGravity, plus he spends an hour roaming the ducts learning where everything is from the noises he hears through the grills. It's explained that once the BigBad realises what's happening, he can easily flush them out by having his crew put on their spacesuits and them flush the vents with cyanide gas, so they use the vents to sabotage the ship, creating so much chaos that when the crew does realise what's happening they don't think of this easy solution--they try entering the vents, get disoriented because they haven't had time to get familiar with them, and end up shooting each other. Meanwhile the protagonists have taken the BigBad hostage and use him to get off the ship.
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* Golik from the ''Literature/{{Kadingir}}'' series uses that to infiltrate Zapp Castle and later to spy on TheResistance. He even mentions they are so convenient he'd better get rid of the air ducts in his own club, lest someone tries spying on ''him''.

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* Golik from the ''Literature/{{Kadingir}}'' series uses that the vents to infiltrate Zapp Castle and later to spy on TheResistance. He even mentions they are so convenient he'd better get rid of the air ducts in his own club, nightclub, lest someone tries spying on ''him''.
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* Golik from the ''Literature/{{Kadingir}}'' series uses that to infiltrate Zapp Castle and later to spy on TheResistance. He even mentions they are so convenient he'd better get rid of the air ducts in his own club, lest someone tries spying on ''him''.

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* ''The Boy Who Knew Too Much'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.



* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', a monkey crawls through a vent in the New Christians' stronghold to free Robin when he's tied up.



* In ''How To'' by Creator/RandallMunroe, the chapter "How to Build a Lava Moat" warns that you will need wide ventilation shafts, and the sort of person who wants a lava moat may find heroes crawling through them.



* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.



* Subverted in ''Literature/TheManyLivesOfStephenLeeds''. Ngozi proposes this as a way of getting into a building with security cameras -- because she's seen it on TV -- but J.C., who is a military expert (sort of), lists several reasons why it's impossible. They do find a creative use for an air vent, but it only involves hiding a mobile phone inside.



* In ''Literature/ThePlaceInsideTheStorm'', Tara uses an air vent to travel from the psychologist's office to the room where [[RobotBuddy Xel]] is being stored.



* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Justin shows Jamisia an air vent that leads to Mohammed's City, an area of the metroliner where non-Muslims aren't allowed. They spy on a marketplace.



* ''Literature/AnUnkindnessOfGhosts'': Aster and Giselle run into the boiler room, climb up the pipes, and flee into the air duct to escape guards.































* ''The Boy Who Knew Too Much'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.
* Subverted in ''Literature/TheManyLivesOfStephenLeeds''. Ngozi proposes this as a way of getting into a building with security cameras -- because she's seen it on TV -- but J.C., who is a military expert (sort of), lists several reasons why it's impossible. They do find a creative use for an air vent, but it only involves hiding a mobile phone inside.
* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.
* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Justin shows Jamisia an air vent that leads to Mohammed's City, an area of the metroliner where non-Muslims aren't allowed. They spy on a marketplace.
* In ''Literature/ThePlaceInsideTheStorm'', Tara uses an air vent to travel from the psychologist's office to the room where [[RobotBuddy Xel]] is being stored.
* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', a monkey crawls through a vent in the New Christians' stronghold to free Robin when he's tied up.
* ''Literature/AnUnkindnessOfGhosts'': Aster and Giselle run into the boiler room, climb up the pipes, and flee into the air duct to escape guards.
* In ''How To'' by Creator/RandallMunroe, the chapter "How to Build a Lava Moat" warns that you will need wide ventilation shafts, and the sort of person who wants a lava moat may find heroes crawling through them.

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\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n* ''The Boy Who Knew Too Much'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.\n* Subverted in ''Literature/TheManyLivesOfStephenLeeds''. Ngozi proposes this as a way of getting into a building with security cameras -- because she's seen it on TV -- but J.C., who is a military expert (sort of), lists several reasons why it's impossible. They do find a creative use for an air vent, but it only involves hiding a mobile phone inside.\n* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.\n* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Justin shows Jamisia an air vent that leads to Mohammed's City, an area of the metroliner where non-Muslims aren't allowed. They spy on a marketplace.\n* In ''Literature/ThePlaceInsideTheStorm'', Tara uses an air vent to travel from the psychologist's office to the room where [[RobotBuddy Xel]] is being stored.\n* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', a monkey crawls through a vent in the New Christians' stronghold to free Robin when he's tied up.\n* ''Literature/AnUnkindnessOfGhosts'': Aster and Giselle run into the boiler room, climb up the pipes, and flee into the air duct to escape guards.\n* In ''How To'' by Creator/RandallMunroe, the chapter "How to Build a Lava Moat" warns that you will need wide ventilation shafts, and the sort of person who wants a lava moat may find heroes crawling through them.----

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* Played straight in a book based on the ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry'' series, Donkey Kong was trying to get to a room containing an auto defense system in a building being built by Kremlings. As he tries to think of a way to get to the 8th floor without being seen, he hears guards coming, and goes into a nearby ventilation shaft. It's big enough to crawl through, and even has signs pointing him in the right direction.

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* Played straight %%%
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%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples
in a book based on the ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry'' series, Donkey Kong was trying correct order. Thanks!
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* Somewhat altered in ''[[Literature/The39Clues The 39 Clues: The Dead of Night]]'', in which Phoenix Wizard and Reagan Holt try
to get to a room containing an auto defense system in a building being built by Kremlings. As he tries to think of a way to get to escape the 8th floor without being seen, he hears guards coming, and goes into Vespers' prison by climbing up a nearby ventilation dumbwaiter shaft. It's big enough Justified, since the characters are children.
* Parodied in ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat'', in which a cruise ship's air vents "... appear
to crawl through, have been ''designed'' for covert transportation." -- "That would explain the moving walkways and even has signs pointing him vending machines."
* Used
in ''Literature/AgeOfFire'', where the right direction. two dragon siblings escape from a raid on their home cave by escaping through naturally formed air passageways.



* ''Literature/{{Duumvirate}}'': The small kids who live in Northberg Educational Facility discover that they can go anywhere they want in the air vents. And the child-sized "secret" areas they lead to.
* Literature/JamesBond escapes confinement in ''Literature/DrNo'' through some ductwork, but he soon discovers that it was a purposefully-built series of hazardous obstacles (poisonous spiders, extreme heat, etc.), complete with viewports for entertainment, intended as a deliberate obstacle course set up by Dr. No.
* Justified in the sci-fi book ''Literature/{{Footfall}}'', as the aliens are twice human size and deliberately put the captured humans to work cleaning the spacecraft's air ducts. Their prison cell also doesn't contain a handy air duct, forcing them to escape before using the ducts to evade.
* In ''Illegal Aliens'' by Nick Pollotta and Creator/PhilFoglio, abducted humans on an alien ship hide in the air vents, because all the movies say that's what you do in that situation -- only they aren't air vents; they're conduits for a horrifically deadly gas weapon, which the aliens are preparing to flood throughout the ship, because they can't locate the humans....



* Subverted in Creator/ChristopherBrookmyre's ''Literature/OneFineDayInTheMiddleOfTheNight''. After an earlier discussion of action movie tropes, one of the heroes spots the "Holy Grille" as the way out when they're held hostage. Unfortunately, he didn't reckon on the fact that crawling through metal ductwork is incredibly noisy, so everyone hears him as he tries to squeeze through.

to:

* Deconstructed in ''Literature/BlackDogs''. The ventilation in question is portrayed as tough, claustrophobic going in the dark, with Lyra, the protagonist, suffering several minor injuries, and a high chance of her falling and breaking her neck. Or breaking something else that renders her unable to escape, and dying slowly over several days.
* ''Literature/CannonFodder'': Kelsey says she escaped from Black Jack's base in this way, but we never see it happen.
* Subverted in Creator/ChristopherBrookmyre's ''Literature/OneFineDayInTheMiddleOfTheNight''. After an earlier discussion of action movie tropes, one ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. In Volume 17 of the heroes spots novels, Touma asks if he could use the "Holy Grille" as ventilation ducts in the way out when they're held hostage. Unfortunately, he didn't reckon plane, but the flight attendant says that the ducts are too small. Touma admits that wasn't the plan and asks for some hot tea and coffee to pour down the duct, causing thermal expansion and make the terrorist on the fact other side ''think'' that there's someone crawling through metal ductwork the ducts, who lampshades that the act is incredibly noisy, so everyone hears just as suicidal as coming in through the actual entrance he was training his gun on. As a result, the terrorist gets some boiling hot tea to the face when he shoots the ducts, which also distracts him from Touma barrelling through the door and flinging a full pot of boiling coffee into his face.
* Both played straight and subverted in Creator/JohnRingo's ''[[Literature/PaladinOfShadows Choosers of the Slain]]''. They need to sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team,
as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down when the air vents narrowed, so her sole job was to get to that point and release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could go the rest of the way.
* In Creator/SandyMitchell's ''Literature/CiaphasCain'' series:
** In ''Cain's Last Stand'', the air vents are exactly the place genestealers like to hide.
** In other books, following a close call in ''Death or Glory'', Cain makes a point of always acquiring the access codes to the maintenance conduits whenever he travels by ship. In one occasion where he didn't find the time to do so, Jurgen brought to his attention the fact that he was in a civilian ship, therefore its maintenance conduits didn't require access codes.
* Averted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Literature/{{Competitors}}'', when Valentin and Lena are confined to quarters in a SpaceStation. When Valentin suggests escaping via the air vents, Lena laughs that he watches too many movies and points out that the vents are barely a foot wide. Valentin's suggestion to set off the fire alarm has Lena point out that this would cause the quarters to be depressurized to contain the fire.
* ''The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks'' features the steam tunnel and pranking variant, as it is set at a school similar to MIT/Caltech mentioned above. It should be noted that this does not occur without consequences: one character gets a moderately-to-severe burn from the exposed pipes.
* Played straight in a book based on the ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry'' series, Donkey Kong was trying to get to a room containing an auto defense system in a building being built by Kremlings. As
he tries to squeeze through.think of a way to get to the 8th floor without being seen, he hears guards coming, and goes into a nearby ventilation shaft. It's big enough to crawl through, and even has signs pointing him in the right direction.
* Used in the last two books of Creator/TimothyZahn's ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be call a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.
** Played with in Zahn's Literature/{{Blackcollar}} novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk through them, in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camoflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler: They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]
* In the ''Literature/DredChronicles'', the PrisonShip Perdition has enough of these that Tam, Dred's advisor, can use them to eavesdrop on rival gangs. This allows him to provide Dred with useful intelligence, which both protects the gang and encourages Dred to rely on him.
* Literature/JamesBond escapes confinement in ''Literature/DrNo'' through some ductwork, but he soon discovers that it was a purposefully-built series of hazardous obstacles (poisonous spiders, extreme heat, etc.), complete with viewports for entertainment, intended as a deliberate obstacle course set up by Dr. No.
* ''Literature/{{Duumvirate}}'': The small kids who live in Northberg Educational Facility discover that they can go anywhere they want in the air vents. And the child-sized "secret" areas they lead to.



* Works better in ''Literature/MrsFrisbyAndTheRatsOfNIMH'' than in most stories due to the escapees being rats. Well, right up until the system starts ventilating. This is one of the scenes that, legend has it, convinced Disney to pass it by as an animated adaptation. Something about having a large part of the party wiped out faster than the RedshirtArmy, and without even an enemy to credit for it. They need help in opening the grilles, too.
* Parodied in ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat'', in which a cruise ship's air vents "... appear to have been ''designed'' for covert transportation." -- "That would explain the moving walkways and vending machines."
* Lyra crawls around in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''[[Literature/HisDarkMaterials Northern Lights]]''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.
* Used in the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' spinoff ''Crown of Slaves'', but used more realistically than many examples. Crawling around in them is murderously hard work, characters without detailed schematics get badly lost, and it proves almost impossible to remove a grille without the proper tools. Additionally, the ducts in question are on a space station and are deliberately designed to be large enough to crawl through since they double as maintenance access passages.
* Referenced in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'':
-->''"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.''
* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' when, after a character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.
-->"He was really ''upset'' when we fished him out!"

to:

* Works better in ''Literature/MrsFrisbyAndTheRatsOfNIMH'' than in most stories due to the escapees being rats. Well, right up until the system starts ventilating. This is one of the scenes that, legend has it, convinced Disney to pass it by as an animated adaptation. Something about having a large part of the party wiped out faster than the RedshirtArmy, and without even an enemy to credit for it. They need help in opening the grilles, too.
* Parodied in ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat'', in which a cruise ship's air vents "... appear to have been ''designed'' for covert transportation." -- "That would explain the moving walkways and vending machines."
* Lyra crawls around
Justified in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''[[Literature/HisDarkMaterials Northern Lights]]''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller sci-fi book ''Literature/{{Footfall}}'', as the aliens are twice human size and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.
* Used in the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' spinoff ''Crown of Slaves'', but used more realistically than many examples. Crawling around in them is murderously hard work, characters without detailed schematics get badly lost, and it proves almost impossible to remove a grille without the proper tools. Additionally, the ducts in question are on a space station and are
deliberately designed put the captured humans to be large enough to crawl through since they double as maintenance access passages.
* Referenced in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'':
-->''"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's
work cleaning the spacecraft's air ducts. Their prison cell also doesn't contain a handy air duct, forcing them to escape before using the ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.''
* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' when, after a character fails
to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.
-->"He was really ''upset'' when we fished him out!"
evade.



* In Creator/SandyMitchell's ''Literature/CiaphasCain'' series:
** In ''Cain's Last Stand'', the air vents are exactly the place genestealers like to hide.
** In other books, following a close call in ''Death or Glory'', Cain makes a point of always acquiring the access codes to the maintenance conduits whenever he travels by ship. In one occasion where he didn't find the time to do so, Jurgen brought to his attention the fact that he was in a civilian ship, therefore its maintenance conduits didn't require access codes.
* Used in the last two books of Creator/TimothyZahn's ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be call a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.
** Played with in Zahn's Literature/{{Blackcollar}} novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk through them, in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camoflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler: They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]

to:

* In Creator/SandyMitchell's ''Literature/CiaphasCain'' series:
** In ''Cain's Last Stand'', the air vents are exactly the place genestealers like to hide.
** In other books, following a close call in ''Death or Glory'', Cain makes a point of always acquiring the access codes to the maintenance conduits whenever he travels by ship. In one occasion where he didn't find the time to do so, Jurgen brought to his attention the fact that he was in a civilian ship, therefore its maintenance conduits didn't require access codes.
* Used by Cammie and Macey in the last two books third book of Creator/TimothyZahn's ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design ''Literature/TheGallagherGirls'' series to get back into a building, though in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be call a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in this case it was still for escape rather than infiltration.
* Averted in ''Literature/GetBlank'' when Blank uses a false ceiling, rather than any kind
of hostile takeover, and duct, to get around.
* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' when, after
a human sourly character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that he outgrew the ability last guy in that cell -- who happened to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes be unusually small and nimble -- managed to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.
** Played with in Zahn's Literature/{{Blackcollar}} novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk
squeeze through them, a tiny drain in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camoflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler: They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there river like he thought.
-->"He
was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]really ''upset'' when we fished him out!"



* Comes up in several variations (breaking in, breaking out, air ducts, hanging ceilings...) in places in the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, particularly the short story "Labyrinth" -- where it involves problems like ducts forking or being blocked by grilles, and the others being only passable by the rather less than five-foot-tall main character, not his companions.
* In Creator/GrahamMcNeill's ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novel ''Storm of Iron'', this is how Hawke escapes a launching rocket and a Chaos SpaceMarine.
* In the ''Literature/WomenOfTheOtherworld'' short story "Chaotic" in the anthology ''Dates From Hell'', Hope flees from a werewolf into an office, and finds herself in a dead end. She tries to escape through the air ducts, but she makes too much noise when moving and has to freeze when the werewolf enters the room. He finds her immediately. Later, after the pair has teamed up, they both move around through the air ducts, which are noisy, painful, cramped, and dusty. Still later, the bad guy enters a room looking for Hope, and while he's investigating the unscrewed air vent the good guys come out of their real hiding places and get the jump on him.
* Averted in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/RedPlanet'' when one of the good guys proposes taking a vent grille off of a wall to get to the room on the other side. His friend points out that there will certainly be a similar grille on the other side, fastened by screws they won't be able to reach.

to:

* Comes up The main characters use this method of travel at one point in several variations (breaking in, breaking out, air ducts, hanging ceilings...) in places ''[[Literature/HIVESeries H.I.V.E.]]''. The trope is played a bit more realistically than usual: the vents are not well-lit, the characters are concerned about the noise they're making, their route has some difficult paths and "obstacles", and there's some mention of the effect that crawling along a cramped space would have. When entering the vents, they have to use a screwdriver to remove the grille. The only reason they don't get lost is because of Otto's uncanny ability to remember their route. However, they oddly don't have any difficulty removing the exit grille (and due to the exit's location, there was no way they could have checked it beforehand). There's also no excuse for the lack of security cameras in the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, particularly air vents, given they're big enough to crawl through.
* Used in
the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' spinoff ''Crown of Slaves'', but used more realistically than many examples. Crawling around in them is murderously hard work, characters without detailed schematics get badly lost, and it proves almost impossible to remove a grille without the proper tools. Additionally, the ducts in question are on a space station and are deliberately designed to be large enough to crawl through since they double as maintenance access passages.
* In ''Illegal Aliens'' by Nick Pollotta and Creator/PhilFoglio, abducted humans on an alien ship hide in the air vents, because all the movies say that's what you do in that situation -- only they aren't air vents; they're conduits for a horrifically deadly gas weapon, which the aliens are preparing to flood throughout the ship, because they can't locate the humans....
* In
short story "Labyrinth" -- where it involves problems like "[[http://www.baenebooks.com/chapters/0743471741/0743471741___3.htm In the Bone]]", the protagonist uses air ducts forking or being blocked by grilles, and the others being only passable which were too small for his alien opponent but nonetheless navigable by the rather less than five-foot-tall main character, not his companions.
* In Creator/GrahamMcNeill's ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novel ''Storm of Iron'', this is how Hawke escapes a launching rocket and a Chaos SpaceMarine.
* In the ''Literature/WomenOfTheOtherworld'' short story "Chaotic" in the anthology ''Dates From Hell'', Hope flees from a werewolf into an office, and finds herself in a dead end. She tries to escape through the air ducts, but she makes too much noise when moving and has to freeze when the werewolf enters the room. He finds her immediately. Later, after the pair has teamed up, they both move around through the air ducts, which are noisy, painful, cramped, and dusty. Still later, the bad guy enters a room looking for Hope, and while he's investigating the unscrewed air vent the good guys come out of their real hiding places and get the jump on him.
* Averted in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/RedPlanet'' when one
smaller human form. Some of the good guys proposes taking a vent grille off of a wall to get to ducts are indeed too small for the room on the other side. His friend points out that there will certainly be a similar grille on the other side, fastened by screws they won't be able to reach.human.



* Deconstructed in ''Literature/BlackDogs''. The ventilation in question is portrayed as tough, claustrophobic going in the dark, with Lyra, the protagonist, suffering several minor injuries, and a high chance of her falling and breaking her neck. Or breaking something else that renders her unable to escape, and dying slowly over several days.

to:

* Deconstructed Works better in ''Literature/BlackDogs''. ''Literature/MrsFrisbyAndTheRatsOfNIMH'' than in most stories due to the escapees being rats. Well, right up until the system starts ventilating. This is one of the scenes that, legend has it, convinced Disney to pass it by as an animated adaptation. Something about having a large part of the party wiped out faster than the RedshirtArmy, and without even an enemy to credit for it. They need help in opening the grilles, too.
* Lyra crawls around in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''[[Literature/HisDarkMaterials Northern Lights]]''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.
* Subverted in Creator/ChristopherBrookmyre's ''Literature/OneFineDayInTheMiddleOfTheNight''. After an earlier discussion of action movie tropes, one of the heroes spots the "Holy Grille" as the way out when they're held hostage. Unfortunately, he didn't reckon on the fact that crawling through metal ductwork is incredibly noisy, so everyone hears him as he tries to squeeze through.
* Referenced in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'':
-->''"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.''
* Occurs in ''Heaven's Queen'', third book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy''. When Brenton is helping Devi infiltrate Dark Star Station, he shows her a passage to crawl through and she assumes that it's an air vent. Brenton tells her that the people who built the station weren't that stupid; the passage is a power conduit, and usually filled with plasma heated to thousands of degrees. They're only able to use it as a passage because of a power outage.
* In ''Symbiont'', second book of the ''Literature/{{Parasitology}}'' series, Sally tries escaping captivity in a mall this way. She manages to make her way through the system only to find her guard Ronnie patiently waiting for her at the end; once he saw that she'd entered the vent, he was able to casually stroll over to the exit grating while she slowly crawled her way through the duct.
* Averted in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/RedPlanet'' when one of the good guys proposes taking a vent grille off of a wall to get to the room on the other side. His friend points out that there will certainly be a similar grille on the other side, fastened by screws they won't be able to reach.
* ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'': Attempted by Rolas in "Captive of the Red Vixen", after he figures out that his ShockCollar is only tied to the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.
* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries
The Rings of Saturn]]'': The space pirate base has an extensive air ventilation in question is portrayed as tough, claustrophobic going system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.
* ''Literature/SixtyEightRooms'': The two kids manage to fit easily
in the dark, Museum's air vents as they have been [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunk down to five inches]]. Getting up to the vents was much harder.
* In Creator/MichaelFlynn's ''Literature/SpiralArm'' novel ''In The Lion's Mouth'', Bridget's first guess is such an escape before she deduces that in fact Ravn hid {{Invisibility Cloak}}s in the ventilation system, and then escaped, invisible,
with Lyra, her companion as soon as the protagonist, suffering several minor injuries, door opened.
* Subverted
and a high chance {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''[[Literature/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineRelaunch Star Trek: Section 31: Abyss]]''. After escaping her cell, Ezri Dax goes up into an air vent, which (contrary to what the holonovels of her falling youth would have her believe) is very dirty, dark, small and breaking her neck. Or breaking something else that renders her unable has creepy things living in it. (She is, however, successful in using the air vents to escape, and dying slowly over several days.move throughout the base to important rooms.)



* Both played straight and subverted in Creator/JohnRingo's ''[[Literature/PaladinOfShadows Choosers of the Slain]]''. They need to sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team, as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down when the air vents narrowed, so her sole job was to get to that point and release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could go the rest of the way.
* Used by Cammie and Macey in the third book of ''Literature/TheGallagherGirls'' series to get back into a building, though in this case it was still for escape rather than infiltration.
* Subverted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''[[Literature/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineRelaunch Star Trek: Section 31: Abyss]]''. After escaping her cell, Ezri Dax goes up into an air vent, which (contrary to what the holonovels of her youth would have her believe) is very dirty, dark, small and has creepy things living in it. (She is, however, successful in using the air vents to move throughout the base to important rooms.)
* Subverted in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. In Volume 17 of the novels, Touma asks if he could use the ventilation ducts in the plane, but the flight attendant says that the ducts are too small. Touma admits that wasn't the plan and asks for some hot tea and coffee to pour down the duct, causing thermal expansion and make the terrorist on the other side ''think'' that there's someone crawling through the ducts, who lampshades that the act is just as suicidal as coming in through the actual entrance he was training his gun on. As a result, the terrorist gets some boiling hot tea to the face when he shoots the ducts, which also distracts him from Touma barrelling through the door and flinging a full pot of boiling coffee into his face.
* Used in ''Literature/AgeOfFire'', where the two dragon siblings escape from a raid on their home cave by escaping through naturally formed air passageways.
* In short story "[[http://www.baenebooks.com/chapters/0743471741/0743471741___3.htm In the Bone]]", the protagonist uses air ducts which were too small for his alien opponent but nonetheless navigable by the smaller human form. Some of the ducts are indeed too small for the human.
* Justified in ''Literature/WitchAndWizard''. In order to free innocent children being persecuted by the government for being witches and wizards from prison, the protagonist Wisty infiltrates one of the prisons through the air vents..... but she turns herself into a mouse first.

to:

* Both played straight and subverted in Creator/JohnRingo's ''[[Literature/PaladinOfShadows Choosers of In ''Literature/TalesOfDunkAndEgg'', it's revealed at the Slain]]''. They need to end that [[spoiler: Bloodraven had a few dwarfs sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team, as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down when the air vents narrowed, so her sole job was to get to that point and release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could go the rest of the way.
* Used by Cammie and Macey in the third book of ''Literature/TheGallagherGirls'' series to get back into a building, though in this case it was still for escape rather than infiltration.
* Subverted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''[[Literature/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineRelaunch Star Trek: Section 31: Abyss]]''. After escaping her cell, Ezri Dax goes up into an air vent, which (contrary to what the holonovels of her youth would have her believe) is very dirty, dark, small and has creepy things living in it. (She is, however, successful in using the air vents to move throughout the base to important rooms.)
* Subverted in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. In Volume 17 of the novels, Touma asks if he could use the ventilation ducts in the plane, but the flight attendant says that the ducts are too small. Touma admits that wasn't the plan and asks for some hot tea and coffee to pour down the duct, causing thermal expansion and make the terrorist on the other side ''think'' that there's someone crawling through the ducts, who lampshades that the act is just as suicidal as coming
in through the actual entrance he was training his gun on. As a result, privy to steal the terrorist gets some boiling hot tea to the face when he shoots the ducts, which also distracts him from Touma barrelling through the door and flinging a full pot of boiling coffee into his face.
* Used in ''Literature/AgeOfFire'', where the two
dragon siblings escape from a raid egg. Justified, seeing as they're dwarfs]].
* Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/UnchartedStars''. While
on their home cave by escaping through naturally formed air passageways.
* In short story "[[http://www.baenebooks.com/chapters/0743471741/0743471741___3.htm In
the Bone]]", pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters the protagonist uses station's air ducts which were too small for his to do some snooping.
* ''Under Alien Stars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile
alien opponent but nonetheless navigable by race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the smaller human form. Some edges of the ducts are indeed too small for the human.
* Justified in ''Literature/WitchAndWizard''. In order to free innocent children being persecuted by the government for being witches and wizards from prison, the protagonist Wisty infiltrates one of the prisons through
the air vents..... vents, but she turns herself into a mouse first.don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.



* ''The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks'' features the steam tunnel and pranking variant, as it is set at a school similar to MIT/Caltech mentioned above. It should be noted that this does not occur without consequences: one character gets a moderately-to-severe burn from the exposed pipes.
* Somewhat altered in ''[[Literature/The39Clues The 39 Clues: The Dead of Night]]'', in which Phoenix Wizard and Reagan Holt try to escape the Vespers' prison by climbing up a dumbwaiter shaft. Justified, since the characters are children.
* Averted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Literature/{{Competitors}}'', when Valentin and Lena are confined to quarters in a SpaceStation. When Valentin suggests escaping via the air vents, Lena laughs that he watches too many movies and points out that the vents are barely a foot wide. Valentin's suggestion to set off the fire alarm has Lena point out that this would cause the quarters to be depressurized to contain the fire.
* ''Under Alien Stars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.
* In Creator/MichaelFlynn's ''Literature/SpiralArm'' novel ''In The Lion's Mouth'', Bridget's first guess is such an escape before she deduces that in fact Ravn hid {{Invisibility Cloak}}s in the ventilation system, and then escaped, invisible, with her companion as soon as the door opened.
* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries The Rings of Saturn]]'': The space pirate base has an extensive air ventilation system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.
* ''Literature/SixtyEightRooms'': The two kids manage to fit easily in the Museum's air vents as they have been [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunk down to five inches]]. Getting up to the vents was much harder.
* ''Literature/CannonFodder'': Kelsey says she escaped from Black Jack's base in this way, but we never see it happen.
* Attempted by Rolas in "[[Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures Captive of the Red Vixen]]", after he figures out that his ShockCollar is only tied to the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.
* Averted in ''Literature/GetBlank'' when Blank uses a false ceiling, rather than any kind of duct, to get around.
* Occurs in ''Heaven's Queen'', third book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy''. When Brenton is helping Devi infiltrate Dark Star Station, he shows her a passage to crawl through and she assumes that it's an air vent. Brenton tells her that the people who built the station weren't that stupid; the passage is a power conduit, and usually filled with plasma heated to thousands of degrees. They're only able to use it as a passage because of a power outage.
* In ''Symbiont'', second book of the ''Literature/{{Parasitology}}'' series, Sally tries escaping captivity in a mall this way. She manages to make her way through the system only to find her guard Ronnie patiently waiting for her at the end; once he saw that she'd entered the vent, he was able to casually stroll over to the exit grating while she slowly crawled her way through the duct.
* In the ''Literature/DredChronicles'', the PrisonShip Perdition has enough of these that Tam, Dred's advisor, can use them to eavesdrop on rival gangs. This allows him to provide Dred with useful intelligence, which both protects the gang and encourages Dred to rely on him.
* Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/UnchartedStars''. While on the pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters the station's air ducts to do some snooping.
* In ''Literature/TalesOfDunkAndEgg'', it's revealed at the end that [[spoiler: Bloodraven had a few dwarfs sneak in through the privy to steal the dragon egg. Justified, seeing as they're dwarfs]].

to:

* ''The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks'' features the steam tunnel and pranking variant, as it is set at a school similar to MIT/Caltech mentioned above. It should be noted that this does not occur without consequences: one character gets a moderately-to-severe burn from the exposed pipes.
* Somewhat altered
Comes up in ''[[Literature/The39Clues The 39 Clues: The Dead of Night]]'', in which Phoenix Wizard and Reagan Holt try to escape the Vespers' prison by climbing up a dumbwaiter shaft. Justified, since the characters are children.
* Averted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Literature/{{Competitors}}'', when Valentin and Lena are confined to quarters in a SpaceStation. When Valentin suggests escaping via the
several variations (breaking in, breaking out, air vents, Lena laughs that he watches too many movies and points out that the vents are barely a foot wide. Valentin's suggestion to set off the fire alarm has Lena point out that this would cause the quarters to be depressurized to contain the fire.
* ''Under Alien Stars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.
* In Creator/MichaelFlynn's ''Literature/SpiralArm'' novel ''In The Lion's Mouth'', Bridget's first guess is such an escape before she deduces that
ducts, hanging ceilings...) in fact Ravn hid {{Invisibility Cloak}}s places in the ventilation system, ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, particularly the short story "Labyrinth" -- where it involves problems like ducts forking or being blocked by grilles, and then escaped, invisible, with her companion as soon as the door opened.
* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries The Rings of Saturn]]'': The space pirate base has an extensive air ventilation system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.
* ''Literature/SixtyEightRooms'': The two kids manage to fit easily in the Museum's air vents as they have been [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunk down to five inches]]. Getting up to the vents was much harder.
* ''Literature/CannonFodder'': Kelsey says she escaped from Black Jack's base in this way, but we never see it happen.
* Attempted by Rolas in "[[Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures Captive of the Red Vixen]]", after he figures out that his ShockCollar is
others being only tied to passable by the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.
* Averted in ''Literature/GetBlank'' when Blank uses a false ceiling,
rather less than any kind of duct, to get around.
* Occurs in ''Heaven's Queen'', third book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy''. When Brenton is helping Devi infiltrate Dark Star Station, he shows her a passage to crawl through and she assumes that it's an air vent. Brenton tells her that the people who built the station weren't that stupid; the passage is a power conduit, and usually filled with plasma heated to thousands of degrees. They're only able to use it as a passage because of a power outage.
* In ''Symbiont'', second book of the ''Literature/{{Parasitology}}'' series, Sally tries escaping captivity in a mall this way. She manages to make her way through the system only to find her guard Ronnie patiently waiting for her at the end; once he saw that she'd entered the vent, he was able to casually stroll over to the exit grating while she slowly crawled her way through the duct.
* In the ''Literature/DredChronicles'', the PrisonShip Perdition has enough of these that Tam, Dred's advisor, can use them to eavesdrop on rival gangs. This allows him to provide Dred with useful intelligence, which both protects the gang and encourages Dred to rely on him.
* Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/UnchartedStars''. While on the pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters the station's air ducts to do some snooping.
* In ''Literature/TalesOfDunkAndEgg'', it's revealed at the end that [[spoiler: Bloodraven had a few dwarfs sneak in through the privy to steal the dragon egg. Justified, seeing as they're dwarfs]].
five-foot-tall main character, not his companions.



* The main characters use this method of travel at one point in ''[[Literature/HIVESeries H.I.V.E.]]''. The trope is played a bit more realistically than usual: the vents are not well-lit, the characters are concerned about the noise they're making, their route has some difficult paths and "obstacles", and there's some mention of the effect that crawling along a cramped space would have. When entering the vents, they have to use a screwdriver to remove the grille. The only reason they don't get lost is because of Otto's uncanny ability to remember their route. However, they oddly don't have any difficulty removing the exit grille (and due to the exit's location, there was no way they could have checked it beforehand). There's also no excuse for the lack of security cameras in the air vents, given they're big enough to crawl through.

to:

* The main characters use In Creator/GrahamMcNeill's ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novel ''Storm of Iron'', this method of travel at is how Hawke escapes a launching rocket and a Chaos SpaceMarine.
* Justified in ''Literature/WitchAndWizard''. In order to free innocent children being persecuted by the government for being witches and wizards from prison, the protagonist Wisty infiltrates
one point in ''[[Literature/HIVESeries H.I.V.E.]]''. The trope is played a bit more realistically than usual: the vents are not well-lit, the characters are concerned about the noise they're making, their route has some difficult paths and "obstacles", and there's some mention of the effect that crawling along a cramped space would have. When entering the vents, they have to use a screwdriver to remove the grille. The only reason they don't get lost is because of Otto's uncanny ability to remember their route. However, they oddly don't have any difficulty removing the exit grille (and due to the exit's location, there was no way they could have checked it beforehand). There's also no excuse for the lack of security cameras in prisons through the air vents, given they're big enough vents..... but she turns herself into a mouse first.
* In the ''Literature/WomenOfTheOtherworld'' short story "Chaotic" in the anthology ''Dates From Hell'', Hope flees from a werewolf into an office, and finds herself in a dead end. She tries
to crawl through.escape through the air ducts, but she makes too much noise when moving and has to freeze when the werewolf enters the room. He finds her immediately. Later, after the pair has teamed up, they both move around through the air ducts, which are noisy, painful, cramped, and dusty. Still later, the bad guy enters a room looking for Hope, and while he's investigating the unscrewed air vent the good guys come out of their real hiding places and get the jump on him.




























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* ''Literature/AnUnkindnessOfGhosts'': Aster and Giselle run into the boiler room, climb up the pipes, and flee into the air duct to escape guards.

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* ''Literature/AnUnkindnessOfGhosts'': Aster and Giselle run into the boiler room, climb up the pipes, and flee into the air duct to escape guards.guards.
* In ''How To'' by Creator/RandallMunroe, the chapter "How to Build a Lava Moat" warns that you will need wide ventilation shafts, and the sort of person who wants a lava moat may find heroes crawling through them.
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* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', a monkey crawls through a vent in the New Christians' stronghold to free Robin when he's tied up.

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* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', a monkey crawls through a vent in the New Christians' stronghold to free Robin when he's tied up.up.
* ''Literature/AnUnkindnessOfGhosts'': Aster and Giselle run into the boiler room, climb up the pipes, and flee into the air duct to escape guards.
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* In ''Literature/ThePlaceInsideTheStorm'', Tara uses an air vent to travel from the psychologist's office to the room where [[RobotBuddy Xel]] is being stored.

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* In ''Literature/ThePlaceInsideTheStorm'', Tara uses an air vent to travel from the psychologist's office to the room where [[RobotBuddy Xel]] is being stored.stored.
* In ''Literature/DaystarAndShadow'', a monkey crawls through a vent in the New Christians' stronghold to free Robin when he's tied up.
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* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Justin shows Jamisia an air vent that leads to Mohammed's City, an area of the metroliner where non-Muslims aren't allowed. They spy on a marketplace.

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* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Justin shows Jamisia an air vent that leads to Mohammed's City, an area of the metroliner where non-Muslims aren't allowed. They spy on a marketplace.marketplace.
* In ''Literature/ThePlaceInsideTheStorm'', Tara uses an air vent to travel from the psychologist's office to the room where [[RobotBuddy Xel]] is being stored.
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* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Discworld/GoingPostal'' when, after a character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.

to:

* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Discworld/GoingPostal'' ''Literature/GoingPostal'' when, after a character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.

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* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.tall.
* In ''Literature/ThisAlienShore'', Justin shows Jamisia an air vent that leads to Mohammed's City, an area of the metroliner where non-Muslims aren't allowed. They spy on a marketplace.
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* Subverted in ''Literature/TheManyLivesOfStephenLeeds''. Ngozi proposes this as a way of getting into a building with security cameras -- because she's seen it on TV -- but J.C., who is a military expert (sort of), lists several reasons why it's impossible. They do find a creative use for an air vent, but it only involves hiding a mobile phone inside.

to:

* Subverted in ''Literature/TheManyLivesOfStephenLeeds''. Ngozi proposes this as a way of getting into a building with security cameras -- because she's seen it on TV -- but J.C., who is a military expert (sort of), lists several reasons why it's impossible. They do find a creative use for an air vent, but it only involves hiding a mobile phone inside.inside.
* In the first sequel to ''Literature/LittleFuzzy'' some would-be jewel thieves teach (and coerce) some "Fuzzies" (little furry aliens native to the colonial planet Zarathustra) into crawling through a ventilation system to steal some fabulously valuable gems. Justified in that an adult "Fuzzy" is only about two feet tall.
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Added DiffLines:

* Played straight in a book based on the ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry'' series, Donkey Kong was trying to get to a room containing an auto defense system in a building being built by Kremlings. As he tries to think of a way to get to the 8th floor without being seen, he hears guards coming, and goes into a nearby ventilation shaft. It's big enough to crawl through, and even has signs pointing him in the right direction.
* ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'': Averted, since the one time this trope is used, Marco's in bug morph.
* ''Literature/{{Duumvirate}}'': The small kids who live in Northberg Educational Facility discover that they can go anywhere they want in the air vents. And the child-sized "secret" areas they lead to.
* Literature/JamesBond escapes confinement in ''Literature/DrNo'' through some ductwork, but he soon discovers that it was a purposefully-built series of hazardous obstacles (poisonous spiders, extreme heat, etc.), complete with viewports for entertainment, intended as a deliberate obstacle course set up by Dr. No.
* Justified in the sci-fi book ''Literature/{{Footfall}}'', as the aliens are twice human size and deliberately put the captured humans to work cleaning the spacecraft's air ducts. Their prison cell also doesn't contain a handy air duct, forcing them to escape before using the ducts to evade.
* In ''Illegal Aliens'' by Nick Pollotta and Creator/PhilFoglio, abducted humans on an alien ship hide in the air vents, because all the movies say that's what you do in that situation -- only they aren't air vents; they're conduits for a horrifically deadly gas weapon, which the aliens are preparing to flood throughout the ship, because they can't locate the humans....
* Something similar to the above happens in ''Literature/ArtemisFowl: The Arctic Incident''. Artemis has to crawl through a duct filled with fuel for the building's plasma weapons. Before his helmet runs out of air. Without being able to see where he's going. Knowing full well that if anyone turns on the plasma cannons, he's toast. Once he gets out, he has to be sprayed with anti-radiation foam or he'll likely develop cancer.
* Subverted in Creator/ChristopherBrookmyre's ''Literature/OneFineDayInTheMiddleOfTheNight''. After an earlier discussion of action movie tropes, one of the heroes spots the "Holy Grille" as the way out when they're held hostage. Unfortunately, he didn't reckon on the fact that crawling through metal ductwork is incredibly noisy, so everyone hears him as he tries to squeeze through.
* Justified in ''Literature/EndersShadow''. Bean uses the air ducts to explore and reconnoiter, but he can only do it because he designed a specialized workout to develop the muscles he needs to pull himself through at odd angles, and because he's really, ridiculously small. Eventually he grows too big to use the outflow vents anymore, but by then he [[spoiler:is the commander of Rabbit Army]] and so has access to the larger inflow vents.
* Works better in ''Literature/MrsFrisbyAndTheRatsOfNIMH'' than in most stories due to the escapees being rats. Well, right up until the system starts ventilating. This is one of the scenes that, legend has it, convinced Disney to pass it by as an animated adaptation. Something about having a large part of the party wiped out faster than the RedshirtArmy, and without even an enemy to credit for it. They need help in opening the grilles, too.
* Parodied in ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat'', in which a cruise ship's air vents "... appear to have been ''designed'' for covert transportation." -- "That would explain the moving walkways and vending machines."
* Lyra crawls around in the dropped ceiling in Bolvangar in ''[[Literature/HisDarkMaterials Northern Lights]]''. Being a twelve-year-old girl, she's smaller and lighter than most {{Action Hero}}es, but she gets caught anyway, and almost transformed into a soulless abomination. She's only saved because the BigBad had a special interest in her, and was present.
* Used in the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' spinoff ''Crown of Slaves'', but used more realistically than many examples. Crawling around in them is murderously hard work, characters without detailed schematics get badly lost, and it proves almost impossible to remove a grille without the proper tools. Additionally, the ducts in question are on a space station and are deliberately designed to be large enough to crawl through since they double as maintenance access passages.
* Referenced in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''[[Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy Only You Can Save Mankind]]'':
-->''"I saw a film where there was an alien crawling around inside a spaceship's air ducts and it could come out wherever it liked," said Johnny reproachfully.\\
"Doubtless it had a map," said the Captain.''
* Pratchett also pokes fun at the trope in ''Discworld/GoingPostal'' when, after a character fails to tunnel out of his jail cell, a guard remarks that the last guy in that cell -- who happened to be unusually small and nimble -- managed to squeeze through a tiny drain in the floor. Unfortunately, it didn't lead to the river like he thought.
-->"He was really ''upset'' when we fished him out!"
* Used and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/JohnCWright's ''[[Literature/ChroniclesOfChaos Fugitives Of Chaos]]'', Vanity--who has the power to find-slash-create hidden passages--finds an accessible air vent.
* In Creator/SandyMitchell's ''Literature/CiaphasCain'' series:
** In ''Cain's Last Stand'', the air vents are exactly the place genestealers like to hide.
** In other books, following a close call in ''Death or Glory'', Cain makes a point of always acquiring the access codes to the maintenance conduits whenever he travels by ship. In one occasion where he didn't find the time to do so, Jurgen brought to his attention the fact that he was in a civilian ship, therefore its maintenance conduits didn't require access codes.
* Used in the last two books of Creator/TimothyZahn's ''Literature/{{Dragonback}}'' series; the (less-than-subtle) justification is that large air vents are actually standard design in capital ships, so that in the event of a hull breach emergency air supplies can be funneled to the compromised areas in large amounts, buying the occupants time to reach emergency air masks and so on. Although humans can't fit through them as it is, so it can almost be call a {{lampshad|eHanging}}ing. Shontine/K'da ships are actually ''designed'' for the stealthy, compressible K'da to be able to move through in case of hostile takeover, and a human sourly remarks that he outgrew the ability to navigate even big ships' navigation ducts when he was seven. When a K'da takes to those vents for the first time she gets thoroughly lost; in a later escapade she's almost caught when her tail twitches in shock enough to thump a vent.
** Played with in Zahn's Literature/{{Blackcollar}} novel ''The Backlash Mission'', where the air intakes for a huge underground military base are large enough an adult human can walk through them, in order to accommodate the massive inflow needed and the filtering equipment to keep out poison gas attacks. Since even with the vents camoflaged, this is an insanely large security risk, the intakes are designed with a very large kill zone of automated defenses, which are described as completely undefeatable and possibly viable for centuries without maintenance. [[spoiler: They actually were completely undefeatable. But with the base abandoned, there was no one to stop someone from spending months ''tunneling around'' the killbox.]]
* Slightly altered in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets'', using the castle sewer-pipes for the monster to invade from -- and for the heroes to find -- the title chamber. Hogwarts Castle has got to have the most gigantic pipes ever seen... particularly for being built by wizards. [[spoiler: Somewhat justified, in that the pipe leading to the chamber was designed to be a passageway to it, and thus capable of being accessed by the Heir of Slytherin. Likewise, a massive snake would have much more success than other monsters in navigating plumbing. Both had been planned by one of the people who helped create the Castle in the first place.]]
* Comes up in several variations (breaking in, breaking out, air ducts, hanging ceilings...) in places in the ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, particularly the short story "Labyrinth" -- where it involves problems like ducts forking or being blocked by grilles, and the others being only passable by the rather less than five-foot-tall main character, not his companions.
* In Creator/GrahamMcNeill's ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novel ''Storm of Iron'', this is how Hawke escapes a launching rocket and a Chaos SpaceMarine.
* In the ''Literature/WomenOfTheOtherworld'' short story "Chaotic" in the anthology ''Dates From Hell'', Hope flees from a werewolf into an office, and finds herself in a dead end. She tries to escape through the air ducts, but she makes too much noise when moving and has to freeze when the werewolf enters the room. He finds her immediately. Later, after the pair has teamed up, they both move around through the air ducts, which are noisy, painful, cramped, and dusty. Still later, the bad guy enters a room looking for Hope, and while he's investigating the unscrewed air vent the good guys come out of their real hiding places and get the jump on him.
* Averted in Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/RedPlanet'' when one of the good guys proposes taking a vent grille off of a wall to get to the room on the other side. His friend points out that there will certainly be a similar grille on the other side, fastened by screws they won't be able to reach.
* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/LuckyStarrAndTheOceansOfVenus'': Bigman volunteers to use an air vent in order to access a critical relay which, once disconnected, will prevent the UnderwaterCity from drowning.
* Deconstructed in ''Literature/BlackDogs''. The ventilation in question is portrayed as tough, claustrophobic going in the dark, with Lyra, the protagonist, suffering several minor injuries, and a high chance of her falling and breaking her neck. Or breaking something else that renders her unable to escape, and dying slowly over several days.
* Subverted in the final book of the ''Literature/{{Sten}}'' Series, by having the hero nearly get stuck in a claustrophobic moment.
* Both played straight and subverted in Creator/JohnRingo's ''[[Literature/PaladinOfShadows Choosers of the Slain]]''. They need to sneak into the secure facility of one of the bad guys, so (played straight) they pick the slimmest girl on the team, as the men on the team are too large especially wearing all their weapons. Subverted because they knew she would get stuck half-way down when the air vents narrowed, so her sole job was to get to that point and release a small robot (an R2-D2 toy they had picked up in a toy store and then modified to include surveillance and communications gear) which could go the rest of the way.
* Used by Cammie and Macey in the third book of ''Literature/TheGallagherGirls'' series to get back into a building, though in this case it was still for escape rather than infiltration.
* Subverted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''[[Literature/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineRelaunch Star Trek: Section 31: Abyss]]''. After escaping her cell, Ezri Dax goes up into an air vent, which (contrary to what the holonovels of her youth would have her believe) is very dirty, dark, small and has creepy things living in it. (She is, however, successful in using the air vents to move throughout the base to important rooms.)
* Subverted in ''LightNovel/ACertainMagicalIndex''. In Volume 17 of the novels, Touma asks if he could use the ventilation ducts in the plane, but the flight attendant says that the ducts are too small. Touma admits that wasn't the plan and asks for some hot tea and coffee to pour down the duct, causing thermal expansion and make the terrorist on the other side ''think'' that there's someone crawling through the ducts, who lampshades that the act is just as suicidal as coming in through the actual entrance he was training his gun on. As a result, the terrorist gets some boiling hot tea to the face when he shoots the ducts, which also distracts him from Touma barrelling through the door and flinging a full pot of boiling coffee into his face.
* Used in ''Literature/AgeOfFire'', where the two dragon siblings escape from a raid on their home cave by escaping through naturally formed air passageways.
* In short story "[[http://www.baenebooks.com/chapters/0743471741/0743471741___3.htm In the Bone]]", the protagonist uses air ducts which were too small for his alien opponent but nonetheless navigable by the smaller human form. Some of the ducts are indeed too small for the human.
* Justified in ''Literature/WitchAndWizard''. In order to free innocent children being persecuted by the government for being witches and wizards from prison, the protagonist Wisty infiltrates one of the prisons through the air vents..... but she turns herself into a mouse first.
* Played with in ''Literature/TheVampireFiles''. Jack can justifiably play this straight if he assumes a gaseous form (gas, after all, being what air vents are ''designed'' to let through). However, he's a bit claustrophobic and can't shake the feeling of being trapped while traversing a ten-inch-square conduit.
* ''The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks'' features the steam tunnel and pranking variant, as it is set at a school similar to MIT/Caltech mentioned above. It should be noted that this does not occur without consequences: one character gets a moderately-to-severe burn from the exposed pipes.
* Somewhat altered in ''[[Literature/The39Clues The 39 Clues: The Dead of Night]]'', in which Phoenix Wizard and Reagan Holt try to escape the Vespers' prison by climbing up a dumbwaiter shaft. Justified, since the characters are children.
* Averted and {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Literature/{{Competitors}}'', when Valentin and Lena are confined to quarters in a SpaceStation. When Valentin suggests escaping via the air vents, Lena laughs that he watches too many movies and points out that the vents are barely a foot wide. Valentin's suggestion to set off the fire alarm has Lena point out that this would cause the quarters to be depressurized to contain the fire.
* ''Under Alien Stars'' by Pamela F. Service has a crew from a hostile alien race take over a hotel, placing their prisoners on one floor. They remember to seal the edges of the air vents, but don't know or don't care about the garbage chutes descending past each floor.
* In Creator/MichaelFlynn's ''Literature/SpiralArm'' novel ''In The Lion's Mouth'', Bridget's first guess is such an escape before she deduces that in fact Ravn hid {{Invisibility Cloak}}s in the ventilation system, and then escaped, invisible, with her companion as soon as the door opened.
* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries The Rings of Saturn]]'': The space pirate base has an extensive air ventilation system, extensive enough that a MadScientist was able to live alongside the inhabitants and move around the base for years without their knowledge.
* ''Literature/SixtyEightRooms'': The two kids manage to fit easily in the Museum's air vents as they have been [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunk down to five inches]]. Getting up to the vents was much harder.
* ''Literature/CannonFodder'': Kelsey says she escaped from Black Jack's base in this way, but we never see it happen.
* Attempted by Rolas in "[[Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures Captive of the Red Vixen]]", after he figures out that his ShockCollar is only tied to the door to his cell, but he finds a note from his captor and a trap waiting for him at the grille above the lifeboats.
* Averted in ''Literature/GetBlank'' when Blank uses a false ceiling, rather than any kind of duct, to get around.
* Occurs in ''Heaven's Queen'', third book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy''. When Brenton is helping Devi infiltrate Dark Star Station, he shows her a passage to crawl through and she assumes that it's an air vent. Brenton tells her that the people who built the station weren't that stupid; the passage is a power conduit, and usually filled with plasma heated to thousands of degrees. They're only able to use it as a passage because of a power outage.
* In ''Symbiont'', second book of the ''Literature/{{Parasitology}}'' series, Sally tries escaping captivity in a mall this way. She manages to make her way through the system only to find her guard Ronnie patiently waiting for her at the end; once he saw that she'd entered the vent, he was able to casually stroll over to the exit grating while she slowly crawled her way through the duct.
* In the ''Literature/DredChronicles'', the PrisonShip Perdition has enough of these that Tam, Dred's advisor, can use them to eavesdrop on rival gangs. This allows him to provide Dred with useful intelligence, which both protects the gang and encourages Dred to rely on him.
* Creator/AndreNorton's ''Literature/UnchartedStars''. While on the pirate space station Waystar, Murdoc Jern's companion Eet enters the station's air ducts to do some snooping.
* In ''Literature/TalesOfDunkAndEgg'', it's revealed at the end that [[spoiler: Bloodraven had a few dwarfs sneak in through the privy to steal the dragon egg. Justified, seeing as they're dwarfs]].
* In ''{{Literature/Wander}}'', Wander and Dagger use the airvents [[spoiler:to escape from a nest of smilers set up in an abandoned prison]].
* The main characters use this method of travel at one point in ''[[Literature/HIVESeries H.I.V.E.]]''. The trope is played a bit more realistically than usual: the vents are not well-lit, the characters are concerned about the noise they're making, their route has some difficult paths and "obstacles", and there's some mention of the effect that crawling along a cramped space would have. When entering the vents, they have to use a screwdriver to remove the grille. The only reason they don't get lost is because of Otto's uncanny ability to remember their route. However, they oddly don't have any difficulty removing the exit grille (and due to the exit's location, there was no way they could have checked it beforehand). There's also no excuse for the lack of security cameras in the air vents, given they're big enough to crawl through.
* ''The Boy Who Knew Too Much'' by Roderic Jeffries. A youth breaks into an abandoned factory on a bet and finds himself pursued by masked thugs. The detective assigned to the case is reluctant to believe him, but then sees the marks where the kid dived down a chute and notes that he must have been pretty scared to have jumped in there without knowing where it came out.
* Subverted in ''Literature/TheManyLivesOfStephenLeeds''. Ngozi proposes this as a way of getting into a building with security cameras -- because she's seen it on TV -- but J.C., who is a military expert (sort of), lists several reasons why it's impossible. They do find a creative use for an air vent, but it only involves hiding a mobile phone inside.

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