Resident Evil Volume 1 Chapter 33

Resident Evil Volume 1 Chapter 33
Yogesh


 nism. Neat trick, that. When she'd reached the area

where the pit had been, she'd thought that maybe

she'd gotten lost after all. The gaping hole had been

gone, smooth stone in its place. Looking up, she'd

seen the ragged edges of the pit suspended overhead;

the entire center section of the tunnel had been

flipped over, turned like a giant wheel by some miracle of engineering.

The doors had led to another straight, empty tun-

nel. A giant boulder stood at one end, and past that,

the room she was about to leave.

Jill grabbed the handle of one of the doors and

pushed it open, stumbling out into yet another

gloomy passage. She leaned back against the door and

breathed deeply, barely resisting the urge to brush

wildly at her clothes.

I can blow away zombies and monsters with the best

of 'em; show me a spider and I lose my freaking

mind.

The short, empty tunnel ran left to right in front of

her, a door at either end, but the door to her left was

set into the same wall as the one she'd just exited,

leading back toward the courtyard. Jill opted for the

one on the right, hoping that her sense of direction

was still intact.

The metal door creaked open and she stepped in,

feeling the change in the air immediately. The tunnel

split in front of her. To the right, a thickening of

shadow where the rock walls opened into another

corridor. But to her left was a small elevator shaft like

the ones in the courtyard. A warm, delicious wind

swept down and over her, the sweet air like a forgot-

ten dream.

Jill grinned and started for the shaft, seeing that the

lift's platform had been taken up. Chances were good

that she was still on the trail of Enrico's killer. . .

. . . but maybe not. Maybe he went the other way,

and you're about to lose him.

Jill hesitated, gazing wistfully at the small shaft-

and then turned around, sighing. She had to at least

take a look.

She walked into the stone corridor that stretched in

front of her, the temperature immediately dropping

back to the now familiar unpleasant chill. The tunnel

extended several feet to her right and dead ended. To

her left, a massive, rounded boulder like the one she'd

seen before marked the other end, a good hundred

feet away. And there was something small laying in

front of it, something blue. . .

Frowning, Jill walked toward the giant rock, trying

to make out the blue object. Halfway down the dim

tunnel was an offshoot to the left, and she recognized

the metal plate next to it as the same kind of mecha-

nism that had moved the pit.

She stepped into the small offshoot, examining the

worn stones at its opening. There was a small door to

her right, and Jill realized that the passage and room

could be hidden by way of the mechanism, the walls turned to block the entrance.

Jeez, it must've taken them years to set all this up.

And to think I was impressed with the house. . .

She opened the door and looked inside. A mid-

sized square room of rough stone, a statue of a bird on

a pedestal the only decoration. There was no other

exit, and Jill felt a sudden rush of relief as the

implications sank in. She could leave the under-

ground tunnels; the killer had to have left already.

Smiling, she stepped back out into the corridor and

started toward the giant rock, still curious about the

blue thing. As she got closer, she saw that it was a

book, bound in blue-dyed leather. It had been thrown

carelessly against the base of the stone, laying face

down and open. She slung the Remington across her

back and crouched down to pick it up.

It was a book-box. Her father had told her about

them, though she'd never actually seen one. There

was a cut-away section of pages behind the cover

where valuables could be hidden, though this one was

empty.

She flipped it closed, tracing the gold-leaf letters of

the title, Eagle of East, Wolf of West, as she started

back toward the elevator. Didn't sound like much of a

thriller, though it was nicely bound.

Snick.

Jill froze as the stone beneath her left foot sank

down a tiny bit-and she realized at the same instant

that the entire tunnel gently sloped away from where

she was standing.

-oh no-

Behind her, a deep, thundering sound of rock

grating against rock.

Dropping the book, Jill sprinted for cover, arms

and legs pumping as the rumbling grew louder, the

tripped boulder picking up momentum. The dark

opening of the offshoot seemed miles away -

-won 't make it, gonna die-

- and she could almost feel the tons of stone

bearing down on her, wanted desperately to look but

knew that the split-second difference would kill her.

In a final, desperate burst of speed she dove for the

opening, crashing to the floor and jerking her legs

in as the massive rock rolled past, missing her by

inches. Even as she drew in her next gasping breath,

the boulder hit the end of the tunnel with an explo-

sive, bone-jarring crunch that shook the underground

passage.

For a moment, it was all she could do to huddle

against the cold floor and not throw up. When that

passed, she slowly got to her feet and dusted herself off. The heels of her hands were abraded and both her

knees bruised from the running dive, but compared to

being smashed flat by a big rock, she thought she had

definitely made the right choice.

Jill unstrapped the Remington and headed for the

elevator shaft, very much looking forward to leaving

the underground behind and keeping her fingers

crossed that whatever came next, it wouldn't be cold.

And that there wouldn't be any spiders.

The basement was flooded, all right.

Chris stood at the top of a short ramp that led to the

basement doors, staring down at his own unsmiling

face reflected off of the shimmering water. It looked

cold. And deep.

After he'd left Rebecca, he'd continued down the

hall and found room 003 at the end, the ladder to the

basement level tucked discreetly behind a bookcase in

the neatly kept bedroom. He'd descended into a

chilled concrete corridor with buzzing fluorescent

lights overhead, a dramatic change from the plain

wood and simple style of the bunkhouse above.

At least I found the basement.

It appeared that killing Plant 42 was their only

option for escape after all. He'd seen no other exit

from the bunkhouse, which meant that it had to be

past the plant's room or else there was no back

door, a thought that left him distinctly unsettled. It

didn't seem possible, but then, neither did a carnivo-

rous plant.

And you won't find out until you get this over with.

Chris sighed, and stepped into the water. It was

cold, and had an unpleasant chemical smell. He

waded down to the door, the water sliding up over his

knees and finally stopping at mid-thigh, sloshing

gently. Shivering, he pushed the door open and

moved inside.

The basement was dominated by a giant glass-fronted

tank in the center of the room that extended

floor to ceiling, a large, jagged hole toward the bottom

right-hand side. Chris wasn't that good at judging

volume, but to fill the whole area with water, he

figured that the tank had to have held several thou-

sands of gallons.

What the hell were they studying that they needed

that much? Tidal waves?

It didn't matter; he was cold, and he wanted to find

what he needed to find and get back to dry land. He

started off toward the left, slowly, straining against

the push and pull of the gently lapping waves.

It was totally unreal, wading through a well-lit concrete room, though he supposed it was no stranger

than anything else he'd experienced since the Alpha

'copter had set down. Everything about the Spencer

estate had a dream-like feel to it, as if it existed in its

own reality far removed from the rest of the

world's . . .

Try nightmare-like. Killer plants, giant snakes, the

walking dead-all that's missing is a flying saucer,

maybe a dinosaur.

He heard a soft sloshing behind him and glanced

over his shoulder...

...to see a thick, triangular fin rise up from the

water twenty feet away and slide toward him, a

wavering gray shadow beneath.

Panic shot through him, an all-encompassing panic

that seared away rational thought. He took a giant,

running step and realized that he couldn't run as he plunged

face first into the cold, chemical water and came up

gasping, spluttering tainted liquid from his nose and

mouth, hoping to God Rebecca was right about the

virus having burned itself out.

He whipped his head around, eyes burning, search-

ing for the fin and saw that it had halved the distance between

them. He could see it now - a shark, its rippling,

distorted body sliding easily through the water, ten or

twelve feet long, its broad tail lashing it forward - the

black, soulless eyes set above its pointed grin.

-wet bullets misfire-

Chris stumbled away backwards, knowing that he

didn't stand a chance of outrunning it. Wheeling his

arms for balance, he sloshed heavily through the

dragging water, turning himself sideways and manag-

ing a few more steps before the shark was on top of

him...

...and he leaped to the side, dodging the animal

and slapping the water as violently as he could,

churning it into foaming waves. The shark slid past

him, its smooth, heavy body brushing against his leg.

As soon as it was past, Chris stumbled after it,

splashing wildly to keep up as he turned the corner in

the flooded room. If he could stay close enough, it

wouldn't be able to turn, to get at him - except

that in seconds, the shark would have the

room to maneuver. He could see two doors ahead on

the left but the giant fish was already leaving him

behind, heading toward the next corner to turn

around and come back for him.

Chris took a deep breath and plunged into the

water, knowing it was crazy but that he didn't have a

better chance. He stroked desperately toward the first

door, kicking off against the cement floor to propel himself forward in great, bounding leaps.

He hit the door just as the shark was turning up

ahead and grabbed for the handle, choking -

- and it was locked.

Shit, shit, shit!!!

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