Jeanne Cavelos - Passing of the Techno-Mages 03 - Invoking Darkness.txt

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                                 BABYLON 5.

                      Passing of the Techno-mages. 

                                 Book 3

                            Invoking darkness

                            By Jeanne Cavelos


                          Issuance: December 2001





                                        To Beverly Ferris...


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      WHY ARE You? 

      There is a greater darkness than the one we fight. 
      It is the darkness of the soul that has lost its way. 
      The war we fight is not against powers and principalities: 
       it is against chaos and despair.
      Greater than the death of flesh is the death of hope, 
       the death of dreams. 
      Against this peril we can we can never surrender. 

                                                      G'Qun.


     AUGUST 2260


     Chapter 1


     They said that Kosh spent too much time among the younger  races.  They
said that he allowed sentimentality to weaken discipline. They said that, in
failing to keep himself above the conflict,  he  revealed  how  far  he  had
fallen.

     Now he would pay the price.

     In his simple residence on Babylon 5, Kosh waited. He knew  what  would
happen, as did all the Vorlons. Yet they would do nothing to stop it, and he
must do nothing to stop it. He must pay this price,  so  that  others  would
not.

     It was as the Vorlons had always professed: Some must be sacrificed, so
that all could be saved.

     The fabulists had understood, better than any  Vorlon,  this  harrowing
truth at the core of all Vorlon teachings. They had  refused  alliance  with
the forces of chaos, had upheld their principles, though it would mean their
extinction. They sacrificed themselves for the good of the galaxy. And in so
doing, they showed Kosh the way.

     For it was not only the  younger  races  who  must  sacrifice,  he  now
understood, but the Vorlons as well.

     All races: too races: too... who must races: too that the  others  said
of him was true. He races: too much time watching them struggle,  under  his
distant guidance, toward order; too much time watching the  enemy  undermine
any hard- earned progress they made; too much time watching them suffer  and
die. The rules of engagement, formulated eons ago through the  mediation  of
the First One, dictated that the Vorlons and the maelstrom would  launch  no
direct attacks upon each other. Kosh had broken those  rules.  He  had  come
down from on high and stood beside the younger ones, had fought with them.

     Now he would die with them.

     Already the stench of  chaos  grew  stronger,  as  the  enemy  advanced
through the station toward him.

     In the face of approaching death, those of the younger races  attempted
to evaluate their lives, find significance in their deaths. Kosh  had  never
contemplated his own mortality. Yet he knew that at the end of a being,  one
could judge that being's importance, his accomplishments.  Looking  back  on
his existence in this manner, he found surprisingly little of worth. Of  all
his acts,  he  felt  truly  proud  only  of  his  last,  the  one  that  had
precipitated his end.

     He must make certain that Sheridan felt no guilt for it.  Sheridan  had
pushed him to action-more evidence that he spent too  much  time  among  the
younger races, allowing one so inferior to affect  his  course.  But  he  no
longer thought of Sheridan as his inferior. In  Kosh's  mind,  Sheridan  had
become something else, had risen to a new level of growth, one Kosh did  not
fully understand. Kosh had even come to believe that if ever  the  cycle  of
war and death  was  to  end,  if  ever  the  forces  of  order  were  to  be
definitively proven superior, it would be through Sheridan.

     Sheridan had not the wisdom or the knowledge or  the  discipline  of  a
Vorlon, yet he had other qualities, Human qualities, that  seemed  to  carry
their own value and worth. Among those was guilt, an emotion long studied by
the Vorlons. Kosh did not want Sheridan to be crippled by it.

     Sheridan had done no more than speak aloud the argument Kosh  had  many
times made to himself. From the mouth of Sheridan, though, the argument took
on  a  simplicity  and  a  power  Kosh  obscured   behind   subtleties   and
rationalizations.

     How many people have already died fighting this war of yours?  Sheridan
said.

     How many more will die before you come down off that mountain  and  get
involved?

     For the first time in millennia, fear governed Kosh's action.

     He struck out at Sheridan three times, the discharges  of  his  essence
nearly killing the Human.

     Impudent, Kosh said.

     Incorrect, Kosh said.

     We are not prepared yet, Kosh said.

     Yet it was only Kosh who was not prepared, not prepared to die.

     The ancient enemy ascended through the station to his level, bent their
steps toward him. Sheridan had simply spoken the truth. As Kosh had stood on
high and watched, the fabulists had gone, and they had been but the first in
an escalating series of losses.

     The forces of chaos had begun by forming secret alliances with some  of
the younger races, encouraging and provoking them  into  vicious  wars  with
their neighbors. Now the enemy openly attacked the younger races, killing at
will. And from a planet near the enemy's home on the rim, Kosh's  buoys  had
sung a disturbing song. The two fabulists who served chaos  were  rebuilding
an ancient force that hadn't been used for many millennia. Billions  already
had died, and billions more would die. The  maelstrom  hungered  to  subsume
all.

     Only in banding together to fight the maelstrom could the  majority  of
the younger races survive. They would not fight, though,  if  they  believed
themselves overwhelmed by an invincible enemy.  They  must  have  hope  they
could win, and that hope, as Sheridan had argued, could only be provided  by
the Vorlons. And so Kosh had brought the Vorlons into the war,  had  engaged
the enemy directly for the first time since their ancient agreement had been
reached. With  that  one  battle,  he  had  provided  Sheridan  the  victory
necessary to draw the others into alliance.

     Now the enemy would demand recompense for the  Vorlons'  transgression.
Sheridan had not understood what he had asked. Kosh had told him:

     There is a price to pay. I will not be there to help you when you go to
Z'ha'dum.

     Still Sheridan had not understood. The Human believed he  himself  must
pay the price. He believed that, if ever he went to the enemy's  home,  Kosh
would withhold help out of anger. Yet Kosh would not be unwilling  to  help;
he would be unable.

     The enemy was close now, the stench of chaos saturating his senses.

     Kosh poured himself into  the  sleek  brown  and  green  shell  of  his
encounter suit. No disguise was  necessary,  but  the  hard  casement  would
provide a few moments' defense.

     Death was harder to accept than he had thought. Vorlons rarely died; in
the last millennium, only one had perished. He feared how the  others  would
proceed in this war without his counsel. He had placed them  upon  a  narrow
path. They must participate in the war only when absolutely necessary;  they
must not dominate it.

     Yet he did not believe the Vorlons had the will to  follow  that  path.
Some hoped that Kosh's death would bring the conflict back into equilibrium,
allow them to return to the ancient rules of  engagement,  to  resume  their
manipulations from on high. But a growing number believed Kosh's action  the
first step toward a total, final war with the enemy, one that would end with
the complete annihilation of the forces of chaos  and  everything  they  had
touched. In such a total war, Kosh knew, the Vorlons  would  exterminate  as
many of the younger races as the maelstrom.

     He wished he could remain among them, guide  them.  If  his  aide  were
nearby, he could pour the core of his essence into her, as he sometimes did.
She had been modified and trained to carry him, concealed inside  her,  when
he required it. No other on the station had the strength  to  carry  even  a
small portion of his core. If she were here, though, the  enemy  would  have
first sought her out and killed her, to prevent any such transfer. Kosh  was
glad he had sent her away.

     The ancient enemy stood now outside his door. Three of them, and  their
servant, the pestilence Morden. Morden tampered with the lock.

     It was time.

     From the core of his essence, Kosh reached out. First, he slipped  into
the song of his ship. It lay docked in a special bay on the station. It  was
resting, humming softly to itself of the beauty of order,  the  satisfaction
of service, the harmony of the spheres. He directed it to take no action  in
the coming moments, when it might sense he was threatened.

     A dissonance entered the ship's song, and its tempo quickened.  It  did
not understand. It was frightened. Kosh repeated his order,  and  its  tempo
slightly slowed.

     It remained anxious, but it would obey; obedience was its greatest joy.
Without him to serve, Kosh knew, the ship would have no purpose.

     It would follow its long-standing directives and kill itself by  flying
into the nearest sun. For many millennia, it had attended him well. He  took
a moment to convey a simple, calming harmonic.

     The ship adopted it eagerly, ...
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