“You mean weeks.”
“No. I mean hours.”
“But that can’t be,” he says, almost laughing. “It’s impossible. Isn’t it?”
“I have a hypothesis about the incubation cycle at this point,” she tells him.
“But it’s preposterous! If the disease is closely related to rabies and is a latent feature of HK Lyssa, then one would expect a period between exposure and becoming symptomatic to be more like its rabies cousin—anywhere from twenty to sixty days.” He blinks. “Wait—what is your hypothesis?”
“I believe the disease may have been bioengineered and that is why it is so efficient.”
Hardy breaks into a sweat. “Oh, Jesus. A terrorist weapon?”
“I do not know, obviously. But that is not important right now. What is important is given the aggressive mode of transmission and the lack of immunity in the population—even those who have caught Lyssa and recovered—the disease has a transmission factor that is likely equal to or greater than R2.”
“Exponential spread. Of a disease that is transmitted through aggressive biting.”
“It’s almost impossible to confirm without field data,” Petrova says.
“And then there’s the incubation period of several hours.”
“Yes. As I was saying to you, the implications of my findings are naturally quite significant.”
“You can say that again,” Hardy snorts.
“I would like to speak to some epidemiologists to discuss with them what they are learning in the field. Meanwhile, we will need to shift resources from curing the version of the disease transmitted by sneezes to the version transmitted by bites. Obviously.”
Hardy rubs his hand over his stubbled face, staring over her shoulder in a daze. “I mean, you’re kind of talking about the end of the world.”
“You know my background. Ten years working with viruses like Ebola, Marburg, Lassa Fever. I am hardly an alarmist. I am only interested in facts. And the facts tell us that the Mad Dog strain is now taking over from its descendant because its victims are now spreading exponentially in the population. That is the disease we need to cure.”
The blood suddenly drains from Hardy’s face.
“Oh, God,” he says, remembering. “Amy!”
Taking out his cell phone, he hurriedly punches a phone number.
“Yes! It’s ringing,” he says, pacing nervously. “Come on, come on. Pick up the phone.” He suddenly feels an irrational rage at his daughter for making him worry. “I got her voicemail.” His tone suddenly changes, becoming calm and smooth, a father’s voice. “Hey honey, it’s Dad. Just calling to make sure you’re okay. Give me a shout when you get a minute, all right? I love you.”
Outside the Institute, the country is falling apart because of the epidemic. Nearly twenty percent of the country’s workforce is sick, consuming resources and producing nothing. And the numbers keep growing while supplies keep dwindling. Food and gas are being rationed, world trade has ground to a halt, the economy is crashing, and prices for everything from cigarettes to toilet paper are skyrocketing. Most states have declared martial law under the Emergency Powers Health Act.
On the radio, preachers are saying it’s the Apocalypse.
But now this. Well, Hardy thinks, if Petrova is right, then it won’t just feel like the end of the world. It really might be the end of the world. Infection will spread exponentially until everybody gets it except for those smart and supplied well enough to stay hidden for the next few weeks. Billions will die. The survivors, many driven mad by what they have seen, will live the rest of their days scavenging among the toxic ruins.
If she is right, the stakes in the race for a cure, already high, have just been raised to the ultimate level of a fight against possible extinction.
After hanging up, he glares at Petrova. “You’re making me worry.”
“I am simply the messenger,” she says, staring wistfully at the phone in his hand. He can tell she is thinking about her family and wishes she had a little time so that she could try them again in London. He feels ashamed by this.
“Okay,” he says. “Show me your test results. Let’s hope you’re wrong.”
Then he freezes in his tracks and smacks himself in the forehead.
“Dr. Baird!” he shouts.
And rushes out of the room.
Puppets
Hardy jogs down the hall trailed by Petrova, his heart pounding in his chest. He just remembered that Dr. Gavin Baird entered the Institute last night shouting for help. On his way home, he got caught in a small riot of cops and looters outside a supermarket, and a child bit him on the hand, breaking the skin and drawing blood. Shaken, he returned to the Institute for antiseptic and a bandage minutes before the tall blonde and her mob showed up. Like the other scientists, he eventually gave up waiting and went back to work, disappearing into Laboratory West with Marsha Fuentes, one of the lab techs.
Hardy has not heard from either of them since.
Lucas leans out of his office, adjusting his glasses. “Do you know where the trash bags are kept?”
“Come with me!” Hardy roars.
“Should I come, too?” Saunders asks, then falls in with the rest. “Why aren’t you wearing your mask, Dr. Hardy? Are you lifting the self-quarantine regime?”
Hardy pauses at the door of the lab, looking through the porthole but seeing nobody inside. “Has anybody seen Marsha since yesterday? Marsha Fuentes?”
The others glance at each other and shake their heads.
Hardy looks into Petrova’s eyes wearing a sad expression. Then he opens the door and steps inside, holding the putter defensively.
Marsha Fuentes walks towards him from across the room, whimpering.
What is left of her, anyway.
She has been beaten black and blue. The left side of her face is purple and her eye is swollen shut. Her arm appears broken and, perversely, one of her breasts is completely exposed through a tear in her shirt and bra. She winces with each step.
“God, Marsha, are you all right?” he says, taking a step forward.
“She is one of them, Doctor,” Petrova says.
He realizes that Petrova is right: The woman’s throat is swollen, as if she swallowed crabapples that are now lodged in her throat. She’s growling, making the buboes vibrate.
“Aw, Marsha,” he says sadly.
“What’s this all about?” Lucas says, sounding panicked.
“Christ, what is that smell?” Saunders says. “What was she working on in here?”
Baird went Mad Dog and beat the crap out of Fuentes. He also bit her. By the time she regained consciousness, she was already one of them.
Fuentes grins, leaking foam between clenched teeth.
“Maybe we should leave now,” Saunders says, blinking.
“Where’s Dr. Baird?” Hardy says. “We need to confirm that he’s here and then we can get out and seal the room.”
He turns to the right and sees the man several yards away, behind a desk.
“Jesus, Baird, you scared the crap out of me,” Hardy says, forgetting for an instant what his colleague has become.
Baird is growling. His ponytail has worked loose and his long blond hair, clotted with blood, is splayed across his face and shoulders. He’s a strong man, a weight lifter. His hands clench into fists.
Hardy can see his eyes through the veil of hair, burning like coals.
“Oh, shit,” he says.
Baird launches across the desk, scattering papers and sending a PC crashing to the floor. He brushes aside the golf club that Hardy feebly raises to defend himself, seizes the back of the man’s neck and sinks his teeth into his throat. Fuentes, her mouth foaming, latches onto Hardy’s left arm and together, the infected scientists bear him to the floor screaming.