Chapter 68: She Was Dead
I watched as blood started to bubble out of the hole in the paradic’s neck as she struggled to take in oxygen. She turned her head to look at , a desperate plea for help in her eyes, but there was nothing I could do.
She was dead; she just didn’t know it yet.
I reached for one of the tranks I had in the pocket of my hazmat suit, ready to stick it into the boy, but all of a sudden, the entire ER departnt was plunged into darkness.
And that was when shit really hit the fan.
Screams rose all around , both patients and staff, as I could hear people fighting each other in the darkness.
"The generator will kick in in a few seconds. Everyone remain where you are!" I shouted, just as I was grabbed from behind and spun around.
Unable to see anything, the only thing I could do was react. I plunged the needle with the trank in my hand into the neck of my assailant and then flipped them over my shoulder until they crashed into the stretcher that was right in front of .
I was counting in my head the whole ti, waiting for the generators to kick in... But they didn’t.
"Fuck!" I cursed as yet another pair of hands grabbed , and I could hear my hazmat suit ripping and my air escaping.
It was absolute chaos in the ER as more and more people started screaming in pain. I needed to get to my office and grab the camping light that I had stored away in there. It was the only way I could think of to retain order until the generator ca back on.
Hell, even the ergency lighting was out, and that never happened. It had its own backup energy source so that even if there were no electricity, it would still be able to produce light. And yet... nothing.
I was plunged into darkness, my entire world gone as people ran around . Sotis, soone would bump into , sending
to the floor. Other tis, people would grab onto , trying to rip into .
What the fuck was going on?!?
I closed my eyes because, let’s face it, they weren’t all that useful right now. Pulling up the layout of my departnt, I slowly made my way toward the hallway that had my office in it.
I shuffled my feet, not daring to raise them so much as an inch off of the ground. I didn’t know what stood in my way; I didn’t know what was on the floor, so shuffling was the only way I could guarantee that I could retain my balance and not step on anything.
The screams started to die off, and more and more roars and snarls sounded in the darkness like we were in the middle of a zoo and not an ER.
I could feel my heart beating fast as my head started to clear up more than it ever had.
It has co.
I took in a deep breath, and my body almost seed to relax. I knew sothing terrible was going to happen, and it did.
I wasn’t going crazy.
More confident in myself, I continued on the path I imagined in my head, ducking under swinging arms and avoiding places where I could sense a presence.
I strained my ears, trying to get them to paint a picture I wasn’t able to see, but all I could hear was the sound of... eating?
Just off to my right. On the floor. The sound of sothing ripping and then teeth cutting and grinding. Soone was eating?
Not possible.
I needed to get the backup generator going if I was going to deal with whatever situation was currently happening. I needed light.
Counting my steps from where I was to where I needed to go, I raised my right hand and found the corner indicating the hallway to my office.
My hand landed on sothing liquidity. I pulled my hand away and brought it to my nose. The pungent sll of iron let
know precisely what was coating the walls.
Blood.
Cold, sticky, blood.
Picking up my pace without picking up my feet, I continued to count my footsteps until I was just outside of my office.
Taking the key out of my pocket, the one that didn’t have a bunch of tranks inside of it, I unlocked the door and quickly slipped inside. I softly shut the door behind , listening to the click of the handle catching. I then locked the door, knowing that it wouldn’t keep anyone out who really wanted to get in.
Confident that there was no one in here, even in the darkness, I went to my filing cabinet, and, moving aside a few of the things on top, I reached around for the lamp.
I pulled up the top and let the light flood my office.
There was nothing out of place, the benefit of keeping my door locked at all tis.
Letting out a sigh of relief, I headed toward the door, ready to head out again to see what I could do to restore order in my ER.
That was when I saw it.
In my office door was a frosted half glass that allowed
to see out, but not clearly. I did not need to see clearly to know that the thing outside of my office door was not human.
It had a huge head that seed to be inflated and attached to a stick-thin neck. But that wasn’t what got to .
As the light from my lantern shone on it, I could see the sa pinprick pupils in a sea of whiteness that I had seen in at least two of the patients in the ER.
What I hadn’t seen there was the rows and rows of razor-sharp teeth inside a mouth that was too big to be human.
What the fuck was outside of my door.
The creature, whatever it was, cocked its head to the side, studying
as much as I was studying it.
I could hear the handle of my office door turning like the scene out of a horror movie. But it stopped, unable to go forward anymore thanks to
locking it behind
when I first got here.
The door shook as the monster, and I continued to stare at each other.
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