Carved Out — Hull Breach and Irreversible Loss
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Shields collapse entirely as a second Borg beam slices through the Enterprise hull, tearing away decks four through six — Riker’s grim analogy 'carving us up like a roast' underscores the cold, mechanical brutality of the assault.
Picard orders repeated phaser volleys to sever the beam, and the Enterprise’s salvos inflict visible damage on the Borg ship — the beam releases, but only after eighteen crew members are lost, their bodies consumed, replacing tactical hope with irreversible grief.
Worf reports the destruction of three hull sections and eighteen missing crew; Riker’s raw cry 'Why?!' hangs in stunned silence — the crew confronts the visceral cost of their defeat, the loss no longer abstract but lived in empty stations and cold decks.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Stressed and urgent; anxious about failing to free the ship yet focused on carrying out orders quickly.
Wesley inputs helm and power orders, attempts to disengage the ship, and reports that the vessel is being held by the beam — acting as the nervous technical executor between command and engineering.
- • Execute warp/helm commands to remove the Enterprise from the tractor's hold.
- • Relay real-time engineering feedback to senior officers.
- • Prompt technical action can buy the ship time or escape.
- • Accurate input and speed will influence the outcome of the engagement.
Collective indifference; no individual emotion, only efficient purpose.
The Borg launch and maintain a tractor/laser beam that holds the Enterprise, then use a cutting beam to core away and remove whole decks — functioning as a relentless, adaptive aggressor indifferent to casualties.
- • Disable and harvest technology and materials from the Enterprise.
- • Neutralize resistance and escape with harvested sections.
- • Assimilation/harvest of resources is a rational imperative of the collective.
- • Force and technological superiority make moral arguments irrelevant.
Sorrowful and grave; carrying the weight of prior trauma and a desire to warn without having complete answers.
Guinan remains present after the attack, offers a brief apology to Picard, and prepares to answer his questions about the Borg with the limited, painful knowledge she has.
- • Convey what she knows to help the crew prepare.
- • Honor the memory of those lost by ensuring they understand the danger.
- • Her people's experiences with the Borg matter and can influence command choices.
- • Partial knowledge is better than none when confronting an existential threat.
Resolute but gravely shocked — responsibility for lives presses on him, but he remains focused on procedure and understanding the enemy.
Picard issues tactical orders (warp heading, lock and fire), demands termination of the beam, calls a conference after the attack, and solicits Guinan's knowledge — balancing immediate command with the need for fuller understanding.
- • Reposition and save the ship and crew through tactical maneuvering.
- • Gather intelligence and counsel (Guinan) to shape strategic response.
- • Command must make clear tactical choices even while grappling with moral loss.
- • Contextual knowledge (Guinan's history) is crucial to facing this new threat.
Calmly clinical; emotionally detached but grave in consequence — using data to steady others.
Data monitors sensors and announces precise technical milestones — shield drain, an eighteen‑second countdown, shields down, tractor release — and identifies that a force field is maintaining hull integrity after the cut.
- • Provide accurate timing and sensor data to allow tactical decisions.
- • Diagnose the ship's condition and confirm when hostile links are severed.
- • Accurate information can convert panic into effective action.
- • Technical clarity will give command options to save lives and ship integrity.
Controlled fury; resolute and focused on neutralizing the threat while conveying grim facts without theatricality.
Worf reports shield failure, declares phasers locked, executes phaser volleys that finally break the tractor hold, and then reports destroyed sections and casualty counts — a martial, duty‑first presence amid carnage.
- • Neutralize the enemy's hold on the ship using phaser fire.
- • Protect remaining ship systems and report damage so command can act.
- • Direct force and correct weapon employment can change the tactical situation.
- • Clear reporting of damage and casualties is necessary for command decisions.
Angry and stunned; fury focused on the violation of crew safety and the seeming wantonness of the attack.
Riker translates alarm into orders — demanding increased power, demanding a damage report, and expressing raw anger when casualties are reported. He helps move command toward a conference while visibly stunned and furious.
- • Restore ship capability and prevent further loss of life.
- • Hold command accountable and press for immediate remedial action.
- • Starfleet must protect its personnel at all costs.
- • Swift, aggressive measures are necessary when the ship is under direct assault.
Stunned concern; empathically registering the room's shock and preparing to counsel as needed.
Troi stands with the senior officers as they move to conference, present and attentive but offering no lines in this passage — a silent emotional barometer in the room.
- • Support command emotionally and be ready to advise on crew morale.
- • Read the bridge's emotional state to inform Picard's decisions.
- • Emotional health of the crew will affect operational effectiveness.
- • Her perspective will be valuable once command processes the immediate tactical facts.
Emotionally unreadable; deliberately detached and watchful, implying control and judgment.
Q silently reveals himself behind the senior officers at the end of the exchange; he speaks no words here, his presence a theatrical punctuation that reframes the scene's moral stakes.
- • Observe and provoke Picard and the crew's moral response.
- • Demonstrate his power and the precariousness of human agency.
- • He is testing or auditioning humanity (specifically Picard).
- • Crisis exposes character and makes people more manipulable.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Enterprise defensive shields are described as being drained by the Borg beam, counting down to failure; their loss creates the vulnerability that allows the cutting beam to core away decks, making shields a central tactical variable.
The Red Alert system is invoked during the engagement and then ends once the tractor releases and the phaser volleys succeed; its activation signals shipwide emergency response and its ending marks a tactical lull in which command assesses damage and loss.
Ship phaser banks (pin‑point phasers) are locked on the tractor source and fired repeatedly; their accurate volleys finally break the beam's hold and batter the Borg ship — a costly but necessary use of offensive shipboard weapons.
The Borg's anomalous tractor/laser beam holds the Enterprise in place, drains shields, and then a focused cutting beam cores a segment of the saucer section and drags it back toward the Borg ship — the literal instrument of violent extraction and the catalyst for the casualties and tactical countermeasures.
An internal force field is reported to be maintaining the Enterprise's hull integrity after the saucer section is cut away, preventing immediate decompression and allowing the ship to stabilize despite the catastrophic structural loss.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Saucer Section is the portion of the Enterprise physically cored by the Borg's cutting beam; it becomes the visceral site of structural loss and mortal consequence when entire decks are severed and carried away, transforming abstract danger into concrete human toll.
The Borg ship (represented here by battered exterior imagery) is the origin of the tractor and cutting beams and the destination for the removed saucer segment; it is both the active antagonist and the physical repository of the stolen hull piece.
Decks four, five and six (Sections 27–29) are explicitly reported destroyed — they serve as the precise compartments lost to the cutting beam and the locus for the reported eighteen missing crew members.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Q’s fearful recoil from Guinan mirrors the Borg’s indifference to Picard’s plea — both demonstrate the futility of humanity’s attempts to normalize or negotiate with forces beyond comprehension. Guinan’s terror is the human equivalent of the Borg’s antipathy."
"Q’s fearful recoil from Guinan mirrors the Borg’s indifference to Picard’s plea — both demonstrate the futility of humanity’s attempts to normalize or negotiate with forces beyond comprehension. Guinan’s terror is the human equivalent of the Borg’s antipathy."
"Q’s fearful recoil from Guinan mirrors the Borg’s indifference to Picard’s plea — both demonstrate the futility of humanity’s attempts to normalize or negotiate with forces beyond comprehension. Guinan’s terror is the human equivalent of the Borg’s antipathy."
"Sonya’s spill is a human error in a controlled environment; the Borg’s assimilation is a cosmic error in the galaxy’s natural order — both represent 'invasions' of order by the unprepared, thematically linking small-scale missteps to civilization-scale failures."
"Sonya’s spill is a human error in a controlled environment; the Borg’s assimilation is a cosmic error in the galaxy’s natural order — both represent 'invasions' of order by the unprepared, thematically linking small-scale missteps to civilization-scale failures."
"Sonya’s spill is a human error in a controlled environment; the Borg’s assimilation is a cosmic error in the galaxy’s natural order — both represent 'invasions' of order by the unprepared, thematically linking small-scale missteps to civilization-scale failures."
"The Borg’s surgical removal of decks — 'carving us up like a roast' — directly escalates the stakes from system damage to human extinction, triggering Riker’s physical lunge at Q and Picard’s dignified moral confrontation."
"The Borg’s surgical removal of decks — 'carving us up like a roast' — directly escalates the stakes from system damage to human extinction, triggering Riker’s physical lunge at Q and Picard’s dignified moral confrontation."
"The Borg’s surgical removal of decks — 'carving us up like a roast' — directly escalates the stakes from system damage to human extinction, triggering Riker’s physical lunge at Q and Picard’s dignified moral confrontation."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"RIKER: "They are carving us up like a roast.""
"WORF: "Eighteen were in those sections and are missing.""
"GUINAN: "I am so sorry, Captain.""