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Chapter 35: The Outbreak
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The thermometer in little Toby’s mouth didn’t just beep; it hissed a death sentence in the form of a 104.2-degree reading. Helen didn’t look up at the boy’s mother, Sarah, because she didn’t want to see the reflection of her own mounting dread in the woman’s eyes. Instead, she adjusted her glasses, the bridge of which was slick with the humid, recycled air of the Cypress Bend infirmary, and looked at the boy’s throat. It was a landscape of raw, angry red—pustules the color of curdled cream clung to the tonsils like barnacles on a rotting hull.
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"Is it the water?" Sarah’s voice was a brittle wire, ready to snap under the slightest tension. Her fingers were white-knuckled where they gripped the edge of the examination cot.
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"The water is triple-filtered, Sarah. You know that. Silas checks the levels every four hours," Helen replied, her voice steadying even as her pulse thrummed in her fingertips. She reached for a wooden tongue depressor. "Open up, Toby. Just a little more. Be a brave scout for me."
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The boy made a wet, gurgling sound as he complied. The smell was the giveaway. It wasn't the metallic tang of a common virus or the sourness of a simple cold. It was the scent of wet earth and copper—the unmistakable heavy sweetness of a virulent bacterial infection.
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"Get him to the isolation ward in the West Wing," Helen said, finally meeting Sarah’s gaze. She kept her face an iron mask of clinical neutrality. "Now. Don't stop to talk to anyone. I’m calling a Code Amber."
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"Helen, you’re scaring me. You only call a Code Amber for—"
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"I’m calling it because I need to keep the other twenty children in this settlement from ending up like Toby," Helen snapped, then immediately softened her tone. She placed a gloved hand on Sarah’s shoulder. "Go. I’ll be right behind you with the first round of tinctures."
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As Sarah hurried the feverish boy down the hall, Helen didn't move. She leaned against the heavy oak desk that served as her station, closing her eyes for exactly five seconds. In those five seconds, she did the math. The settlement’s supply of shelf-stable Amoxicillin had expired three years ago. The last of the Ciprofloxacin had been used on a puncture wound back in October. They were a closed system, a bubble of humanity surviving on the edge of the cypress swamps, and the bubble had just sprung a leak.
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She turned to the wall-mounted intercom and pressed the button for the greenhouse.
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"Silas, drop whatever you're doing," she said, her voice echoing in the small room. "The *Hydrastis canadensis*... the Goldenseal. I need the entire harvest from the north bed brought to the lab immediately. Not the leaves. I need the rhizomes. Scrubbed, diced, and ready for the solvent."
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There was a pause, the static of the line crackling like a dying fire. "Helen? The Goldenseal isn't fully mature. We were supposed to wait another three weeks for peak berberine levels."
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"We don't have three weeks, Silas. We have about six hours before the second child shows symptoms. Move."
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She cut the connection and moved toward the back of the infirmary, her boots clicking a frantic rhythm on the concrete floor. The "lab" was a repurposed walk-in pantry, now filled with glass carboys, copper stills, and drying racks that looked more like an apothecary’s shop from the seventeenth century than a modern medical facility.
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She began pulling jars from the shelves with surgical precision. Willow bark for the fevers. Echinacea for a desperate, flailing move at immune support. But the core of what she needed sat in a dark amber bottle at the back: a concentrated extract of *Usnea barbata*, the Old Man’s Beard lichen she’d spent months culturing from the swamp trees. It was the closest thing they had to a broad-spectrum antibiotic.
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A knock at the door startled her. It was Marcus, the settlement lead, looking ragged and smelling of diesel and sweat.
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"Two more down, Helen," he said, his voice low. "The Miller twins. Same thing. High fever, throat swelling so fast they can barely swallow. The parents are starting to panic. Word is getting out that the 'old world' meds are gone."
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Helen didn't stop weighing out dried thyme. "Word is correct. Tell them to stay in their quarters. Anyone who has been in the communal play area in the last forty-eight hours is under mandatory quarantine. If they fight you, remind them what happened to the colony at Marrow Creek when the flu hit."
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"They're scared, Helen. They think you're just playing with weeds."
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Helen paused, a handful of dried leaves suspended above the scale. She looked at Marcus, her eyes sharp enough to draw blood. "These 'weeds' have been fighting bacteria since before humans crawled out of the mud, Marcus. My greenhouse isn't a hobby. It’s a munitions factory. Now, either give me a hand with the alcohol extraction or get out of my way so I can save these children."
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Marcus hovered for a moment, then stepped forward, reaching for a mortar and pestle. "Tell me what to grind."
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For the next four hours, the lab became a blur of steam and sharp, herbal odors. Helen worked with a feverish intensity, her mind a frantic library of botanical chemistry. The challenge wasn't just finding the right compound; it was the delivery system. The children's throats were too swollen for pills, even if she could press them. She needed a concentrated glycerite—something sweet enough to go down but potent enough to coat the infection site.
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She watched the clear liquid in the flask turn a deep, muddy gold as the Goldenseal rhizomes gave up their medicine. Berberine. It was a natural alkaloid, a yellow-tinted warrior that could bridge the cell walls of the bacteria.
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"Is it enough?" Marcus asked, his brow furrowed as he watched the slow drip of the condenser.
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"It has to be," Helen whispered. She was staring at a petri dish she’d swabbed from Toby’s throat an hour ago. Under the microscope, the slide was a chaotic battlefield of chain-link bacteria—Streptococcus. But it was a strain she hadn't seen before, likely a mutation from the damp, stagnant air of the swamp fringes. It was aggressive. It was hungry.
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A scream from the hallway shattered the concentration in the room.
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Helen was out the door before Marcus could react. She found Sarah in the isolation ward, clutching Toby as the boy thrashed against the sheets. He wasn't just feverish anymore; he was seizing. His face was a terrifying shade of dusky purple, his breaths coming in short, agonizing rasps.
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"He can't breathe!" Sarah shrieked. "Helen, he's choking!"
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Helen dived for the bedside, her hands moving with a clarity born of pure adrenaline. She felt the boy’s neck. The lymph nodes were the size of golf balls, pressing inward on his trachea. This wasn't just an infection; it was an inflammatory cascade. His own body was strangling him.
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"I need the kit!" Helen yelled back at Marcus, who had followed her into the room. "The blue roll in the second drawer! And get me the ice—all the ice we have in the kitchen!"
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She pinned Toby’s shoulders down with her forearms, her weight keeping him from rolling off the bed. "Toby, listen to me. Look at my eyes. Focus on me."
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The boy’s eyes were rolled back, showing only the whites. He was drowning on dry land.
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Marcus slammed the medical roll onto the nightstand. Helen ripped it open, revealing a row of stainless steel instruments she’d kept polished and sharpened for a day she hoped would never come. She bypassed the scalpels and grabbed a thick, hollow needle—a makeshift trocar she’d fashioned from a salvaged IV line.
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"What are you doing?" Sarah gasped, reaching out to stop her.
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"If I don't give him an airway, he dies in three minutes," Helen said, her voice dropping into a terrifyingly calm register. "Marcus, hold his head. Don't let him flinch."
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The room went silent, save for the harrowing sound of Toby’s desperate, whistling gasps. Helen palpated the space between the thyroid and cricoid cartilage. She felt the dip. The spot.
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She didn't hesitate. She plunged the needle downward with a swift, practiced motion.
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A sharp *pop* echoed in the small room. A hiss of air followed, then a wet, bloody cough. Toby’s chest suddenly heaved, a deep, shuddering lungful of air rushing through the needle. The purple hue in his cheeks began to recede, replaced by a ghostly, waxy pallor.
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"He's breathing," Marcus breathed, his hands still trembling on the boy's temples.
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"He's stabilized. For now," Helen said, her own hands finally starting to shake. She wiped a bead of sweat from her lip with the back of her glove. "But the infection is still winning. Sarah, take this ice. Wrap it in those towels. We need to get his core temperature down or his brain is going to cook."
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She turned back toward the lab, but her legs felt like they were made of water. She stumbled, catching herself on the doorframe.
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"Helen, you haven't slept in twenty-four hours," Marcus said, stepping toward her.
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"I'll sleep when the stills are empty," she replied, pushing him away. "The Goldenseal-Usnea blend should be ready for the first reduction. I need to get it into the nebulizer."
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Back in the lab, the air was thick with the scent of alcohol and resin. Helen worked through the haze of exhaustion. She filtered the dark liquid through layers of fine silk, then combined it with a saline base. She wasn't just relying on tradition anymore; she was using every scrap of her pre-Fall pharmacology training. She added a drop of peppermint oil—not for the scent, but for the menthol, to soothe the spasming tissues of the throat.
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By midnight, she had six doses ready.
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She moved from bed to bed in the isolation ward like a ghost. Toby was first. She attached the makeshift mask to the trocar, letting the herbal vapor drift directly into his lungs. Then the Miller twins. Then a young girl named Maya who had started coughing an hour earlier.
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The hours bled into a singular, grueling blur of monitoring vitals and reloading the nebulizer. Helen sat on a plastic stool in the center of the ward, a notebook on her knee, recording every dip in temperature, every change in heart rate.
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Around 3:00 AM, the cooling system in the West Wing groaned and died.
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"Is it the generator?" Helen hissed as Silas entered the ward, his face streaked with grease.
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"No, it's the compressor. It’s shot, Helen. I can’t fix it without parts from the city," Silas whispered, looking at the sleeping children. "It’s going to get sweltering in here within the hour."
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"We can't have heat," Helen said, her voice rising in panic. "Heat breeds the bacteria. It’ll turn this room into an incubator."
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"We can open the windows," Silas suggested.
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"And let the swamp humidity in? That’s worse." Helen stood up, her mind racing. "Go to the pantry. Get every jar of honey we have. The raw stuff, not the filtered. We’re going to coat the walls of their throats. We’re going to create a sugar-based osmotic barrier."
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"Helen, you're talking like a madwoman," Marcus said, appearing in the doorway. "Honey?"
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"Honey is hygroscopic! It draws water out of bacterial cells. It dehydrates them! It's been used since the Pharaohs for a reason!" she shouted, her exhaustion finally boiling over into rage. "If we can't keep them cool, we make the environment uninhabitable for the pathogens. MOVE!"
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They moved. For the rest of the night, Helen didn't use needles or inhalants. She used silver spoons. She moved from child to child, tilting their heads back and coaxing a thick, dark slurry of Manuka-style honey mixed with high-potency Echinacea down their throats. It was slow. It was messy. It was primitive.
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As the sun began to bleed over the horizon, casting a bruised purple light over the cypress trees outside, the infirmary fell into a strange, heavy silence.
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The frantic whistling of blocked airways had stopped.
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Helen stood over Toby’s bed. She reached out and touched his forehead. It was cool. Damp, but cool. She checked his throat. The angry, curdled pustules had begun to grey and shrivel. The swelling in his neck had gone down enough that she could see the outline of his jaw again.
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She walked to the window and pushed the heavy curtain aside. The swamp was waking up, a chorus of frogs and night-birds marking the transition to day. She looked at her hands. They were stained yellow from the berberine, the color etched into the callouses of her palms.
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Marcus walked up behind her, placing a heavy hand on her shoulder. "They're all sleeping naturally now, Helen. Even Maya. Her fever broke ten minutes ago."
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Helen didn't speak. She couldn't. The knot in her chest, the one she’d been carrying since Toby first walked in, was finally beginning to loosen, and she knew if she opened her mouth, she would start to sob.
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"You saved them," Marcus said quietly. "With weeds and honey."
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"I bought us time," Helen corrected him, her voice a raspy whisper. "But the bacteria is still out there, Marcus. It’s in the soil. It’s in the air. This was a skirmish. The war is just beginning."
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She turned away from the window, her eyes falling on the empty jars and the stained mortar and pestle. She felt a profound sense of isolation. She was the only thing standing between these people and the relentless, microscopic hunger of the natural world.
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She walked back to her desk and sat down, pulling a fresh sheet of paper toward her. She didn't head for her bed. She didn't seek out a meal.
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She began to write a list of every medicinal plant they hadn't yet successfully cultivated, her pen scratching fiercely against the paper.
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"We need more Willow," she muttered to herself, the light of the rising sun catching the silver in her hair. "And we need to find a way to stabilize the Usnea without the high-proof alcohol. If the still breaks next time..."
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A soft sound came from the ward—a child’s voice, small and clear.
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"Mama? I’m hungry."
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Helen dropped the pen. She stayed in her chair, her head bowing as she finally allowed the first tear to track through the dust on her cheek. She didn't move until she heard Sarah’s sob of relief, a sound more beautiful than any symphony.
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But as she looked out at the dark, encroaching green of the cypress bend, she knew the victory was temporary.
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The swamp was patient, and the next shadow to fall over the settlement wouldn’t be nearly as easy to cure.
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