'Haven't seen you in…. a while,' she said, coughing. 'Do you want a drink? I've some Narn wine here somewhere….'
'No, thank you,' he replied. 'Ah…. you…. are you all right?'
'I'm fine,' she replied, flatly. 'I haven't been…. sleeping very well recently. Not for the last few days in fact. The beds here are a little…. hard. Not very comfortable.'
'Drazi design probably,' he said, apologising lamely.
'Yes. That's it. Anyway, I thought I'd do a little reading. I…. What time is it anyway?'
'Coming up to midday, Kazomi Seven time. I…. couldn't say what time it is EST.'
She nodded. 'I haven't quite adapted to…. the time here. It's…. Why did you send me away?'
He stopped as if poleaxed. 'Wh…. what?'
'From Babylon Four. You sent me away.'
'We…. we sent all civilians away, Mary. The place was…. at risk. We had to get you all out of there.'
'A civilian. Is that what I am? David, you didn't come to see me. You didn't come to check if I was all right. You didn't….'
'I was busy!' he replied. 'I was…. I was afraid. I…. heard things about what had happened on the planet. I was worried about you! I wanted to get you to safety as quickly as possible!'
'I can look after myself, and I don't need you protecting me.' She paused. 'I'm the one who had to talk to Lianna after all…. explaining why her husband won't be coming home.'
'Lianna.' He sighed, and swore silently. 'I'd completely forgotten…. oh…. How…. how did she take it?'
'How do you think she would have taken it? We didn't get to speak long. Something's…. up at Sanctuary. But…. I knew what she was thinking. He ran away from her. She loved him too much to see that, but I could see it. And so could you, and you did nothing!'
'I…. what? Mary, what are you saying?'
'They were having problems. Difficulties with Frank, disagreements over Bester. Lianna wanted to get out of there, start somewhere new. Michael…. he wanted to stay with Bester. Felt he owed him. But rather than talk it out, he…. he ran away. He came here, he stayed here for months on end, and he…. he got himself killed because it was easier for him than staying around!'
'I had no idea,' David whispered softly. 'Mary, I…. I swear to you…. I had no idea.' He moved forward, but she pulled away from him.
'I'm just so…. so angry…. at him, at you, at Bester, at…. at everything! At everyone! At this whole pathetic little war of yours! It isn't some game. It's not heroic, or glorious, or…. or…. People are dying, and people are being left behind to mourn…. and I just….' She took a deep breath.
'I'm leaving, David. I'm leaving this place. I hate it. The sky's wrong, the time's wrong, the air doesn't smell the same…. I'm going back to Sanctuary to pick up Lianna, and from there we're going to one of the outlying colonies. They're free again now, and some of them are a long way away. Far away from the Minbari, and the Narns and…. everything!'
She paused and looked at him intently, folding her arms. 'You could come with us. I…. I want you to.'
'Mary, I….' He took a deep breath, and kept feeling the box in his pocket. 'I…. I came here to ask you to marry me.'
She smiled, and then shook her head sadly. 'I was wondering when…. No, it doesn't matter. I'd love to, but not here. Give all this up, David. Give up this war, give up fighting this hopeless cause. You can't win. There's always another enemy. Give it up…. and come with me. I do want to marry you, but I won't sit at home like Lianna, waiting for news to come through that you've been killed somewhere, fighting for some cause no one understands.'
'I…. Michael…. his death was…. It wasn't….'
'It doesn't matter, David. He's dead, and how or why won't help at all. You…. know what I want.'
He picked the box from his pocket, and looked at the ring inside. He had bought it in the market here on Kazomi 7. It was a Brakiri design, and he had had it altered a little so that it would fit a human finger. It was…. beautiful.
'I love you, Mary,' he said pathetically. 'I love you…. but….'
She sighed, and looked down. 'That's what I thought. Go away, David…. please. I…. I can't sit and wait by the news reports every night like this. Go away.'
'I….' He closed the box and gently laid it down on the table. He made to take a step towards her, but then sighed and turned away.
He left the room without looking back. Only then did he start to cry.
Time passed, neither slowly, nor quickly. It simply was. For Delenn of Mir, the few months after the Battle of the Third Line were hard. The year wove its way slowly towards an end and work became harder and harder. She slept even less now than she had before, and her few brief hours of slumber were normally spent in a chair at John's bedside.
The state of affairs on Kazomi 7 was not especially good, but neither was it especially bad. Much of her time was taken up in helping with the reorganisation of G'Kar's Rangers. The loss of Epsilon 3 and Babylon 4 had hit them hard, but G'Kar had been canny enough not to place all of his resources in one area. He was recovering from his injuries as well as could be expected, and he and Ta'Lon were working closely with Taan Churok and Vejar to make Kazomi 7 the new base of the Narn Rangers.
A few weeks after the battle word came in from Centauri Prime, news which was most welcome. Londo had become Emperor. He was dealing with the wreckage of his bloody ascension, and would appoint an Ambassador to Kazomi 7 as soon as he could. He specifically requested no outside assistance. The presence of aliens on the planet now might well make matters far worse.
There was no word from Alfred Bester. None at all.
John's condition did not improve, and the initial prognosis had proven distressingly accurate. His spine was irretrievably broken, and he would never move below the neck again. He could not even breathe without artificial help. How he had remained alive until he had been found, nobody knew. Delenn spent as much time with him as she could, holding his hands that could never feel hers. When she was not there, Commander Corwin was, relaying reports of the defensive capabilities of the system, of the field testing of the commandeered
Unfortunately as time passed he suffered more and more violent headaches. The lights in the ward hurt his eyes, and he frequently suffered bad dreams. Neither he nor Delenn spoke about it, but the doctors had been given all the available information on his virus, and they were beginning to speculate that quarantine might soon become necessary.
There was a brief reply from Sinoval, stating that he would need to remain behind at Tarolin 2 to help rebuild, and to increase security at the other colony worlds he controlled. He said little else, but Delenn knew that someone was threatening the remaining Minbari worlds. The number of Minbari refugees coming to Kazomi 7 increased briefly for a month or so. Few of them were possessed by Keepers though.
The crew of the
Susan Ivanova remained imprisoned. Medical reports and a study by Vejar confirmed that the Keeper she had been given had been completely removed from her system. Who, or what she was now…. was unknown.
It was on a day slightly over two months after the battle that Lethke received an interesting and unexpected message. He promised to consult with the remainder of the Government and reply later. He then instantly went to see Delenn.
'It is a lie,' she said. She had been with John, and her eyes were haunted. He had lapsed briefly into delirium during her visit. It had been for less than a minute, but it was a troubling development all the same.
'They mean nothing but to sow dissent and suspicion, Lethke.'
'So I thought, but what if they do speak the truth? Can we afford to pass over such an offer?'
Delenn shook her head. ''There can be no peace with the Shadow',' she quoted. 'They are lying.'