Garm Bel Iblis
Commodore
Archer IV had a unique place in Federation history. It was the first M-Class world visited by Jonathan Archer in 2151. Back then, no one new about the eviri pollen that came down every spring from the Korantaq mountain range. His landing party had been deeply affected by the hallucinogenic qualities of the pollen.
Decades later when human colonists had returned to Archer IV, then still called 61 Ursae Majoris IV, and had developed an inoculation against the pollen, the population of Archer IV had bloomed to nearly nine hundred million by the late 24th century. It was on a sunny day, as typically the norm on Archer IV, that the quadrant tumbled into war.
Archer IV Planetary Operations Center, Sato City.
Lieutenant Commander Brian Dekaley was eager to get back aboard a starship. He’d served as chief engineer aboard the USS Apollo for nearly a decade. When Captain Hagen had been promoted to commodore, the Apollo had been decommissioned along with the rest of the Oberth-Class line, finishing out their century of Starfleet service.
Dekaley had been cooling his heels in the DPO on Archer IV awaiting reassignment to one of the new Intrepid or Akira Class ships coming out of Utopia Planitia. Given Starfleet’s recent encounters with the Dominion, ships were being rushed out of the yards before they were fully ready and Dekaley was an experienced engineer who would get them whipped into shape.
He sipped his raktajino as he stepped out of his office and into the small command center of operations and made his usually rounds. Located one kilometer below the surface of Sato City, the DPO monitored all incoming and outgoing space traffic as well as monitoring surface and orbital weapon platforms and keeping track of communications between all Starfleet activity within the system.
“Good morning, people,” he said to his team of five.
A mumble of ‘good morning’ and ‘sir’ greeted him. Everybody hates DPO postings, he mused with a grin. “What’s on the agenda today, Mister Forest?”
Cadet Forest, currently doing his Junior Year Academy field training spun his chair around and sat up straight. “Sir, nothing until seventeen hundred, sir. The USS Centaur is due at Orbital III for retrofitting of their phaser banks and a Barolian freighters due at eighteen forty five for a delivery in New Province.”
“Pretty quiet schedule,” Dekaley concluded, smiling at the cadet’s posture and brusqueness. “Sounds like a good morning to get those sensor diagnostics underway.”
“Yes, sir,” the cadet said eagerly. “We’ll have to take the sensor grid offline for approximately six hours to compete the complete series.”
“Let’s get cracking then,” Dekaley said as the others went to work. He rounded the main console and was about to return to his office when the proximity alarms went off. “Report.”
Lieutenant Pora, a young Bajoran looked up at the master display which showed a sector of space near Orbital IV. “Tachyon surge,” she said, “coming from oh four nine, sector 4.”
“I’m assuming since surging tachyons are indicative of cloaking devices we’ve got a ship up there,” Dekaley said.”
“More than one by these readings,” Pora said. “At least twenty ships… Klingon.”
“Well at least they’re friendlies,” Dekaley said. “Open a channel.”
“They’re not responding to hails,” Forest said. “They’ve de-cloaked, sir, ten birds of prey, five D21’s and five Vorcha-Class attack cruisers.”
“They’re loaded for bear too,” Pora remarked. “Disruptors and torpedoes armed, shields at full.”
“Red alert. Power up ground and orbital weapons. Get the city-shields up. Send a emergency transmission to Starfleet, let them know we need help.”
- - -
The Klingon cruisers with methodical in their attack, the smaller birds of prey fanned out and engaged the orbital weapon platforms, making quick work of the photon cannons and reducing them to radioactive slag. Once the grid had been penetrated, the D21’s unleashed their quantum warheads on the major city’s defense shields, pouring gigajouls on energy, breaking the electrostatic barriers and burying their weapons deep within the planetary crust. Lakes boiled, buildings vanished, millions of people were incinerated.
Finally, nearly ninety years since the Khitomer Conference, the Klingon Empire had shed their shackles and turned against the greatest oppressor in galactic history: the United Federation of Planets.
The ships continued their orbital bombardment until their long-range sensors picked up the distortion in subspace. A Starfleet ship coming in at warp nine point eight.
Decades later when human colonists had returned to Archer IV, then still called 61 Ursae Majoris IV, and had developed an inoculation against the pollen, the population of Archer IV had bloomed to nearly nine hundred million by the late 24th century. It was on a sunny day, as typically the norm on Archer IV, that the quadrant tumbled into war.
Archer IV Planetary Operations Center, Sato City.
Lieutenant Commander Brian Dekaley was eager to get back aboard a starship. He’d served as chief engineer aboard the USS Apollo for nearly a decade. When Captain Hagen had been promoted to commodore, the Apollo had been decommissioned along with the rest of the Oberth-Class line, finishing out their century of Starfleet service.
Dekaley had been cooling his heels in the DPO on Archer IV awaiting reassignment to one of the new Intrepid or Akira Class ships coming out of Utopia Planitia. Given Starfleet’s recent encounters with the Dominion, ships were being rushed out of the yards before they were fully ready and Dekaley was an experienced engineer who would get them whipped into shape.
He sipped his raktajino as he stepped out of his office and into the small command center of operations and made his usually rounds. Located one kilometer below the surface of Sato City, the DPO monitored all incoming and outgoing space traffic as well as monitoring surface and orbital weapon platforms and keeping track of communications between all Starfleet activity within the system.
“Good morning, people,” he said to his team of five.
A mumble of ‘good morning’ and ‘sir’ greeted him. Everybody hates DPO postings, he mused with a grin. “What’s on the agenda today, Mister Forest?”
Cadet Forest, currently doing his Junior Year Academy field training spun his chair around and sat up straight. “Sir, nothing until seventeen hundred, sir. The USS Centaur is due at Orbital III for retrofitting of their phaser banks and a Barolian freighters due at eighteen forty five for a delivery in New Province.”
“Pretty quiet schedule,” Dekaley concluded, smiling at the cadet’s posture and brusqueness. “Sounds like a good morning to get those sensor diagnostics underway.”
“Yes, sir,” the cadet said eagerly. “We’ll have to take the sensor grid offline for approximately six hours to compete the complete series.”
“Let’s get cracking then,” Dekaley said as the others went to work. He rounded the main console and was about to return to his office when the proximity alarms went off. “Report.”
Lieutenant Pora, a young Bajoran looked up at the master display which showed a sector of space near Orbital IV. “Tachyon surge,” she said, “coming from oh four nine, sector 4.”
“I’m assuming since surging tachyons are indicative of cloaking devices we’ve got a ship up there,” Dekaley said.”
“More than one by these readings,” Pora said. “At least twenty ships… Klingon.”
“Well at least they’re friendlies,” Dekaley said. “Open a channel.”
“They’re not responding to hails,” Forest said. “They’ve de-cloaked, sir, ten birds of prey, five D21’s and five Vorcha-Class attack cruisers.”
“They’re loaded for bear too,” Pora remarked. “Disruptors and torpedoes armed, shields at full.”
“Red alert. Power up ground and orbital weapons. Get the city-shields up. Send a emergency transmission to Starfleet, let them know we need help.”
- - -
The Klingon cruisers with methodical in their attack, the smaller birds of prey fanned out and engaged the orbital weapon platforms, making quick work of the photon cannons and reducing them to radioactive slag. Once the grid had been penetrated, the D21’s unleashed their quantum warheads on the major city’s defense shields, pouring gigajouls on energy, breaking the electrostatic barriers and burying their weapons deep within the planetary crust. Lakes boiled, buildings vanished, millions of people were incinerated.
Finally, nearly ninety years since the Khitomer Conference, the Klingon Empire had shed their shackles and turned against the greatest oppressor in galactic history: the United Federation of Planets.
The ships continued their orbital bombardment until their long-range sensors picked up the distortion in subspace. A Starfleet ship coming in at warp nine point eight.