:57:01
	Dead, certainly.
But dead is a little extreme.
:57:07
	On the other hand, when my colleague
Gradski had your pulse...
:57:10
	and your blood pressure,
he had less than a day to live.
:57:19
	You are infected with Chimera,
my friend.
:57:25
	No use, my friend.
:57:27
	The medical staff
wants no part of this.
:57:31
	Doctors don't fancy the idea
of dying any more than anybody else.
:57:34
	How could I possibly be infected?
:57:37
	That's exactly what Gradski said
27 hours before he died.
:57:41
	You've got the antidote,
you miserable bastard!
:57:45
	- You stole Bellerophon! All of it!
- My, my, my.
:57:48
	I need it! I need it now,
you whacked-out Russian Gypsy!
:57:51
	And what about Gradski, who you
deliberately infected with Chimera?
:57:56
	How was I to know they needed...
:57:58
	to be treated with Bellerophon
within 20 hours?
:57:59
	- By asking me.
- You still don't get it, do you?
:58:03
	I needed to know just how bad
the disease was in the real world,
:58:08
	not just the lab.
:58:10
	You were genetically splicing
together strains of influenza...
:58:13
	to create a cure for all influenzas.
:58:15
	But you were also creating
a disease so terrible in Chimera,
:58:19
	the cure would be priceless.
:58:21
	I needed Chimera in order
to peddle Bellerophon.
:58:24
	It's not that difficult
to understand, is it?
:58:27
	Look, I've got the virus.
You've got the cure.
:58:31
	I need them both.
:58:33
	Time was a shot of penicillin
would knock off...
:58:35
	every bloody bug in the zoo.
Not any more.
:58:38
	If I couldn't make money killing
the microscopic little shits out there,
:58:42
	well, you'd help me put one out
there that I could make money on.
:58:46
	Well, there it is.
I've confessed.
:58:49
	I, John C. McCloy,
:58:52
	am in business to make money.
:58:56
	Now, forget any deal you may have
made with that thug Ambrose.