Resident Evil Volume 1 Chapter 32

Resident Evil Volume 1 Chapter 32
Yogesh


 Chris pushed at the knob, and the door swung open.

Warm, humid air flooded out of the shadowy room,

thick and tropical, but with a nasty undertone, like

the taint of spoiled fruit. Chris instinctively pushed

Rebecca behind him as he saw the walls of the

chamber. They were completely covered in the same

kind of strange, straggling growth that was in the

hall, but here, the scaling ivy was lush and bloated, a

bilious verdant green.

There was a faint whispering coming from inside

the room, a subtle sense of movement and Chris

realized that it was coming from the sickly plant

matter itself, the walls quivering in a weird optical

illusion as the draping tendrils crept and grew.

Rebecca started to step past him and Chris pushed

her back. "What, are you nuts? I thought you said this thing sucks blood!"

She shook her head, staring at the whispering walls.

"That's not Plant 42, at least not the part the report

talked about. Plant 42 is gonna be a lot bigger, and a

lot more mobile. I never did much with phytobiology,

but according to that study, we'll be looking for an

angiosperm with motile foliage."

She smiled a quick, nervous smile. "Sorry. Think of a great big plant bulb with ten to twenty foot vines

waving around it."

Chris grimaced. "Great. Thanks for putting my mind at rest."

They edged into the large room, careful not to walk

too closely to the hissing walls. There were three

doors besides the one they came through: one directly

across from the entrance and the other two facing

each other to their left, where the room opened up.

Chris led them toward the door opposite the entrance,

figuring it as the most likely to lead out of the

bunkhouse.

The door was unlocked, and Chris started to push it

open. . .

BAM!

The door slammed shut, causing them both to jump

back, weapons raised. A series of heavy, sliding

thumps followed, like someone on the other side was

kicking at the walls - except the sounds were every-

where, above and below the door's sturdy frame,

beating against every corner of the sealed room.

"Lots of vines, you said?" Chris asked.

Rebecca nodded. "I think we just found Plant 42." They listened for a moment, Chris thinking about

the kind of strength and weight it would take to slam

the door so solidly.

No kidding, bigger and more mobile . . . and maybe

blocking the only exit to this place. Terrific.

They backed away, turning into the open area and

looking at the other two doors. The one on their right

had the number "002" above it. Chris fished out the

keys he'd found and flipped through them, finding

one with a matching number.

He unlocked the door and stepped inside, Rebecca

behind him. There was a smaller door to the left that

opened to a bathroom, quiet and dusty. The room

itself was another bedroom, a bunk, a desk, a couple

of shelves. Nothing of interest.

There was another series of dull thumps from

behind the far wall and they quickly moved back into

the humid, whispering room, Chris fighting a growing

certainty that they were going to have to deal with the

plant if they wanted to get out.

Not necessarily, there could still be another way. . .

The way things had been going so far, he didn't

think so. From the shuffling zombies lurking in the

main house to the run through the courtyard, snakes

dropping from the trees, every part of the Spencer

estate seemed to be designed to keep them from

leaving.

Chris shook the negative thoughts aside as they

approached the shadowy chamber's final door, but

they came rushing back at the sight of the small green keypad set next to the frame. He rattled the knob but

there was no give. It was another dead end.

"Security lock," he said, sighing. "No way to get in without the code."

Rebecca frowned down at the pattern of tiny red

lights set above the numbered buttons. "We could just try numbers until we run across the right combina-

tion."

Chris shook his head. "You know what our chances are of just stumbling across the right..."

He stopped, staring at her, then fumbled the key

ring out of his pocket.

"Try three-four-five," he said, watching eagerly as Rebecca dutifully punched in the number.

Come on, Mr. Alias, don't fail us now.

The pattern of red lights flashed, then blinked out,

one by one. As the last tiny light faded, there was a

click from inside the door.

Chris grinned, pushing the door open and felt his

hope dwindle as he glanced around the tiny room.

Dusty shelves filled with tiny glass bottles and a rust

stained sink; not the exit he'd expected.

No, that would have been too easy, God knows we

can't have that...

Rebecca walked quickly to one of the shelves and

looked over the glass bottles, mumbling to herself.

"Hyoscyamine, anhydride, dieldrin . . ."

She turned back to him, grinning widely. "Chris, we can kill the plant! That V-Jolt, the phytotoxin - I can

make it here. If we can get to the basement, find the

plant's root."

Chris smiled back. "Then we can destroy it

without having to fight the damned thing! Rebecca,

you're brilliant. How long do you need?"

"Ten, fifteen minutes."

"You got it. Stay here, I'll be back as soon as I can."

Rebecca was already pulling down bottles as Chris

closed the door and jogged back toward the corridor,

past the whispering walls of shadowy green.

They were going to beat this place, and once they

got out, Umbrella was going down hard.

Barry was standing over Enrico's cold body,

Wesker's map crumpled in one hand. Jill had been

gone when he'd returned and rather than look for

her, he'd found himself unable to move, to even tear

his gaze away from the corpse of his murdered friend.

It's my fault. If I hadn't helped Wesker get out of the

house, you'd still be alive...

Barry stared miserably at Enrico's face, so filled

with guilt and shame that he didn't know what to do anymore. He knew he had to find Jill, keep her from

getting to Wesker, keep his family from being hurt,

but still, he couldn't seem to force himself to walk

away. What he wanted more than anything was to be

able to explain himself to Enrico, make him under-

stand how things had come to be the way they were.

He's got Kathy and the babies, Rico . . . what else

could I have done? What can I do but follow his orders?

The Bravo stared back at him with glazed, unseeing

eyes. No accusation, no acceptance, no nothing. For-

ever. Even if Barry continued to help the captain and

everything else turned out the way it was supposed to,

Rico Marini would still be dead and Barry didn't

know how he was going to live with the knowledge

that he was responsible...

Shots echoed through the tunnels. A lot of them.

Jill!

Barry's head snapped around. He reached for his

weapon automatically, the sounds spurring him to

action as anger flushed through his system. There

could only be one explanation; Wesker had found Jill.

Barry turned and ran, sick at the thought of another

S.T.A.R.S. member dead by Wesker's treacherous

hand, furious with himself for believing the captain's

lies.

The door in front of him slammed open and Barry

stopped dead in his tracks, all thoughts of Wesker and

Jill and Enrico wiped away by the sight of the crouch-

ing thing in front of him. His mind couldn't grasp

what he saw, his stunned gaze feeding him bits of

information that didn't make sense.

Green skin. Piercing, orange-white eyes. Talons.

It screamed, a horrible, squealing cry and Barry

didn't think anymore. He squeezed the trigger and the

shriek turned into a bubbling, choking gasp as the

heavy round tore into its throat and knocked it down.

The thing flailed its limbs wildly as blood spurted

from the smoking hole. Barry heard several sharp

cracks like breaking bones, saw more blood pour from

its fists as long, thick claws snapped off against rock.

Barry stared in mute astonishment as the creature

continued to spasm violently, burbling through the

ragged hole in its throat as if still trying to scream.

The shot should have blown its head off its neck, but

it was another full minute before it died, its frenzied

thrashings gradually weakening as blood continued to

pump out at a tremendous rate. Finally, it stopped

moving and from the dark, noxious lake it had

created, Barry realized that it had bled to death,

conscious until the end.

What did I just kill? What the fu...

From the tunnel outside, another shrieking howl

resounded through the clammy air and was joined

by a second, then third. The animal cries rose up,

furious and unnatural, the screams of creatures that

shouldn't exist.

Barry dug into his hip pack with shaking hands and

pulled out more rounds for the Colt, praying to God

that he had enough and that those shots he'd heard

before hadn't been Jill's last stand.

 

SIXTEEN

IT COULD HAVE ONCE BEEN A SPIDER, IF

spiders ever got to be the size of cattle. From the thick

layer of white web that covered the room, floor to

ceiling, it couldn't have been anything else.

Jill stared down at the curled, bristling legs of the

abomination, her skin crawling. The creature that had

attacked her by the courtyard entrance had been

terrifying, but so alien that she hadn't been able to

relate it to anything. Spiders, on the other hand . . .

she already hated them, hated their dark, bustling

bodies and skittering legs. This one had been the

mother of all of them and even dead, it frightened

her.

Hasn't been dead long, though . . .

She forced herself to look at it, at the slick puddles

of greenish ichor that dripped from the holes in its

rounded, hairy body. It had been shot several times

and from the noxious ooze that seeped from the

wounds, she guessed that it had still been alive and

crawling not twenty minutes ago, maybe less.

She shuddered and stepped away toward the double

metal doors that led out of the webbed chamber.

Whispering streams of the sticky stuff clung to her

boots, making it a struggle to move. She took careful,

deliberate steps, determined not to fall. The thought

of being covered in spider web, having it clinging to

her entire body . . . she shuddered again, swallowing

thickly.

Think about something else, anything.

At least she knew she was on the right track, and

close behind whoever had triggered the tunnel mecha-

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