Hoop put Ripley down on one of the nearby beds and tried to assess her wounds. There was so much blood. Her shoulder wound weeped, several staples protruded from her stomach and the gash there gaped. New injuries had been added to the old. Puncture wounds were evident across her chest, perhaps where the thing’s claws had sunk in. Her face was bruised and swollen, one eye puffy and squeezed shut, scalp still weeping. He thought her arm might be broken.
He had seen the med pod at work several times before, but he didn’t know what it could do for Ripley. Not in the time they had left.
He was pulled in two directions. In truth, he should be back at the shuttle, finishing the fuel cell installation and ensuring that all systems were back online. After that there was Ash, the malignant presence he had to wipe from the
If Ripley were awake, he could tell her what he’d found. According to the log, the old fuel cell had still maintained more than sixty percent of its charge when it had docked with
The creatures.
Everything that had happened since Ripley’s arrival had been engineered by the artificial intelligence. Those additional lives lost—Sneddon, Baxter, Lachance—could be blamed squarely on him.
Hoop wished the bastard was human so he could kill him.
“Pod’s ready,” Kasyanov said. “It’ll take half an hour for it to assess the wounds and undertake the procedures.”
Hoop couldn’t waste half an hour.
“I’ll go back for the supplies we need,” he said. “Stay in touch.”
Kasyanov nodded and touched her suit’s comm unit. Then she turned her attention to the med pod’s screen and frowned in concentration, scrolling through a complex series of branching programs flashing there. She was sweating, shaking.
“You good?”
“No. But I’m good enough for this.” She wiped her forehead with the back of her hand. “Her first, then if there’s time, me.”
“There’ll be time,” Hoop said, but they both knew there were no guarantees.
“I feel… weird inside. Bleeding in my guts, I think.”
“I’ll get up to the bridge, first,” Hoop said, gingerly lifting Ripley off of the bed. “See just how much time we have.”
As if in response, the ship shuddered one more time. Kasyanov didn’t look up or say anything else, and her silence was accusation enough.
He held Ripley as gently as he could, and carried her to the med pod.
“Amanda!” she shouted. She shifted in his arms and he almost dropped her. He staggered a little, then when he righted himself and looked down, Ripley was staring right at him. “Amanda,” she said again, softer.
“It’s okay, Ripley, it’s me.”
“She won’t leave me alone,” she said. Her eyes were wide and white in her mask of blood and bruising. “Just staring. All because of them. My little girl won’t forgive me, and it’s all because of
“We’re going to patch you up,” Hoop said.
“I want to forget,” she said. “I can’t… even if you fix me, I can’t sleep with Amanda staring at me like that. I’ll never sleep again. It’ll make me go mad, Hoop. You can make me forget, can’t you? With this?”
Hoop wasn’t sure exactly what she meant, and how much she wanted to forget. But she was all there. This wasn’t a delirious rant—it was a very calm, very determined plea.
“It feels as if I’ve known nothing else but them,” she said. “It’s time to forget.”
“Kasyanov?” Hoop asked.
“It’s a med pod, Hoop,” the doctor said. “That’s almost certainly beyond its capabilities.”
“But it does neurological repairs, doesn’t it?”
“Yeah. Repairs, not damage.”
“They’ve given me a nightmare, and I think it’s going to kill me,” Ripley said. “Amanda. My girl, dead, staring, never forgiving me. Please, Hoop.
“Hey, hey, lie back,” he said. “Let Kasyanov do her work.” But he could see the terror in her eyes, and the knowledge at what sleep would bring.
“We’re ready,” the doctor said.
Ripley let Hoop ease her back down, but she was still pleading with her eyes. Then they closed the clear lid. He felt a tug as he saw her shut away in there, maybe because he thought he might never touch her again.
“So can you?” he asked.
“It’s not me that does the work, it’s the pod. I just initiate the programs.” Kasyanov sighed. “But yes, I think it could manipulate her memories.”
“How?”