As the creature launched itself at me, an idea flashed through my mind. Time did seem to slow down, just as the novels often described. But I knew it was partly because of my training. The abomination that was wanting my flesh took only two strides before it was upon me. I immediately grabbed it’s outstretched hands and pulled it towards me with every ounce of strength pent up inside of me. It’s guttural scream stopped for a few milliseconds as it must have realised it’s teeth and jaws were missing my head. I had let go of it’s hands and side-stepped while dropping to the floor. It smashed through the security door like it was balsa wood and carried on going through the glass window and out of the fifth storey howling all the way down. I was up and at the shattered window quicker than I thought possible, and heard a sickening crunch as the creature’s momentum plus Newton’s gravity and God’s earth met all at once.
I took deep gulping breaths and tried to collect my thoughts. I heard more and more screams and howling as the murder and slaughter spread through the building. I knew I had to do two things. First, I had to alert the authorities. Second, I had to get out of here quickly.
The smashed door behind me lay in tatters on the floor, so I found my way back into the receiving area of the lab easily. I still didn’t feel the glass in my shoulder until I felt some blood dripping down the side of my neck. But I didn’t have enough time to stop and sort it out now.
I climbed through the receiving window, careful this time not to cut myself on the shards of glass. I walked slowly to the door where I had vomited and slowly peered into the lab. Sprays of bright red blood splattered the walls and what remained of the containment tents. Those were torn to shreds in a few places. I heard a horrible gurgling and munching sound, and as I looked more carefully I could see another creature had it’s face buried in Sipho’s abdomen, loops of bowel lying on the floor around it, being ingested rapidly.
Suddenly, it stopped and sniffed the air. I held my breath and didn’t move an inch. I knew I had to get to my part of the lab to get my car keys and cell phone, but that creature would easily see me if I walked there. After a few seconds, which felt like hours, it lowered it’s head again and continued it’s feast. Slowly I stepped back into the admin office and quietly removed my shoes. I would come back for them after I had accomplished my first mission.
The creature was still feasting when I got back to the doorway, and took advantage of it’s preoccupation and the noise it was making by quietly darting across into the lab and crouched down behind a work bench. I ducked my head down and could see the thing feasting.
Suddenly it stopped and it’s head disappeared and I lost visual on it, but I heard that sniffing once again. It was then that I noticed a lab technician hiding behind and underneath the bench in the next row down. He was shaking visibly and his eyes widened when he saw me. I slowly raised my finger to my lips to indicate to him to stay dead still. But he kept shaking and whispered “Help.” I kept my finger on my lip indicating to him to shut up and with my other hand made a sign to calm down. But he didn’t seem to understand and slowly crept out from under the bench. I shook my head as vigorously as I dared to, and he froze. There was a heavy crunch immediately above him. My vision was obscured but I knew with terror that the creature had jumped onto the bench and was directly above the technician. His face froze in an expression of abject terror, and before I could move, there was a hellish howl and the creature jumped on top of the tech, grabbed his head and literally ripped it right off. You may not believe me, but that was how strong those monsters are. The tech didn’t even have enough time to scream and I made a quiet note that at least he hadn’t suffered in his death. The creature grabbed the body of the tech, jumped off the bench and walked away from me, dragging the corpse behind him. I then realised the creature had been that second paramedic, but I was fascinated in a horrified kind of way that he was now twice his original size, and his skin now looked almost reptilian.
He disappeared around the far corner of the lab and I sat there for a few minutes, slowly breathing in and out, trying to slow my racing heart. But the adrenaline still flowed and I knew I needed to use it to good effect.
Slowly I got out from behind the bench and glanced towards my work area, then quickly scanned the room, and made my way across the lab. There was blood and grey matter and limbs lying all over the place, so I had to tread very carefully. Having got to my work bench, I put on my coat and felt for my cell phone in it’s inner pocket. I pulled it out and was relieved to note that there was still signal.
I had spent three years in the military after my medical studies, and the time was spent in Military Intelligence. And I still had high-up clearance because of my regular one month per year that I still spent on active duty in the army. It was only for that reason that I knew exactly who to phone and what to say. I dialled the secret coded number that automatically scrambled my already-secure smartphone, and lifted it to my ear, still keeping an ear and eyes out for any trouble that might be heading my way.
It rang once only. There was silence on the other end, and I spoke my code word into the phone.
“Delta-Bravo-Foxtrot-Lima Mirage.”
There was a small click on the other end and then a woman’s voice said, “Authenticate - Bravo-1-9-3-3.”
I quickly did the decipher in my head.
“Camelot.”
“Good morning General Smit. Please hold for Cheetah.”
There was a pause of about 5 seconds.
“Frank, I suppose this isn’t a curtesy call?” The voice was that of the Chief of Military Intelligence, General Strongman Mkhize.
“No sir. We have a code Red Vector.” There was a sharp intake of breath at the other end.
“Where are you now?”
“At Albert Luthuli. There must have been a virus in the blood of the specimens we acquired.”
“Yes, I had a horrible feeling about this when you informed me about the discoveries. Sometimes things that are buried should remain buried. How is Rachel taking it?”
I paused, my voice suddenly quivering “She was the first to turn.” I paused again. “Strongman, remember when we found those bio-weapons in Angola in 2009? The characteristics are similar. But, my friend, these…..creatures, are beyond anything….. Their musculature doubles in size within five minutes, and they deliberately leave some victims uninjured except for a bite. They know they want to spread the infection, or at the very least there is some form of lower intelligence. The last one I saw had skin that started to change to look almost reptilian, but I can’t be sure.”
“I’m so sorry Frank. Rachel was a real gem. I know you have this level of clearance, but I must tell you something that is a few levels above Top Secret. There have been the same reports coming in from my colleagues in the United States and Britain. All the parts of the specimens are infected with some sort of virus. One of the lab techs in Houston managed to escape the laboratory with a sealed sample, and rapid testing in the field showed them that this virus is related to the Rabies virus strain 1334, the Russian Wolf Strain. But there is a whole extra sequence of RNA that we have never seen before. I’ve lost contact with my counterpart in Houston, but we are trying to re-establish communication.”
“Strongman, this thing needs to be contained, and you are going to need to weaponise our soldiers with everything you’ve got. These things are fast and beyond dangerous. They are terrifying.”
My Commander paused again. Then he said, “I probably shouldn’t be telling you this, but when communications went silent with the US, General George Meade told me that if their containment procedures don’t work….” He stopped again. Then continued with a strained and hoarse voice, “…then they were going to use Ultra Containment Means.”
I gasped when I heard this. “They can’t use Nukes to contain this!” I tried not to raise my voice. “That’s suicide.”
“Frank, if they don’t, it will be suicide anyway. Another thing I didn’t tell you was that they received some samples of the specimen before any of you did, and that the compound where they were running tests in Pensacola was overrun within about 5 minutes of first exposure. General Meade told me that when he lost contact with Admiral Kendridge, the southern districts of Pensacola were already overrun and the city was in flames.”
“Why weren’t we informed of this?! They could have prevented this from happening! Rachel might still be alive, at least be herself!” My voice was beginning to get louder, and I knew I was putting myself at risk. But I was spitting mad.
“Frank, calm down. You need to keep yourself safe. Where exactly are you at the moment?”
I took a few deep breaths and tried to calm myself down and answered him, telling him exactly where I was.
“I can get a chopper to the roof of the hospital in about fifteen minutes, Frank. They are at SAAF base on the South Coast near Umlazi. They are on 24-hour call and can be there quickly.” Before I could answer him, I heard him partly cover his receiver and speaking into another device. It only took about thirty seconds. “Frank, be on the roof at 08h20. They are coming in hot and are going to expect hostiles. They will include a unit of Para-Bats.” The Para-Bats had earned a notorious reputation during the South African bush war on the Angolan border some thirty years prior to this, but their extremely high standards and training had kept them at the top of their game and having worked with them during my time in military Intel I knew they were the meanest SOBs in the business. The US Navy SEALs had nothing on these guys. So I knew I was in good hands.
“Frank, we need to get you to safety because you are the only one in South Africa that has any know-how, and you still have access to some samples I presume?” It didn’t really sound like a question but I gave the affirmative anyway. “Secure the samples and make sure you are secure from them as well! Be there. You’ve now got twelve minutes.”
I had already been carefully placing pieces of the femur into high-tensile strength test-tubes, and securing them using our vacuum machine while he was talking, and had also made my way warily across the lab to where Rachel had been working, and had retrieved a tube which obviously contained blood drawn from her specimens and placed them all inside a special double-walled, auto-cooled, high-tech vacuum pack that was usually used for organ transport for organ donation.
“I’ve got them under lock and key, Strongman. I’m on my way to the roof already.”
“Be safe, Frank. Let me know when you get back to base.”
He cut off the connection before I could ask what the containment procedures were going to be.