Europe baked that summer. The mercury just rose and rose like a fever.
Way past the mid-40's, things started to go wrong.
In Rini Bay tourists were trapped in their rooms, the air con blasting out and straining to refrigerate the searing interiors.
Even with the blinds closed in all the hotels the baking heat swept over the holidaymakers like a sickness.
They yearned for respite from the intolerable sun that July.
So did the wind farm workers. Having sailed out by motor dinghy to fix an intermittent turbine far out in the bay the two man crew were exposed to the full force of the blistering temperatures as they walked up the ladder of the giant metal shaft.
Having left their flasks in the dinghy the pair of technicians were totally dehydrated by the time they reached the fifty foot mark at the summit of the mast.
It must have been near to boiling point inside and their skin began to blister terribly.
The huge blades suddenly kicked in and the mill's power surged once more.
Woozy and semi-delirious from extreme thirst, peeling skin and heatstroke their bubbling fingers simply couldn't follow the instructions on the circuitry panel and with charge biulding up dramatically it was inevitable that disaster struck.
One of the main live power cables detached from the turbine, whipped about ferociously and slithered down the gigantic cylinder sparking and flashing the whole way and taking the two men with it. The impact of them both hitting the steel grid floor sent the small doorway flying open and with it the live cable, which flopped out and ran into the waters of the Mediterranean.
The effect was immediate, as the turbine was in full flow again. The sea around the steel foundations began to boil and pop as a million volts ripped through the super-conductive ocean.
Fish exploded in their thousands, Octopi burst open, sharks tore apart and krill cooked in its own juices.
The whole of Rini Bay sizzled, as if it was soup on a stove. Steam rose from the spitting surface and tourists, stood gawping from their rooms, saw a true vision of Hell as the seawater boiled.
Out on the bay's edge, where the massive river Vita drained into the Med, the brackish mix began to fizz too. Salt and sweet water gargled as the charge zipped through it and up into the river's mouth.
It was here that communities of flesh eating bacteria began to suddenly heat up.
Heat up dramatically and also grow.
With the enormous current continuing to cook the bay, the microscopic Vibri bacterium expanded exponentially in size, as white-hot electricity fired through their nuclei.
The colony of microbes convulsed and shook like a witch's brew and their single-celled minds burned and yearned for the cool and wet of human open wounds.
Five, ten, twenty feet in height, the Vibri rose above the water's surface and began to shamble out of the estuary far out into the open sea, where they sat waiting like meringues between the turbines.
Meringues of corrupting death.
In the bay the dreadful heat began to wane and tourists gingerly ventured out onto the tolerable beaches again. No one yet braved the sea, as, disconcertingly, it was still steaming.
A second bigger crew was sent out in a re-cabling craft to reel in the loose one and repair the circuits in the faulty wind turbine.
The men finished up quickly. Despite a few scrapes and cuts it had taken them less time than expected.
We've a good hour to spare boys. Anyone fancy a nip? I've a big flask of coffee with a good slug of rum mixed in!
Everyone agreed with the Skipper and the crew enjoyed a good laugh on the boat.
It was during a pretty terrible joke that Jonesy, the rigger, suddenly sat bolt upright. He had his back to the sea and as the boat rocked gently he threw his arms up and reached behind his head and appeared to be scratching furiously at his neck , where he'd been cut during the job.
He then stood up. Looked at each of his mates in turn and screamed a scream that made their blood freeze in their veins.
A small hole appeared on Jonesy's forehead, which he immediately stuck his fingers into and began to prize it open with all his might, all the while screaming in agony.
Shrieking in pain the man pulled apart his entire face, revealing his living damp skull beneath. It was then, as he stood twitching, that a gelatinous mass pushed it's way first out of his nostrils, then his ears, then his mouth and finally his eyes, the cuckoo'd eyeballs landing sickeningly moist on the Skipper's lap.
The crew went crazy with fright, their wails of distress deadened by the whup whup of the gigantic wind blades high above.
It was when Jonesy fell to the deck that their minds truly began to collapse. A giant morass of speckled gel and slobber was hungrily mouthing it's way into his now cavernous open back, his tarp jacket and trousers chewed away and his entire skin literally dissolving in front of their eyes leaving behind a throbbing slew of blackened putrefaction.
The crew members gagged violently and as they felt the initial terrifying widening of their own cuts they leapt overboard into the now pulsating ocean. But it was already too late.
The necrosis had begun.
The bacterial gunk could expand and contract at will and assuming massive proportions, the gigantic Vibri clusters, having tasted fresh blood, floated towards the shore, where the first brave souls were just entering the cooler sea.
They looked like low clouds from the shore, where laughter filled the air, as the holidaying commenced in earnest once more.
Talk drinks, parasols, suncream, lilos, towels, windbreaks, Ice creams, pimms, beers, sun loungers and buckets and spades.
All the paraphernalia of beach life on the Med.
A small child wandered to the surf and seeing some interesting foam scooped it up into its plastic bucket and ran off excitedly to mother, who was blissfully sunbathing with her dark glasses shading her eyes.
She was examining a laceration she'd got on her foot whilst putting up the big heavy parasol. Her husband had said she needed first aid from the overtly handsome lifeguard sat high in his chair.
It's nothing really. A plaster. That's all.
Her panting child arrived with its bucket of scum.
What on Earth is that?
The full damp load was tipped straight onto her wounded foot.
The mother immediately began to scream in pain and held her arms up in sheer terror.
It burns! It burns!
But it wasn't burning. The Vibri were clambering into her injury and chewing insatiably at its edges and the soft muscle underneath.
The assailed woman stood up and staggered bleeding onto the sand. Her bewildered husband heard the commotion, dropped his cornets at the gelati van and ran towards her.
Oh my dear God!
He yelled and heaved, as he saw what had happened to his wife's limb.
The entirety of her foot and ankle had been eaten away, reducing the whole thing to bone, which, mouldering as he watched, simply snapped off, at which his delirious wife passed out.
No one saw the small scummy mass lumber across the beach back to the sea, where the rest of the Vibri were waiting for confirmation that the flesh was good and ready.
It was and the phalanx of hungry murderous colloids treaded quickly over the wavelets towards the holidaying hordes.
The first to land padded towards a teenage couple who had wandered off to kiss and cuddle behind some huge rocks in a tiny cove of their own.
The boy, shivering with excitement as he undid the smiling girl's bikini top for the first time, felt something wet on his fumbling hand. Thinking it was most likely just perspiration he persisted and persisted but for some odd reason his fingers lost purchase on the clasp and everything seemed gooey and moist.
Suddenly his hand pierced the screaming girl's back and passed straight through to her chest, where it exited between her melted ribcage and purifying breasts.
The boy screamed and screamed
She fell over in his lap and it was then he saw the carnivorous puss digesting her whole spinea and scalp.
He held her head maniacally repeating her name over and over.
Gina. Gina. Gina. Gina!
Alas, Gina was no more and when he came to he was holding just her white skull in his hands, the last of the purulence clearly visible through her empty eye sockets hoovering up the soft rump of her brain.
The boy, now saved by insanity, ran yacking towards his family sat way up on the far sands.
Mum, Dad, this is Gina!
He laughed and threw her skull in the air, from which the residual gunk leapt out and made for the waves.
Meanwhile, on the bay's second beach a much larger massacre was taking place.
Every conceivable cut and wound were being exploited and enlarged by the vanguard of the Vibri, as they consumed vast quantities of flesh on that bloody stretch.
A man's huge triple-bypass scar was wrenched apart and the slop fed on each every scrap of his living tissues, only discarding the plastic valves from the op and his pacemaker, from which the sudden zap simply excited the blob even more as it necrotised his heart and crawled up the windpipe in search of his voice.
A little further a Grandmother had been completely buried in the sand by her grandchildren. Naturally, they'd left her head exposed.
At first she was laughing, but then she began wailing in excruciating pain as Vibri filaments had found perfect ingress through her severe and bloody varicose veins. They proceeded to capitalise on her already mushy legs and then rapidly digested the rest of her soft ancient carcass.
Her head, now neckless, fell over and rolled towards the children. An inquisitive crab climbed onto her stump but was instantly dissolved by the relict gloop.
The grandchildren ran roaring to their parents.
It's Grandma, It's Grandma. She's really laughed her head off!
At the gelati van the queue didn't really bat an eyelid when the ice cream man daubed their ices with a yellowy blackened slurry. It was only when he raised two more tubs from the sprinkles bowl that they saw his hands had withered away to a trembling sheath of slime dripping all over their cornets and sundaes?
He was clearly delirious and bent low to ask his buyers one last thing before he fell over.
Sauce anyone?
The van began to shake violently and the onlookers howled with fright as they ran back to the pool clutching their bacterial creams.
At the side of the pool an expectant mother came into labour way too soon. She was due a few days later and had wanted to relax before the big push. She lay fitfully on her lounger, white-knuckled, panting and hissing.
A holidaying midwife recognised the situation, got beach towels and some bottled water. The belly before her was simply huge and the nurse surmised that it would be twins. Twins born by a pool on vacation.
Push! Push!
The midwife was completely focused on the opening when suddenly her guiding hands felt no resistance at all. She looked up and screamed so loud that every pool slouch sat up and stared.
The pregnant mother's body had simply vanished, leaving in its place a quagmire of soupy flesh and powdered bonemeal. The newborns, three of them, were crying and wriggling free of the membranous birth sac and on seeing the fetid creature rearing up before her, the midwife instinctively threw the triplets into an inflatable dinghy in the pool.
The Vibri were now ravenous and with their appetite for human flesh peaking, consumed every living soul around the poolside and on the bay's beaches. Even the hotels weren't spared and as night fell on Rini no human voice could be heard except for the cry of three hungry babies in a rubber boat.
When help arrived all too late the following day, the authorities concluded that it had been the chlorinated water that had saved the triplets and that the Vibri simply could not abide it.
It was critical information for the people left behind in the Bay of Rini should those dreadful and voracious Vibri ever rise again and return for a second helping.