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Lower Deck Tales: Ship of the Dead

I never heard of a Japanese with a Chinese name (living in Asia I have friends of both nationalities :)). Even though they use almost the same characters, Japanese read them completely differently (and Japanese surnames are usually two-character, while Chinese one-character).

For example she could have been born in Japan but be ethnically Chinese.
I don't think it works that way in Asia ;) She would still be considered Chinese.
But her mother could be Japanese and father Chinese, while she was born and raised in Japan, so she identifies with that country more. Such things do happen :)

I'm of the opinion that she's from Alpha Centauri, which everyone knows is a greater melting pot of ethnicity than the even the Old United States was. Being at least fourth generation, the cultural distinctions between Chinese and Japanese would have long since been blended and blurred. I suspect her parents were just happy to have married someone of the same basic racial stock. Hence, the Chinese name and Japanese cultural outlook. Or something like that.

Nah, my thinking is if we're going to say she's Japanese, she ought to have a Japanese name, or at the very least a Japanese surname (a given name from another culture I could understand).

Otherwise, Ceej, that's my only nitpick for once. Good story so far.
 
I'm of the opinion that she's from Alpha Centauri, which everyone knows is a greater melting pot of ethnicity than the even the Old United States was. Being at least fourth generation, the cultural distinctions between Chinese and Japanese would have long since been blended and blurred. I suspect her parents were just happy to have married someone of the same basic racial stock. Hence, the Chinese name and Japanese cultural outlook. Or something like that.

In that case she should be identified either as "Asian" only, or rather as "Centaurian."
 
I'm of the opinion that she's from Alpha Centauri, which everyone knows is a greater melting pot of ethnicity than the even the Old United States was. Being at least fourth generation, the cultural distinctions between Chinese and Japanese would have long since been blended and blurred. I suspect her parents were just happy to have married someone of the same basic racial stock. Hence, the Chinese name and Japanese cultural outlook. Or something like that.

In that case she should be identified either as "Asian" only, or rather as "Centaurian."

*sigh*
 
“I’ve … I’ve found the crew.”

Jiang turned away from staring at the Klingon corpse like she had done for the last couple of minutes or so since he had died, only to see the Tiburon stumble back into sickbay.

“Oh my God, Telvin, what happened?” she said and immediately rushed towards the medical technician.

His face was bloodied and his uniform ripped and torn in multiple places. He practically fell into her arms when the nurse approached and she was forced onto her knees by his weight.

“Chayton, help me get him onto one of the beds,” she said even while she looked him over. He had a large bite mark on his left cheek but there were other wounds all over, almost as if he had been in vicious melee combat with multiple unyielding opponents. He was bleeding from more places than she could count.

“What did this to you?” she said and when she pulled down the collar of his blood soaked uniform shirt she gasped in shock when she realized that a massive chunk of his neck had been ripped clean out, severing his jugular vein along with a couple of others. “How … did this happen? How can you still be –“

She felt Chayton by her side, harshly yanking her away at the same moment that Telvin snapped forward as if he was trying to take a bite right out of her.

The Sioux instantly threw a mean left hook which smacked loudly against his chin, causing Telvin to fall backwards and collapse.

“What …” Jiang was too confused to know what was happening but seeing the Tiburon falling on his back and bleeding onto the floor, she immediately freed herself from Chayton’s grasp and knelt at his side.

She tried to take a pulse but there wasn’t enough neck left to do it with so she went for his wrist. She found nothing. She pulled out her tricorder for a second opinion but the result stayed the same. “He’s dead. You’ve killed him.”

“He was dead before.”

She shot him a perplexed look and then stood slowly. “What are you saying? He was walking. He spoke. He wasn’t dead until you attacked him.”

“He attacked first.”

“How could he have attacked first if he was already dead? You are not making a lick of sense, Crewman,” she shouted, now almost hysterically.

Then she heard the long, guttural moan.

She turned around very slowly, not quite able to believe what her ears were telling her.

And yet the sound was clearly emanating from Telvin.

She didn’t quite dare to get close but she consulted her tricorder yet again. No heart beat, no brain activity, all life signs at zero. He was completely and entirely dead.

And then he began to stir.

“This … this is not possible,” she said as she watched in horror as the previously assumed dead Telvin rose from the ground.

He moaned loudly and seemed momentarily confused. He had an empty, almost soulless look in his eyes as he seemed to take in his surroundings.

“Telvin … Telvin, can you hear me?” she said.

But he didn’t appear to respond to his name. Not at first. Then he groaned again and began to slowly walk towards the nurse and Chayton with small, unbalanced steps as if he had only learned to walk minutes ago.

Jiang and Chayton stepped backwards as he continued on. His skin had turned a sickly pale and his mouth opened wide as if getting ready to consume. An almost constant groan escaped from somewhere down his ripped throat.

“This cannot be happening,” said Jiang. “Stay back. Please just stay back and we’ll figure this out.”

But he didn’t and eventually they both ended up with their backs against the wall.

Chayton found a Klingon sword, a mek’leth, discarded carelessly on one of the workstations. He reached for it and used it to keep Telvin at bay without success. He kept coming even when the sharp blade began to tear through his uniform and flesh underneath as if it was made out of nothing but air. Telvin kept coming.

The Sioux changed tactics. He pushed Telvin away harshly, coming within inches of being bitten by him and when that didn’t discourage him, he took a vicious swing with the blade.

It did nothing but tear clothes and flesh.

“My god, what has happened to him?” Jiang nearly shrieked.
Chayton went for the head and the sword split his cranium with such force, Chayton and Jiang were both hit by the blood spatter. The blade remained lodged inside Telvin’s skull but the groaning stopped almost instantly and the former medical technician sagged to his knees before collapsing to the floor where he remained motionless.

For a moment nobody spoke as they simply stared at his seemingly lifeless body lying in a pool of his dark red blood. Jiang had tears streaming down her cheeks.

Then they heard the groans again. Dozens of them, coming from the same direction Telvin had arrived from.

Chayton looked at Jiang. “The crew,” he told her. “He said he had found the crew.”

She didn’t seem to understand straight away. Then she saw the Klingons stream into sickbay, all of them with the same pale skin, all of them with horrible and clearly fatal wounds covering much of their bodies, all of them with that same empty look in their eyes and all of them single-mindedly stumbling or walking towards the two Starfleet officers.

These ones were much faster than Telvin had been and within moments the sickbay was filled with them.

Chayton grabbed the mek’leth still buried inside the dead Tiburon’s skull and by placing one boot onto his head, he dislodged it, making a sickening squishing sound in the process.

“Stay behind me,” he said as he waved the blade back and forth in an effort to keep the horde of Klingons at bay.

For Jiang there was no place to go, within no time the seemingly crazed crew had completely surrounded them, blocking off all potential avenues of escape.

The only place to go was deeper into the medical bay and towards the bio-beds.

Staring with wide-open eyes and complete disbelieve at the approaching Klingons, Jiang failed to notice the movement right by her side. Until something cold grabbed hold of her wrist and she screamed.

It was K’ven. She had stepped up right next to the bed on which the dead captain had been left except for that he wasn’t dead anymore. At least not in the traditional sense. He had risen slightly from the bed, reached out for the nurse and looked straight at her with an unintelligible and disturbing groan which added to the sick symphony now filling the sickbay.

And he didn’t let go.

Chayton noticed and with once swift move with his blade, cut right through the Klingon’s lower arm, separating him from Jiang.

He pushed the captain off the bed, causing him to land on the floor. Then he swung around just in time to impale one of the other Klingons who had tried to use the distraction to attack him.

Unfortunately, in the process the mek’leth got stuck in the man’s chest and Chayton found himself unarmed and faced with two dozen more Klingons, all seemingly determined to eat the two Starfleeters alive.

Jiang hadn’t quite realized this predicament yet as she desperately tried to pull K’ven’s severed hand and arm stump off her wrist. By the time she had finally managed to get those dead fingers untangled, she quickly threw the limp away in disgust only then to discover that Chayton was now without a weapon and the Klingons almost upon them both.
“My God, my god, what do we do, what do we do?” she shrieked.

Apparently Chayton’s only response was to place himself in front of the petrified nurse to try and shield her from the inevitable.

The nearest Klingon of course was undeterred and continued to stumble forward, ready to take a bite out of the tall Sioux. Chayton was not going to stand still while serving as dinner to the crazy-starved former crew and went on the offensive, grabbing hold of the possessed Klingon, struggling with him for a moment and quickly realizing that his unnatural condition had lessened none of his inherent strength.

Understanding that he would not be able to simply overpower him, he went for his head and in a swift motion, jerked it ninety-five degrees until he heard a loud crunch. The Klingon stumbled backwards and fell and even though his neck was clearly broken, he didn’t appear to be completely dead yet.

Chayton had no time to try and finish the job.

“Watch out!”

Jiang’s warning still came too late. Another Klingon had walked up next to Chayton, placed his hands by his neck and went in to tear out a mouthful of flesh.

But just before his rotten teeth could make contact, the Klingon completely disintegrated.

Nurse Jiang wasn’t entirely sure what had happened until she heard the sound of a phaser blast and then saw an amber colored beam demolecularize another Klingon nearby.

It was enough to give the two Starfleeters some breathing room as their attackers turned to find the new threat.

“Are you guys, alright?”

Jiang peered past the Klingons and recognized Gradkowski and Aliris who had entered the sickbay, the security officer blasting at the Klingons with his rifle while the Risian was wielding a Klingon-made disruptor pistol.

After disintegrating two more former Klingon crewmembers, they had managed to clear a path between them and their fellow officers.

Chayton recognizing this, grabbed hold of Jiang’s arm and pushed her forward. “Go.”

They both ran through a field of Klingons trying to eat them, exploiting their momentary confusion caused by the armed newcomers.

On his dash, Chayton found the man who still had his mek’leth stuck in his chest, pulled it free and then cut him down in the same motion.

Jiang breathed hard when she finally managed to get to the relative safety of Aliris and Gradkowski who hadn’t stopped firing into the horde for cover. “Am I glad to see you,” she said through labored breaths.

“What the hell is going on here, Yifey?” said Aliris as she blasted yet another Klingon in the chest. “One moment the ship is all but abandoned and the next we’re fighting our way through a legion of flesh-eating monsters.”

“They’re dead,” Jiang said hysterically. “They’re all dead.”

Aliris gave the nurse an unconvinced look.

“When there is no more room in Gre’thor, the dishonored dead will rise.”

They looked at Chayton and not just because it was perhaps the longest sentence he had ever uttered since either of them had known him.

“That’s what the Klingon captain said just before he died,” explained Jiang, recalling the words K’ven had spoken earlier and which at the time had seemed like nothing more than the fever-induced ramblings of a dying man.

“Alright, for argument’s sake, let’s ignore for a moment the absurdity of what you’re saying,” said the ensign and dematerialized another Klingon who was getting too close. “Why the hell are they trying to eat us?”

Neither Chayton nor Jiang had an answer to that.

“And where is Telvin?” she added.

The sad look in the nurse’s eyes was enough answer.

“We can’t keep this up,” said Gradkowski just before disintegrating another undead Klingon. “At this rate I’ll run out of juice long before we run out of … whatever they are.”

Aliris nodded with understanding. “We need to get back to the transporter room and off this gods-forsaken ship,” she said. “For now, lower the setting of your rifle to seven,” she added and then performed a similar adjustment on her disruptor.

Gradkowski’s next shot went clean through an approaching Klingon, leaving behind a gaping hole in his torso. The zombie was unimpressed and continued on.

He fired again with the same results. “It’s not having any effect on them.”

Aliris found the same to be true. The Klingons kept coming.

“Shoot their heads,” Chayton yelled. “Aim for the heads,” he said and took a wild swing with his sword. He was dead-on target as the blade sliced through a Klingon’s neck, causing his head to pop straight off. The body itself took another step before collapsing in a heap at the Sioux’s feet.

Aliris had a Klingon at arm’s length and without hesitation she pressed the muzzle of her pistol against his bony forehead and pulled the trigger. The head exploded instantly, showering her in nasty, cold Klingon blood.

Gradkowski dispatched an attacker in similar fashion, blasting away the entire left side of a Klingon’s face.

“Jo, behind you,” Jiang cried out.

The security officer wasn’t able to get his rifle around quickly enough and the zombie grabbed Gradkowski’s arm and bit him right through his uniform while the human screamed in pain.

Aliris blew away his head too late.

“Goddamnit, the bastard bit me,” said Gradkowski, his face twisted into a mask of agony as he reached for his injured arm. His rifle clattered to the floor.

Chayton didn’t waste any time and picked up the weapon to keep the advancing Klingons back.

Jiang quickly tended to the security officer, removing his jacket and rolling up the golden undershirt, she revealed a nasty wound underneath, bleeding profusely. “Just a flesh wound, soldier. Nothing to worry about,” she said with forced humor.

He gritted his teeth. “Stings like a son-of-a-bitch,” he said.

“You’re loosing a lot of blood.” In lieu of any readily available bandages, she tore away the sleeve of his discarded jacket and wrapped it around the wound. “This should hold for a while but we need to get you back to the runabout.”

“That’s our cue,” said Aliris. “Let’s get the hell out of here.”



* * *
 
Yeesh, and one of them gets bit! Well, at least they'll have a prime example of how this contagion afflicts the human body... if they're able to get back to the runabout alive. :scream:

Harrowing stuff, CeJay, keep it up!
 
And now they're going to take Gradkowski to their runabout, he's going to infect them, then they're going to infect their ship, then...

You will be zombified, resistance is futile!
 
Ah its great to finally get Star Trek and have a horror story! Even more surprising when it happens to have Klingons go mad claiming the dead have returned from the afterlife because its filled to capacity! Ah set phasers and distrupters to maxium setting! So Cejay keep the thrilling going with all of the twists and turns that make it a great story!
 
Thanks for reading, folks. Bad things a clearly in the offing here. How bad are things going to get? Hope you'll stick around to find out.
 
The one-armed Klingon seemed a little lost as he stumbled across the corridors of a gloomy ship which he had once known as well as the back of his now missing right hand.

The once proud warrior was on the hunt, something he had been an expert on before he had succumbed to his present state. The instinct however was still there, buried but impossible to ignore.

He stopped at a corridor junction and slowly turned ninety degrees.

There, not a hundred paces down the corridor, he sensed the presence of his prey.

Had he still had control over all the faculties which had once made him a proud and fierce warrior, he may have been able to recognize the group as an alien team of Starfleet officers but in his current condition they were simply his quarry and his one and only urge was to feed.

He stumbled forward at first but then slowly, as if drawing on skills and abilities that had laid dormant for years, his steps quickened and his balanced improved until he was at an all out trot.

He continued to accelerate to a near run as he quickly approached his unsuspecting targets.

With only a handful of paces left until he would burry his teeth deep into the warm-fleshed, brown-skinned, delicate creature, it turned, its hand outstretched, pointing a device right at his face.

An emerald blast erupted and his head exploded like a watermelon, painting the bulkheads with blood and brain matter. Headless, his body collapsed, by the creature’s feet not a moment later.

The Klingon’s blood was barely noticeable on Aliris' red uniform shirt but the same could not be said for her caramel-colored face. She tried to wipe it off the best she could with her free hand, shuddering with disgust the entire time.

"They can run now?" she said once she had wiped herself reasonably clean.

There wasn't much time to consider this new development. Another undead Klingon had appeared at the end of the corridor, having spotted the away team he started out to try and succeed were his predecessor had failed.

Aliris aimed her disruptor and pulled the trigger.

Nothing happened. "Damn, I'm out."

Chayton stepped forward, took aim with his phaser rifle and fired.

The precise beam sliced into the Klingon's bony forehead, leaving behind a nearly perfect perforation which went clean through his cranium. Like a puppet whose strings had been cut, the holed-out Klingon dropped like a stone.

"Take this," said Chayton and threw the Risian ensign the rifle as she disposed of the now useless disruptor. Chayton reached for the mek'leth which he had acquired in the medical bay.

"I can ... I can take the rifle," Gradkowski said, his voice weak and with little timbre. His face was now sickly pale, thick droplets of sweat pouring down his forehead and his nose bleeding intermittently. He could hardly stand at all and depended on Jiang to steady him.

The nurse however was too lithe to be able to carry so much of his weight and as they attempted another step, they collapsed together against the bulkhead.

"Easy there," Jiang said exasperated as she tried her best to keep him in a sitting position.

"My ... my rifle," he moaned.

"I'm sure they'll take good care of your weapon," she said with a smile. "I doubt you'd be much use with it at the moment anyway."

"This? This … this is nothing. A scratch, a flesh wound. I had worse. I just need a minute to get my strength back."

"Sure thing. After all we'll need you to protect us," she said exchanging a smile with the wounded security officer which never quite reached her eyes.

"No time. We have to move on, now," said Chayton, barely making eye contact with Jiang or Gradkowski.

"I've about had it with you, you know that?" she shot back with real fire in her voice. "We're stuck on the Klingon ship from hell, surrounded by two hundred bloodthirsty zombies trying to eat us alive, I had to watch Telvin die and come back to life only to join this madness and turn against us, the goddamn flickering lights and the smell are making me go absolutely crazy and I don't need you and your two words per sentence crap on my case as well."

Both Chayton and Aliris gave the infuriated nurse blank looks.

"OK, Yifey, try to calm down. We can't have you freak out on us now. He's just trying to keep us moving," said Aliris.

The nurse took a deep breath and then nodded. "Of course, I'm sorry. It's just I wish you could say something encouraging once in a while."

"I apologize if you feel that my attitude has made things more difficult for you. I promise I will talk as much as you like once we get out of here in one piece. Hell, if we come out of this alive I'll invite you to one of my infamous poetry reading sessions," said the Sioux and promptly stepped up to the fallen security officer to help him back on his feet and continue down the corridor.

Aliris and Jiang exchanged astonished looks, neither of them having witnessed the tall man use that many words in one go before.

"Well, if we didn't have a reason to survive this before," said the Risian.

Jiang gave her a small smile and then began to follow Chayton. But before she had made even a couple of steps, she felt Aliris' hand on her arm. When she looked at the ensign, she found her eyes focused on Gradkowski.

"How is he, Yifey? Can he pull through?"

The Chinese woman's empty eyes seemed to hold little hope. "I ... I really don't know."



* * *
 
Okay, so now I'm gonna drop some advice on you.

A couple of us gave you a hard time about giving a character you said was Japanese a Chinese name. I notice in this installment you took pains to correct that. The problem is, now you've changed the nationality of the character in the midstream of the story, which is kind of jarring. It would have been better if you'd changed it in the post you first mentioned it, but I'm guessing it's too late to edit that at this point.

So here's my advice, concernning your human characters. It's a good bet that all your readers are human and familiar with Earth and its peoples, so from now on just pick names for the characters. Don't mention nationalities at all unless it's important to the story. It's a good bet that if you pick the right ethnic name everyone will have a good idea where the person was born. Japanese names are easily recognizable. So are Russian names, German names, etc. The more you concentrate on the right name the less work you have to do with characterization, and saying "The Chinese this" or "The japanese that" will be unnecessary.
 
Thanks for the advice and I entirely agree that changing such details in the middle of a story is not ideal. In my defense the character was always planned to be Chinese and I simply made a mistake when I started to write this thing.

The issue was discussed so thoroughly here that I didn't think it be too jarring to change it now. Sorry if it didn't work for you. And sure, her ethnicity isn't important to the story but I felt it added to the characters to have a sense of their backgrounds.

I suppose you're also going to hate the fact that I've decided to change the Stardate for this story to 54432. That's 2377 for those interested in those things.
 
Thanks for the advice and I entirely agree that changing such details in the middle of a story is not ideal. In my defense the character was always planned to be Chinese and I simply made a mistake when I started to write this thing.

Understood.

The issue was discussed so thoroughly here that I didn't think it be too jarring to change it now. Sorry if it didn't work for you. And sure, her ethnicity isn't important to the story but I felt it added to the characters to have a sense of their backgrounds.

Like I said, unless you you wanted to say something about what province she grew up in relation to the story, the name is enough.

I suppose you're also going to hate the fact that I've decided to change the Stardate for this story to 54432. That's 2377 for those interested in those things.

Nah, Stardates are always made up out of whole cloth anyway. i don't even read 'em.
 
It had taken the Stafleet team five minutes to get from the transporter room to the medical bay when they had first arrived on the Lukara.

Fighting off sporadic attacks from crazed Klingons with just one phaser rifle and helping along the quickly deteriorating Jonas Gradkowski, the remaining away team needed over an hour to finally reach their destination.

Thankfully the transporter room appeared to be at least partially functional when they arrived.

“Chayton, put Gradkowksi down and then try to get those doors closed while I’ll attempt to speed-learn how to operate a Klingon computer console,” said Aliris as soon as she had stepped foot in the room. She stepped up to the station controlling the transporter, leaning the rifle against a bulkhead and began to look over a computer station which was completely alien to her.

The Sioux did as instructed, carefully helping the security officer to sit on the platform while he went to tend to the doors which were currently stuck in a wide open position.

Jiang went to tend to Gradkowski. “OK there, big feller, just hang on a few more minutes and we get you back on the runabout,” she said and injected him with a stimulant in the hopes to keep his vitals stable. And for the sixth time she found that it was having absolutely no effect on in.

His body temperature was threatening to burn him up inside, his skin was now completely pale and his nose wouldn’t stop bleeding. He had almost constant coughing fits and shivered uncontrollably.

He still managed to make eye contact with her. “Don’t … don’t worry about me. Gradkowski’s are made … made out of stern stuff. Shake this off … in a jiffy,” he said with great difficulties through dry, chapped lips.

She tried to smile at him but her facial muscles simply didn’t cooperate. She turned to look to the ensign working on the controls. “Aliris, we need to go.”

“Yeah, yeah, tell me something I don’t know, doc,” she said without ever taking her eyes off those Klingon panels which may as well have been hieroglyphs as far she was concerned. “If you know how to read Klingonese be my guest and help me out over here.”

It turned out Jiang couldn’t.

In the meantime Chayton had managed to close one of the two heavy door panels by using nothing more than brute strength. He was just about to start on the second when he heard the sound.

At first he wasn’t quite sure what it was but it sounded as if something or someone was grating metal.

And it was becoming more pronounced with every second.

Aliris looked up. “What the hell is that?”

“I don’t think we want to find out,” Jiang whispered.

Chayton took a careful step out of the room to look down the corridor. Then he turned back to look at the Risian woman who gave him a quizzical look. “Ensign, we need to leave here now or we’re all going to die,” he said and pulled his mek’leth.

It was only then that the previously distant sound became obvious to everyone. It was a mixture of deep groans and footfalls, most of which sounded as if those feet were being merely dragged across the floor. But these weren’t just the sounds made by a few individual Klingons, this was the sound of countless men and women, all producing the same awful noise. All now seemingly trying to converge on the last place on the ship were a warm body could be found. The transporter room.

Aliris reached for the rifle and shockingly realized that its power pack was nearly drained. “Jifey, take this and try to buy us as much time as you can. Make your shots count, it doesn’t have much juice left,” she said and threw the rifle at her.

She caught it awkwardly, looked at it for a moment as if she had never seen it before and then back at the Risian. “I’ve … I’ve never used one before.”

“Never to early to start,” she said. “Point and shoot, just like the smaller ones.”

But Jifey Yiang was suddenly more concerned with Gradkowski who uttered a low, throaty rattle and then nothing at all. She put the rifle to one side and kneeled next to him. “No, no, Jonas. Jonas, come on, come on, don’t do this now.”

“Incoming,” said Chayton and started slashing at Klingon bodies who had appeared by the half-open doorway.

To his credit he held his ground for at least thirty seconds before he was forced back deeper in the transporter room, now faced with a seemingly unbroken wall of the undead, and with every one he managed to cut down, another one took its place in a seemingly never-ending horde of walking zombies.

“Damnit, Yifey, help Chayton!” Alriris yelled as she noticed the nurse trying to revive the apparently dead Gradkowksi.

“I need to try and –“

“You need to buy us time or we’re all dead meat,” she shot back, trying to keep an eye on the approaching horde while working on the console at the same time.

Jiang very reluctantly left Gradkowski to take the rifle. She took careful aim at one of the Klingons threatening to get past Chayton and pulled the triggering stub.

The shot went wide, still drilling a Klingon – just not the one she had aimed for – and nearly grazing the Sioux.

“Sorry,” she stammered.

“Just keep shooting,” responded a blood trenched Chayton who didn’t stop hacking away even if it was beginning to look more like self-defense than any kind of coordinated attack, slashing away at limps and everything else in front of him, slowing the Klingons but not really putting them down.

The floor was turning into a slippery, crimson red mess.

The nurse tried again, this time hitting her target but missing the head of the tall Klingon she had tried to take out and incinerating his shoulder instead.

“I think … I think, I’ve got it,” Aliris exclaimed. “Get on the –“

A female Klingon had slipped past Chayton and bore down on the ensign at the computer console. Aliris hadn’t seen her in time and was pushed backwards as the Klingon slammed into her.

She managed to bring up her arms just before her sharp teeth were able to rip into her. Aliris recognized her attacker. “B’Nera?”

A low groan was her response. But what sounded like unintelligible noise suddenly began to make sense to the ensign.

“Help me … help me.”

Aliris had to fight tooth and nail to keep the former medic away from her as she was pushed down onto the floor. “B’Nera, can you understand me?”

“Help me,” she groaned again. “Kill … kill.”

Aliris was fighting a losing battle. The Risian was no match in pure strength to the Klingon warrior even in her zombified-state.

“Kill me …Kill me.”

The Risian noticed the hilt of a dagger on her belt and in a last, desperate measure, reached for it and managed to pull it free with her fingertips.

Just as she could feel B’Nera’s foul smell and sharp teeth at her throat, Aliris mustered all her remaining strength by taking hold of the Klingon’s low cut vest and pushing her up and away from her.

Her other hand gripped the dagger firmly and in one quick motion, she shoved the razor-sharp blade upwards were it buried itself between B’Nera’s chin and neck and drove deep into her head. Aliris was immediately showered by thick, cold blood which erupted like a fountain. The Klingon’s body stopped moving.

She managed to pull the lifeless body off her and crawl back onto her feet. “Get … get Gradkowski off the platform and let’s go,” she said with apparent effort and began to activate the transporter sequence.

Jiang looked at her in shock. “We can’t just leave him here,” she said. “We can bring him back to the runabout and … I don’t know … put him in stasis.”

But Aliris shook her head. “Too much … too much of a risk.”

The nurse apparently was determined not to leave anyone else behind. “We’re not abandoning him,” she said just before she decapitated another approaching Klingon with a now well-aimed shot.

“I’m giving you an order, godsdamnit, get him off the gods-forsaken platform, now,” Aliris screamed.

Jiang turned to look at the dead security officer, sitting slumped over against the bulkhead. “I … I can’t …”

That’s when he came back to life. Sort of.

Jiang shrieked in panic as he groaned loudly and bore down on her with an empty look in his dead eyes and blood tripping from the corners of his mouth.

“Shoot him … shoot him,” Aliris shouted, trying to finish the sequence but now hesitating to enter the final command until the undead Gradkowski was clear of the platform.

Jiang hesitated, letting herself being pushed backwards until she ran out of room. “Jonas … Jonas, please,” she begged to no avail as he continued to stagger towards her.

“Blow his, godsdamned head off!”

She raised the rifle and Gradkowski reached out for it, wrapping a pale and flaky hand around the barrel. Then he hesitated for a moment as if he recognized the device now pointing at his head.

It lasted less than a second.

Jiang, with tears streaming down her face, fired.

At the point blank range, his head was practically seared off.

Aliris hit the last command, activating what she hoped to be the remote start-up sequence and then had to leap over the console to escape the mass of undead Klingons trying to eat her.

“Chayton, let’s go,” she yelled without being able to make him out anymore.

Unbelievably, the tall Sioux emerged not a moment later, shoving Klingons away left and right, he had long since lost his mek’leth sword, apparently taking on the undead with his bare hands.

The three blood soaked Starfleet officers converged on the platform were Aliris unceremoniously kicked Gradkowski’s separated head into the crowd of Klingons while Chayton pushed the body off the platform.

Yiang was too busy cowering in the corner, sobbing, to be of any help.

“Is this going to work,” said Chayton as he positioned himself in front of the nurse and next to Aliris on the platform, facing the Klingons below which were now mere steps away.

“We’ll either get back on the runabout or explode in the vacuum of space.”

“Either way, beats being turned into fresh gagh,” said Chayton.

A thousand arms seemed to reach out for them just before they heard the telltale sounds of a cycling transporter beam.


* * *
 
Gradkowski's fate was obvious since the moment he had been bitten, so no surprise here...for anyone who know how zombie "operate," that is ;)

But what happens to the rest of them? I wonder if being covered by zombie Klingons' blood, which most likely entered their organisms through eyes and mouth and maybe some microabrasions and cuts on their skin, would mean something nasty and only work slower than a bite.
 
You've got your work cut out for you, CeJay. Think about it: if this is happening because Klingon hell is full and rejecting dishonored dead, how do you get it unfull and working again to stop the problem...and what plague in Klingon history could have been the start of the myth in the first place?


This is really good. I like concepts like this. Carry on...
 
Human hell (or heaven) must be full too, if Gradkowski returned. The problems seems more serious than just one after-death destination ;)
 
Human hell (or heaven) must be full too, if Gradkowski returned. The problems seems more serious than just one after-death destination ;)

Well obviously whatever planning commission the after-life has been using to design its facilities needs a full performance review. :D
 
Giving that none of them exploded upon re-materialization, it was a good bet that they had not been beamed into outer space.

Yifey Jiang pretty much immediately collapsed onto the floor of the runabout and then crawled up against the nearest bulkhead, pushing her knees up to her chest and hugging them tightly, she began to weep.

Chayton quickly dropped to her side. “Are you alright?”

She simply shook her head.

“Have you been hurt? Did they touch you somehow, did you get bitten anywhere?” asked Chayton as he began to look her over closely and trying to establish if any of the blood she was covered in was hers.

“Don’t touch me,” she barked and pushed him back harshly. “Just don’t touch me.”

Aliris watch them for only a moment. “Where the hells is Graham?” she said when she had realized that Torain was nowhere to be seen. She grabbed the phaser rifle and headed towards the back of the ship. “The bastard should have beamed us out of there hours ago. I’m going to kill him,” she fumed.

“Telvin and Gradkowski are … dead,” mumbled Jiang. “Or … something worse. That entire ship is filled with walking … dead people,” she continued, slightly rocking back and forth and staring out of the forward view point to see the unassuming Klingon Bird-Of-Prey drifting just a few hundred meters away, not allowing the slightest indication of what horrors it contained.

“Yifey, I know you have gone through a lot over there but this is important,” he said. “Have they managed to injure you in anyway?”

She turned to look at him very slowly and gaze straight into his eyes. Then a very small smile formed on her lips. “That’s … that’s the first time you’ve ever called me Yifey.”

He returned the smile.

She nodded and then quickly shook her head, wiping away the blood on her face. “It’s not mine. It’s … it’s Jonas’s. I … I killed him.”

“You didn’t kill Jonas,” he said. “Whatever that was. Whatever he had become. He wasn’t Jonas anymore when you shot him, do you understand?”

Her nod was barely perceivable at all.

A high-pitched warble of a phaser beam cut through the silence that had ensued. Both Chayton and Jiang whipped their heads towards the back.

“What happened?” the nurse asked.

But Chayton was already on his feet, storming towards the rear compartment.

He found Aliris holding the phaser rifle and pointing it straight at a clearly feverish and panicked Graham Torain. He did not look well at all, his skin pale and his nose refused to stop bleeding. He was on his knees, trying to stem his nosebleed with one hand while the other one was held up in front of him, as if trying to protect himself from the weapon pointed at his head.

“What … what are you doing?” Torain stammered. “I need … help,” he said, his voice so weak, he had difficulties making himself heard.

Aliris trembled slightly and Chayton could see from the scorch mark on a bulkhead behind Torain that she had fired a warning shot, presumably to keep him away. Thankfully the rifle had not been set on the highest setting or she may have perforated the hull.

“I’m not saying it again,” she said with uncharacteristic coldness in her voice. “Stay the frack back.”

“What is wrong with you? What’s … what’s happening?” Torain managed to say but was hardly able to even get those words over his lips anymore.

Jiang joined them and immediately gasped in horror upon finding Torain in his condition. “Oh my god.”

“Yifey, can you help him?” Aliris’ voice trembled. “Is there anything you can do for him?”

But the nurse had no words as she simply stared at the young lieutenant on the floor, barely able to keep himself upright.

“Godsdamnit, Yifey. Can you frakkin’ help him or not?”

“I … I don’t know how but maybe – “

“I’m sorry Graham, I’m not having you turn into one of those monsters,” said the Risian as tears began to well up in her eyes. “I’m so sorry.”

“Wait,” the nurse said. “You can’t do that. You can’t just shoot him down in cold blood. There maybe something we can do.”

The ensign threw her a withering look. “There was nothing you could do for those Klingons. There was nothing you could do for Jonas. I’m doing him a favor, don’t you see that!” Her voice was now almost hysterical. “I’m putting him out of his misery,” she added more quietly as she looked back at the shivering Torain on his knees, unable to speak but with his pleading eyes wide open, staring right back at the Risian woman.

Jiang looked at Chayton for help.

He nodded and carefully approached the ensign. “Aliris, listen to me. Lower your weapon and we’ll try to figure something out.“

“There is nothing to figure out. Don’t you get it? He’s too far gone. He’ll turn just like the others.”

“B’Nera,” the nurse said, suddenly remembering the Klingon medic, and stepped closer. “She talked to you. I saw her talk to you in the transporter room when she attacked. There is still hope.”

The ensign nodded. “You are right. She did talk to me. She begged me to kill her.”

Jiang tried to reach out for the Risian. “Aliris, please just –“

But she had already pulled the trigger.

The phaser beam sliced off Torain’s hand before burning itself through the left side of his face, instantly melting away his check, jaw and eye socket and leaving his head a bloody pulp just as he collapsed to the floor where he remained unmoving in a quickly expanding pool of his own blood.

Jiang covered her mouth in shock.

For a moment all they could do was stare at the scene with disbelieving eyes.

“You … you –“ But Jiang couldn’t even say it.

“I had no choice. I had to do it. I had to keep him from becoming one of them,” Aliris stammered, seemingly unable to take her eyes of the man she had just murdered. Then, with apparently newfound strength and determination, she clasped her rifle tighter. “Those godsdamned Klingons. I’m going to kill them. I’m going to kill them all,” she said, turned on her heels and stormed back towards the cockpit.

Chayton followed her.

Jiang stayed behind for a moment, almost as if unsure if she should try to see if she could do something for Torain, her medical training compelling her to at least check his vitals even if it appeared obvious that he couldn’t have survived the massive head trauma caused by the phaser blast.

“Wait,” she said. “Wait, this isn’t possible. Guys, this isn’t possible,” she added when sudden realization hit her. When she noticed that they had both left, she quickly followed them into the cockpit.

Aliris had flung the rifle carelessly to the side and headed straight for the runabouts controls, her eyes sharply focused on the Klingon ship floating mockingly in space before them.

“I’m going to blast you all back to whatever hell you belong,” she seethed and found the weapon controls.

Without bothering so much as calibrating the phasers or taking proper aim, she repeatedly hit the controls, unleashing uncontrolled and imprecise rounds of destructive energy, blasting away at the unshielded Klingon starship.

Her aim didn’t need to be true. At their relatively close distance and with nobody on board trying to evade or protect their vessel, the phasers easily tore into the Lukara and slicing away entire chunks of ember duranium hull.

“Aliris, stop,” Chayton urged as he tried to get her away from the controls.

But before he could get hold of the infuriated woman, she had managed to do significant damage to the Bird-of-Prey and tearing off one of the ship’s prominent wings, sending the entire ship and the debris into an erratic drift and exposing numerous decks to the cold vacuum of space.

“Let me go, let me go,” she screamed hysterically as he pulled her away from the console and she futilely tried to free herself. “I have to kill them all!”

“Calm down. This is not helping.”

She struggled for a moment longer and when she finally stopped fighting him, Chayton let her go just before she collapsed into on of the seats with tears now flowing freely down her cheeks.

Jiang joined them not a second later. She looked at the tumbling and broken up Klingon ship in shock before looking at the equally broken Aliris slumped in the chair. Then she made eye contact with Chayton. “Something is wrong.”

“You think?” he responded harshly.

“No, I mean Graham. How did he get infected? From everything we’ve seen so far it takes direct contact with somebody who has already been infected for them to show symptoms and die only then to come back. You said it yourself earlier. Jonas was bitten before he became … un-dead.”

“Perhaps it’s airborne,” said Chayton.

“Perhaps,” she responded. “But none of us have exhibited any symptoms so far and we have spent hours on that ship. Torain has never left the runabout.”

Even Aliris looked up through swollen and teary eyes as she began to slowly grasp what the nurse had been trying to get at.

And then they heard that low, guttural moan again which neither of them had hoped they would ever have to hear again.

It was coming from the rear compartment.


* * *
 
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