The Judas Strain - James Rollins [133]
“Sir?”
“The entire deck. Clear it all out. Cabin by cabin.”
1:54 A.M.
STILL IN THE virology lab, Lisa listened to the spats of rifle fire.
Screams also reached her.
No one spoke.
Devesh finally returned. He seemed unfazed, only a little red in the face. He pointed his cane at Lisa. “Come with me. There is something I would like you to see.” He turned on a heel and stepped briskly away.
Lisa stood and followed, hurrying to keep up.
Devesh led her past the security station and down the next hallway.
It was a slaughterhouse. Blood splashed walls. Bodies lay rolled up against the walls, macerated by automatic gunfire.
Lisa swallowed hard, choking on the stench in the confined passageway.
As they passed along the hallway, the cabin doors to either side all lay open. She glanced inside and spotted more bodies, lifeless, twisted, bloody. Some had been shot while still handcuffed to their beds.
More gunfire blasted—not scattered, purposeful.
Farther down, a pair of guards exited a cabin, rifles smoking—then moved to the next room.
“You…you’re slaughtering the patients,” Lisa said.
“We’re winnowing the patient load, that’s all.” Devesh lifted an arm and vaguely motioned ahead. “This is the second breakout. An hour ago, a pair of patients escaped their restraints, biting off their own fingers in order to free themselves. They attacked their doctor, killing him before they could be stopped. In such a deranged state, these patients are strong, hyped on adrenaline, oblivious of pain.”
Lisa remembered the video footage of Susan Tunis’s husband, raving and attacking. It was starting here now, too.
Devesh glanced back to her. “From EEG studies, it seems you were right. The pathology appears to be some form of catatonic excitement, accompanied by deep psychotic breaks.”
More gunfire chattered, causing her to jump.
Responding to her reaction, he sighed. “This is for everyone’s safety. We’re seeing a rapid decline in condition among patients. Shipwide. With medical supplies already running low, we must be efficient. Once a patient devolves to this level of debilitation, they pose a grave physical threat to all around them and serve no real purpose.”
Lisa understood the sentiment behind his words. Devesh and the Guild were using the ship’s patients as the equivalent of living culture media for the Judas Strain, harvesting the deadly pathogens and storing them as potential bioweapons. And like any field after it had been thoroughly reaped, Devesh was plowing it over.
“Why did you bring me out here?” she asked, aghast.
“To show you this.”
Devesh stepped to the only cabin door that was still closed. He keyed it and held the door open for her.
A stronger stench struck her.
Lisa crossed the dark threshold, unsure what to expect. The hall lights revealed an inside cabin, similar to her own: a small bath, a couch, a television, and a small bed in back.
Behind her Devesh reached inside and flicked on the lights. The bulbs flickered, then steadied into a low thrum of fluorescents.
Lisa stumbled back, a hand at her throat.
A body lay draped across the bed, soaked into the bedding and cushions. His two bare legs were tied to the bedposts, arms to the headboard. But it appeared as if a bomb had gone off in his belly, hollowing out his abdomen. Gore splattered ceiling and walls.
A hand over her mouth, Lisa went cold, falling reflexively back to the clinical, her only safe haven.
Where were his internal organs?
“They were found feeding on him,” Devesh explained. “Patients whose minds had rotted beyond restraint.”
Lisa shivered once violently. She was suddenly too aware of her bare feet, her near-naked body under the robe.
“We’ve seen this before,” Devesh continued. “In this state of catatonic excitement, the virus appears to stimulate a ravenous appetite. Insatiable, in fact. We’ve watched one of these victims gorge himself to the point his stomach exploded. And still he continued to eat.”
Oh God…
Past the shock, Lisa needed another moment for the significance of his words to strike