"You do realize that you are wrong," Commodore Marcus Mohab sighed.
"Of course not," came the reply of one of his many freighter captains. "I have never been wrong."
Marcus made a motion to one of his officers, barely perceptible to anyone. "Very well then. How long are you going to live?"
"What kind of question is that? Certainly longer not working for you!"
"How long are you going to live?" Marcus repeated "Give me a time, weeks? Months? You're never wrong, so tell me how much time you have to live."
The captain grimaced as he was informed of the General Lee's power signature. Three photon tubes were powering up. "Apparently, not as long as I would like to. Fine, I concede. We'll leave the minerals there until after we're done. But the profits..."
"Are not important," Marcus interrupted. "We're here for salvaging the Unity fleet, nothing more, nothing less."
"Understood, out," came the begrudging reply.
How many more? Marcus thought. How many times will that happen? Three hundred ships, all from Mohab Galactic Salvage Company, spanned the expanse of what was now known as the Unity Trail, each salvaging ships, parts, people, logs... it was a tedious process. It was hard knowing that so many had died here; so many wasted beings gone without hope. For the past five years the expedition had scoured the Trail, searching for remains of ships. Hundreds of different ships had been identified, and even strange things had been seen. The saucer of the starship Geneva was found, and a very grateful crew finally returned home. The boom of the Klingon warship Defiance of Death was also found, towing the remains of an Andromedan ship. The captain of the boom expressed a great desire to destroy the andro, even though it was long dead and the weapons left on the boom were long since burned out. Marcus obliged, allowing the Klingons to destroy it from the General Lee. The boom was salvaged as payment, and all were happy.
The plan was, at first, to enter the Trail and salvage everything of value, and resale it back to its owners, selling Andromedan equipment to the highest bidder. This was quickly followed by plan B, as all the Unity races wanted the goodies that the Andromenans left, but even with the Greatest Peace, none were willing to allow a "national" race sole access to the Trail, thus they all hired Marcus. Mohab Galactic Salvage Company was formed, and over two hundred freighters, ore ships, processors and mobile factories were donated, including crews and supplies for an extended stay on the Trail.
Each of the major races, except the Tholians, donated used warships for protection, and the Federation donated the General Lee, or rather, the major parts for her. Marcus had been a dabbler with Federation designs, and he was most noted for assisting the development of the Tactical Saucer Separation System, allowing newer Federation ships the ability to separate into their two halves and rejoin again without needing overhaul or repairs. The first of the system went into the older Excelsior class ships and her sister classes. The General Lee's secondary hull was that of an even older New Jersey class, and one of the first improved with this design. The saucer was donated by the GSX2 Darwin, although it was not the same Darwin that discovered the Andromedan Rapid Transit Network so long ago. The GSX2 (Advanced X2 Galactic Survey Cruiser) saucer shared a virtually identical docking layout as the standard New Jersey saucer, so the fit up was easy, and post-dock trials confirmed that a saucer separation and reattachment could easily be done. The warp engines were donated from a failed experimental warp ship based on the Excelsior class. The warp core also came from this ship, and these two together managed to provide adequate, although often short, power. After a few modifications to the power distribution system, warp drive and the addition of secondary hull impulse engines eventually gave birth to the BCSX (Advanced Survey Battle Cruiser) General Lee, often referred to at Utopia Planitia as the Frankenship. Marcus liked the lettering, and had, in place of the Starfleet "NCC", "BCSX-01" painted on the hull.
Marcus Mohab's involvement in the Federation and Starfleet more or less ended there, he got his money, his ship and his new company. Since then, he never really looked back, almost always ahead, on the Trail. Occasionally, he'd receive a letter from his twin brother, Commodore Jacob Mohab of the Starship Agamemnon, keeping him more or less up to date, but other then that he could care less about home. This is home now, he'd thought.
"Interesting," the tactical officer, Lieutenant Mindy Meyers said. "I'm picking up a disturbance at extreme long range... I can't make out yet exactly who or what."
"Very well, Mindy," Marcus replied. "Helm, go to."
The helmsman, Robert Wright, acknowledged and the ship lurched forward at a steady pace, eventually entering warp speed for two minutes, then dropped back to impulse. "We have arrived," Robert said, almost emotionless.
"Its an Andromedan signature, I'm sure of it," Mindy said, almost frustrated with her sensor panel. "Its in and out, almost like a bad cloak... Wait a second, its holographic... Correcting... On screen now, sir."
On the viewscreen, empty space was replaced by a heavily damaged Dominator. "Helm, make it look like we're still looking for them," Marcus barked. He trotted behind the bridge rail and headed to Mindy's station. "Magnify and analyze this spot, here... It looks like a piece of a Federation hull panel inbedded in its hull."
Mindy stared at her panel a moment. "Quite correct. Our computer has given us a specific hull, too... its a piece of..."
Mindy was cut off by a sudden explosion, and the sounding of the ships 'red alert' klaxon. "Andromedan has insufficient weapons power to do serious harm, unless we do nothing."
"Shane, see if we can talk to this one."
Shane Freund, the communications officer, grumbled. "Whatever, sir." Marcus, personally, never really hated anyone, but the fact that the crew hated Shane so much was the only reason he was still part of the crew. Shane was fat, lazy, smelly and a terrible story teller. Marcus couldn't resist, however, the dual torture of keeping him, and even allowed him these disrespectful tones. As long as Shane was on board, the crew was threatened with the possibility of having a Shane twin, and Shane was tormented by his crew mates.
"Just push the damn button Shane!" Eric Moore, the engineer, yelled
"Button pushed, your highness!" The ship rocked gently under the Andromedan fire. "No other response to our hail."
"You push the right button?" Eric asked.
"End that chatter, you two," Marcus interrupted. "Mindy, you were saying about the hull fragment?"
Mindy looked at him grimly. "Its two fragments. Hyperion and Agamemnon"