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She paused for a second with her hand on the latch, then tugged it open.

Jellyfish tumbled against her legs, sprawling over her feet. They must have been piled up against the door on the other side, just waiting for her to return.

With a cry of revulsion she backed away, hammering at them with the blunt end of her spear. There was no time even to turn it round and use the knife. They were pushing forward into the corridor, jerking along with that disgusting snail-like movement. In the lobby ahead of her so many crowded over the floor that there was hardly an inch of it left visible.

No other course was open to her but to retreat.

There must be some other way out, she thought desperately. She felt so helpless before their onslaught — and yet why? They covered the floor and flopped over her feet, but she still towered above them, didn’t she? She was still human, wasn’t she?

Bloody jellyfish, that’s all they were — slimy, smelly, repulsive jellyfish.

Oh, if only she could spray them with something poisonous. Dispose of them with a quick aerosol burst, like greenfly… or cockroaches…

Instead, she was going back along that corridor the way she had come, clutching the sick child close in her arms, relieved that at least she’d succeeded in ridding herself of those clinging to her gumboots.

They were following her. It was obvious they’d not be satisfied until they’d brought her down — and the child — to strip the flesh from her bones, just as they’d done to so many others.

But where could she hide?

Not in the ward, that was too easy; they’d be in there within seconds. The dead nurse would point the way for them. No, it had to be the other direction. The Bacteriology Department, whatever that was. A laboratory, probably. At least it had a door which closed, and they’d first have to climb the two or three steps leading to it.

She went up the steps herself: vinyl-covered, with a metal strip along each tread. They seemed so secure after the slime of the corridor. The top half of the door had a frosted glass panel, but it looked solid enough. She tried the handle.

Locked.

For some crazy reason she suspected there might be a key on the inside. Shifting Sarita on to her other arm, she took the fireman’s axe from her belt and smashed the glass to reach inside.

No key.

The first of the jellyfish had already reached the foot of those steps. Outside, the wind was roaring even more intolerably; it was as if some terrible dream were taking her over. Desperately, she inserted the axe-blade into the gap between the jamb and the door. With a splintering of timber she at last got it open.

Inside, she found the laboratory was sparsely furnished: benches against the walls, a couple of high stools, a desk with a chair or two, shelves of jars of all sizes, a sink and a large fridge. She trampled over the broken glass, looking for a place where she could put the child down. In the end, she cleared the desk with a sweep of her arm and laid Sarita on it, with a chair up against it to prevent her falling.

Dashing back to the door, she saw that jellyfish were already congregating at the foot of the steps, half a dozen of them at least. She slammed the door shut but the lock no longer held. In a wild panic, she stared around for something she could use to barricade herself in. A low cupboard! She dragged it across.

‘Drink…’

‘Yes, Sarita, yes! In a minute!’

The fridge proved to be a dead loss. It was filled with jars and test-tubes and little glass dishes, nothing she dare give a child to drink. Yet what about the people who worked there? Did they all take their tea and coffee black?

The roar from outside became more and more persistent until her head felt it would burst. She looked out. Above the nearby trees — or so it seemed — a large cigar-shaped object was hovering in the air. As she watched, so crazed by everything that had happened that she was convinced she must be on the threshold of insanity, a dark cloud of spawn appeared to issue from it, floating downwards.

Tim had chafed impatiently in his seat, wondering why the flight had to take so long. Their route was over Lyme Bay, where absolutely nothing was to be seen other than the neutral sea. No ships. Lines of white foam showed up clearly over the stormy water. Broad dark patches triggered off images of shoal upon shoal of jellyfish heading for the coast.

It was a rough ride, too. The pilot warned they might not be able to land, nor even get in close enough for observation. Yet he knew he had to get down there somehow. For the soldiers on board, including Major Burton, this operation was no more than another job; for Tim, it was –

Oh, fuck! he swore to himself as he looked around that cramped cabin; the truth was, he’d rather die down there with Sue than carry on living without her.

Maybe none of them would survive, who could tell? By now the army had begun to realise the real size of the problem; for every hundred yards of territory regained they’d suffered one man dead or injured, and no one knew how long they’d be able to hold on.

He’d left Jocelyn back at the command post, invited to lunch by the general who’d made a point of stressing how much they needed her advice. She was an unwelcome guest no longer, but a specialist who might be able to suggest a way out of the mess.

‘OK, I’m going in low to take a look.’ The pilot’s laconic message floated over the intercom. ‘Hang on to your balls.’

They spotted the hospital right away, a holiday coach parked in front of it and an overturned lorry blocking the drive gates. No lights in the building, though a pale green shimmer covered the waterlogged grounds. But the wind was gusty; to be on the safe side, the pilot began to climb again.

‘Jellyfish all round the place,’ the major commented tersely. ‘No telling how deep that water might be.’

‘The ground’s higher near that clump of trees,’ Tim said.

‘Can’t imagine our pilot liking that idea. Not in this weather. I’ll go forward and have a word with him.’

For a time they circled over Totnes, but there was no sign of movement anywhere in the town. It had stopped raining but the sky was still overcast. In normal circumstances people would have switched on their lights. Instead, every street and alleyway gleamed pale green as if treated with luminous paint, making the whole place seem unreal. Insubstantial, even.

The major returned to his seat and once again the helicopter flew low over the hospital, this time making its circuit of the grounds from a different direction. A few yards away from the trees, not far from a small, steep-gabled building standing on its own, they hovered before cautiously going down lower to scout out the possibilities.

Again they regained height, returning to the town, and the major went forward for consultations.

‘We’re going in,’ he announced a minute or so later. ‘You’ve all got your orders. You know exactly what to do. The aim at this stage is to get into the hospital and stay there. Now remember, the ground is likely to be slippery. If you do fall, keep calm and get to your feet again as soon as you can. Right, sergeant — they can get themselves ready.’

For this operation, the major had decided that his men should wear anti-gas suits and respirators. They would be protected from head to toe, with not a single chink which jellyfish poison could penetrate. Tim was still dressed in the outfit they had laid out for him that morning in the general’s caravan, but beggars can’t be choosers, he thought. He fished the rubber face-mask out of his pocket and was about to put it on when the major stopped him.

‘Not you,’ he said.

‘Why not?’

They would not be landing, the major explained briefly. The helicopter would hover above the ground just long enough to drop the men who were trained for that sort of exercise; it wasn’t something they could expect a civilian to handle. Once they had achieved their objective and were inside the hospital, they would radio the helicopter with a report on the situation.