hatred, fear, and death. And now he was to sit in it. Oh well, someone had to. There was something Lennier had once said to him: Who better to claim power than the one who does not want it?
Lennier…. 'Malachi!' Londo cried out. 'He is wounded. Find him. Get him to a doctor. Now!'
'Your will, Majesty.' Marrago turned and began barking orders to his soldiers. Londo made to go with him, but Marrago stopped him. 'You will need a doctor yourself, Londo. Cartagia cannot have died easily.'
'He wanted to die, Marrago. He foresaw…. all of this. I will be the Last Emperor, and I will guide us all to the brink of oblivion. He knew that. That was why he didn't want the task. He wasn't strong enough for it.' The words were delivered quietly, in a near whisper. Only one other person heard them.
Marrago's reply was equally hushed. 'Then prove him wrong. Be the Emperor you always wanted to be. Make us strong again. Take our people back to the stars…. Deliver our destiny.'
'Yes. You are right…. although I wish you weren't.' Londo stepped back and looked at the throne for a third time. It was raised on a dais, just a short step, but an important symbolic one. It looked a thousand feet high to him now. He could not make the ascent alone.
'Help me to my throne, old friend.'
'It will be my pleasure…. my Emperor.'
Slowly and gently, Marrago guided Londo to the throne. He sat down.
There were things that went well beyond anger, past fury, and into an infinitely more dangerous sense of calm and peace. Sinoval felt at peace as he walked through the ruined streets of Tarolin 2, mentally assessing the damage. It was as if he were in a void, his warrior's instincts having taken over. Everything had become a matter of tactics and logistics, paper numbers of gain and loss.
The damage was concentrated on the Government buildings and thereabouts. There had been no general orbital bombardment, but a precise and targeted destruction of a specific area of the city.
Not far away there lay a body. By what he could tell from her clothing she was a worker, an administrator in the Ministry of Agriculture. The body was comparatively fresh. She had survived the initial attack, but had been taken down by a precise blow to the back of the neck, which had severed vital nerve tissue and caused immediate death.
Sinoval paused, musing on this. It was not an uncommon mode of killing, used primarily on those in flight, but there was something different about the wound. Almost as if it had been done by a very clumsy warrior, which hardly seemed to fit, or by someone working a little differently. Sonovar's alien allies, in all likelihood. Their weapons were similar to the denn'bok, but with subtle differences.
These aliens must have done the majority of the ground-based killing, mopping up those who had escaped the immediate attack. Did Sonovar trust the aliens more than his own warriors, or had the warriors refused to kill their own people? Possibilities for weakness on the rebel's part, there.
A child was sitting next to the body, trying to make the woman wake up. The child — he could not tell if it was male or female — looked up at Sinoval with pleading eyes. He ignored it, and walked on. He had always hated children.
As he walked through the city, accompanied as always by his guard of two Soul Hunters, and by a larger group of Minbari warriors who called themselves the Primarch's Blades, he collated information, studying and storing it.
A precise attack, concentrated at one point. Sonovar did not want to harm civilians. He was hitting only those in the Government. Why? To take out the power base, and destabilise? Or as a punishment for allying with Sinoval?
But if the latter were the case, then where were Kats and Kozorr? They had been the first, after all, to swear fealty.
His heart began to quicken, but he calmed himself. He could do no good to either of them by panicking.
Not long afterwards one of the Primarch's Blades stepped up to him. There were a great many of them now, more than he had expected. All of them were warriors, having renounced their former clans and taken on a new one. They all wore black, with Sinoval's personal crest affixed to the front of their tunics. Each of them also bore a tattoo on their face. It resembled a blindfold, a black line from either side of the crest, across the eyes.
Sinoval smiled to himself, recognising an old custom from a very old time.
'We have found her, Primarch,' the Blade said, bowing formally. 'The Lady Kats. She claims to be busy in a place of respite nearby. I will guide you there, by your will, Primarch.'
Sinoval nodded and stepped up after the Blade, his honour guard of Soul Hunters following him, easily matching his pace. Kats was alive, then. That was good. He was…. happy to hear that.
What had he said to himself after receiving Sonovar's message? T
But Kats…. about her, he was not sure, and that troubled him.
The building was damaged, but not badly. It did not seem to have been a target for the initial phase of the attack. Subtle signs indicated that Sonovar's aliens had been here however, and they had not been alone. Sonovar himself had been here with them.
What could be here that was so important as to attract Sonovar himself? The Primarch had an uncomfortable feeling that he knew the answer.
He stepped inside and saw countless bodies, some dead, some dying. People tried desperately or futilely to heal or comfort them. He looked around intently, studying each face, and committing them to memory. They had served and died in his name, and they would be remembered.
Then he saw Kats, and his composure shattered.
He strode through the room, stepping over or around the bodies on the floor. As she heard his approach she turned and sighed softly, bowing her head.
For his part, Sinoval was shocked. She was covered in scratches and marks and bruises, and her simple smock was heavily stained with blood. He had known veteran warriors who would have collapsed with fewer injuries, and yet she was still on her feet, working.
'My lord,' she said, softly.
'My lady,' he replied, numbly. 'Why have your wounds not been tended to?'
'There are others here with more serious injuries than mine. I tend to them first.'
'You will be no use to them if you pass out here. Rest, my lady. That is an order.'
She lifted her head, eyes blazing. 'You are a warrior, my lord. You kill! I am a worker, and so I build! Allow me to build here.'
For a moment he was taken aback. 'My lady….' he said softly. 'Speak to me….'
'Kozorr is dead,' she whispered, and he closed his eyes. He had known it. He had known somehow, back when the warrior had first given his vow of fealty. 'He died, in my stead.'
Sinoval nodded, unable to think of words to say. Kats turned from him to resume her work. He spun on his heel and stalked from the room.
There would be a reckoning. Some day soon, there would be a reckoning.
'I…. I am…. dying now….'
Londo looked down at the ashen face of one of his oldest friends, and tried to think of the words. He was feeling very light-headed, almost giddy with the day's events. He had not yet had time to eat, and Timov would be furious if she were here.
'Hush, Malachi. You will make a fine recovery.'
'Bad…. liar, Londo. Never a good trait in a politician…. but a…. welcome one in…. you….' Malachi winced, and tried to sit up. 'Much to tell you…. Doctors…. have…. given me…. drugs to…. dull the pain. But they…. make