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Why did Peter attack this man?
And why is the pathogen
- making him stronger?
- Pending necropsy, I believe
we may have found the source
of the contagion.
This mutation only occurs
in a fraction of the samples.
It's minimal, but it's
statistically relevant.
- But what's it doing to him?
- Open the door.
- No.
- Come on! Now!
People have to know what's
going on up here!
Peter.
It's all right.
Alan?
It's all right. Relax.
What happened?
You tell me.
I found you here passed out.
- What do you remember?
- Uh, I was, uh...
I... I was, uh...
taking a shower -
decontamination procedures -
and... and...
Uh... um...
I, uh...
- I...
- Jules.
I just felt lightheaded.
I don't remem...
I don't remember
what happened next.
I guess I, um...
I didn't realize
how exhausted I am.
Well, we've... all been
pushing really hard.
You need to get
a few hours' sleep.
- Yeah.
- I need you 100% for this one.
- OK, good idea.
- I'll walk you back
to your quarters.
With Peter roaming around
out there, it's not safe
to go alone.
I'll give you a moment.
Hello?
Anybody in here?
Help... me.
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Please report to me
immediately if you see
any skin lesions,
flu-like symptoms,
or black mucus discharge.
Should we not be taking
antivirals? Like...
- oseltamivir?
- That's for H1N1 influenza.
We've ruled that out
as a cause of infection.
- What is it then?
- It's all right.
Taking the wrong meds can do
more harm than no meds at all.
We're working 'round the clock
on a treatment,
and when we find it, we'll
attack the virus aggressively.
Now, they are scared;
I get that.
But sometimes I just want
to yell at 'em, you know?
We're not the enemy here.
Security teams are doing
constant sweeps.
Still no sign of our three
escapees or Peter Farragut.
And another attack has been
reported on Level G -
two more possibly infected.
They're being moved to isolation.
We've been in lockdown
for 32 hours.
People are panicking.
If something doesn't change,
we risk losing control
of the base.
Where is Julia Walker?
I... I'm not sure.
Do you want to speak to her?
That won't be necessary.
Dr. Farragut.
- What are you doing?
- Getting my brother
- into containment.
- Why didn't you inform us?
Because I presumed the man
you had following me would tip you off.
I want a full workup -
LFT, CBC with
differential, coags, viral
screen, and all available
- antigen-antibody assays.
- My security teams
couldn't wrangle him.
How did you manage it?
He turned himself in.
What is Peter's status?
Stable for now.
I meant the status
of his sedation. We don't want
- another security incident.
- That's unlikely.
As unlikely as cutting off
a man's hand
to access his RFID chip?
Peter gave himself up;
no fight, no struggle.
Why would he do that
- if he were planning to escape?
- That's what we thought
- the last time we put him in isolation.
- He appears to be controllable
on morphine. I've hooked him up
to a pain pump. He shouldn't
- be a danger to anyone.
- I'm not willing
- to take that chance.
- Neither am I.
Is there somewhere more secure
we can hold him?
This floor was phase one
of Arctic Biosystems.
As the company grew,
so did the facility.
Level R contains our early labs
and living quarters,
along with maintenance
for the entire base.
The ventilation system in this room is
separate from the rest of the facility.
The walls are concrete,
three feet thick,
and the door is
double-plated steel.
- Nothing is getting in or out.
- What kind of research
were you conducting
with nuclear reactors?
I spent time at Sandia Labs. The burn patterns
on these walls are virtually identical.
Controlled fusion,
a project we abandoned.
When was the last
radiation screen down here?
We test every six months,
and the lab has been empty
- for about five years.
- So it's safe?
Perfectly. More than qualified
to be an isolation unit for Peter.
For everyone else as well.
There are empty rooms
on this level, plenty of space,
and this secure lab allows us
- to separate vectors from those
who are just infected.
- Vectors?
It's what we're calling
the infected who are...
physically attacking others
to spread the disease, like Peter.
I think we can achieve
full containment down here.
Well, what are you saying?
I'm saying we turn Level R
into an isolation floor.
Get it together, Jules.
You don't... get... sick.
All right, we have 18 sick
in isolation, including Peter.
- With three on the loose and two
presumed infected, that's 23.
- That we know of.
I want to move them all down
to Level R. I'll need medical equipment.
Turn one of the labs
into a triage unit.
I'll need food, water,
bedding, for 40 patients.
This thing will get bigger
before we achieve full containment.
I think we can
accommodate that.
Help me. Help me.
- Stay where you are.
- I'm sorry I ran. They made me do it.
- We can help.
- They made me!
- You need to stop.
- Believe me. They made me...
Bring the guaranine
and find Dr. Duchamp.
No! There's no time.
She's going into shock. Find me
a scalpel and something
to pack into the wound.
Stay with me now. You'll be OK.
Hurry up!
All right, I feel the bullet.
Here, pinch off this vein.
Pinch off this vein!
Yes.
More pressure.
Right there.
I have it, I have it.
Good.
You're gonna be fine now.
She should be stable enough
to move. We take her
down to the fusion lab.
- Thanks to your quick thinking.
- My quick
thinking shouldn't have been
necessary in the first place.
All right. Come on.
Come on!
She was unarmed
and asking for our help.
I was only trying
to protect Dr. Hatake.
She wasn't threatening him;
she was scared.
- The situation was escalating.
- It didn't escalate
until you panicked and almost
murdered an infected patient!
I set the rules on this base.
There are no countries here,
no laws.
Dr. Sulemani's life is
my responsibility, not Daniel's.
As senior scientist
on this case,
every patient's life is
my responsibility.
You tell your security people
that this is the last time
lethal force is to be used
on one of my patients!
- I can't guarantee that.
- You tell them!
Or I'll pull my team, and we can
do this again in six months'
time as a postmortem!
What did you do to me, Peter?
What did you do?
We seal off the stairwells,
use the elevator for an airlock,
and once
we control access to the floor,
we should have a viable isolation unit.
So, healthy people come
upstairs; sick people go down.
- It might work.
- But if people aren't
showing symptoms yet,
how do we know who's infected?
We'll need a test, something
that we can administer quickly.
A rapid-response test would
be the fastest.
But first we need to synthesize
a pure sample of the virus.
- Both viruses. What about those
vials you found in Peter's lab?
- Neither NARVIK-A nor B
show up as a pathogen
in any existing database.
NARVIK-B is the strain
that created the vectors
in the rat population, right?
How long to synthesize a test
- based on that variant?
- Eight hours at least for
something functional.
Well, you have four. Work with Jordan.
Tell me more about this infected monkey.
I think the virus
inside the monkey is the key.
I'm sequencing
the full genome now. If we can
prove that the infection passed
from monkey to human...
It gets us one step
closer to the original strain.
- And the best shot we have at a vaccine.
- All right, get started on it.
I'll go with her;
can't be too careful right now.
- Thanks, but I can take care of myself.
- Doreen, take him with you.
All right, everybody, the
com link window goes live
in six hours and 42 minutes.
If we have this data to upload
to Atlanta, we might just
get on top of this thing.
Let's get to work.
And 20 bags -
make that 30 bags -
of saline drip.
Our base doctor's
seen Dr. Sulemani.
She's gonna make it.
Well, have him keep her
on a propofol infusion.
I didn't panic with Sulemani.
She was infected
with a lethal virus
and coming at Dr. Hatake.
I assessed the options
and I pulled the trigger.
We shoot everyone
who's infected? Is that it?
- Eliminate the threat?
- If necessary.
And those who might be
infected? Do we kill them too?
The only reason you didn't
fire that shot
is because the gun wasn't
in your hands.
- Another false positive.
- Me too. I've gone through
- all of the atypical enzymes.
- You started with atypicals?
Their catalyzation rate is
too low.
I read a study that linked the
use of atypical enzymes to
certain viral antibodies.
You have to start wide and narrow down.
That's why I assigned you EC-1 enzymes...
EC-1 catalyzes with everything, which
tells us nothing, and we don't have time
to go through a thousand different enzymes.
If we're gonna come up with a test
in last at 3 hours,
we need to do some crea...
- Sarah.
- What?
What's wrong with your hand?
Are you OK?
Are you feeling any symptoms?
I've been up for three days
straight. I'm probably just exhausted.
We're out of Peter's
blood serum. I should go
- get some more samples...
- I'll do it.
If you find the virus
did come from the monkeys, will
that help you figure out a cure?
"Curing" a virus is
a relative term.
We need a treatment to help
the infected folks get better,
and a vaccine to prevent anyone
else from getting infected.
That sick monkey is just the
first step down a long road...
Where the hell is my monkey?
What's that smell?
Formaldehyde.
Whoever did this wanted
to kill any living organism
left behind. They didn't want me
analyzing the samples
- from that monkey.
- It reeks.
Reeks all right.
Reeks of Hatake.
What are you gonna do?
Walk into his office
- and demand answers?
- Why not?
Because you know how
that conversation's gonna go.
He's gonna say it was biosafety
protocol, or scheduled maintenance.
I knew this full-bird colonel,
just like Hatake. Real stickler.
You had to find creative ways
to get things done.
What'd you have in mind?
What if I could get you
another monkey sample?
What are you doing here?
Three days ago, we were moving
on with our lives, and now this?
Seeing you, it all comes
flooding back -
how unhappy I was with Alan;
how I couldn't even recognize...
who I was with him anymore.
But instead of acknowledging it,
I didn't say anything; I just...
swallowed it, all of it,
until it filled me up,
and I was drowning in it.
And then you.
I thought I could handle this.
Never seen anything like this.
Look at their faces!
I know.
It's pretty damn scary.
No, not scary; scared.
These monkeys were running
for their lives.
Running from what?
How'd you find this place,
anyway?
I was just checking the
stability of the icepack around the base.
Horseshit.
Who the hell are you?
I'm just an army engineer,
like I said.
You want to work together?
I got no problem with that.
But you have got to start
telling me the truth.
- I am!
- Ha.
There are people in the army,
myself included,
who are wondering
if this outbreak was
an accident.
You think Hatake did this
on purpose?
Why would he do that?
Why don't you come help me
find out?
I want 24-hour guards on this
door until we get full containment.
Base One, go ahead.
They found one of the escapees
on this level.
What are you so happy about?
Nothing.
I just cracked the test.
You figured it out?
Which enzyme catalyzed?
None of them. After you left,
I remembered another study.
It utilizes the body's
natural way
- of detecting foreign pathogens.
- White blood cells, yes. Get to the point.
So it modified the white
blood cells with genes
from a crystal jellyfish,
Aequorea victoria,
to create
a rapid-response test.
The jellyfish genes produce
a fluorescent green protein.
- You replicated this?
- I swabbed three security techs
for control samples - all clear.
Then I ran the test
on known infectees - Peter,
Dr. Tracey, and Dr. DeKlerk.
All green -
positive for infection.
Show me again.
Use yourself as a control.
Why does that matter?
Look, if you want to see it in action,
I can take a swab from you right now.
OK. Test me.
I don't know why we're
wasting our time with this.
We need to tell Alan.
Come on, Duchamp!
I know you're in there!
- Don't come any closer.
- Put it down. Put it down.
- We're going to help you.
- Oh, just like you took care
- of Dr. Sulemani, huh?
- What happened to Dr. Sulema--
- You want us all to die!
- ...was a terrible mistake,
all right? We don't want
to hurt you, but you have
- to come to isolation.
- I'm not going there!
I'm not even infected!
Or at least I wasn't until you
threw me in with the rest of them!
- Let me help you.
- I want the cure!
- We don't have a cure.
- ***!
The SODRA's in there.
You're keeping it from us,
and I'm not gonna let you!
Put him in the fusion lab
with Sulemani.
This is Alan Farragut
of the CDC.
Everybody all right in there?
Thank God you're here.
They almost got in.
- What's your name?
- Philippe Duchamp.
What was he saying
about you having a cure?
This is ridiculous.
There is no cure.
Adding growth factor
so the cells will build
a critical mass
for the genome sequencing.
And we stick it in the incubator
and wait.
- So, do the thing I've been doing
for the last hour.
- Hm.
Is that supposed to happen?
So, then you said
you're growning the virus?
- It wasn't supposed to grow like that.
- You mean like it was alive?
Viruses aren't living organisms. They lack
any form of energy or carbon metabolism.
- Why did it Hulk out?
- That's what we're gonna find out.
Maybe Alan'll know
why it reacted so violently
- to the growth factor.
- Wait.
- Don't.
- Don't what?
Don't tell anyone.
If Hatake gets wind of this,
it'll be the monkey room
all over again.
I still don't trust you, but
when you're right, you're right.
Dr. Bryce said Duchamp was
working on a... a cure,
- something called SODRA.
- I can't discuss that.
The research is proprietary.
No! No more secrets!
You promised me transparency.
When the satellite
comes online,
I'll speak with
my board of directors.
You will tell me everything
I need to know,
or when that satellite
comes online,
I'll tell every major news
organization on Earth
what's happening in this base.
You think you're
afraid of the US military?
Wait till you have to
keep your secrets
New York Post.
SODRA is an antiviral treatment
with an astonishing
cure rate -
nearly 100%.
When you say cure,
you mean
total viral elimination?
- With no harm to host cells?
- Yes.
How many viruses
have you tested against?
How wide a range?
All of them.
H1N1? Hepatitis? ***?
Hell, smallpox is a virus.
There are only two places
on Earth that have smallpox:
the CDC, and Vector Institute
in Russia.
Actually, there are three.
You have been growing
lethal viruses
for the purpose
of developing a cure-all.
SODRA works.
In all animal test cases,
the viruses were killed.
The only problem is
the mortality rate.
How many subjects were killed?
Over 75%.
Which is why SODRA
is not an option.
Level R has been sealed.
We'll take everyone downstairs,
go person to person. Anyone
who's infected stays below;
everyone else comes back up.
A hundred and forty tests
ready to go.
You two did good work.
If I call your name,
please step over here,
take a face shield
from Dr. Jordan,
and then come stand over here.
Doctors... Alvarez...
Mihalovich...
Hassan.
Security Tech Terry.
Dr. Sun-Lee.
Security Tech Gruning.
Those of you whose names
I have called,
you'll follow me. The rest of you will stay
with Dr. Jordan and Dr. Walker.
Wait! Why are they getting
to go back upstairs?
Because they tested negative
for the virus.
Please find any empty cot.
Make yourselves at home.
Dr. Walker and Dr. Jordan will
be coming around to collect
your medical information.
Go ahead.
- That's the last group.
- How many?
- Forty-three infected.
- That's almost a third of the base.
I want to bring Drs. Bryce
and Sulemani down here.
Shouldn't they stay locked up in the fusion
lab? They already tried to escape once.
This floor is secure.
There's no way out.
Excuse me.
Isolating this level was
a good idea.
People are settling in.
Yeah, but they're scared.
I think a lot of them believed
they weren't sick.
Part of them knew. They just
didn't want to believe it.
I took Peter's vitals again.
He's all over the place...
I'm sending his lab work to the CDC
as soon as the satellite window opens.
Get some more heads in the game
when finding a safe treatment
and a vaccine.
That may be too late for him.
Open the door.
Let's get these people
into the isolation beds.
Almost done with the samples?
I was just about
to bring them upstairs.
- What's wrong?
- No, I'm fine. I just slipped.
- Are you infected, Sarah?
- What?
You were in the drug stockroom
with Peter. Did he attack you?
- No. I told you. He ran off.
- That's right, you told us.
You think I would lie
about something like that?
Your symptoms. You tried to hide
your hand tremor this morning,
and you wouldn't use yourself as a control
sample for the rapid-response test...
You want me to take the test?
- Fine.
- I'm not judging.
I can understand...
I would never risk
spreading an infectious disease.
That's completely unethical.
What kind of a doctor
do you think I am?
It's clear.
Happy?
- I'm sorry. I just thought...
- Where's Alan?
Checking
the triage room. Why?
We have a problem.
Dr. Sulemani broke out
of the fusion lab.
- She killed Dr. Bryce.
- What?
Dr. Sulemani is on this level?
She's killing people!
Stop! Remain calm!
Stop!
Please, stay calm!
Calm down!
Calm down!
- Relax, get back!
- Back!
Everyone remain calm!
- Sarah!
- Alan!
What's going on?
Where's Julia?
Get back!
Julia!
Get back! Back, now!
Out of the hallway!
Get out of the hallway!
Get out of the hallway!
- We need to get in
the elevator. Get upstairs...
- I can't.
We'll regroup, get medical
supplies for the injured...
- I have to stay down here.
- It's too dangerous.
- We have to go.
- Alan, I can't.
What happened?
Where is Dr. Walker?
She's staying down there.
How could you risk leaving her?
Dr. Farragut.
Alan!
She's infected.
She has the virus.
We need to seal off Level R.
It's the only way
to stop the contagion.
Leave them down there?
With no food or water?
There's a week's worth
of supplies.
He's right.
We've...
I have lost control
of this situation.
We need to seal it off.
How can you say that with
Dr. Walker still down there?
It's only until help arrives.
When the satellite com link goes
operative again,
I'm calling in the army
for backup.
Two hundred
and seventy-four.
Three nurses in Kikwit
of Ebola;
family of six in Sudan,
Lassa fever;
10 students in a Heidelberg
dorm, Legionnaires' disease;
We've all had people die
on our watch, Alan.
It's part of the job.
We save who we can.
I could live with 274 because it was
the disease that killed them,
not me, until now.
I not only killed someone
with my own hands today...
but it's very likely... Julia
- is very likely...
- Way I hear it, you didn't
have much choice.
What we're dealing with here...
none of us has ever seen.
You're still the best CDC has.
I've seen you pull off miracles.
You'll figure out a way
to save 'em both.
What happened with the monkey?
It's inconclusive for now.
That's too bad.
I'm, uh... I'm still
doing tests.
No. No.
No, they should be green, they should
all be green! It doesn't work.
It doesn't work!
- Observation.
- Doreen, where's Alan?
Jules?
Hello?
Alan?
Jules? You there? Jules?
Hello?!
Can anybody hear me?!
The test doesn't work!
It doesn't work!
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