The Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5
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Synopsis by Matthew Murray (mmurray@cc.wwu.edu)
"Humans have a phrase," Delenn narrates, as we see a recap of events
leading up to the present, while she watches over Sheridan as he
sleeps. "'What is past is prologue.' Minbari also have a phrase. 'What
is past is also sometimes future.'"
The door to Sheridan's room bursts open, and he emerges, mouth agape,
staring at Anna. He can't believe what he is seeing, and asks her what
she's doing there. She asks him if that's the best she can do, but,
indicating Delenn, says she can understand under the circumstances.
Delenn rushes out, and Sheridan tries to stop her, but Anna lets her
leave. He tells Anna that he thought she was dead, and she expresses
surprise that Delenn didn't tell him. She says she's sorry she
couldn't tell him herself, and that she had to leave him alone for so
long with no word. But that's behind them now, and they're together
again. He pulls away, and she tells him she understands his doubts,
based on what Delenn told him. She tells him she will take any tests
and answer any questions to prove she is his wife. She says she's here
to explain everything to him to help him understand what it's really
all about. She says all he needs to do is come with her.
"Where?" Sheridan asks.
"Where else?" Anna replies. "To Z'ha'dum."
As G'Kar and Ivanova walk through a storage bay, G'Kar explains that
the devices around them were delivered by the Gaim ambassador, and
that each of the weapons can deliver a blast of between five and six
hundred megatons, and they are very difficult to detect. Ivanova plans
to use them as mines to destroy Shadow vessels when they come out of
hyperspace.
Sheridan watches in MedLab as a group of medical personnel examine
Anna. Dr. Franklin emerges and tells Sheridan that Anna is human, and
that all of her old medical records match up perfectly: It is his
wife. Sheridan protests that she died at Z'ha'dum, and Franklin asks
why he isn't glad she's back. Sheridan explains that he had to move
beyond her death, and now, with Delenn, things are even more
complicated. He asks Franklin if there is anything else, and Franklin
mentions that he found some epidermal scarring above the nape of her
neck, and that he doesn't yet know what caused it. Franklin promises
to run some tests, and Sheridan tells him that he has to know whether
or not it's really Anna.
Sheridan, in his office, demands to know from Delenn if it really is
Anna. Delenn says she doesn't know, but Sheridan doesn't accept that
answer--the pictures she and Kosh showed him led him to believe she
was dead, but he wants to know why they did that if they didn't know
for sure. Delenn said she was sure Anna would not serve the Shadows,
but she admits she might have been wrong. Sheridan is adamant in
believing Anna would never go along, and Delenn says she has no other
explanation, but Sheridan can't accept that. He demands to know why
she didn't tell him if there was even the slightest chance she was
still alive. She says, that if she had, he would have gone to Z'ha'dum
after her, and they couldn't allow that.
"You and Kosh... You couldn't allow it," Sheridan says. "I trusted
you, Delenn, I cared for you. I let myself start to love you. Do you
know what that means? Do you know how hard that was for me? All along
a little part of me was still in love with Anna, even though she was
gone--I had to fight that part off. Everytime I thought about you...
about holding you, about building a life for the two of us..."
"John, you must believe me, I didn't know she was alive. We assumed
that she had died with the rest of the crew of the Icarus, that only
Morden had survived."
"And had you known, would you have told me?"
"That would depend. It would depend on what she had become. Z'ha'dum
is the homeworld of the Shadows. No one leaves there the same as they
arrived."
"You... you would have denied me the right to make that choice. How
can you say that and expect me to ever trust you again?" He starts to
walk out, but Delenn stops him.
"John, I do love you. If you believe nothing else I ever say,
please... please believe that." Sheridan, without responding, walks
out of the office.
Londo and Vir are in the Zocalo, and Vir asks Londo why he has been
drinking so much since a diplomatic pouch arrived. Londo explains that
he has been promoted, to the position of advisor to the emperor in
matters of planetary security. Vir thinks that's great news, and
doesn't know why Londo is upset. Londo tells him that it's because it
didn't come twenty years ago, when he could appreciate it, but now,
since they are afraid of him, they want to put a leash on him so they
know what he's doing at all times. He knows that, if they see him
doing anything suspicious, he will soon be killed. A man, who
identifies himself only as "a friend" approaches the table. He says he
was sent by their "mutual associates" and tells Londo to leave the
station at once. Londo says he doesn't want to, and the man says that,
if he won't go, he won't be responsible, but that Londo must leave
quickly if he values his life. Londo and Vir know that it was more
than likely a friend of Morden's, and Londo doesn't like the sound of
the warning at all.
As Dr. Franklin looks over the medical records, searching for an
explanation for the epidermal scarring, Anna tells Sheridan, in his
quarters, that she has never been examined in such deatil--by anyone
other than him. She tells him that the medical reports have confirmed
that she is Anna, but Sheridan doesn't understand what she has been
doing on Z'ha'dum for so long, and why she picked now to come back.
She can't tell him that, but says that he needs to come back with her,
and that they are eager to meet him. Sheridan asks what will happen if
he doesn't go, and Anna says she will leave without him, and he'll
never know the truth. She promises no threats and no
ultimatums--merely an opportunity to hear their side of the story.
Sheridan asks why she wants to go back, and Anna tells him it's her
home now, and she's doing important work, and that he'll understand
when he goes there. Sheridan still refuses until he gets some
answers--he wants to know what happened to the Icarus and its crew
when they landed there. Anna asks him if, when she tells him, he
promises to go back with her. Sheridan agrees.
"Interplanetary Expeditions said that one of their probes out on the
Rim had found the ruins of an ancient civilization," begins Anna. "Dr.
Chang was putting together a follow-up expedition and he wanted me on
his team. It was the find of a lifetime. What he didn't tell me, or
most of the crew, was where he really got the information.
"A few years earlier, IPX had found an alien ship buried beneath the
surface of Mars. It was unlike anything they had ever seen before. As
soon as it was exposed to daylight, an automatic beacon on board sent
out a coded message. They knew whoever the ship belonged to would be
coming in fast to pick it up, so they moved quickly. They analyzed the
ship, took pieces of it for study later, and planted a homing device
inside. Three days later another ship turned up and was digging it out
of the ground. When it left, IPX was able to track it through
hyperspace to a world out on the Rim."
"Z'ha'dum," Sheridan realizes.
"We didn't have a name for it at the time," Anna continues. "And Chang
was under strict orders from EarthForce New Technologies Division to
keep this top secret. As soon as we landed, we picked up an energy
source. We were told to check it out. And that's where we found them."
"The Shadows."
Anna tells him that that is not a descriptive name, nor their true
name, which is very long and nearly unpronouncable. She says they were
quite approachable, but Sheridan tells her to tell that to the rest of
the crew. Anna says that there was an accident, the crew was killed,
and the comm system was destroyed. They had no way to contact anyone
else. She says that, since the Shadows had just come out of
hibernation, they made a deal with the crew: If the humans would stay
silent, the Shadows would let them study their technology, which would
solve nearly all of Earth's problems and let them leap forward 10,000
years. Anna says she didn't want Sheridan to think she was dead, but
that he knows he always said his first duty was to Earth. In addition,
time doesn't work quite the same on Z'ha'dum as it does everywhere
else. She tells him that, now that she's back, she'll take him to
Z'ha'dum, so the Shadows can tell him what it's really all about. She
says that Delenn, Kosh, and the others have misled him, and it's time
to learn the truth. He agrees and embraces her, but while he does so,
his gaze falls on Franklin's medical report on a table across the
room.
Garibaldi enters Sheridan's office and asks if there's anything he can
do to help. Sheridan tells him that, since the Minbari crew of the
White Star has never been logged into the security net, he wants
Garibaldi to begin that right away. The White Star can orbit the
station on autopilot. Garibaldi reluctantly agrees. Sheridan says he
also as a few other things for him to do, and hands him a list.
Garibaldi agrees to do it, but is more than surprised by what he sees.
Sheridan, in his quarters, prepares for his trip to Z'ha'dum, by
making sure he is armed with a PPG at his side. He pulls another one
out from a drawer and looks at it critically in the mirror. As he
gazes into its surface, he realizes he is not alone.
"If you go to Z'ha'dum, you will die," says the old Kosh, whose image
is also in the mirror. But when Sheridan turns around, there is no one
else there. Sheridan turns back around, and looks at himself in the
mirror for a moment, before walking to his comm screen. He tells the
computer he wants to record a time-delayed message for Delenn.
Aboard the White Star, Anna asks if Sheridan is sure he can run the
ship by himself. Sheridan thinks he probably can, as the design is
pretty intuitive, and Anna assures him he is guaranteed safe passage.
"Next stop," Sheridan says, "Z'ha'dum."
On the journey through hyperspace, Anna examines the White Star, and
says she wishes they could have taken a different ship. As it is based
partly on Vorlon technology, it could be dangerous; the Shadows
believe they will die if anything even remotely Vorlon were to touch
the surface of Z'ha'dum. Sheridan says he won't take any chances, and
they'll take the shuttle down to the surface.
Back on Babylon 5, Franklin catches up with Ivanova as she walks down
the corridor. Franklin asks why Sheridan left, and tells her that he
knows Sheridan read the report he gave him. Ivanova doesn't know what
he's talking about, and Franklin tells her it's about Anna.
The shuttle lands on the surface of the planet, and Sheridan and Anna,
wearing oxygen masks, make their way through the harsh atmosphere to
the entrance of the structure. The air inside is breathable, and Anna
explains, for security reasons, the structure was moved underground
many centuries ago. They are about to go further, but Anna takes
Sheridan's PPG before she will let him go further. She explains this
part of the complex was designed specifically for them. She takes him
down a corridor, and to a door. She knocks, and a voice inside tells
her to enter. She does so, and inside are two humans. One is an older
gentleman, and the other is a very familiar face: Morden.
Sheridan asks the older man who he is. The man insists it isn't
important, but Sheridan demands to know. "Who decides that the work
day is from 9 to 5 instead of 11 to 4? Who decides that the hemlines
will be below the knee this year, and short again next year? Who draws
up the borders, controls the currency, handles all the decisions that
happen transparently around us?" Sheridan admits he doesn't know.
"Ah," says the old man. "I'm with them. Same group, different
department. Think of me as a sort of middleman. And the name is
Justin."
Delenn receives a time-delayed message from Sheridan. "Delenn," the
message says, "by the time you get this message, I will be at
Z'ha'dum... with Anna. I can pretty much guess your reaction when you
hear this, but I think it's the only way. When you and I were in the
time rift with Babylon 4, for a moment, I jumped forward in time. We'd
won the war, but Centauri Prime had been devastated. You said that
this future couldn't be changed. You also told me, 'Do not go to
Z'ha'dum. Do you understand? Do not go to Z'ha'dum!' I began to
wonder... What if that future happened because I listened to your
warning and didn't go to Z'ha'dum? What if... what if I could prevent
the fall of Centauri Prime and end the Shadow War by going there? What
I want... is to stay alive, to be with you. But you were right before.
This is about more than what I want. So I'm going, even though I know
it's almost certainly a trap."
"You see, John," Justin explains, as he pours tea, "back, a million
years ago, there were forces prowling around the galaxy beyond
anything that we could understand. And, like anything else, most of
them outgrew this little corner of the universe, and headed off toward
greener pastures. Now, two of them stayed behind, shepherds, you might
call them. They wanted to look after the younger races, bring them
around, help them evolve into something better."
"One of these was the Vorlons," Morden tells Sheridan. "The other was
what you call the Shadows."
"The Vorlons are like your parents, I suppose," Justin continues.
"They want you to play nice, clean your room, do it by the rules. I
guess you could call them lords of order."
"The others," Anna says, "the ones who live here, believe that
strength only comes from conflict. They want to release our potential,
not bottle it up."
"It's really simple," Justin explains. "You bring two sides together,
they fight, a lot of them die. But those who survive are stronger,
smarter, and better."
"It's like knocking over an anthill," Morden says. "Every new
generation gets stronger. The anthill gets redesigned, made better."
"So that's what the Shadows do," Sheridan says. "Come out every few
thousand years, and kick over all the anthills, start wars, destroy
entire races."
"A few get lost along the way, yes," Justin admits, "and that's
unfortunate. I don't think it was ever easy, but you can't let that
get in the way of the dream."
On Babylon 5, Corwin reports to Ivanova that he is picking up a
disturbance coming from all around them. Many Shadow ships are
appearing outside, encircling the entire station. Ivanova orders a red
alert, and all the fighters are scrambled. None of the Shadow vessels
are attacking, but Ivanova still orders the fighters to launch, but
not to approach until she authorizes it.
"Think about it, Captain," Morden says. "Look at the long history of
human struggle. Six thousand years of recorded wars, bloodshed,
atrocities beyond all description. But look at what came out of all of
that! We've gone to the stars, split the atom, written sonnets... We
never would have come this far, if we hadn't been at each others'
throats evolving our way up, inch by inch."
"It was supposed to be an equal balance between our side and the
Vorlons," Anna says. "But the Vorlons decided that their way was the
right way. They enlisted the support of the other worlds, like the
Minbari. They even started interfering with the development of younger
races."
"When you look at a Vorlon," Morden says, "you see what they want you
to see. They've manipulated us so we respond faithfully to them.
They've even at a genetic level, taking humans and adjusting them. Why
do you think certifiable telepaths came out of nowhere a hundred years
ago?"
"They created telepaths on a hundred worlds to use as cannon fodder
for the next war," Justin explains. "But fortunately, our friends got
there first and with the help of the Psi Corps, made sure that they
came out on our side. John, they think that the human race shows great
potential. When all this is over, we can be riding high, the first to
rebuild, making things our own way. But the only thing that's standing
in our way now is you. So, we can either work together now, or we can
remove your support mechanism."
The fighters begin to mobilize around the Shadow vessels, and
Garibaldi is among them. Ivanova tries to get through to Draal, but
communications are being jammed. Ivanova knows the ships' appearance
has something to do with Sheridan, but has no idea what it is, or why
they are waiting.
"Everything depends on getting the other races to fight each other,"
Anna says, "to create conflict in order to promote growth and
evolution. By getting them to cooperate, you are working against that
goal."
"Whenever this starts," Morden says, "there's always someone who tries
to organize the other races. You've done it. That's a commendable
achievement, but as far as our goals are concerned, unproductive."
"So why don't you just kill me?" Sheridan asks.
"It doesn't work," Justin says. "Somebody'd just come around and
replace you. That's always been the trouble with creating martyrs. We
brought you here hoping you'd understand us, work with us, not against
us. You're important. You're what they call a nexus. You turn one way,
and the whole world has a tendency to go the same way. Let go of those
other races. You can't hold them together. Evolution will be served
one way or another. You can work with us, or..."
"Or you'll do to me what you did to Anna," Sheridan says.
Justin, Anna, and Morden all look at each other. "I don't know what
you're..." Anna begins.
"The memories are there, the voice is there, the DNA is there... But
the personality, the look in her eyes... The woman I loved, the woman
I married isn't there. She would never go along with this."
"You're right," Justin tells him. "Just so. You see, when she came
here five years ago, she was given a choice. The same choice that
we're giving you. She made the mistake of choosing badly." As Justin
is talking, Sheridan's hand creeps down toward his leg.
"You stuck her in one of those ships, didn't you?" Sheridan asks. He
uncovers a PPG strapped to his leg, beneath their field of view.
"How did you know?" Morden asks.
"A few months ago," Sheridan tells them, "we intercepted a ship full
of people who were going to be merged with the Shadow vessels. They
had implants in the brain stem, right back here. The scars in the back
of her head are in exactly the same place."
"Our associates needed fresh bodies for the central processing units
in their ships," Justin explains. "But we pulled her out as soon as we
found out who she was and who you are. But once you've been inside of
one of those ships for a while, you're never... quite whole... again.
But you do as you're told!" Behind Sheridan a door opens, and a Shadow
begins entering the room, and Sheridan sees it out of the corner of
his eye. "And so will you!" As soon as Justin finishes, Sheridan jumps
up and begins firing the PPG at the Shadow.
G'Kar runs into C&C. Ivanova asks if they can get the bombs outside,
but G'Kar says it would be too dangerous -- the blasts would take out
Babylon 5 as well. Ivanova is willing to risk it, and asks how many
they have. G'Kar explains that's why he's there -- two of the devices
are gone.
A bleeding Sheridan makes his way through a rocky corridor, and
eventually comes to a balcony overlooking a Shadow city. Directly
beneath him is an enormous black abyss, and above him, a glittering
ceiling, seperating this place from the outside atmosphere. Sheridan
types in some commands on his commlink, and the White Star begins to
come alive. Inside, a voice from the bombs says, "Thermal fusion
system armed for detonation," and the White Star begins moving toward
the planet.
"John," Anna says, as she arrives. "There's nowhere to run. Come back
inside. We can work this out." As the White Star hurtles toward the
surface, Anna continues. "I know this isn't the Anna that you knew.
What I am is what was made in her. A new personality. She can never
come back. But I can love you as well as she did."
"Finally," Sheridan's message concludes, "I heard what you said when I
left. I want you to know, I love you Delenn. Goodbye." Delenn touches
the screen, and as the message ends, she collapses against the wall,
crying.
Sheridan looks through the semi-transparent ceiling, and sees the
White Star on its way. He looks down into the abyss, and hears a
familiar voice--that of Kosh in his mind. "Jump... Jump now!" the
voice urges. As Anna and a group of Shadows begin to move closer,
Sheridan climbs over the edge of the balcony and leaps into the abyss
below. Anna watches, stunned, but has little time to contemplate
what's happening. The White Star crashes through the ceiling, and she
lets out a blood curdling scream as a white light floods the balcony.
The White Star impacts in an enormous exlosion.
The Shadow vessels, without warning, all vanish immediately, and while
Garibaldi watches, a shadow comes over his viewport. No one on C&C
understands the sudden departure, unless it is because they are no
longer a threat, as G'Kar suggests. Ivanova believes she knows why,
though. "He's gone."
As Delenn and Lennier pray over candles, we hear G'Kar's voice. "It
was the end of the Earth year 2260, and the war had paused, suddenly
and unexpectedly. All around us, it was as if the universe were
holding its breath. Waiting... All of life can be broken down into
moments of transition or moments of revelation. This had the feeling
of both..."
Corwin reports to Ivanova that there has been no further word on the
Captain, but that they can't communicate with the White Star--he
thinks it's been destroyed. In addition, one of the fighters sent out
didn't return. Ivanova asks who the pilot was, and Corwin tells her,
"Mr. Garibaldi."
G'Kar continues speaking. "G'Quon wrote, 'There is a greater darkness
than the one we fight. It is the darkness of the soul that has lost
its way. The war we fight is not against powers and principalities, it
is against chaos and despair. Greater than the death of flesh is the
death of hope, the death of dreams. Against this peril we can never
surrender. The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of
transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the
shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is
always born in pain.'"
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[15]Last update: May 8, 1997
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