Read Where the Dead Men Lie Online
Authors: James Harden
"Save it," Daniel snapped. "What happened here?"
"I already told you," Tariq replied calmly. "The soldiers were isolated. They went mad. There was an incident a few of days ago. One of the men was bitten. As a result he had to be euthanized. This death, this tragedy, pushed the men over the edge."
"And why are you here?"
"Two days ago we lost contact with this outpost."
"Who’s ‘we’?"
"The command center. The Fortress. There’s not many of us left. General Spears is the only military commander still here. The rest have fallen back to home soil."
"You mean the U.S. military have completely fallen back to the States?" Kenji asked.
"Yes. As far as I know they are setting up their defenses on the home front. They are making sure the Oz virus does not get in."
"Do they think the Oz Virus is going to go global, do they think it will reach that far?"
"Going to? It already has."
"What?"
"It is already spreading. There has been an outbreak in New Zealand."
I breathed a sigh of relief.
"We knew that." Jack said.
"You did?" Tariq asked. "How?"
"Well, we found a computer," Maria began to explain. "It belonged to one of the doctors who…"
"It doesn’t matter how we know," Daniel said cutting Maria off. "I told them. I’m a member of the U.S. Special Forces. I came in after the outbreak. After the nationwide quarantine."
Tariq nodded. "It is good to have you around. I am sure you have come in handy keeping these people alive."
"But New Zealand is hardly global," I pointed out. "It’s just as isolated as Australia. Maybe even more so."
"I agree," Tariq said. "But it will not be long. Asia will be next. And once it hits Asia, the rest of the world will soon be overrun. You can mark my words."
"How is it spreading?"
He shrugged his shoulders. "You have all seen it. You have all experienced it. The virus moves fast."
"Yeah it moves fast," Jack said. "But that’s because we were unprepared. No one knew what was happening. The rest of the world is on high alert, right? They’ll know what to do."
"Maybe not," I said. "The rest of the world is really in the dark about this. They won’t be prepared."
"So the U.S. military is just leaving Australia?" Jack asked. "They’re just giving up on us?"
"No, it is not like that." Tariq said.
"Really?" Jack continued. "Because that’s exactly what it sounds like. What about the navy? Is their blockade still being enforced?"
"I don’t know."
"How do you not know?"
"We’ve been cut off for quite some time now."
"How long?" Daniel asked.
"At least a month. Maybe more."
"And now we’re on our own?" Jack said.
"There is still a small but substantial force left," Tariq answered. "But yes, the majority of the military are either dead or they have left the country. If I was to hypothesize as to what the navy was doing, I’d say they would have left as well."
It sounded like Australia had been abandoned. Written off. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised.
"Do you know this man?" Daniel asked, pointing to Ben who was still unconscious.
Tariq looked at Ben. Shook his head. "No. I have never seen him before."
"He told us that he’d been stationed at the Fortress," Daniel said. "Apparently he worked closely with General Spears. How do you not know him?"
"I was working with the research team," Tariq answered. "General Spears kept everyone separate. Soldiers. Research teams. Civilians. Everyone was kept separate just in case there was an outbreak. General Spears was very paranoid about the virus. But can you blame him?"
Jack shook his head, kicked a chair over. "We are so screwed. The world. Humanity. We’re done for. Worldwide zombie apocalypse, here we come."
"No," Tariq said. "There is still hope."
Yeah we have Maria, I thought.
"What do you mean?" Daniel asked. "What hope?"
"There is a research team working at the Fortress. We are close to a break through. I mean, we have had our setbacks. But we are close."
"How are you going to keep working?" Kenji asked. "We’re completely cut off."
"We’ve got the Fortress," Tariq said. "We’ve got protection. We can finish our work. We can save this place."
Daniel still seemed unconvinced. "So, let me get this straight. The command center, the Fortress, lost contact with this station two days ago?"
"Yes. Correct."
"And so they sent you here to investigate? By yourself?"
"Not by myself. I accompanied a team of Green Berets. They had been working directly under the command of General Spears."
"What happened to the Green Berets?"
Tariq shook his head. "They came in the night. Took us by surprise. We thought we were in a clear area. Eventually, we ran out of ammo. We were surrounded. They just kept coming."
"And you were the only one who made it here alive?"
"Yes. Only just. I had to check myself over a couple of times just to make sure I had not been bitten."
"Wait. Why did they send you again?"
"I told you, I have had experience with the Red Cross. I came with the Green Berets as a precautionary measure. When we lost contact with this outpost, we assumed they had run into some trouble. We figured they would need medical attention. But the Green Berets…" he said trailing off.
"Go on." Daniel urged.
"None of them made it. And when I got here, the soldiers were on the brink of insanity," he said motioning towards the dead soldier. "And he had completely lost his mind."
Daniel pointed to the laboratory door, the one with the warning written in blood. "What’s in that room?"
"He said that's where he put them," Tariq answered. "He said he couldn't bring himself to kill any more of his brothers."
"Are they all in there?"
"I am not sure. I have not been in there. But I do not think it would be wise to open that door."
I totally agreed with Tariq on that point. Especially since the warning was written in blood.
Do not open. Infected inside.
You’d be mad to open it. Or suicidal.
"I doubt all the soldiers are in there," Tariq continued. "It is only a small facility. They would not physically fit."
"Do you have any idea of where the other soldiers would’ve gone?" Daniel asked.
"No. They have just vanished."
"Just vanished, huh?"
"Yes. There is no sign of them. It is like they have disappeared into the desert."
"Why were you locked up?" Daniel continued. "Why was this soldier guarding the door? Why did he tell us not to let you out?"
"I have no idea. You have to believe me. I do not even know that man. And when I tried to ask him what had happened…"
Daniel held his hand up, cutting him off. "He called you a liar. He told us not to trust you. Why would he say that?"
"I do not know. Please, that man, he had lost his mind. He was in a manic state."
Daniel looked at Kenji and shook his head. I think he was at his wits end.
Tariq on the other hand remained calm the whole time. His story sounded plausible. Maybe the dying soldier really was crazy with cabin fever.
"What are you even doing here in Australia?" Kenji asked taking over the questioning.
"I was flown out here, to the Fortress, when things got really bad."
"Why were you sent here?"
"I am a research scientist. I was sent here as part of Project Salvation. Our mission was to develop and manufacture an anti-virus. But unfortunately things have gone from bad to worse since I arrived. Nothing has gone to plan."
"What the hell is Project Salvation?" I asked.
"Project Salvation. The cure. It was supposed to be a solution for the outbreak. It was supposed to stop the plague."
"How?"
Before he could answer a soft alarm sounded.
"Whoa, what’s that?" Maria asked.
"That is the proximity alarm." Tariq informed us. "It is tripped when something moves through the motion sensors."
"Oh," I said. "Well, of course it’s going off. There are literally hundreds of infected outside."
"No, the motion sensors are set up at least ten miles away. So if it’s tripped, the soldiers have time to respond appropriately and prepare."
"So what is it?" Maria asked. "More infected?"
"Guys." Kenji said. "I think you should come take a look at this."
Kenji had moved into the communications room. It was only a small room connected to the mess hall. Actually it wasn’t much of a room at all. It basically consisted of one long table with a few computers. A rack of walkie-talkies, phones and what appeared to be satellite phones. The windows in the communications room had also been spray painted over. And again someone had scratched out a few small peep holes.
Kenji was looking at one of the computer monitors. It appeared to show black and white images of the desert.
"The surveillance cameras are attached to the motion sensors," Tariq said from out in the mess hall.
I couldn’t see anything. Just the barren desert. A few low-lying scrubs. Rocks.
"I don’t see anything," Maria said
"False alarm?" Daniel asked.
"No," Tariq answered. "You can control the cameras. If you would allow me..."
Daniel hesitated, not wanting to untie someone who was a potential threat.
"Come on," Kenji said. "We need eyes on the target. You know we do."
"Fine," Daniel said as he moved back out into the mess hall. He untied Tariq from the table but kept his hands tied.
Kenji moved out of the way and Tariq sat down in front of the computer and began typing furiously. Even with his hands tied at the wrists, he could still type amazingly fast.
The screen divided into four different images. With the arrows of the directional pad, Tariq panned each one back and forth.
"I still don’t see anything," Maria said.
"Wait," Daniel said. "Go back."
Tariq slowly moved one of the cameras. "There," he said.
"Black smoke," I whispered.
"Yes," Tariq said. "It is a rouge nano-swarm."
CHAPTER 40
The black cloud was moving in and around the cameras. Rising up in front of each lens and then moving away.
"Oh no," Maria said. "Not another one."
"Another one?" Tariq asked.
"We had a run in with a swarm in the town of Hope," I informed him.
"How did you evade it?"
"We didn’t," I said. "Ben, the guy you patched up, he had an EMP spear gun. We were able to lure the nano-swarm into an EMP field and take it out."
Tariq looked surprised. "Where and how did he come into the possession of an EMP gun?"
"I don’t know," I answered. "Ben had it with him."
"There are only ten of those particular weapons in existence. They are a prototype. Still in the testing phase."
"He must’ve stolen one from the Fortress," I said. "As you can maybe guess, he’s the kind of guy who plays by his own rules."
Tariq raised his eyebrow. "You are lucky to be alive."
"Yeah. I don’t think we would’ve made it if we didn’t have Ben’s help."
"How did you get the nano-swarm to come within range of the EMP?"
"Ah well, we acted as live bait."
The swarm continued to move in and around each camera.
"What’s it doing?" Kenji asked.
"Hunting." Tariq answered as he controlled the cameras.
"What?"
"Each swarm is made up of individual nano-bots. The main program function of each nano-bot is very basic."
"And what’s that?"
"It is a hunter-killer program. Search and destroy."
"Doesn’t look like it’s hunting," Jack said.
"Trust me, it is. The nano-bots were programmed to find the Oz virus in the host body and destroy it. Essentially, they were programmed to be apex predators. As you can see from this footage, they are executing their programming to perfection. And now that theses swarms have gone rouge, well, we’re essentially witnessing the evolution of the nano-bots. And it’s occurring at an extremely rapid rate."
"What the hell does that mean?"
"Now that the nano-virus has been released," Tariq continued. "Now that it is out in the real world, we are discovering the nano-bots have an amazing ability to adapt and evolve. To Learn."
"And that’s not a good thing?"
"No. Not at all."
"So wait a minute," Jack said. "They programmed these little robots to destroy the Oz virus, right?"