Resident Evil Volume 2 Chapter 22


 He nodded toward the journal she still held. "They found the room, but didn't touch anything. Did you

find anything else useful?"

She nodded, relieved by the news and glad for the

change of subject. "It looks like there are only four Trisquads, though the entry that mentioned it is six

months old."

David looked relieved. "That's excellent. John and Karen had another encounter outside of D, managed

to get five of them - that means there may only be one

team left."

They pulled chairs away from the small tables that

lined the walls, forming them in a loose semi-circle in

the middle of the room. David stayed standing, ad-

dressing them solemnly.

"I'd like to do a quick recap, to make certain we're

all on the same page before we go any further. In

short, this facility was used for T-Virus experimenta-

tion and has been taken over by one of the researchers

for reasons unknown. The other workers have been

killed and the offices purged of incriminating evi-

dence. Rebecca believes that the biochemist Nicolas

Griffith is responsible, and the fact that the grounds

are still being patrolled suggests that he's alive, some-

where in the compound - though I don't feel we

should concern ourselves with trying to find him.

We've already completed two of the tests given to us

by Dr. Ammon, through Trent, and my hope is that

the 'material' he has hidden for us will be the evi-

dence we need to formally charge Umbrella with

criminal activity."

He folded his arms and started to pace slowly as he

talked, glancing between them. "Obviously there's already plenty of proof that illegalities have occurred

here; we could leave now and turn the matter over to

federal authorities. My concern is that we still don't

have enough hard evidence on Umbrella's involve-

ment other than the computer system's software

and the journal that Steve and Rebecca found, Um-

brella's name isn't on anything, and both of those

could be explained away. My feeling is that we should

continue with the tests and find whatever Dr. Ammon

meant for us to have before we evac, but I want to

hear from each of you about it first. This isn't an

authorized op, we're not following orders here, and if

you think we should go, we go."

Rebecca was surprised, could see that the others felt

the same by their expressions. David had seemed so

certain before, so enthusiastic about their chances.

The look on his face now told a different story. He

seemed almost apologetic about wanting to continue,

and looked as though he wanted for one of them to suggest otherwise.

Why the change? What happened?

John spoke first, glancing at the rest of them before

looking at David. "Well, we've made it this far. And if there's only one more group of zombies out there, I

say we finish up."

Rebecca nodded. "Yeah, and we still haven't found the main lab, we don't know why Griffith did this -

- whether he suffered a psychotic break or is actually

hiding something. We may not find out, but it's worth

a look. Plus, what if he destroys more evidence after

we've gone?"

"I agree," Steve said. "If the S.T.A.R.S. are as

deeply involved with Umbrella as it looks, we're not

going to get another chance. This may be our only

opportunity to dig up a connection. And we're al-

ready so close, the third test is right here - we do that

one, we're one step away from finishing."

"I'm up for it," Karen said softly.

At the strained sound of her voice, Rebecca turned

to look at her, noticing for the first time that Karen

didn't look so good. Her eyes were bloodshot, her

complexion almost a pallor.

"Are you okay?" Rebecca asked.

Karen nodded, sighing. "Yeah. Headache."

Must be a migraine, she looks like hell. . .

"What is it, David?" John asked abruptly. "What's eatin' you? You know something you're not telling

us?"

David stared at them for a moment, then shook his

head. "No, nothing like that. I just - I have a bad feeling. Or rather, a feeling that something bad is

going to happen."

"Little late, don'tcha think?" John said, grinning. "Where were you when we got into the raft?"

David half-smiled in response, rubbing the back of

his neck. "Thank you, John, I'd almost forgotten. So, it's decided then. Let's solve our next puzzle, shall

we? Oh, Rebecca, take a look at Karen's eye while

we're at it, it's giving her some trouble."

They stood up and moved toward the back of the

room, for the table in the northwest corner marked

with a blue nine. Steve and Rebecca had already

looked when they'd found the room, though there was

no clue as to what the test was - a small, blank

monitor screen with a ten-key hooked to it sat on the

metal table, an enigma.

Rebecca motioned for Karen to sit on the chair in

front of test ten, the purpose of which also escaped

her - it consisted of a circuit board wired to a plank

and what looked like a pair of tweezers connected to it by a black wire. She bent down to take a look,

frowning. The woman's right eye was extremely irri-

tated, the pale blue cornea floating in a sea of red. Her

eyelid had a bruised, swollen look.

She turned to ask for David's flashlight and saw

that as he sat down in front of the scheduled test, the

screen flickered on, several lines of type appearing in

the center of the monitor.

"Some kind of motion sensor..." Steve started to say, but David held up his hand suddenly, reading

aloud what had appeared on the screen in a rapid,

anxious voice.

" 'As I was going to Saint Ives, I met a man with seven

wives, the seven wives had seven sacks, the seven sacks

held seven cats, the seven cats had seven kits; kits, cats,

sacks, wives, how many were going to Saint Ives?'"

There was a digital readout on the screen, showing

00:49 and counting down. In the time it had taken

David to read the question, eleven seconds had al-

ready ticked off the clock.

David stared at the screen, his thoughts racing

furiously as the team leaned in behind him. Tension

radiated from them, and David felt a sudden prickle

of sweat break out across his forehead.

Don't count, that was the clue. But what does it

mean?

"Twenty-eight," John said quickly. "No, wait,

twenty-nine, including the man..."

Steve cut him off, talking just as fast. "But if they had seven kittens each, that would be forty-nine plus

twenty-one, seventy, seventy-one with the man."

"But the message said don't count," Karen said. "If you're not supposed to count - does that mean don't

add, or ... wait, there's the man with the wives and the

speaker, that's another one..."

Thirty-two seconds had elapsed. David's hand hov-

ered over the key pad.

Think! Don't count, don't count, don't...

"One," Rebecca said quickly. " 'As I was going to Saint Ives' - it doesn't say where the man with the

wives was going. That's what it means, the clue -

- don't count anyone except the one who was going to

Saint Ives!"

Yes, it makes sense, a trick question...

They had twenty seconds left.

"Anyone disagree?" David asked sharply.

No answer. David hit the key, entered it...

... and the countdown stopped, sixteen seconds to

spare. The screen turned itself off. From somewhere

overhead, the now familiar chime sounded.

David exhaled, leaning back in the chair.

Thank you, Rebecca!

He turned around to tell her as much, but she was

already bending to examine Karen's eye, fixated on

her patient.

"I need a flashlight," she said, barely glancing around as John handed his to her. She turned it on,

shining it into Karen's eye as the rest of them looked

on silently, watching them. Karen didn't look well;

there were dark circles under her eyes, and her skin

had gone from pale to almost sickly.

"It's pretty inflamed ... look up. Down. Left and

right? Does it feel like there's something rubbing it, or

is it more like a burn?"

"Actually, more like an itch," Karen said. "Like a mosquito bite times ten. I've been scratching it,

though, that might be why it's so red."

Rebecca turned off the torch, frowning. "I don't see anything. The other one looks irritated, too ... did it

just start itching all of a sudden, or did you touch it,

first?"

Karen shook her head. "I don't remember. It just started itching, I guess."

A look of sharp, almost violent intensity flashed

across Rebecca's face. "Before or after you were in room 101?"

David felt a cold hand clutch at his heart.

Karen suddenly looked worried. "After."

"Did you touch anything while you were in there,

anything at all?"

"I don't. . ."

Karen's red eyes widened in sudden horror, and

when she spoke, it was a breathless, quivering whis-

per. "The gurney. There was a bloodstain on the gurney and I was thinking about ...I touched it. Oh,

Jesus, I didn't even think about it, it was dry and I, my

hand wasn't cut and oh my God, I got a headache right

after my eye started itching."

Rebecca put her hands on Karen's shoulders,

squeezing them tightly. "Karen, take a deep breath. Deep breath, okay? It may be that your eye just itches

and you have a headache, so don't jump to conclu-

sions here, we don't know anything for sure."

Her voice was low and soothing, her manner direct.

Karen blew out a shaky breath and nodded.

"If her hand wasn't cut..." John started ner-

vously.

Karen answered him, her pale features composed

but her voice trembling slightly. "Viruses can get into the body through mucous membranes. Nose, ears ...

eyes. I knew that. I knew that but I didn't think about

it, I... wasn't thinking about it."

She looked up at Rebecca, and David could see that

she was struggling to maintain her composure. "If I am infected, how long? How long before

I become ... incapacitated?"

Rebecca shook her head. "I don't know," she said softly.

David felt as though a raging blackness had envel-

oped him, a cloud of fear and worry and guilt so vast

that it threatened to overwhelm his ability to move,

even to think.

My fault. My responsibility.

"There's a vaccine, right?" John asked, his dark gaze darting between Karen and Rebecca. "There's a cure, wouldn't they have a shot or something here if

someone got it by accident? They'd have to, wouldn't

they?"

David felt a sudden surge of desperate hope. "Is it possible?" he asked Rebecca quickly.

The young biochemist nodded, slowly at first but

then eagerly. "Yeah, it's possible. It's probable, they created it."

She looked at David seriously, urgently. "We have to find the main lab, where they synthesized the virus,

and quickly. If they developed a cure, that's where the

information would be ..."

Rebecca trailed off, and David could see what she'd

left unspoken in her troubled gaze; if there was a cure.

If Dr. Griffith hadn't taken the information there, too.

If they could find it in time.

"Ammon's message," Steve said. "In that note, he said we should destroy the lab, maybe he left us a

map, or directions."

David stood up, his hope building. "Karen, are you feeling well enough to ..."

"... Yes," she said, cutting him off, standing up. "Yes, let's go."

Her red eyes were bright with fervent intensity, a

mix of despair and wild hope that made David's heart

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