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As for David, he said nothing, as he hadn’t for some time. It was as if the creature had some sort of lock on his speech center. In a way, Delenn was grateful for that. What if the keeper had so subsumed his personality that he began spitting out curses and defiance, like some demon—possessed shell? Or worse… what if his own personality held sway, and he was crying out for her help? The prospect of standing there, listening to his cries, knowing she could not aid him… it would have been beyond excruciating.

Franklin finally looked up and indicated with a gesture of his head that they should reconvene outside the room. They walked out, Delenn bringing up the rear and casting one last, sad look at her son. It was hard to tell whether he was even aware of it.

“Look,” Franklin said slowly, “I have to admit, my ego, if nothing else, would love to be able to come in here, take one look at the situation, and say that there’s some simple answer that everyone else has overlooked. But there’s not. That thing is like… it’s like a parasite that’s literally eaten into him on a neurological basis. It didn’t happen overnight, either. The… keeper, you said it’s called?” Sheridan nodded. “The keeper, as near as I can tell, has been establishing a psychic bond with him for a number of years now. It had theopportunity to intertwine itself with him on a far more comprehensive and profound basis than it could have with an adult, because it connected with him at such a young age. For all I know, it’s been influencing him on a low—level basis of some kind since birth.”

Delenn let out a choked sob but managed to pull herself together quickly. Coming apart now wasn’t going to benefit anything. Instead she let the cold, burning fury that she felt for the monsters that had done this come to the fore.

“The creature’s tendrils have wrapped themselves around David on a basic neurological level,” Franklin continued. “If we tried to remove the thing by force, it would be the equivalent of tearing out his central nervous system with a chain saw.”

“We can put it to sleep,” Delenn suggested. “Londo told us that alcohol numbed its awareness.”

“It’s awareness, yes, but not its influence. If its life is threatened, no matter how incapacitated it is, it will fight back, and David will likely be the battleground. The chances are that, even if David manages to live, there will be nerve and brain damage so extensive that whatever is left won’t really be David anymore.”

“There has to be a way.”

Franklin took a deep breath. “As near as I can tell—basedon brain—wave readings I’ve gotten off the keeper—it draws a sort of strength from its point of origin.”

“Point of origin?” Garibaldi sounded confused.

But Delenn understood instantly. “The Drakh that made it.”

“Made it, nourished it, sustained it… however you want to describe it,” Franklin agreed. “That Drakh, whoever and wherever it is, is the keeper’s foundation. As with any house, remove the foundation, and the structure collapses.”

“Is there a way to generate some sort of scrambling field so it can’t communicate with the Drakh?” Sheridan asked.

Franklin shook his head. “Even if we could manage it, it would just trigger the keeper’s self—defense mechanisms, and David would suffer for it. The only thing I can suggest is finding a way to terminate the signal from the other end, as it were.”

“You’re saying we have to find the Drakh who did this… and kill it,” Sheridan said grimly.

“In essence… yes.”

“How in Valen’s name can we possibly do that?” Delenn demanded.

“I wish I had an answer for you… but I don’t.”

Slowly, Garibaldi walked toward David. His determination to struggle against his bonds seemed endless. During every waking hour he kept it up; only when he slept did he cease his struggles, and he only slept because he had exhausted himself so thoroughly that he couldn’t move anymore.

Garibaldi focused all his attention on the keeper, staring straight into that hideous eye. “Whoever… wherever you are,” he said intently, “if you’re seeing me… sensing me, whatever… I’m telling you right now: I will find you. And when I do, the only thing that’s going to be on your side is that you’ll die quick and easy. Trust me: I’d rather prolong it. Make you feel every second of agony, for as long as possible. But I don’t want you influencing this boy for an instant longer than necessary. You got that, you disease—ridden piece of filth? I… am coming… for you.”

The keeper didn’t seem especially perturbed by the prospect.

Dinner that evening was a lessthan—festive affair. Vir and Senna had joined Delenn, Sheridan, Franklin, and Garibaldi around a table that had more than enough food to accommodate everyone. Unfortunately, much of it was left uneaten, since no one seemed particularly hungry.

Franklin, in short order, brought the two Centauri up to speed with what he had already told the others. Vir didn’t seem especially shocked to hear it. “I can’t say I’m surprised,” he told them. “You know of how I found G’Kar and Londo…”

“With their hands at each other’s throats,” Sheridan said grimly.

“There was no way… no way… Londo was trying to fight G’Kar off on his own. He wanted to make certain that the two of you escaped, and he was willing to sacrifice his life to make sure that happened. Any resistance given to that end was entirely at the keeper’s control.”

“Is that supposed to make us feel better about the guy?” Garibaldi demanded.

“Michael…” Sheridan tried to rein him in.

But Garibaldi wasn’t listening. He put down the fork that he hadn’t used to pick up any food for twenty minutes, and leaned forward. “You’re sitting here telling me that, after he was responsible for the deaths of millions, all long before the Drakh got their hooks into him, we’re all now supposed to feel sorry for Londo Mollari and take pride in him because he sacrificed himself to save three people? Granted, three people whom I myself would crawl through hell over broken glass to help, but three people nevertheless? Is that somehow supposed to balance the scales?”

“No,” Vir answered softly.

“Then don’t try to make him out to be some sort of grand hero, at least not while I’m around.”

Once upon a time, Delenn thought, Vir would have been intimidated by the ferocity and intensity of Garibaldi’s outburst. Instead he just looked a bit tired, and said, “You know, Mr. Garibaldi… Londo was endlessly fascinated by Earth and its inhabitants. He stepped in whenever he could to help you. Did things behind the scenes, positive things, which your people never knew anything about. He read over Earth culture endlessly, always researching, always trying to understand. I asked him occasionally why he was so intrigued by all of you, and he never really managed to give me any sort of satisfactory answer. But you know what? I think I’ve figured it out. I think that, in many ways… he was far closer spiritually to any of you than he was to any of us. He had a clear vision of what he wanted, a vision that exceeded his grasp at every level, but he never stopped reaching, despite the inherent character flaws that pulled him down. Londo Mollari was not a hero, Mr. Garibaldi. What he was… was all too Human.”

There was a long moment of silence, and then Sheridan turned to Vir. “Well spoken,” he said.

Garibaldi rolled his eyes. “Sometimes I don’t get any of you people.”

“That’s quite all right, sir,” Senna spoke up. “I don’t ‘get’ any of you, either. And I’m speaking largely as an outsider. But what I do see,” and she looked around the table and actually smiled, “is a group of people who would very much prefer to like each other… but have been through so much, they don’t know if they can.”