"I'm in a bad fuckin' spot here. You know that? A bad fuckin' spot."

- Joe Pesci, Casino


Ada was the type of girl who just let it all out sometimes. She blankly stared at the ceiling of a long industrial hallway washed with stark red emergency lights as alarm bells blared around her. Shadows of ravenous creatures moved over her on the floor. Her shoulders twitched and her legs convulsed against the slab of iron grating she'd fallen on. Her mouth squealed as the countless zombies, dogs, and Lickers kept her pinned and gnawed somewhere along her belly, shredding apart the nice silk dress she'd just bought the week before Hell came to Raccoon City. Her gun was ten feet out of her reach. A thin trickle of blood descended from her left nostril.

The wet splash of rags being ripped off a bony towel rack echoed through the steel halls. Everything that defined who Ada was on the inside came flopping over her hips and pouring down her sides. It turned out she wasn't as durable as the leather holster she wore on her arms. The creatures crawling on top of her scowled and snapped at each other just as viciously as they snapped into her. The smell of blood and the glistening of fresh living intestines still attached to their host seemed to drive the already crazed monsters into an utter frenzy.

The voice of Annette Birkin resounded over the factory intercom. A ruthless and scientifically-minded woman, she quite detested pesky little corporate spies trying to interrupt the family business.

"Well, my dear, it would be wrong for me to say you don't have the guts to stop my husband. Too bad they're being spread all over the place."

Ada opened her mouth again, but no sound came out—only a waterfall of blood. She drowned in her own vital fluids as the warmth flooded out of her ruptured body and hollow coldness started to set in. The ceiling became distorted in her wide-open eyes. All of the growling, roaring, and crunching changed into a single ringing sound in her ears. Her vision blurred, her hearing went deaf, and the glaring red light abruptly faded to black.