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Sickbay – Is it Hot in Here? [TAG: Captain; CMO]

Posted April 17, 2022, 2:52 p.m. by Lieutenant Commander T’Aria (XO / Navigation Officer) (Trin S)

Posted by Ensign Kastarak (Doctor) in Sickbay – Is it Hot in Here? [TAG: Captain; CMO]

Posted by Lieutenant Commander T’Aria (XO / Navigation Officer) in Sickbay – Is it Hot in Here? [TAG: Captain; CMO]

Posted by Ensign Kastarak (Doctor) in Sickbay – Is it Hot in Here? [TAG: Captain; CMO]
Posted by… suppressed (4) by the Post Ghost! 👻
(Snip!)

Kastarak listened carefully to every word coming from T’Aria. Had he functioned neuropsychologically and executively better at this point, he might have noticed the conflict of frustration and logic in T’Aria, though now Kastarak only noticed some neuropsychological dysfunction. It appeared to him thus that there were similar experiences between them as how the viral infection behaved.

“As you said, co–” (he was about to say “commander”), “–lleague, we have determined that the virus behaves like an influenza-like virus. We have determined how it binds itself to Vulcan cells and infects them. While we could easily use this information and device an antiviral treatment for you and me, or a vaccination for the other Vulcans on board, the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.”

“The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few,” T’Aria muttered. Those words were her T’Kuht – her ‘north star’ – and served as a stark reminder of their commitment to logic. They centred her. When those words touched Kastarak’s lips, she expected to find some solace within them, but she sensed only a tightness swelling in her chest. Naturally, dismissed it as another symptom of their flu.

Kastarak paused.

“We must consider the safety of our non-Vulcan crewmembers. They outnumber us by far. Let us begin simulating the virus’s behaviour on cells from other species, beginnign with the largest one onboard, Humans, and then in order of magnitude. It should not take too long, provided we are able to function properly.”

“Of course…” T’Aria winced and seized the ledge, squeezing until her knuckles turned a sallow green. The dizziness came without warning. T’Aria urged the world into stillness, her breath trembling, but it resisted her commands. Focus. She screwed her eyes shut and concentrated on her thumping heart, slowing its rhythm until the dizziness subsided. Her body groaned in protest – self-preservation threatening her already dwindling energy reserved – but T’Aria turned to Kastarak and said: “I’ll begin simulations.”

Kastarak coughed. It was painful, and his mucus had a deep green hue to it. Could it be blood? Had he coughed that hard?

T’Aria caught the faint green hue in Kastarak’s mucus. Blood? Dead white blood cells washed out with the infection? There were deceivingly infinite possibilities. “Is your nose unusually dry?” She asked upon stepping closer to offer a swab to examine the substance.

“Yes, yours as well?” said Kastarak, as he swabbed his nose. Why did T’Aria want him to swab his nose? It’s dry, what was she expecting to find…?

Apparently, because of the swabbing of his unusually dry nose, now his nose was bleeding.

Just what he needed.

“No,” T’Aria reached for a sterile cloth and exchanged it for his swab, which she ran through the adjacent computer. Then, she sanitised her hands and approached the cabinet to retrieve a small device that she would later supply with synthesized saline. Saltwater. “This should reintroduce moisture into your nasal membrane,” she inspected the device before handing it to him, “and stop the bleeding.”

She expected the computer would conclude little about Kastarak’s sample beyond the presence of blood and virus, but it was a non-invasive way to assess the strength of his immune response. She hoped her concern was not so evident to Kastarak as her. There were many nights of meditation ahead of her, T’Aria suspected.

“I have not received any reply from either the Chief Medical Officer or from the Captain. Surely the imposition of quarantine on this office cannot block out communications?”

– Dr/Ens Kastarak

“No—” her words were instantly cut off by a whistling comm panel.

Chris was on the bridge watching a solar nebula when he got the call. “Absolutely stunning!” Pressingthe com [O] Chris here. I’m fine Doctor Do you need me down there to assist? [O]

Captain Chris Taggart CO

Kastarak replied, [o] Thank you, captain. We will keep you advised of any developments, or if should we require extra staff or resources to aid us.[/o]

– Dr Kastarak

While Kastarak conferred with Taggart, T’Aria extrapolated a breakdown of the species aboard Chernov. She selected the most populous – humans – and ran simulations in decreasing order. Humans: negative. She continued down the list. Andorians: negative. Tellarites: negative. Caitians: negative. Eventually, the computer exhausted the manifest at the foot of their Orion crewmembers. And they, like those before, yielded a promising “negative” followed by a percentage so small that T’Aria thought it almost negligible.

“Aside from Vulcans,” T’Aria wandered over and extended a data-loaded PaDD to Kastarak, “there are no other species aboard Chernov who face an imminent threat from this virus. The data, of course, does not account for mutations; nevertheless, I suspect our isolation and the recency of our discovery have limited the possibility considerably. Have you checked your temperature recently?”

— Dr. T’Aria

“No… But I feel hotter. Are you?” Why did T’Aria show concern for him by asking that? The main point was that most of the crew would be immune. Only the handful of Vulcans onboard would be at risk, and with some probability of safety, the risk for other Vulcans would be low. This flu had a fast incubation period, it appeared, and no other information of any sickly Vulcan colleagues. Perhaps this was it.

“Warmer…” T’Aria agreed, but she could not assess whether fatigue weakened her resistance to the fever’s heat or their fevers overwhelmed their internal cooling. “We’ve narrowed the threat to Vulcans,” she added in a gesture to the tricorder neglected to a nearby chair, “I suggest we now focus on mending ourselves. We will be of little help if we are fully incapacitated.”

The question was how had T’Aria caught it? How had it got onboard? Why was she affected, but not Symar? He had been down on the planet too. He decided not to ask this question. Somehow, he sensed something about T’Aria and Symar, something that she was not telling. But what this telepathic transference? Was it counter-transference? Was it that Kastarak perhaps had some underlying emotion about his manager? Symar had not been present in Sickbay for a while, was Kastarak really just annoyed by that, and that he projected those emotions on T’Aria – or did T’Aria somehow have feelings that somehow he sensed?

There were too many emotions right now. Kastarak tried putting them aside.

“My abilities to suppress emotional experience seem to be going away. I am really tired. How is your emotional control?”

– Ens/Dr Kastarak

As her body weakened, she felt the tug of her emotions intensify, chipping away at her resolve, and it deeply disturbed her. T’Aria already lacked the emotional control of her Vulcan relative. Though she toiled with meditation and mental discipline, neither was enough.

“Rovalat,” she recalled the eerie calm Prisu adopted as she eased onto the cushion near enough for T’Aria to attend her lecture but never relish her warmth. “Breathe with me,” her grandmother would command, “we will soothe your mind together.” T’Aria narrowly resisted the instinct to hover her palms over where Prisu’s would rest, patiently awaiting her surrender. There had been countless incidents, she recalled, where she dashed from the learning centre to their rural family home in tear-ridden frustration. Prisu never once asked why, nor offered her embrace, but somehow T’Aria sensed a trace of compassion beneath her apathy. That sensation may have been little more than childish hope, but it encouraged her to give in and seek her grandmother’s support, even when her ‘gut’ insisted she was sacrificing more than her emotion but a piece of herself. Prisu was not there to redirect her – she hadn’t been for sixteen years.

T’Aria hadn’t appreciated Prisu’s lectures and intense “exercises” until control slipped through her fingers. Her tools failed. Her mask threatened to dissolve before Kastarak. And right now, despite the apparent calm in her trained expression, she never felt so vulnerable.

“I…” T’Aria lingered on the edge of a lie but resisted, “I find it increasingly difficult to regulate my emotions.” There was more to say where their emotions were concerned, but she did not see the point in wasting time on what was already turbulent territory for Vulcans. “If you need to rest, rest.” He seemed to be losing energy quicker than she was and, given their condition, that served to motivate and concern her. “We must conserve our energy, so it seems logical that we take turns synthesising a treatment. What do you think?”

— T’Aria


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