“So as far as I can tell, he’s the reason I’m here,” she concluded. “And he’s not going to be happy unless I bring one of those things back with me.”
“That’s just really fucking dandy,” Powell said. “So we clear one ship of fucking great big rib-busting monsters so we can escape on another ship piloted by a psychotic AI. Wonderful. My life is complete.”
“I don’t think it’s that much of a problem anymore,” Ripley said. She lit another cigarette. The smoke burned her throat. They were harsh Russian cigarettes, brought along by Kasyanov. Of the
“But why keep you alive, if that’s the case?” Sneddon asked.
“Because he needs someone for the alien to impregnate. He’s seen how violent the fully-grown creature is, there’s no way he could get one back to Weyland-Yutani. Not on board the
“Now… he’s not really here anymore. He’s just code. Ethereal.” She blew smoke again, but this time didn’t wave it away. “And we know where to find him.”
“So we just shut down Ripley’s shuttle’s computer until we’re ready to go,” Hoop said. “Then when we’re underway, and before we initiate main thrust, I’ll do my best to purge Ash from the systems. Or at least to isolate him to certain drives.”
“God knows you’ll have plenty of time,” Powell said.
“Right,” Ripley said. “And there’ll always be someone awake, to monitor any changes in the shuttle’s programed flight. Incoming signals. Whatever.”
“So Ash is just floundering,” Sneddon said. “Following his programing, but without a plan.”
Ripley shrugged. She wasn’t sure. He’d been so deceitful, so scheming back on
Soon, she would return to the
“So that’s the plan,” Hoop said. “Lachance, I need you to plot the
“There are the thumpers,” Garcia said. “They use them to fire charges deep into loose sand.”
Hoop nodded.
“Can we really use them in the
“We don’t have to use the explosive charges,” Welford said. “Substitute bolts, or something, and you have a pretty good projectile weapon.”
Ripley was looking into her cup of cold coffee, listening to the discussion, trying to take it all in. But her mind was elsewhere. Somewhere dark, claustrophobic. Stalking the steam-filled corridors where lighting flashed, the countdown siren wailed, and the alien could have been waiting around any corner.
“How many are in there?” she asked. The conversation was too loud, so no one heard her. She tried again.
“We think four,” Hoop said.
“Fully grown?”
He shrugged. Looked around.
“Last time we saw, they looked big,” Baxter said. “Just shadows, really. They were still, hunkered down at the back of the passenger compartment.”
“Maybe they were dead,” Kasyanov said hopefully. Nobody responded to that. Their luck wasn’t going that way.
“They have acid for blood,” Ripley said.
“What?” Sneddon asked.
“Dallas—our captain—said it was molecular acid of some sort. It ate through two decks before its effect slowed down.”
“Oh, man,” Powell said, laughing in disbelief. “Do they fire lightning out of their asses, too? Do they cum nuclear jelly? What else, huh?”
“Ripley, that’s…” Sneddon stopped, and shook her head. Ripley looked up in time to see her glance at the others, eyebrows raised.
“I’m not making this up,” Ripley said.
“No one said you were,” Hoop said.
“Hoop, come on!” Sneddon said. “Acid for blood?”
There was a long silence on the bridge. Ripley smoked the last of her cigarette and dropped the butt into her coffee mug. It sizzled out. She was feeling an increasingly urgent need to get back to the
She’d promised Amanda she’d be home.
Closing her eyes, she willed back the tears. She’d already cried too much. Now it was time to survive.