The Last Bastion of the Living (The Last Bastion #1)(115)
“Shit,” Dwayne exhaled. “Shit.”
“It makes sense in a terrible way,” Commandant Pierce said angrily. “The SWD created its own thinking Inferi Scourge, used them to clear the valley, and will dispose of them to ensure there’s no risk of further infection. There was never any cure for Maria and the others. It’s all been a lie, hasn’t it, Dr. Curran?”
Dr. Curran shifted around in her chair so she could glare at the commandant. “I’ve been working on a cure since I successfully made Vanguard Martinez into the first viable thinking Inferi Scourge. All other scientists before me had failed, but she was perfection. I did lie to her and the others. I knew that there was a possibility that they would be destroyed, but I didn’t think it would really happen. Mr. Petersen swore that he would give me the time to develop a cure. I modified the virus. I was convinced I could discover a way to turn it off.”
“And did you?” Lindsey spat out. “Did you find your f*cking cure?”
Dr. Curran began to laugh, hysteria edging the sound. “I never had to find a cure!”
Dwayne gripped the armrests, leaning down to gaze into her face, his anger barely held in check. “You’re allowing them to die!”
“That’s not what I mean!” Dr. Curran waved her pad at them. “I received some very important intel today that no one but I has seen. The SWD doesn’t possess this information, not that it would change anything.”
“What are you talking about, you stupid bitch?” Lindsey shouted.
“Stand down, Rooney,” Commandant Pierce ordered, her expression curious.
Dwayne glared at the scientist. “Make yourself clear. Now.”
“The modified virus I gave the Inferi Boon was the closest we had to the original virus.”
“Original virus?” Commandant Pierce arched her eyebrows. “The Inferi Scourge Plague Virus?”
“No, no.” Dr. Curran poked Dwayne in the chest. “Get out of my face and I’ll tell you.”
Dwayne complied. It was probably the best idea because he was close to losing his temper. He tried to estimate how much time he might possibly have to start a public groundswell to bring the Inferi Boon back into the city. It would probably take them another few days to completely clear the valley after they killed the Anomalies.
“The original virus was a gift. We, humanity, didn’t realize it at the time. A gift that landed in the ocean and every nation on earth raced to discover what had fallen from the heavens and still remained visible on satellite and radar.”
“You’re talking about extraterrestrial?” Lindsey said in a dubious tone.
Dr. Curran nodded. “Oh, yes. It was. What was discovered in international waters was a capsule that contained several strange containers. One had the most beautiful fabric ever seen by human eyes. The others contained mineral specimens. And one contained vials of the virus.” Dr. Curran sighed. “The original virus.”
“I don’t remember any of this from history,” Petra said in a cross tone. “I don’t believe it.”
“Well, for once the nations of the earth cooperated in keeping humanity in the dark about what had been discovered. The Unified Nations of Earth Council determined that since there was no message within the capsule, we had to regard it as a possible weapon. The virus and other objects were secured at the Unified Nations of Earth Disease Control Laboratory. It wasn’t until nearly a decade later that it was discovered that the virus samples had been stolen one by one over the years. The Inferi Scourge Plague Virus appeared soon after. The virus I used to create the Inferi Boon was recovered from the laboratory of the United Eastern Seaboard States of America. According to the data recovered alongside the virus, it had only been modified slightly.”
“What is your point?” Lindsey shouted at her.
“My point, little girl, is that we were idiots!” Dr. Curran stood up and held out her pad. “We were fools! We began altering and experimenting with the virus before we even knew what it was meant to do!”
“There wasn’t a message. You said so!” Lindsey’s face flushed red beneath her blond hair.
“There was a message, wasn’t there?” Commandant Pierce said in a soft, dangerous voice.
“The fabric...scientists didn’t realize until much later, when it was far too late, that it was the fabric that held the message. The actual weave itself was a language. The virus was a gift. Immortality, perfect health. The minerals, building blocks for utopia. Somewhere, out there, we have benefactors.” Dr. Curran sighed wistfully. “Though if they have been watching for the last one hundred years, I’m sure they regret their gift. By the time we understood what the virus was for it was too late. No pure sample of the virus remained, and the Inferi Scourge were nearly done finishing us off.”
“The virus you gave the Inferi Boon was not altered as much, so what does that mean?” Caitlyn asked.
“It means that the virus is doing what it was originally intended to do. It’s restoring the Inferi Boon slowly back to life. I’ve been keeping close tabs on Maria Martinez without the SWD’s knowledge. No, I didn’t trust them either. The virus is restoring her, healing her. Already I have seen some dramatic changes in her scans that she may not even be aware of yet.”
“What does that mean for the rest of us?” Petra asked, her hand pressed to her breast. “We’re going to be immortal?”
Rhiannon Frater's Books
- Rhiannon Frater
- Pretty When She Kills (Pretty When She Dies #2)
- Pretty When She Destroys (Pretty When She Dies #3)
- Pretty When They Collide (Pretty When She Dies 0.5)
- Fighting to Survive (As the World Dies #2)
- Siege (As the World Dies #3)
- The Last Mission of the Living (The Last Bastion #2)
- The First Days (As the World Dies #1)
- Pretty When She Dies (Pretty When She Dies #1)
- The Living Dead Boy (The Living Dead Boy #1)