The outdated hospital ships never stood a chance.
The three Jem’Hadar attack ships struck with lightning-quick speed, and unmatched ferocity. It didn’t matter to them that the two ships were obsolete. That they were barely armed with minimal shields. Nor that they were crewed by civilian medics and scientists.
All that mattered to them was the orders of the Founders. Orders that stated these ships were to be obliterated to make way for the Dominion.
They would not fail their Gods.
Polaron beams burned the hulls of both ships. The
Keller, a
Miranda-class ship that had once seen service during the heyday of the 2320s, was surprisingly nimble for a ship of advanced years. Thanks to the quick actions of their pilot, the vessel was able to break orbit and take evasive maneuvers.
However, it wasn’t fast enough for a single shot to wing the starboard nacelle. Plasma began venting out into space, trailing behind the
Keller as it bobbed and weaved around incoming fire.
The
Medusa, a 70-year old, boxy and compact former transport ship, was nowhere near as fortunate. A succession of energy blasts to their impulse drive crippled the
Sydney-class ship, leaving only thrusters to get the ship moving.
The Jem’Hadar, as if smelling the blood of their injured prey, went in for the kill. One attack ship pushed on after the
Keller, who was unable to help their comrade, their own limited shields and weapons useless against Dominion armaments. All they could hope for was to outpace or outsmart their smaller, fiercer opponent until help could arrive.
The other two fighters viciously pounded the weakening hull of the
Medusa with an assortment of polaron blasts and plasma torpedoes. The shields long gone, jagged cracks formed in the hull as atmospheric integrity was breached. The strut of the port nacelle gave way under the intense assault, snapping clean off and spinning out into space.
Still the assault continued, as the crews on both Jem’Hadar ships relished their imminent victory of the pitifully-weak craft…
…until the massive form of the
Galaxy-class
Starship Tempest abruptly dropped out of warp and unleashed its own impressive weapons payload.
The volley of quantum torpedoes and phaser blasts the vessel launched made quick work of one of the attack fighters. The remaining one taunting the
Medusa quickly broke away, redirecting its fire towards the much larger threat now off their stern.
Their beams impacted the shields, which seemed to have little to no effect visible to the outside viewer.
Inside was another story.
“Continue firing, Mr. Ravin! Don’t lose them, helm!”
Marcus Doyle edged forward in his command chair, gritting his teeth in private anguish and supreme fury. His gamble had paid off, but were they in time?
The in-system warp jump had been a risky maneuver, but Lanso Krendan had proved every bit the cocky flyboy his record said he was. Under his skilful hands, the
Tempest had made the navigationally-hazardous move, which got them back to Reshii III orbit in seconds, instead of the several hours it could have been at full impulse.
Now, they chased down the other Jem’Hadar fighter that had been carving up the
Medusa like a pork roast. Where the Hell had these bastards come from?
“Captain, we’ve got more ships incoming,” Kayrene announced from hir primary science console. “Two more Jem’Hadar fighters. They were masking their approach by using the planet’s magnetic pole to obscure their energy signatures.” S/he frowned at the readings, double-checking it before continuing, “They appear to have suffered battle damage.”
“Which isn’t stopping them from charging disruptors, sir.” Ravin growled from his position at Tactical, clawed talons tapping in a variety of firing sequences. “They’ll enter weapons range in 60 seconds.”
It gave them a brief pause to catch their breath. “X.O., how are we holding up from our little jump?”
Lero, manning the auxiliary systems console to monitor damage reports, replied quickly, “Structural integrity is at 82% but holding. Chief Shaan reports that the nacelles are showing strain but no sign of coil burnout. EPS conduits are stable.”
Doyle breathed a sigh of relief at that small mercy. “Divert power from all non-essential systems to weapons and shields,” he ordered, standing from his chair, needing to be on the move as the ship went into the fray.
It was time to put this new ship through her first taste of battle. To unleash the fury of the
Tempest.
“Here they come!”
The
Tempest’s shields withstood the combined assault of the new arrivals, coming to fight alongside their outgunned compatriot. But there were several energy surges through the EPS system, causing ancillary control panels on the bridge to short out. “Damage report!”
Ravin's response took a few extra seconds to come as the ship rocked again, “Shields are down to 78%. Artificial gravity failure on Decks 37 to 40. Lateral sensors are only partially operating, but damage control teams have been deployed.”
“What's the status of the medical ships?” It was the first thing Lewis had said since they’d raced up to the bridge only minutes before.
Laya consulted her readouts. Doyle saw her grip was white-knuckle, as she coordinated the different priority systems and the sensors, “The
Keller has locked down the plasma leak in its nacelle, now that the attack fighter has shifted attention towards us. Their shields are at 47%. But the
Medusa is in a bad way. Primary power is off-line and they’ve got multiple hull fractures. Engines are completely dead.”
Doyle took position behind his conn officer, “Mr. Krendan, I want us between the Jem’Hadar and the
Medusa.”
Krendan nodded, hands already in motion as he moved the huge ship between the smaller Dominion fighters and the medical frigates. "You got it, sir." Weapons fire rocked the ship, and Doyle's grip tightened on the back of the lieutenant’s seat.
It would not be good for the captain to be sent across the bridge during the battle.
An idea came to him. It wouldn’t be pretty, but it might give them an ace in the hole. “Prepare to extend shields around the
Medusa so we can beam their crew off.”
Ravin growled with reluctant disapproval, “Captain, extending the shields weakens overall integrity. We will take damage.”
“I know, Mr. Ravin,” Doyle acknowledged his tactical officer’s salient point, “But you know as well as I we can’t just leave the civilians aboard that ship to die.”
Ravin bowed his head in acquiescence, as Doyle turned to Sokath, “Hail the
Keller. Tell them to warp out of the system as soon as possible. We’ll keep the Jem’Hadar occupied.” The
Miranda-class ship wasn’t fast, but he hoped they would keep the attention of the Dominion ships for long enough to allow the
Keller to get some distance.
After all, they were a more attractive and tempting target.
The Vulcan nodded, calmly following out his orders, easily maintaining his balance despite the buffeting the
Galaxy-class starship was taking, “
Keller responding, sir. Captain Lenari sends her thanks.”
As Lero coordinated to make sure all transporter rooms went from stand-by to active status, and Sickbay was ready for more incoming wounded, Doyle hit his comm. badge, and braced himself as the ship was hit with another barrage of weapons fire, “Engineering, how are you holding up down there, Chief?”
The purring voice of M'ilyia Shaan was cut through with static, but he could make the most of her report, [The ship... aking a pounding, but she... andle it, Captain.]
“Acknowledged. Listen carefully. I need as much power as possible to the tractor emitters without sacrificing shield strength. No time for questions, just do it. Understood?”
[Roger, sir.] The Caitian signed off, and Doyle felt reassured she would do all she could. Now he just had to let the rest of the bridge crew in on the half-formed plan he had, “Okay, everyone, listen up. Once we’ve cleared the
Medusa of personnel, we’ll use it as a battering ram.”
On the screen, the older-model nacelles of the
Keller glowed bright blue, before the vessel vanished as it was propelled into warp in a flash of light.
“No signs of pursuit,” Ravin reported. “I think the Jem’Hadar have decided that we are the most worthy of their attention.”
Despite the dire nature of the situation, Doyle allowed himself to figuratively breathe a sigh of relief - that was one less near-defenseless craft he had to be concerned over.
“Shields extended,” Laya reported - just before another barrage of disruptors pummeled the
Tempest. As expected, this time the crew felt the deck buck beneath them a lot more than previously, as the shields were stretched thin. “57% and dropping.”
The Jem’Hadar continued to hound them, like a swarm of angry hornets, desperately trying to break through the protective energy bubble in order to sting the more vulnerable hull. Even with their low-yield ablative armor, the hull wouldn’t withstand enemy fire for long once the disruptor beams punctured the shields.
“All transporters have commenced emergency evac protocols,” Lero reported, “
Medusa crew is being beamed directly to Sickbay.”
“Captain..?” Kayrene couldn’t keep the fear and horror from hir voice, “Sensors are picking up intense fluctuations in the
Medusa’s antimatter containment system.” S/he looked to Doyle, hir eyes wide, “We’re looking at an imminent core breach.”
Oh, good God… “Status of beam-outs?”
“Less than half of the surviving complement evacuated,” Lero responded, feeling her heart sink in despair, “The targeting sensors can’t get through the interference generated by all the disruptor fire.”
Archer left his seat and approached Doyle’s side. “How long until the breach?”
Kayrene shook hir head, totally clueless, “The rate of magnetic decay isn’t constant, I can’t even give you a rough estimate!”
Sokath’s calm voice had a grave edge to it. “Sir, if we are still in our current close proximity when containment fails–”
“I’m aware, Mr. Sokath,” Doyle replied through gritted teeth. Wishing like Hell he could do something - anything - more than just stand and watch as it all happened.
Finally, he did the only thing he could, “Continue transport sequences, but pull back the shields.” The words weighed heavily on his soul, even though he knew he didn’t have a choice, “Mr. Krendan, back us off, best speed.”
The bridge fell silent. As orders were carried out, there was nothing anybody could do but watch and wait for the death knell of a starship. Even the assault of Dominion weaponry had abated as the Jem’Hadar ships pulled back, wanting to avoid being caught in an imminent explosion. But not too far, as if almost eager to see how it would all play out.
The dread pall lifted slightly when a chime beeped from the communications panel. Ensign Izumi, the current officer manning the position, looked ashen. “
Medusa is sending out a wide-band transmission, sir. Their comms. system took heavy damage.”
Doyle turned his gaze to the forward viewscreen, as static flared across the image of the drifting medical frigate, already falling away as
Tempest put distance between them. It was practically impossible to make out anything, until the static calmed somewhat, and from somewhere at the rear of the bridge, someone gasped in horror.
They honestly couldn’t be blamed for that. It was like a scene from an old 20th-century disaster movie.
The
Medusa’s compact, outdated and vintage-era bridge was wrecked. Flames burned all across the deck, and there didn't seem to be a working console anywhere. The body of the young helmswoman now lay prone across her console, half her face covered in soot and burns. It was hard to make out if she was still breathing.
Through the smoke and flames, Doyle managed to see another prone figure, slumped in the command chair. The smoke cleared slightly as damaged air purifiers vainly cleared the air, revealing the figure to be Russell Kingston. Bloodied and bruised but alive. His eyes wide with shock and terror.
“Kingston, hang on!” Doyle stepped forward, “We’re beaming you all out.”
Laya offered a humble apology, “Sir, he can’t hear you. Their receiving array was destroyed.”
Kingston’s wild gaze stared ahead. and it was like his mind had snapped, [
Doyle! --left us? You’re supposed -- protect us! Please, don’t leave -- here, I don’t -- to die..!]
It was like a cold hand of the Devil had taken hold of his heart. Doyle looked at the broken man, all pomposity and arrogance gone as his ship and crew burned around him.
The transmission began to falter, but Doyle could just make out his words, [
Not supposed -- be like this. Medical sh-- Do no harm. No ha--]
The signal cut out, just before Kayrene cried, “Magnetic containment collapse! The core is–”
S/he didn’t need to finish as the
Sydney-class vessel exploded in the blinding white light of an uncontrolled runaway matter/antimatter reaction.
Somehow, Doyle found his voice long enough to call out, “Auxiliary power to the aft shields!” He hoped it would be enough…
“All decks, brace for impact!”
Energy cannot be created or destroyed. Merely change form.
In the case of the
Medusa’s failing warp core, the matter and antimatter that powered the ship’s systems was now expelled outward in a destructive conflagration. A sheer untempered fury to it akin to the burning heart of a star.
All of that and more slammed into the shields of the
Tempest, despite Krendan’s best attempts to put enough distance. So, instead he tried to adjust their course, and allow the
Galaxy-class starship to ‘ride’ the shockwave, like the surfers he’d seen in old holovids from an Academy girlfriend.
The fancy-dan move was only partially successful, as the shields crackled, white-hot energy strands dancing across their entirety.
The four Jem’Hadar ships, only moments ago delighting in the death throes of their enemy, now paid the price for that arrogance. The blast wave continued unabated, and despite their superior agility, these beetle-like ships were not as well-protected as their larger brethren.
Their shields, weakened by the
Tempest’s earlier phasers and torpedo impacts, were not as strong as they should have been. One fighter took the brunt of the impact, to be sent spiraling out of control, end over end, before it unceremoniously and unforgivably blew apart, succumbing to the massive internal damage it had sustained.
The other three fighters were more fortunate. Intact, but damaged. Weapons ready and available. Crosshairs sighted and locked.
The
Tempest was an altogether far-too-easy target…
His lungs burning from the acrid smoke that the environmental systems hadn’t managed to purge, Doyle coughed roughly as he tried to speak, “Damage report! All stations.”
When the energy wave had struck the
Tempest, the crew had been tossed around like proverbial ragdolls. Systems all across the ship had blown out, going off-line for long drawn-out moments until emergency back-ups kicked in.
This was no more evident than the bridge. Crewpersons were strewn across the deck. The starboard consoles were dead, as exposed and broken access panels fell away, revealing the damaged circuitry. Sokath, using an emergency medkit, was tending to a badly wounded non-com, who’d caught the brunt of an exploding console.
Finally, with a cough of her own, Lero managed to answer him, “Warp power is fluctuating. The primary EPS manifold overloaded. Engineering is working on a bypass, but they took heavy damage. Shields are on-line, but they’re at 19%.”
Laya struggled with her console, “Sensors temporarily overloaded. Attempting to bring secondary arrays online, while the processing subroutines reset.”
“Helm is being slow to answer, Captain.” Krendan slapped at his board, which blinked on and off intermittently.
“Phaser arrays off-line,” Ravin contributed. “Forward torpedo launchers ready, but on manual targeting only.”
“Marcus. Look…” Something in Lewis’s tone made Doyle’s blood turn cold. He followed the counselor’s gaze towards the viewscreen. It was functioning, but flickering with static overlay and imaging render errors.
But it was still clear enough to see the four remaining Dominion attack ships closing in on them. Slowly and inexorably.
Doyle swallowed the hard lump in his throat that had formed as the enemy forces slowly approached. He moved back to his command chair and pressed a control on the armrest console, and the image stabilized to a tactical view. Two of the attack fighters swarmed around the forward section of the
Tempest, boxing them in, while the remaining Jem’Hadar ship took position at their exposed and defenseless aft.
No way forward. No way back.
The lead Jem’Hadar ship powered up its engines, its weapons ports glowing as they prepared to fire. Ready to make a final attack run.
Marcus Doyle did not feel fear at that moment. Instead he felt outrage and anger. Like Hell was Doyle going to let these arrogant bastards the satisfaction of admitting defeat. “Okay, then. If they want a fight, then let’s damn well give them a good one.”
But before he could issue the order, in the moment the Jem’Hadar ship sprang forward to land a decisive, destructive blow–
-- a volley of quantum torpedoes, accompanied by an almighty barrage of phaser fire, slammed into the vessel with unmatched ferocity. It exploded from the sheer might of the onslaught, the sister ship in close proximity abruptly moving clear of the debris.
Through that growing cloud of torn metal and fading energies, a catamaran-shaped vessel emerged.
Krendan's cry of joy filled the bridge, “It’s the
Excellence!”
As the
Akira-class starship glided by, continuing to fire phasers at the enemy vessels trying vainly to avoid their strikes, several smaller ships emerged from the
Excellence’s aft-mounted shuttle hangers. Breaking off and maneuvering with amazing swiftness and grace, the two squadrons of
Peregrine-X fighters joined the fight, bringing their own micro-torpedoes and pulse phaser cannons to bear.
“
Excellence has engaged the remaining attack ship to fore!” Laya squeaked, before regaining her composure, “The fighters are taking on the ship at our aft.”
Lewis grinned from ear to ear as he stood at Doyle’s side, “The cavalry turned up.”
Doyle breathed a sigh of relief, feeling as if the specter of defeat had finally let them be, “Leave it to Valerie to be fashionably late, I guess.”
Overhead lights flickered back to full-strength. Sokath, attending the scorched engineering MSD, was quick to report the good news, “Warp power has stabilized. Shields restored to 82%.”
Her words seem to act like a good luck charm. Laya reported that forward short-range sensors were back on-line, while Krendan gleefully announced that the helm was responding and he had impulse engines ready. Doyle looked over at his tactical officer, “Mr. Ravin, how’s your manual targeting?”
The canine-esque humanoid grinned wickedly, understanding what his captain was thinking and agreeing wholeheartedly, “It will suffice, Captain.”
Lero nodded her agreement. They were down, but they weren’t out. The
Excellence was designed for combat, but even an
Akira-class with a full fighter complement would need back-up to take on two Jem'Hadar attack ships on their own.
Doyle and Lewis retook their seats, as the Irishman smiled wolfishly, “Then let’s get back in the fight.”
“Engage!”
============================