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Resident Evil: Apocalypse [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader]
eBook by Keith R. A. DeCandido
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eBook Category: Dark Fantasy
eBook Description: Failure of the Hive to contain the Umbrella Corporation's most deadly viral creation has led to an outbreak of apocalyptic proportions. Now the streets of Raccoon City swarm with the living dead, compelling Umbrella to deploy another of its bioweapons, a hulking prototype soldier code-named NEMESIS that kills anything in its path. Jill Valentine of the RCPD and several others are determined to get out of Raccoon alive, but only if they can escape the city's hordes of undead, Umbrella's unleashed creatures, and the relentless pursuit of Nemesis itself. Their one chance is with one of the only survivors of the Hive--a young woman named Alice, who learns a terrifying secret behind her connection to Umbrella.
eBook Publisher: Simon & Schuster, Inc./Pocket Books
Fictionwise Release Date: September 2004
10 Reader Ratings:
Available eBook Formats [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT [346 KB], SECURE MICROSOFT READER FORMAT [265 KB] - Requires Microsoft Reader 2.1.1 for PCs, or Microsoft Reader 2.2.2 on Pocket PC 2002 handheld devices. Some older Pocket PCs can be upgraded. Learn More., SECURE EREADER (RECOMMENDED) FORMAT [150 KB]
All formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
Microsoft Reader ISBN: 9780743499378 Mobipocket Reader ISBN: 0743499379 eReader ISBN: 9785551375982

One Major Timothy Cain didn't take any shit. He'd been born with a different name in Berlin back when the city was separated by a large wall. The third of four children, and the youngest boy, he had the misfortune to be on the wrong side of it. Shortly after Mother died, when he was sixteen, Father had managed to secure a way for them to emigrate to the United States. Upon arrival, Father had declared their name to be Cain—an anglicization of their name in German—and gave all his children new names. They were now Michael, Anthony, Timothy, and Mary, because those, Father said, sounded like American names. Anytime they used their old German names, Father would hit them until they stopped. Not being fools, all the children learned quickly to think of themselves with their new identities. In gratitude to his new home, Timothy enlisted in the army on his eighteenth birthday. Shortly thereafter, he was sent overseas to fight in the Gulf War. Father was happy that his son did so. Michael, who was three years older than Timothy, had moved to Chicago and become a police officer; Anthony had moved to San Francisco and lost touch with the rest of the family. As for Mary, though women could serve, she had no interest in doing so, preferring a career in business. Timothy Cain became alive for the first time in the desert. He had always succeeded academically, but mostly by rote. He was a fast learner, but he had never had much enthusiasm for it. The two years of school he'd attended since immigrating were difficult, since Timothy spoke with a thick German accent, which made him the target of teasing by his peers, and made it difficult for him to derive any kind of enjoyment from the learning experience. Combat, though, he took joy in that, especially when that combat was against the enemies of the United States of America. And in the desert, nobody cared about his accent, except for a few idiots, and they all shut up once they saw Timothy Cain in action. It didn't take long for him to distinguish himself, work his way up the ranks. He was leading his fellow soldiers into combat after only a few weeks, and his men would follow him anywhere. He had a natural charisma, an aptitude for tactics, and an especially fine ability to kill Saddam's foot soldiers. Subject to the usual armed forces proclivity for obvious nicknames, he quickly became known as "Able" Cain, because no matter how bad the mission, no matter how ridiculous the plan, no matter what it was you needed to get done, if you put Sergeant Timothy Cain in charge, it was going to get done. Period. Cain learned many things in the desert, but the most important thing was that, contrary to what Father had always taught him, life was neither precious nor sacred. Life was, in fact, cheap. If life was such a glorious, magnificent, wonderful thing, then it wouldn't be so easy to take it away. If life was a great gift, then he wouldn't be able to kill a fellow human being with one hand, as he did often in the Persian Gulf. When his tour ended, he went to officer candidate school to get his commission. After several more years as an officer, he realized another important truth: there was more to life than the military. That truth didn't so much come from plowing through the desert and blowing up the enemy, something at which he had frankly excelled. No, this truth came from the gentlemen in suits who worked for the Umbrella Corporation and recruited him to run its Security Division. Able Cain had served his country. In a sense, he would still be doing so, for Umbrella had many government contracts and provided services for Americans everywhere. The main difference was that now he'd be recompensed with an obscene amount of money. Having achieved the rank of major, Cain said yes to Umbrella's proposition, though he insisted that he still be referred to by his rank. He was also able to buy Father a house in Florida. When Michael was shot in the line of duty, and afterward was going slowly insane at a desk job, Timothy made him the head of security for Umbrella's Chicago office. He tracked Anthony down in a crack house in Berkeley and got him cleaned up, paying for his detox. (That he later jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge was hardly Timothy Cain's fault.) When Mary learned her husband was cheating on her, Cain paid for her divorce lawyer. Then, after the divorce was finalized and Mary had taken the bastard for all he was worth and then some, Cain tracked the ex-husband down—living in a shitty little studio apartment in South Bend, Indiana—and shot him in the head. Life was, after all, easy to take. But it was so much more satisfying to destroy someone first. Now Cain stood outside the mansion. Located in the neighborhood of Foxwood Heights, two miles outside the Raccoon City limits, the mansion looked like something out of one of those snooty British movies that Cain hated rather than an actual structure outside a small American city. It was also owned by the Umbrella Corporation, used as the primary entry point to the Hive. Five hundred men and women employed by Umbrella lived and worked in the Hive, a massive underground complex where the corporation's most sensitive work was done. The existence of the Hive was not kept a secret—it was impossible to sequester five hundred employees, many of whom were in the upper echelons of their respective fields, without someone noticing they were missing—though it was not widely advertised either. Umbrella kept its public headquarters in downtown Raccoon where everyone could see it: the public face of the company that provided the best computer technology and health-care products and services in the country. Unfortunately, something had gone horribly wrong in the Hive. The facility's sophisticated artificial intelligence—named the Red Queen—had gone quiet, security measures were activated, and the Hive was now sealed. Cain had sent a team led by his best security operative, a Special Forces veteran who went solely by the code name One, to find out what the hell had happened. In that, they seemed to have failed, since their contingency plan—sealing the Hive—had been enacted. That only would have been the case if the team was incapacitated or killed. Cain had assembled a team of doctors and security personnel outside the mansion as backup for One. Based on the protocol that the Red Queen appeared to have used, the crisis was medical in nature and the AI had felt the need to activate a quarantine. So the entire team was dressed in Hazmat suits, with several gurneys and diagnostic equipment on standby, and a sterile umbilical linking the entrance of the mansion with the helicopter that would take them back to Umbrella's Raccoon City corporate headquarters. Observing the feed from the security cameras located throughout the mansion on his PDA, Cain and his team waited to see if anyone would emerge from the Hive. Only two people did. The first was the head of the Hive's security, Alice Abernathy, one of Cain's top people. The other was a man Cain didn't recognize. Of One and his six-person team, there was no sign. That was bad news. Not only was One Cain's best operative, but the team he'd brought were Umbrella's elite. Bart Kaplan, Rain Melendez, J.D. Hawkins, Vance Drew, and Alfonso Warner were the best of the best, and Olga Danilova was a talented field medic. If they were dead… Still, Cain felt no trepidation, because Cain hadn't felt trepidation since he enlisted in the army. As a teenager, sure, he'd felt trepidation all the time—his skin was breaking out, he'd struggled with the language, he had difficulty with girls—but once he reached the desert, he never feared anything again. Because he knew the secret. Life was cheap. As Cain watched on his PDA's screen, Abernathy and the man made it to the vestibule just inside the mansion's front door. The man had three wounds in his shoulder that looked like they were made by large claws. Cain instantly knew what had happened. Someone—probably the fucking computer—had let the damn licker out. This was turning into a clusterfuck of epic proportions. Abernathy stumbled to the floor. She was carrying a metal case, which she dropped. The wounded man knelt next to her. Abernathy was crying. Crying? What the hell had happened down there to make a professional like Abernathy cry? The camera had an audio feed, and Cain turned it up. Abernathy's voice sounded tinny on the PDA's small speaker. "I failed. All of them. I failed them." Cain shook his head. It looked like everyone was dead. One of the security people asked, "Should we move in, sir?" Holding up a hand, Cain said, "Not just yet." "Listen," the wounded man said, "there was nothing you could have done. The corporation is to blame here, not you." He indicated the case that Abernathy had dropped. "And we finally have the proof. That means Umbrella can't get awa—" He cut himself off, wincing in pain. Cain smiled. From the sounds of it, this guy was some kind of crusader. How the hell he'd managed to infiltrate the Hive was something Cain would worry about later. From the looks of things, this asshole was about to find out just what those wounds really meant. The jackass kept talking. "—get away with this. We can—" Again, he cut himself off. "What is it?" Abernathy asked. The man screamed, and fell onto his back. "You're infected. You'll be okay—I'm not losing you." Cain had seen enough. "Let's move in." Two members of the security detail opened the door and proceeded inside. Abernathy shielded her eyes from the blinding light that suddenly poured into the vestibule. "What's happening? What're you doing?" One guard reached for her, while the other, along with one of the medics, knelt beside the crusading moron, who was now convulsing on the floor. "Stop!" she yelled. Cain sighed as she fought off the guard with a few well-placed punches. Something obviously had happened to her down there that had a profound effect on her personality—but it didn't have the least effect on her fighting ability. She was still the best. Even as the wounded man was loaded onto one of the gurneys, three more of the guards tried to grab Abernathy. It took her maybe five seconds to subdue them. Damn, she was good. "Matt!" So that was the guy's name. Cain looked to see that this Matt person was growing tentacles out of the three wounds in his shoulder. Definitely the licker. And this might turn out to be just what they were looking for. "He's mutating. I want him in the Nemesis Program," Cain said. Copyright © 2004 by Davis Films/Impact (Canada) Inc. / Constantin Film (UK) Limited
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