Part Thirteen
Chris
fought his way to the cockpit as the drop ship continued to shudder, its
descent apparent by the clouds that were thinning around them when its nose
sagged forward and the ground seemed like a monster opening its maw to swallow
them whole. From the freshly melted orifice created by the alien in its death
throes, a column of dark smoke was rising up its jagged walls to fill the ship
with black smoke. Ezra and Collins were making a valiant attempt to dissipate
the noxious fumes but it was fast making the air in the rear end of the drop
ship, unbearable for the duo. Chris in the meantime found himself pulled
forward by the steep incline of the ship's trajectory towards the cockpit where
even without his com badge, he could hear Vin barking orders at Alex as they
struggled to keep the ship in the air.
"I
can't get the landing gears to lower!" Alex cried out when Chris entered
the small cockpit that was the nerve centre of the craft. In the window in
front of her, Chris could see just how close they were to the ground.
"We'll
have to do without it." Vin said sharply, having no patience with groaning
about things they could not change. "I'll have to angle the nose just
right before we touch down. With any luck, I can find a stretch of land
somewhere and slid this thing to a stop."
"Exactly
where would that be?" Chris asked as he saw what was awaiting them beyond
the cockpit window. The ground was much lower than the thought and the majority
of the landscape was the grey, choppy ocean that covered much of this planet.
The prison had been built on one of the few stretches of solid land there was
on Fiorina and judging by their rate of descent, there was not going to be time
to search for a safer landing place. Given the alternative of not landing and
all and landing to deal with the problem of the aliens once more, Chris decided
that for the moment, he would take the latter. Besides, he had to assume that
eventually Julia would come looking for them. Their mission was to last no more
than a day and if they had been out of communications for longer than that
time, the Chief Engineer would follow procedure and come in search of
them.
"The
only place we can land." Vin said grimly. "At the prison."
"Damn."
Chris whispered under his breath. "Can you put as much distance between us
and the prison as possible? We need some time to set things up if those aliens
are going to come after us."
Alex
shuddered openly at the thought but Vin was more composed about that
eventuality and nodded in response. "I'll do what I can
pard but I can't make any promises. Right now, I'm just aiming to get us
to the ground in one piece."
"Do
what you can." Chris replied patting the Vulcan on the shoulder in a
gesture of thanks and it was more than just for his piloting skills.
Vin gave
his captain a look, understanding the sentiment behind the gesture. "You
bet. Now go strap yourself in Captain, this is going to be a rough
landing." He retorted, moving past the moment. Chris nodded and retreated
out of the room with Vin still watching him a few seconds after he left.
"He's
feeling bad." Vin remarked as he faced front again.
"He
shouldn't." Alex said automatically as she aided Vin in their rough
landing, trying not to pay too much attention at the ground coming up at them.
"We all wanted to come here."
"I
know," Vin retorted unhappily. "But he took the drop ship because of
me. I wanted to fly her out here."
"Vin,"
Alex reached for his hand briefly. "Don't start blaming yourself on how we
got here. The truth is, I've got as much to do with it. I wanted to come here
just as badly to get my hands on the android. We all had our reasons for being
here, you're not alone in feeling the way you do."
Vin
stared at Alex for a moment and felt himself melt at the sight of the smile she
aimed at him. He watched her for a second as she returned her attention to
their difficult landing. Even though the situation was completely inappropriate
Vin could not get enough of looking at her. Just watching the determined way
she was handling the controls next to him and being able to scent the subtle
perfume she wore was capable of stirring his emotions to such a state. He had
no idea that he was physically experiencing something when he felt tingles
against his skin. For a minute Vin was rather shocked by the sensation and
shrugged it away, wondering what that was all about.
Instead
he turned to the screen before him and searched for possible landing sites,
trying to keep Chris' request about keeping as far away from the prison
facility as possible. Unfortunately, the list was savagely short. Vin's hand
moved across the controls at lightning speed. Being Vulcan, he had the benefit
of the eidetic memory genetic to the race and was able to memorize the cockpit
controls very quickly. He fed in the coordinates required and hoped that the
choice he made would be adequate.
"I'm
going to try and set her down on the coast." He explained as he directed
the steering controls to where it needed to be. "I hope the stretch is
long enough."
"It
will have to be." She answered hopefully, trying to hide the fear at being
anywhere in proximity to those aliens.
"You
okay?" He asked, seeing something in his eyes that forced the question
from him. When it came to courage, Alex was one of the bravest people he knew.
What fear she felt, she hid beneath a veneer of ruthless control and it was
rare that she let that tough mask slip enough to let the emotion show.
"Yeah,"
she nodded slightly but her apprehension was clear. "Vin I don't want to
die with one of those things inside me. I'd rather kill myself
first."
"I
understand," Vin replied, agreeing with her on that much. He had no wish
to go out of his life knowing that his end would see the birth of one of those
monstrosities that had killed so many already. "Alex, I'll never let it
happen to you." He said firmly. "I promise."
"Really?"
She looked at him, seeing him so far removed from that shy young lieutenant she
had to rescue Charlotte Richmond's acidic tongue. She wondered at what point had their relationship changed that she was now seeing as
more than someone she had once had to protect. She thought about the nights
they spent together, where he held her in his arms and allowed her to sleep
without nightmares. With a feeling of reassurance, Alex realised
that it was good to know that he would always be there for her when she
stumbled or simply needed holding in the dark, to chase away the ugly
dreams.
"Yeah,
really." He smiled at her and then faced front again, all business as they
landing began. Tapping his com badge, he spoke to the other passengers in the
drop ship. "Everybody, buckle up. We're going to land."
Vin did
not have time to learn if they were indeed strapped in because the ground came
up at them with terrifying speed and he began to fight the controls against the
pull of gravity. Struggling to keep the drop ship's nose up, he fought the
sharp downturn pull that would kill them all unless he made the descent
gradual. The small craft began to shudder against the two opposing forces and
Vin found he was using every ounce of skill and strength to keep them from
slamming into the earth. Unlike the design of the runabout whose snub nose
front, Vin had to level the more stream lined version belonging to the drop
ship in order to make a successful landing without any landing gears
whatsoever.
The sandy
stretch of beach upon which he was using as a runway of sorts swept towards
them as the buckling and shuddering became more and more violent. Seals began
to snap glass shattered on Alex's right, she raised her hands to shield herself
from the flying glass but most of it was borne away by the speed of their
descent. Vin continued to wrestle with the steer and finally, the horizon
sneaked into view even though around them chaos was ensuing as the drop ship
groaned from its exertion. He had no idea what state the rest of the craft was
on and someone managed to yell out as the sand rushed up against them.
"Brace
for impact!" He shouted and hoped those behind him were listening.
The nose
of the drop ship met the dirt first; creating a tidal wave of sand and earth as
it impacted like a flaming comet. It dug in and then through as the forward
momentum propelled it across the sandy shore. Vin could feel objects being
crushed under the tremendous weight as the drop ship scraped across the ground,
creating a loud, screeching sound that send tingles though him and made him
wince in reaction. He could see the prison facility not far from them and the
grey, ugly sea on his flank. The drop did not seem to slow and Vin started to
worry that it if did not stop, it would keep going and end up in the
water.
"She's
not slowing down!" Alex shouted over the power roar of grinding
metal.
"I
know!" He shouted back but there was very little he could do at this
point. A tremendous heaving was heard and Vin saw what was left of the drop
ship's wing fall away from the structure of the craft as if it was blow away in
the wind. It its place were ragged and twisted strips of metal and the exposed
framework of the wing. For a moment Vin was horrified that the lack of wind
resistance would keep them going but instead the drop ships journey across the
ground began to slow. The shuddering though violent began to ease off and
slowly the horizon of water ahead began to lengthen further away instead of
drawing closer and closer. An eternity of moment passed with Vin holding his
breath before the drop ship finally came to a rest with the edge of the
shoreline only a few hundred yards away. For what they had been through, it had
been a narrow miss despite that distance.
"Oh
my god!" Alex let out a gasp as she unbuckled herself from her seat.
"We made it!"
"Just
barely," Vin muttered but nonetheless felt just as relieved as his breath
escaped him and he leaned into the chair. "And I think we tore her pretty
good making that landing." Vin did not even have to examine the damage to
know that they would not be taking off again any time soon. He leaned towards
the side window of the cockpit to examine the state of the hull and pulled back
a second later, his expression grim. "She's had it, Alex.""How
bad?" She asked, not needing to clarify what he was talking about.
"Pretty
bad." He replied. "We've lost a wing and an engine. However, we get off Fury,
its not going to be on this ship."
*************
Vin's
estimation of the damage was not only accurate but in some sense it was
somewhat more optimistic than what he had seen earlier. They had come down
about two miles away from the prison facility but was certain that that would
not stop the aliens from coming after them. Since the species' ability to
reproduce hinged on its obtainment of viable hosts, Chris suspected than the
creatures could not even afford to pas up on four potential hosts if they were
available which meant that if the aliens could sense, they would be coming.
After their turbulent landing, the Away Team made a brief inspection of their
landing craft to assess how severe the damage to the drop ship had been.
Unfortunately the wreckage was extensive and though most of it was intact,
there were gaps were an alien penetration would be remarkably easy when the
creatures came in force.
"God
what a mess." Alex remarked as she saw the wide gapping holes in the hull.
They were all braving the wind and rain as it battered against their skin in
abnormally large droplets more than aware that the weather would not stop the
aliens that would be closing in on them soon enough.
"How
long can we hold out in this Sir?" Collins asked none of the officers in
particular; however, everyone appeared to be looking towards the Captain.
"A
few hours if we're lucky." Chris muttered.
"If
there is one thing about this trip has been so far proven incontrovertibly, it
is certainly our good standing with Lady Luck." Ezra said dryly.
Vin
flashed him a look of pure venom while Alex merely stiffened, not about to say
anything. Chris did not react to the obvious jibe, more than aware that he
certainly deserved some of Ezra's vitriol. No matter how he might like to think
otherwise, the truth was he had placed them in this situation. "We need to
retrieve the wing."
"What
for?" Vin looked at Chris puzzled. "We're never going to get this
thing off the ground. She's had it Chris."
"I
know that." Chris returned. "But we better be prepared for them and
we're going to need to seal those ruptures in the hull and fortify the ship
with barricades. We only need to hold out until our check in time, which is
five hours from now. The minute we don't contact the Sulaco, Julia will be on
her way here with the runabout."
"He's
right," Alex responded in a show of support for her captain. "All we
need to do is stay alive until then, possibly sooner if this storm
passes." She looked up in the sky and was greeted with rain battering her
skin.
"I
stocked the drop ship with a considerable amount of fire power prior to our
approach." Ezra remarked. "I found what they called remote sentry
units. I had at least five of them loaded in the cargo hold."
"Remote
sentry units?" Vin glanced at the security chief.
"Yes,"
Chris nodded. "They respond to motion, I believe. Good thinking
Ezra." Chris offered the Southerner the compliment, knowing that it was a
meager peace offering and not one that would appease the man very much in light
of how against this entire trip he had been from the beginning.
"If
we set them up around the perimeter of the drop ship, we can keep them away for
some time. I hope." Ezra volunteered, not missing the sentiment directed
at him by his captain and deciding for now, he could afford to be a little
magnanimous.
"You
hope?" Alex frowned wishing the news was a little brighter.
"You
should have seen how many there were Commander." Collins responded.
"They were a lot of them coming after us. We may not have enough artillery
to keep them all away."
"Its
something." Chris said firmly. "And if we are to survive this. We
best get to work immediately. Ezra, you, Alex and Collins set up the sentry
units. Vin, you're with me. We're going to get this wing, while we still
can."
"Sure
thing." Vin replied, wanting to give Chris as little trouble as possible,
more than aware that the Captain had enough guilt of his own as it was.
They set
out without saying very much and Vin noted Chris gaze seemed fixed on the
shale-covered surface before him. Vin on the other hand found his eyes studying
the grey horizon and the equally grey sea and thought how perfect this world
was to be the home of an unspeakable species like the alien. He wondered if the
creatures even had a name. Probably not he soon decided. No civilized species
could have survived long enough on their indigenous planet to name them.
"Chris
you okay?" Vin asked as they caught sight of the torn wing of the drop ship
ahead. They were not very far from the ship at all and Vin was grateful that
they would not have to long a hike before them when they started dragging the
large piece of metal back.
"No
I'm not." Chris answered shortly because Vin is the one person to whom he
could confide without being offered advice or judgement.
Perhaps that is why they had struck up such an enduring friendship. Vin knew
when to pull back and when to get in one's face. He had never seen the Vulcan
impress himself upon Chris yet and secretly the captain wondered what it would
take to inspire that kind of passion in the younger man.
"It's
not your fault." Vin responded automatically, remembering that Alex had
used the same words on him earlier and found the whole think somewhat ironic to
a fashion.
Chris
looked up and met his gaze. "Yes it is Vin." He replied sadly.
"No matter what I might like to tell myself, there is no hiding from the
truth. It is my fault that we're in this mess."
"Chris
we all wanted to come down here," Vin returned, not about to exonerate
himself when he knew how much he had himself had contributed to this situation.
"Hell I wanted to take stupid drop ship up so bad I couldn't think
straight. If we hadn't taken her, we would be in orbit by now. The runabout would
have taken straight off and we would be on the Sulaco safe."
"You
didn't have to convince me very hard to take her Vin." Chris offered the
young man a little smile and was grateful for what he was trying to do even
though Chris knew better inside himself. "Looks, I wanted to know what
happened to Ripley, a woman I had never met, who for some reason my ancestor
was hell bent on keeping alive. I wanted to know what made her so special and
the more I found about her, the more I realised she
was special."
"That's
not wrong Chris...." Vin started to say.
"Yes
it is!" Chris insisted. "It is when I am the captain of a starship
and I have a thousand people relying on my judgement
to stay alive. Then it becomes very much wrong that I bucked protocol and
didn't listen to Ezra when I should have and now that...that...ensign, that
child is dead! She died to protect me, her captain because she thought that I
was doing the right thing. That I was making the decisions to keep the crew
alive and all the while I was wrapped up in what I wanted, I didn't see
anything other than getting my hands on it!"
"Chris
you're human." Vin found himself saying, wondering where this fountain of
wisdom was coming from inside of him but was not prepared to ignore its
benefits once it had arisen. He supposed that he was not that reserve
lieutenant any more and that somewhere along the line, with Alex and the
friends he had met, Chris in particularly he had found his place in the world
and was content with it. "After what you went through with Sarah and Adam
and learning what you did. You are entitle to show some hurt."
"I
didn't just shows some hurt," Chris shook his head wishing he could let
himself be exonerated that easily. "I hurt the people I cared about."
Chris could not bring himself to say Mary but Vin was certain that was who he
meant. "I could have asked for help but I didn't. I done know where I've
been the last few weeks. I don't even know who I was."
"I'll
you Chris," Vin said hesitantly, a little uncertain about making his inner
most feelings known to his captain but he sensed that if there was any time for
such revelations, now was the moment for it. "You're my friend and my
captain. We will get out of here and we'll find the truth about your family,
one way or another."
Chris did
not say much for a few seconds but when he did, he raised his eyes to the
Vulcan and grinned. "Thanks Vin. I really needed that."
"Any
time pard." The helmsman returned the smile.
"When
did you wise up?" Chris chuckled as they reached the strip of wing lying
half buried in the shale ground.
"I
don't know," Vin shrugged and he leaned over. "But I think it suits
me."
**********
Julia had a plan.
Actually
it was not so much of a plan as it was an improvisation. However, she had no
choice but to make the attempt no matter how outrageous it might seem. She knew
she did not have the materials to repair the damaged window of the runabout but
if she had enough time, she could rewire the shield to extend the protection
grid to the exposed area. Usually if there was a hull breach on the Maverick,
bulkhead shields would immediately kick into gear, protecting the damaged area
from decompression. Julia could see no reason why the same principal could not
be applied to the runabouts' current difficulties.
Julia
emerged into the hangar of the Sulaco, her eyes scouring the immediate vicinity
even though her tricorder indicated that the alien was nowhere in sight.
However she did not lower the pulse rifle in her hand as she crossed the floor
of the deck that only a short time ago, she had fled in fear for her life being
pursued by the creature. Her sixth sense or women's intuition, she was not sure
which was certain that something was wrong down on Fiorina 361. Her attempts to
contact the Away Team had been met with silence and after what she had seen
since finding that what was left of poor Lieutenant Atwater, Julia was not
going to blithely assume that there was some reasonable explanation. Reasonable
had gone out the window the moment she had seen Atwater's entrails all over the
floor of the runabout.
The
runabout door was still open when she reached it and cautiously, the Chief
Engineer peered inside the cockpit of the small craft, when logically she knew
that the alien was not there. At the moment, she detected it somewhere near the
engines of the Sulaco, probably finding itself a nice little nest before coming
back for her. She did not know how much time that gave her to accomplish what
she needed to but Julia knew she had no choice but to try. Entering the runabout,
she searched the floor covered in broken glass for the phaser she had dropped
earlier. The smooth handle peered at her from under one of the compartments and
Julia quickly retrieved it before sliding into place on her belt.
Lowering
herself to the floor, she crawled underneath the helm station and slid off the
panel, which would give her access to its inner workings. Reluctantly, she
relinquished her grip of her pulse rifle and set to work; unaware that she was
all that stood between the Away Team and a fate worse than death.
Part Fourteen
They were working against time and they
knew it. Retrieving what remained of the drop ship’s left wing, the Away Team
set to work quickly, fortifying their only protection against the alien hordes
that were undoubtedly coming for them. Ezra, Alex and Collins went to work
setting up the remote sentry units that Ezra had taken from the arsenal he
found on the Sulaco. Although he would have preferred something more formidable
and still had reservations about relying on the 21st century
technology, he knew at the present moment their choices were limited. While
they quickly installed the weapons in place, Ezra was also keeping vigil on the
tricorder in expectation of the readings that would tell them that the enemy is
coming.
Upon
their return, the work detail was expanded to include barring all fissures and
openings that the aliens might use to make their way into the structure. This
included sealing the cockpit that was no compromised because of the shattered
glass of its main window. Using their phasers to do the work, since nothing
else on board would weld titanium plates, they worked quickly. All the while
mindful about draining phaser energy because they would need it to defend
themselves when their assailants finally arrived. The storm did not seem to
abate but did not become any worse either, having reached a crescendo in its
intensity before choosing to level off. The wet did not make the job of
building their barricades any easier but fortunately most of their equipment
was designed to endure in the most adverse climatic conditions.
They
worked at a feverish space until the hours stretched into darkness for the days
on Fury 361 were short and with the rain continuing to descend upon them, the
blackness that surrounded the ship was more than just a little disheartening.
From inside their titanium walled fortress, they could hear the pitter-patter
of rain against the hull but in truth, they were listening closely for other
sounds in the dark. There had not been enough of an alien carcass for Alex to
make a thorough examination for the creature’s cellular composition had a
tendency to narcotize after death. Alex spent much of the evening studying the
damage done to the engines during the acid bath it received from the alien
following its demise.
The acid
had eaten through all three decks of the drop ship and had unfortunately landed
on the main engines. Their only consolation was that the corrosive material had
taken time to eat through the metal, giving them the opportunity to land
otherwise, they would have been a dead weight in the atmosphere. Following
their preparation, Alex took a moment to herself and connected Bishop to a
power supply once again. She hoped the android might be able to tell them something
further about the alien life form and perhaps interface with some of the data
storage units she had taken from the EEV. In any case, there was nothing left
to do but wait for the attack or rescue, whichever arrived first. She hoped for
the latter but was more than realistic enough to know that the former would
make its appearance first.
Sparks of
electricity and the spasmodic twitch of his one good hand marked Bishop’s
return to life. After a few seconds, the same dazed expression bled into the
melted face as Bishop opened a lazy eye and took stock of his surroundings. He
not say anything as the familiar environment impressed itself upon his memory
banks and it was not long before he realised where he
was.
"We're
on the second drop ship." He stated looking at her.
"Yes."
Alex nodded. "You know it?"
"I
flew it." Bishop said with a little smile, which seemed bizarre on his
ruined features. "From LV427."
Alex
wondered how she was going to tell him what they were going through and then realised that he probably would not have any feelings on
the matter anyway. He was android. However, Bishop preempted the admission.
"Is
something the matter?" That smooth but still gravelly voice asked.
Alex
released a little laugh. "Yeah Bishop." She nodded begrudgingly.
"Something is wrong. We're trapped here. We killed an alien on board and
it ate straight through the ship. We couldn't break the atmosphere and the ship
just about tore apart on the landing. There is also some extreme ionization in
the atmosphere that keeps us from contacting our ship."
"I'm
sorry." He replied and Alex believed he genuinely believed it.
"Thanks,"
she offered him a little smile. "We have a rescue ship due within the next
few hours so if we can hold out that long."
"Just
look out for emergency venting." He said dryly.
"What?"
She looked at him curiously.
"A
little joke." Bishop shrugged the question away. "So why did you
revive me."
"For
something to do." Alex replied honestly, "but also because I need you
to review the data tapes on the EEV. My tricorder suggests that it may have
been used after the crash."
"It
was." Bishop explained. "Ripley wanted to know if the alien came down
with us. I had to interface with the flight recorder to find out."
"Can
you tell me what else she might have used it for?" Alex asked. "I've
already got you hardwired to the drive. All you have to do is take a
peek."
"I'm
not what I used to be," Bishop confessed. "Peeking isn't that easy
any more."
"I'm
not going to let you become some museum relic Bishop," Alex found herself
saying. "You come from one of the most elusive periods of human history.
People want to talk to you and I want to see that you're in the state to do it.
The best engineer I know is salivating to get her hands on you."
"How
appealing." He remarked a hint of amusement in his voice before his face
sobered as he began searching through the darkness of electronic information to
find out what she knew.
"Alex,"
Chris Larabee entered the room. "We're warming some rations up. You should
get some food."
"Hello
Captain." Bishop greeted.
"Hey
Bishop." Chris smiled, finding himself similarly found of the android as
his science officer. "I thought you were supposed to be convalescing
before we got you back to the ship."
"I
just wanted to find out what was in the flight recorder Captain," Alex
explained. "Bishop is able to interface with it and give us a step by step
account."
"I'm
doing what I can," the android responded. "As I said its dark in
here."
"Sometimes
that's the best way to start." Chris said enigmatically.
"She
accessed the medivac." Bishop suddenly spoke.
"Ripley?"
Chris found himself asking, feeling a sliver of excitement inside of him, as
realizing that he was being privy to Ellen Ripley's last few days on Fury.
"Yes."
Bishop nodded, his expression turning into a troubled frown quickly. "She
is using it on herself."
"Why?"
Alex asked puzzled. "Surely the prison facility comes equipped with
medical personnel and equipment."
"She's
running an internal scan." Bishop continued his running narration.
"She's looking for something. She paused at the sternum."
No one
needed to ask why.
"Nothing
there." Bishop announced to everyone's relief. It's clear. She's moving
down mid thorax to the pelvic area......" the android's words drifted
away.
"Bishop?"
Alex asked but Chris did not need to. Even though Bishop did not say it and
though he was an android incapable of displaying that much emotion or for that
matter supposed to feel it, Chris saw the glint in his milky colored eye and
immediately knew.
"Did
it get her?" Chris asked quietly.
"Yes."
Bishop's voice was full of unspoken sorrow. "Its different." He added
a moment later. "They're usually lodged in the sternum. This one is in the
uterus."
"Oh
god." Alex gasped, horrified by the notion of something so unholy in that
most vulnerable of places inside a woman.
"It's
embryonic but judging by the way it looks I think this was a queen."
Bishop revealed, his eye squinting as if he were trying to get a better look at
the thing. "It would make sense if that is the case. The queen would talk
longer to mature. Ripley was still in one piece days after the crash."
"So
all these creatures came from an alien queen that used Ripley as a host?"
Alex asked, the horror of it was more than she could stomach. There had to be
some honor in death but she felt her heart bleed in sympathy for the poor
woman.
"I
doubt it." Chris said firmly and unaware of how he could be so certain but
the truth was he had enough sense about Ellen Ripley to know that she had lived
how she wished and given the circumstances, she would die in the same way.
"I
agree with the Captain. Ripley would have died before letting it live. She was
an exceptional human."
Chris did
not speak for a few seconds as the final fate of Ellen Ripley seeped into his
mind with the tragic knowledge of the truth. He felt a great deal of sorrow for
this woman who had seen so much, deserve more than anyone for a chance of life
only to have it cruelly taken from her in the most unimaginable way possible.
He mourned for her and knew that perhaps in truth, he was mourning for himself
a little as well. He had hoped that finding out the truth for Ripley might
salve some of his own issues about his family's murder but all he had done in
his quest was sentence a good number of people to die who did not need to.
"I
think Hicks cared about her," Bishop volunteered. He hoped his words were
in some small way a comfort to the Captain. "They seemed to get along very
well. I saw how sad she was when she told me about the others. There was a
different kind of hurt when she spoke about Hicks. I think of all the Marines,
he was the one who most understood how frightened she was and what act of
courage it had been for her to accompany them back to LV427. He didn't say it
but after the disaster in the atmosphere processor when she got what was left
of the squad out there, he made it his business to see she stayed alive."
Anything
Bishop was about to say in response was cut shot when suddenly the sound of
gunfire ripped through the air. The sound was powerfully loud; resonating
against the titanium hull like it was a tuning fork. Chris and Alex exchanged
glances, knowing what the activation of the remote sentry units meant.
"Looks
like we have company." The Captain said tautly.
Bishop
watched the humans leave the room and hoped thing turned out a good deal better
than it did for the crew of the Sulaco.
*********
"How
many?" Chris asked the minute he and Alex stepped into the passenger deck,
which also happened to be the inner, most centre of the drop ship. Vin, Collins
and Ezra were huddled around the computer screen watching the progress of the
remote sentry units through the digitized medium. Outside, the roar of erupting
gunfire had almost entirely obliterated the sound of rain and screeching aliens
as they attempted to breach the deadly barrage.
"Enough."
Ezra said coldly as he stepped aside from the screen so that the captain could
see for himself.
What Chris
saw in that small screen was more than enough to justify Ezra's present snit
with him. The aliens had descended upon their target like a swarm of locusts.
He could not see where one black, exoskeleton began and where another ended.
All he could make out were the taloned hands; the
banana shaped heads and the occasional glint of teeth when the gunfire
illuminated the blackness surrounding the craft. He could see them being blown
apart while trying to approach the ship, their determination to reach their potential
hosts beyond reason or belief. They were absolutely relentless and reminded
Chris a little of the Borg but at this moment, he could not imagine which was the worse fate of the two.
"Some
of them are going to make it through." Chris warned. "They've got the
numbers to see to it."
"I'm
on it Sir." Collins offered. "I'll walk the perimeter of the
barricades."
"Susan,"
Ezra looked over his shoulder. "I require no heroes among my junior staff.
If you so much as see a shadow that does not look entirely right, I want you to
get back to us immediately. Do we understand each other Lieutenant?"
Collins
knew the Chief' tone well enough to understand how serious he was about that
order. The Chief took his people's life very seriously and did not hold with
the fact that security officers should not expect to die young. It was his
devotion to his staff that inspired the loyalty he engendered in all of them.
"Yes Sir." She nodded and left the room.
Once she
was gone, they turned their attention back to the screen once more. The aliens
were still coming and the counter reading for the number of rounds left in all
the guns began to click down with rapid speed. Although Ezra had brought
ammunition for the weapons to last them for several more assaults, the problems
was not in the supply but being able to replenish them when there were so many
aliens attempting to breach the crossfire. Unearthly screeches tore through the
air almost as rapidly as the bullets being fired and Chris had to admit for
weapons forged so long ago, they were certainly holding up against the test of
time.
"They're
still coming." Ezra said grimly.
"They
won't stop." Vin spoke with something that sounded a great deal like
familiarity. "We're what they need to continue and nothing else defines
their existence more than that."
Alex
threw an uncertain glance at him. "Since when were you a behavioral
expert?"
"I
just know it." Vin responded, feeling a little uneasy because he could not
explain why he had this sixth sense about the creatures that allowed him to
make such a statement. However, he had a sense that he was right.
A moment
of awkward silence descended the room as no one knew how to respond to Vin's
statement. Chris guessed it had something to do with his close contact with the
alien which might have allowed his natural telepathy
to gain some insight into the creature's psyche, such at it was. However the
awkward silence was soon overtaken by something as equally still. Without
warning, the guns stopped firing. For a terrible moment, Chris thought it might
because the ammunition had finally run out but in truth the guns had still a
long way to go before being completely exhausted. What had caused the silence
was the sudden withdrawal of the aliens.
"They're
going!" Alex exclaimed, never feeling more relieved than at that moment.
"For
now." Ezra retorted, not about to get overly optimistic. "They will
return later, I am certain of it."
"He's
right," Chris agreed. "Let's wait a few minutes and go refill the
guns to maximum again. I like to have some insurance before the later rolls by
again."
**************
Collins
was walking along the belly of the drop ship, poised for trouble when she heard
the sound. Although the large rips in the hull had been fortified, she knew
that the aliens were strong. The Bishop android had said they were more than
capable of tearing through steel as evidenced by the destruction of the
barricades the colonists of LV427 had erected to protect themselves. She
remembered what the Chief had said she ought to do in the event she heard
anything strange and though it was sound advice, Collins found that she could
not withdraw. It was not lost upon her that they were trapped here because she
had opened fire on one of the creatures when it attempted to attack the
captain. Logically, she knew she had done the right thing but it was hard to
discern what the right thing was when they were in such perilous circumstances
because of her actions.
She
raised her phaser to fire, prepared to kill anything that came into her sight
because she refused to let the alien if it was in here, have the run of the
ship and cause a calamity like the one that had seen them stranded on this
hellish world. Suddenly it occurred to her that perhaps using her phaser was
not the best course of action. She was also carrying one of the pulse rifles
and realised it would most likely cause less damage.
Of course the alien would bleed but it would not create explosion of acid that
had crippled the drop ship. The sound of something hard skittering across a
metal surface cut short her ruminations and Collins swung around to see the
dark shadows moving in the corner. Without wasting any time, she opened wire
and caused the alien to leap out of its hiding place with an ear-piercing
screech. It leapt towards her and Collins had to roll with it to keep it in her
sights. She was about to fire again when she saw it resting on the barricade
that sealed the hull from the outside. Pull the trigger and the acid would eat
away their hopes of staying alive.
For an
instant she had no idea what to do and then realised
that there was one solution left to her. The alien hissed at her, perhaps
sensing her hesitation. If not why. Collins took a deep breath and supposed she
might be able to take the creature, at least dislodge it far enough away from
the barricade. The belly of the drop ship was pressed against the ground, if
she shot it while it was there the acid would leave a whole in the ground but
not one that could be exploited by the rest of the aliens. Steeling herself,
she ran forward, positioning her body as if she were a grid iron player of all,
her shoulder ahead of the rest of her. The alien was more than welcome to the
attack. She slammed into its exoskeleton and was about to pull away when
suddenly she realised that it was she who had been
played the fool, that the trap was meant for no one
but her.
The
second alien had been watching in the darkness and the minute she was in
between the both of them, it sprang forth and joined its brethren as
high-pitched screams of agony tore through the darkness. As Collins felt teeth
sink into her body, she did the last thing she could to keep more of these monster from penetrating the ship. Pulling the trigger
several times, she did not know anything but the pain and was glad that when
she was bathed with acid, that she was beyond feeling anything.
***********
The
tricorder started beeping.
Julia sat
up abruptly and almost cracked her skull on the underside of the panel. She
immediately scrambled for her gun, even though she had a phaser in her hand.
The tricorder registered the movement of the alien approaching fast to her
location and Julia grabbed the pulse rifle because for some foolish reason the
large, prolific looking weapon felt a lot more reassuring than her phaser. She
knew she was being ridiculous, that her phaser was far more efficient than
anything that might have been built in the 21st century. She grabbed
her weapon and left the runabout; not about to shoot the alien inside the craft
when it was the only means of escape not only from the Sulaco but the only way
to reach the Away Team.
She
emerged into the hangar and saw nothing out of the ordinary. She was breathing
hard and Julia knew she was scared. There were all too many shapes in this
large cavernous decks and more than ever, felt how alone she was in this
enormous ship. She shuddered inwardly and ached for Ezra, praying that he was
in better circumstances than she. The tricorder could put the alien at a
certain distance but it could not tell her from which direction it would come.
It was within fifty feet of her, according to the device and Julia found
herself standing on the floor in the centre of the deck, making sure that
anything that tried to come at her would not be doing so with the element of
surprise. Her choice of venues to make her stand gave her direct line of sight
with everything on the floor so she was going to be able to vaporized the alien
before it could even take a running leap to attack.
The
tricorder still continued to show its readings of 50 feet and then 40,
dwindling down to a scant 30 feet. Julia began to get confused. That distance
should place the creature inside the room and yet she could see no sign of it.
She began looking down through the gratings, wondering if it was being smart,
that it was making its approach from beneath her. She moved away again from the
detachable grills on the floor and reconfigured her safety zone to take the
grill into account. Glancing at her tricorder again, she expected to see the
distance closing in again but it did not.
Thirty
feet and the creature chose to hold position.
Did it
know the virtue of patience? Julia asked herself and started becoming anxious
as the time lengthened. Did it know how to wait out its prey, holding firm and
creating such a strangulating bout of fear that the helpless victim was tricked
into doing something foolish? Julia did not know but she feared such a ruse was
being played upon her now. She swallowed hard, feeling beads of sweat running
down her brow and alone her back. Her gaze began to waver and she kept darting
her eyes from one place to another, hoping to catch out the alien that was
playing havoc with her nerve and so superbly, she might add.
"Come
on out you bastard!" She shouted. Her voice flowing through the room until
it reached the obstruction of wall and bounced back upon itself.
Still no
response.
Perhaps
her tricorder was malfunctioning. Julia slipped her phaser back onto her belt
so that she could take a closer look at the device when suddenly; her eyes
caught something overhead. It came down on her so fast she barely had time to
move and landed almost entirely on top of the petite redhead. Julia let out a
scream as she felt it recover much better than she did and lunge at her. She
raised the pulse rifle to fire because she had been too frightened to let go of
it and attempted to pull the trigger. She almost did before freezing at the
realization that the flaying arms and the teeth attempting to tear her apart
belonged to a creature that was on top of her at this moment. Pull the trigger
and she would kill it alright but she would almost certainly kill herself as
well.
Instead
as the alien's secondary jaws snapped forth almost crushing her cranium, Julia
forced the gun in its way and it ended down crunching down on steel. Hardly a
tasty morsel in its opinion because it screeched angrily in protest. A taloned hand dug into her chest and pulled back, taking a
good deal of skin with it and immediately tearing a cry from her lips. Julia
let out a pained scream as she felt her skin shredded and reacted the only way
a terrified woman, filled with anguish could. With complete instinct. Throwing
one foot up and arching her back, she flung the alien off her with enough force
to sent it over her head and crashing onto the floor.
Julia
rolled bodily, her pulse rifle still in her hand as she stood upright on her
knees as the alien began scrambling forward, its exoskeleton making a teeth
chattering noise as it skittered across the floor towards her, dispensing with
the formalities of using her as a host but preparing to tear her apart. This
time Julia was filled with an incredible sense of euphoria as well as clarity
produced by the adrenaline surge inspired by her abundance of terror. Time
seemed to slow as she lifted the pulse rifle and took aim. The alien lunged,
its coiled tail propelling it through the air when Julia pulled the trigger.
The bullets tore out of the short barrel with such force she fell backwards as
multiple rounds propelled by chemical reactions slammed into the alien and
halted it progress with deadly efficiency. She heard it utter a final death
shriek as its body was torn by the dangerous projectiles, pieces flying in all
directions as she scrambled away from the spray of acid. Acid began eating into
the floor plates as the alien remains splattered onto the deck of the hangar.
For a long while Julia stared at it panting, her hands still clutching the
pulse rifle as she aimed at the carcass as even in death it might be harm her.
The alien did not move and as the acid of its form ate its way through the
floor, she saw it sink past the newly created orifice and disappear into the
blackness.
Only when
it was completely gone, did she finally lower her gun.
Julia was
trembling when she stood up shakily to her feet. "I hope you learned your
lesson." She declared when she walked to the hole created by the acid
spray that had eaten through more decks than she could count when she peered
into it. The corrosive substance did its work well and she could peer through
what was almost half the ship. "Never mess with an engineer."
God, she
just hoped she didn't throw up.
Part Fifteen
"That stings," Vin complained as Alex reapplied the
dressing on the wounds he had received when he had been battling with the alien
earlier. Although the lacerations were superficial, Alex had been determined
that he not ignore the injury even though it barely registered in his mind. His
body was surging with adrenaline and pain seemed very far away, even though her
presence was impacting on his senses with more acuity than ever. As he felt her
fingers on his bare skin, Vin found himself taking a deep breath of her scent
and savoring the sensation as it filled him with warmth like he had never known
before. Even her innocent touches against him felt tantalising,
just the manner in which the pads of her fingers ran across his flesh made him
want to...
He wasn't
sure what. He only knew he liked it.
"Stop
complaining," she said abruptly, cleaning the smears of green blood from
around the tears in his flesh. "You may be stronger than a human but
you're not indestructible."
"I
hadn't guessed," he retorted as he flinched again at her probing. "It
isn't that bad."
"In
this environment?" She looked at him. "With huge bugs running around
the place spraying acid all over, wanting to make us hosts for more of them,
not to mention the tiny parasitic suckers that seemed to thrive in this
climate? Leaving it will be inviting trouble." She said firmly and went back
to what she was doing.
"As
opposed to what?" Vin grumbled; more interested in how her fingers were
moving against him, how her body seemed more fluid and graceful than ever and
how every breath made him feel something he had never felt before. His blood
felt as if it was boiling in his veins and the sensation was surprisingly good,
even if he did not understand it.
"Good
point," she gave him a wry smile. "Just humor me okay?" She
responded and continued tending him. The captain and Ezra had gone outside the
ship, taking advantage of the momentary pause in hostilities by the advancing
aliens to reload the remote sentry units with ammunition for when the creatures
made their second attempt to infiltrate the ship. It did not appear as if too
long would pass before the aliens came after them again and Alex wanted to put
the brief time afforded by the lull to good use.
"Alright,"
Vin grumbled, hating the fuss but enjoying everything else about her
ministrations.
However,
his time to enjoy it was soon cut short when the unmistakable sound of a pulse
rifle shattered the stillness of the quiet in the small room. Their eyes locked
for barely an instant before they realised the shots
were close, too close to be produced by either the captain or Ezra outside.
Whoever had pulled the trigger to their weapon had done it inside the confines
of the drop ship barricades. Vin jumped to his feet, grabbing his own weapon as
Alex tapped on her com badge. The science officer was also on the move,
unprepared to let him go anywhere on this ship by himself.
"Captain,
did you hear that?" She asked as she followed Vin down the narrow
corridor.
"Yes
we did." Chris Larabee responded, his voice jumping about as if he was
talking while in motion. "Ezra and I are on our way." He confirmed a
moment later.
Alex
disconnected the link between them. Instead she tapped her com badge hopping
that Collins who could be the only one of them responsible for discharging a
weapon inside the barricade, was still with them. "Collins!" She
cried out.
There was
no response.
"Come
on Sue!" Alex called out again; hoping that desperation alone would
produce the result she wanted. The seconds stretched past as she and Vin
descended in the lower depths of the drop ship without hearing a sound from the
Lieutenant. Although Alex had some idea what they would find at the source of
the gunfire, inwardly she dared to hope that Collins was not gone like Christie
and Angel but she also knew she had to be realistic.
"I'm
not getting anything from her!" Alex cried out as they reached the belly
of the drop ship and immediately, the noxious fumes of acid seeped from the
cargo hold deck that was pressed firmly against the shale floor. The fumes were
accompanied by the familiar smell of molten steel and Alex knew what they would
find before they entered the hold. Vin slipped through the door first, walking
into a fog of smoke, which he had to brush aside. It was difficult to see
inside the room but Alex's readings on the tricorder indicated that there were
no creatures presently on the drop ship. She wished she had been as diligent
when the aliens had attempted to pass the remote sentries. She should have
known that some might penetrate the ship.
Unfortunately,
not only did the tricorder register the lack of aliens; it also registered the
absence of Collin's life signs. It took only a second later for Vin to confirm
visually what she had learnt using the device.
"Alex,"
he said softly. "Its too late."
"Damnit!" Alex swore emotionally. "I should have
been paying attention during the attack."
"Don't
start blaming yourself," he replied as he stepped away from the bloody
remains of Lieutenant Collins who had died fighting and ensured that she had
taken the aliens with her. The carcasses of the dead creatures were already
eating their way through the floor and what parts of Collins that was not
doused with acid was covered in blood. Vin doubted that there would be enough
of her left to bury after the acid had done with its grisly work.
Alex forced
herself to look long enough to know that she probably shouldn't have. She
turned away in time to see the captain and Ezra making their entrance to the
place. Both men paused upon seeing her expression and though it was a redundant
gesture, Alex shook her head enough for them to know for certain. "Its too
late."
Chris
closed his eyes, feeling the burden of another death on his conscience, a death
that had come about needlessly because he had decided to ignore good sense and
bring them to this world where there was the possibility of danger. His voice
died in this throat and he halted where he stood, unable to think for a moment
for the overwhelming guilt that lashed at him like the gale force winds against
a canvas sail in a storm. Chris did not follow as Ezra forced himself to the
place in the room where Lieutenant Collins had died doing her duty.
"It
looks like two of them got in here during the shooting." Vin stepped away
from the scene, having seen enough to last him several lifetimes. "I
figured Collins walked in here and spotted them. She realised
that if she used a phaser, she'd most likely spill enough acid blood to leave a
serious breach in our defenses. Judging from where she had them pinned, I think
she somehow lured them to solid ground so that if she were to kill them, the
acid would seep into the soil, not eat through the hull."
"Why
didn't she call for help?" Chris whispered angrily.
"Chances
are she didn't have time." Alex offered a guess. "You've seen how
fast these things move."
Chris has
to agree with that much. The aliens moved at lighting speed. Their ability to
adapt themselves to any terrain was without doubt and Collins would have known
how dangerous it was to have even two such creatures roaming loose inside the
drop ship. Even for a craft this small and with their tricorders, there was
ample place for the aliens to hide and make it extremely hard to neutralize
them.
"Are
there any more of them?" Chris turned to Alex who was carrying the
tricorder.
"No,"
she shook her head. "The ship is clear."
"Alright,"
Chris nodded somberly. "We best get ready for the next wave." He
remarked gesturing the others to follow him as he started out of the cargo
hold.
Alex and
Vin immediately fell into stride side by side while trailing behind their captain,
however Ezra had not moved a step. The security chief remained hunched over
what remained of Lieutenant Collins staring into the blood and dissolving
remnants of an officer and a friend he had worked with closely since arriving
on the Maverick. She had always a reputation for being trouble and Chris had
more than raised a brow when Ezra had asked for her transfer to the Maverick.
However Ezra himself was known to be something of an outcast and he never could
find himself to take a bad report about any officer at face value.
"Ezra?"
Vin called out.
Ezra did
not answer and his silence made the others stop.
Ezra was
so angry he could not speak. Only when Silas Poplar had killed Julia in that
holo-deck fantasy world created by Q, had Ezra felt anger equal to this.
However, his rage this time was not directed at some faceless killer he had yet
to discover but rather at a source closer to home. For the first time since
this had began, the fury he felt at the irresponsibility of his captain bubbled
to the surface and was not held in check by his usual indifferent facade. Ezra
rose to his feet slowly and glared at Chris, venom exuding from him in clear
waves of rage.
"I
hold you completely responsible for this." Ezra spoke in a low hiss.
"Ezra,
this is not the time." Alex stepped in, seeing the look in his eyes and
pretty sure they were going to have a situation unless it was not stopped in
its tracks now.
"When
is it time?" Ezra whirled at her, too carried away by his anger to stop.
He had tried so hard to do his job. Time and time again, he had asked the
captain to walk on the side of prudence but the captain, obsessed with finding
answers to a riddle in the past had ignored him, despite the fact that
everything about the situation demanded caution. "When we are all
dead?" He sneered. "Well that dear Alexandra is not too far away now
is it?"
"Ezra
that's enough." Vin warned even though he felt Ezra's anger was warranted.
However, nothing he said to Chris would make the captain feel any worse than
Chris already did for the deaths of the security team.
"It
is not enough!" Ezra glared at Chris. He rarely allowed his rage to have
free reigned but now unleashed, it was determined to have its day. "My people
are dead! They did not have to die! If you had just listened to me! If you had
just acknowledged one single concern that I had, they would still be here! In
fact, not only would they be alive, we would be on our way out of here instead
of waiting for those hellish creatures to close in on us."
"Ezra!"
Alex snapped, this time she was not speaking to the security chief as his
friend but rather as his superior officer. "You are riding close to
insubordination, now give it a rest!"
"The
hell I will," he took a step towards Chris and Vin immediately blocked his
path, ensuring that he did not reach the Captain.
"Ezra
I did what I had to." Chris finally spoke defending himself. "I'm
sorry about Angel, Christie and Collins. I'll never be able to forgive myself
for what happened to them and you're right, not just about this but about
everything."
"And
you think that actually makes a difference don't you?" Ezra retorted
shaking his head. "You think that an apologies
make everything you did permissible? Forgive me Sir but I am afraid that is not
good enough. What happens the next time we have to go on a mission that
conflicts with your personal difficulties?"
"Don't
push your luck Ezra," Chris broke past Vin and was now standing toe to toe
with the security chief. He was more than aware of his complicity in the deaths
of those crewmen but Ezra was crossing a line he would not abide from anyone,
even a friend like Ezra.
"Or
what captain? Are you going to charge me with insubordination?" Ezra
returned.
"Maybe."
Chris retorted, thinking that was the least he was going to do. The most was he
was going to wipe that insubordinate smirk off his face.
"You
do that captain and I will charge with misconduct resulting in the death of
innocent crew men!" He exploded and lunged at Chris, prepared to strike
while Chris did the same. Fortunately, Vin was already grabbing both men apart
and flung them to either side of the room. He had more than enough strength to
manage the feat quite easily and both security chief and captain went sprawling
in opposite directions.
"KNOCK
IT OFF!" The Vulcan fairly shouted. "WE ARE IN NO SHAPE FOR EITHER OF
YOU TO GET INTO PISSING CONTEST ABOUT WHO'S TO BLAME!"
Vin's own
rage had been sparked by this display by both his friends and while Chris did
deserve some of the things said to him just as Ezra was justified in saying
them, there was a line crossed that he did not care for from either of them.
"Now we need to work together to get out of this mess alive. What you two
decide to do once we get off this hellhole is up to you but for the moment,
we're all standing waist deep in the same shit! Those things are coming back
for us as soon as they discover that there are more of them then there are
bullets in the remote sentry units so we better start thinking up a plan.
Captain, we need you to come with one." He shifted his gaze from Chris to
Ezra. "And Ezra, we need you to make it work."
Ezra
blinked and looked away, feeling an inordinate amount of shame for letting his
anger get the best of him. A short time ago, he had been thinking of how he had
asked for Collins to be assigned to the Maverick because he knew what it was
like to be undervalued because of what it said in one's official record. Yet he
had forgotten that the reason he was on the Maverick at all was because Chris
had taken that same chance on him when there was no reason for the captain to
do so. In the light of Vin's harsh but appropriate driven words, Ezra realised that he had behaved abominably and Vin was right,
nothing he said to Chris could make the captain feel any worse already.
Besides, Collins, Christie and Angel were apart of Chris' crew, not just his
security team.
"Captain,"
Ezra swallowed hard, feeling flushes of shame stain his cheeks as he kept his
feet on the floor unable to meet Chris' gaze. "I am sorry for what I said.
I had no right to speak to you in that fashion and I know that you did not mean
for any of this to happen.'
The
apology meant a great deal to Chris because he knew exactly how pained Ezra was
feeling and he was responsible for their deaths because Ezra had pointed
out all the possibilities for something to go wrong and he had ignored them. He
was culpable and not about to get on his high horse now that he was a little
less angry at Ezra's outburst. "Thank you Ezra," he said genuinely
accepting the apology. "I promise you I'll never take your advice for
granted again and we will get out of here. I won't let any more of us die in
this place."
"Captain,"
Alex interrupted the speech as her eyes remained fixed on the tricorder. The
expression on her face was deathly and they knew even before she spoke what
terrible revelation was going to come from her. "The aliens." She met
their gaze. "They're attacking."
************
This time
the converging number of aliens did not resemble their earlier attack. Instead
of coming blindly at the sentry units and being cut to pieces like before, the
aliens were more coordinated, sacrificing some of their number to keep the
sentries busy while taking the momentary distraction of the sensors on other
targets to slip past the defensive perimeter. The Starfleet officers watched
through the console screen at the scenery outside, feeling their blood chill
with each screech that tore a shrill path through the air before being obliterated
by a more mechanical one as the remote sentries found more targets to shoot.
Even though none of the aliens had yet to reach the hull Chris could tell that
it was only a matter of time, the problem was, there was little he could think
of to stop them once they decided to take the ship. The small room where they
were keeping watch made it almost impossible for them to talk with one another
thank to the deafening noise outside and thus they were forced to watch without
speaking, trying hard not to let the scene outside diminish their hope.
Alex
could see the writing on the wall just as her captain could and she knew they
would soon be in a position that left very little chance of survival no matter
what course they were forced to take. It stood to reason that eventually the
aliens would make their way to the hull and when that happened, Alex had no
doubts the creatures would have little trouble tearing the titanium off the
ship's structure if that was what it took to penetrate the barricades. Once the
aliens were inside the drop ship, this was no longer a suitable place to hide
and they would have to leave but in all truth, there was nowhere to go. The
prison may have been a maximum-security installation but it was not made to
keep out a life form as versatile and determined as this one. Alex did not like
their chances out in the open but supposed it was better than nothing.
Suddenly,
Alex remembered Bishop and realised that she had left
him still conscious. She was not about to leave the android behind, especially
powered. She could think of no crueler act than to leave him awake, without the
ability to save himself and waiting for deliverance that would never come if
anything happened to them. For someone who had been in a similar situation a
lifetime ago, Alex was not about to let it happen to Bishop if it was in her
power to do something. Without considering the wisdom of her actions, the
science officer broke away from the others as she hurried to the passenger
deck, where she had left Bishop.
She was
half way there when suddenly a burst of static ruptured in her ears making her
flinch. She looked around and searched for the noise, thinking at first that it
must have been one of those old fashioned radios the 21st century
was so found of using. Straining to listen in order to pinpoint the source, she
was once again rewarded with another scratchy burst that she discovered was
coming from her com badge and was trailed by a familiar voice.
"Lieutenant
Pemberton to the Away Team! Come in." Julia's voice reached across space
and flooded Alex with nothing less than joy.
"Julia!"
Alex tapped her com badge and wondered if the captain and the others could hear
it. It took her a split second to realize that they could barely hear each
other when the sentry units were firing, let alone this uneven voice from
space. "Where the hell have you been? Do you have any idea what we've been
going through?"
"What
you've been going through?" The redhead snorted from the cockpit of the
runabout. "Don't even get me started."
"How
did you manage to contact us through the storm?" Alex asked, wondering how
this minor miracle had come about.
"I'm
piggy backing the signal on a tachyon pulse. It's drawing your transmission to
it through the interference." The Chief Engineer explained and did not
surprise the Science Office by its ingenuity.
"Julia
get down here! The place is crawling with aliens. We've already lost all our
security personnel."
"All?"
Her voice tightened with sheer terror. "Ezra?"
Alex
scolded herself and immediately responded. "Ezra's fine but we've
barricaded ourselves on the drop ship. We can't take off and we're about to be
overwhelmed by these things. Kick that runabout into maximum burn and get us
the hell out of here!"
"I'm
already on my way!" Julia declared firmly, panic stricken for the safety
of not only her lover but also her friends. "Just hang on!"
"Alex!"
Chris' voice sliced through Julia's communication with Alex. "Where the
hell are you? We've got breaches through the perimeter! They've gotten through
the hull! We've got to evacuate immediately!"
Alex
swung around and prepared to go back the way she came when something dropped in
front of her. All black and slithery, it landed softly on the grating in front
of her and straightened itself upright to hiss at her with its massive jaws,
tentacles and tail coiling languidly as it prepared to attack. Alex was
mesmerized for a brief instance before she pulled her phaser and fired. The
alien prepared to lunge but a beam of energy caught it straight in the gut and
threw it half way across the corridor before its body exploded, spraying acid
in all directions. Alex backed up, preparing to find another way to the captain
when she heard something behind her.
Something
very close.
She
whirled around into a set of glistening jaws and something sharp that struck
her in the center of her thigh. There was a moment of clarity when she realised what the creature had done and tried to scream but
the darkness overwhelmed her and she knew nothing more.
************
It was
Vin who guessed that Alex might have gone back to get the android Bishop. What
was left of the Away team left the command center where they had been
monitoring the sentry units' progress at keeping the aliens at bay. Since that
was more or less a moot point with the damn things over running the drop ship,
all the Away Team could do was find their missing member and get out while they
could. It was anyone's guess what would happen once they were out in the open
but at the moment, the confined spaces were giving the aliens too much of the
advantage. As they attempted to reach the passenger compartment, they saw the
damage inflicted by an alien's demise and found another route instead.
"Bishop."
Vin spoke as he lowered himself from an access hatch on the ceiling that led
from the upper deck. "Where's Alex?"
Bishop
could not meet the Vulcan's gaze as Chris and Ezra followed him into the room
by way of the same hatchway.
"I
heard her coming." He said softly. "She was speaking to someone but
she never got here."
"Speaking
to someone?" Vin mused and exchanged puzzled glances with both Ezra and
Chris.
"Someone
called Julia." Bishop informed.
"Julia!"
Ezra exclaimed. "Did you say Julia?"
"How
did she get through the storm?" Chris asked but decided it did not matter.
He tapped his com badge as Vin ran out the room, trying to retrace Alex's step
with Ezra following closely behind.
"Away
Team to Lieutenant Pemberton. Come in." Chris tried, hoping that the same
fluke that had allowed Alex to communicate with Julia was still in existence.
"This is Captain Larabee, come in Julia."
"I
heard her." Bishop said sadly. "And then I heard it."
Chris'
heart froze in his chest when he realised what Bishop
was trying to say when suddenly, Julia's voice belayed his horror with hope.
"Captain!" She answered, her voice full of relief. "Thank God
you're alright. I was talking to Alex and suddenly we were cut off. Standby for
pick up, I've got the drop ship in sight now."
No sooner
than she had uttered those words, the ground shuddered with violent rumble.
Bishop rattled on his table and anything that was perched on a shelf was
jostled out of place onto the floor.
"I
was not aware of Fiorina experiencing seismic instability." Bishop's
grotesque face wrinkled into a frown.
"Its
not seismic instability," Chris responded with a grin. "Those are
phaser blasts."
"Just
clearing the area." Julia retorted. The signal between them was far
stronger now since they were no longer forced to send the signal through the atmosphere.
"You seemed to be surrounded by the things."
Chris was
about to answer when Vin and Ezra entered the room. Vin was carrying a phaser
in his hands and the expression on his face was beyond sorrow. Chris had never
seen Vin's cobalt color eyes take on the shade of dark almost as black as the
alien's soul.. It was as if someone had stuck a knife through his heart and
Chris knew of only one thing that could grieve the helmsman that much.
Alex.
"Alex?"
Chris was almost afraid to ask.
"There
was no sign of her." Ezra spoke because Vin could not. Chris could see the
Vulcan's hand clenched so tightly around the science officer's phaser that the
metal was starting to bend. "All we found is her phaser." The Chief
Security officer responded.
"Vin,
I'm sorry." Chris tried to say but words were not enough. If it was Mary
that was taken and Vin was responsible for it as he was responsible for Alex,
there was nothing that would keep Chris from tearing him apart.
"No
body?" Bishop suddenly asked.
Both Ezra
and Vin looked up. "No body." Ezra answered.
"She's
still alive." Bishop quickly replied. "They don't kill you. They only
do that if you give them no choice but to kill. Chances are she's being
cocooned for implantation."
"NO!"
Vin shouted. "I promised her I wouldn't let that happen!" Vin shot a
look at Chris that defied the Captain to say otherwise because friend or not,
he would regret it. "If she's alive I'm going to get her. I won't let her
die like that!"
"Steady
there Vin." Ezra responded automatically. "We are not letting her
die, are we captain?" The security officer met his captain's gaze and told
him in that one hard stare that he was more than willing to walk into that hive
at Vin's side to get Alex back alive.
"'No
we're not." Chris said firmly, deciding that much there and then. Tapping
his com badge, he addressed Julia once again. "Julia, we're coming top
side. Be ready to pick us up. "
With that
he severed the connection and gave both Vin and Ezra one of those infamous
Larabee stares and stated firmly. "We're leaving. All of
us."
Part Sixteen
Drip.
Drip. Drip.
The sound
of water impacting against the surface somewhere in the distant fog lulled
Alexandra Styles back to consciousness. Her head began throbbing almost
immediately after awareness filled her and she winced slightly at the dull ache
that resonated inside her mind in steady pulses. For a few seconds, she had no
idea where she was but the amnesia lasted briefly. The memories began to return
quickly, when she raised her heavy head and realised
that there was only darkness around her. Images of glistening teeth and not
moving away quite fast enough slammed into her as her eyes widened and
instinctively, she glanced at the leg that had flared in pain moments before
she woke up from the sleep that found her here.
Oh
God, I'm inside the hive.
The
realization struck cold terror in her heart. Frantically, she let her gaze
sweep across her present surroundings, searching for salvation and finding
nothing but an addendum to the horror of her situation. She had not been in the
hive that had seen Ensign Christie torn up apart but there was no doubt this
was where she was. Alex could see the skeletons described so prolifically by
Ensign Angel. The dank musty smell of decomposed bodies still clung stridently
to the air. She tried not to think what she was inhaling as she began to
tremble. Inside the darkened host chamber, the air was also hot and humid. Alex
could feel beads of sweat forming under her uniform and breaking free of her
hairline to run down her brow. The chamber was still and she heard no movement
or saw any of the creatures that had brought her here.
She did
however see the sealed egg in front of her.
Alex
froze, wanting to scream but too terrified to bring attention to herself from
the creature. They had not killed her, which meant she was meant to be this
spore's host. It had been a long time she had been this afraid, not since she
had been in the hands of the Cardassians. Back then,
they had implanted their seed in her too but this was far different. This was
obscene. She looked to her hands, trying to see how they had managed to pin her
to this chamber of horrors and realised that she was
being held in place by the resin produced by the creatures. It was strong
enough to keep her off the floor and trapped to the wall with the rest of the
pure creatures that had been forced to be hosts for the alien spores. Her gaze
traveled along the wall, seeing the unsealed spores that had brought to so many
their doom still littered the floor, their twisted progeny just as scattered.
The egg
in front of her remained sealed but Alex knew that was only a temporary state
of affairs. She wanted to scream her head off for help but the scientist in her
vetoed that idea almost immediately. Besides, if the Captain were smart, he
would take what's left of the Away Team and get the hell out not waste time
trying to mount a rescue attempt which in all truth would end them up in exactly
the position she found herself now. Thus, however, she extricated herself from
this present situation, it would have to be on her own. If worse comes to
worse, she'd find someway to kill herself before she became host to one of
these monsters.
She was a
scientist. She had to think that her mind could get her out of this or her
life's work would mean nothing. Think, Alex. Work the problem as someone famous
had once said. These things have no sensory organs of any kind and yet they
detect their prey easily. Obviously they were not drawn to light for this place
felt like a tomb. They had no eyes to see it anyway, no ears to hear it,
telepathic perhaps? It was possible. They were a
exceedingly organized hierarchy structure. Spores, drones, she wondered if
there were warrior aliens as well. If there was a Queen there had to be a
warrior caste too. Not important, Alex quickly disregarded that line of
reasoning. Right now, she needed to know how the spores seemed to know when a
host was near. It stood to reason that the eggs must hatch pretty quickly after
coming into contact with a potential host because of the inconsistency of the
supply. So they must hatch when they sense the host nearby but how? Scent? Not
from an inside a sealed egg.
Sound?
Could it be sound? Is that why it was so quiet in here? She did not see any
auditory organs but that did not mean anything. Who knew ducks had ears? Alex
tensed up and took a deep breath but made certain that it was a silent inhale.
Sound was not just a thing that was heard, it could be felt. It moved through
the air in invisible tremors. It was all a matter of frequency. White sound
could shatter eardrums. Low frequency noise beyond human hearing could drive a
canine insane. If the alien spore sensed her presence by sound then every
breath, ever flex of muscle no matter how minute could be a beacon that woke it
up.
So she
had to be extremely quiet and pray that would be enough until she could figure
out how to escape.
************
"Are
we ready?" Chris asked his Away Team from inside the confines of the
runner about.
"Let's
get going." Vin said impatiently as he held the phaser rifle in his hand.
The Vulcan was standing at the main hatch, waiting for Julia, who was still at
the helm, to land the runabout.
Their
rescue from the drop ship had been fraught with danger but Julia had created
enough carnage thanks to the phasers that even if there were aliens left to
make their rescue of Alex somewhat difficult, it would be nowhere in the
numbers they had confronted earlier. When all this was said and done, Chris was
going to have to sit down and ponder where the Prime Directive stood in all
this. If the atmosphere had not been ionized, this entire mission would have
gone a great deal smoother with a lot less loss of lives. Even though he had
learnt the truth about Ripley and Hicks from Bishop, who at the moment was
disconnected and lying in a compartment at the back of the runabout because Vin
wouldn't leave it behind, Chris wasn't sure if he had gained as much as he
thought.
Needless
to say there would be a great deal he would hold himself accountable for later
on but for right now, they had to get Alex before any one else paid for his
mistakes. It was bad enough to see the look of sorrow on Ezra's face when Julia
told him that Lieutenant Atwater had died, being host to one of those creatures
and that she bore wounds herself from her encounter with his progeny. Chris was
not about to loose his science officer to the same fate that had taken Ty
Atwater. As it was, Vin was already foaming at the mouth and the Vulcan was
riding a wave of savagery that would give some of those aliens down there a run
for their money. He had noted the agression in Vin's
behavior and wondered was it just Alex's situation that was the cause of it or
was it something more?
"Have
you got her Ezra?" Chris asked the security officer who was holding the
tricorder in his hand while a phaser rifle was slung over his shoulder.
"Yes,"
the southerner nodded. "I detect her life signs clearly." He added
for Vin's benefit. "She is alive but there is not way to tell if..."
he trailed off not knowing how to finish that sentence.
"If
they haven't got one of those things inside of her," Vin nodded in
understanding. "Well if she's taken we can put her in stasis until the
Maverick gets back right?" He looked at Chris.
"Absolutely."
Chris nodded. If there was anyone who would be able to extract the parasite
from inside Alex, Chris knew it was Nathan Jackson.
"We
may even be able to beam it out of her." Julia added hopefully, able to
see how fearful Vin was for Alex.
"Rest
assured Vin," Ezra said firmly. "One way or another, she will not die
on this god forsaken place."
"Alright,"
Chris let out a breath as he turned to Julia. "Julia, you know what to
do."
"Yes
Sir," the Chief Engineer nodded though she did not like the idea much.
"Once you're on the ground, I am to circle the hive until I receive your
signal to land."
"Right."
He nodded. "Under no circumstances will you be on the ground before that
Lieutenant. Are we clear?"
Julia
swallowed, glancing instinctively at Ezra when Chris made that statement only
to see him nod his agreement with his captain. "I do not want you in any
more danger than you have already been Julia." He solidified his solidarity
with the captain by that statement.
"Yes
Sir." She whispered unhappily.
"Good,"
Chris turned towards the hatch. "Take us down."
****************
It had
started to rain again but this time is was a light teeming fall, which felt
prickly against the skin. The run about soared into the air and Chris was
consoled by the fact that it would not be far away when they needed it. They
had sighted the same fissure on the surface of the large hive structure found
by Ensign Angel in the last hour of her life. There was no light radiating from
that jagged smear of black leading into hell. There were no aliens in sight
now. Mostly likely they were scattered searching for the prey they know were
here if not gone. Vin started walking first, his phaser rifle slung around his
shoulder and held in a firm grip in readiness to fire. The expression on his
face was something Chris had never seen. The captain had no doubt that any
alien attempting to stop Vin from reaching Alex would have reason to regret it.
"Vin,
wait up." Chris ordered the Vulcan who immediately came to a stop and
glanced impatiently over his shoulder for his captain and the security chief to
catch up.
"Captain,"
Ezra spoke up as he studied his tricorder, a slight frown appearing on his
face. "I cannot get an accurate fix on the aliens. I think there may be
some interference coming from the structure. I can pin point their general
location but nothing exact."
"What
about Alex?" Vin turned around and faced Ezra with that alarming news.
"Her
life signs are easy to pinpoint Mr Tanner." Ezra
responded automatically. "Fortunately, one carbon based life form amongst
a complement of silicon types makes for a standout."
"That's
something at least." Chris muttered under his breath before speaking in a
clearer voice. "Are we clear to go?" The captain looked at Ezra, as
they were about to penetrate the interior of the hive.
"As
we will ever be." Ezra retorted with a shrug. "There does not appear
to be aliens in the immediate vicinity."
"You
don't sound very sure." Chris noted.
"I
am not." He returned the stare Chris was giving him with just as much
intensity.
Predictably,
Vin entered without waiting for them while they were still talking. The phaser
rifles came equipped with a torch perched on the barrel and the moment they
entered the darkness, the small bulb illuminated inside its glass casing and
lit the way for them. Chris and Ezra followed right behind him and immediately
they were faced with the bizarre construction of the alien hive. Gigantic veins
ran across the high ceilings and the interior of the hive seemed to be a
collection of dark chambers, shadowy and indistinct. It was the perfect
environment for the aliens to lie and wait in the Chris wondered if the
creatures' home world resembled this and then felt glad that he had never had
the misfortune to land in such a stygian place.
There
were tiny wisps of rain drifting past the light beams and the humid temperature
soon attacked them mercilessly. Vin would not stand for it and immediately
divested himself of his Starfleet issue blazer and turtleneck.
"Ezra,
how far away is she?" Chris asked as they moved through the black
chambers.
"About
a hundred feet." Ezra responded his voice soft and hushed.
"Almost
at the centre." Vin remarked.
"Makes
sense," Chris replied. "She would be placed very close the egg
chamber, which is where the queen would. If the entomology principles of a hive
society were in force here at least in the conventional sense, the queen would
be isolated. She would be protected by the others but at a safe distance."
"So
we will have to pass their defensive perimeter to reach her." Ezra nodded
in understanding.
"I
think so."
"Everybody
quiet!" Ezra suddenly hissed loudly. "I'm getting alien signals
approaching."
"How
far?" Chris demanded.
"I
cannot determine that accurately." The security chief replied "But I
think we ought to proceed with extreme caution."
There was
no need to seek out the approaching aliens for they emerged soon enough. Chris
saw the black shape spring out of nowhere, the angle of its trajectory heading
straight for Ezra. As it leapt over himself and Vin, Chris aimed his phaser to
fire while Ezra staggered out of the way when suddenly Vin shot out his arm and
wrapped a fist around what appeared to be the creature's leg. The Vulcan pulled
back with so much force that the alien swung back the way it came, slamming
onto the hard ground while screeching its outrage. Giving it little time to
recover from its abrupt grounding, Vin brought the butt of his rifle down on
the banana shaped head and fairly shattered the mouthful of sharp teeth that
made up the alien's fangs. The creature hissed again and Vin let go of his
rifle, allowing it to swing under his arm as both hands grabbed the elongated
head and twisted hard. The following snap was loud enough for even Chris and
Ezra to wince as the Vulcan twisted the head all the way around. The alien felt
down limp without offering further protest.
Vin stood
up and looked over his shoulder before stating icily. "Let's go."
But they
were not going anywhere yet. Probably because they were just as astonished by
the brutal demise of their own, two more aliens made their appearance and Chris
ducked as one lunged and rolled across the grimy floor as he fired. The only
thing he heard was a screech of pain and the brief illumination of the phaser
as the creature was blown apart, spraying acid in all directions. A bit of
landed on his shoulder and Chris uttered a small gasp of pain as he felt the
noxious substance eating through his skin. Without wasting any time, Chris
ripped the entire sleeve away, cutting abrupt the flow of acid making its way
through the flesh. He had still had some burns though but not enough to slow
him down, just enough to give him something to think about.
Ezra in
the meantime had just completed vaporizing the second creature when he noted
that Vin had gone ahead.
"VIN!" Ezra shouted as he hurried to the captain and helped him up.
"Wait for us Lieutenant!" Vin did not respond and Ezra shook his head
in annoyance as he turned to Chris. "Are you alright?"
"Yeah,"
Chris nodded wincing. "Its hurts but I'll live." Chris raised himself
to his feet and examined the burnt flesh on his shoulder. It did hurt but
adrenaline was dousing the pain for now. His attention was mostly focussed on Vin who had disappeared. "Vin, hold your
horses! NOW!" He roared in a voice that immediately garnered a response.
"Well
hurry up!" Vin snapped back from the next chamber.
Chris
shook his head in disbelief at the helmsman's impeccable timing to suddenly
become temperamental. "Is it me or is he behaving just a little
bit...."
"Deranged?"
Ezra completed, thinking the same thing himself. "What he did to that
alien made me feel pity for the creature. It is not just worry for Alex either.
He has been this way for quite some time now."
"I
know." Chris nodded remembering how he had torn them both apart during
their spat. A little more strength and they could be in the same condition as
that alien lying on the floor with its head 180° degrees form
where it ought to be. "We'll deal with this later," Chris sighed
knowing that at this moment, they had not the time for such debate. "If
there is a later."
***********
They
encountered more aliens the further into the hive they pushed. Ezra's tricorder
readings indicated that there were a large number of them in the hive and at
this moment they were converging upon the rescue team. Fortunately, they were
almost twenty feet away from Alex's coordinates and her life signs were still
strong. Vin was pushing forward with the same savage pace and the more Chris
saw him react to the aliens, the more the captain became nervous. The latest
kill, again with his bare hand had Vin shoving one of those elongated heads
into a protrusion jagged metal, the remains of a steel chair leg that the
aliens had used to construct their hive. Vin had impaled the creature through
the base of its skull, forcing steel to exit through the top of its head, just
beyond the jaw. According to Vin, that was where its central cortex was located.
Chris did not argue with the results, the alien did not survive the procedure.
They
entered the large chamber with the skeletons and saw the remains of humans and
domestic animals the company had used in its breeding program. It was a macabre
picture of death and Chris could not imagine what kind of evil that allowed one
human being to do this to another. Sometimes he didn't know which species was
worse. You didn't see them fucking each other over for a goddamn percentage.
"These
poor souls." Ezra whispered as he saw the terror they must have endured in
those skeletal faces in his imagination.
Chris was
passing by a corpse clinging to the wall when suddenly; a hand reached out and
grabbed him. Chris almost turned around and fired but when he looked, all he
saw was a human face. A live human face.
"Angel."
He gasped and felt a little of himself die then and there when he saw her eyes
fix on him.
"Captain."
She whispered. Her face was covered in moisture and held in place with ooze.
She was pinned to the wall with the resin the creatures had used to construct
their hive and keep their prey immobilized for implantation.
"Oh
sweet Jesus." Ezra muttered somewhere in the dark and Chris knew it was
not because she was alive but because he had seen the unsealed egg and the dead
spore at her feet. With an alien inside of her, the tricorder was unable to
pick her life sign as human.
"Captain,
I can't feel it moving." She blinked and hot tears ran down her cheeks.
"It's scratching against my insides. I think its going to come soon."
"We'll
get you out of here Ensign," Chris said quickly examining her trappings to
do just that.
"Captain,"
she met his gaze with a great deal more realism than he himself, possessed.
"You can't get this out of me in time." She said softly, trying not
to cry. "I don't want to die like this. Please don't let me see it coming.
I couldn't stand it. Give me some honor in my death."
Chris
understood and she was right. If she could feel the infant alien starting to
claw its way out of her sternum then they were out of time. Even if he pulled
her free, they had to make it out of here again and it would be too late. With
anguish, he realised that his ensign was far braver
and smarter than he was.
"Angel
do not talk that way," Ezra replied, refusing to let things end like this.
"We will extricate you from this..."
"Ezra,"
Chris spoke with a voice not quite his own. "You and Vin continue on to
get Alex."
"What?"
Ezra gasped. "Why?"
"DO
AS I SAY!" Chris roared with a vehemence that would have sent the aliens
running for cover if they understood the words.
Vin met
Chris' gaze and a wave of sympathy filled his eyes for not only the young
ensign but his captain. "Come on Ezra," Vin tugged at the security
officer's arm. "We have to go."
"No."
Ezra shook his head. "Not like this."
"Please
Chief," Angel made her final plea. "I don't want to see it come out
of me." She was begging and Ezra felt his heart breaking into a thousand
pieces and never hated a species more than this miserable race they happened
upon on Fury 361.
Ezra
couldn't say anymore because Vin was pulling him away. Chris did not watch as
his security chief and helmsman faded into the darkness. All he could do was
stare into the face of this innocent child whose life was turned in an
obscenity because of his obsession. He had never felt so ashamed in his life
and he took a step to the young woman and placed his hand on her warm cheek,
wet with tears. She had started to cry and each sob tore at his soul like
knives.
"I'm
scared Captain," she wept. "I'm so scared."
"Its
okay Ensign, I'm going to be right here." Chris leaned forward, raising
her chin in his hand and lowering his lips to hers in a gentle kiss. It was the
most lingering kiss he had given any woman, not at all passionate but filled
with tender gentle affection. He closed his eyes and felt her tears against his
skin, even as the barrel of the phaser rifle was moving stealthily through the
darkness towards her brow. She did not notice it, lost in the kiss. Lost in the
one beautiful moment she would have before she died. Chris felt her respond
felt her lips take his hungrily and felt his own tears comes just as he pulled
the trigger.
She went
limp in his arms with the discharge of the weapon and her head slumped against
his as the life drained out of it. When Chris stepped back, there were more
tears running down his face and of all the things he had done to bring them to
this place, until this moment he never realised how
wrong he was until he stared at this child who had begged him to take her life.
"I'm
so sorry Ensign," he said softly. "God help me, I am so sorry."
**********
Alex heard
a sharp voice and knew that through some miracle, they were actually
coming for her. She had heard gunfire and voices in the distance, all the while
praying they would reach her before the noise they had caused gave the alien
spore before her reason to awake. However, through all the shooting and voices,
the spore remained sealed which gave further evidence that there spore's
sensory perception had limits. However, now it was time to make a decision. Her
friends were close and they had to know where she was. They had to know even if
she had to help them. Even if she had to risk giving the spore stimulus to
awake.
"VIN!"
Alex screamed on top of her lungs and hoped that it was enough.
"Alex!"
The voice returned almost immediately. "Alex, we're coming!" Vin
Tanner shouted back.
The egg
needed no more incentive than that. It started to unseal with a loud hiss of
warm gases escaping the mouth, like a obscene parody
of a flower bud opening.
"Come
faster!" She shouted unashamed of the pure unadulterated terror in her
voice when she saw one spindly digit make an exploratory examination of the
outside world through the noisome fluid of its receptacle.
She
watched as another digit peered out, dragging clear, sticky fluid in thick
suspending rivulets. Soon the entire creature was pushing towards the edge of
the egg. Alex had not actually seen the spore before but it reminded her of a
hand with way too many fingers. She did recognise the
tail however, the long coiling tail whose only purpose was to send it
propelling through the air towards some helpless victims. She saw its muscles
flex and knew it was preparing to jump.
Alex
screamed just as Vin fired and killed the thing before it had a chance to reach
her.
As he did
so, an alien leapt into view and Ezra dispatched it with as much impunity.
Another emerged and Vin displayed the skill that made him the best shot on the
Maverick when he swung around and killed it before it could even reach them.
"Alex!"
Vin hurried to her, letting go of his rifle as he reached her. A surge of
happiness at seeing her well made him push his lips against hers in a kiss of
passion before he had chance to know what he was doing. Alex did not know if
her sudden deliverance was more surprising or the fact that Vin had actually
kissed her.
"Are
you alright?" He asked, his eyes full of concern.
"One
second more and I wouldn't have been." She laughed with relief even though
they were nowhere out of trouble.
"I
do not wish to interrupt your reunion Mr Tanner but
do you think you could possibly remove our lovely science officer from her
present incarceration so that we can get the FUCK out of here?"
"What
he said." Alex replied. "But without the swearing and a hell of a lot
more gratitude." She looked around and saw the captain was not with them.
"Where's the captain?" She asked almost fearful of the answer.
"Right
here." Chris responded emerging from out of the darkness. "You okay
Alex?"
"Yes
Sir." Alex replied and noted something in his eyes that made her decide to
keep her answer short. There was also something about the way Vin and Ezra were
looking at the Captain that made her wonder what had happened. However for the
moment, she was just grateful at being freed.
Vin
ripped the resinous material than kept her bound and Alex dropped into his arms
from her suspended position against the wall. She took a moment to embrace him,
never being so happy to be alive. However, she soon noted that Ezra was keeping
watch on the tricorder reading. The frown on his face did not bode well.
"Captain,"
Ezra said softly. "They're coming."
"How
many." Chris returned tautly as they started to back track.
There was
a pause before the security officer answered. "All of them."
Chris
thought quickly.
There was
only one way for them to get out of here. It was time for a royal meeting.
**********
It was
not hard to find the chamber where all the alien eggs had originated. As soon
as they approached it, the advance stopped in its tracks. The aliens were
hovering at a perimeter, uncertain of what to do, Chris wagered. He had been
correct in assuming that the drones would not risk attacking while the mother
of their entire society was endangered. Knowing she existed was nothing like
laying eyes upon her in reality. In her report, Angel had spoken of the queen
being larger and far more formidable than the drones they had so far
encountered but seeing her for themselves made that description pale in
comparison. The room they entered was full of eggs, produced by a biological
conveyor belt that ran the length of the room.
As Chris,
Vin, Alex and Ezra entered the maw of hell, no one dared to speak. The horror
of their situation had robbed everyone of speech. The eggs sack ran like a
giant conduit around them, beginning at an egg and ending at the queen alien
that was perched on top of it. She was aware she had visitors and raised her
massive head, flared with black frills that looked very much like a crown, her
outer lips, it was the closest definition he could come up with, pulled back
and revealed an enormous mouth full of teeth the size of his forearms. Clear
ooze dribbled off those massive uneven teeth as fangs were bared in their
direction.
"Oh
shit." Alex whispered. "Captain, tell me again how this is a good
idea?"
Chris did
not know what he was doing for an instant as he stepped forward and stared at
the thing, ahead of those with him. He was just beyond her reach but close
enough for the alien queen to know that she was being observed by the leader of
this small band of humans or in her reckoning, host creatures.
"So
you're the big bad huh?" He asked, his voice devoid of humor.
She
hissed, a loud stomach turning sound.
They
regarded each other for a long moment, bringing puzzlement to those who
observed the silent exchange.
"I'm
going to kill you." Chris said simply but the menace in his voice made
those who heard shudder at the sound of it. "I'm going to wipe you and
your whole fucking nest out of existence. If I have to turn this planet into
radioactive mush, I will do that because you're going to pay for Ripley, for
Hicks," his voice wavered a little. "And for Angel. You're gonna pay a thousand times for Angel."
An egg
unsealed next to him and Chris stared at the queen, aware that she had just
thrown down the gauntlet. Fine, he had come in here with a plan.
"Now
Julia." He ordered.
No sooner
than the words had left his mouth and explosion rocked the structure. The alien
screeched loudly her arms flaying as the high ceiling above them suddenly
shattered, torn apart by a phaser blast. Chris chose that moment to withdraw,
ordering his people to the far corner of the room as the runabout slammed
through the top of egg chamber, raining debris down over the queen's precious
eggs, following the signal of their com badges. She roared once again with
fury, struggling to break free and Chris had no intention of sticking around
for that. The runabout once inside the narrow space began to lower onto the
ground. Julia picked her landing spot carefully as the Away Team watched in
anticipation, as she set down the runabout on a pile of debris, safe from
squashing the acid filled eggs. The landing was unstable but Chris knew as well
as Julia that the runabout would be capable of blasting off any surface.
"Get
to the ship!" Chris shouted though it was a redundant gesture. Everyone
was already clambering through the hatchery towards the runabout, which was as
close to heaven as any vehicle could be. Alex was the first to reach the hatch,
which Julia had opened for them. The destruction of the hive had overridden the
aliens' fear for their queen and they were closing in. As Alex clambered
through the open door, Julia fired at an approaching alien in the shadows.
Following close behind was Ezra and Vin. Chris was the last.
Chris had
one more thing to do before he vacated the area. He set his hand phaser for
overload and dropped it in front of the queen's perch than he ran like hell for
the runabout as his crew valiantly kept attacking aliens from reaching him.
Chris had to practically jumped into the open mouth of the runabout's open
hatch.
"Get
us out of here!" He shouted at Vin who had taken the helm.
The
runabout was already lifting off the ground as Julia closed the hatch and as
the craft rose into the air, Chris could see the aliens crowding in on the
ship. No doubt some would try to reach it. He didn't care. They could hang on
for all they were worth if they did but they were not going to survive the trip
out of the atmosphere because he'd burn the bastards off first.
The
runabout exploded off the ground as Vin took off at maximum speed, sending hot
waves of plasma from the engines as it shot through the air like a comet. The
fallout incinerated the eggs and aliens beneath it, ending their threat in a
screech of all consuming heat. Vin directed the runabout through the fissure
that Julia had created to reach them, having widened as the structural
integrity of the hive began to collapse. The small Starfleet craft had escaped
the hive when another explosion was heard; this time a little more localized in
its concentration and had all the earmarks of a detonating phaser set on
overload.
Inwardly,
Chris whispered to himself. Die bitch, die.
"Vin,"
Chris struggled to his feet after they were free of the hive and went to his
pilot. "Circle around."
"Circle
around?" Vin stared at him in surprise.
"Circle
around." Chris repeated. "Ezra how many torpedoes have we got on this
thing?"
"Five."
Ezra responded.
"Vin,
I want you to take a pass at that hive." Chris said with a tone that would
not tolerate any argument, even from his best friend. "And I want
you to fire all torpedoes at that damn thing."
"All?"
Ezra exclaimed. "One would be sufficient."
"ALL."
Chris glared at him. "I want the entire site leveled."
Strangely
enough, that was a comforting thought for everybody and Chris received no
further comment.
Epilogue
The
Maverick was no more than two days away from the Sulaco when the distress
signal that Julia Pemberton had sent prior to leaving the ship to retrieve the
Away Team on Fiorina reached them. Buck Wilmington had sent his apologies to
Admiral Donaldson, citing an emergency and that they
would be a little late in reaching their destination at the Vorlis system. Fortunately,
the USS Saratoga was in the vicinity and was able to assume the duties that
Maverick was forced to abandon in order to carry out their rescue mission. Buck
immediately reversed course, proceeding to the prison facilities at Warp 9,
cutting short a trip that would have taken days into a matter of hours. The
distress signal did not explain much in the way of the emergency but
considering what they knew about the life forms encountered by Ellen Ripley,
Buck wasted no time in returning to the lady’s last known location.
The
runabout had already returned to the Sulaco when the Maverick arrived and Chris
wasted no time having his crew beamed off the ancient ship and back to more
familiar surroundings. After what they had been through, he would not force
them to remain on the Sulaco for longer than necessary. This entire situation
was his fault and he knew it. It would be a long time before he would ever
forget what the price of forgetting he was captain had cost him. All he would
have to do was to remember that girl who had asked to be killed and suddenly,
the obsession that had driven him these past few weeks did not seem as
important as his crew or his duty to them.
Utilising the Maverick’s sensors, they were able
to make another sweep of the Sulaco, calibrating them to detect any further
evidence of non-carbon based life forms in order to ensure that there were no
more of the aliens that had almost been the death of them all on Fury 361. The
sensors gave the Sulaco a clean bill of health and the Maverick signaled Deep
Space Five to dispatch a tug to tow the vessel back to Earth. Every member of
the Away Team had seen just about as much of the Sulaco as they wanted to for a
long time. To ensure that no one else stumbled inadvertently into the alien
nest, if there were any had survived the torpedo barrage that Chris had ordered
Vin to deliver upon it, Chris ordered the deployment of a cautionary beacon,
warning any ships who happened by to avoid landing on the surface.
Chris
remained on the Maverick long enough after its arrival to gather the belongings
of Corporal Hicks for himself. He was after all; family and Chris did not feel
right about leaving the man’s last possessions on the ship that had brought him
to his death. He did the same for Ripley, mostly because he could not bear to
forget her. Ripley and Ensign Angel had both taught him valuable lessons.
Ripley had taught him to value the friends in his life for she had lost
everyone she had through no fault of her own and he who was a great deal
luckier, should not take them for granted as he had been doing since learning
about Q’s gift to him. What Angel taught him was an even more painful lesson
and one he would carry for a long time. She and all the others, Lieutenant Ty
Atwater, Lieutenant Susan Collins and Ensign John Christie were dead because he
had forgotten that a Captain had responsibility to his crew first, everything
else was second best.
After
what finally seemed an eternity Chris and the Away Team were transported back
to the Maverick. All of them were a mess of injuries that needed tending. Julia
and Vin had severe lacerations that simple field dressing were not adequate to
treat and they were immediately ordered to Sick Bay by Nathan Jackson before
they even stepped of the transporter pad. Alex and Ezra were unscathed but both
were exhausted and immediately retired to their quarters for some rest.
Although he was suffering third degree burns to the shoulder, he resisted
Nathan’s demand to get medical help for the time being. In truth, Chris had no
patience with doctor’s poking and prodding at him when there was one thing he
had to do that he had put off too long.
When he
knocked on her door, he did not know what to say to her.
His behaviour the past few weeks had been next to offensive and
he knew that she was completely justified in wishing to leave the Maverick
permanently. Before this had all happened, he had been more than happy to let
her go, ignorantly believing that she was less important that the quest he had
to complete. Now as he waited for her to open the door, Chris knew that if
Sarah had been standing here, she would have been utterly furious at he had
been to Mary. He did not know what he had to say to her but the pain inside of
him was so intense, he knew that only her forgiveness would make some of it go
away.
The doors
slid open and Mary’s shock at his appearance showed. He was still covered in
grime, soot left over from smoke, gooey alien. His Starfleet uniform had been
discarded after he had been forced to tear the sleeves off both garments when
he had been sprayed with acid, not to mention the plethora of bruises and acid
burns across his skin and most predominantly on his wounded shoulder. However,
none of this mattered to him because seeing her before him, smelling the faint
smell of her perfume and the worry in her dove like eyes was enough to make him
feel terribly grateful to be alive.
"Oh
my God, Chris!" Mary exclaimed. "What happened to you?"
"Can
I come in Mary?" He asked meekly.
Mary
nodded and stepped aside. She had been on her way to the bridge herself to find
out what had happened that required the Maverick straying off mission to come
rescue them for Fury 361. She had expected that whatever the emergency was, she
would most likely find Chris at SickBay. Looking at
him now, she wondered why he was not there already.
"Chris
you’re hurt." She ran her finger gently on the tender flesh that had been
seared with acid.
"Its
okay," Chris swallowed and met her eyes. "I'll see Nathan later. I've
got a something to tell you. Something important."
She could
see it in his eyes, something terrible had happened down there. Something so
unspeakable he could barely keep it contained behind that icy coloured stare. Her heart pounded in fear as well as
compassion. Everything that happened between them of late was brushed to the
back of her mind because he needed her and he was not a man who would ask.
Their relationship in tatters could be dealt with later, for now she wrapped
her arms around him and held him close to her. There was a slight moment of
hesitation before she felt his own arms around her waist and his head lowering
into crook where her shoulder met her neck.
"I'm
sorry," he whispered as the bottled up sorrow inside of him finally found
release. The tears came freely as he wept softly in her embrace and felt her
arms encircle him even tighter as she cooed in the background that things would
be all right.
"I
love you." He said suddenly. He had never said it before and Mary paused
for a moment, reeling from the surprise and the elation at his finally
admitting what had been unspoken for so long.
Chris did
not fear telling her how he felt. He would say anything to keep her from going
away because it was in his power to keep her in his life. Ellen Ripley never had
the chance. The people in her life were stolen from through no fault of her
own. Chris would not make the mistake of standing by and letting those in his
life slip away because he was too thick headed or stubborn to say what was
necessary for them to stay. He would not lose Mary for anything. Chris composed
himself a short moment later and pulled away from her.
"I
love you Mary. I've loved you from the minute I met you. I don't know what to
say to you to explain how I've been these past few weeks but I want to make it
right between us. I don't want you to leave the Maverick. You belong here, I
need you."
"Oh
Chris," Mary responded with tears in her eyes. She couldn't think of
anything else to say for the moment was filled with too many emotions for her to
articulate anything clearly.
Chris
caught a wet drop in his fingertip and met her gaze. "I don't want you to
leave Mary. You're the best thing that has happened to me since Sarah and Adam
died, I don't want to lose you. I was a complete fool for acting the way I did,
not knowing what it is I had that I was dumb enough to think I could do with
it. I can't do without you or Billy. You're part of my life."
"I
guess we are." She said with a little smile and studied him for a moment.
She was elated by his admission but she was also aware that he had been through
something deeply traumatic for him to finally speak so deeply from the heart.
"Chris, what happened down there?"
Chris did
not speak as he considered whether or not he should tell her what transpired between
himself and Lieutenant Michelle Angel. When he finally decided what he would
say, Chris looked up at Mary and took her hand in his. "I learnt that my
choices can hurt people and that I have to starting thinking of them and
letting go of my obsessions. I can't promise you that I won't always be a
little irrational about finding the truth about Sarah and Adam but I do
promise you that I won't shut you or any of my friends out."
"Chris,"
she gently carressed his face and smiled. "We'll
be there for you and with you, no matter what happens."
"I
know that," Chris answered and knowing that was of some comfort to him
"I should have always known that."
"We
all grow a little Chris," she offered him a bittersweet smile. "Even
star ship captains."
"Especially
star ship captains." He agreed but secretly wished this was one lesson he
could have done without.
**********
"You feeling alright Vin?" Nathan Jackson as
he regarded the Vulcan sitting impatiently on the treatment while one of his
nurses put the finishing touches on the wound that Nathan had just tended to.
The doctor was staring at the readings on his medical scanner and had to
confess that he did not need the sophisticated piece of diagnostic equipment to
see for himself that there was something wrong with the helmsman.
Vin was
fidgeting on table as if the inactivity was making him anxious. Although he
showed no signs of illness, Nathan's scans indicating that his metabolic race
was moving much more rapidly than was customary for a Vulcan. Not to mention
the fact that the young man was paying particularly close attention to his
nurse. Vin seemed to leaning in towards her, as if his senses were basking in
the sensations. The Vulcan equivalent of endorphins was surging through Vin at
this moment and Nathan wondered what on earth had happened down on Fury 361.
His age had him placed too early for Vulcan maturity, that
was almost two years down the track.
"Yeah,"
Vin tore his attention away from Lieutenant Saunders and her ministrations to
his injuries. He could smell her in his nostrils, not just her scent but
something beneath the skin that reached into him on a primal level. She smelt
female. That was the closest definition he could come to what it was. "I'm
okay, why?" He met Nathan's studious eyes.
"You
seem a little out of sorts." Nathan pointed up. "Your metabolism is
up. Anything else happened to you down there you want to talk about?"
Vin
decided that perhaps he ought to tell Nathan that he was becoming very aware of
sensations and the opposite sex but felt slightly embarrass about doing so in
front of Lieutenant Saunders. Besides, the Maverick may have been a galaxy
class starship but news traveled quickly, faster whenever the morsel was
particularly salacious in its content. Vin had no intention of letting anyone
know his private business. Unfortunately, Nathan was no fool and if he thought
Vin was lying, he would keep the helmsman in SickBay
until kingdom come to get an answer so Vin decided he had better come up with
some conciliatory gesture.
"There
is one thing," he said after a moment. "Its not much really but maybe
it has some bearing." Vin volunteered. "When we down there, I got
into a tangle with one of the aliens. We were in very close contact and I
picked up things, telepathically."
"What
sort of things?" Nathan said, his brow frowning into a knot and made Vin
immediately regret telling him at all.
Too late
now Tanner, he told himself. Might as well finish the story. Vin braced himself
and continued speaking. "Emotions I guess. Instincts. I got pretty much
into its head. They're not intelligent like we are. They live do one thing and
one thing alone, breed. When they have to breed nothing else matters."
"How
much inside did you get?" Nathan asked again, not showing Vin just how
worried he was about the Vulcan. Nathan knew of no way to confirm his
suspicions because Vulcans did not discuss a matter like this without extremely
good reason and as a Vulcan put it, right now he did not have the appropriate
facts to confirm his theory.
"Not
much," Vin shrugged and Nathan knew instantly he was lying. "Just
enough to know that we were in a lot of trouble."
Nathan
did not answer but he was thinking the same thing. They were in a lot of
trouble and though it had yet to make itself feel overt, Nathan knew that would
not last for long. The problem was, he had no idea how to treat the problem if
he was right about what he believed, which at the moment he was not entirely
certain enough to vocalize it. However, Nathan was convinced that the melding with
the alien had done more than simply given Vin insight into the alien's psyche.
If he was right, then they had better batten down the hatches and wait for the
storm to come.
Either
way it was going to be a bumpy ride.
*************
The
android Bishop materialized on the floor of Holo-deck 2 some days later and was
rather to surprised to find himself in the middle of what appeared to be a
Scottish glen. In the distance, he could see the splendor of the highland
mountains and his mind registered the beauty of the landscape in rolling glades
of lustrous green grass. He did not know what surprised him more, the fact that
he had awakened from another bout of darkened sleep to find that he was somehow
transported to Earth and as he looked down at himself, discovered that he was
very much intact. He appeared exactly as he had when he had come off the
production line some four hundred years ago. There was no sign of the massive
damage perpetrated on his body by the alien queen so laboriously ejected from
the air lock of the Sulaco by Ellen Ripley.
Bishop
marveled at the beauty around him and took a deep breath when suddenly, he saw
a familiar face standing in front of him with a not so familiar face but an
equally lovely one as well.
"Alex."
He replied with a faint smile. "Where am I?"
Alexandra
Styles grinned, genuinely pleased to see Bishop was rather taken by his
restored form and the surroundings she had produced for him. Ever since she had
recovered from the ordeal at Fiorina, Julia and Alex had been working hard to
give Bishop some form of mobility. The two woman were
realistic that they would be unable to restore Bishop's body to what it was in
a space of a few days. That kind of construction would take months and a lot of
the information would come from Bishop himself. However, Alex hated the idea of
leaving Bishop in limbo for that amount of time and thus she and Julia devised
an alternative method of downloading his core memory into the holographic
projection system and in essence give him back his body in this environment of
light and magnetic containment.
"You
are on board the Maverick." Alex answered quickly.
"This
is a starship?" Bishop looked at her incredulously. His gaze swept around
the idyllic scene before he remarked again. "It doesn't look it."
"Oh
I like him." Julia chuckled.
"Hello."
Bishop greeted her politely.
"Bishop,"
Alex spoke up. "This is Chief Engineer Julia Pemberton. She's the one who
helped me configure your core memory into a holographic matrix."
"This
is a hologram?" The android exclaimed with surprise though one would hard
pressed to know for certain with Bishop's understated voice.
"Yes
but not unlike anything that you might understand of the concept." Julia
explained. "You're at the moment a hard light hologram. In this place, you
are essentially a whole person. We're going to need your help to construct your
original body so we can download your matrix and I have contacted the Daystrom Institute. There are robotic experts who are very
eager to meet you."
"I
see." Bishop nodded absorbing everything with usual quiet. "How long
do I remain on line?" He asked, hating the fact that he might be turned on
and off at will.
"You
can remain online as you put it for as long as you like," Alex answered.
"We've given you autonomous control of your program, not to mention access
to the ship's computer. You will be able to interface with the main computer
and update your data banks."
"I
like this place," Bishop looked up at the picturesque world around him.
"You
can program as many scenery or places as you like. If it's on the main
computer, you can go there. I know it can't compare to seeing the real thing
but it will keep you busy while we figure out how to get that body of yours
restored to what it was." Julia added. She could see why Alex had grown so
fond of the android..
"I
don't know what to say," Bishop replied, genuinely touched by the effort
these humans had gone to make
"Don't
say anything," Alex answered. "Just enjoy it. This is your new home
Bishop."
Bishop looked
around the glen and lowered himself onto the lush grass. He slipped his fingers
through the artificially generated blades and caressed the pile gently. He was
pleasantly surprised at how real the cool texture of leaves felt under his
palm. He had never been to Earth. He had been activated when he was first
shipped out on the Sulaco and had never seen the world where he had been
designed and created. For the first time, he understood why humans were always
drawn to home even out in the middle of deep space.
"Not
bad," he whispered to himself as the artificial sun peeked past the thick
clouds and shone on his face. "Not bad for an android"
***********
Chris
stared out the window of his Ready Room at the jeweled orb that was the Vorlis
home world. Although a day later than expected, the Maverick had made good time
once it had picked up its wayward captain and resumed the journey to complete
its mission. Chris had spent much of the time making himself accessible to his
crew once again. For the first time in weeks, he walked the length of his ship,
dropped in for inspections and generally let those who had noted his absence
know that he was back from the dark corner he had been hiding himself of late.
He had forgotten how good it felt to acquaint himself with the Maverick. He
communed with the vessel the way he had not done since he had first come on
board and assumed command.
He also
had a number of apologies to make, other than just making amends to Mary for
his behavior the past weeks. He had neglected Billy as well and delighted the
boy when Chris took him fishing, just the two of them for half the day. It was
the most time that Chris had been able to allot to the boy alone and Billy was
thrilled by the attention and reinforced Chris' realization that though he had
lost Sarah and Adam, his new family were just as important and needed him as
well. Chris had also called into see Josiah who was more than happy to share a
bottle of Saurian brandy to make Chris' apologizing pass a little smoother,
proving once and for all, the man was one hell of psychiatrist.
Buck as
always was easy to please and seeing his captain and oldest friend back on
track was all the thanks he needed even though Chris felt compelled to make the
gesture nonetheless. During his obsession, it was Buck who held the Maverick
and the senior staff together. It was not an easy thing to do while having to
wrestle with knocking some sense into his obtuse captain as well. Buck took the
effort as he always did, with a shrug and smile. Sometimes, Chris wondered how
he would have ever managed anything if Buck had not been there to pick him up
or tell him what he needed to hear, even though he did not wish it.
He turned
away from the window after a moment and returned to his desk, paying attention
to the data pads of backed up work he had either ignored or left to Casey to
deal with during the last month. Chris picked up his cup of brisk hot coffee
and took a deep sip, determined to get on top of this daunting heap of
paperwork by the end of the day. He had neglected his duties as Captain for far
too long. It was time for him to show why he deserved to be master of this
vessel, Lord knew he had not done that much lately to warrant his deserving
this command.
The other
pile of data pads, the one that sat on the far end of the desk, tried
desperately to catch his attention but Chris ignored them. His obsession with
finding out the truth about his family's murder to the point of ignoring
everything else, was over. He would pursue it when he was done with the day's
work. Justice had waited so many years for him to realise
the truth, he did not think a few more hours would matter. However, just
because he had put his quest into perspective did not mean that if he were to
find out who was responsible for their deaths, there would be no stone in any
corner of the galaxy under which they could hide from him. He would hunt them
down and kill them, that much he remained adamant
about.
Suddenly,
the soft chime of someone at his door sounded its tune in the air. Chris looked
up from the staff evaluations Buck had prepared for him and sang out in a firm
voice. "Come in."
The doors
slide open noiselessly and Ezra Standish stepped into the room. The Captain had
not seen much of the Chief Security officer since their arrival at Vorlis. Ezra
had been busy with Vorlis delegates who had been touring the Maverick in order
to make a thorough assessment of the defensive as well as social impact of
obtaining Federation membership. As always, the commander dealt with the
politicians himself, claiming that a special knack was needed to tend to the
security arrangements of such a breed, speaking as if the occupation was almost
a genetic traits as defining as race.
"Ezra,"
Chris leaned back into his chair and set his cup down on this desk. "What
can I do for you? The Vorli delegation not giving us
any trouble."
"Well,"
Ezra remarked pausing in front of the captain's desk. "At the moment, they
are more fascinated with our holographic android than they are of anything
else."
"Really?"
Chris asked with surprised, aware that Julia and Alex had made the restoration
of Bishop their pet project. "How so?"
"Well
Mr Bishop has been studying the hologram database
quite extensively and has introduced our visitors to Scotland, New Zealand and
Alaska in one afternoon. At the moment, I have a dozen officials who want to
know if a Kodiak bear really exists or it is some holographic fantasy."
Ezra remarked with clear amusement in his voice. "Our android is quite the
representative of Earth."
"I
like that," Chris smiled despite himself. "The Daystrom
people want his entire matrix sent to Earth."
"Julia
and Alex will not be happy." Ezra pointed out and Chris tended to agree.
"I
told the Daystrom Institute that they can see him
when we put into Earth or come here themselves but Bishop is accustomed to
Julia and Alex, he might find it difficult to adjust to new faces."
"How
did they take that?" The security chief asked, certain that the engineers
at the prestigious Daystrom Institute for Robotics
would be scoffing at the idea of giving thought to an android's mental health,
despite their experiences with Commander Data of the Enterprise.
"Surprisingly
well actually," Chris responded. "The guy I talk to, Commander Maddox
conceded that there was no reason Bishop can't remain with us for a
while."
Ezra knew
that he was delaying the real reason for his arrival here and after a moment of
silent, he noted that the Captain had made the same observation himself. Ezra
cleared his throat and glanced at the pile of data disks being intentionally
ignored at the corner of the captain's desk and hoped he did not get sentence
to the brig indefinitely for what he was about to ask. However, he had gained a
great deal of leverage over Chris regarding the Captain's judgement
in Fiorina and felt that he might not be met as indifferently as he feared.
"You're
not working on finding your answer?" Ezra gestured to the data pads with a
slight glimpse. Chris did not need him to elaborate to know what he was talking
about.
"I
have duties to this ship first," Chris said firmly, his voice tensing
despite himself. "I'll deal with that later."
Ezra
nodded. "Would you mind if I peruse your data?"
Chris
stared at Ezra.
"Why?"
The captain asked with a hint of suspicion.
"Forgive
me captain," Ezra began the speech he had carefully rehearsed only to realise that it was best that he made this entreaty from
the heart. "Chris," he said with a loud exhale. "Of the two of
us, I am more qualified than you are to discover if there is a conspiracy
regarding your family's demise. I deal with deception every day in security.
You selected me to be your Chief Security officer because you knew I could
detect trouble better than anyone in the fleet could. While I do not choose to
overstate my capabilities, I know that if there is something to find in those
data pads regarding the unfortunate situation with your wife and child, I will
locate it. Also, I think you are too close to the issue. I have by experience
learnt that when you are too close to a thing, you may not see the whole
picture as it were."
Chris felt
his anger bubbled up, feeling as if he had intruded upon something that was his
private domain but then he remembered Ellen Ripley and how she was forced to do everything alone, probably even die alone and that
gave him pause to consider Ezra's words. There had been no way for her to gain
help but there was for him and Ezra was that good. If there was
something in those data pad that might lead him to the truth, Chris knew that
Ezra would find it. The security chief was absolutely relentless in that
aspect. Understanding that he was at a threshold, he took a deep breath and
decided to fight his instincts and accept the help that Ripley never had.
"Alright."
Chris found himself saying. "Take your best shot." He glanced at the
data pads and gestured at Ezra to take them from his sight before he changed
his mind.
"Thank
you Chris," Ezra replied, gathering the small collection. "I know how
hard that decision is and I will not stop until I have an answer for you."
"Thank
you Ezra," Chris answered, genuinely touched by the offer and wondered if
Ezra was so smart, had he also guessed what Chris had on Fiorina? The
realization that had made him order Vin to torpedo the hive with not one but five
photon torpedoes? He doubted it.
"You
know something Ezra," Chris sighed turning away from the security chief as
he stared at the window again. "When I was standing face to face with that
alien queen, she looked at me like she had already won. Like she and her kind
always would. It was like it didn't matter that I was going to kill her,
because death doesn't have the same kind of meaning for them that it does for
us. No matter how many times I killed her, it wouldn't matter because we are
children. That in the end, we will die so that they can live."
"I
shudder at the prospect, I can only reiterate my gratitude that the lady and
her deadly progeny are no more." Ezra responded, despising the entire race
for what it had done to his crewmen.
"No
she isn't." Chris shook his head and averted his gaze enough to look Ezra
straight in the eye. "She isn't gone and this is far from being over. The
aliens down there on Fiorina are gone, that's all that is certain."
"I
do not see how there could be any more." Ezra remarked wondering where
Chris was going with this. "The nuclear explosion on LV427 would have
destroyed the derelict as well."
"Ezra,"
Chris looked at him with almost pity in his eyes. Pity because he did not
understand the full implications of what Chris was trying to tell him. "The
derelict ship carrying the original alien eggs crashed on LV427. It
didn't come from there. Somewhere out there," he gestured towards the window,
revealing the stars, "somewhere out there is an entire
planet of these things and someday, we're going to land on it and she'll find
us all over again."
And the
stars, which always looked so pure and beautiful to Commander Ezra Standish
suddenly became as black as the alien's empty soul.
THE END