Click HERE, HERE, or HERE to see pictures from the episode.
This episode is very important to the arc and rather heavy
on information. Even though it seems relatively
slow-moving, you should pay close attention to it, because
there WILL be a quiz later.
First, we have a wonderfully creepy-cheerful teaser scene
in which ISN "the galaxy's most important channel!" SEEMS
to be coming back on-line...but now, they're a mere
propaganda tool for Clark! This will become important
later on...
Sheridan is testing out a new Starfury, one of the ones
that the Churchillleft behind (they're
funky-looking, instead of a snub nose they have this long
pointy muzzle sticking out in front of the "x-wings") and
picks up a distress signal, only to find--BESTER? That's
right, our favourite charmingly sarcastic and arrogant
slimeball is back and better than ever. And THIS time he
says he's here to HELP.
Well, Sheridan dearly wants to "blow him out of the sky",
but reluctantly tows his broken Starfury back to the
station, where they try to figure out how they can trust
him, and also how they can talk to him without being
scanned. Franklin points out that basically they HAVE no
more dangerous secrets TO figure out, that all the plotting
and scheming they were doing underground against EarthGov
is all kind of a moot point by now, after all, they've
BROKEN AWAY from Earth! Garibaldi, Ivanova, and Sheridan
still don't trust him, and Sheridan comes up with a rather
nasty way to find out if he's trustworthy or not. He talks
to Ivanova alone, and says that since she's a latent
telepath and can tell instantly if someone's scanning her,
he'll send her through the door into the room with Bester
FIRST. If he tries anything, they'll know, and they can
throw him into--no, UNDER--the brig. If not, they know
they can trust him.
A little.
Ivanova VERY reluctantly agrees to this plan and we get a
great conversation scene between her and Bester in which we
first hear about the "superiority of evolution" complex
that the telepaths have, that they are a whole new,
higher-evolved race, the future of Humankind, and that one
day they hope to actually take over. A frightening
thought...
Anyway, they then must have decided he's trustworthy--a
little--because they decide to all meet with him and hear
what he has to say. He tells them about Clark working
heavily with the Shadows, that it's not REALLY him but
these aliens that are calling the shots back on Earth, and
that he heard that a convoy carrying "weapons supplies" for
the Shadows is going to be going through hyperspace near
here soon. "How did you figure all this out?" they
ask.
"I'm a telepath," he smarms. "Work it out."
So they go off to intercept the convoy and take the weapons
supplies, and this is the part I REALLY disagree with--they
took the Whitestar. Not that THEY used that ship, but that
they actually let Bester SEE it. A new, top-of-the-line,
secret, special ship and they let BESTER see the inside of
it! The line "try not to drool on the controls" was
amusing, as was the "Get the HELL out of my chair!" but he
should NOT have been there at ALL. Don't tell me there
weren't ANY other ships they could have used...a Minbari
cruiser, perhaps...?
Anyway, they shoot down the smaller escort ships, grab the
supply ship with a tractor beam and are just about to get
out when a HUGE mama Shadow ship shows up and...leaves.
HMMMN...
They find out, when they get back to Babylon 5, that the
"weapons supplies" in the ship are actually...PEOPLE?
Frozen telepaths, actually. All unconscious, in
cryo-tubes. (The fans on-line call them "teepsicles", I
find that rather amusing in a cold-blooded kind of way.
And no, "cold"-blooded was not meant to be a pun.) They
all have the Psi Corps symbol on their tanks, strange, VERY
advanced cyber-web implants on their faces, and no
identification except for bracelets with serial numbers on
them.
Franklin decides to try and wake one of them to ask what
the hell is going on, figure out who they are and why they
were listed as "weapons supplies". So he tries it on a
young woman, who completely FREAKS and starts tearing at
the wall of the tube as she wakes up, screaming and tearing
out her hair and sobbing about the pain, get it OUT of my
MIND, etc. Franklin has to sedate the poor lady.
Meanwhile, they show her identification bracelet to Bester,
who at first, just glancing at it, informs them that she is
a "blip", a telepath who wouldn't join the Corps or take
the sleepers. She tried to ran away, and of course they
caught her, they "always do". Then, looking more closely,
he sees something he evidently recognises and he gets
absolutely stunned.
Nobody notices this at the time, but when asked about it
later, he says that he recognises who this belongs
to--Carolyn--his LOVER. This is a great twist. Bester is
STILL a villian, but by giving him someone he truly CARES
about, which it seems he does, all the evidence points that
way anyway, it DEEPENS the character. He's evil...but he
has FEELINGS. He's not just some killing robot, he's a
PERSON. I love this kind of shades-of-grey stuff.
He DEMANDS to see her right now, but that's sort of a
problem. You see--she's kind of...um...INTERFACED with the
computer and mechanical systems in Medlab. When they find
her, they find a darkened, smoky, sparking room with her
hiding up against the wall, wrapped up in a...COCOON of
wires! She starts babbling incoherently, most of what she
says as if she is under posession, with only tiny, small
moments of being herself, in which she BEGS pathetically to
be set free, to make the pain stop. "The machine says
kill...to protect...I am the machine...MAKE IT STOP!! MAKE
IT STOP TALKING IN MY MIND!" When she sees Bester, she
recognises him, and was about to ask him for help when she
sees the Psi Corp badge on his uniform, upon which she
INSTANTLY tries to blow him away with bolts of electricity
from her fingers! This gives Garibaldi an idea. He takes
off Bester's Psi Corps badge and throws it onto the floor
in front of her.
ZAP! "The sign hurts us...we cannot hear the
machine..."
They figure out that these telepaths must have been altered
to hook into Shadow vessels, to be the controlling core
element that makes the ship operational (as we learned
about back in "Messages From Earth"), but why telepaths in
particular? Delenn never said anything about that...
Meanwhile, in the subplot, we have a VERY ticked-off G'Kar
who had asked to be let "in" several episodes ago,
accosting Ivanova in the hallway and demanding to know why
Sheridan hadn't kept his part of the bargain yet. Ivanova
says that things are very busy but she'll do the best she
can. Then Delenn feels she must fess up to what her people
did, or rather didn't do, about the Shadows to G'Kar. This
makes a very emotional scene (Mira Furlan REALLY CRIED on
camera, which is hard to do just on cue, out of nowhere! I
think she is easily the best female actor on the whole
show--best MALE actor goes to Peter Jurasik, of course) in
which she tries to explain why the Grey Council did NOT
speak out about the Shadows in time to rally the other
races to save Narn from the Centauri. The other races
wouldn't have listened, wouldn't have believed them even if
they HAD said anything. All that would have done would be
to tell the Shadows that they were aware of them, force
them to act OPENLY, not quietly. They needed time to build
up the forces of "light", so they had to remain silent.
You must understand, Delenn begs G'Kar, tears running down
her face (as I said before, REAL tears), it would have done
no good. Under the Centauri, there is still a HOPE for
survival, for victory. If the Shadows had attacked Narn
openly, there would have been NO hope. NONE of your people
would have survived. We had to choose between the death of
millions--
and the death of BILLIONS.
"And I hope that, someday, when all this is over, you can
find it in your heart to forgive me, G'Kar.
"Maybe", says G'Kar. "But not today". And he leaves the
room.
Gee...
Anyway, Garibaldi has been studying the book of G'Quan that
G'Kar lent him, and he finds something interesting....
G'Kar is finally let into the War Council, and looks
around, when Garibaldi, looking like the proverbial cat
that ate the equally proverbial canary, makes his startilng
discovery to the rest of them. "It's all here," he says,
thumping the Book. ("Please do not thump the Book of
G'Quan"). He explains.
"Your people have no telepaths, right?" he asks G'Kar.
"Yes, and it is a great concern to us," he answers. "Why
do you ask?"
He then opens the book to the passage he saw earlier and
has G'Kar read it aloud. It tells about how, 1,000 years
ago, the Ancient Enemy showed up and the VERY first people
they blew away were the "mindwalkers".
Telepaths.
The Shadows were last on the move 1,000 years ago! And it
seems they're AFRAID of telepaths!
Everything they've learned during this weird day starts to
fall into place. "The sign hurts us...we cannot hear the
machine"--somehow, maybe telepaths can block their signals,
mess up the Shadow ships' brainwaves! So they're hoping
that using teeps of their own IN the ships will counter
that.
"We have a weapon, people," Sheridan realises. "We really
do have a weapon."
"Let's just hope it's in time." says Ivanova...
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