Authors: Mina Carter
“Sorry babe, but you got it in one.”
“Jesus fucking Christ.” She ran a shaking hand through her hair. “Okay, say I believe you and somehow I’ve dropped into some kind of
Resident Evil
inspired nightmare…what happens now?”
If he could have kept the next words to himself, he would have. Blunt and forthright, he’d never been one to mince his words. He called a spade a spade. One part of him wanted not to tell her, to gather her in his arms and make a run for it so she didn’t have to deal with the horror the night was about to become.
If he did that, he could take her over the mountains. Find a town and let her go… As soon as the thought entered his mind, his wolf sat up and took notice. The thing didn’t bother much with his human thoughts, but the very idea of letting Lillian go, never seeing her again, had his wolf snarling a warning at him.
“We go down with the others. The re-an…the zombies come in. We kill them in a variety of bloody and gruesome ways. We try and stay alive until they’re all dead or the sun comes up. They’re slow in the sunlight. We can make a break for the mountains then. With us gone, the Project will leave this place alone and the people…your patients and staff…will be safe.”
She nodded. He could feel the question hanging between them. “What about me?” shone clearly in her chocolate, puppy-dog eyes. He ignored it, letting go of her hands to clap his own on his thighs and stand.
“Your choice, Lillian. You can go hide with the others in the secure wing. Or you can come with me, and see what the government is hiding from you.”
Chapter Nine
The gates of St. Mary’s were old and imposing. For many years, they had been a symbol of care and treatment for those in society deemed too unstable to deal with reality. Austere yet welcoming, they never closed. Any man, woman or child could walk through those gates and take the long walk up to the hospital set on the hill, and be sure of help once they reached their destination.
It was calm, peaceful. Tranquil.
That silence shattered as military helicopters screamed through the air toward them, so low that the backwash from their blades whipped the vegetation on either side of the old iron gates into a frenzy. Spotlights snapped on, trained onto the hospital on the hill.
The trap was sprung. Clean-up had arrived.
Within seconds, the ground rumbled, the sound growing in strength until heavy military transporters turned the corner. They rolled toward the gates, an unstoppable force. Metal squealed against stone as the first cut a deep grove into the gate’s stone support, leaving a wound of bright cream stone against the weather-beaten exterior.
The gates wobbled.
The second vehicle turned in, catching the damaged stone column as it passed. The stone swayed, wobbled. Finally, with the elegant surrender of a bygone era, it collapsed.
The gates of St. Mary’s fell.
“Jeez! Just
try
to be a little more careful, would ya?” Antonia snapped as the transporter rocked and rolled like a boat on the high seas. In the rear-view mirror, the stone wall toppled into the road, making the vehicle behind them swerve. It was that or half a ton of rock on the hood, something that would put a serious crimp in anyone’s day.
“Remember, we have a live payload. There’s no way I want to try and round up a dozen hungry RAs and stuff them back in Pandora’s box. Do you?” she directed at the young driver.
One of the new troops into camp, he was so young she’d have been surprised if he had to shave yet. And no one could miss the sparkle of interest in his eyes as he looked at her.
“I can handle anything, doll.” He winked at her as he swung the big vehicle around and onto the long drive up the hill toward the hospital. The muscles in his arms stood in high relief as he fought the steering wheel. “Seen it, done it and got the T-shirt to prove it.”
Despite herself, Antonia’s lips quirked. He was cute, very cute, but human. Which meant that if the things in the container behind them got out, he had a life expectancy of less than nine seconds.
Thinking of the container reminded her of what had happened the last time she got even marginally friendly with one of the human staff. Wiping the smile from her lips, she shot him a “don’t fuck with me” glare.
“Just be more careful. And it’s
Major
, not ‘doll’. Comprende?”
“Yes, sir! Sorry, sir. Won’t happen again, sir,” he replied briskly, snapping his eyes front and center.
She had to give it to him, he was
way
more intelligent than Fitzgerald. That guy wouldn’t get a hint if you put it in a truck and ran him over with it.
“Good.”
They trundled up the last incline, and the hospital suddenly stood in front of them. She shifted in her seat, leaning forward and looking up so she could see all of it. Four stories, it was an immense building, especially for this area. Imposing and dramatic, it stood on the hill in defiance of the elements and the desert fast encroaching from the west.
She tapped the discreet plug in her ear and started a running commentary to help with her report later. “Lights out, looks like the main power’s already offline.”
Thwap-thwap-thwap.
The sound of chopper blades overhead was accompanied by a dust storm, and the transport was bathed in bright white light.
“Gunships already onsite. Quarantine lines already in place.”
Opening her door, she stood on the first step and waved the chopper off. The turbulence from its blades whipped her hair into a frenzy around her face but she ignored it in favor of looking over the target location.
“Main reception looks all quiet—”
The flutter of movement tugged at the corner of her eye. Instantly she zeroed in on it, her eyes as sharp as a hawk.
“Movement, second floor. Looks like one of the hospital staff. Yeah, more people at the window. Not a threat. Get the secondary team around the other side and start the evacuation,” she ordered as she turned her attention back to the main entrance and ignored the civilians—hospital staff and patients alike—who were staring down at the military convoy in a mixture of fascination and fear.
The other wing and the main reception area were both dark. No movement at all. Her instincts told her that was where their problem would be. Nothing Lycans liked more than a dark hole to skulk in. Damn creatures loved to hide or ambush their prey. She hissed through her teeth as she folded herself back into the cab.
“Okay, swing around and back up to the entrance. When we drop the tail gate, I don’t want any of these fuckers getting loose,” she ordered, her voice sharp and no-nonsense. “Because if that happens, I’ll be burning more than a bunch of dogs and RAs here tonight.”
The courtyard at the front of the hospital exploded into a hive of activity. As the transporter started to back up, the other vehicles surrounded the area. A cordon of steel completed by commandos with enough weaponry to arm a small regiment. Their grim faces were all locked on the main entrances and the large transporter between them and it. She wasn’t sure which they were more wary of…the Lycans within the building or the RAs they were sending in to deal with them.
Shaking her head, she looked back at the entrance and started. The door stood open. Half a second later, the commandos registered the change as well and a host of rifles were aimed at the black gap within.
Winding her window down, her arm pumping in swift, circular motions, she bellowed, “Hold your fire!”
“Just hold it here for a second,” she told the driver next to her, and studied the door with a frown on her face.
Why had they opened the door? What was the point?
It was as if they were inviting entry, even though they had to know what the Project would send in after them.
Not much could kill a Lycan. A Blood could, and vice versa, but cross-infection was deemed too much of a risk. She’d only ever heard one whispered tale of it around the camp, and the story claimed that the subject had been eliminated instantly. If it was true, she didn’t blame them. Such a creature would be too powerful for even the Project to contain.
RAs couldn’t be re-infected by anything. Once the RA17 virus had taken hold, they were literally walking, rotting corpses. She shuddered again. While it was a nasty way to go, at least they weren’t aware. The initial reaction to the serum killed off most autonomic and all higher mental functions. For most anyway—the scientists had theorized that some subjects retained self-awareness, but at the first hint of it, they’d been put down and the serum adjusted. Since then they’d had no problems.
Something moved in the rectangle of darkness set into the pale stone of the building. She squinted, her enhanced eyesight struggling to bring whatever it was into focus.
It was a man. He stepped forward a little, just into her range of vision but still shrouded by darkness and unseen by the humans around her.
A Lycan. He was in human form, but she still knew what he was. His eyes burned with amber fire. Instinctively, her lips curled back from her fangs as her gaze riveted on him. He was possibly the most handsome man she’d ever seen. Even with the unnatural amber hue to his eyes, he was gorgeous. Everything feminine in her responded, even as her Blood instincts yammered at her to rip the door open, race across the distance that separated them and destroy him.
As though he could sense her internal struggle, he grinned, winked and blew her a kiss. Then he was gone, swallowed up by the darkness so even her Blood-enhanced eyes could no longer see him.
“Crap!”
“What? What did you see?” The driver asked, leaning against the steering wheel as he tried to look around her.
Without a word, she leaned back so his view was unimpeded. Air whistled between his teeth.
“Fuck. They opened the front door.”
“Bring it around. That’s it…back up, back up. Further…you could get a damn tank through there. Where’d you learn to drive…a go-cart track?”
A tense half hour later the stream of abuse from the soldier guiding the transporter back toward the now open door of the hospital was constant and scathing. Standing to one side, rifle held loosely in her hands, Antonia ignored it. It was just banter, the same the world over…get a group of soldiers in one place, and within two minutes they’d start insulting one another. Guaranteed.
“At least I
can
drive. You suck at it.”
She sighed and started to count, her eyes still on the open door. The darkness beyond was empty. The Lycan had gone. She knew that, and she knew that shortly they’d release the RAs to go hunt him and his friends down. Death by mindless cadaver. Hell of a way to go. So why did she feel like running in there and warning him?
“That’s not what your mom said when I was climbing off her this morning…”
And there it was. The “your mom” joke. Shaking her head, Antonia stepped forward. “If you’re all finished…let’s get this show on the road, shall we?”
There were rumblings and disgruntled expressions, but the chatter cut to a minimum as the transporter rolled the last couple of feet back toward the door and ground to a halt in a hiss of air-brakes. Silence settled for a second. The call had come through from the other team to confirm the hospital was empty of civilians. Which meant it was showtime.
“Lock and load, people!” she yelled as she looped her rifle across her back out of the way and started to undo the heavy bolts and deadlocks on the back of the transporter.
“Keep eyes on that door and stay back. Cutting loose the RAs!”
She jumped back on her last words, narrowly avoiding being clipped by the heavy metal of the ramp as it swung down. The edge slammed into the ground, the impact lifting a cloud of dirt and chipping the worn flagstones. After today, the courtyard would be the least of the hospital’s worries. They’d be more concerned with the wing she was about to burn down to contain the Lycan infection.
Grabbing the door strap from the side of the container, she wrapped it around her wrist and took three running steps. On the last, she swung herself into the air, using her body weight and momentum to open the metal door, all that was left between the RAs and freedom.
It squealed as it swung open. The low-level moaning they’d all been ignoring grew louder. Not the sound of a creature in pain, nor could it be likened to the noise cattle made. It was dull and monotonous, like the air escaping from a set of moth-eaten bagpipes with rotten insides. A broken sound, an unnatural sound, and it was getting louder.
Her feet hit the ground the other side of the vehicle, and she looped the restraining strap into the hook made for it.
“Perkins and Fletcher, get your asses front and center,” she yelled, but the two flame-thrower operatives were already moving. One on each side, they flanked the vehicle, tanks primed and pilot lights lit. Perkins on the left ignited and a stream of flame lit the courtyard up in shades of orange and yellow, restoring the colors of daytime for a few seconds.