Chapter 16 #3

Sheriff Dawson materialized first, his disappointment at finding no reason to arrest Ruka practically radiating off him.

He prowled the room cataloging everything—my bruised knuckles, the constellation of blood drops on the linoleum, the shell-shocked nurses huddled together.

His small leather notebook, worn soft with decades of use, filled with observations delivered in a voice that suggested he'd rather be writing something else entirely.

The FBI arrived next. Two of them, crisp and efficient in dark suits that seemed to absorb the fluorescent light.

Their badges caught the overhead glare as they introduced themselves—Agent Morrison and Agent Munroe.

Agent Morrison I'd spoken to previously, and the instant I told them of Nadine's confession, something shifted in their bearing.

Professional urgency crystallized into something sharper, more dangerous.

Morrison's phone was at her ear before I finished speaking, her clipped words about CDC protocols and biosafety level four containment turning the hospital corridor into a potential war zone.

The witnesses came forward one by one—nurses and security guards, plus patients who'd lingered nearby, drawn by raised voices or simple curiosity.

They'd all heard Nadine's confession spill out like poison.

Allie's hands trembled, tears streaming down her face, as she recounted those terrible words about sick children, about wishing more had died, about unfinished business that chilled the blood.

Agent Morrison guided Ruka and me into an empty consultation room, closing the door with a soft click that somehow felt ominous. Her expression carried the weight of bad news about to get worse.

"Dr. Bennett, Chieftain Ruka," she began, "we didn't just arrive because of today's call."

My fingers laced through Ruka's, my grip tight. "What do you mean?"

"Nadine Fletcher's cousin, Dr. Gavin Fletcher, has been in our custody for the last forty-eight hours.

" Morrison's words fell like stones into still water.

"He's employed at the CDC research facility in Atlanta.

Six weeks ago, security flagged discrepancies in their smallpox sample inventory.

Minute variations in the weight of stored variola virus samples. "

The temperature in the room seemed to drop. "He stole it."

"Confessed this morning," Morrison confirmed.

"Completely fell apart when we showed him the security footage.

Claims his cousin sold him a story about 'legitimate research purposes'—some breakthrough treatment for a rare disease.

He was careful about it—methodical. Took the virus in small increments over the course of a couple of weeks, sometimes just micrograms at a time.

But he smuggled out enough." He paused, and the silence stretched like a held breath.

"Enough for multiple exposures. He swears he had no idea what she really intended.

Given his cooperation and the timeline, we're inclined to believe him. "

"She was planning another attack," Ruka said. "She said there were others. Others who want us dead."

Morrison's jaw tightened, her eyes going hard.

"We've been tracking extremist organizations since Orcs first arrived.

Most are noise—fringe groups with more volume than organization.

But there's one in particular that concerns us.

" She exchanged a loaded glance with Munroe.

"They call themselves the Human Preservation Coalition.

Their public face is respectable—a think tank focused on 'protecting human interests.

' Lobbying, policy papers, academic conferences.

But our intelligence paints a different picture.

They're funding operations that go far beyond rhetoric. "

"How far?" I asked, though I'd already guessed the answer.

"Far enough that we've been building a case for months," Munroe said. "Shell companies, encrypted communications, substantial cash transfers to individuals with very particular skill sets. We just couldn't prove the connection." His expression darkened. "Until now."

"Nadine was one of those individuals," Ruka hazarded a guess.

Morrison nodded slowly. "Her financial records show a fifty-thousand-dollar deposit three weeks before the outbreak.

The money was laundered through four different accounts, but we traced it back to a corporation linked to the Coalition's primary benefactor—a tech billionaire named Aston Aldrich.

He's been remarkably vocal about his belief that Orcs represent an 'existential threat to humanity'. "

"Aldrich Industries," I breathed. I knew the name. His company manufactured medical equipment, including specialized equipment used in high-security biocontainment facilities.

Morrison's expression turned grim as stone. "We need to search Fletcher's office, her home, her car—anywhere she might have stored additional virus. If even a fraction remains unaccounted for..."

The unfinished sentence hung in the air like a guillotine blade, its implications too terrible to voice.

The hazmat team materialized within twenty minutes—four figures swathed in containment suits so pristine and alien they looked like astronauts preparing for a mission to a plague planet.

Their suits crinkled with each movement, a sound like crumpling paper that somehow made everything feel more surreal.

The respirators transformed their breathing into something mechanical and otherworldly, each inhale and exhale a reminder that we were standing at ground zero of something catastrophic.

"This wing is now under quarantine," the team leader declared, her voice distorted through layers of filtration.

"No one in, no one out until we've swept every surface.

" She wielded a scanner that could have been pulled from a spy thriller, its screen casting an eerie blue glow across her faceplate.

My fingers laced through Ruka's, taking comfort in the strength with which he held my hand.

We stood together, watching them transform the hallway into something from a nightmare—plastic sheeting billowing like ghostly curtains, biohazard tape screaming its warnings in bold letters.

The team moved methodically, each gesture practiced and purposeful.

"Airborne particle detection," I whispered, filling in the terrifying blanks. "If Nadine opened that vial in there, if even a microscopic amount became aerosolized..."

"She didn't." Ruka kept his voice steady, anchoring us both. "She was too deliberate. This wasn't about chaos. She wanted to choose who lived and who died."

Time stretched and contracted strangely as we waited.

Then one of the suited figures emerged from Nadine's office, cradling a small metal box like it contained a beating heart.

Biohazard tape crisscrossed its surface, and even through the thick protective gloves, the handler's movements screamed caution.

"Locked drawer," came the muffled report. "Mini refrigeration unit. Temperature-controlled storage."

Morrison moved forward, her entire body radiating tension. "Contents?"

"Single vial—empty." Each word from the respirator carried weight. "Requires transport to a BSL-4 facility for proper containment and analysis."

The hazmat team moved meticulously, sealing the box in multiple containment layers. I watched as they triple-bagged it, each layer going into progressively larger containers until the box disappeared into a reinforced transport case that looked like it could survive a nuclear blast.

"We're establishing a perimeter around the entire administrative wing," Morrison announced, her phone pressed to her ear as she coordinated with someone on the other end. "No one in or out until we've completed a full decontamination sweep."

More FBI agents arrived, flooding the hallway with their dark suits and serious faces.

They began cordoning off Nadine's office with yellow tape, transforming it into a crime scene.

The hazmat team swept every surface with detection equipment, their instruments beeping and whirring as they searched for any trace of contamination.

"Clear," one of them finally called out after hours of waiting. Hours of vending machine coffee and nacho cheese Doritos—which Ruka surprisingly enjoyed. "No airborne particles detected. No surface contamination outside the refrigeration unit."

Morrison's shoulders dropped slightly—the first sign of relief I'd seen from her. "She kept it contained, at least. Small mercies."

The team leader carrying the transport case nodded to Morrison. "We're moving it now. CDC's got a helicopter standing by."

We all stepped back as they made their way down the hallway, the case held between two handlers like a coffin for something that had never been alive but could still kill. The weight of what they carried seemed to press down on everyone in the corridor, making the air itself feel heavier.

Munroe turned to the remaining agents. "I want every file, every computer, every scrap of paper in that office cataloged and seized. If there is a way to tie the Human Preservation Coalition to this, I want it found."

Morrison watched the hazmat team disappear around the corner before turning back to us.

The hard edges of her professional mask softened, just slightly.

"Dr. Bennett. Chieftain Ruka." She paused, seeming to choose her words carefully.

"If not for the two of you..." She shook her head.

"We'd be looking at a very different situation right now. Possibly a catastrophic one."

Ruka's jaw tightened. "We lost four of our people."

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