Microsoft word the com.., p.9

Microsoft Word - THE COMPLETE ALIEN OMNIBUS, page 9

 

Microsoft Word - THE COMPLETE ALIEN OMNIBUS
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  was better than wandering around an empty ship or staring at

  the vacant seats surrounding her.

  Unexpectedly, a realignment of priorities in her querying

  jogged something within the ship’s Brobdingnagian store of

  information. The resultant readout appeared on the screen so

  abruptly she almost erased it and continued with the next series

  before she realized she actually had received a sensible

  response. The trouble with computers, she thought, was that

  they had no intuitive senses. Only deductive ones. You had to

  ask the right question.

  She studied the readout avidly, frowned, punched for ela-

  boration. Sometimes Mother could be unintentionally evasive.

  You had to know how to weed out the confusing subtleties.

  This time, however, the readout was clear enough, left no

  room for misunderstanding. She wished fervently that it had.

  She jabbed at the intercom. A voice answered promptly.

  ‘Science blister. What is it, Ripley?’

  ‘This is urgent, Ash.’ She spoke in short, anxious gasps. ‘I

  finally got something out of the Bank, via ECIU. It might have

  just come through, I don’t know. That’s not what matters.’

  ‘Congratulations.’

  ‘Never mind that,’ she snapped worriedly. ‘Mother has

  apparently deciphered part of the alien transmission. She’s not

  positive about this, but from what I read I’m afraid that

  transmission may not be an SOS.’

  That quieted Ash, but only for an instant. When he replied his

  voice was as controlled as ever, despite the import of Ripley’s

  announcement. She marveled at his self-control.

  ‘If it’s not a distress call, then what is it?’ he asked quietly. ‘And

  why the nervous tone? You are nervous, aren’t you?’

  ‘You bet your ass I’m nervous! Worse than that, if Mother’s

  correct. Like I said, she’s not positive. But she thinks that signal

  may be a warning.’

  ‘What kind of warning?’

  ‘What difference does it make, “what kind of warning”!’

  ‘There is no reason to shout.’

  Ripley took a couple of short breaths, counted to five. ‘We

  have to get through to them. They’ve got to know about this

  right away.’

  ‘I agree,’ said Ash readily. ‘But it’s no use. Once they went

  inside the alien ship we lost them completely. I’ve had no

  contact with them for some time now. The combination of

  their proximity to the alien transmitter coupled with the

  peculiar composition of the vessel’s hull has defeated every

  attempt of mine at re-establishing communication. And believe

  me, I’ve tried!’ His next comment came off sounding like a

  challenge.

  ‘You can try to raise them yourself, if you like. I’ll help in any

  way I can.’

  ‘Look, I’m not questioning your competence, Ash. If you say

  we can’t contact them, we can’t contact them. But damn it,

  we’ve got to let them know!’

  ‘What do you suggest?’

  She hesitated, then said firmly, ?I’m going out after them. I’ll

  tell them in person.’

  ‘I don’t think so.’

  ‘Is that an order, Ash?’ She knew that in an emergency

  situation of this kind the science officer outranked her.

  ‘No, it’s common sense. Can you see that? Use your head,

  Ripley,’ he urged her. ‘I know you don’t like me much, but try

  to view this rationally.’

  ‘We simply can’t spare the personnel. With you and me, plus

  Parker and Brett, we’ve got minimum take-off capability right

  now. Three off, four on. That’s the rules. That’s why Dallas left

  us all on board. If you go running after them, for whatever

  reason, we’re stuck here until someone comes back. If they

  don’t come back, no one will know what’s happened here.’ He

  paused, added, ‘Besides, we’ve no reason to assume anything.

  They’re probably fine.’

  ‘All right.’ She admitted it grudgingly. ‘I concede your point.

  But this is a special situation. I still think someone should go

  after them.’

  She’d never heard Ash sigh and he didn’t do so now, but he

  gave her the impression of a man resigned to handling a

  Hobson’s choice.

  ‘What’s the point?’ He said it evenly, as though it were the

  most obvious thing in the world. ‘In the time it would take one

  of us to get there, they’ll know if it’s an operative warning. Am

  I wrong or am I right?’

  Ripley didn’t reply, simply sat staring dully at Ash on the

  monitor. The science officer gazed steadily back at her. What

  she couldn’t see was the diagram on his console monitor. She

  would have found it very interesting . . .

  V

  Refreshed by the brief rest, Kane kicked away from the smooth

  wall of the shaft and continued downward. He kicked off a

  second time, waited for the impact of his booted feet contacting

  the hard side. They did not, sailed off into emptiness. The

  walls of the shaft had vanished. He was swinging in emptiness,

  hanging from the end of the cable.

  Some kind of room, maybe another chamber like the big one

  above, he thought. Whatever it was, he’d emerged from the

  bottom of the shaft into it. He was breathing hard from the

  exertion of the descent and the increased warmth.

  Funny, but the darkness seemed to press more tightly about

  him now that he was out of the shaft than it had when he’d

  been dropping within its narrow confines. He thought about

  what lay below him, how far away it might be, and what could

  happen to him if the cable broke now.

  Easy, Kane, he told himself. Keep thinking of diamonds.

  Bright, many-faceted big ones, clear and flawless and fat with

  carats. Not of this fog-like blackness you’re twirling through,

  redolent of alien ghosts and memories and . . .

  Damn, he was doing it again.

  ‘See anything?’

  Startled, he gave a reflexive jerk on the cable and started

  swinging again. He used the mechanism to steady himself,

  cleared his throat before replying. He had to remind himself

  that he wasn’t alone down here. Dallas and Lambert waited just

  above, not that far distant. A modest hike southwest of the

  derelict lay the Nostromo, full of coffee, familiar sweat smells,

  and the patient comforts of deep sleep.

  For an instant he found himself wishing desperately that he

  was back aboard her. Then he told himself that there were no

  diamonds aboard the tug, and certainly no glory. Both might

  still be found here.

  ‘No, nothing. There’s a cave or room below me. I’ve slipped

  clear of the shaft.’

  ‘Cave? Keep ahold of yourself, Kane. You’re still in the ship.’

  ‘Am I? Remember what was said about shafts? Maybe that’s

  right after all.’

  ‘Then you ought to be swimming in your goddamn

  diamonds any minute now.’

  Both men chuckled, Dallas’s sounding hollow and distorted

  over the helmet speakers. Kane tried to shake some of the

  sweat from his forehead. That was the trouble with suits. When

  they kept you cool they were great, but when you started

  sweating you couldn’t wipe a thing except your faceplate.

  ‘Okay, so it’s not a cave. But it feels like the tropics down

  here.’ Leaning over slightly, he checked his waist instruments.

  He was far enough below the surface to be in a cave, but so far

  he’d found nothing to indicate he was anywhere but inside the

  bowels of the alien ship.

  There was one way to find out. Locate the bottom.

  ‘What’s the air like down there? Besides hot.’

  Another check, different readouts this time. ‘Pretty much

  the same as outside. High nitrogen content, little to no oxy.

  Water vapor concentration’s even higher down here, thanks

  to the temperature rise. I’ll take a sample if you want. Ash can

  have fun playing with it.’

  ‘Never mind that now. Keep going.’

  Kane thumbed a switch. His belt recorded the approximate

  atmospheric composition at his present level. That should

  make Ash happy, though a sample would have been better.

  Still puffing, Kane activated the unit on his chest. With a

  confident hum, it resumed lowering him slowly.

  It was lonelier than falling through space. Spinning slowly as

  the wire unwound, he dropped through total darkness, not a

  star or nebula in sight.

  So completely had the peaceful blackness relaxed him that it

  was a shock when his boots struck a solid surface. He grunted

  in surprise, almost lost his balance. Steadying himself, he stood

  straight and deactivated the climber unit.

  He was preparing to unhook the restraining cable when he

  recalled Dallas’s directive. It was going to be awkward,

  exploring while trailing the constraining tie-line, but Dallas

  would have a fit if he discovered that Kane had released

  himself. So he’d have to manage as best he could and pray the

  trailing line didn’t get itself entangled in something overhead.

  Breathing more easily now, he flashed his lightbar and suit

  lights in an effort to make something out of his surroundings.

  It was instantly clear that his guess about being in a cave was as

  inaccurate as it had been emotional. This was obviously

  another chamber in the alien ship.

  From the appearance of it, bare-walled and high-ceilinged,

  he supposed it to be a cargo hold. The light travelled across

  odd shapes and formations that were either an integral part of

  the hold wall or else had somehow been attached to it. They

  had a soft, almost flexible look, as opposed to the solid

  appearance of the bone ribs that reinforced corridor and

  chamber walls. They lined the walls from floor to ceiling, neat

  and orderly.

  Yet somehow they didn’t give him the impression of having

  been stowed. There was too much wasted space in the vaulted

  chamber. Of course, until they had some idea of what the

  protrusions were, it was absurd to speculate on the rationale

  behind alien methods of storing cargo.

  ‘You all right down there, Kane?’ Dallas’s voice.

  ‘Yeah. You ought to see this.’

  ‘See what? What’ve you found?’

  ‘I’m not sure. But it’s weird.’

  ‘What are you talking about?’ There was a pause, then,

  ‘Kane, could you be a little more specific? “Weird” doesn’t tell

  us much. This whole ship is weird, but that’s not how it’s going

  to be described in the official report.’

  ‘Okay. I’m in another big chamber like the one above.

  There’s something all over the walls.’

  Holding his lightbar extended in front of him in an

  unconsciously weapon-like pose, he walked over to the nearest

  wall and examined the protrusions. Up close, he was able to

  decide that they weren’t part of the hull structure. Not only

  that, they looked more organic than ever.

  Above, Dallas glanced over at Lambert.

  ‘How long until sunset?’

  She studied her instruments, touched a control on one

  briefly. ‘Twenty minutes.’ She accompanied the announcement

  with a meaningful stare. Dallas didn’t comment, turned his

  attention back to the black circle of the shaft, continued to stare

  downward although he couldn’t see a thing.

  A flash of Kane’s lightbar revealed still more of the peculiar

  objects attached to the floor of the chamber, in the centre of

  the room. He moved toward them, circled them while

  examining individual specimens in turn. Each was roughly a

  third of a metre high, oval in shape, and leathery in

  appearance. Choosing one at random, he turned his light on it,

  kept it focused there. The steady illumination revealed nothing

  new, nor did it seem to have any effect on the ovoid.

  ‘It’s like some kind of storage area, for sure.’ There was no

  response from his helmet speakers. ‘I said it’s definitely a

  storage area. Anybody read me?’

  ‘Loud and clear,’ Dallas said quickly. ‘We were listening,

  that’s all. You say you’re pretty sure it’s a storage room?’

  ‘That’s right.’

  ‘Anything to support that premise besides its size and shape?’

  ‘Sure is. Those protrusions on the wall are also on the floor,

  and they’re not part of the ship. This whole place is stocked

  with ‘em. Leathery things. Matter of fact, they kind of resemble

  that urn you found above, only these are much softer looking.

  And these seem to be sealed, where yours was empty. They’re

  all arranged according to somebody’s concept of order, though

  there seems to be a lot of wasted space.’

  ‘Funny-sounding kind of cargo, if that’s what it is. Can you

  see if anything’s in them?’ Dallas was remembering the hollow

  urn shape he’d found.

  ‘Hang on. I’ll give it a closer look.’ Leaving the lightbar on,

  he approached the particular specimen he’d been studying,

  reached out a gloved hand, and touched it. Nothing happened.

  Leaning over he tugged at the sides, then the top. There was

  nothing resembling a catch or break on the smooth surface.

  ‘Got a funny feel to it, even through the gloves.’

  Dallas sounded suddenly concerned. ‘I just asked if you

  could see what was in it. Don’t try to open it. You don’t know

  what it might hold.’

  Kane peered close at the object. It hadn’t changed and

  showed no effect from his pulling and tugging. ‘Whatever it

  contains, it’s sealed in tight.’ Turning away, he played his light

  over the rows of ovoids. ‘Maybe I can find one that’s cracked or

  has split a little.’

  In the faint backwash of his suit lights, a small bump

  appeared silently on the taut surface of the ovoid he’d

  touched. A second eruption appeared, then others, until there

  were raised spots across the smooth top.

  ‘All the same,’ he reported to Dallas and Lambert. ‘Not a

  seam or break in any of them.’ He turned his light absently

  back to the one he’d experimented with, leaned forward, and

  squinted uncertainly at what he saw.

  The opaque surface of the ovoid had become translucent. As

  he continued to stare, eyes widening, the surface continued to

  clear, becoming transparent as glass. Moving closer, he shined

  his light on the base of the object, stared hard, barely breathing

  as a shape within the oval container became visible. Jesus . . .

  ‘What, Kane, what’s going on down there?’ Dallas forced

  himself not to shout.

  A tiny nightmare was now clearly visible within the ovoid. It

  lay neatly coiled and folded about itself, compact and delicate

  and all made of a rubbery, filigreed flesh. It looked to Kane

  like a fraction of someone’s delirium tremens plucked from the

  mind and given solidity and shape.

  The thing was basically in the shape of a hand,

  many-fingered, with the long, bony fingers curled into the

  palm. It looked very much like the hand of a skeleton, save for

  the extra fingers. Something protruded from the centre of the

  palm, a short tube of some kind. A muscular tail was coiled

  beneath the base of the hand. On its back he could just make

  out a dim, convex shape that looked like a glazed-over eye.

  That eye . . . if it was an eye and not simply some shiny

  excrescence . . . deserved a closer look. Despite the feeling of

  repugnance churning in his belly, he moved still closer and

  raised the light for a better view.

  The eye moved and looked at him.

  The ovoid exploded. Propelled outward by the sudden

  release of energy contained in the coiled tail, the hand opened

  and leaped at him. He raised an arm to ward it off, too late. It

  fixed itself to his faceplate. He had a horribly close glimpse of

  the weaving tube in the centre of the palm stroking the front of

  the glass, centimetres from his nose. Something started to sizzle

  and the material of the faceplate began to deliquesce. He

  panicked, tried to tear the creature away.

  It was through the plate. Alien atmosphere, cold and harsh,

  mixed with breathable air. He felt faint; continued to pull

  weakly at the hand. Something was pushing insistently at his

  lips.

  Beyond all horror now, he staggered about the chamber,

  trying to wrench the abomination from him. The long,

  sensitive fingers had slipped through the open faceplate. They

  reached over his skull and around the sides of his head, while

 

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