JANEWAY: But it did, and it's part of our history. All because of that timeship. Look at this - gantry, power conduits, telemetry consoles. This looks like a design for a launching bay.
JANEWAY: We're in Starling's office. I want you to establish a comm. link with my tricorder and try to upload his computer database.
CHAKOTAY: You know, Captain, in a way Braxton was right. If we hadn't fought him when he tried to destroy Voyager, he wouldn't have been pulled back in time, his ship wouldn't have crash-landed on Earth, and none of this would have happened.
JANEWAY: Time travel. Ever since my first day in the job as a Starfleet Captain I swore I'm never let myself get caught in one of these god-forsaken paradoxes. The future is the past, the past is the future. It all gives me a headache.
JANEWAY: Maybe it's linked to some kind of surveillance system. An image of the launch bay would give us a clue as to it's location.
(A holographic display disengages; an image of the timeship appears on the other side of glass screen) STARLING: I see you've made yourself at home. Welcome to the twentieth century. I know who you are, you're from the future. I knew you'd come back one day. I detected your vessel in orbit and Mister Dunbar here had a run-in with your friends. You're here to take the timeship.
STARLING: I see you've made yourself at home. Welcome to the twentieth century. I know who you are, you're from the future. I knew you'd come back one day. I detected your vessel in orbit and Mister Dunbar here had a run-in with your friends. You're here to take the timeship.
Janeway: Mister Starling, you're about to cause a terrible disaster that affect the 29th Century. An explosion that will cost billions of lives.