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CDC field investigator Dr. Eric Linder arrives in a frozen Nebraska grain town to assess a fast-moving fever cluster, only to find the sick triggering synchronized images on every nearby screen. Phones, televisions, and laptops flicker with concrete corridors, unmarked soldiers, black hoods, zip ties, and briefing rooms no patient should recognize, while each recovered host remembers nothing. What begins as outbreak response turns into a claustrophobic blend of medical horror, surveillance nightmare, and buried government operations as the quarantine tightens, the town goes dark, and the footage grows harder to explain away. With the illness spreading beyond Delford’s truck-stop corridor and official reports being rewritten in real time, Linder has to decide which facts still matter when the record itself is under containment. Cold, procedural, and deeply unnerving, this is rural sci-fi horror built from fever heat, static-lit screens, and the dread of institutions that know more than they admit.
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📜 Fictional Work Disclaimer
This story is a work of fiction created for entertainment purposes only. The events, characters, and organizations portrayed are entirely fictional, and any references to governmental bodies, entities, or individuals are not intended to represent reality. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or real-life events or organizations is purely coincidental.
#scifi #scifihorror #creepypasta
sci-fi horror, outbreak horror, medical horror, quarantine thriller, conspiracy horror, surveillance horror, rural Nebraska, small town lockdown, synchronized screens, classified experiment, government cover-up, psychological horror, biotech thriller, dark science fiction
Disclosure: This episode includes AI-generated elements.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Youth Mental Health is a complex challenge that requires comprehensive solutions.
We must strengthen after-school programs.
We must make digital literacy tools available in our schools.
We must work with mental health professionals to support children.
And we must empower mentors, educators, and parents to keep kids happy.
Learn more about our commitment to finding lasting solutions at EmpowerOurFutureCoalition.com slash Solutions.
Paid for by the Coalition to Empower Our Future.
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The screens change, Dr. Briggs said.
He was waiting in his office at the Delford Family Practice,
door closed, blinds drawn against a grey march afternoon.
The room smelled of stale coffee and the antiseptic sweetness of hand sanitizer
used too often by too few people.
He said it before I'd pulled a chair to his desk.
Before any greeting, handshake or small talk about my flight into Grand Island,
or the drive west across frozen fields.
When the fevers cross about 40 degrees, every screen in the room starts showing something.
Phone, television, laptop if one's open. All the same image at the same time.
Warren Briggs had practiced family medicine in Delford, Nebraska for 31 years.
He looked like men in rural medicine who had spent a lifetime making themselves
available to everyone else's emergencies.
Grey at the temples, compact build, gone slightly loose with age.
White coat hanging on a hook because there was no point pretending the day was orderly.
He had filed the cluster report five days earlier,
respiratory pathogen, unusual neurological presentation, possible novel strain,
standard language. The State Health Department had forwarded it to Atlanta and Atlanta had sent me.
The screens were nowhere in that report.
Showing what, I said. He opened the Manila folder on his desk and pushed a photograph across to
me. A phone screen captured by a second phone. Uniformed men stood in a sun-blasted courtyard,
concrete walls behind them. The rifles were American. The uniforms carried no insignia.
This was on Shirley Kovar's phone while I was checking her husband's oxygen saturation,
Briggs said. She doesn't have cable. She's never searched for anything like this. She doesn't know
what it is. He paused. Neither do I. How many patients? 19 confirmed fibrileers of this morning.
I've seen the screen effect in seven homes, more calls coming in every few hours.
When the fever drops, screens go back to normal. The patient doesn't remember any of it.
Complete fugue from onset to break. He sat with his arms folded, watching me the way a man does
when he knows he sounds impossible and expects the dismissal. On the credenza behind him,
message slips had been stacked in three uneven piles and then abandoned. His receptionist,
a heavy-set kid named Pruitt, who couldn't have been more than 22, had tried to hand him another
stack on our way in. Briggs had walked past because there was no room left in him for one more
piece of paper. You're going to tell me it's fever-induced hallucination and the screens are
coincidence, he said. Go ahead. I took out my notebook and wrote down everything he'd told me.
Dates, temperatures, addresses, witnesses. He watched the pen move. After a while, something in his
posture loosened. Not much. Just the slight drop of a man who'd been carrying weight alone for
five days and had found someone willing to take a piece of it. I'm going to need to see a patient
mid-episode. I said, tonight if possible. Dale Kovar, Shirley's husband,
Mill worker 56, day three of fever, hasn't broken yet. He wrote the address on a prescription
pad and tore off the sheet. Bring your own gloves, I'm running low on everything.
The Kovar house sat on a residential street to block south of the Koss Harlan grain elevator,
a single-story ranch with vinyl siding and a cracked concrete stoop where wind had drifted
powdery snow against the steps. Shirley Kovar let me in. Mid-50s, hair pulled back tight enough to
pull the shine from her face, a housecoat thrown over jeans and a sweatshirt. The kind of woman
who had been making practical decisions without sleep for three days and expected nobody else to
start now. He's worse since this afternoon, she said, leading me through the front room.
Talks in his sleep, but I can't understand any of it.
The bedroom was small. Dale Kovar lay on his back under a patchwork quilt,
skin, waxy and slick, breathing in quick shallow pulls through cracked lips.
A phone was plugged in on the nightstand, screened dark. The television on the dresser
played a muted weather broadcast, a map of central Nebraska, grain futures scrolling beneath it,
a high school basketball score from Kerney. I pulled on gloves and took his temperature,
40.3, pulse elevated, lymph nodes swollen along the jaw, severe respiratory infection with neurological
involvement. On any other deployment, I would have logged the vitals, built the differential,
and moved on. I was recording his numbers on my tablet when the phone on the nightstand woke up.
The screen had been off, it came on all at once. Across the room, the television dropped its
weather map at the same instant and matched it frame for frame. A corridor. Concrete walls,
fluorescent tubes mounted in wire cages overhead, armed men moving in single file,
American pattern body armor, plates visible under the carriers, but no unit markings,
no patches, no flags. The camera angle was low, chest height, maybe hip mounted,
and the men moved quickly, silently, with the spacing of people who had rehearsed this approach
until they no longer needed to speak. The lead man carried a black cloth hood bunched in his
off hand. Behind him, the second man had a strip of white zip ties looped through a carabiner
on his vest, six seconds, maybe eight. The footage was too steady for interference,
too specific for algorithmic corruption, too calmly menacing to feel invented.
The men turned a corner, and both screens went black. The phone dimmed.
The television picked up its weather map mid-sentence, as if nothing had interrupted the broadcast.
Dale Kovar's breathing had gone faster and shallower during those few seconds.
His eyes stayed closed. His hands lay flat on the quilt.
He showed no awareness of anything in the room, including me. I realized I had stopped writing.
My tablet was still in my hand, pen hovering over the glass, and a thin stripe of cold had
opened at the base of my spine. Shirley was in the doorway.
Short one, she said. Conversational, a woman who had already made peace with something inexplicable,
because the alternative was panic, and there was nobody to panic, too.
This morning it went on for 20 minutes. Looked like men digging in a field at night,
headlamps and shovels, shapes on the ground. She tugged the housecoat tighter around herself.
I unplugged the TV after that. When I plugged it back in, it came right back.
I finished logging Kovar's vitals and stepped out to the front porch, minus seven outside.
Delphid lay quiet under the cold. The grain elevator lit against a colourless sky,
a gas station on the corner with one car at the pump, and beyond that, frozen fields running flat
to darkness. In the rental car with the heater going, I opened a second notebook,
a pocket molskin from the Grand Island Walmart, separate from my official CDC field log.
I wrote down what I'd seen on Dale Kovar's screens. The corridor, the men, the armor configuration,
the absente insignia, the hood, the zip ties. I noted the synchronization between the two devices.
I referenced Briggs's photograph as a cross-match. 15 years in the epidemic intelligence service,
fevers of every origin, delirium of every shape, every secondary symptom the human body can produce
when its core temperature runs past safe limits. I'd worked hemorrhagic clusters in West Africa
where patients hallucinated entire conversations with the dead. I'd documented in cephalitis cases
in Southeast Asia where the infected screamed in bursts for hours. A pathogen that reached through
its host and altered the output of nearby electronics belonged to a different category.
I let the sentence form in my head and refused to write it, not yet. I wrote only what I had seen.
They arrived the next afternoon. I was pinning case locations on a delford street map,
working off Briggs's patient list when the trucks pulled in. The conference room the
cost Harlan Mill had lent my team faced the gravel parking lot through a wide window.
Two black suburban's and a white panel van, government plates, parked in a line outside the
loading bay. A millhand named Garcia had been sweeping the hallway. He stopped at the front door
and watched them come in, broom-handle resting across his shoulders. Another worker carrying a
lunch-pale back into an office doorway and stayed there until the men had passed. Nobody asked
questions. In towns like Delford, government vehicles rarely brought clarity. They brought control
over who got it. The signals unit, four technicians with hard-case equipment I'd never seen on a
disease investigation, went straight to the second floor without introducing themselves.
A security detail of six men took the building's exits, side-arms under their jackets,
no conversation. One of them put black tape over the conference room webcam without asking.
Leonard Price entered last, 50 or close to it. Trim build,
salt and pepper hair cropped short, navy suit that had never been within a mile of a grain mill.
He carried a DHS credential folder in one hand and a battered leather briefcase in the other.
The briefcase was the only thing on him that looked personal. Scuffed corners,
tarnished clasp, a crease in the handle worn smooth by years of grip.
Everything else about him was new. He found me in the conference room, closed the door,
pulled a chair to the opposite side of the table and sat across from my case map as if he'd
been expected. Dr. Linda, I appreciate the work you've done in the last 24 hours. Your preliminary
reports are thorough. My reports go to Atlanta. They did. He opened the briefcase,
removed a single document in a clear plastic sleeve and set it on the table between us.
As of 0800 this morning, your team's findings route through my office before they reach the CDC.
I've spoken with your director. She'll confirm when you call.
The document was a program briefing, partially redacted, with classification markings I hadn't
seen outside a foyer archive. In the visible text, a code designation for a biological agent,
two letters followed by a four digit number. Below that, a line about recovery and characterisation
with a date from 18 months earlier. You've already cataloged this pathogen.
It was identified under a Department of Defense Research program focused on emerging
biological threats from permafrost degradation. He delivered the line the way someone recites a phrase
used in a hundred briefings. Recovery site was in Siberia. The program is classified,
release was never intended. What do you need from me?
Exactly what you're already doing. Contact tracing, case identification, symptom documentation,
but the reporting framework changes. Your public facing record should reflect a novel hemorrhagic
fever, aggressive atypical but within known parameters. He paused just long enough to make the next
part land. The screen phenomenon does not appear in any official file. The screen effect is the
primary epidemiological anomaly, I said. Stripping it out makes the public record incomplete.
Yes. He acknowledged the objection the way a man steps over a stone in his path without breaking
stride. I'm asking you to maintain an accurate private record for my office and a manageable
public one for the civilian chain. The two documents serve different purposes. And my team
stays under your operational direction. You run the fieldwork. I handle classification and
communication. Your people keep doing their jobs. They don't transmit anything without my review.
The arrangement was clean, specific, designed to look collaborative. Every piece of data my team
generated would pass through prices hands before it reached anyone with the authority to act on
it independently. You flew in from Washington with a classification document ready before I'd
filed my first full day of findings, I said. The CDC was called to give this operation a civilian face.
He studied me for several seconds. You were called because you're good at your job, Dr. Linda.
Your competence is the reason this arrangement works. I need credible fieldwork. I need a case map
that holds up to peer scrutiny. I can't produce that with security personnel.
What happens if the outbreak isn't containable? Price closed the briefcase, checked his watch,
a plain steel face, government issue, and asked whether the mill's second floor had enough
power outlets for his signals unit and whether the motel on Route 30 had vacancy for six additional
rooms. By the third morning, Delford had 38 confirmed cases and the cell tower on the hill above
the grain elevator went dark. I watched it happen from the mill parking lot. A guard signals crew in a
flatbed truck drove up the access road at dawn, spent 40 minutes on the platform, and drove back down.
My phone dropped to zero bars before they reached the bottom. Across town, in the same quarter hour,
a second team cut the landlines at the junction box behind the post office. A third disabled
the fiber relay serving the school district and the municipal building. Price called it
information hygiene. He explained the protocol to my team in the conference room that afternoon,
with the fluency of a man who had rehearsed the language long before this crisis required it.
Outbreak communications needed to be centralized. Unvetted transmissions could cause public alarm,
disproportionate to the actual threat. His people would maintain a secure satellite uplink
for essential medical reporting. All outgoing data would be reviewed.
My field epidemiologist Fletcher asked when the civilian channels would be restored.
Price said the timeline depended on containment progress. Fletcher looked at me.
I had nothing to give him. Outside the mill, the reaction was already building. A crowd of about
20 had gathered at town hall by midday, mostly mill workers and their families, a few retirees,
a young mother with a toddler on her hip who kept unlocking and relocking her dead phone,
as if persistence might restore service. Youth mental health is a complex challenge that requires
comprehensive solutions. We must strengthen after-school programs. We must make digital literacy
tools available in our schools. We must work with mental health professionals to support children,
and we must empower mentors, educators and parents to keep kids happy.
Learn more about our commitment to finding lasting solutions at empowerourfuturecoalition.com slash
solutions paid for by the Coalition to empower our future. Most all-in-one HR systems are a
patchwork of disconnected and manual tools. Ripling is totally automated. If you promote an employee,
Ripling can automatically handle necessary updates from payroll taxes and provisioning new
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An older man in a feed store cap stood beneath the steps and demanded to know why his daughter
in Omaha couldn't call her mother. The mayor, a part-time insurance agent named Huitt,
stood on the steps telling people service would be back soon, that it was a technical issue,
that the government people were working on it. He said it in the voice of a man reciting reassurance,
he did not believe enough to improvise. Nobody believed him. Delford had 9,000 people and one
major employer. The town had been ignored, underfunded and slowly depopulated for two decades.
A communications blackout felt like confirmation of something they had always suspected.
The people with authority over their lives could shut them off whenever the math favored it.
Briggs met me in the clinic parking lot that evening. He'd aged five years in three days,
the skin under his eyes had gone from dark to bruised, and he moved with the stiff care of a man
running on caffeine and obligation. Three families tried to drive out this morning, he said.
God turned them back at the Route 30 checkpoint. Race Sutter owns the body shop on maple,
got out of his truck to argue. They zip tied him to a camp chair by the roadside for six hours
in minus ten windchill. He rubbed his face with both hands. His wife called the clinic.
I told her to bring him in for frostbite screening. She said she couldn't. The guard took his keys.
Where is he now? Home, walking. The zip ties cut his wrists through his coat sleeves.
I wrote it down in the moleskin. An hour earlier, I would have called my director in Atlanta.
That option was gone. I looked at the note after I wrote it and felt the clean procedural frame of
the deployment start to split. The facts themselves were not worse than facts I'd handled before.
What changed was knowing where these facts would never be allowed to go.
The Moran House was on Elm Street, east side of town, a two-story colonial that had once
been white and was now the pale grey of paint surrendered to Nebraska winters.
I went with Briggs on the evening of day four. The call had come through the clinic's walk in
traffic. One of the Moran kids' teachers had driven to Briggs's office in person because there
was no other way to reach anyone. Mark Moran answered the front door. 41, laid off from the mill the
previous autumn, picking up shifts at the grain co-op in Gibbon when they'd have him.
He wore a flannel shirt buttoned wrong. One tail tucked in the other hanging loose,
and his face had the flat, exhausted look of a man who had stopped being surprised by what was
happening inside his home because surprise required energy he no longer had.
They've been like this since yesterday, he said.
The living room was dim. Curtains drawn. Every piece of electronics in the room was on.
The television over the fireplace, a laptop open on the coffee table, the microwave in the
adjoining kitchen visible through the pass-through. Its clock display bright green.
All of them showed the same image, men in hoods. A line of them shuffling down a corridor lit
by overhead tubes, hands bound behind their backs with dark fabric. The camera held steady
from a fixed position, like a security feed. An American flag was mounted on the wall at the far
end of the corridor, partly obscured by a water pipe. The hooded men moved slowly. Two guards
walked alongside them, faces visible, wearing unmarked fatigues and side-arms in thigh holsters.
One of the guards was laughing, mouth open, head tipped back, unmistakable even without audio.
The two younger Moran children were on the kitchen floor, a boy of about seven and a girl of maybe
five. Both kneeling, back straight, hands clasped behind their heads, fingers interlaced.
The boys' elbows were pulled back at the exact angle a detainee holds after a guard has corrected
him twice. His eyes were open and fixed on the baseboard. The girls were closed, her lips moving
around words I couldn't make out. They had never been taught this position. Their father had never
served. Their mother, Jenny Moran was upstairs. Briggs checked her first, found her fibrile at 40.1,
curled on the bathroom floor with her arms over her head, shaking in long, rolling tremors,
that synced with the footage cycling on the laptop screen, their 15-year-old daughter had
carried into the hallway. Anna stood at the living room window facing the street,
arms at her sides, speaking in rapid, continuous Arabic. The words poured out in fluent,
unbroken chains, grammatically structured, a native speaker's cadence coming from the mouth of a
girl who had never left Platt County. Tears ran down her face in two steady lines.
She gave no sign she knew anyone else was in the room.
Mark Moran stood with one hand on the doorframe between the kitchen and hall,
not interfering because he had already learned that touching them changed nothing.
A serial bowl sat on the counter behind him, milk skinned over from sitting too long.
A cartoon lunchbox lay open on the table, never packed. The house itself felt interrupted,
as if ordinary family time had been cut open and left where it fell.
I stood three feet from Anna with a thermometer and a blood draw kit, and the television above
the fireplace shifted. The hooded men vanished. The screen cut to something else,
a desert airstrip at twilight, vehicles parked in a row, a prefabricated building with a
satellite array on its roof. Men in civilian clothes unloading long cases from the back of a pickup
truck. The image was sharp, digital, well lit, modern, then a briefing room, a table with six chairs,
maps pinned to a corkboard on the wall. A man in a polo shirt and car keys pointing at a
projected image I couldn't resolve from my angle. Another man seated across from him,
hands folded, face partly turned toward the camera, and I knew him. I'd seen him on C-SPAN
14 months earlier, during his confirmation hearing. A deputy undersecretary, current administration,
still in office. The footage held for four seconds, then cycled back to the hooded men.
Anna Moran kept speaking. The children on the kitchen floor kept kneeling.
Somewhere upstairs, Jenny Moran made a low sound that might have been pain or fear.
Briggs was beside me. This is the fourth house like this today, he said. His voice was controlled
the way a surgeon's hands are controlled through practice. I drew blood from Anna Moran while she
spoke a language she had never studied. Her arm was compliant, limp, offered the way a sleepwalk
as body yields to redirection. The vein was easy. She never looked at me. When I turned toward the
kitchen floor, the boy lifted his head half an inch and asked in a voice so small it barely carried.
Are we in trouble? His father closed his eyes.
No, I said. Because there was nothing truthful I could say that would be less cruel.
Outside in Briggs's truck, I labeled the tubes. Moran, A Moran, J Moran, K, the seven-year-old boy,
Kyle, whom Briggs had coaxed off the kitchen floor long enough to take a temperature and a blood
sample, 40.4. I put the tubes in my field kit, wrote the addresses and times in the mull skin,
and sat in the passenger seat while Briggs drove us back toward the clinic. After two blocks,
I said, that briefing room sequence. I saw it. The man at the table was Gerald Corwin,
deputy under secretary of defense for policy. He was confirmed last January. Briggs kept his
eyes on the road. So that's current. Current to someone, I said. He glanced at me then, quick and
sharp. I watched the dark field sliding past the windshield. This thing may not show the future,
I said, hearing the care in my own voice, the professional resistance to making the leap too early.
But if it carries archive material from people higher in the chain, then a later host can see plans,
briefings, operations that haven't happened yet from the viewer's point of view. To the viewer,
stored and future would look identical. Briggs pulled into the clinic lot, killed the engine,
and sat with both hands on the wheel. Five days ago, I had a flu cluster, he said.
Now I have children on their knees in a kitchen, and classified military operations on their living room
TV. He opened the door. Cold air filled the cab. I need to check on Dale Kova. His wife called the
walk in this morning. Temperatures been above 40.5 for 36 hours. If it doesn't break by midnight,
his kidneys are going to start failing, and Grand Island is 40 minutes away on a road the guard
won't let him use. That night, in the conference room, I rebuilt the timeline. I spread my case map
across the table, the official version, the one prices team reviewed, and beside it, the mole
skin's notes. Every confirmed patient plotted by symptom onset, address, workplace, and known contacts.
Prices version showed the index case as Dale Kova, on set March 9th, consistent with a localized
cluster radiating from the mill neighborhood. My version showed something else. Three patients on
the south side of town, a truck stop cook named Phelps, a gas station attendant named Womack,
and a retired schoolteacher named Beryl Hesse, who lived alone above the laundromat,
had presented to Briggs with Phoevers five and six days before Kova.
Briggs had logged them as seasonal respiratory cases, mild, self-resolving. He'd prescribed fluids
and rest and moved on. But Beryl Hesse had mentioned offhand during a follow-up call four days later
that her television had acted up during the worst night of her fever. Briggs hadn't noted it.
By then he was buried in new cases, and the detail had slipped past him.
He told me about it only when I asked whether any earlier patients had reported
electronic anomalies. Hesse, Phelps, Womack. All three lived or worked within a quarter mile of
the Delford truck stop on the I-80 corridor. Phelps cooked for long haul drivers passing through
between Lincoln and Northplatt. Womack pumped gas for the same traffic. Hesse bought her groceries
at the convenience store attached to the truck stop because it was closer than the fairway on Maine.
The pathogen had been in Delford's truck stop for at least six days before Kova's fever
triggered the cluster report. During those six days, every long haul rig that stopped for fuel,
food or a shower had been exposed. I-80 was not a road in the epidemiological sense.
It was an artery. Drivers who refueled in Delford could have reached Denver,
Des Moines, Kansas City and Salt Lake within 48 hours of exposure.
The cordon around Delford had been thrown around a wound after the blood had already left it.
I sat back from the map. Until then some part of me had preserved the possibility,
thin, procedural, but present that prices measures were grotesque because they were urgent.
That the blackout, the containment language, even the buried reporting framework
had been built around a crisis that could still be mathematically narrowed.
The truck stop timeline killed that possibility. The perimeter was preserving a narrative
about origin and spread. Containment had become secondary to controlling the record of where the
outbreak had begun. I closed the mole skin and sat with it in my lap. The mill was quiet.
Prices signals team had gone back to the motel for the night. A security man sat at the front
entrance reading a paperback western, with a cracked spine. The overhead lights in the conference
room gave everything a yellow cast that made the street map look older than it was,
as if I were studying the administrative record of a town already lost.
I called prices satellite phone from the desk line the signals team had left operational for my use.
He answered on the second ring.
I need to discuss the transmission timeline, I said. Tomorrow morning,
0700, I'll come to you. The timeline suggests pre-symptomatic spread through the truck stop
corridor. If that's accurate, the current perimeter is, tomorrow Dr. Linda.
His voice was the same as always, measured, unrushed. A man who had never been surprised by anything
I told him. Get some rest. We have a full schedule. He hung up.
I sat with the phone in my hand for a long time, listening to the deadline and
understanding more completely than I had at any point before that my work and his were no longer
overlapping activities. They were opposing ones. They started moving patients the next morning.
Price called it assisted relocation. A medical transfer to a federal facility in Omaha.
Specialized containment, better resources, a proper isolation ward.
The logistics were handled by his security team, not mine.
Two unmarked vans arrived at dawn. His people went door to door with a list,
escorting the most severely symptomatic patients out of their homes on stretches and in wheelchairs.
Dale Kova was on the list. So was Jenny Moran. So were 11 others whose
fevers had held above 40 degrees for more than 24 hours.
Youth mental health is a complex challenge that requires comprehensive solutions.
We must strengthen after-school programs. We must make digital literacy tools available
in our schools. We must work with mental health professionals to support children and we must
empower mentors, educators and parents to keep kids happy. Learn more about our commitment to
finding lasting solutions at EmpowerOurFutureCoalition.com slash Solutions.
Paid for by the Coalition to Empower our Future.
Most all-in-one HR systems are a patchwork of disconnected and manual tools.
Ripling is totally automated. If you promote an employee,
Ripling can automatically handle necessary updates from payroll taxes and provisioning new
app permissions to assigning required manager training. That's why Ripling is the number one
rated human capital management suite on G2, trust radius and gardener.
If you're ready to run the backbone of your business on one unified platform,
head to Ripling.com slash AcastBiz and sign up today. That's r-i-p-p-l-i-n-g.com slash AcastBiz to sign up.
Briggs stood in the clinic doorway and watched the first van pull away.
I've treated Dale Kovar for 23 years. He said,
chronic back pain, two bouts of pneumonia, a knee replacement in 2019. He trusts me,
surely trusts me. He was holding a clipboard, a habit, something for his hands to grip.
They won't let me ride along. They won't tell me which facility in Omaha.
They won't give me a transfer number or a receiving physician's name.
The van's rear doors had been closed before the loading team wheeled the stretcher to the curb.
No visible medic, no monitor leads, no oxygen running,
though Dale's saturation had been borderline the night before.
A paper wristband had been put on him, but it had no hospital logo and no printed patient
number I could see from the sidewalk. Only a barcode and a line of block text turned away from me.
The two men handling the stretcher wore nitrile gloves and soft shell jackets, not scrubs,
and one had a sidearm under his coat. Price said the information would be provided once
the patients are stabilized. I don't believe a single one of them is going to Omaha, Eric.
He said it plainly, a statement of professional judgment, not accusation.
He'd been a physician in a town small enough to know every patient by first name,
and he understood the difference between a medical transfer and a removal.
The second van loaded at the Moran house. I was there. Price hadn't restricted my access
to active case sites yet, and I'd insisted on a final assessment of the Moran children
before any transport. Kyle and Sarah had been moved to the living room couch. Their fevers had
broken overnight. They sat side by side wrapped in blankets, eating cereal from plastic bowls with
the blanket, hollowed look of children who had slept for a long time and woken somewhere unfamiliar.
Kyle asked me where his mother was. I told him she was going to a hospital where they could help her.
He nodded. He didn't ask which hospital either, because he trusted adults to know,
or because the last day had already taught him they often didn't.
Anna Moran's fever had also broken. She sat on the stairs, arms around her knees,
silent. When I asked how she felt, she said, tired. When I asked if she remembered anything from
the previous days, she shook her head once and looked at the wall. Her father stood on the
porch while the van team buckled Jenny Moran in. He didn't speak. He didn't wave. He kept one hand
on the porch rail so hard the knuckles went white. When the rear doors shut, he said,
my wife hates enclosed spaces. Nobody answered. The van pulled away.
Marc Moran remained on the porch until it turned the corner on Elm. Then went inside and closed
the door like a man trying not to let his children hear the sound of himself breaking.
I found price that afternoon in the office his team had set up on the mill's second floor,
a corner room that had been the plant managers, cleared of everything except a desk, two chairs,
and a wall-mounted whiteboard covered in shorthand I couldn't read from the doorway.
Was the pathogen manufactured? He looked up from a laptop screen. Considered me the way he always
did, passaling out honesty and measured fractions. The organism is natural in origin, recovered from a
permafrost core sample in eastern Siberia, approximately 70 meters deep. The program focused on
characterization and subsequently refinement. Refinement. Control detenuation, stability
modifications for laboratory study, standard procedures for any high consequence biological
research. Defensive research. Yes. He used the word with the fluency of someone trained to use it.
A term approved, tested in briefings, confirmed by council. Defensive. The syllables carried
the weight of an institutional decision about what a word was allowed to mean.
The footage, the pathogen broadcasts, I said. Some of it isn't historical.
Price closed the laptop. Slowly. The gesture created a pause he could fill with whatever he chose.
Dr. Linda, I want to be straightforward with you because I think you've earned that.
He folded his hands on the desk. The pathogen's interaction with neural architecture is
more complex than the original research team anticipated. It doesn't generate images. It reads and
stores them. Every host it passes through contributes to a cumulative archive. That archive is broadcast
indiscriminately during high fever states. Stored from whom? From everyone in the transmission
chain, including in the early development phase laboratory personnel with active security
clearances. The room was very quiet. Somewhere below us, a mill conveyor belt cycled through its
idle rotation. A rhythmic clatter of metal on metal. Your lab staff were infected during development.
Contained exposures, controlled environment. The infections were resolved and the subjects
were monitored and cleared. But the pathogen kept what it read from them. That appears to be the case.
Including operational briefings they'd been read into. Including material they had been exposed to
in the course of their duties. He unfolded his hands and placed them flat on the desk.
Which is why the screen phenomenon is classified and why every piece of broadcast content captured
within this town is a federal security matter regardless of its age or origin.
Age or origin, I said. Not date. His eyes stayed on mine. There's no evidence the archive predicts
anything. He said. But sequence integrity degrades across hosts. Material may surface out of order
relative to its acquisition point. If an individual in the chain has seen operational planning for
an event not yet executed, a later viewer will experience that as anticipation. A plan not yet
executed. The archive was giving people advance exposure to events still in motion.
The people you're relocating, I said. What happens to them? They'll be taken care of, Eric.
First name. Delivered gently, almost kindly, with the intimacy of a man who understood that
familiarity could function as a wall. I stood in the doorway for a few seconds after that. A
security man in the hall below had shifted his chair so he could see the stairwell and the front
entrance at the same time. His paperback was tucked into his jacket pocket, spying out.
Price had told me the truth to see how much I could carry without becoming unusable.
He wasn't seeking agreement. He was measuring whether understanding would still leave me obedient.
I went back to the conference room and closed the door.
Two in the morning. The mill dark except for the security lights in the loading bay
and the exit sign glow in the stairwell. The guard checkpoint on Route 30 visible through
the conference room window as a cluster of orange cones and a single flood light.
I sat at the table with my field kit open. Inside it, beside the standard equipment,
thermometer, stethoscope, swabs, gloves, biohazard bags.
Were three blood draw tubes I had collected at the Moran House.
Labelled in my handwriting, logged in the mullskin, missing from the official intake records
prices team compiled. Beside the tubes, my personal phone. Dead for outgoing calls and data since
the tower went dark. But its camera still worked. I had recorded eleven seconds of the Moran
living room broadcast the previous night. The desert air strip, the briefing room.
The face I'd identified as Corwin. Shakey footage dim captured from my hip while I pretended
to check the phone's battery. The quality was poor. The content was unmistakable.
Also in the kit, the mullskin. 47 pages of notes spanning five days. Patient names,
onset dates, symptom profiles, screen effect descriptions, broadcast content,
the corrected transmission timeline showing pre-symptomatic spread through the truck stop corridor.
Everything prices official reports were designed to exclude.
I put the blood tubes in my jackets in a pocket, zipped the phone and the mullskin into the
kit's side compartment and closed the case. 15 years in the epidemic intelligence service,
every deployment, the same foundational discipline, observe, document, report through the chain.
The chain decides what to do with the data. Trust the chain. The chain had brought me price,
a falsified reporting framework, a communications blackout, and a convoy of unmarked vans carrying
my patients to an unnamed destination. I kept the kit close and waited for morning,
because I needed to decide whether I still belonged inside that chain at all.
The perimeter started to fail on day seven. Briggs told me about it first.
He driven to the Route 30 checkpoint at six in the morning to argue again for medical transport
authorization to Grand Island. Two of his remaining patients needed dialysis support he
couldn't provide from a family practice clinic. The guard sergeant on duty turned him down,
same as every other morning, and Briggs was pulling a U-turn in the gravel when he saw the crowd.
30 or 40 people on the far side of the barrier. Cars parked along the highway shoulder in a ragged
line stretching back toward the on-ramp. Families mostly. Some held hand-lettered signs.
One man had a bullhorn but wasn't using it yet. A few had pitched camping chairs in the frozen
grass beside the road, settled in for a wait they expected to last.
They're from Columbus, Grand Island, Keirney, Briggs said. Wives, parents,
grown kids who can't reach their people inside the line. He set his keys on the reception counter.
The guard won't let them through and won't explain why. One woman told the sergeant she'd
been trying to call her mother for four days. He said the cell infrastructure was under maintenance.
How did they know to come? A trucker out of Ogolala posted a few seconds of dash cam footage
to a message board before the towers went down. Shakey video, bad resolution, but it showed the
guard vehicles and the checkpoint. Somebody in a Keirney Facebook group identified the location
from the grain elevator in the background. He took off his coat. There's also a county sheriff's
deputy from Merrick County parked at the back of the line. He's watching. He hasn't approached
the guard yet but he's there. By noon the crowd had doubled. Prices security team reinforced
the checkpoint with four additional men from the mill detail. The guard soldiers, Nebraska
National Guard, most of them weekend reservists from towns within a hundred miles of Delford,
stood behind the concrete barriers with their rifles at low ready and their faces visible to
people who could have been their neighbors. I drove out to the checkpoint at 1,400.
Price hadn't restricted my vehicle access. My CDC credentials still cleared the inner perimeter
and he needed me mobile for case assessments. I parked on the Delford side and walked to the barrier
on foot. The crowd was louder now. The man with the bullhorn was reading names. People trapped inside
the cordon, their ages, their medical conditions were known. A woman in a green parker held a phone
above her head, screened facing the guard line, showing a photograph of an older man in a feed cap.
Her father I assumed. She held it there without speaking. Arm steady. For the full ten minutes
I stood at the barrier. As if endurance alone might force one honest answer out of the men facing
her. Then I saw the woman near the back of the crowd. She stood apart from the others near the
shoulder rumble strip, facing the checkpoint but not moving toward it. Mid-forties, brown hair
loose around her shoulders. She stood with her arms at her sides in the flat neutral posture I had
learned to recognize over the past week. The same absence of voluntary motion I'd seen in Anna
Moran at the living room window. In Kyle Moran on the kitchen floor, in every febrile patient at the
peak of an episode. Her lips were moving. I was 40 feet away behind the barrier but I could see the
shapes her mouth was making. Repetitive. Structured. She was reciting something,
coordinates maybe, or a sequence of words in a fixed order. A man near her glanced over and
stepped sideways, giving her room the way people create distance from someone behaving wrong in public.
She had never been inside the cordon. Or if she had, not through any route prices perimeter could
account for. A guard specialist named Pruitt, not the receptionist, a different Pruitt,
a kid from Hastings who told me his first name was Jake when I'd passed him a coffee at the
checkpoint two days earlier, was stationed six feet to my right. He had been watching the woman too.
She started about 20 minutes ago. He said quietly, pitched under the crowd noise.
Just walked up to the shoulder and started talking. Won't respond when anyone speaks to her.
Is she fee-brile? Nobody's checked. We're under orders to avoid physical contact with anyone
outside the line. From the far end of the barrier, I heard a change in the crowd's noise.
A knot of people near the bullhorn man had started chanting. Ragged and unsynchronized at first,
then locking in. Words I couldn't make out from this distance. Then I could. They were chanting a name.
Two words repeated, a compound designation that sounded military, an operation name.
Pruitt went still beside me. His hand moved to the stock of his rifle, then stopped. He pulled it back.
I did two rotations in Kandahar, he said. His voice had changed, lower, stripped of the conversational
ease he'd had a moment earlier. That name. I've heard that name. It was on a briefing slide at
Bagrum in 2018. He looked at me. 23 years old, sunburned under his helmet strap, and something behind
his eyes had come loose. How do those people know that name? I had no answer for him. The biological
spread had escaped town days earlier, standing at the barrier, listening to civilians chant a
classified designation they should not have known. I understood something worse was moving with it.
The archive itself, or the people already altered by carrying it, was leaking outward in ways
nobody had designed a perimeter to stop. I walked back to my vehicle. In the mirror,
I saw Pruitt set his rifle against the concrete barrier, step back from the line, and stand with
his hands on his knees, head down, breathing. Briggs had a shortwave radio. He told me that night,
in the clinic's back office, door closed, lights low. A Yaisu transceiver he'd bought 15
years earlier, for storm season communication, when the power grid failed, which it did in Delford
at least twice every winter. He kept it in a cabinet behind the auto-clave, plugged into a 12-volt
battery he recharged from a solar panel on the clinic roof. Prices blackout had targeted cellular,
landline, and fiber infrastructure. Nobody had swept for amateur banned shortwave,
because nobody in the signals unit had imagined a 60-year-old GP in a grain town would be running one.
I've been talking to Anvasek in Lincoln since day three, he said. State epidemiologist
she was copied on my original cluster report. When the phones died, she tried to reach me through
the state health department's emergency line and got nothing. So she found my call sign in the
amateur registry and tried shortwave. What have you told her? Symptom profiles, case counts,
the screen effect. He paused. Youth mental health is a complex challenge that requires
comprehensive solutions. We must strengthen after-school programs. We must make digital literacy tools
available in our schools. We must work with mental health professionals to support children,
and we must empower mentors, educators, and parents to keep kids happy. Learn more about our
commitment to finding lasting solutions at EmpowerOurFutureCoalition.com slash Solutions.
Paid for by the Coalition to Empower Our Future.
God has turned them back. That alone tells her something is wrong beyond a hemorrhagic fever.
Can she receive a physical package? Briggs looked at me for a long time.
The clinic was quiet. His last walk in patient had left an hour earlier.
Pruit the receptionist had gone home, and the only sound was the baseboard heater ticking against
the cold. What kind of package? I told him. Blood samples from the Moran household. Unlisted
in the official records. Eleven seconds of broadcast footage on my phone.
The moleskin. Forty-seven pages of unredacted field notes covering the full scope of the outbreak.
The corrected transmission timeline. The screen effect documentation. The broadcast content
descriptions, including the core-win identification. If Vasek gets this to the state lab and the
governor's office at the same time, it triggers a parallel investigation outside prices reporting
chain, I said. The blood work alone forces a pathogen characterization that won't match the
hemorrhagic fever narrative. The footage corroborates it. The notes give enough epidemiological
framework to justify an emergency public health declaration at the state level.
And then? Then it becomes a public outbreak with state and federal jurisdiction in conflict.
Price can't relocate patients or maintain the blackout once the governor's office is involved.
The cordon either becomes a legitimate quarantine with civilian medical oversight or it collapses.
What about the broadcasts? The classified material? Goes public with everything else.
The words sat between us. I heard the full shape of what I was asking only after I said it.
This was a deliberate release. Evidence, pathogen data, and material that could rip open whatever
operation had produced price and the archive with him. Briggs leaned back in his chair.
The leather creaked. Behind him, the cabinet with the shortwave was closed. Its ordinary wooden
door indistinguishable from the supply cabinets on either side. I've got 42 patients I can't
transfer, can't properly treat, and can't reach by phone, he said. I've got a woman on Elm whose
husband watched strangers take her away without a receiving address. I've got a town clinic
turning people away with advice and a cedar minifin because that's all I have left.
He looked at the cabinet, then back at me. Whatever happens to you and me, somebody outside this
town needs to know that number. He opened the cabinet, powered up the Yasu, and began
composing a relay message to Vasek. While he spoke into the microphone in clipped call sign language,
I stood beside the exam room sink and felt the line inside me finish moving.
The decision had come by accumulation, not by revelation. Fact after fact had piled up until
continuing to report through the institution I served, had itself become an act of falsification.
When Briggs finished, he wrote down the pickup instructions on a prescription pad,
and handed them to me with a pen that had his clinic's phone number printed on the barrel,
a number that no longer reached anyone outside town.
Price found me the next morning. He was already in the conference room when I arrived at O630,
seated at the table briefcase open, two paper cups of coffee from the gas station positioned
side by side. He'd brought one for me. The gesture was precise, considered, like everything else
about him. Sit down, Eric. I sat. The coffee was lukewarm. He had been waiting a while.
I'm going to be direct with you, he said. Because I think you deserve clarity,
and because the situation has changed in ways that make clarity more efficient than management.
He removed a document from the briefcase and placed it on the table between us.
A printed report, 12 pages, spiral bound. My name was on the cover page.
Dr. Eric Linder, EIS Lead Investigator, CDC Field Deployment,
Delford, Nebraska. Below it, a title. Final Epidemiological Summary, novel hemorrhagic fever cluster,
Platt County, Nebraska. The report was already written.
Price's people had drafted it using my official case data, stripped of every reference to the
screen phenomenon, the broadcast content, the corrected transmission timeline, and the patient
relocations. What remained was a clean, professionally structured account of an aggressive but
containable hemorrhagic fever in a small agricultural community, tragic, unusual, explainable.
This goes to Atlanta, to the state health department, and to the media pool when the
cordon lifts. Price said, your name on it provides the credibility the document requires.
Your field data supports the clinical narrative. There are no factual claims in this report that
contradict your official logs. My official logs are incomplete. You made them incomplete.
Yes, he acknowledged it with the same calm he gave everything else, and I'm asking you to let
that stand. What's the alternative? Federal obstruction charges under the national security
protocols your deployment now falls within. Revocation of your clearance, quarantine designation,
which keeps you inside the cordon for the duration of the containment period. He said it evenly,
itemized like costs on an invoice. I would also note that your personal phone and your field
kit have not been inspected. I'm aware they could be. I've chosen so far to leave that decision
to you. He knew. Maybe not every item, but enough. He had known long enough to confiscate them
and hadn't. He was giving me room to hand them over voluntarily, to choose complicity instead of
having it forced on me. The offer was more respectful than a search. That was the worst part.
The cordon has already failed, I said. I showed you the truck stop timeline, pre-symptomatic spread
along the I-80 corridor, six days before the first reported case. The pathogen is in Lincoln,
Omaha, Denver, probably farther. You can erase Delphid from the map and it won't matter.
You're correct that the pathogen has likely spread beyond this locality.
He folded his hands the way he had in every conversation, composed, balanced,
body language as managed as his words, which is precisely why the narrative framework matters more
than the cordon. The cordon buys time. The report defines the event. If the pathogen surfaces in
Omaha next week, the public record needs to already contain a coherent non-alarming explanation
linked to a resolved rural cluster. The alternative is uncontrolled disclosure of classified material on
every television screen between here and the eastern seaboard. And the patients in cold storage
are being monitored in a secure facility appropriate to their condition. Where? He picked up his coffee,
drank, set it down. Sign the report, Eric. Accept reassignment to Atlanta. Walk out of Delphid with
your career, your clearance, and the knowledge that you helped prevent a disclosure event that
would destabilize alliances, collapse public trust in federal institutions, and achieve nothing
curative for the people already infected. He paused. I'm not asking you to forget what you've seen.
I'm asking you to let the system process it through the appropriate channels
at the appropriate pace, under conditions that don't result in mass panic.
The coffee sat between us. The conference room was cold. The mill's heating system had been
unreliable for days, and the baseboard units clicked and went silent in irregular cycles.
Through the window, the grain elevator stood against a white sky, and beyond it, the guard checkpoints
floodlights still burned in daylight. I picked up the report. 12 pages. Clean margins,
professional formatting. My name and credentials on every header. A document designed to be
credible because it was built from real data and stripped of the pieces that made the data
meaningful. I'll review it tonight, I said. Of course. He closed the briefcase. The tarnished
clasp caught the overhead light. Take your time. When he left, I kept my hand on the report a few
seconds longer than necessary, feeling the spiral binding under my palm. I knew exactly what signing
it would mean. It would turn living people into a manageable narrative artifact and make me part
of the conversion. I left the report on the table. I left the mill at 2200. The inner checkpoint
was staffed by a single guard private, a kid from Macook who had been rotating 12 hour shifts
for four days and whose face had the glazed look of sustained sleep deprivation. I showed him my
CDC badge and told him I needed to reach a symptomatic household on the south end of town for an
emergency assessment. He logged my plate number on a clipboard and waved me through.
The night was clear and hard. Minus 12. The roads were empty. Delphard had imposed a
voluntary curfew after dark, and most of the town was complying out of exhaustion more than
obedience. I drove south past the clinic, passed the school, passed the laundromat where
Berrel Hess lived upstairs, and turned east onto the county road that ran parallel to I-80.
Briggs's relay message had gone out at 1600. Vasek would have a state police officer waiting
at the Platte County Line, mile marker 112, parked on the access road behind the grain co-op in
Gibbon. 26 miles from the inner checkpoint. The outer perimeter was positioned on the highway
on ramps and the major intersections. The county roads between towns were patrolled but not blocked,
because prices team had calculated, correctly until now, that nobody inside the cordon had anywhere
to go and no way to communicate with anyone who would meet them. The field kit was on the passenger
seat. Inside it, three blood draw tubes in a sealed biohazard pouch, the mullskin, and my phone
with 11 seconds of footage. I'd transferred the mullskin's contents to a portable USB drive
at the clinic that afternoon, copying the pages on Briggs's flatbed scanner, while
pruned the receptionist was at lunch. The drive was in the kit's side pocket, wrapped in a latex
glove to keep it dry. I drove east on the county road at the speed limit. No headlights behind me.
The field stretched flat and white on both sides, stubble poking through crusted snow,
fence posts marking property lines in the darkness. The only light was the dashboard glow and
behind me, shrinking in the mirror, the distant yellow smear of the mill's security floods.
At mile marker 108, I started to feel it. A warmth behind my eyes, low and diffuse,
like the first hour of a flu. The moment the body registers invasion before the immune response
organisers. I gripped the wheel and kept driving. The heater was on high. I turned it off. The warmth
stayed. By mile marker 110, my vision had developed a faint bright edge, as though the contrast on
the world had been turned up one notch. The road surface looked sharper than it should.
The fence posts were too defined. My joints had begun to ache in quick,
separate pulses, each one small enough to dismiss and together impossible to ignore.
I blinked and the effect receded. Then it came back. I knew the symptom curve.
I knew what an exposure window looked like. I could date my likely infection backward through
house calls, through Dale Kovar's bedroom, through the Moran living room, through the weak I had
spent leaning over the sick in rooms where screens watched with them. Knowledge did nothing.
The body proceeds on its own schedule. Mile marker 112. A gravel access road leading south
toward the co-op buildings. A state police cruiser parked behind the first storage shed,
lights off, engine running, exhaust drifting white into the cold. I pulled up beside it and got
out. The officer was young. Late twenties. He stepped out of the cruiser in a heavy department
jacket and a watch cap. Breath visible. Service weapon on his hip. He looked at my CDC badge
then at me, then at the field kit in my hand. Dr. Vasek sent me, he said. She said you'd have
a sealed package. This goes directly to her. No intermediaries, no stops, no departmental intake.
Her hands only. I held out the kit. The biohazard pouch contains blood samples that need to reach
a BSL-3 lab within 12 hours. The USB drive and the notebook are evidentiary documentation
supporting an emergency public health petition to the governor's office. She'll understand the
contents. He took the kit. Held it carefully, with both hands, the way a person holds something
he knows is more significant than its size. Are you all right? He said. You look. I'm fine,
drive. He got into the cruiser. I watched him back out of the access road and turn east onto
the county blacktop, tail lights shrinking, gravel crunching under his tires until the sound faded,
and there was only wind in the distant base vibration of a freight truck somewhere on I-80.
I stood in the dark for a while. The warmth behind my eyes had settled into a low pressure,
building by fractions. My hands were bare. I'd forgotten my gloves in the car. I couldn't feel the
cold in my fingers, which meant either the adrenaline was still masking it, or the fever was further
along than I wanted to calculate. I drove back to Delford. The inner checkpoint guard logged my
return without comment. I parked at the fire station on Main Street, walked inside and found
bricks in the front bay, restocking a first aid kit by the light of a camping lantern.
It's out, I said. He looked at me. Looked longer. Set down the roll of gauze he was holding.
Your warm, he said. A physician's observation, the diagnosis already forming behind his eyes.
38 maybe. Climbing. How long? Started on the drive. 20-25 minutes. He said nothing for a moment.
He walked to the station's storage closet, pulled out a folding cot and a wool blanket,
and carried them into the turnout room at the back of the building. A narrow space with a sink,
a wall-mounted first aid cabinet, and a safety monitor above the door connected to the station's
internal camera system. The monitor was on, showing a fixed wide angle of the empty engine bay.
Lie down, he said. I'll check your temperature in an hour. If you cross 40, I'll start fluids.
You should keep distance. I've been in direct contact with symptomatic patients for nine days without
a mask for the first five. If I'm going to get it, I already have it. He set the blanket on the
cot. Lie down, Eric. I lay down. The ceiling was white drywall, water stained in one corner.
The safety monitor above the door showed the engine bay, concrete floor, the front bumper of the
rescue truck, the camping lantern Briggs had left on the workbench. Briggs closed the door.
His footsteps moved down the hallway and out to the front bay. The warmth spread.
It traveled from behind my eyes to the base of my skull, then down through my shoulders and
chest, unhurried and thorough, like a tide filling a series of connected rooms. I could track
its progress the way I'd tracked pathogen spread on a case map, systematically by feel,
each new area of warmth a new pin on the board. My shirt was damped by the time I check my watch.
41 minutes since the county road, the monitor above the door changed. The engine bay vanished.
The screen held gray static for two seconds, then resolved.
A room. Small, windowless, lit from above by a single recessed panel.
Concrete walls painted institutional beige. A metal table in the center bolted to the floor.
Two chairs, one on each side. A man sat in the far chair with his back to the camera.
Shoulders broad under a dark jacket, hands resting on the table.
Across from him, a second man faced the camera. Younger, thinner, wearing a coloured shirt open
at the neck. He was speaking, lips moving around words I couldn't hear. Expression calm and focused,
delivering information in a measured cadence point by point. The footage was crisp. High resolution.
The lighting was even modern. The recessed panel above the table was an LED type I
recognized from a CDC facility renovation in Atlanta two years earlier. A fixture that had
only entered government procurement catalogs within the last 18 months. I watched.
The man in the far chair shifted, and I caught a partial view of his face in profile.
Unfamiliar, middle-aged, clean shaven. The younger man continued speaking.
Behind him, on the wall, a clock showed a time I couldn't read at this resolution.
Beside the clock, a framed insignia I'd never seen. A dark blue shield shape with lettering
too small to make out. An agency that existed on no organizational chart I had been shown.
The footage held steady. The younger man paused, consulted a folder on the table,
turned a page, and resumed speaking. A briefing conducted in the way all briefings are
conducted. Calmly, in a quiet room, by someone who has given this presentation before and expects
to give it again. I lay on the cot in the Delphur Fire Station and watched a meeting take place in
a room that might exist in Washington, or in a facility I'd never heard of, or in a building
not yet in use. The pathogen played its archive without annotation or context. It offered no dates,
no captions, no explanation. Just the image, pulled from someone's memory, stored in the chain,
broadcast through a wall-mounted monitor above a turnout room door in a town of 9,000
the federal government had considered expendable. The footage ran for a long time. Three minutes,
four. The two men spoke and listened, spoke and listened. Business conducted in a place I couldn't
locate on a date I couldn't determine about a subject I could see but couldn't hear.
At some point, the younger man smiled at something the other said. A brief, professional smile.
The kind exchanged between colleagues who have worked together long enough to share private
references. Then static. Then the engine bay returned. The rescue truck. The lantern. The empty
concrete. I reached into my coat pocket and pulled out a spare spiral notebook, bought with the
mull skin in Grand Island. I wrote the date. The time. The duration of the broadcast. The room
dimensions as best I could estimate. The furniture. The lighting fixture. The wall color. The insignia.
The two men. The broad-shouldered ones seen only in profile. The younger one facing the camera
with his folder and his calm delivery. The smile. I described what I saw, line by line, in the only
language I had left. The language of a field investigator recording evidence for a chain that no
longer existed in any form I recognized. The monitor above the door was dark. The fever held
steady. Outside somewhere east on I-80, a state police cruiser carried blood samples and 47
pages of notes toward Lincoln. And the pathogen inside it traveled the same road. Adding what it
found to the archive. Carrying what it carried into the next room. The next screen. The next pair of
eyes willing to look. For 15 years I had believed documentation was the first step in response.
In Delphi it had become something smaller and more stubborn than that. A refusal to let
what passed through a body disappear with the body that carried it.

Galactic Horrors

Galactic Horrors

Galactic Horrors
