Resident Evil Volume 1 Chapter 31

Resident Evil Volume 1 Chapter 31
Yogesh


 "All I want you to do is keep Jill busy, keep her and

anyone else you run into away from the labs, at least

for a little while. You'll be saving her life and I

swear to you that as soon as I get what I need, you and

your family will never hear from me again."

He waited. And when Barry finally spoke, Wesker

knew he had him.

"Where are the labs?"

Good boy!

Wesker lowered the gun, keeping his expression

blank just in case Barry had good night vision. He

pulled a folded paper out of his vest and slipped it

into Barry's hand, a map from the tunnels to the first

basement level.

"If for some reason you can't keep her away, at least

go with her. There are a lot of doors with locks on the

outside down there; worse comes to worst, you can

lock her up until it's over. I mean it, Barry, no one

else has to get hurt. It's all up to you."

Wesker stepped back quickly, reaching for the lever

with the six-sided tip that he'd left next to the

generator. He watched Barry for a few seconds longer,

saw the sag in the big man's shoulders, the submissive

hang of his head. Satisfied, Wesker turned and walked

out of the room. On the very slight chance that any of

the S.T.A.R.S. made it to the lab, Mr. Burton would

ensure that there wouldn't be any more trouble.

He hurried back through the entrance tunnel, si-

lently congratulating himself on getting things back

under control as he headed toward the first passage

mechanism. He'd have to move fast from here on out;

there were a few things he'd neglected to mention to

Barry - like the experimental security detachment

that would be released into the tunnels once he turned

that lever for the first time. . .

Sorry, Barry. Slipped my mind.

It would be interesting to see how his team fared

with the 121s, the Hunters. Watching the S.T.A.R.S.

pit their strength and agility against the creatures

would be quite a show and sadly, one that he'd have

to miss.

It was too bad, really. The Hunters had been caged

for a long time; they'd be very, very hungry.

 

FIFTEEN

BARRY HAD BEEN GONE FOR TOO LONG.

Jill had no idea how extensive the tunnels were, but

from what she'd seen they all looked alike. Barry

could be lost, trying to find his way back. Or he could

have found the murderer, and without any backup ...

He might not come back at all.

In any case, staying put wasn't going to help any-

thing. She stood up, taking a last look at the Bravo's

pale face and silently wishing him peace before walk-

ing away.

What did he find out that got him killed? Who was it?

Enrico had only managed to get out that the traitor

was a he, but that didn't exactly narrow things down;

except for herself and the rookie, the Raccoon

S.T.A.R.S. were all male. She could rule out Chris,

since he'd been convinced from the start that there

was something weird going on and now Barry,

who'd been with her when Marini died. Brad Vickers

simply wasn't the type to do anything dangerous, and

Joseph and Kenneth were dead - which leaves

Richard Aiken, Forest Speyer, and Albert Wesker.

None of them seemed likely, but she had to at least

consider the possibility. Enrico was dead. And she no

longer doubted that Umbrella had one of the

S.T.A.R.S. in their pocket.

When she got to the door, she quickly leaned down

and tightened her damp boot laces, preparing herself.

Whoever had shot the Bravo could have just as easily

taken her and Barry out - and since he hadn't, she

could only figure that he didn't want to kill anyone

else, and wouldn't be looking for more targets. As-

suming that he was still in the underground system,

she'd have to be as quiet as possible if she wanted to

find him; the tunnels were perfect sound conductors,

amplifying even the tiniest sound.

She eased open the metal door, listening, and then

edged out into the dim tunnel, staying close to the

wall. In front of her, the corridor was unlit. She opted

to head back the way she'd come instead; the darkness

was a perfect spot for an ambush. She didn't want to

find out she was wrong about the killer's intentions by taking a bullet.

A low, grinding rumble reverberated through the

heavy stone walls, a sound like something big moving.

Jill instinctively used the sound as cover, taking

several sliding steps forward and reaching the next

metal door just as the rumbling stopped. She slipped

back out into the tunnel where she'd run into Barry,

gently closing the door behind her.

What the hell was that? It sounded like an entire

wall moving!

She shuddered, remembering the descending ceil-

ing of that room in the house. Maybe the tunnels were

rigged, too; she needed to watch every step. The idea

of being crunched to death by some bizarre mecha-

nism underground. . .

Like the one next to that pit, with the hexagonal hole?

She nodded slowly, deciding that she needed to go

take another look at those doors she couldn't get to

before. Maybe the killer had the tool it required, and

the noise she'd heard had come from him operating it.

She could be wrong, but there was no harm in

checking.

And at least I won't get lost.

She reached for the door that would lead her back

and stopped, her head cocked to catch the strange

sound coming from the tunnel behind her. It was

a rusty hinge? Some kind of a bird, maybe? It was loud,

whatever it was. . .

Thump. Thump. Thump.

That sound she knew. Footsteps, headed in her

direction, and it was either Barry or someone built

like him. They were heavy, plodding, but too far

apart, too . . . deliberate.

Get out of here. Now!

Jill grabbed at the metal latch and ran into the next

tunnel, no longer caring how much noise she made.

Although she sometimes misread them, her instincts

were never wrong and they were telling her that

whoever or whatever was making that sound, she

didn't want to be there when it showed up.

She took several running steps down the stone

corridor, away from the ladder that led back to the

courtyard and then forced herself to slow down,

taking a deep breath. She couldn't just go sprinting

ahead, either; there were other dangers than the one

she'd left behind.

Behind her, the door opened.

Jill turned, raising her Beretta and stared in hor-

ror at the thing standing there. It was huge, shaped

like a man, but the resemblance stopped there. Na-

ked but sexless, its entire muscular body was covered with a pebbled, amphibious skin, shaded a dark

green. It was hunched over so that its impossibly long

arms almost touched the floor, both its hands and feet

tipped with thick, brutal claws. Tiny, light-colored

eyes peered out at her from a flat reptilian skull.

It turned its strange gaze toward her, dropped its

wide - hinged jaw and let out a tremendous, high-

pitched screech like nothing she'd ever heard before,

the sound echoing around her, filling her with mortal

terror.

Jill fired, three shots that smacked into the crea-

ture's chest and sent it reeling backwards. It stum-

bled, fell against the tunnel wall and with another terrible shriek it sprang at her, pushing off the stones with powerful legs,

its claws outstretched and grasping.

She fired again and again as it flew toward her, the

bullets tearing into its puckered flesh, ribbons of dark

blood coiling away and it landed in a heaving crouch

only a few feet in front of her,

screaming, one massive arm snaking

out to swipe at her legs. A musky, moldy animal smell

washed over her, a smell like dark places and feral

rage.

-Jesus why won't it die-

Jill trained the Beretta on the back of its skull and

emptied the clip. Even as the green flesh splattered

away and bone splintered, she continued to fire, the

hot slugs ripping into the pulpy, pinkish mass of its

brain.

Click. Click. Click.

No more bullets. She lowered the weapon, her

entire body shaking. It was over, the creature was

dead, but it had taken almost an entire clip, fifteen

nine-millimeter rounds, the last seven or eight at close

range. . .

Still staring at the fallen monster, she ejected the

empty magazine and loaded a fresh clip before hol-

stering the Beretta. She reached back and unstrapped

the Remington, taking comfort in the solid, balanced

weight of the shotgun.

What the hell were you people working on out here?

It seemed that the Umbrella researchers had invented

more than just a virus - something just as deadly, but

with claws. . .

And there could be more of them.

She'd never had a more horrifying thought. Hold-

ing the Remington close, Jill turned and ran.

Chris and Rebecca walked down a long, wooden

hallway, warily glancing up with every other step.

There was what looked like dried, dead ivy poking out of every crack and crevice where the walls met the

ceiling, a bone-colored growth that scaled across the

planks like a fungus. It looked harmless, but after

what Rebecca had read to him about Plant 42, Chris

kept himself ready to move quickly.

After going through the rest of the papers in the

trunk, Rebecca had come up with a report on some

kind of an herbicide that could apparently be mixed

in Point 42, called V-Jolt. She'd brought it along,

though Chris doubted it would be useful. All he

wanted was to find the exit, and if they could avoid

the killer plant, so much the better.

The front hall had been clear of the growth, though

Chris wasn't prepared to call it secured. Besides the

two bedrooms by the front door, there had been a rec

room that had been distinctly creepy. Chris had

looked inside and immediately felt his internal alarms

going off, though he hadn't known why; there'd been

no danger that he could see, just a bar and a couple of

tables. In spite of the seeming calm, he had closed the

door quickly and they'd moved on. His gut feeling

was enough of a reason to leave it alone.

They stopped in front of the only door in the long,

meandering stretch of hallway, both of them still

glancing nervously at the scaling ivy near the ceiling


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