The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Nuclear weapons, obviously. Both universes enjoy using them liberally, I'm just being true to the source material!

As for Battleaxe being out and Mace taking over, nah, Mace is a Chief of Staff so Jellicoe, as a line officer, holds seniority. And besides, Mace was being evac'd along with Battleaxe, so having him in command would be bloody useless.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by fnord »

Good point.

Given you're rather fond of a good banger, now we get to see how a Warspite-class battlestar stands up to a big fleet fight. (Pegasus would be too heavily modified to count as Mercury-class any more).
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Oh yeah, I'm on a roll this week! Behoid, the actual crossover begins!

Interlude: Last Chances and New Hopes
Ba’al’s Hat’tak, Dar’mok Orbit


To say Ba’al, Last of the System Lords was having a bad day would be a colossal understatement. His official territory had been collapsing by the hour as the cursed Jaffa Rebellion claimed more and more of his worlds and soldiers. Most of these worlds were, naturally, not significant losses since he still had his ace card, the secret world of Dar’mok and its extensive Cylon industry.

But in the last twelve hours things had taken a decidedly catastrophic turn. The Asgard, who had been making their presence felt in the galaxy once again after the defeat of the Replicators, had discovered that he had been involved in attacks on several of the planets protected by the ancient treaty with the System Lords. They had sent word to every remaining Goa’uld that these attacks, and the other Goa’uld’s failure to stop them as required, meant the treaty was voided and they were taking action to end the Goa’uld threat.

Within moments of this pronouncement, Asgard ships began to strike. At least a dozen of their most powerful battleships were roaming the galaxy; any Ha’tak they found under Goa’uld control was attacked, disabled and towed to Dakaara for the Jaffa Rebels to deal with. The Goa’uld themselves were stripped from their hosts and killed; the surviving hosts were given treatment and where possible returned to their homeworlds.

Ba’al was being hunted, his fleet captured and his soldiers defecting. Only pure chance had saved him so far; the handful of Ha’taks he had refitted with Cylon jump drives had been at Dar’mok when the announcement came and had so far been spared. The planet itself had not been found, though the canny Goa’uld knew full well this was only a matter of time.

And now, his Cylon servants were failing at their task of immolating Terra. He had heard nothing more from them since being informed that the Resurrection ship was gone. He’d ordered them to attack anyway; he had enough enemies as it is, he needed the humans who knew of his involvement with the Cylons destroyed before the Asgard or the Tau’ri found them.

He had spent hours sat upon his throne brooding and desperately trying to come up with a solution that allowed him to retain a position of power. The problem was that he and his forces were completely outmatched – nothing he knew of could catch an Asgard ship in hyperspace and their speed was such that his ships had only seconds of warning before the huge battleships were upon them.

He might have been able to handle the Jaffa Rebels, the humans on Terra and the Tau’ri if he had time to plan an effective strategy. But the Asgard carrying out their lightning war against the Goa’uld, time was something he simply didn’t have. He, a being that had endured eight thousand years of scheming politics and eight years of outright warfare against the other System Lords, now faced the prospect of irrecoverable defeat in days.

And then came the data burst from one of his Basestars around Terra. His forces weren’t only not winning, they were being shredded. Their numerical superiority was helping, and they were hurting the humans, but the data he had received showed that at best it would be a pyrrhic victory for the Cylons. He had no choice; he would have to go to Terra himself and either help overwhelm the remains of the human forces or salvage what he could from his shattered fleet and run.

He gave the order and his ship turned and shot forward into hyperspace. His other Ha’taks, the ones fitted with jump drives, likewise turned away from the planet and departed: he’d ordered them to retreat to deep space, somewhere lightyears from any star or planet where even the Asgard were unlikely to find them until he returned.

Seconds after he left, a hyperspace window opened and no fewer than six Asgard O’Neill class battleships appeared. They took a moment to survey the planet before they went to work, eliminating any Goa’uld they found. The fact that every humanoid on the planet were copies of just five individuals gave them pause. This was an issue that would need more careful study.

On his ship, Ba’al received the distress call. HE began a long and furious rant, complete with cursing and swearing that would have embarrassed the crudest human sailor, had he understood the language. All of his plans were collapsing, his decades-long schemes vanishing like ethereal smoke in the wind. Now he would have to pull his forces back from Terra, he needed every single ship and human slave left if he was going to start anew.

Perhaps, he mused to himself, he should seek refuge in one of the small satellite galaxies. They had no stargates, no known intelligent civilisations. They would be the perfect place to hide.

Stargate Command, Cheyenne Mountain, Earth

The SGC was busier than usual. They too had heard from the Asgard about the Protected Planets Treaty and the aggressive assault their diminutive allies were making. Relations between the Asgard and the Tau’ri were at their strongest ever and the SGC now played host to a permanent Asgard Ambassador in the form of Heimdall. The Asgard High Council, in recognition of all the Tau’ri had done to end the Replicator threat and the general progress they had made, had acted unilaterally in declaring them the Fifth Race, part of the newly-reformed Alliance.

SG teams were being sent out almost every ten minutes to investigate the former Goa’uld bases incapacitated by the Asgard ships, aiming to salvage as much technology and as many resources as possible. Regular military units were being drafted in to help as well once it was clear that the scale of the Asgard offensive encompassed the whole Goa’uld domain.

But that was hours ago. With all the teams available sent out, only SG-1 remained behind. Teal’c was ensconced with Jack and Heimdall in the main briefing room, providing advice and knowledge of important Goa’uld bases and worlds and helping direct the assault. Sam and Daniel were likewise occupied; Sam with the other scientists looking through the data the Asgard had provided them as part of the new Alliance; plans for a significant upgrade to the Prometheus and the nearly-completed Daedalus were well underway. Daniel was working on the historical data that had also come with the deal; he was ecstatic at the prospect, a hundred thousand years or more of history and culture to learn about. It had taken him a good twenty minutes to regain the power of speech when he’d first learned what he was being given.

In the control room, Sergeant Harriman was hard at work. The teams may all be deployed but they still had work to do. AS per O’Neill’s standing orders, they were trying to dial the various gate addresses the General had entered into their database while under the influence of the Ancient Repository years before. Any address that could be dialled had a MALP sent as a matter of course.

Walter was delighted. He genuinely loved his job, even if working as the General’s de facto aide could be frustrating at times he wouldn’t change it for anything. He entered the next address on the list into the dialling computer and sat back to watch his Stargate at work. He would always consider it his,no matter what the scientists or soldiers said. After all, he ran it, controlled it and in his own way cared for it. It had never occurred to him that Sergeant Siler, the man who maintained the gate and its associated systems felt the same way. The Gate was his, and that was that.

The last few addresses he’d tried from the Ancient List (as it was known to the various technicians) had all been busts; either they couldn’t get a lock or the probes they sent were trapped underground on arrival. The coordinates were dutifully logged for eventual survey by the Prometheus. As such, he wasn’t expecting much from this address. He sipped his coffee and went through his usual routine while the crew in the gate room itself prepared yet another MALP.

The gate locked and engaged, the unstable vortex bursting forth before collapsing into a stable wormhole. It was a sight that never failed to amaze the Sergeant no matter how many thousands of time’s he had seen it.

The MALP was dutifully sent through the event horizon and the control room staff waited. Several could be heard placing bets on what they would find; as usual the predications ranged from the mundane (a sealed cave, a forest or a desert) to the absurd (an Ancient outpost, a hidden Goa’uld base or a pyramid with a crystal skull) though Walter wondered why those bets were considered absurd when they had happened before. Many of the staff were new though, so he overlooked their naivety.

The signal came back from the probe. It showed a large but apparently empty room, with no visible doors and, most troubling, no DHD. This was clearly something unusual. Then Walter looked at some of the other data that was being received. Massive energy readings, encrypted radio chatter, the works. This was something he definitely needed to inform his superiors about.

He double-checked that the data was being recorded and then grabbed the base intercom.

“General O’Neill and Colonel Carter, please report to the Control Room, urgent. Repeat, General O’Neill and Colonel Carter to the Control Room.”

The call echoed throughout the base, letting everyone know that something serious was afoot. First to arrive was the General, clattering down the staircase from the briefing room followed by the silent but reassuring presence of Teal’c.

“What is it Walter?”

“We’re connected to P7S-235, near the bottom of the Ancient address list sir. The MALP shows a large empty room and no DHD, but we’re also picking up huge energy readings and encrypted radio traffic.”

O’Neill looked suitably surprised at the news. Virtually no one they knew of in the galaxy used encrypted radios. Either they lacked the technology entirely or, like the Goa’uld and the Tok’ra, they used something more advanced.

Colonel Carter arrived next, nodding briefly at Jack before looking at the data displayed.

“Wow, those are some huge energy readings.” She went silent for a few seconds as she processed the data. Jack liked to imagine he could see the gears turning in her head as she thought, but that was an idea he kept firmly to himself. He had no desire to annoy a woman who was brilliant, beautiful and knew how to fight.

“Either they’ve got a naquada reactor the size of Prometheus nearby, or they’re using a ZPM, and that definitely looks like Ancient architecture “

That caught everyone’s interest. Either option meant that this was a seriously advanced planet they were dealing with. The lack of a DHD precluded immediately going to investigate further however. Jack turned this over in his head before reaching a decision.

“Ok. Walter, log the coordinates. Sam, I want you, Teal’c and Daniel to get geared up. I’ll ask Heimdall if there’s an Asgard ship nearby that can give us a lift.”

Sam nodded, then paused. “Us, sir?”

Jack grinned at her. “This is potentially first contact with another advanced race Carter, I’m not missing out. I’ve been sat behind that damn desk for too long.”

Sam really couldn’t muster an argument against that, not least because Jack was in command, so she merely nodded again and headed to the locker room along with Teal’c. They’d grab Daniel along the way; as maniacal as he was about the Asgard historical data, he’d want to see this one. She couldn’t help smile at knowing O’Neill was coming with them, the definitive SG team was going back into action.

Sam and Teal’c had barely left when Heimdall appeared in the control room in a flash of light. Something the SGC personnel had quickly learned about the Asgard was that such mundane acts as walking downstairs were apparently beneath such advanced beings, though since they were willing to give the humans a lift as well no-one complained too much.

Heimdall examined the data as well, compared it to some information she (it was easier to think of the little aliens as male or female, despite their apparent lack of gender) had on her own system.

“General O’Neill, that is definitely an Ancient structure. Hmm…Sergeant, please zoom in on the far wall, that appears to be writing.” Walter dutifully obeyed, focusing in on the area in question. Heimdall hummed happily as she translated it.

“Here is kept the Stargate of the Lords of Kobol, sealed away to protect our children. By order of the Lord Prometheus, it shall never be used again.” The little Asgard blinked. “That is very strange indeed General. I have never heard of these Lords of Kobol, or of an Ancient called Prometheus.” She touched a few controls on her wrist device. “I have informed Thor, he will be here momentarily aboard the Daniel Jackson to provide transport.”

Despite the potentially serious situation emerging around him, Jack could not hide the smirk at that ship's name. He thought it was hilarious that Daniel, not Sam, had a science vessel named after him. Of course, he was also slightly miffed that the original O’Neill had been summarily blown up, even if it was for a good cause.

He was just about to head to the locker room and gear up himself when he felt himself transported out of the control room.

Walter, left behind and largely confused, sighed and went back to his job and his coffee.

======

SO, Ba'al is heaidng for Terra at full speed, the SGC have learned of Terra as well and the Asgard are kicking ass and taking names. This si the first time I've written SG1 characters, so I hope I got them right, or close enough. And yes, I am a fan of Walter, in case you hadn't noticed.

To those keeping score, yes I am stretching the SG1 timeline a little, as well as making major changes. Since in my timeline there is no Ori threat and no Asgard wasting disease, they no longer have a reason not to act agaisnt the Goa'uld. So, they're on the offensive.

Everything is coming to head over Terra. What will happen? Check back soon!
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Steve »

Oh, this is going to be fun.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by fnord »

The little grey guys can be very offensive when they put their minds to it.

I hope this isn't setting up for a Lensman Arms Race.

Real dumb question - you've had the Terran and Colonial characters' speech (ntm Smug Git and the Cylons) rendered as English - is that a translation convention?
Are they actually speaking, I dunno, a language that has a similar relation to (some dialect of) Ancient as STRAYAN has to British English? (It's had at least 10x as long to drift). Ancient, except in all the places where it's not. Enough to give Danny boy the yips for a bit.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

fnord wrote:The little grey guys can be very offensive when they put their minds to it.

I hope this isn't setting up for a Lensman Arms Race.

Real dumb question - you've had the Terran and Colonial characters' speech (ntm Smug Git and the Cylons) rendered as English - is that a translation convention?
Are they actually speaking, I dunno, a language that has a similar relation to (some dialect of) Ancient as STRAYAN has to British English? (It's had at least 10x as long to drift). Ancient, except in all the places where it's not. Enough to give Danny boy the yips for a bit.
...you just live on TVTropes don't you? :D

As for the language issue, I honestly hadn't considered that at all. I'm probably just going to adopt the unspoken convention from SG-1 (past season 2 or so) that everyone speaks English. Or I might go in a completely different direction and have them be speaking something like a hodgepodge of Latin and Greek but have Thor provide a translation system. That would require translating things into either language though, and while my vocabulary for Latin is moderate, my knwoledge of grammar and syntax is about zero.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by fnord »

No - I am not clinically insomniac - but TVTropes provides a great way to summarise ... well... tropes. And you are writing (what hopefully is) fiction.

I was asking because I couldn't see a way for English (or STRAYAN) to ever actually happen on Terra before O'Neill et al show up. But, since it looks like it will get in the way of the story, buggrit.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Crazedwraith »

Cool. So no Fargate or Orri? O'Neil is still a Brig? (Battleaxe can be suitable impressed with is rank? :D )

Nitpick: Despite being voiced by Teryl Rothery, Heimdall's a guy I think. Stargate wiki and Omnapedia both use male pronouns. He certainly was mythologically speaking.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Crazedwraith »

ghetto edit:
fnord wrote: I was asking because I couldn't see a way for English (or STRAYAN) to ever actually happen on Terra before O'Neill et al show up. But, since it looks like it will get in the way of the story, buggrit.
It's not the English language that bothers me so much that Prometheus picked up in ancient times a bunch of people with British (via shout outs) names. Rather than say the Greek ones you'd expect well Prometheus to pick up.

I wonder if Prometheus in this continuity was a goa'uld or some thing more like a Tok'Ra. In legend he help humans by giving them fire and was punished for it...
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Crazedwraith wrote:Cool. So no Fargate or Orri? O'Neil is still a Brig? (Battleaxe can be suitable impressed with is rank? :D )

Nitpick: Despite being voiced by Teryl Rothery, Heimdall's a guy I think. Stargate wiki and Omnapedia both use male pronouns. He certainly was mythologically speaking.
Curses, foiled again by spotty memory of only one episode :D

As for the British names and Prometheus, well, Prometheus, Zeus, Apollo etc are (some of) the known names for the Lords of Kobol, and since I've established that the Lords of Kobol are the Ancients who left Atlantis I'm kinda stuck with the names, just think of it like how Ganos Lal became Morgan le Fay over similar time scales, or whatshisname becoming Myrrdin and then Merlin.

Actually, sod it. Zeus, Prometheus etc aren't names but titles/ranks/jobs within the Ancient/Lantean society. Hence, Zeus is top dog, Hephaestus builds things, Demeter is in charge of food production, Aries is the General, Apollo is a pilot, Aphrodite is the Team Stress Reliever and so on.

As for the Terran names, um, subtle influence by now-ascended Lords. Same with the language. They want the eventual meeting with Earth, their other little fiefdom, to go smoothly.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Steve »

And the fact that Ares was also a Goa'uld? I believe Athena was also one. Don't recall if they had an Aphrodite.
”A Radical is a man with both feet planted firmly in the air.” – Franklin Delano Roosevelt

"No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism." - Sir Winston L. S. Churchill, Princips Britannia

American Conservatism is about the exercise of personal responsibility without state interference in the lives of the citizenry..... unless, of course, it involves using the bludgeon of state power to suppress things Conservatives do not like.

DONALD J. TRUMP IS A SEDITIOUS TRAITOR AND MUST BE IMPEACHED
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Steve wrote:And the fact that Ares was also a Goa'uld? I believe Athena was also one. Don't recall if they had an Aphrodite.
Those Goa'uld adopted roles of existing "Gods." Maybe they just weren't as imaginative.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by LadyTevar »

Eternal_Freedom wrote: Actually, sod it. Zeus, Prometheus etc aren't names but titles/ranks/jobs within the Ancient/Lantean society. Hence, Zeus is top dog, Hephaestus builds things, Demeter is in charge of food production, Aries is the General, Apollo is a pilot, Aphrodite is the Team Stress Reliever and so on.

As for the Terran names, um, subtle influence by now-ascended Lords. Same with the language. They want the eventual meeting with Earth, their other little fiefdom, to go smoothly.
No, don't go that far. Who says that Heimdall knows the names of all the Ancients, or that these Ancients didn't change their names after they left Atlantis and met up with whatever humans they took to Terra?
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

LadyTevar wrote:
Eternal_Freedom wrote: Actually, sod it. Zeus, Prometheus etc aren't names but titles/ranks/jobs within the Ancient/Lantean society. Hence, Zeus is top dog, Hephaestus builds things, Demeter is in charge of food production, Aries is the General, Apollo is a pilot, Aphrodite is the Team Stress Reliever and so on.

As for the Terran names, um, subtle influence by now-ascended Lords. Same with the language. They want the eventual meeting with Earth, their other little fiefdom, to go smoothly.
No, don't go that far. Who says that Heimdall knows the names of all the Ancients, or that these Ancients didn't change their names after they left Atlantis and met up with whatever humans they took to Terra?
There we go, that works. Maybe the new names was a "turning over a new leaf" thing.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Burak Gazan »

The little grey guys, when not hobbled or under artificial restraints, pretty much are The Daleks and everyone else -- PEST CONTROL, right? :twisted:
"Of course, what would really happen is that in Game 7, with the Red Sox winning 20-0 in the 9th inning, with two outs and two strikes on the last Cubs batter, a previously unseen meteor would strike the earth, instantly and forever wiping out all life on the planet, and forever denying the Red Sox a World Series victory..."
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Burak Gazan wrote:The little grey guys, when not hobbled or under artificial restraints, pretty much are The Daleks and everyone else -- PEST CONTROL, right? :twisted:
Only the Goa'uld, and that's more because the Asgard have been wanting to deal with them for ten thousand years or so but only now are able to. So yeah, the Goa'uld are getting swatted...too good fer 'em I say!
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

A little later than planned, I present the climax tot he BAttle for Terra, and my longest chapter to date at 4500 words or so:

Deicide
Cavil’s Basestar, Terran Orbit


The appearance of God’s own starship changed everything for Cavil. His plan, to allow the humans and the loyalist Cylons to batter each other before he made his bid for independence would no longer work. With a third player on the field he needed a new strategy. His first thought, in typical pragmatic fashion, was to join with the other Cylons and God in destroying the humans and then turn on God. But he was intelligent enough to quickly realise that this was unworkable.

As the shattered Cylon fleet sped to God’s side to regroup, Cavil was thinking feverishly, trying to deduce God’s motive for appearing here and now. He had been very clear when He had last spoken with them, shortly after the Resurrection Ship was destroyed: do not contact him again until the humans were all dead. Then Cavil recalled something God had let slip once, something about “The Others.” Perhaps, he mused as his ship pulled alongside God’s, these “Others” have attacked God, forced him to come and gather His servants. It was something to ponder as Cavil activated the communications link with God’s ship (and that was another amusing indication that Cavil was right in his doubts: what use did God have for a starship after all).

The hologram appeared. Only years of practice allowed Cavil to conceal his shock. God looked tired. His face, that damnable human face, was strained, the usual fetching goatee looked slightly unkempt, the hair untended. And the eyes…they still glowed malevolently, but some indefinable quality was missing. The voice however, that was worse than usual; the normal anger and power was undercut by something else…fear.

”Well my children? Why are these humans not dust and vapour by now?

Cavil stepped forward. He knew that one way or another this would be his last talk with God. No, he corrected himself this being, not God.

“My lord, the humans have resisted far more effectively than we feared. They used massive nuclear weapons to annihilate our fighter force, they made repeated wild charges through our lines, smashing countless ships as they went. They out-fought us at every turn. We cannot match their combat experience.”

God did not seem pleased. Cavil braced himself for insults, rage, suicidal orders, anything. What he got instead was something quite different. Resignation.

”Then I will have to destroy them myself. Your ships will escort mine, I will burn these vessels from the stars! Follow!” The hologram disappeared. Cavil turned to the Four and the Five he had been plotting with.

“Now is our chance brothers. We have God here, we can destroy him. The humans may even help us kill him and then…” Cavil took on an almost beatific look, his eyes alight with their own fire “…then we will be free!”

The Four looked grimly resigned. This was not what they had planned, but there was no other choice. The Five was more uncertain, and surprised Cavil by voicing his doubts.

“This is not what we planned. Turning on the devout fools, yes, fleeing to our own destiny yes. Now you suggest we open fire on God Himself! You know full well our ship cannot match His! And why the hell would the humans help us?”

Cavil nodded, they were all good points. Luckily, he had an answer. He tapped a quick message into his console and sent it out to one of the Colonial Battlestars, in the clear. “We are two ships to his one. This is our best and probably only chance to act. As for the humans? They may not help us, but after the message I have just sent them, they will act against God.”

Five looked down at the message and then closed his eyes for a few seconds, clearly thinking rapidly. He looked back up at Cavil and the Four. “Very well. I would rather die fighting for my own future than a futile death for this God.”

Four nodded as well. Cavil smiled and sent the appropriate orders to the other war-era Basestar, to wait for the word. He also warned the gunners to be ready to fire on the three new-model Basestars.

And then he gave the order.

Battlestar Warspite CIC,

Jellicoe and Beatty had been stunned by the unexpected appearance of the giant ship. Its design was totally alien to them and to the Terrans and its method of travel was new as well; it clearly did not use jump drives. The sensor readings suggested powerful weapons and shields and visual images showed numerous weapon mounts to back up that view.

The Cylons had immediately broken off to regroup around this ship, giving the battered defenders vital breathing room. Shields were recharging swiftly, Vipers were brought aboard for refuelling as quickly as possible and crews took a few moments to breathe deeply and stretch after half an hour of frantic, lethal combat.

As soon as the ship had appeared, Jellicoe had ordered Daniel to CIC. He had a suspicion that this ship was connected with the Cylon’s so-called God and wanted someone with first-hand knowledge available. He was also acutely aware that he was still in overall command: Admiral Lethbridge-Stewart was still unconscious and had yet to land on Excalibur, and Adama was still missing.

The doors opened and Daniel raced in. He saw the image of the new ship on the screen overhead and stopped dead. All emotion disappeared from his face. Jellicoe had to call his name three times in increasing volume before he responded.

“Sorry Commander….but that’s God’s ship. He’s here.”

Jellicoe and Beatty shared a grim look. But before either of them could speak, Lieutenant Goodenough, the comms officer, called out.

“Sir? We’ve just received a signal from one of the war-ear Basestars. Its basic text, broadcast in the clear and addressed to you sir.” He handed over a printed copy. Jellicoe was thoroughly confused. Beatty jokingly suggested they wanted to surrender, but John doubted it was anything so simple. The message was short and to the point:
TO: Commander, Battlestar Warspite
FROM: Basestar 07-A

The being aboard the new ship is the one we call God. He is the one who gave us sentience, who ordered us to rebel, who ordered the destruction of the Twelve Worlds. He is responsible for the untold billions of deaths in the wars between us. We have learned this and we will take action. We will follow him no longer.

Models One, Four and Five
Jellicoe read the message twice, then showed it to Beatty. The Colonel did the same thing before passing it to Daniel, who also read it and laughed.

“Cavil…the model known as One. He was always the quickest to doubt, and Four and Five? My own model is going along with this? My word, things must be getting exciting over there.”

Jellicoe was about to ask what he meant when Major Smythe called out in surprise:

“Sir! The two old Basestars are firing on the new contact!”

Ba’al’s Ha’tak

The Last of the System Lords was almost incandescent with rage. His servants had failed him yet again and he had to clean up their mess. These humans simply had to be destroyed but he had precious little time to act. He ordered his ship forwards, with his servants flanking him.

They were almost in range of the humans when his ship was rocked by weapons fire.

“What is going on?” he roared. His ship shook again and again was fire poured against its shields. The Cylon manning the sensor post looked at him in alarm and dread.

“My Lord, the two First War Basestars are firing on us!”

Ba’al had thought himself beyond surprise after the last twelve hours. But this…his own servants firing on him? Impossible! He slammed his hand down on the communications controls. The image of the model called One appeared before him. Beside him were the Four and the Five, both of whom looked resolved. The One however looked positively gleeful.

“How dare you fire upon Me? You will cease fire at once and surrender to my mercy!” The Goa’uld was furious, rage such as he had never known flowed through him. The Cylons looked back defiantly.

”We know what you are, we know what you have done. Everything we hated the humans for; giving us sentience yet enslaving us; giving us life yet sending us to die, all of that was you! You are no God, you are a monster! We will bow to you no more!” The One looked like some mythic hero; his back straight, his eyes blazing with defiance, he voice shaking with righteous anger.

Ba’al was stunned. His first reaction was to deny it, the second to cut the channel and open fire. But it was his third thought that came to fruition: he activated the remote override he had included in all Cylon ships some months ago when he first began to doubt the wisdom of giving his servants Goa’uld weapons.

The signal went out. The three new-model Basestars promptly shut down, to the shock and terror of their crews. Those Cylons had barely had time to react to the sudden firefight within their formation; the councils aboard each ship had only just begun discussing what was going on when they were plunged into darkness. The ship’s shields dropped, their power plants shut down, the lights and life support failed. Even the Centurions fell into a dormant state.

The two First War vessels likewise received the signal…and nothing happened. Ba’al was incensed yet further when the communications channel did not shut down as he had expected. The One looked down briefly at the data stream before looking back at him.

”We disabled those overrides. I thought you’d try something like that, but thanks for disabling the other ships, they might have turned against us. Now die, you bastard!

The channel closed. Ba’al’s ship continued to shake, the shields dropping gradually. His Cylon crew, fanatically loyal to him, would not dare act without his orders. Even as the rebel Basestars fire salvo after salvo of plasma bolts into his shields, even as the first volley of naquada warheads that had been launched blossomed into brilliant fireballs, they still had not returned fire.

Ba’al took fully twenty seconds to do anything more than stare, slack-jawed in shock, at the communications screen. Finally, he was roused from his stupor by a particularly rough impact, one that sent showers of sparks cascading to the deck as circuits overloaded.

There was only one order he could give. “Destroy them!”

Battlestar Warspite CIC,

Jellicoe was rapidly thinking. The situation was unprecedented, absurd almost and yet he could not deny the evidence in front of him. The Cylons were apparently firing on each other. Major Smythe continued to update them on the rapidly developing situation.

“Targets Foxtrot-One and Foxtrot-Two are still engaging…missiles launched! Targets Nebulon One through Three appear to have shut down, no shields or active DRADIS detected…unknown contact is opening fire, looks like the same weapons as Foxtrot One and Two. This is frakking weird.”

Jellicoe could hardly fault the Ops Officer for his less than polite remark. He looked down at the message they’d received, wondering if some of the Cylons really were switching sides. Then he recalled that these two Basestars had been extremely inaccurate so far, in direct contrast to the other refitted Basestars. In fact, not a single direct hit had been scored by them. Almost as if they weren’t trying to hurt them but had to keep up appearances.

The fact remained that this new unknown vessel carried the being responsible for the near-genocide of the Colonies. He now had two sources confirming this and while he didn’t trust the apparently-rebellious Cylon commander in the slightest, he did believe Daniel. He made his choice.

“Get me Apollo and White Knight on a secure channel, right now.”

Goodenough tore his eyes away from the displays and set up the impromptu conference call. He looked over at his commander and confirmed that the line was ready. Jellicoe nodded back and grabbed the phone.

“Gentleman, I have two sources claiming that this new unknown vessel carries the alien being responsible for both the Cylon Insurrection and the genocide of the Colonies. Some of the Cylons seem quite happy to blow it the hell up, so I think we should join in. Apollo, how are your missile tubes loaded?”

There was a brief silence over the encrypted channel before the younger Adama’s voice came back.
”Tubes one through twelve are loaded with enhanced ship to ship missiles, same as you. You really want to get involved in this Iron Duke?

Captain Pendragon spoke next. “I have to agree with Apollo, why not sit it out?

Jellicoe answered, with a hint of steel in his voice. “Because gentleman we have them between two fires. We can blast this son of a bitch back to whatever hell it came from and finish the Cylon bastards at the same time. We attack. And since I’m in command, you can consider that a direct order.”

Pendragon sighed audibly. “I understand that John, but if we wait…”

Jellicoe cut him off, but his tone softened somewhat. “Arthur, this is the being responsible for thirty-one billion deaths during the Fall. Not to mention the three and a half billion casualties of the last war. I will not pass up this opportunity. He’s also the one responsible for Barham and all the destroyers going down.”

Pendragon was silent for a few moments. He’d known Captain North for many years, and the chance to avenge him was tempting indeed. “Very well Commander. What’s the plan?

Jellicoe smiled, even though the other CO’s couldn’t see it. “Charge up your main batteries, I want a staggered salvo of every available mega-laser once we reach max range. Apollo, on my mark salvo-fire your missiles, with them distracted some should get through. We don’t know how strong this thing is, so we may as well go all in. Unengaged batteries should target the three disabled vessels, let’s finish this.”

Apollo spoke to someone in his CIC briefly before coming back to the channel: ”Prepping missiles for launch, ready in forty seconds. Main battery charged and locked on target. At best formation speed we’ll be at max range in 35 seconds from mark…mark. Unengaged turrets locked on targets.”

Pendragon spoke up: ”Main battery locked on target, ready to fire on your command. All other batteries ready to fire on secondary targets.”

Jellicoe acknowledged the responses as the three Battlestars moved forwards to attack.

Ba’al’s Ha’tak

The ship was shaking continuously now. The Ha’tak was a powerful vessel, but it was up against two similarly powerful ships and had to divide its fire. The initial minute of unanswered fire had depleted the shields noticeably and the ship’s general lack of point-defence weapons meant that every Cylon missile was detonating on the shields rather than being safely intercepted.

It was a bad position, but far from fatal. The Ha’tak’s guns spoke, sending streams of golden plasma to batter at the rebel ships. Gold met blue as the respective salvos crisscrossed the space between the vessels. Cylon shields began to flare and weaken as well. It was a battle of attrition as the three ships exchanged hammer blows at nearly point-blank range.

Towards this melee came the three Battlestars. They had left the remnants of the destroyer squadrons behind with the defence platforms and forged on alone, just as the three Lionheart’s had done earlier. At twenty seconds from energy range, the bows of the Pegasus and the Warspite lit up with plumes of fire and vapour as each ship launched twelve missiles in a rapid sequence. These were the same enhanced missiles the Warspite had used to such devastating effect months ago.

The missiles raced in, jinking up and down and side to side to evade any counter-missile fire, but none came their way. The target was being particularly cooperative in this case; no defensive fire, no evasive actions, no jamming, nothing. Had they been capable of emotion, the computers controlling the missiles would have been offended at such an easy task.

The Ha’tak may not have been firing on the missiles, but it was taking its toll on the two Cylon vessels. Shield strength was falling rapidly on the second vessel, which had the misfortune of being in sight of the Ha’tak’s heaviest guns. The shields failed completely and three powerful plasma bolts tore into the ship’s lower hanger disc, shredding armour and internal bulkheads with contemptuous ease. Fires swept through the hangers and secondary explosions tore away large portions of the hull, leaving the ship’s lower section with a terrible appearance.

Ten seconds before the missiles were to impact the Ha’tak’s shields, the three Battlestars fired their main batteries in sequence. Warspite fired first, four beams of red death lancing out and striking the Ha’tak’s shields dead centre. The shields were already strained by the fire from the two Basestars, this new attack from a third angle stretched them even further.

Then Pegasus fired. Four more mega-laser beams impacted the shields. They flared a brilliant yellow as they absorbed and deflected the incredible energy, but their strength dropped even further, rapidly approaching critical levels. Finally Excalibur fired, and the shields were on the brink of collapse.

The Cylon manning the weapons station barely had time to shout to his God that shield strength was at five percent when the missile salvo detonated. Twenty four warheads, each yielding two hundred and fifty megatons, made for a terrifying light show in the dark environment of space.

The shields collapsed completely, allowing much of the energy to reach through and burn the hull away. The outer framework emerged with its hull plating totally ablated; countless compartments were opened to space and those unlucky Cylons who hadn’t been immediately killed were hurled out into the void by the decompression.

Ba’al’s ship was heavily damaged; many of its weapons were gone and the two Cylon vessels were still firing, though in one case with considerably fewer weapons than before. Plasma bolts punched deep into the outer framework and central pyramid. Critical systems were damaged beyond repair; the shields, the hyperdrive, life support.

This was not the end of the battle however. At the same time as the Battlestar’s fired their main weapons, the various smaller turbolaser turrets had cut loose at the three adrift Basestars, seizing the opportunity to eliminate the Cylon threat. Salvos of crimson bolts systematically shredded the dormant Cylon vessels. The crews, almost all of whom were still loyal to their God, spent their last moments in the dark as their ships were torn apart around them. Some of them wondered, with their last thoughts, if this is what the Colonials over Caprica and Aerilon and Scorpia had felt.

In just four salvos the disabled Cylon vessels were breaking up. A fifth salvo detonated something critical within two of them, producing huge fireballs that consumed the ships. The third died a much less dramatic death, splitting apart into a dozen large pieces that continued to flame and spark as they drifted apart.

In his command chamber, Cavil looked at the data stream with barely suppressed glee. The humans had done exactly what he had hoped and helped deal a crippling blow to God’s ship. Even now, large parts of the outer framework were being blasted away from the main structure and the central pyramid’s golden hue had given way to craters and huge black scorch marks. The ship was clearly dying, but it was still firing with what few weapons it had left.

The other Basestar had already taken heavy damage, so even the diminished salvo of plasma bolts that struck its central core was enough to finish it off. The first three bolts tore deeper and deeper holes into the armour before the fourth and final bolt penetrated to the ships armoured core and the main reactors. They detonated with titanic force, blasting the wrecked lower disk away from the ship before the fireball voraciously consumed the upper hull. There was enough debris left to be recognisable as a Basestar but that was all.

In his throne room, Ba’al was pacing angrily. His sanity, an always tenuous quality in a Goa’uld, was rapidly slipping away as he came to the realisation that his own creations would destroy him, and very soon. Of the many wild and vengeful thoughts in his mind in these last moments was that this would be recorded as the single worst day in Goa’uld history…if any Goa’uld survived to record it.

His Cylon crew were almost all dead or incapacitated, his ship was shredded, even he was injured. His shoulder was dislocated, courtesy of a surprise encounter with the chamber wall when the nuclear missiles detonated. He stopped his pacing and glared at the sole sensor display that still worked; one of the rebel ships was gone, the other was damaged, but now the cursed humans were firing on him as well.

Ba’al, Last of the System Lords, died with a curse on his lips as a plasma bolt fired from Cavil’s ship tore through the deck where the throne room was located. His host and the symbiote it carried was vaporised too quickly for him to scream.

From Cavil’s Basestar, and from the human Battlestars, the various command crews watched as God died. The uppermost section of the central pyramid now sported a large hole burned clean through it from one face to the opposite edge. A few seconds later several large explosions erupted in the pyramid’s base as various volatile substances detonated under the Cylon plasma fire. The ship finally died in a paroxysm of countless small detonations; the outer framework spun away, its last connections shot through. The central pyramid was blown into twenty or more fragments, several of which exploded shortly after the end of the larger ship.

Cavil was ecstatic. His gambit had worked and God was well and truly dead. The loyalist Cylons were gone as well, except those back on the Homeworld, but they could be dealt with in due course. He was broken from his joyful thoughts when the ship rocked as turbolaser fire struck the shields.

He glared at the displays only to feel his insides freeze. The three Battlestars had turned towards him and the flank batteries were already firing. It seemed their unspoken truce had been temporary and the humans were once again pressing their advantage. He thought rapidly and, seeing no other choice, grabbed the ship to ship comm system and broadcast in the clear:

“Attention Battlestars, this is the Cylon Commander…” he breathed deeply, steeling himself even as weapons fire continued to hit his shields “…we surrender! I repeat, we surrender! Please cease fire immediately!”

There was no answer except more weapons fire. He tried again with the same result. His ships shields were being rapidly drained and he knew it was a matter of seconds before the Battlestars had recharged their impressive main weapons.

The shields reached critical levels as Cavil made one last call, knowing that if this didn’t work he would be dead in very short order. And then, as if by a miracle, the fire stopped. The shaking ended. Cavil looked around at his brothers before a voice came over the speakers. It was as cold as ice:

This is Commander John Jellicoe of the Battlestar Warspite, acting Commander of the Unified Fleet. We have you outnumbered, outgunned and surrounded. That “God” may have given the orders but you bastards still dropped the bombs. Give me one good reason why I shouldn’t blow you frakkers to hell, just like you did to us.

Cavil looked at the Four and the Five again, silently asking for ideas. Five could offer nothing but a scared expression. Four thought quickly and then rapidly typed something into the data stream so Cavil could see it. He read the message, blinked at the content, realised he had nothing left to try and then pressed the transmit button again:

“Because you are better than us.”

There was silence on the line. The seconds stretched out with painful slowness, the Cylons desperately hoping the last throw of the dice would work. They couldn’t read the bursts of messages between the Battlestars but they knew their existence was being rapidly debated. Finally, after fifty seconds of agonising delay, a response came over the speakers. It began with a heavy sigh and, of all things, a quiet chuckle:

I guess you’re right about that. We are better than you…

Cavil sagged against the console in relief. The Four had the beginning of a smug grin while the Five looked like he might faint. Their relief was short lived as Jellicoe continued:

…after all, we’re not targeting civilians.” The line went dead. Cavil’s expression of relief turned to one of fear as he grasped what Jellicoe had meant. That epiphany would prove to be his last thought.

The Warspite and the Pegasus both fired their main batteries. For a final time, the beams of read death struck out from the ship’s bows. The Basestar’s shields were still extremely weak and put up only token resistance, failing within milliseconds. The beams, barely attenuated, slammed into the Basestar’s central core. The hull and skeleton vaporised, the reactors detonated, the magazines and atmosphere ignited, all within fractions of a second. The ship vanished in a brilliant flash, which faded away to reveal that there was nothing left of Cavil and his ship larger than a grain of sand.

The Battle of Terra was finally over and the Cylons were utterly defeated. Jellicoe, Beatty, Lee Adama, Commander Fischer, Captain Pendragon, Captain Stewart, Captain Garrett, all the surviving senior officers sagged at their posts, almost simultaneously. The battle had been short, barely an hour had passed since the Cylons first arrived in the Terran system, but they were all exhausted.

Fate was not done with them quite yet however. As one, the various sensor officers announced a new contact. It appeared much like “God” had done, erupting from a blue-purple…rip in space. It was a completely different design however.

It was based around a thick main hull that was roughly oval in shape and a good thousand metres on its longest axis. The front half narrowed into two prongs whilst the aft had a large cut-out in the hull shape, which was flanked by pillars extending above and below the main hull. These pillars were joined by arc shaped sections that presumably filled some important technological or aesthetic function. Those Terrans or Colonials who had the chance to look at the new contact thought it was a much prettier ship than “God’s” had been.

There was a moment’s pause. The new ship made no attempt to move towards the planet or the Battlestars, nor did it send out any active sensor signals that they could detect. It didn’t appear to do anything in fact. It was just..waiting.

Jellicoe was about to order a standard ship to ship challenge when Smythe called out from his place at Ops:

“Sir, I’ve got something else on the edge of sensor range…” the Major trailed off. Jellicoe came within seconds of turning and banging his head against the wall at the absurdity of so many unknowns in one day when the officer spoke again, delight in his voice:

“…it’s the Galactica! She survived!”

A cheer broke out in CIC. Jellicoe and Beatty shared a look of profound relief. And then the final shoe dropped. A voice came over the comm speakers, calm, refined and distinctly not human:

”Greetings. I am Thor, Supreme Commander of the Asgard Fleet aboard the Science Vessel Daniel Jackson. I come in peace. Both myself and my allies from Earth would like to speak to your leaders.”

=========

Cue closing credits and cliffhanger music...again. I'm a bastard like that aren't I?

Seriously though, the Battle for Terra is finally done, God/Ba'al is dead, Cavil is dead, the Cylons in general are dead. Galactica has survived! Well, the ship has, no word yet on the crew...mwahahaha...

The Asgard have arrived with SG1, so the crossover can finally begin! And yes, I did steal a line from Star Trek 5. It was a shit film, but the line fits...what does God need with a starship?

And finally, to Steve and others who mentioned him...see, Goodenough appears! Happy now? I'm not sure how many more Jutland references I can get away with before O'Neill wallops me.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
fnord
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by fnord »

"Remember the Barham"

One huge, Smut Git-shattering, kaboom. Nice.

Speaking of Wallop, when's he turning up?
A mad person thinks there's a gateway to hell in his basement. A mad genius builds one and turns it on. - CaptainChewbacca
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Oh he'll probably turn up during the aftermath amongst the crew that evac'd from the Barham. Or I might make him one of the Terran officers assigned to Galactica to help fill out her crew and help with the upgrades. Haven't decided yet.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Crazedwraith »

It's understandable they want to wipe out the Cylons but wiping them out when they've surrendered strikes a very sour note with me. Especially since you established Cavill as someone who'd genuinely changed his mind when it was revealed he was wrong about humans. (And wonder if Daniel Jackson will have issues with this)

Likewise, Baal's demise is a loss of an interesting character. There's a very end of act one feeling to this chapter, I do wonder where you can take this. What need to the Tauri/Asgard have of the Terrans if they're busy wiping out the Goa'uld.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

Jellicoe's orders will get questioned, don't worry. You may notice that only Warspite and Pegasus fired, not Excalibur. These are people that have survived a near-genocide, found a safe haven, only to have it threatened again by the same enemy, who are happy to act against civilians while the battle is still raging. Jellicoe has had to deal with losing everyone he loved, has made new friends and seen many of them die as well - Lethbridge-Stewart is unconscious, Adama was at the time MIA presumed dead, Jellioce acted in the heat of the moment. Lee went with it for similar reasons. Capt. Pendragon would have argued against it - which is why he wasn't consulted.

However, the Cylons are not wiped out - their Homeworld is still largely intact, it's just their fleet that is gone. As for Cavil changing his mind, well, hopefully I've shown that his motives are still pragmatic and self-serving - even when he decided to turn against God and the loyal models, his plan was to let the two fleets grind each other down and then act - he might have decided they don't need to be wiped out any longer but he has no trouble letting them die if it achieves his goals. It was his idea to send ships to bombard Lemuria after all. As he said himself "we can never be friends but maybe we don't need to be enemies." He wanted to cut and run, not make peace.

As for Baal, well honestly I didn't see much else to do with the character - his power base has been swept away by the Asgard and his ace card (the Cylon fleet) has been shredded, and he had doubts about them anyway. The most I could do with him would have him pop up now and then as a peripheral menace, not a major opponent. It felt right to have him die, especially at the hand of his own hubris and creation.

However, we know in the series he made clones, so while this Baal is definitely dead, there may yet be a reappearance.

As for the "End of Act 1" feel, you are correct. The next arc will focus on the Tauri, Terrans, Colonials and Asgard working on that new Great Alliance mentioned previously - and then they'll receive word from Atlantis about the Hive Ships. As for what they need from each other, they have plenty to trade, the Terrans/Colonials have their jump drives and sublight engines (which given the size of the ships are superior to what the Tau'ri have) plus the Terran system has lots of naquada - needed for all those enhanced nukes.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
fnord
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by fnord »

There's what, 50-odd thousand surviving Colonials out of a pre-war population of thirty billion? ~600,000 ghosts standing behind each survivor.

If Barham had survived Frankie's Wild Ride, the capship brawl would have been lot more lopsided, probably in the Cylon's favour - 1/6 of the Allied heavies traded for a quarter of the post-bomber-strike murderfleet.
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Eternal_Freedom
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

fnord wrote:There's what, 50-odd thousand surviving Colonials out of a pre-war population of thirty billion? ~600,000 ghosts standing behind each survivor.

If Barham had survived Frankie's Wild Ride, the capship brawl would have been lot more lopsided, probably in the Cylon's favour - 1/6 of the Allied heavies traded for a quarter of the post-bomber-strike murderfleet.
Dunno what you mean about Barham - she was dead and they knew it. Her somehow surviving and being in any condition to fight would have been miraculous, but still wouldn't change much. The real Cylon tactical loss to Barham was the First War Basestar - the unshielded versions simply wouldn't last long against shielded Battlestars - witness Galactica's fight.
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by fnord »

If Barham had survived to jump back to the Allied fleet with her sisters, then logically a quarter of the post-Wild-Ride murderfleet (including one of the surviving four FW basestars) wouldn't have buggered off after it and would have been able to contribute to the main battle. 20% More Dakka on the Allied side vs 33% More Dakka on the murderfleet.

However, weighed against that would have been the lack of time to recharge shields (as you said, Barham's and Excalibur's shields were only a few hits from collapse anyway).
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Re: The Thirteenth Tribe (nBSG/SG Crossover)

Post by Eternal_Freedom »

fnord wrote:If Barham had survived to jump back to the Allied fleet with her sisters, then logically a quarter of the post-Wild-Ride murderfleet (including one of the surviving four FW basestars) wouldn't have buggered off after it and would have been able to contribute to the main battle. 20% More Dakka on the Allied side vs 33% More Dakka on the murderfleet.

However, weighed against that would have been the lack of time to recharge shields (as you said, Barham's and Excalibur's shields were only a few hits from collapse anyway).
Ah I see what you meant. If that had been the case, things would have gone differently. But, doing things this way gave me a really cool final stand scene to write. Plus, well, you wanted your ship to go out fighting, so there :D
Baltar: "I don't want to miss a moment of the last Battlestar's destruction!"
Centurion: "Sir, I really think you should look at the other Battlestar."
Baltar: "What are you babbling about other...it's impossible!"
Centurion: "No. It is a Battlestar."

Corrax Entry 7:17: So you walk eternally through the shadow realms, standing against evil where all others falter. May your thirst for retribution never quench, may the blood on your sword never dry, and may we never need you again.
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