“See?” Ripley said.
“Okay,” Hoop said. “So, here it is. You’ve hardly been rescued. We spotted your shuttle on our scanners just over fifteen hours ago. You were on a controlled approach.”
“Controlled by whom?”
Hoop shrugged.
“You drifted in, circled the
“The shuttle has proximity protocols,” she said.
“Auto docking?”
“If it’s programed to do so.”
“Okay, well, that’s academic now. Our situation— and now yours—is… pretty grim.” He paused, as if to gather his thoughts. “We suffered a collision eleven weeks ago. Lost a lot of our people. It’s knocked us out of geostationary orbit, and we’re now in a decaying pattern. We figure less than fifteen days before we start burning up in the atmosphere.”
“Atmosphere of what?”
“LV178. A rock.”
“The planet you’re mining for trimonite,” Ripley said, and she was amused at the look Hoop threw Garcia. “It’s okay, she didn’t tell me anything else. Like, anything important.”
Hoop held out his hands.
“That’s it. Our antenna array was damaged, so we couldn’t send any long-distance distress signals. But after the collision we sent a call for help on a high frequency transmitter, and it’s still being transmitted on a loop. Hoping it would be picked up by someone within rescue distance.” He frowned. “You didn’t hear it?”
“Sorry,” she replied. “I was taking a nap.”
“Of course.” Hoop looked away, stroking his hands together. Two other people entered med bay, both of them ragged, unkempt. She recognized Kasyanov, the dark-skinned ship’s doctor who had given her the initial examination. But the man she didn’t know. Heavily built, a sad, saggy face—his name tag said Baxter. He sat on another bed and stared at her.
“Hi,” she said. He only nodded.
“So what happened to you?” Hoop asked.
Ripley closed her eyes and a rush of memories flooded in—the planet, Kane, the alien’s birth, its rapid growth, and then the terror and loss on the
“I was on a towing vessel,” she said. “Crew died in an accident, the ship’s core went into meltdown. I’m the only one who got away.”
“
“How do you know that?”
“I accessed the shuttle’s computer. I remember reading about your ship, actually, when I was a kid. It’s gone down in the ‘lost without trace’ files.”
Ripley blinked.
“How long was I out there?” But she already knew the answer was going to be difficult. She’d seen that in Garcia’s reaction, and saw it again now in Hoop.
“Thirty-seven years.”
Ripley looked down at her hands, the needles in her forearms.
“Going to tell her about
Ripley looked around the room.
“Who’s Samson?”
No one replied.
Baxter shrugged and walked across to her bed, laying a tablet computer on the sheet.
“Fine,” he said. “Easier to show her, anyway.” He tapped an icon. “The
He swiped the screen.
At that moment, Ripley doubted everything. The fact that she was awake. Her being there, the feel of sheets against her skin, and the sharp prick of needles in her arms. She doubted the idea that she had survived at all, and hoped that this was simply her dying nightmare.
“Oh, no,” she breathed, and the atmosphere in the room changed instantly.
She started to shake. When she blinked her dreams were close again, the shadowy monsters the size of the stars.
“No,” she said, her dry throat burning. “Not here!”
Kasyanov shouted something, Garcia held her down, and another sharp pain bit into the back of her hand.
But even as everything faded away, there was no peace to be found.
“She knew what they were,” Hoop said.