Outside, Adrian walked with five soldiers and the three girls. They were all covered in thermal blankets as the night was chilly. Around them were the corpses of the zombies.
It was a disturbing sight from the girls but they felt a sense of security by being around Adrian and his men.
"How many were killed in this?" Chandrika courageously asked.
"About 40 of them were killed, five were injured," Adrian replied.
"How did this happen?" Glaiza added.
"We donât know, we are going to figure it out. We believe she has been infected ever since she was in Boracay. Our medical team inspected the body and found out that she has a bite in her legs. She hid it. But whatâs more troubling is that she took a long time to turn while those she bit turned instantly."
"That means the infection isnât consistent," he continued. "Some turn fast. Some donât. Weâre still trying to understand why."
Chandrika nodded slowly, taking that in.
Her arms stayed wrapped around herself under the blanket, not from the cold anymore, but from everything that just happened.
Aubrey walked close beside her, quiet now.
Glaiza stayed on the other side, her eyes scanning the ground, avoiding the bodies.
They moved past another row of corpses.
Then, a voice.
"Chandrika!"
Chandrika froze.
Her head snapped up.
"Dad...?"
Marco was already running toward them, breaking past the perimeter line before one of the soldiers could even react.
"Sirâ" one of them started.
Adrian raised a hand slightly.
"Stand down," he said.
Marco reached her in seconds.
He didnât stop.
He pulled her into a tight embrace, his arms wrapping around her like he was afraid sheâd disappear if he let go.
"Youâre alive..." he said, his voice breaking. "Youâre alive..."
Chandrika didnât speak at first.
She just held onto him.
Tight.
"Dad..." she said quietly.
Behind him, Liza approached slower.
Her eyes moved over Chandrika first.
Then Aubrey.
Then Glaiza.
Taking everything in.
The blankets.
"...Youâre safe now," Liza said softly.
Chandrika nodded.
"Yes... weâre safe."
Marco pulled back slightly, his hands still on her shoulders as he looked at her face.
"Are you hurt?" he asked immediately.
"No," she said. "Iâm okay."
He looked at her a second longer, like he was trying to confirm it for himself.
Then he nodded.
"Good... good...Wait...where is Sophia?"
Chandrikaâs grip on the blanket tightened.
Aubrey looked away immediately, her lips pressing together as her breathing started to shake again.
Glaiza lowered her head, her fingers curling into the fabric at her side.
Marco noticed.
His expression shifted.
"...Chandrika?" he asked, quieter now.
Chandrika didnât answer right away.
She looked down.
Then back up at him.
"...She didnât make it," she said.
Lizaâs eyes softened, her gaze dropping for a moment as she understood without needing more.
"How?" Marco asked, his voice lower now.
Chandrika hesitated.
Just for a second.
"...There was chaos," she said. "The infected... they broke through. It spread fast."
Aubrey turned slightly, her shoulders trembling.
Glaiza stayed silent.
Marco looked between them.
He didnât press further.
Didnât ask for details.
He saw enough.
"...Iâm sorry," he said quietly.
Chandrika nodded once.
"Yeah..."
Liza stepped forward then, closing the distance.
She placed a hand gently on Aubreyâs shoulder.
"Itâs okay," she said softly. "Youâre here now."
Aubrey didnât respond.
But she didnât pull away either.
Lizaâs hand moved to Glaiza next, giving the same reassurance.
"Weâll take care of you," she added.
Adrian stood a few steps behind, watching the exchange, giving them space.
Marco let out a slow breath, then pulled Chandrika into another brief embrace.
"You did well," he said. "You made it out."
Chandrika closed her eyes for a moment.
"...We had to," she replied.
Marco nodded.
Then looked at Adrian.
"Thank you," he said.
Adrian gave a small nod.
"We got to them in time," he replied.
"Come," Liza said gently. "Letâs get inside."
Then he turned.
"Sir?" one of the soldiers asked.
"Return to your posts," Adrian said. "Maintain perimeter security. No one moves between zones without clearance."
"Yes, sir."
They split off immediately.
Adrian headed in the opposite direction.
Toward the medbay.
The doors slid open as he stepped inside, and the smell hit him firstâantiseptic, blood, and something metallic lingering in the air. Beds lined the room, occupied by the injured. Some were conscious, others not. Medics moved between them with urgency but control.
One of the doctors looked up as Adrian approached.
"Sir."
"I need to know what caused her to do that. You are a doctor, so for sure you may know something about how the infection works."
He glanced toward one of the beds first, making sure the medic beside it had things under control, then turned fully to Adrian.
"Sir, Iâll be direct," he said. "What we saw out there doesnât follow a normal infection pattern."
Adrianâs eyes stayed on him.
"Explain."
The doctor nodded and motioned for him to step a little closer, away from the others.
"The initial carrierâthe woman from Boracayâhad a bite wound that was already in a partial healing phase. That suggests she was infected for at least a day, possibly longer."
"And she didnât turn."
"No," the doctor said. "Not immediately. She retained motor function, awareness, even the ability to move freely among civilians without raising suspicion."
Adrianâs jaw tightened slightly.
"And the others?"
"They turned almost instantly after exposure," the doctor replied. "Seconds to under a minute. That kind of conversion speed indicates a very aggressive transmission phase once the virus activates."
"So what changed?" Adrian asked.
"Thatâs the problem," the doctor said. "We donât know."
He exhaled slowly.
"There are a few possibilities. Oneâviral mutation. The strain she carried might be different from what it becomes after transmission. Twoâviral load. The amount of pathogen transferred during a bite could affect how fast the host turns. Or threeâhost factors. Some individuals may resist progression longer than others."
Adrian glanced briefly at the covered body across the room.
"Meaning she walked around as a carrier."
"Yes," the doctor said. "And that makes her more dangerous than the ones that turn immediately."
A short pause.
"Is it airborne?" Adrian asked.
"No confirmed evidence of that," the doctor replied. "All cases so far are linked to direct contactâbites, blood exposure. But we canât rule out evolution."
Adrian nodded once.
"What do you need?"
The doctor hesitated for a second.
"...A specialist," he said. "A virologist. Someone trained specifically in infectious diseases at a molecular level. What we have right now is field observation. If you want to understand this fullyâhow it spreads, how it changesâwe need deeper analysis."
"Iâll find one," he said.