<><><>
Geordi La Forge extracted the second set of sensor relays from the photon torpedo casing and set it on the antigrav cart next to him. “I don’t know,” he told his companion. “This entire thing really has me bothered.”
Lieutenant Worf attached a series of relay components and set the system into a quick diagnostic mode. “You saw what the Borg were capable of. They killed hundreds in an instant, including the captain.” He wouldn’t admit it out loud, but the failure he had felt on that dark day still haunted him and he had declared to the dead gods of Sto-Vo-Kor that he would avenge the captain’s death.
“I know, but taking out this entire facility, it just seems like genocide.”
“If the Borg come to Federation space they will tear the surface of our worlds apart and consume them to continue their conquest,” Worf said defiantly. “We must stop them before such an attack comes.”
“There’s a lot of ‘if’s’ there Worf,” Geordi said. “We’ve no idea if they’re going to invade. There’s seventy thousand light-years between here and home.”
“Yes,” Worf said, “and the transwarp network that we used to get here will take them directly into our territory. Starfleet has sent us to deliver a crippling blow that will stop the Borg from invading.”
“That’s assuming that that base out there is their only centralized location in the galaxy,” La Forge. “I have really bad feeling about this.”
“Perhaps,” Worf said, sealing the torpedo casing and running the final checks on the trilitihium warhead. “But these are our orders and we must obey them. For the sake of our families and comrades back home.” He tapped his combadge. “Worf to Bridge. The trilitium weapon is ready. It will be loaded in the forward tube in moments.”
<><><>
On the bridge, Riker acknowledged the com call and told Worf to set up the weapon and get back to his post as soon as possible. Then he’d ordered Crusher to take them into firing range around the system’s star. The massive solar eruptions and fire raged on the G-Type star, almost identical to that of Sol. The Enterprise would have to enter the stars photosphere to guarantee the torpedo could enter the corona without being deflected by the massive gravitational forces. And that meant the shields would have to be up. And in order for the shields to be up, they’d have to drop their cloak.
It was going to have be calculated to the millisecond. It was a forgone conclusion that the Borg would detect the Enterprise when it de-cloaked even through the stars radiation. The trick would be deploying the weapon, and executing an escape at maximum warp before the Borg attacked. Estimates indicated that the level twelve shockwave that was produced by the destroyed star would take twenty nine seconds to reach the Borg complex and vaporize it. That was the only window that the Borg ships would have to pursues the Enterprise out of the system.
The aft turbolift doors hissed open, depositing Worf and La Forge, who took their respective stations.
“We’re in position,” Crusher said, “holding station.”
Riker rose from the command chair and pulled down on his tunic, adjusting the fabric to smooth it on his frame. “This is it,” he said calmly. “We’ve run the simulations, you all know what we are here to do. Everybody ready?”
His officers acknowledged they were ready and standing by. Riker returned to his seat and nodded to Data.
“Execute,” the android said.
<><><>
The entire operation had been rehearsed for five hours straight. And finally when it was time to execute, it went like clockwork. The modified photon torpedo erupted from the de-cloaked Enterprise and detonated within the corona of the star. The solar implosion tore the vast ball of hydrogen and radiation apart, expanding every direction in space. As soon as the torpedo had emerged from the launch tube, the Enterprise had gone to warp nine and re-cloaked.
Riker sat on the edge of his chair and gripped the glowing armrests. They were a hundred billion kilometers away before he allowed himself to take a breath.
“Complete destruction,” Worf said, a bit to proudly for Riker’s taste. “The Borg complex has been destroyed. A few vessels tried to escape the blast but were incinerated.”
Riker remained motionless, shocked that the plan had gone so well. The fact they’d eliminated all of the Borg ships was nothing sort of miraculous.
“Captain,” said Janeway from ops. “I’m picking up a Federation distress call.”
Riker bolted to his feet. “Triangulate and get a course. What’s the source?”
“Call signs and codes indicate it’s the USS Raven. It’s in a populated region about forty light-years away.”
“Populated by Borg?” he asked.
“No, sensors can’t ID tem obviously, but they’re definite not Borg.”
“Wes, set in a course, best possible speed. Mister Worf, send an array of Class 5 probes back to the Borg station. I want the debris analyzed. See if there’s any indication they got off a distress call of their own. Also look for any weapons or technology that can be salvaged.”
<><><>
At warp nine, it took them five days to reach the source of the distress call. They fell into orbit around a Class-M world that was heavily covered in vegetation and rare minerals that blocked most sensor scans.
“The kelbonite and rubindium below the surface are playing hell with sensors,” Janeway said. “But I’ve pinpointed the source of the transmission to within five kilometers.”
“Mister Data,” Riker said. “Prepare an away team.”
“You’ll have to go by shuttle,” Janeway added. “Transporters are iffy with that metallic mess.”
Data nodded. “Commander Janeway, Mister Worf, Commander La Forge, please come with me.” He tapped his combadge. “Doctor Crusher, please prepare a field kid for an away mission and report to shuttle bay two.”
<><><>
Through the dense cloud cover of the jungle world slow dissipated as the Starfleet shuttlecraft Beck descended into the atmosphere and skimmed the surface within a few clicks of the distress signal.
At the helm, Data operated the controls with a fraction of his concentration as his positronic brain calculated all avenues available to them and attempted to ascertain what they would find. The USS Raven had apparently been lost in a Borg transwarp conduit and ended up here in the heart of Borg space. The odds of their survival were minimal and it was most likely the distress call was automated and that the Enterprise had detected it when they’d departed the sensor inhibitions of the Borg home station. They were most likely to find a crashed vessel, and a few pieces of hull fragments scattered about the area.
So it was almost sheer surprise that struck Data as the shuttle came into range of an Aerie-Class science vessel situated in a clearing, mostly undamaged and none the worse for wear.
Next to him, Geordi La Forge whistled. “Would you look at that. What are the odds they’ve been out here all this time?”
“I would not care to calculate them,” Data said. From behind him at the auxiliary console, Doctor Beverly Crusher operated the bio-scanners. “There’s one life form down there. Male. Human.”
“Set us down,” La Forge said, getting up. “This should be interesting.”
<><><>
As soon as the shuttle had settled down on the surface and the aft hatch open, the away team was met by a human male, probably I his early sixties, hair wildly long, beard disheveled. He limped with the aid of a cane as he approached them.
“I am Commander Data of the Federation Starship Enterprise.”
“I’m well aware who you are,” the old man wheezed. “And I’m well aware of what you’ve done. Do you have any idea the disaster you’ve caused?” He began coughing violently, doubling over.
Beverly was immediately at his side, sweeping over him with her medical tricorder. “Easy, you’ve got severe infection in your lungs. I need to get you to sickbay.”
“The hell with you,” he wheezed between coughs. “You’ve doom us all.” Another fit of coughing and he collapsed to the ground, unconscious.
Data turned to Worf. “Lieutenant, go with Doctor Crusher and return to the Enterprise. This man must be stabilized. Commander La Forge and I will remain on the surface and begin a complete search of the Raven and it’s computers.”
Worf didn’t like the idea of playing pilot and nurse, but he acquiesced to Data’s order and after the old man was secured in the passenger compartment, the Beck fired her antigrav thrusters and headed back into space.
Data and Geordi spent the next several hours reviewing the logs and data in the computers o the Raven. The man was indeed it’s former commander, Doctor Magnus Hanson. He’d shipped out with his wife Erin and their four year old daughter Annika 2354. After departing the Omega Sector they’d shadowed a Borg cube at close range for many weeks until it entered the same transwarp conduit the Enterprise had used. They’d escaped the Borg ships at a terrible price. Erin and Annika had been kidnapped by the Borg. Most likely assimilated into the Collective and used to destroy other cultures.
For the past ten years, Hanson had been studying the Borg facility. A simple individual did not pose a threat to the Borg and they had let him be for all of these years. He’d gathered gigaquads of data from the intricate relationship between individual drones and the hive mind to detailed scans and schematics for Borg ships. He’d even come up with a process to undo the assimilation process and disconnect drones from the hive.
What they found last was heart wrenching. Prior to their capture, Hanson had injected his wife and daughter with a combination of radio nuclides. Even after they’d been assimilated, he’d been able to track his wife and daughter across thousands of cubic light-years. But they’d never traveled far. His wife and daughter were members of Borg Unimatrix One. The very same facility that had been destroyed one week ago.
La Forge sighed heavily and sat back in his chair. This man had accumulated the data to defeat the Borg at every level and in return the crew of the Enterprise had murdered his wife and daughter.