Bats Out of Hell (12 page)

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Authors: Guy N Smith

BOOK: Bats Out of Hell
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"What are the feelings of the citizens of Birmingham at present?"

"Panic hasn't broken out yet," the Ministry man replied, "but it could at any moment. Once people start dying in the streets and there aren't enough hospitals to cope with the sick, then all hell will be let loose. That's why the BVF is being formed."

"British Volunteer Force."

The seven people looked at each other in silence. There was no more to be said. No amount of talking could come up with a solution. Not unless Professor Newman discovered an antidote or someone found the main breeding quarters of the bats.

"I'm afraid the whole of the blame seems to have fallen on your head, Professor Newman," Sir John Stirchley said, smiling wanly. "Of course we know that it's just one of those things, but it's no good trying to explain that to the public. I am, however, going to try and get it through to Fleet Street that you are the one person capable of saving them from the bats. I'm sorry about the way you and Miss Wylie were treated by those louts, and about your bungalow, too. I take it you have fixed up accommodation elsewhere?"

"Yes, I've another bungalow." Newman said "At Chasetown close to Chasewater."

"Perhaps we should arrange for a police guard," Stirchley mused.

"I don't think that will be necessary, sir," Newman smiled at Susan. "I am sure that that episode was purely a freak outbreak of hooliganism."

"Well, if you need anything let me know," Sir John nodded to Haynes, and the meeting broke up.

Susan followed Brian back into the laboratory.

"It's terrible," she said, shuddering, and leaned against him. "D'you . . . d'you think there's any chance of finding an antidote now?"

"No," he told her, "to be perfectly honest, I don't. I've tried everything, and barring a miracle we'll just have to face up to the fact that there's no antitoxin."

"Then . . . what'll happen?" she asked.

"If it continues to spread." he replied as he slipped an arm around her, "I guess it'll mean the end of civilization as we know it in this country. Or even the whole world!"

"We are in the midst of one of the gravest situations since the war," were the Prime Minister's opening words as he began his televised speech on all channels, "and as a result it has fallen upon my government to bring in emergency measures. A State of Emergency was formally declared at six o'clock this evening, and the British Volunteer Force, which has been formed only this week, has now gone into full operation. A disease zone has been drawn up, incorporating most of the Midlands, and there will be no movement of persons either into or out of that designated area. It is our duty to contain the virus within those boundaries, and while every effort will be made to assist the people inside, under no circumstances must the virus spread beyond it. We are hoping that our scientists will discover an antidote within a very short time. In the meantime life elsewhere must continue as near as normally as possible, whilst within the zone it is in the interests of everyone to stay at home, stay indoors, and have as little contact with others as possible. Arrangements for food and other necessities will be made by your local authorities. Be sensible. Stay at home."

Within an hour of the Prime Minister's speech traffic jams were building up on all roads leading from the Midlands. Nobody had foreseen such drastic emergency measures in spite of the new terror which flitted from building to building in the gathering dusk each night. There were reports of deaths. Some still did not believe it. And those who did refused to believe that it could ever happen to themselves. Somebody was dying on average every half hour in a city the size of Birmingham. One accepted those statistics. The cause did not matter.

Now, suddenly, the presence of the bats was affecting Everybody's life. Death was one thing. Military rule was another.

Gerald Pitkin had worked at the Treasury for five years. As an ex-Forces man it helped to supplement his pension after the age of forty-five. Thickset with short-cropped iron-grey hair, he had no other ambition than to see his time out there. At first he had had some difficulty adjusting to the new way of life, the systems, the lack of military discipline, but overall there were few problems. Until that fateful day when the bats had chosen to occupy the ventilation shaft in the Credit House. Fortunately for Gerald he had been standing in for one of the clerks on the bullion vans who had stopped at home with a migraine. So by the time Gerald's van had arrived back at base order had been restored, and the Credit House clerks who had been in direct contact with the bats had been taken to hospital.

He accepted their deaths philosophically. Baxterdale's he delighted in secretly. But in the days which followed, Gerald Pitkin devoted much thought to the situation. It was rumoured early in the morning that the Prime Minister would be making a statement to the country that night, and Gerald had a good idea what the content of that speech would be. With his army training he forecast events. It had to be that way. They had to try and contain the outbreak of whatever it was, he decided. That meant calling up reservists (not from the infected zone, naturally) plus volunteers, men who feared for their own safety if the plague spread. Rabble. An armed mob with little or no training, just a few brief instructions. Keep the bloody Midlanders in, and if any of 'em try to make a break for it, shoot 'em down. They'd die, anyway. A bullet was quick, painless. The virus was slow agony by comparison. So what was there to lose?

It was midmorning by the time Gerald had worked all this out. A sudden sense of frustration followed by panic gripped him. Had he left it too late? He and his wife Bertha, and Harry, their eighteen-year-old son, should have made tracks yesterday. His brother Tom's place at Shrewsbury was the safest place for them. They'd be all right there.

He wondered if there was still time. He looked at his watch, trying to estimate what time he would finish that evening. Surely not later than five, unless some stupid pratt couldn't balance his books, and then they'd all have to hang about waiting. Stupid bloody rules. Nobody left until everybody had balanced. And even if everything went according to plan he might still be too late. Surely others had anticipated a cordoning off of the Midlands? Anybody with any sense could see what was going to happen.

Gerald Pitkin had to leave early somehow. And one didn't get out of the Treasury before time without a good excuse. Like going sick. He worked out a plan of action, but it was after lunch before he finally put his escape plan into motion.

"I've got the shits," he informed Barlow, the new chief clerk.

"Well, go and have a crap, then." Barlow was young, wore a permanent smirk on his face and made no secret of his dislike of ex-Forces men. If you didn't start in the Bank straight from school then you didn't deserve to be there.

"I've had two." Gerald controlled his temper and tried to look as though he might be feeling ill. "And I've been sick, too. I think I might have caught something. A bug, maybe."

"You had a couple of days off last week." Barlow continued working, pencilling figures in a large cash-book as he spoke.

"I had the shits then," Gerald forced a belch and hoped that it sounded genuine. "I don't think I ever shook it off."

"I'll phone upstairs for the key holders," Barlow muttered, picking up the phone and dialling with his pencil. "You'd better have a word with the Chief. See what he says."

Gerald Pitkcin could hardly believe his good fortune as he hurried along the crowded street, up the ramp to the station, and just managed to board the 3:15 train before it pulled out. He'd never have got away with a yarn like that in Baxterdale's time. Baxterdale wouldn't have listened to anybody who claimed to have the shits. He was one big shit himself. But he was dead and gone, so what the hell?

Bertha Pitkin looked up in amazement as Gerald walked into the hall. She was thickly built, with greying hair disguised by an auburn rinse. The type who did everything to a routine. That had been bred into her by living for most of her life in army married quarters. And anything which disrupted her self-regimented life upset her. Like her husband arriving home two hours before he was officially due.

"What on earth's the matter with you?" she snapped. "Are you ill or something?"

"Told 'em I was." Gerald was sweating, partly because of the heat and partly because he had run the remaining hundred yards as he succumbed to a sense of urgency.

"Whatever for?"

"Because we're leaving." He jerked a thumb towards the stairs. Harry would still be sleeping. He was on nights at the car factory this week. "Wake Harry and get a few things packed. Just essentials."

"Are you mad?" she demanded, surveying him, hands on hips, eyebrows raised, lips compressed.

"No," he said. "But if we don't get out now, we never shall. They're going to do something shortly. Cordon off Birmingham, maybe even the whole of the Midlands."

She stared at him in astonishment, but for once she did not ridicule him.

"They couldn't." she breathed softly. "They wouldn't dare."

"They could and they would." He stood poised on the bottom stair. "I'll go up and wake Harry. We need to be on the road in half-an-hour before everybody else realizes what's happening."

Forty minutes later the Pitkins, Gerald at the wheel of their new Fiat, Bertha beside him and a bleary-eyed Harry in the back amidst piles of loose luggage, headed out of Birmingham. Gerald had tried to telephone Tom before leaving, but after three unsuccessful attempts, each time thwarted by a recorded flat female voice which stated that "all lines to Shrewsbury are engaged", he gave up and they set off.

The traffic was lighter than it would have been under normal circumstances. Gerald Pitkin prided himself that he was the only person in the whole of Birmingham who had forecast the government's intentions.

They were through West Bromwich and Wolverhamton by six o'clock, and out on to the A464. Gerald glanced down at the gas gauge. Less than half full. He wished that he had filled up before leaving, but it didn't matter. There was more than enough fuel in the tank and it was less than fifty miles to Shrewsbury.

Shifnal was crowded. People seemed to be carrying on much the same as usual, going about their everyday shopping, chattering on the streets.

"Probably haven't even heard about the bats out here, Gerald said. "I guess we're clear by now. We can relax."

"I think you're making a damned fool of yourself, and us as well," Bertha snorted. "And when you get back to Birmingham you'll find that you've had the sack from the Treasury."

"I've still got my army pension," he grunted. Things did seem to be very normal out here.

Harry slept soundly on the back seat.

Then, with startling suddenness, their returning sense of security was shattered. There was a police roadblock at the entrance to the M54, the Wellington bypass which would have taken them to within a few miles of their destination.

Wooden barriers blocked the road. A red and white police patrol car was parked on the side, one uniformed officer seated behind the wheel, another standing by it, waving for them to continue back up the two-lane road and on to the A5. That in itself was bad enough. It was the third member of the obstruction team who caused Gerald Pitkin's heart to miss a beat. Tiny beads of sweat formed on his forehead. A soldier, stoic-faced, wearing camouflage denims. An automatic rifle was cradled beneath his arm and he watched the Fiat intently as though half-expecting some kind of resistance from its occupants.

Bertha started to wind the window down, but Gerald stopped her. His foot had eased up on the accelerator but now it pressed down hard again and the car picked up speed.

"We'll get back on the A5 and go through Wellington," he said.

Bertha was white-faced, shaken. Harry stirred and sat up in the back. Neither of them said anything. There was nothing to say.

As they dropped down into Wellington, through Ketley, they were aware of an increased flow of traffic coming towards them. Cars, vans, all piled high with luggage, hastily strapped roof racks, occupants with resigned expressions on their faces. Bumper to bumper, they crawled, came to a standstill, moved again.

Yet Gerald Pitkin had to see for himself. He tried to convince himself that it was nothing more than a flow of holiday-makers returning from the Welsh coast. Their expressions? Well, nobody enjoyed coming back off holiday, did they?

There was one other car behind them. He watched it in the mirror. A Reliant three-wheeler, grossly overloaded.

The heat was oppressive. The sky had clouded over, but Gerald knew it would not rain. Four months of drought now. The overcast sky increased the humidity, and Gerald Pitkin tried to tell himself that that was why he was sweating. The back of his shirt and trousers were stuck to the upholstery.

The oncoming traffic was at a standstill by the Cock Hotel. One car had broken down, overheated, and those following were having to overtake it. Impatience was growing. Horns blared. Drivers were leaning out of their windows in an attempt to determine the cause of the delay. And still the road ahead of the Pitkins was free of obstruction.

The second roadblock was some way out of Wellington. It consisted of another patrol car, two policemen, a soldier and, of course, an automatic rifle.

"Damn it!" Gerald Pitkin drove slowly up to the barriers. Apart from the following three-wheeler there was no other traffic here. It was as though the initial panic was over. The public had accepted the situation, resigned themselves to it. They had been told to go back to their homes and die like good citizens. And they were obeying.

Gerald pulled up alongside the barriers, wheels half-turned in anticipation of the U-turn he would be forced to make.

"Sorry, sir." A policeman stepped forward. "I'm afraid you'll have to turn around and go back."

"We're on our way to Shrewsbury. To my brother's place."

"I'm sorry, sir. The A5 and all roads to Shrewsbury are closed."

"There's been an accident?"

"I don't know what's happened, sir. But the roads are all closed. Now, please move on."

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