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Interregnum 01-02 S2 / Re: Day 09 [15:30 hrs,] Once Upon the Island
Last post by P.C. Haring -Hathev had lost count of the Klingons on the beach as she had been both gunning them down and creating a literal line in the sand that dared anyone to cross. She thought she had seen one of the Klingons disappear. She could not immediately determine whether it had been under her fire or some kind of transporter beam. So when the ship pulled away from the beach and it became apparent that their Klingon pursuers could do so no longer, she stepped down from the turret and froze.
In the briefest of moments, Hathev saw Cross laying on the deck, blood oozing from a head wound and a Klingon approaching her, a blunt weapon dripping in green blood in his raised hand as it swung down towards her own skull.
Time continued to move at a standstill to her perception. She saw the site to site transporter beacon on his belt, the adornment of his armor and she knew this was the Klingon commander. The one who had led the raid, the one who had ruined their vacation, who might have killed Cross, and who wanted to kill her now.
Logic told her how to react, what movement she should make, and the most efficient way to subdue the attacker. But none of that mattered as something else happened to her. Something she did not expect…
Hathev got angry.
As a Vulcan, Hathev experienced the deep and intense level of rage and anger that had almost destroyed her people. She had learned to control it through logic and discipline. Since her mind meld with Cross, her ability to exercise that control had been compromised and while she had been able to more or less keep it in check until now. Even so, she needed to acknowledge and accept that her emotional self would never again be fully silenced. But in this moment, this blink of time, anger and a growing sense of rage boiled her own green blood.
Her right hand shot up, catching the wrist wielding the war hammer and stopping him cold. He seemed surprised by her defense but even as he pushed against her with increased force, she immobilized his attack. Her elbow locked, her leg kicked back bracing her.
“Klingon P’tahk,” she spat, her eyes narrowing
He reached for the dagger at his belt, his hand barely gripping it before the closed fist of her free hand smacked it away, sending the blade overboard.
“I…”
The Klingon tried for a head butt but he telegraphed his movement too clearly and the Vulcan side stepped the attack. The Klingon’s momentum worked against him and he stumbled forward. Hathev held her grip on the captured wrist and twisted the arm until the joint gave a satisfying pop and the Klingon growled in pain as his hand released the war hammer.
“...have had…”
His bad arm hanging limp at his side, the Klingon tried to swing wildly at her. Hathev ducked and caught eye of the transporter beacon on his belt. He lunged for her again as her hand clamped down on his collar bone and squeezed.
“…enough of…”
The nerve pinch was not as effective on Klingons as it was humans, but it was enough to slow him down long enough for her to tear the beacon from his belt and throw it to the deck behind her. He found enough strength to bat her arm away. The motion turned Hathev in her place momentarily putting her back to him and giving him the time he needed to recover and come at her again.
“…YOU!!!”
In the motion of her spin, she had come around, her hand gripping the handle of the Klingon’s fallen war hammer. She continued the circular motion using her momentum to her advantage as she swung upward at him.
Metal and flesh collided with a sickening crunch as the hammer smashed through the Klingon’s jaw sending flesh, blood and bone flying. Hathev followed through with a second strike. His head recoiled with another crunch as he staggered back, his momentum taking him the rail and overboard.
He did not scream or call out as he fell. Hathev surmised he might have been dead from the broken bones in his jaw and neck before he hit the water.
She stood there, her chest heaving, as she forced herself to push the anger and rage back into its proper place. Red Klingon blood mixed with the green Vulcan blood on the hammer in her hand turning both into an ugly shade of brown.
The weapon fell to the deck with a loud thunk and she remembered that Cross had been injured. Calm control returned to her and she rushed to his side and checked him. As they did with humans. Vulcan head wounds bled far worse than almost any other and so it was difficult to assess just how badly he’d been hurt just by a visual assessment. He was awake and groggy, and she was able to assess that his upper spine had not been injured so she deemed it safe to move him.
Even so she was not cavalier as she lifted him in her arms, carried him into the on deck cabin, and set him gently down on the bed which, much to her surprise, actually included a mattress.
She found some old garments in the wardrobe which she was more than happy to tear apart to use as a wipe to staunch the blood and give her time to find a medical kit.
Rudimentary by Starfleet standards the kit contained a medical tricorder and what looked to be the proper tools to put her first aid skills to use. The tricorder indicated no concussion. Training kicked in and she found the Klingon equivalent of the medication needed to stabilize him. She dosed the medication and then applied the dermal regenerator to the wound to close it.
She set the tricorder to a continuous scan while she washed herself up and ruffled through the wardrobe. She pulled out a piece, a black body suit with silver armor across the front. It was sized just smaller than her preference, but she suspected it would fit well enough and she slipped into it while waiting for Cross to wake.