Doctor Myles Morgan, Molecular Biology PHD. Harvard University.
Located: The Brig
"So, what's your name?" Doctor Morgan asked through the microphone that connected him to the other side of the reinforced ballistic glass.
"I FUCKED YOUR MOTHER!" A high pitched, almost deafening screech exploded from somewhere within the darkness.
Doctor Morgan sighed and lent back in his chair, removing his reading glasses so that he could massage his sinuses. He'd been at this for hours. Out of all the people the Rig had rescued in the last 48 hours, only 1 of them have tested positive for T-1C. Protocol dictated that the infected be destroyed and their remains "sterilized", which of course meant a visit from a match and his best pal a tank of gasoline. Doctor Morgan however, was curious; this was the first T-1C victim he'd seen in weeks, and the first that he had a chance to properly observe. It was a woman, of no name, and no fixed abode or anything else for that matter; she'd so far replied to all of his questions with profanities and nonsense.
"YOU HEAR ME DOC!? I FUCKED HER! I WENT TO HELL AND I FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDD HER!" The infected screamed again, still unseen in the darkness of her holding cell.
"Lights," Doctor Morgan said to no one in particular, and lent forwards across his desk.
There was a brief thrumming, and then the darkness was instantly lifted as a dozen or so strip lights beamed to life. The holding cell had been reduced to a mess of trashed furniture, blood prints on the white wall, and other less savory stains smeared across the ballistic glass. In the corner, a woman in a torn red dress had her legs wrapped in her arms and was busy rocking in a state of intense delirium.
"I'll ask again, what's your name?" Morgan said, his voice booming over the holding cell's speakers.
The woman looked up suddenly, her face a mess of blood and broken skin. "I am DEAth, yes, yesyesyeesyes, DEATH, I AM DEATH, I am death, I am death, I am death, I am death, I am death, I am death. I. AM. DEATH. AND. I. COME. FOR. THEE."
Doctor Morgan sighed heavily, "Very well, we'll try again tomorrow." He slid out from his chair and exited the observation room, accompanied by a couple of nonplussed marines. He turned to one of them, "I don't suppose the patient's test results have come back to us, have they?"
The marine shook his head, "No sir, radio's been pretty quiet."
Doctor Tom Eagerton, Forensics Science PHD. Cambridge University.
Located: Test Chambers and Biological Diagnostics
"Fuck, oh fuck, oh no, oh no, no, no, no," Tom whimpered, covering his eyes with his left hand; his right was caught in the centrifuge, the glove torn to shreds and glass shards sticking from his flesh.
He slowly withdrew his hand from the tube rotator, and then dashed for the nearest sink. He hit the wound with semi-boiling water, firebombed it with iodine, and then doused it in anti-bacterial powder.
"Stupid fucking thing," he muttered, shaking with panic. "Always getting stuck, all the fucking time! Why did I do that? Why didn't I use a ruler to push it?" He carried on furiously washing the wound, his blood mixing with the running water to form a light pink froth at the sink's plug hole. "Of all the fucking tests, it had to be the one with an actual live infected blood sample. I'm so stupid! I'm so stupid!"
He looked up at the security camera, and wandered if they had seen everything; by they, he meant the two man USMC fire team on the other side of the door, who were supposed to be watching his every move. The fact that the lab's door remained closed, told him they hadn't.
"Maybe it'll be okay, maybe I acted quick enough," Tom tried to assure himself. "Yes, yes I'm sure it's fine. T-1C isn't that resistant, it's just extremely aggressive."
His breathing slowed, and he found himself a stool; he carefully hid his injured hand from the camera. He wondered if the blood trail on the floor was easily seen from the security feed's resolution; probably not. He'd just play it cool, and mop the floor after pretending to have dropped some chemical. Yes, he'd be fine.
"Besides," he said to himself. "I feel fine. REALLY fine. Better than ever in fact. Yes, yes I'm okay, I'm really okay."
His left hand grabbed a scalpel from the work surface, and he started smearing it in the wound of his right hand.
"Yes, everything is going to be okay," he said, smiling broadly. "I best go and see the guards, they look ever so unhappy these days. I have just the medicine for that!"
The Doctor started stalking towards the lab's decontamination pod.
PFC James Corville, United States Marine Corps
Located: Catwalk Above Survivor Processing (Where the players are!)
PFC James Corville was on the verge of becoming a zombie. Literally. Weeks of 16 hour back to back shifts had taken a heavy toll, and he felt he was loosing his mind. Not in that way that T-1C had made people lose theirs of course, just in a typical human I-can't-take-anymore-of-this-crap kind of way. He yawned for the millionth time in the past hour.
Leaning over the railing, he looked lazily down at the huddled survivors twenty feet below. Some of them would occasionally give him nervous glances, and whisper to their peers. Others did their best not to make eye contact with him. It was a shame really, if his CO wouldn't kick his ass for fraternizing with civilians, he'd be more than willing to talk to them about everything and anything. That'd put them at rest, once they'd seen he was just a fucked up cog in an even more fucked up system.
And then the room shook, the catwalk wobbling on the chains that suspended it in the air. James gripped the handrails, "the fuck?" he managed, and then the walls shook as a distant explosion reverberated through the metalwork.
Suddenly the lights dimmed, their clinical white replaced by an eerie pulsating red. An alarm started to bleat.
"Control, this is Processing, what the fuck are you guys up to?" James yelled into his mic.
It took only a few seconds to get a reply, "Hold your ground, Private, we've got a situation. Keep an eye on the civilians, and do not move from your position."
"What kind of situation?" James asked, but no one answered him.
Gun fire erupted somewhere beyond the metal doors, followed by screams and men barking orders. James unshouldered his M4A1 assault rifle, and prepped it for action with an audible click. He looked across the catwalk, where a hydraulic door obscured his view from the corridors beyond. It was the only access point into Processing, aside from the main door below.
"Attention, all units, we have a Level 5 Breach on Science Deck. Say again we are compromised, gentlemen," crowed Jame's headset. He gasped; the voice belonged to Colonel Williams - his CO and commander of the 22nd USMC Regiment. If he was yelling this stuff, then James could bet his life that this wasn't a drill. The old man never ruffled feathers, not personally anyway. "All units go red immediately. This is the fight of our lives, make no mistake. Shoot first, ask questions later. Even if you're unsure, shoot. This is not a drill. I want this contained yesterday."
James' heart started thudding in his chest, his breathing becoming irregular and heavy. He'd never seen any real action, and now it had come to his doorstep. So far his experience of the T-1C outbreak had been limited to news reports, memos and suppressed feelings towards his family's fate back in the States. A Level Five Breach translated into a total loss of control of the affected area, with immediate containment protocols set to fail. The Colonel was in effect announcing the end of the Rig, and everyone in it, if the situation could not be swiftly resolved.
"Say again, this is a Level 5 Breach," Williams' voice boomed through James' headset. "All civilians are to be eliminated; we cannot risk the loss of this station. Say again, all civilians are to be nullified. God forgive us."
James fumbled for his mic, "PFC Corville in Processing, sir, what are you saying? I can't just shoot these people!"
"Yes you can, Private, and do it quickly. They're a biological payload of death waiting to happen, we can't spare the men to defend them, and I cannot allow them to join the ranks of the enemy," Williams replied sharply. "That is an order."
James' eyes widened, and he looked down at the survivors. They looked back up at him having heard everything. His shaking hands lifted his M4A1 up over the railing, and his trigger finger fought a war of conquest against his moral compass.
And then the hydraulic door leading onto the catwalk opened with a hiss. "Stand down, Private."
James looked over and saw Sergeant Jones, a big and bulky Afro-American warrior strutting his way. "Sir?"
"Stand down, I said," Jones said, holding his hands up to show he held no weapon.
"But the CO said we've got to-" James tried to spout.
Jones shook his head, and moved in close. "No, no, you see the CO has it all wrong. We don't want them to join us, we want them to die. By our hands. Because its fun."
James' heart skipped a beat, and he tried to step back, bringing his rifle to bear. "Get the fuck away fro-"
Jones' fist connected with James' face, knocking him over the railing. The PFC hit the floor hard, his rifle sliding across the smooth metal. A sidearm was strapped to his thigh, and a combat knife could be seen sheathed in the front of his ballistic vest. He didn't stir.
"Laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaadiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiieeeeeeees and gentlemen!" Jones roared from atop the catwalk, "Thankyou for visiting the Rig, we hope to see you again soon. WOOP WOOP!"
The Marine Sergeant reached into his belt, and produced two small green ball-like objects, that anyone over the age of four would realize were hand grenades. It seemed he intended to drop them onto the survivors.