It made him feel very small and ineffectual. Even bearing the spray gun he was just a weak creature needing a weapon to protect him. Those aliens were their own weapons, perfect hunting and killing organisms. It was almost as if they were created as such, though he had no wish to imagine the creator.
Hoop had never been a God-fearing man, and he regarded such outdated beliefs as ignorant and foolish. But perhaps there were gods other than those the human race had once known.
Light flickered around the large room, casting movement into the eggs, into the eye sockets of the dog-aliens, and into corners where anything could be hiding. He sensed everyone’s nervousness, and he felt it himself. This was far more than any of them had expected.
“We’ll get through this,” he said softly, but no one answered. None of them could know that for sure.
At the end of the room, passing through the opening to whatever might lie beyond, they came close enough to touch one of the cocooned victims. Hoop passed his flashlight over the dead thing and paused on its face. The creatures they’d found back in the tunnels had been deformed by the weapon that had ended them, but apart from their chest wounds, these were whole.
This one looked agonized and wretched. Hoop wondered at a universe that could still express such pain, after so long.
He shone the light into the space beyond and then entered.
Another tunnel, another corridor, another hallway. The walls were curved, the floors uneven and damp. The dampness was a new thing, and he paused to sweep his foot across the surface. Fluid was bubbled on the floor, as if the surface was greasy, and his boot broke a thousand bubbles into a smear.
“Slippery in here,” he said back over his shoulder. Ripley was there again, shining her flashlight past him.
“The smell’s changed, too,” she said. She was right. Until now the ship’s interior had smelled of age—dust, staleness, air filtered in from the atmosphere-processed mine to lift scents from all around. But here it was different. He breathed in deeply and frowned, trying to place the smell. It was subtle but foul, slightly tangy, like someone who had gone unwashed for a long time. There was also something underlying it that he couldn’t place at all. Not a smell, but a sensation.
“It’s warmer,” Ripley said. “Not the air, but… it
“Yeah,” he said. “Like something alive.”
“The ship?” Ripley asked.
He shook his head.
“I think if it ever was alive, in any form, that was long ago. This is more recent. This is them.”
He heard Ripley passing the word back
Responsibility weighed down heavier than ever, gathering mass the more time that passed without incident. He’d never been a great decision maker—it often took him a long while just to choose dinner from the
Better to forge forward.
As they moved on, the dampness and the smells in the air increased. The inside of his nose started to sting. He was sweating, the humidity rising, nervousness drawing moisture from his body. His mouth was parched, his throat sore.
“We shouldn’t be going this way,” Baxter said. “This is bad. This is wrong.”
“It’s
“What about the things they hatched?” Sneddon asked, and Hoop stopped dead.
“Where are they?” he asked, turning around to look at the others.
“That was a long time ago,” Ripley said.
“We don’t know how long they live. The ones in the
“So there could be a lot more down here than just those hatched from the miners,” Sneddon said.
“It doesn’t change anything,” Hoop said, and he waited for any response. But everyone was looking at him. “Changes
They continued on, but the corridor—twisting and turning, erring only slightly upward—ended at another wide, dark room.
It was another birthing ground. There was no telling how many places like this there were in the ship, nor how big the ship even was. As they paused at the edge of the hold, he found himself shaking with a deep, primeval fear. This was a danger beyond humanity, one that had existed since long before humans even knew what the stars were.
“They’re unopened,” Sneddon said. She pushed past Hoop, slinging the spray gun over her shoulder and taking something from her pocket.
“Don’t get too close!” Hoop said.