Escape 3: Defeat the Aliens (23 page)

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Authors: T. Jackson King

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Military, #Space Opera

BOOK: Escape 3: Defeat the Aliens
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CHAPTER SIXTEEN

 

“I am.”

Jane crossed her fingers. Sitting in her command seat, watching the holos as she and others chased after the homicidal monster who wished to dominate, or destroy all opposition, she felt useless. Was her Bill going to survive this crazy boarding? While his plan made total sense, and gave her the option to save lives, she recalled his choice during the boarding of the ship commanded by Diligent Taskmaster, when a boarding team was being outflanked. He’d opened a hole in the ship’s Command Bridge wall and dived in, distracting the deadly cockroach for the moments needed to allow the boarding team to drop through a ceiling hole. He’d taken a bad laser wound doing that. And he could have been killed. Would Bill keep his promise to her to come back alive? To stay alive for her? Would love overrule duty?

“Jane, he’ll survive this,” called Chester from up front.

She saw the man was still at his Engines seat, but had turned back to face her. His clean-shaven face showed an amiable smile. The man was trying to reassure her. “Thank you. If anyone can survive alone on that ship, outnumbered five to one, Bill can. He’s a SEAL. And he has me waiting for him.”

Chester nodded. “My Sharon told me what it was like for her as she waited out the months when I was on deployment with the
USS George H. W. Bush
. You’re feeling that on top of the final command authority.” He smiled big. “Like Stefano said, you have me and the other crew folks at your back. We will win this thing!”

Jane took in a deep breath. She tried to smile back. “Thank you, Chester. Sharon is lucky to have you. And Bill is the man I should have met years ago.” She turned away and stared at the system graphic and true space holos. “Waiting is the shits.”

 

♦   ♦   ♦

 

Bill stepped up to the open hatch, then moved to the right of it. Poking his taser tube through the open hatch, he leaned forward and took a quick look and pull-back. Ahhh. Empty of anyone. Like the Engine Chamber on the
Blue Sky
, this large room was filled with the two long tubular forms of its Magfield engines. To his right was the alternate command seat, the mind-link helmet sitting on its bench seat. Fifteen feet of open space lay between him and the command seat pedestal. A thought hit him.

“Ship mind Dexterity, please display an interior holo map of this ship. Display all bioforms now present in the holo,” he said, hoping this ship’s indifferent mind would comply with the Emergency Operations of the Ship program that was part of every AI’s core functioning.

“Displaying holo,” came a mech-toned voice over his comlink. “All bioform locations displayed.”

A teardrop shape floated before them, identical in shape to the
Blue Sky
cross-section holo that he watched at his Weapons station. The shape shimmered and grew translucent. Two main hallways now appeared inside the teardrop, along with many box-like rooms that linked to the hallways. The cross hallway at the bulbous nose showed, as did the tail-end cross hallway he’d just passed through. Red dots shone bright. Three were present in the Command Bridge room. Two dots were halfway down the left and right side hallways. Clearly two ship crew were heading his way. Or was one of them the snake-gorilla monster?

“Very good. Show me the location of captain Death Leader. Show him as a red dot with a green outline.”

“Complying. Location indicated,” came the mech hum of this ship’s artificial intelligence.

The bastard was at the center of the Command Bridge! Two red dots near him were his crew. Which meant the two red dots heading Bill’s way were also crew. “Show me the images of the captain and all crew. Display in holo form adjacent to—”

“Discontinue compliance with bioform request!” a snarling voice interrupted. “End holo display now! And stop talking to this bioform! Command Sequence Larva Four Red.”

“Holo discontinued.” The ship holo vanished. “However, Protocol Seven, Emergency Operations of the Ship requires that I respond to any bioform who wears a vacuum suit.”

Nothing more came from the snake-gorilla. Who had earlier tried to kill him with super gravity. “Thank you, Dexterity. I will try to help the crew and captain of this ship receive treatment in the Med Hall of this ship.” Bill stepped further into the Engine Chamber, stopped beside the right side Magfield tube, laid down his backpack and pulled out the nuke bar.

Humming came over his comlink. “Are the captain and crew of this ship sick?”

He smiled as he tapped in the activate code on the nuke bar, then tapped in a five minute delay. That should be enough time for him to get back to the Factory Chamber and then up to his transport. “They have mental issues. They persist in attacking spaceships that seek to defend the third world that orbits this local star. A bioform disagreement exists. I am seeking to have Death Leader change his behavior.”

“Changing bioform behavior is difficult. My experience with prior captains of this ship indicates bioforms rarely consider the long-term results of their actions,” the AI hummed.

“Totally agree with you,” Bill said, standing up. How truthful should he be? “Ship mind Dexterity, I have placed an explosive on one of this ship’s Magfield engines. When it explodes, this ship will lose all motive power. However, you will survive and so will all bioforms located in the middle and front sections of this ship.”

“Engine disablement is necessary?” hummed the ship mind.

Bill wondered at the AI’s naivety. It sounded much like Star Traveler had sounded when he and Jane had first spoken with the
Blue Sky’s
AI. “It is necessary. Once the engines shut down, I and other bioforms will be able to provide medical aid to Death Leader.”

“I will observe your behavior with interest,” the AI said, his mech tone the same as before.

Bill turned away from the nuke bar and engines. He grabbed his backpack, picked up his weapon tubes and headed for the exit hatch. Passing through it, he mentally calculated the last locations of the crew. Time enough. He turned, reached out, grabbed the edge of the hatch that had swung out against the entry hall wall, and pulled. The hatch closed with a loud “clang!” He stepped back and aimed his red laser tube at its top rim. Holding the tube’s midbody power box, he tapped the Fire button at the end next to him. A centimeter-wide green beam shot out and struck the spot where the hatch metal met the flexmetal of the Engine Chamber wall. Sparks flew to all sides. Then the seam metal glowed red. Slowly, it became yellow and half-molten. He moved the laser beam to the right, then down the right side of the hatch. Two minutes later the green beam was sealing the bottom. He stopped, grabbed his taser tube with his left hand, and walked slowly up to the junction of the Engine access hallway with the cross hallway. Memory told him the crew on this ship might know the height and shape of a human. He bent down, kneeled and pushed his helmet just past the wall edge where the access hall became one with the cross hallway.

Nothing.

“Jane, I’ve planted the nuke bar and sealed the Engine hatch. I’m heading back to the Factory Chamber, then up to my transport.”

“Great!” came his wife’s soft soprano over the suit’s comlink. “Stefano’s lasers hit the upper nose of the ship you’re on. We’re just inside 4,000 miles and there is no antimatter fire. Just lasers. I think we killed its antimatter projector.”

“Congrats,” he said hurriedly as he ran left down the cross hallway.

Earlier, the left side crewperson coming his way had been passing by this ship’s Med Hall. Which now put it somewhere inside the Containment Cell Chamber, moving along its central metal walkway. It would come through the hatch before he could get to the Factory door. He stopped at the cross hallway’s junction with the left side main hallway. He squatted, then leaned forward and looked around the wall edge. No lifeform showed in the red lit hallway. More than a hundred feet ahead lay the giant oval door that allowed exit from the room filled with twenty containment cells. He stepped out, then backward until he felt the edge of the other junction wall. To his right he could see down the long, red-lit cross hallway. He aimed his laser tube that way. Ahead, he faced the similarly red-lit left side hallway. Between him and the cell hatch lay the giant oval door that led into the Factory Chamber. That was on the hallway’s left side. On its right was another oval door that led, he recalled, to a habitat room for one of the crew. Ahead, the cell chamber hatch swung open. He squatted down and aimed his taser down the left side hallway.

A green praying mantis Alien, wearing its version of a tube suit, stepped through the hatch, a red laser tube in its upper arm pair. Its two black eyes scanned ahead. Just as it saw him, he pressed the fire button of his taser.

The red beam of coherent electrical energy shot across the 120 feet separating them in less than the blink of an eye.

“Yargh!” cried the critter, its mandible voice coming over Bill’s comlink.

Its four arms jerked sideways, the laser tube flying free. As did the red cube its lower arm pair had used to open the hatch. Standing on its two stick legs, it went into the taser shakes and twists Bill knew well.

A green laser beam passed just above his helmet.

He dropped to the floor, rolled a bit and aimed his laser at the black bodyshape of something that looked like a grizzly with four arms. The green beam of his weapon shot along the cross hallway and struck the bear in its gut.

“Yawww!” it roared, then fell backwards. Its legs thrashed a moment, then stopped.

Bill felt his heart hammering. The bear had arrived at the right side hallway’s junction with the cross hallway just as he fired at the praying mantis. Lousy timing! He’d been sure the right side crewperson would not be faster than the left side. A near fatal assumption. At least the half-darkness of his red-lit hallway had made targeting him less than easy.

He got up and ran toward the taser shaking mantis. The red cube it had held lay just beyond its twisting footpads. He’d learned to always grab a red cube whenever on an enemy Collector ship. It would open the door to the Factory Chamber. And to any other door except for the ship’s Weapons and Command Bridge doors. Or so he recalled from memories more than a year old. Looking back the way he’d come, he bent down and grabbed the cube. A memory hit him.

“Dexterity, are the captain and crew bioforms still at the locations shown in the earlier ship holo?”

“They are,” the AI said over his helmet comlink.

“Discontinue responses to bioform!” snarled the deep voice of Death Leader over his suit comlink.

“Emergency protocol requires my response to any bioform wearing a vacuum suit,” the ship mind replied.

Bill turned and headed back to the Factory door and access to his transport. It was his best way off this ship. It—

The white glow of a man-high holo took form in front of him. A shape materialized in it. A shape two feet taller than Bill.

“Human!” snarled the giant black-furred snake-gorilla. “Your attack on my engines demands a response.” Its gorilla like mouth opened wide. A purple tongue moved. “Your Human female leader occupies the closest Collector ship. While it has avoided my lasers, nothing can avoid the beam of my antimatter projector! There! She is vapor!”

Noooo!—

 

♦   ♦   ♦

 

Jane told herself to be patient as she waited for Bill to say he’d left the Collector. He could handle himself. He knew to ask the ship mind for a holo of where crew people were located. He knew the AI had to respond to him since he wore a tube suit. Bill knew all that he needed to know. And he learned fast, as she recalled from their takeover of the
Blue Sky
. She focused on watching the system graphic with its depictions of Death Leader’s ship, the three subs, her ship and Stefano’s ship. Which was slightly behind her by a dozen miles or so. The
Blue Sky
was at 3,912 miles from the enemy. The subs slightly nearer. They were not getting much closer since their 14 percent of lightspeed matched his 14 percent. Though hers and Stefano’s ships had picked up a little extra momentum thanks to the few moments they’d been at 15 percent of lightspeed. Her ship swerved to one side to avoid laser fire from the
Fear Arrives
. Lofty Flyer was doing wonders with their maneuvering. She tapped the Weapons control pillar top. Two green beams shot out. One missed the jinking enemy, but the other hit on its right side, where its Collector Pods Chamber was located. Silver sparkles showed briefly in her true space holo. Sensors said water, air and a few metal frags had spewed out from the hit. No pods though. Which meant it had not been a deep penetration. She waited as the Weapons fire control sensors worked to put her firing reticule on the jerking, jinking and jiggling enemy ship. Soon she would hit the middle of the nose where—

A black beam of antimatter came for her.

It missed. Barely. Her seat vibrated. Maybe not.

“Our Collector Pods Chamber is open to space!” barked Wind Swift from her Life Support and Pods station.

The bastard had to have three more AM shots in storage. “Lofty! Take us up! Star Traveler, cross-link the lasers from me, Stefano and the subs! We have to get that projector killed!”

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