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Authors: Kailin Gow

Fever (12 page)

BOOK: Fever
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            Dr. Florence takes my hand. “If you really want to do this, then we’ll have to get you into the lab and sedate you. Some of the procedures I need to do will be quite… invasive.”

            “Wait, Celes.” Jack is there beside me then. “You’re really going to let Dr. Florence experiment on you, just like that?”

            “It’s for a good cause, Jack. If he can remove my ability, then he could remove it from these creatures, too.”

            “Possibly,” Jack says. “Assuming that you trust him enough to do it.”

            “There would be other scientists around. Even your dad.”

         

            “We could find a way to help other people with this problem, Jack,” I say.

            “It isn’t a problem,” Jack insists. “It’s a gift. One that makes you very special.”

            “Special enough to kill people,” I say, remembering the people I’ve killed. Most of them didn’t even have enough time to scream while they burned, but a few did, and in my memories, those are the ones who come back to me. “Special enough to burn them alive until there’s nothing left. Special enough to
want
to do that. You’ve seen what I’m like when I get angry, Jack. It’s a curse. A curse that does nothing but kill people.”

            “It could if it isn’t used properly,” Jack says, “but you’ve used it to save lives. Tell her, Grayson.”

            “Most of us wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for you, Celes,” Grayson says. “The only people you’ve killed have been ones who were trying to kill you, and I would have killed them if you hadn’t.”

            He says that now, but I can remember the horror in his eyes while I’ve burned people.

            “Are you sure you want to do this, Celes?” Jack asks. “Your powers have let you help a lot of people. They let you burn us a way out of the Others’ base. They let us save your parents. They even let us start the car on the way here. We wouldn’t have escaped that creature without you. Are you sure you want to give that up?”

            I know that Jack is making sensible points, but I nod my head anyway. “If it means that I can cut off the source of the problem now, then yes. I’d give up my abilities in a heartbeat. I let Hammond live, Jack. You could have stopped the apocalypse, and I let it happen. If this is what it takes to fix things, then I have to do it. If
dying
is what it takes to fix things, then that’s what I’ll do.”

            “Don’t talk like that, Celes,” Grayson says. “We aren’t going to let you die here.”

            “But you aren’t going to stop me from doing this, either,” I say. My mind is made up. I have to let Dr. Florence try.

            “You understand that we might not succeed straight away?” the scientist says. “It could be a long, and potentially dangerous, process.”

            “I understand,” I say. When has any part of this ever been safe? “Let’s just get on with it.”

  "Ca this ev          “Okay.” Dr. Florence reaches out for my hand again, but in that moment, there’s a lot of excited talking outside the door. It opens to reveal Niall, the leader of the Australian Faders.

            “Dr. Cook, Jack, you’re going to want to see this.”

            “Can’t it wait, Niall?” Jack asks.

            “Not unless you want to miss out on a bonza opportunity. While you’ve been down here, we got a call about a team out in the desert, and we went out to help them. I mean, Outback is Outback, right? Me and the boys went out to help, and we got to them okay, but then we came across this… creature. Looked just like the one you were talking about before, Jack. Part reptile, part insect, part human. It almost burned Vincent, even after we put a few rounds into it. Thought it was going to take us all arvo to bring it down.”

            “You killed it?” I ask. If they’ve managed to kill one of the creatures, that’s a good thing, but it doesn’t change anything.

            “We didn’t kill it,” Niall explains. “We managed to subdue it. And
you
try finding things to tie up a creature that can burn through almost anything. Not to mention bringing it back on the jeep.”

            “You’ve brought it here?” I say.

            “Well, we weren’t going to leave it out in the desert, were we?” Niall says.

            We follow him, leaving Johnny behind in the care of the doctors. Niall leads the way along a series of corridors, past a door that’s sealed with heavy locks. Behind it, there’s a cage, though it seems to be made out of the non-burning material the Faders use rather than steel.

            Inside, there’s one of the creatures. It seems almost too big for the cage, it’s strange, part insect, part reptile body filling the space almost completely.

            “Of course,” Niall says, “it isn’t exactly much to look at, but I thought you might want it anyway.”

            I look around at the others. Dr. Florence, Sebastian, and Jack all seem to be thinking the same thing. Jack nods to the creature.

            “If Celes could maybe tell us something about stopping those things, one of
them
will tell us so much more. We need to find a way to sedate it and then get it into the lab.”

 

 

<+2" face="Arial Unicode MS">SIXTEEN

 

 

 

 

W
e head across to another lab, where it takes Dr. Florence almost a half hour to get set up. In that time, I see medical personnel wheeling Johnny across in his hospital bed.

            “You didn’t think I’d miss out on the opportunity to do this, did you?” Johnny asks.

            “You should be resting,” I insist. “We can do this without you.”

            “Well, that’s
one
way to make me feel useless,” Johnny says. “Celes, I want to help. I
should
help. If anyone can help to find a way to deal with this problem, it’s me.”

            I realize that despite arguing, he’s still asking me for permission. Whatever else is happening, I’m still his president.

            “Okay, Johnny, but if it gets too much, we’ll get you out of here, okay?”

            “Okay.”

            The creature that the Australian Faders have captured is out of its cage now. It’s a risk, but the scientists need to get to it if they’re going to work on it. It’s sedated, suspended within a network of wires coated with heat resistant materials. It looks strange. An impossible blend of creatures that is somehow bigger than all of them. Dr. Florence, Sebastian, a couple of the Australian Faders and a few more scientists stand around it, working with a wide variety of machinery.

            “What are you going to do?” I ask Dr. Florence.

            “We’re going to start by getting as much information as possible,” he says. “Physiological, neurological… as much data as we can find. That will make it easier to understand if these creatures have any obvious weaknesses that can be exploited.”

            “Do you think they will have any?” I ask.

            Jack answers, moving to stand next to me. “Everything has a weakness, Celes.”

            I wonder what mine is. Is it him? Grayson? The way my heart seems to jump between them almost at random, leaving me breathless and unable to make up my mind what I want? Unable even to think when they’re close. That has to be a weakness, doesn’t it? Yet it’s not one I think I’m going to be able to do anythie twide vng about.

            “What are you going to do first?” I ask Dr. Florence, trying not to think about Jack or Grayson too much. Here, in a confined space with both of them, it’s impossible.

            “We’re going to check its brainwaves first,” Dr. Florence explains. “I want to be in a position to see how they respond to different stimuli.”

            “We can’t do too much on that front,” Sebastian points out. “After all, the creature isn’t conscious, and we are
not
about to wake it up to check. In fact, we should work faster. We have no way of knowing how its hybrid physiology will process the sedative.”

            “It’s one of the questions I’m hoping to answer in the course of this investigation,” Dr. Florence says.

            “Well, let’s not do it by being burned to death.”

            Technicians hurry around them, attaching pads to the creature’s skull, linked by wires to computer screens that start to show data. Dr. Florence starts to press buttons and the data changes. It’s hard to feel useful in that moment, standing there watching other people work. I’m meant to be at the heart of this mission, but right now, I just don’t have the scientific skills to make a contribution.

            “There are brain waves going all over the place,” Dr. Florence says. “And a complex brain. More complex than insect ones, or even reptiles, yet different to mammalian ones as well. It’s like the structures of the brain are designed specifically for the manipulation of energy.”

            “Is it the same with mine?” I ask.

            “Close, maybe,” Johnny answers from his bed, “but not the same. These things’ brains aren’t human.”

            Dr. Florence starts to push more buttons.

            “What are you checking now?” Grayson asks, from the side of the room.

            “I want to examine the creature’s metabolic rate. If what we know about their speed and strength is true, then a high metabolic rate might fit in with that. It also makes sense in terms of their ability to manipulate energy.”

            The numbers on the screen spike as Dr. Florence makes a few more adjustments. “Incredible. Everything about these creatures is fast. What interests me, if they use such vast amounts of energy, is how that energy is transported around the body.”

            “W mes Newhat do you mean?” I ask.

            “Well, in humans, we get energy through a variety of physical systems, but the most important one is the heart carrying oxygenated blood around the body. With the size of these creatures, their cardio-vascular systems must have enlarged considerably, but I think it might be even more complicated than that.”

            “Why?” I ask. Eventually, Dr. Florence is going to give us an answer that we can use.

            “Because insects don’t really have hearts as we know them, or even the same kind of blood,” Dr. Florence explains. “Instead, they have an integrated circulatory system where hemolymph, the closest thing they have to blood, flows through the whole body. They have a kind of dorsal vessel that does a similar job to the heart in pumping it around, but it isn’t the same.”

            “So what are you expecting to see?” Jack asks. “An enlarged dorsal vessel? A combination of it with a heart?”

            “Something like that, possibly,” Dr. Florence says. “We won’t know until we’ve done an ultrasound or MRI of its main body cavity.”

             They opt for the MRI when Sebastian’s technicians come forward with equipment that lets them do it far more portably than would normally be possible. Yet another piece of technology the Faders have that the rest of the world does not. The results take just a minute or two to come up on the screen.

            “No,” Johnny says, staring at it, “that can’t be right.”

            “What can’t be?” I ask, not sure what it is that I’m meant to be seeing. I need to understand, and not just because it might give us a way to deal with these creatures. It might also tell me more about the way my body works.

            “I’m no expert on insectoid physiology,” Johnny says, “but that looks like they have acquired a heart in addition to the usual dorsal vessel.”

            “That’s what I’m seeing,” Sebastian confirms, moving to stand beside Dr. Florence.

            “So what’s the problem?” I ask.

            Dr. Florence shakes his head, taking a step back from the equipment. He looks over at the creature, lit by the bright lighting of the room, as though he might be able to figure out what is going on just by looking at it.

            “The problem,” he explains, “is that neither one is really sufficient to supply the energy needs of a creature this size. Perhaps if both systems are working together?”

            “But then they’d be in conflict,” Sebastian points out. “The body doesn’t have two systems to do one job, because they’d get in each other’s way. They’d balance for a time, but if they got out of balance…”

            I look around their faces. “How did this happen?”

            “It must be a side effect of the solar storm,” Sebastian says. “The transformation enlarged them and started to change their physiology, but the process isn’t complete.”

            “That would explain why they go back to being small,” I say. “They aren’t stable at this size.”

            “But they still take back enough changes to bring about the Fever,” Jack points out.

            I nod. “Could this mix of hearts be our way to stop them? It sounds like if they were put under any kind of stress, they could have a heart attack really easily.”

            “In theory, that could work,” Sebastian admits. “But actually doing it would be harder. We’ve already seen that fighting or chasing prey won’t do it, so what would?”

            “We’ll think of something,” Grayson says. “For now, the important thing is that we know of a way to destroy them without risking the lives of the few people that we have.”

            “We can experiment on this one,” Dr. Florence suggests. “If we try out a range of stimuli, we can find one that will stress the creature enough to make its new circulatory system fail.”

            I notice that he doesn’t seem to have any qualms about conducting potentially fatal experiments on the creatures. Is that just that they aren’t human, or is Dr. Florence maybe not the humanitarian that he wants us to think he is? After all, we only have his word for it that he left Hammond because he didn’t like experimenting on humans.

            That’s a matter for another time now, though. The fact is that we know enough about these creatures to potentially destroy them. If we can do that…

BOOK: Fever
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