remember.'

'Yes, I suppose so.' He paused, and she turned to look at him, surprised at the hesitation in his tirade against everything that was his surroundings. 'There was someone there…. Almost one of us, but not quite. He looks a little…. familiar. Ah, he's gone.'

'You shouldn't try to scan them,' she muttered irritably, swinging her long legs down from the bed. 'We don't know they're all mundanes and we don't want to give ourselves away. Our kind don't go into this area unless they've got something to hide.'

'Hasn't everyone here got something to hide? I can see all their worthless little secrets….'

'Stop it! You're right. Everyone comes here to hide from something. That's why they call it the Pit after all. Things tend to…. disappear here. But there are secrets, and then there are secrets. Ours definitely fall into the latter category. Trust me, Al does not want this coming out.'

'Hmm. I suppose you've got used to this by now, after all.' Byron turned away from the window. He looked irritated, and not without reason. This was the first time he had been without his Psi Cop uniform in years. The two of them had had to leave all the regalia back at Sanctuary: gloves, badges, uniforms. Strictly speaking that was illegal, but then the rules governing the Corps had been very…. lax in recent years.

'Sort of,' Talia admitted. 'It's a little worrying just how easy it gets to adopt different names and faces…. almost as if my own just…. fades beneath them. It does get better though. I've been in worse places than this.'

'Yes. I heard you spent several months on board that ship of theirs…. the Babylon. What was that like?'

'Strange,' she replied thoughtfully. 'The whole ship felt odd…. as if it didn't like me. It had alien technology built into it, but still…. I was never really comfortable there. And the Captain…. he was…. ah….' She fell silent for a moment.

'What's our plan of action then? Do we make for the IPX headquarters?'

'No,' she tutted. 'At least not yet. There's a reason I had us based here, and not just because we'll be hard to track. I've arranged a meeting with someone for tomorrow afternoon, in a less than reputable neighbourhood not far away. His name's Chase, and he used to be a quartermaster at the Government dome. He was transferred to IPX after he…. discovered a little more than he should have done about certain activities of his immediate superiors.'

'Do you know what these activities are?' Byron asked, evidently curious.

'Naturally,' she replied. 'Donne uncovered a great deal for Al. Anyway…. Chase was….'

'And what was his superior up to?'

'Various things that can't be spoken of in the presence of a lady,' she snapped tartly. 'Let's just say there was a very good reason he and Donne would have got on so well. It doesn't matter now anyway. He's dead.

'Anyway, Chase was, in addition to his less pleasant activities, embezzling arms and so forth for sale on the black market. A couple of months ago he graduated to selling very confidential information, and IPX found out about it. They decided to go for a quicker option than trial, and hired assassins to take him out. He's been on the run for a while, and so naturally he ended up here. My preliminary survey tracked him down, and we're going to offer him a deal. He'll know something, or he'll know someone who knows something. Either way, it's a start.'

Byron nodded. 'Uh-huh. And after we've found out what we want from him?'

'You want to kill him, don't you?'

'He's just a mundane, and it would be dangerous to leave him alive.'

She sighed. 'I've never liked gratuitous killing.'

'You won't have to do it.'

'Well, you're the bodyguard, I suppose. Do what you think's best. I'm just…. surprised Al felt the need to give me a bodyguard. He never has before.'

'He's worried about you.'

'I've been in less safe places than this. No….' She swung herself back on to the bed and stared up at the ceiling. 'Something's going to happen at Sanctuary, very soon. He's been trying to keep it from me, but there's trouble there…. possibly the worst trouble he's ever been in.

'I'm worried about him. A lot.'

* * *

They were ready. A decision had been made. She was not entirely sure if it was the right one, but at least it was a decision, and Vizhak and Taan Churok were right. Something had to be done. There are times when any action, even the wrong one, is preferable to no action at all.

Delenn just wished she was sure this was the right action.

She took her place in the same seat she had sat in, slept in and wept in for the last few months. John was still in the same bed. He was asleep. He looked so still. For just a moment he seemed so much at peace, almost as if everything that had happened to them had been just a dream.

'I'm going soon,' she whispered, not knowing if he could hear her, but knowing she had to speak anyway. 'We're going to try to take on the Shadows. It's the sort of thing you'd want to do…. if you could. Commander Corwin will be there, though. He's a good man. I can see now why you trusted him so much.'

She paused, touching his face gently. 'I don't know if I will be able to return. I don't know if I'll ever see you again. I do know…. that I will never forget you. I love you, John. Now…. and always. I hope you know that.'

She gently leaned over and kissed him softly on the lips. Then she turned and left.

* * *

He was surprised by just how much had been done since he had last been here. Kozorr had last seen the buildings and offices of Tarolin 2 in ruins, devastated by the Tak'cha's retribution on those who had betrayed the Minbari people. The streets had been filled with the wounded and dying, and as he had moved through them he had heard the cries of the lost and the moans of the forsaken.

Now it was almost as though the attack had never happened. Oh, there were traces here and there, but for the most part the damage had been repaired. The attack had been very localised of course, and after the initial assault the Tak'cha had gone on the ground to hunt and kill the survivors.

But still, he knew to whom Tarolin 2 owed this miraculous repair. He found her seated at a desk in a nondescript office in the building the new Government had taken over. She was alone, staring at a computer screen.

He stood silently in the doorway, looking at her. She was hard at work, but she looked…. drained. He knew from experience that she had a habit of working on beyond her endurance. Anger flared. Why had Sinoval not recognised this, and done something about it? He calmed himself. He would not be angry around her. He could not be angry around her.

He stood there, watching, for a long time. He did not know how long. Time did not seem to matter. It was only when she stirred and turned to look at the doorway that he returned to his senses.

Her mouth opened wide in mute shock. Her eyes looked…. tired.

'My lady,' he whispered softly, his voice choked. He had seen and done many things, and he had been afraid before. He had known great fear, but never so much as in that moment when his lady Kats looked at him.

'You were…. He said you….'

'I am here,' he said, walking over to her. His limp seemed not to bother him. She rose from her seat and almost fell against him. He caught her easily and held her there. He did not ever want to let her go.

'He said that you were dead,' she whispered. 'He told me you were dead.'

'He lied. I was never dead…. just a prisoner, and every day I thought about you.'

She said nothing for a long time afterwards, but he could hear the sound of her sobs. He was crying himself, but he had no need to say anything. Just to be there, with her, was enough.

For the moment.

* * *

They were there, black against the blackness of space, screaming in her mind. They would kill, brutally slaughter the innocent with no mercy, no compassion. They had to be stopped.

Delenn sat in silence on the bridge of the Babylon, looking around at her companions: Commander David Corwin, John's closest friend. He was breathing in and out slowly, his hands clenched into fists. Lyta Alexander, her eyes shrouded in darkness. She seemed to be listening to something that

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