Starting to get crazy... and by Thunderbolt I am referencing the unmade Star Fleet PF (from SFB) and not the Federation's destroyer class of the same name.
Marcus sat in his vibrating chair, watching the view screen and the Agamemnon as they raced towards the destiny coordinates at warp eight. Agamemnon wasn’t as fast as she used to be, and with all of her improvements, the power consumption ultimately slowed the vessel. Marcus didn’t mind too much, the slower warp speed allowed him to enjoy the now bearable vibrations and get a good massage out of the deal. “Extreme long range scanners detecting something,” Mindy broke the silence, “I can’t make it out exactly, but it appears to be… big.”
“How big is it?” Marcus replied, swiveling around to face his tactical officer. The thought never really occurred to him that the bridge crews, despite being all civilian, were his officers, until now.
“Well, ginormous would be a good word to explain it. It registers a power curve that goes off the charts.”
“Eric, can you help and recalibrate the charts?” Marcus turned to face the engineering console.
“I’ll do what I can,” the engineer replied. Standing up, he added, “Could you join me at the science station?” Marcus stood up and the pair went to the science station at the aft of the bridge.
“Shane,” Marcus spoke as Eric sat down. “Contact Agamemnon, would you?”
“Channel open,” the communications man spoke.
“Admiral George, here,” the cat’s voice sounded over the bridge speakers.
“Admiral,” Marcus started. “We’re picking up a rather large installation with a power curve we’ve never seen before. I know you’re sensors are not as far seeing as ours, so we are going to patch you through to what we have.”
“I appreciate the gesture, but we are just now picking it up for ourselves. We’ll take the sensor link if you wish, perhaps to share data?”
“Consider it done. Glad to see you back in the big seat. General Lee out. Mindy, get Sandra and Ben up here, go to yellow alert.”
“Commodore Mohab to the bridge!” the cat started. “Yellow alert, mister Edwards. Helm, stand by to take us out of warp.” George stood silently in the middle of the bridge, arms folded behind his back and tail twitching. He hated the fact that on this ship, any chair that he might sit upon, there was nowhere for his tail to go. A serious design flaw in his mind, but then again, the only cats that served in Star Fleet were pets.
“Sir,” Edwards said from his tactical panel. “Sensor data from General Lee indicates over six hundred vessels being held in suspension. One Andromedan Battle Station is located at the far end of the field. No visible activity from this range.”
“Any way to pinpoint where the power is coming from for the array?” asked Commander Patricia O’Neil, the ship’s executive officer.
“General Lee is working to recalibrate their sensors to find it, ma’am.”
With a swish of turbo lift doors, Jacob entered the bridge. “Any good news?”
“No,” the admiral replied. “A lot of not so good news, though.”
“Flagg, drop us to warp one, take us over that center prong, there.” Jacob pointed at the screen, and took the center seat.
“Aye, sir,” the helmsman responded. “Helm answers warp one.”
“General Lee is following.”
“Thank you mister Edwards,” George responded. "Commodore Mohab, you have the bridge.”
“If you insist,” Jacob replied with a smile. “You were doing such a fine job.”
George’s eye caught something on the screen. He moved closer towards the giant viewer and gasped, “Great Maker… They’re there!”
“Who’s where?” O’Neil asked.
“Jacob! Your father’s ship! I’d recognize it anywhere, and its here!” George pointed at the screen almost frantically with a clawed finger.
“Edwards?” Jacob asked.
“Vessel scans as Klingon, charlie seven class. Standard phaser and drone mounts, two disruptor mounts, two photon mounts… Unable to determine ship’s name or registry… wait… Mercenary Vessel Mohab’s Death Giver. No life sign readings, but several life forms on board. Sirs, the stasis field is messing with the scanners.”
“Fair enough. Flagg, take us over that ship. Edwards, can you target enough of the berth there to disable the field and free that ship?”
“I’m pretty sure I can.”
“Moving into position now,” Flagg added.
“Firing phasers one and two. Mooring linkages disabled.” The tactical panel screamed a warning at him. “Sirs,” he said a bit shakily, “We have incoming. The station was hiding them from us, but one Intruder class and one Dominator class are now visible. Moving very slowly towards us, less than… Sirs, this is odd, neither vessel has engines powered, no crew signs, nothing.”
“Red alert mister Edwards,” O’Neil ordered.
“I’m going to take a shuttle and a small crew of volunteers to your father’s ship,” George said above the wailing of the alert klaxon. “Cover me, and I recommend you deal with the threats out there before coming after me. I’ll blow the stasis generators locally.”
Before he could move off of the bridge, Marcus’s voice broke through the noise. “I know you too well, brother. I know you found our father’s ship and are probably going to send in a rescue party. We’ll cover any shuttlecraft that you launch, lets you and me put an end to the Andromedan threat in this galaxy. Launching a full squad of Thunderbolts and four fighters.”
“How did you get Thunderbolts?” Jacob asked his brother. “Star Fleet never made any.”
“No time to explain now, lets just leave it at we had some spare time and some spare parts while out on the trail. Having the designs didn’t hurt either.”
“Admiral, I believe you have a shuttle to catch?”
“Indeed I do. Thank you for the cover Marcus!”
“No thanks needed. Just get going. Jacob, our scanners are picking up increased power from the Andromedan ships. They may automated as a defense for the base since, well, there aren’t many Andro’s around anymore. We’ll take the bigger…”
“Negative, Marcus. Let’s take them together.”
The two warships took off towards their target, while a tiny shuttle and its ten escorts began to target and disable the stasis field holding the Death Giver captive. Several small explosions later, the shuttle signaled to the ship to open it’s main shuttle bay doors and began to land. The shuttle’s escorts peeled off to join in the battle that was soon to ensue. Death Giver was slow coming out of stasis and the shuttle bay door was barely open enough when George’s shuttle landed. With a hiss of escaping atmosphere, the shuttle’s door opened and emitted its crew. “Two to the engine room, two to the auxiliary control room and two with me to the bridge,” George started. He was cut off by the slow wail of the ship’s alert klaxon.
“I…n…t…ruder… ale…rt…!” spoke the ships computer as it woke from stasis. “Intruder alert main shuttle bay!”
“The crew will be reviving soon, so lets get to work and get this beast moving!” George and his two volunteers made their way to the main bridge, but slowly. Many parts of the ship were still in “wake up” mode as they traveled, hindering their progress. But eventually they made it to the bridge.
The sight there was slightly horrifying. An unrecognized human stood almost in the way of the rescue team’s entry to the bridge, frozen still in stasis, clutching his bloodied right forearm. On either side of him stood two burly humans, what looked to be security, also frozen. Standing near the bleeding human was Czar Mohab himself, and George paused to take an admiring gaze at him.
The turbo lift doors shut slowly, emphasizing that the ship wasn’t yet fully awake from its long slumber. George extended a soft-furred paw to touch the Czar’s face. “Sir,” one of his technicians interrupted him. “Computer is still coming online, but it looks like someone accessed it at the time it went into stasis.”
“Very well,” George replied, and stepped over to the engineering control panel, where he found Commodore Blood. “Excuse me, Commodore,” the cat said silently, and pawed the Klingon gently out of his way. “Engine room, report, please.”
“Jennison here sir,” came the female tech’s voice. “They initiated an emergency warp shutdown. It was in progress when they went into stasis. We are unable to stop it, but we should be able to restart the mains in about five minutes, maybe ten to full power. All other power systems are available.”
“Very good,” George pointed to one of his techs. “Take the helm and move us clear of the berth.” George strode over to the tactical panel. He paused a moment and picked up the fallen Vulcan, and propped her on the aft bulkhead. He continued his trek to the panel and poked a few buttons. “Ship is on-line,” he said to no one in particular. “The crew should be rousing shortly…”
“What do you mean there isn’t time?” Mohab asked. “Who the hell are you?” he asked, turning his attention to the Kzinti manning the tactical station. “And what are you doing on my ship?”
“Admiral Brown Tiger, Kzinti Hegemony, at your service sir,” the cat spoke, and disabled the intruder alarm. “We’re here to rescue you. You can call me George.”
“I didn’t expect to see a Kzinti,” Blood snarled. “But I am honored for the rescue.”
“The honor is mine,” George started, “and you are right sir, there isn’t time.”
“How many of you are there on board?” K’Tal asked, retaking her station.
“Six humans from Agamemnon, and myself, sir.”
“My old ship?” Mohab asked, surprised.
“Sir, there isn’t time right now.”
“Sir, our virus program failed,” K’Tal interrupted. “Two Andromedans and two Star Fleet vessels are engaged in combat…”
Jenkins, the helmsman, pushed the tech aside and resumed his post. “We are clear of our berth and moving on impulse only.”
“Very well,” Mohab said, retaking his command chair. “Talon, get to sick bay, and see if you can’t find what happened to the doc. K’Tal, is there any way to retransmit the virus program?”
“It appears that it was stopped by the stasis field. Fascinating, I can see where it stopped in transmit. We would have to send it directly to the base itself.”
“I’d recommend freeing some of these ships,” George started, “your sons will need all the help that they can get.”
“Not yet,” Mohab sighed. “We can assist in a better way.”
“Sandra, get to the battle bridge,” Marcus spoke in a frantic hurry. “All hands stand by for tactical saucer separation.”
“On my way, sir,” the executive officer replied, and headed towards the lift.
“Targets are on a program,” Mindy started, “reading transmissions from the Andromedan base… still no life signs on any Andromedan vessel.”
“It has to be a self defense program. Once the two sections are clear, power down our phasers to minimal and start using sensor channels to jam those transmissions.”
“Targets are focusing their attacks on Agamemnon.”
“Because they don’t know yet what to make of us. Hail the Agamemnon and have them break off and regroup with the Death Giver, we can hold these two. Helm, once we’re stable, take us towards the base.”
“Sir!” cried the voice of Josh Peterson, the communications officer. “General Lee ordering us to disengage and regroup with Death Giver. Message ends with ‘We can hold these two’.”
“Very well, comms,” Jacob replied. The bridge shook again as yet another phaser hit struck the weakening shields. “Mister Edwards, fire all available weapons as we turn away.”
“Helm,” O’Neil interrupted, “bring us around for one more pass.”
“Sir!” Edwards shouted “General Lee has performed emergency saucer separation!”
“Hah!” Jacob replied “Clam down Edwards, they meant to do that.”
“Sir, Agamemnon disengaging from battle and heading towards us,” K’Tal reported.
“What is the status on the warp drive?” George asked.
“Engine room reports they are restarting now, sir.” K’Tal moved her hands like lightning over her panel. The image on the view screen changed to the Andromedan base. “Sirs, unidentified vessel has begun jamming the base.”
“That would be the General Lee,” George stated calmly. It was odd to him that finally he was given the chance to sit in a chair with a space for his tail, and he didn’t really want to. The proffered chair was really Blood’s, and it would be disrespectful to take it. He watched in silent awe as the Klingon remained at the engineering console.
“Admiral, sit please,” Mohab ordered the cat. “You’re making me nervous. K’Tal, can you send the virus program yet?”
“As soon as we are closer, the jamming will cause interference.”
“Helm, make best speed to the station, warp speed when it’s available. George! Sit, please!”
George sat finally, beside his long time hero, and soaked up the moment. “Your sons, Marcus and Jacob, followed the instructions that you left for them. And I will have something for you when the time is right.”
Mohab looked at the cat, but didn’t speak. Stars outside streaked as the ship accelerated briefly to warp. Blasts of red phasers licked at the front shield and rocked the ship. “K’Tal?”
“General Lee saucer section moving in and distracting the base. We are in range, sending program… Base received program…” Her panel beeped a warning, and on the screen, the station began to tremble. “We are reading massive power fluctuations from the base. Main reactors on overload…It is going to blow, sir.”
“Helm, get us the hell out of here!”
“Initiating, ‘getting us the hell out of here’ maneuver,” Jenkins replied.
“General Lee saucer moving away,” K’Tal reported. “Agamemnon is following us out.”
“Get us clear of everything, this is going to be one big boom,” Blood said.
George sighed silently in the seat. He closed his eyes and extended ten sharp and deadly looking claws from his fingers, and dug them deep into the armrests. He reached out with his mind, touching the station and the ships. The battle outside froze, stars stopped streaking, and calmness permeated the ambiance of the bridge. “And now my gift to you, great sir!”
“Alpha Four disabled, sir!” Mindy cried out. “Patrol Three destroyed, Patrol One is tractoring Alpha Four back to the barn.”
“Are we in range for transporting the life pod from Three?” Marcus asked.
“We are, lowering shield four, transport successful. Sensor channels two and four powered, commencing jamming.” On the view screen, the two Andromedan warships shuddered. The drive section of the General Lee moved in towards the larger of the two, striking it with six overloaded photons and a full salvo of phasers, a hit that would devastate a normal vessel, but the Andromedan took the attack and asked for more. With its attacker distracted, the Intruder moved in towards the saucer, and fired at the closest of the small patrol ships. The shot caused the small ship to explode in a brilliant flash, and the Andromedan kept moving. “Sir, Patrol Six destroyed.”
“No satellite ships…” Marcus commented. Before he could finish his thought, the two Andromedan ships stopped suddenly in place. “Wow, we got lucky, the program must have run out.”
“Death Giver moving towards the base, Agamemnon is following.”
“Continue jamming the station, if they are going to do what I think that they are…” His words were interrupted by the sight on the screen. Death Giver never faltered on its course towards the station, while taking a full salvo. In a short moment, the two ships turned away. “Ben?”
“Looks to me like they sent in a virus program,” the science officer said calmly, and then with a little more alarm, “stations going to go, and soon, better get clear now.”
“Move us away, best speed!”
“Now we sit in silence,” George started, “Trapped in the moment between moments.”
“Okay,” Mohab replied. “What have you done?”
“My people used to claim this sector of space, before the Andromedans moved in.”
“There’s never been any evidence of Kzinti explorations out this far, let alone settlements.” Mohab looked around the bridge, everything was frozen, the lights, the crew, everything, except him and George.
“You may have guessed by now that I am not truly Kzinti.” George paused a moment to regain his concentration. “Most of our race has evolved past using these shells, these bodies… We traveled the stars, free from form, as energy and as thought…” He paused again, and clamped his eyes shut. “Holding so much is tiring,” he commented through clenched teeth. “We must hurry. I took this form so I could maneuver myself to your side. Admiral Brown Tiger is no more than a farce.”
“I don’t understand, if you can stop time, why couldn’t you destroy the Andromedans here?”
“We had no ships, and no way of directly interacting with the Andromedans… They destroyed the first ones to return here, and stole our home world, our technology. You were the only one,” George paused and gasped with the struggle. “The only one we noticed that knew of this place. I had to help you to destroy the installation, had to help everyway I could.”
“You can control time, so why not just stop time here and take them apart?”
“We tried, but the base…” George screamed. “The base was blocking us, using our home to power their stasis… our stasis generators. They kept us away, until now. We started this collection, and it was our mistake...” On the screen, everything that was to be seen stuttered, and George winced in agony. “Soon, my people will return, they will assist me, in sending you back.”
“How far back are you talking here? What if I like it here and now?”
“Forty-five years… We can control time that much… But this time you must not fail, there will be no second chances… Send the virus as soon as you arrive!”
George’s voice faded, as did the space outside. General Lee, Agamemnon, the station, everything faded to nothingness. “Your final gift from us,” George’s voice sounded in his ears, distant and dreamy, “is your memories. Serve us well.” The cat’s voice faded, and the bridge returned to normal, forty-five years prior.
Czar "grrr... 20000 again..." Mohab