INSANE INSIDE
The Saga
Know Thine Enemy.
The Morningstar Strain: Plague of
the Dead
is available at all major
online booksellers:

Amazon (US) - (UK) - (CAN) - (GER)
Barnes and Noble
Horror Mall

Borders has also stocked Plague of
the Dead
in their brick-and-mortar
stores, so keep an eye out for it next
time you're out shopping!

The Morningstar Strain: Thunder
and Ashes
is available at all major
online booksellers:

Amazon (US) - (UK) - (CAN) - (GER)
Barnes and Noble
Horror Mall

From the bottom of my soul, I thank
you all for reading. I wish you the
best on your adventures into a world
overrun by the undead.
What is the "Morningstar Strain"? The short answer: it's a virus.

The long answer is a bit more complicated.

The Morningstar Strain is a filovirus--that is, a 'thread-like' virus.
Filoviruses are among the world's deadliest and most mysterious
organisms, and scientists are only recently learning the details of
them.

All viruses have a point of origin. That is, there is a place on the
planet that they call "home." In the case of Morningstar, its home is
the Congo river basin. Where in the basin? No one knows. No one
knows how it got out of the basin and into the general population.

The most likely explanation is that it jumped species. Viruses are
able to live in certain species without harming them, and form a kind
of natural equilibrium with the host. The host never becomes
symptomatic, and the virus lives on in its new mobile home. As the
virus multiplies and dies inside the host, many generations pass.
Over the generations, the virus will begin to mutate, taking on new
characteristics.  

The Morningstar Strain most likely lived in a host similar to that of a
human being--a primate. A monkey, gorilla, orangutan--any could
have carried the virus for years without falling ill. As the primate
lived, the virus mutated inside it. Perhaps a human being captured
one, or killed one, or had fecal matter thrown on him by an
ill-tempered monkey from a tree branch. The virus found a new
host--one that was entirely susceptible to its new genetic structure.

As the human host left the jungle with the virus in his or her
bloodstream, things would begin to pick up speed. The virus would
begin to multiply, spreading to the areas of the body it prefers. In the
case of Morningstar, the brain, mouth, genitals, and heart are the
preferred organs, in that order.

It takes a little over a week before any symptoms become apparent.

The host becomes contagious around day three. The obvious
epidemiological problems should be all too apparent--the host
wanders among people for four to seven days with the capability to
spread the virus, but while showing no symptoms of any kind. Factor
in that a filovirus is very hard to detect unless one knows what they
are looking for, and you have a recipe for disaster.

By day eight or nine after initial infection, the host develops a bad
headache, and begins to suffer from unpredictable mood swings,
usually negative in nature. Day ten to eleven brings out advancing
symptoms including a dangerously high fever, which begins to burn
the victim's brain from the inside. They fall into a kind of trance, and
begin to lose their capacity for higher thought.

By day thirteen, most victims have succumbed fully. At this point,
they are completely in the grip of the virus. They become openly
hostile to anything around them that is alive and uninfected. They will
attack without warning, but the attack is a feral and undisciplined
one. They will attempt to scratch or bite their victims, and though a
single attacker rarely kills his victim outright (the sight of a victim's
blood seems to calm them), a group of infected persons could quite
literally tear a person to pieces.

There is a concept known as "fevered strength." In essence, a
person running a high fever is working on adrenaline and lacks the
capacity for doubt or rationality. A carrier of the Morningstar Strain
who has made hostile overtures towards you WILL attack, and when
he or she does so, it will be with fevered strength. They are swift,
deadly, and have lost the capacity for remorse or regret.

It should be noted at this point that there are two separate incubation
periods for the disease. The week-long method described above is
pertinent only if the victim is infected through fluid contact such as
sexual intercourse, eating contaminated foods, or a minor scratch or
cut.

If a victim is badly bitten or scratched, or if a sufficient amount of
virus is introduced to the victim's body, the incubation period is
substantially reduced. What takes a week through normal methods
of infection is reduced to a matter of hours through traumatic
introduction of the virus.

Once the virus has achieved dominance in its host, it begins a series
of subtle changes to the physiology of the host. The metabolic
system is slowed, and the host no longer needs to sleep, eat, or
drink as much as he or she did when uninfected. In addition, the
virus seems to cause the body's unneeded tissues (some fats,
certain muscles and organs) to begin producing the needed amino
acids necessary to fuel the body itself. In essence, the virus feeds its
host, keeping it alive as long as possible.

And now, we come to the most interesting aspect of the Morningstar
Strain.

The host cannot live forever. At some point, it will die, either from
exposure, exhaustion, heatstroke, violence, et al. At this time, the
virus finds itself threatened. Without a host, it too will die. The need
to spread to a new host rises to the top priority. It ceases metabolic
tinkering and begins using remaining energy to fire synapses in the
brain tissue of the host.

Anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours after death, the host
reanimates.

It is no longer human. Rather, it is merely an automated corpse,
running on autopilot, controlled indirectly by the virus. The actions of
the corpse are motor reflexes spurred by the commands of the viral
infection. Victims who have reached this stage are easy to identify.
As the virus has concentrated its efforts on the brain, and as the
body itself is dead, the unneccesary tissues begin to decay. Skin,
hair, and internal organs with the exception of the heart and lungs
suffer decay at a normal rate. The virus concentrates itself in the
organs it needs and continues metabolic tinkering, preserving the
brain, heart, and lungs for as long as possible.

The zombies--now that the host has died, the term becomes more
suitable than 'carrier' or 'host'--move slowly, with a distinctive, almost
drunken, shambling walk. They behave in much the same manner as
their living brethren, only much less dextrously. They are still openly
hostile, and twice as repulsive. As they decay, they may leak bodily
fluids. These fluids are teeming with the virus.

The host goes on either living or undead until the brain is destroyed,
disabling the virus' method of controlling the host.
The Morningstar Strain
Victims lose the capacity for rational
thought and will attack on sight.
Studies into the Morningstar Strain
have led to several researcher
casualties.
Not even Biosafety Level 4 precautions
can guarantee safety when working
with Morningstar.