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“Looks like we’re going to—“

A loud noise from the balcony cut her off, and they both looked up, Sherry instinctively moving closer to Claire as the noise came again. It sounded like foot-steps, but too slow and too loud to be normal—

• and Sherry saw a man in a long, dark coat walk into view, and felt her mouth go dry with fear. He was a giant, maybe as tall as ten feet, and his bald skull gleamed as white as a dead fish belly. She couldn’t see him clearly because of the angle, but she could see enough—and she could feel that he was bad, that there was something very wrong and bad about him. It radiated off of him like sickness.

“Claire?” she squeaked, her voice breaking as the giant man stalked across the balcony, as he started to turn toward them—slowly, so slowly, and Sherry didn’t want to see his face, didn’t want to see the face of a man that could frighten her so deeply by just walking onto a balcony—

“Run!”

Claire grabbed her hand and the two of them ran, splashing through the thick water toward the sealed door. Sherry concentrated on not falling, on praying that the door would open—

• don’t be locked, don’t be locked!

• and on not looking back, not wanting to see what the giant, bad man was doing. The door was close but it seemed to take forever, each second stretched out as they fought against the weight of the cold and oily water.

They stumbled to the hatch and Claire found its control, slamming at the button in a kind of panic that made Sherry even more afraid. The door split in the middle, one half sliding up into the ceiling and the other slipping beneath the rippling waves. Sherry didn’t look back, but Claire did. Whatever she saw made her leap through the door, pulling Sherry off her feet and hurtling into the long, dark tunnel that lay behind the hatch. As soon as they were through, Claire fumbled at the wall and the door slid closed behind them, sealing them into the dripping darkness.

“Don’t move and be quiet,” Claire whispered, and in the very dim light that came from somewhere up ahead, Sherry could see that she was holding the gun out in front of her, trying to search the heavy shadows for any new threats. Sherry obeyed, her heart pound-ing, wondering who, what that man had been—it was the man Claire had asked her about before, that much was obvious, but what was he?

People didn’t get that big, and Claire had been scared, too—

Clink.

A metal noise, soft and muffled from the wall behind her—and Sherry felt the water around her feet start to move suddenly, a swift rush of current that pulled on her legs, pulled her off balance—

• and she stumbled, tripped, plunging face-first into the cold and nasty water as the current got stronger, sucking her backwards. Sherry reached out, trying to find something, anything, to hold on to, and felt slimy stone whip beneath her clutching fingers as the waters rushed her away, away from Claire.

• can’t breathe—

Sherry kicked wildly, twisting her body, her eyes stinging from the bad water—and managed to take a breath as her head broke the surface, as she realized that she was in a tunnel, a pitch black shaft no bigger than the vents from the station. The swift waters carried her along, Sherry taking deep gasps of the foul air overhead, forcing herself not to struggle against the relentless power of the hissing liquid. The tunnel had to end somewhere—and wherever it came out, she had to be ready to run.

Claire, please find me, please don’t give up on me. ...

She was lost, blind and deaf, sliding down through the dark—and farther and farther away from the only person who could protect her from the nightmare creatures that had taken over Raccoon.

Annette no longer doubted that her husband had escaped the laboratory levels. Not only were half of the facility entrances unsealed, the fences that sur-rounded the factory had been breached—and the sewer tunnels, the tunnels that should have been mostly empty, were crawling with human carriers that had to have come from outside. Even as advanced as they’d been in terms of cellular deterioration, she’d had to shoot down five of them just to clear a path from the tram to the sewage operations room. After what seemed an eternity of trudging through the semi-treated, inky waters of the labyrinthian system, she came to the platform she’d been looking for. Annette stepped up into the concrete tunnel, gazing warily at the closed door a few meters in front of her. Closed and undamaged, a good sign—but what if he’d gone through before he’d lost all trace of human intelligence, before he’d grown into an un-thinking, violent animal? Even now, he might still retain something resembling memory; the truth was, she didn’t know.

The G-Virus hadn’t been tested on humans yet. . .

. . . and if he did go through? If he made it to the police station?

No. She couldn’t, wouldn’t entertain the possibili-ty. Considering what she did know about the progres-sive chemophysiologic changes—what he would be capable of doing if the virus worked the way it was supposed to—the thought of him getting to an unin-fected population . . . well, it was unthinkable. The station is safe, she thought firmly. Irons may be an incompetent ass, but his cops aren’t. Wherever William is, he couldn’t have gotten past them. She couldn’t afford to believe anything else; Sherry was there, if she’d done what she was supposed to do—and besides being her own flesh and blood (which, she reminded herself, was reason enough), Sherry played a very important role in her future plans.

Annette leaned against one cold and sweating wall, aware that time was running out but simply unable to go on without resting for a moment. She’d been counting on the encoded territorial instinct to keep him close to the lab, and had been so sure that she would find him, that her live, human scent would lure him to her . .. but she was almost at the end of the contained area, and all she’d found were a dozen ways in

which he could have escaped.

And Umbrella will be here soon. I have to get back, I have to activate the fail-safe before they can stop me. William deserved to be at peace—but beyond that, destroying the creature that had once been her hus-band would eradicate all of her doubts about the success of her objective. What if she blew the lab and escaped, only to find that Umbrella had captured him? All of her struggles, all of his work, for nothing. . . .

Annette closed her eyes, wishing that there was an easy way to make the decision that had to be made. The fact was, William’s death simply wasn’t as crucial as getting rid of the lab. And there was a good chance that they wouldn’t find him, that they weren’t even aware of his transformation—

• and it’s not as though I have a choice. He’s not here, he’s not anywhere.

She pushed away from the wall, walking slowly toward the door. She would check the last few tun-nels, perhaps see if the conference rooms showed any sign of damage—and then she would go back. Go back and finish what Umbrella had started. Annette pushed the door open—

• and heard footsteps, echoing through the lonely corridor from somewhere up ahead; the hall was shaped like a “T,” the sounds melting into them-selves, making it impossible to tell from which direc-tion they were coming—but they were the strong, sure steps of an uninfected human, perhaps more than one, and that could only mean one thing. Umbrella. They’ve finally come.

Rage boiled up through her, making her hands shake, her lips curl back from gritted teeth. It had to be them, it had to be one of their murdering spies; besides Irons and a few of the city officials, only Umbrella knew that these tunnels were still in use—and that they led to the underground facility. The possibility that it was some innocent survivor of the spill didn’t cross her mind, and neither did running; she raised the handgun and waited for the heartless, murdering bastard to appear.