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- <h3>Synopsis by Katrina Glerum (kat@midwinter.com)</h3>
-
- <p>
- The scene in the Council Chambers is chaotic and the nascent Interstellar
- Alliance appears on the verge of cribdeath. Member species are demanding
- the promised technological advances while refusing to sign the Declaration
- of Principles on the grounds that it is an attempt to legislate morality
- and thereby violates the very spirit of the Alliance. The Drazi Ambassador
- is loudly in the forefront as usual, claiming that his species has never
- conquered another, making the Declaration both irrelevant and insulting to
- them.
-
- <p>
- The President is taking a breather on the Observation Deck when he is
- joined by the head of Covert Intelligence. Garibaldi agrees with Londo that
- the Declaration should be dropped and a show of force would be more
- effective persuasion instead, but Sheridan insists that without the
- Declaration, the Alliance is meaningless.
-
- <p>
- At dusk on a beautiful verdant planet, a community of aliens huddles in
- shelters under an aerial bombardment. A Ranger appears at the door and is
- ushered to their leader. The hope that the Alliance might save them from
- their attackers illuminates their faces.
-
- <p>
- While G'Kar struggles to write a more interspecially palatable Declaration,
- Sheridan, Delenn and Londo scheme of ways to convince more worlds to become
- members. Garibaldi proposes an idea that he has been brooding on for quite
- awhile. In order to be on an equal footing with other intelligence
- operations, he suggests that the Alliance use telepaths in addition to
- Rangers for intelligence gathering. The new telepath colony has offered to
- work for their lodgings, and this would be a good way for them to do it.
-
- <p>
- Once Sheridan grants him permission to discuss this with the telepaths,
- Garibaldi sets off immediately. He finds Byron hanging out with his
- overtly hostile coven in DownBelow. Without listening to a word, Byron
- abruptly refuses Garibaldi's mission. Mocking Garibaldi's attempts at
- manipulation and his tendency to rehearse his conversations, Byron describes
- how difficult it is for a telepath to avoid overhearing the thoughts of
- others.
-
- <p>
- A battered White Star flies sideways through the jump gate. The Ranger on
- board is rushed to Medlab, but the prognosis is bad. Delenn decides to
- bring in Lyta to discover his message before it's too late. Lyta sees the
- embattled Enphili through the Ranger's eyes. Even though it may kill them,
- the Enphili have finally refused to pay tribute to the raiders who
- periodically hound them. If the Alliance will save them within the next
- twelve days they will join the Alliance and freely give their planet's
- resources to the cause. Otherwise they are prepared to perish.
-
- <p>
- "I'm dying, aren't I," the Ranger suddenly asks Lyta. He appears to be
- standing across the bed from her. His final anguished thought is that she
- not let the Enphili die because of his failure. Then a white tunnel of
- light appears and draws him in, leaving Lyta gravely disturbed.
-
- <p>
- When Delenn tells Sheridan about the Enphili decision, he grumbles that
- Garibaldi is right again. it's time for a show of force. She suggests that
- instead of a token force, they should send every White Star they have to
- the planet so that the message is clear to anyone paying attention. And
- perhaps as a result, they won't have to fight at all. "Terror is also a
- form of communication," she quotes Dukhat. Since the Enphili planet is on
- the edge of Drazi space, Sheridan informs the Drazi ambassador
- of their intent and invites the Drazi to participate. The Ambassador
- immediately rushes off on a furtive mission as soon as the meeting is
- finished. Byron happens to be lurking pensively in the corridor.
-
- <p>
- Lyta is sitting bleakly over an untouched plate of food when Garibaldi
- bustles up and offers her a job. When she sarcastically thanks him for his
- polite concern, he apologizes. Before he can get going on his intention,
- she tells him what it's like being inside the mind of a person when they
- die. A piece of yourself follows them into death, she says. Permanently.
- When you look into the eyes of a telepath who's done this too many times,
- "there's nothing there anymore," she nearly sobs. Psi Corps rumor is that
- Bester has tasted this too often, and at least once, too deeply. In a
- manner both forlorn and bitter, Lyta asks what Garibaldi wants her to do
- now.
-
- <p>
- He tells her about his object in approaching the telepath colony. "Did they
- tell you they were tired of working for mundanes?" she asks. "Did they tell
- you do go to hell?" When he confirms both, she says that there isn't a
- problem then, and stalks off.
-
- <p>
- Michael never gives up easily though. He chases after her and asks it as a
- personal favor to him, to Sheridan and to Delenn. Lyta is affronted,
- but he continues saying that even if he thinks Sheridan and Delenn are too
- pie-in-the-sky idealistic, he's still going to do everything he can to help
- them succeed, including this. He promises this is the last request of Lyta
- he'll make--until the next time, and she reluctantly agrees to help.
-
- <p>
- In a dark, empty council chamber, G'Kar stands, gathers his paper wearily,
- and walks away.
-
- <p>
- Unable to sleep, Sheridan hears the door chime. The latest Declaration of
- Principles is lying on the floor outside. Delenn rouses and asks him to
- read it.
-
- <p>
- "The Universe speaks in many languages but only one voice...," he begins.
- G'Kar striding down the corridor takes up the speech. "...It is the
- language of the heart." A fleet of White Stars speeds through hyperspace.
- "The language of the soul." The Enphili shiver in their shelters. "It is
- the voice of our ancestors speaking through us. And the voice of our
- inheiritors waiting to be born..." Dr. Franklin is writing a letter to the
- parents of the Ranger telling them who he died for. "...No matter the
- cost..."
-
- <p>
- "We agree to recognize this singular truth and this singular rule...We are
- one."
-
- <p>
- When Lyta finds Byron, he reproaches her for blocking him out. But she's
- in no mood to let down her guard. When she brings up Garibaldi's request,
- Byron berates her for running other people's errands. "Sit!" he orders,
- and then kicks away the chair as she approaches. When she angrily starts
- to walk away he asks if she doesn't deserve to be asked and understood
- rather than commanded and used by inferior humans. "What a piece of work
- is man," Byron recites from Hamlet, "...the paragon of animals." Worse
- than animals, he argues, which is why he has established this place for
- telepaths to make a new, better way. He agrees for her sake to help
- Garibaldi and passes on what he learned from the Drazi Ambassador in the
- hall. The Drazi intend to ambush the White Star fleet.
-
- <p>
- Apparently the Drazi are behind the raiders attacking the Enphili, but not
- directly involved, Lyta reports. Sheridan is incensed at the Drazi
- hypocrisy and orders the White Star fleet to head directly to Enphilia as
- quickly as possible. He sternly thanks Lyta for her help and departs.
-
- <p>
- Once the White Stars have wiped out the raiders, Sheridan calls a council
- meeting where he describes the situation. The Drazi Ambassador is upset
- when he discovers that his government's ships are flying toward certain
- annihilation. As he stammers that he needs to contact his government, the
- advisory council confronts him with the truth about Drazi exploitation of
- the Enphili. As the Ambassador runs to stop his fleet, Sheridan gives each
- Ambassador a Declaration of Principles which he now has the moral authority
- to demand that they sign. Lyta is outside, and seeing the Alliance leaders
- all proudly grinning at their success reminds Lyta once again that she is
- an outsider.
-
- <p>
- Afterwards Sheridan reflects that telepaths saved the day twice. His
- musings are interrupted by G'Kar bustling in to grab all the Declarations
- and insist that they be signed again. When Sheridan objects, G'Kar
- replies, "but it's <em>better</em> now" and runs off. To Sheridan and Delenn's
- amazement G'Kar is right. Returning to the telepath question, Sheridan
- expresses his concern that it will be difficult to make use of the
- telepaths wisely and yet ethically.
-
- <p>
- Lyta finds herself drawn back to Byron, anxious to hear more of his ideas
- and plans for the future.
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