"There are black zones of shadow close to our daily paths, and now and then some evil soul breaks a passage through. When this happens the man who knows must strike before reckoning the consequences."
-HP Lovecraft, The Thing on the Doorstep (1937)
USS
Surefoot
, Command Quarters, Stardate 51180.4:
Hrelle sat quiet and alone in what humans would have called total darkness, staring at a list of names.
Then his wife emerged from their bedroom, approaching his chair, crouching beside him, her voice low, intimate. "Sreen is asleep in her crib, but Misha is in our bed, so don't expect any action tonight. In fact, don't expect to have much of the bed at all, he's sprawled out like- well, like you..." Kami leaned in and rubbed the side of her muzzle against his. "Leave that. You're exhausted. You've gone through the Seven Hells today."
"We all have. So many were killed... you and Misha almost joined them..." He shook his head. "Having my family with me out here, in the middle of a battle... what kind of man thinks that's a good idea to allow?"
Kami wrapped her arms around him. "I hate to break it to you, O Mighty Commanding Captain, Sir, but unlike all your other decisions, the final say never lay with you alone. We've argued about this more than once, and I've been uncharacteristically stubborn in insisting your family stay onboard with you." She sighed with exhaustion, and lingering shock. "And I've had my own share of guilt too today. And will do for some time to come. But we won't solve this tonight. We shouldn't even try."
He sat there, nodding, looking at the list of the casualties. The casualties he used in a diversion to save themselves from the enemy. "We need a memorial. Something for those who have fallen. Something people can visit, alone or with others, where they can reminisce, or pray, or just pay their respects."
"You're still feeling guilty over what you did."
He nodded. "I don't regret using the bodies of the deceased to save the living. Just that I had to do it when people's emotional wounds were still open and raw. And though Commander Zirangi helped defuse a lot of the anger and hurt everyone understandably felt..."
"It will take time. You're right, Esek. But that's something else you can't solve tonight."
He grunted. "Is there anything I
can
solve tonight?"
"Yes: your family needs your presence in our bedroom, so that we're complete."
He made a sound, and rose to his feet, slipping an arm around her waist, their tails caressing each other. "'Uncharacteristically stubborn'? Really?"
"Watch it, Mister, my Protector's in our bed tonight..."
He smiled, ready to surrender to the fatigue, even as his mind truculently continued to ponder the idea of a shipboard memorial. Sentient races had such diverse ideas about death and what awaits them beyond, if anything.
He wondered if anyone had the definitive answer...
*
Nearby:
The Klingon raced down the corridor, his boots pounding on the marble surface, his passing making the rich red curtains hanging in intervals on the walls on either side flutter.
His name was Karpog, of the House of D'Ghunn. And he would die without fear, and join his ancestors in Sto-Vo-Kor. Today was a good day to die.
But if he escaped... well, that wouldn't be too bad, either.
But it was finding his way out of this bizarre ship he and his men had boarded that proved a trial. It was labyrinthine, with stone walls and floors and thick red curtains and a smell of chemicals and decaying flesh. And those... creatures, lurking in the shadows... and that human- no, he couldn't have been human! No human could resist-
Karpoq stumbled as he turned a corridor, his ears hearing the approaching whine of one or more of those petaQ flying objects which had killed Rocut, Kusq and Mucir. He was drawing his disruptor-
When it flew from his hand as if smacked from it, sending it hurtling down the corridor.
A huge, shadowy figure stepped up to him from nowhere. Karpoq drew his blade from his belt, snarling his challenge. "
Veqlargh! qaDta'bogh veqlargh jIH!"
And that was when the silver Spheres caught up with him, two soaring through the air, hooked blades emerging from the front of each of them, swiftly impaling his forearms into the wall behind him.
Agony shot through Karpoq, making him drop his blade. No! NO! He needed to die with his blade in his hand! This was- this was-
The humanoid figure stepped up: a tall man, pale and ancient and wrinkled, dressed in generic plain dark civilian clothes, with receding grey hair and a penetrating gaze. He spoke with a voice that was like dirt shovelled into a burial pit. "You played a good game, Klingon. But the game is over. Still... you earned a reward for entertaining me. And so I give you... Revelation."
Karpoq felt the blood pour from his wounds where the Spheres had penetrated his arms. But he would not be made to beg! He would die with honour! "
Qaj!'etlh Hinob!"
The Tall Man raised an eyebrow, before glancing down, seeing Karpoq's dropped mek'leth blade. He bent down, picked it up, and seemed to regard its sharp, curved, pronged features, as he continued to speak. "The Revelation is this: there is no Sto-Vo-Kor. No Heaven, no Vorta Vor, no Celestial Temple, no Divine Treasury, no Great Forest, no Gloried Way After."
He snapped the mek'leth blade like a twig, and threw the pieces aside.
And then he leaned in, his voice becoming almost intimate. "When you die... you come to us..."
And then, Karpoq felt fear.
"And now... time to die..."
*
This wasn't right...
Captain Esek Hrelle stirred from his place on the floor, feeling a chill through his uniform, his fur, down through his skin to his bones, and deeper. Cold, uncaring air clutched him, reached into his lungs, a stale, musty, ancient air, complementary to the unkind darkness that not even his Caitian night vision could overcome. "Hello?"
His voice echoed; his ears did what his eyes didn't, taking in his surroundings: a long, narrow corridor, made of polished stone, narrow and tall and going on for endless lengths.
A crackle: flames, eating at fuel.
The rustle of thick curtains.