War Without End part 2

Ambassador Sinclair returns to pull Babylon 4 through time ([[Babylon Squared]].) Part 2 of 2.
####Overview

####Guest Stars

Michael O’Hare as Ambassador Sinclair. Tim Choate as Zathras. Kent Broadhurst as Major Krantz.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/061.html
####Plot Points

Sinclair and Zathras travelled back in time with Babylon 4. Since the Minbari would never accept a station commanded by a human (a race they hadn’t encountered yet,) Sinclair entered a chrysalis using the same kind of device Delenn used to become half human. His transformation was complete, though, not halfway; to all appearances he became a Minbari. When he arrived in the past, he was accompanied by two Vorlons. He introduced himself to the Minbari as Valen, and went on to lead the war and form the first Grey Council.

Later, he wrote himself a note describing what was to come, and what he would have to do. He also wrote a note to Delenn.

Sinclair’s transformation caused the start of the migration of Minbari souls to human bodies by linking the two species. Delenn’s transformation in the other direction was, in part, an attempt to restore the balance that had been upset. (See Notes)

“The One,” explains Zathras, is really three: Sinclair is The One who was, Delenn is The One who is, and Sheridan is The One who will be.

The three are a whole, consistent with the Minbari tendency to divide things into threes. (Or, perhaps, The One is responsible for that tendency somehow, maybe due to Sinclair’s teachings.)

Sheridan and Delenn, in at least one possible future, will have a son named David.

Londo, as emperor of a wrecked Centauri Republic seventeen years after the start of the Shadow War, will be made to wear a “keeper,” a creature of some sort attached to the side of his neck. It’s visible only when asleep. When it’s awake, it forces him to do its bidding, apparently on behalf of the Shadows. In the end, he will ask G’Kar to kill him before the keeper forces him to betray Sheridan and Delenn.

But the keeper will awaken as G’Kar strangles Londo, and the two will die at each other’s hands, leaving an astonished Vir to pick up the imperial emblem.
####Unanswered Questions

Who was at the door in Delenn’s flashforward? (See Analysis)

Was one of the Vorlons accompanying Sinclair Kosh? Was the other the Vorlon who later spoke to Rathenn on Minbar in part 1? The two encounter suits were the same as that Vorlon’s.

Why was there an explosive discharge when Sinclair touched Delenn’s suited hand?

What became of Zathras? Did he have a hand in the planning of the Great Machine?

Is Sheridan’s vision of the future inevitable?

What is the price of victory over the Shadows, and why was Delenn so dismayed about it?
####Analysis

How did Sinclair get the chrysalis machine? Did the Vorlons supply it? It seemed to do a much more thorough job on Sinclair than it did on Delenn; in appearance, at least, Valen was a pure Minbari, not half-human.

An odder explanation is that Sinclair got it from Delenn, who got it (indirectly) from Valen; in that case, the machine was never actually invented.

When and how did the Vorlons board Babylon 4? There were two Vorlon ships next to the station when the Minbari cruisers approached it; did they come back in time with Sinclair, or did the Vorlons of a thousand years ago know where and when B4 would appear? Perhaps Sinclair called them.

Delenn’s transformation took several weeks. Presumably Sinclair’s was comparable. Did it take that much subjective time to travel back 1000 years, or did the station sit unnoticed in the past until Sinclair was ready? If the former, then the Vorlons must have boarded the station while it was in transit through time (assuming they gave Sinclair the machine.)

Why did Sinclair choose to call himself Valen? Was it simply because of the contents of his letter? In that case, nobody ever actually invented the name; it was chosen because it was the name he ended up using.

Did the Grey Council realize that they’d captured Valen at the Battle of the Line? Most likely not, or Delenn’s counterpart wouldn’t have ordered her to kill him if he remembered what happened ([[And the Sky Full of Stars]].)

On the other hand, if Delenn’s transformation was really in part an attempt to restore the balance upset by Sinclair’s change a thousand years earlier, then Delenn must have known about Valen’s true nature for quite some time. Perhaps she alone recognized Sinclair’s true identity at the Line, but couldn’t tell the rest of the Council, who almost certainly would refuse to believe what she’d discovered.

Why did the machine transform Delenn into a hybrid human and Minbari, while Sinclair (from all outward appearances) was transformed into a full Minbari? Did Delenn choose to only transform herself halfway? If so, has she truly restored the balance between humans and Minbari, or is there still something left to do?

Besides Delenn and the people on the White Star bridge, how many others know Valen’s true identity? If it became widespread, the information might seriously alter the face of Minbari religion; learning that their greatest spiritual leader was actually a member of a race many of them hold in contempt would probably test the faith of many Minbari.

Sinclair flashed back to the Soul Hunter telling him that he was being used, presumably by the Minbari ([[Soul Hunter]].) Exactly what did he mean by that? Perhaps there was a Soul Hunter present at Valen’s death, and Sinclair was familiar to them already. Or maybe the Soul Hunter found out about Sinclair’s eventual identity when he peered into Delenn’s mind.

Probably of less significance, Sinclair’s other memory was of Neroon ([[Legacies]],) who eventually ended up on the Grey Council. What impact, if any, that had on Sinclair’s tenure on Minbar is unknown. Given Neroon’s dismissal of the reason for the Minbari surrender at the Line ([[All Alone in the Night]]) it seems any respect he had for Sinclair was short-lived, and that if the Council did know of Sinclair’s true identity, Neroon didn’t believe it. Neroon was also Sinclair’s prosecutor in comic issue 3, “In Harm’s Way.”

Now that Sinclair has travelled back in time, the accuracy of Valen’s prophecies is probably at an end. Valen could predict the start of the Shadow War, and the breaking of the Grey Council, because he’d lived through it, but anything after his departure to the past is a complete unknown to him (unless, of course, the Vorlons have some way of telling him.)

The appearance of two Vorlons next to an unfamiliar Minbari might not have been such a shock to the Minbari warriors who found Sinclair. In “In the Shadow of Z’ha’dum”, Delenn claimed that the previous Shadow war marked the last time the ancients walked openly among the younger races. So it’s entirely possible that the appearance of a Vorlon was, if not commonplace, then nothing resembling miraculous.

On the other hand, the two Vorlons were flying above encounter suits; maybe they’ve been secretive all along, and even when they walked openly among the other races, always hid behind masks. That would make sense if they wanted to maintain the illusion of angelic appearance, since as Kosh said in [[Matters of Honor]], maintaining that appearance in front of a lot of people is a great strain on a Vorlon.

Did Babylon 4 travel through space as well as time, or did it appear in what would later become Sector 14? If the latter, does its appearance there have anything to do with the location of the Great Machine?

What is Londo’s “keeper?” Who gave it to him? What exactly is it forcing him to do, and why? The fact that it’s invisible when awake suggests that it’s associated with the Shadows, who have mastered the art of invisibility.

Does Morden have a keeper too? Is that why the Shadows treat him as an equal — because they know he’ll never betray their cause?

Or maybe the Shadows are being controlled by some other party, though that seems unlikely.

“We all have our keepers,” Londo says. Does that include Sheridan and Delenn? Perhaps there’s a connection between Londo’s guest and the dream sequence in [[All Alone in the Night]], in which Ivanova and Garibaldi both have birds on their shoulders.

By granting a reprieve to Sheridan and Delenn, Londo may be fulfilling one of his chances for redemption ([[Point of No Return]].) Morella told him he must not kill the one who is already dead; perhaps that refers to Sheridan — who certainly qualifies as “the one” now in another context. Londo’s greeting in part 1, “Welcome back from the abyss, Sheridan,” tends to support this possibility, though of course it’s not clear what Londo meant by that.

Kosh’s warning to Sheridan in “In the Shadow of Z’ha’dum” and [[Interludes and Examinations]], “If you go to Z’ha’dum, you will die,” probably also ties into this, especially since, judging by Delenn’s plea, it seems that Sheridan has gone to Z’ha’dum at some point in the intervening seventeen years. The “death” Kosh referred to may simply be the death of innocence as noted by Delenn, and not literal physical death.

Londo’s death at G’Kar’s hand may also be the last part of Morella’s prophecy; death may be Londo’s greatest fear, or perhaps death with the knowledge that he hasn’t righted his wrongs.

Londo’s dream in [[The Coming of Shadows]], in which he sees a fleet of Shadow ships flying overhead while he stands alone in a desolate wasteland, may be a vision of the Shadows’ minions coming to Centauri Prime as he says they did.

Kosh’s prediction to the Centauri Emperor in [[The Coming of Shadows]] appears to be literally true: For Centauri Prime, the war has ended in fire.

What were the Centauri, or perhaps someone else, trying to get out of Delenn? She refused to answer their questions, she says; what were they trying to learn? It appears the Centauri captured her, which implies there’s still a conflict of some kind going on, even after the Shadows have been driven off. The presence of Londo’s keeper makes it unclear that the Centauri were the ones trying to question her.

“We created something that will endure for a thousand years,” Delenn tells Sheridan. What will they create? And what happens in a thousand years — will the Shadows return again and break up their creation, much as Valen’s creation, the Grey Council, has recently been destroyed?

In the Centauri cell, Delenn tells Sheridan, “Our son is safe. Nothing else matters.” Why is David in danger, and what has Delenn done to ensure his safety?

What could possibly happen to G’Kar in the intervening seventeen years to cause Londo to refer to him as an “old friend?” Londo, of course, may simply have been speaking facetiously — but in that case, what was G’Kar doing in the Centauri palace?

Is death at G’Kar’s hands Londo’s greatest fear, and thus his final chance for redemption ([[Point of No Return]]?) Or is his fear more abstract than that, the fear that his death dream will come to pass as he’s envisioned it?

When Londo sees himself strangled by G’Kar in his dream, does he know that it’s at his own request? How much of the context of his death does he know already?

In [[Babylon Squared]], the crewman who sees the blue-suited figure appear in the hallway tells Krantz, “It’s back.” Presumably the B4 crew had seen Sheridan appearing and disappearing, since Delenn had only recently switched places with him.

Delenn appears in the hallway in the present time (or rather, the same timeframe she’d reached via the White Star,) so in that specific instance there was no time-shifting, just movement through space. How did she do that? Perhaps, as she implied in Part One, the Minbari have the technology for rudimentary time manipulation, so she used something from the White Star.

The woman at the door in Delenn’s flashforward causes her to drop the snowglobe in shock. Very few people would cause someone as poised as Delenn to do that. One of them, though, and one whose arrival has been foreshadowed, would be Anna Sheridan.

Why does Delenn urge Sheridan to avoid going to Z’ha’dum? If he has already gone there by the time she is thrown into the cell with him, then Kosh’s prediction about Sheridan dying if he goes there is wrong, or at least not as immediate as it originally sounded. On the other hand, the fact that they have a son is good evidence the two of them will become much closer; perhaps the arrival of Anna Sheridan (if that’s who’s at the door in Delenn’s flashforward) will complicate their relationship, and it’s to avoid finding out about Anna that Delenn tells Sheridan to stay away from Z’ha’dum.

Are the flashforwards completely random, or might there be something guiding people to visions of certain events? The Vorlons appear to have some perception that extends beyond time; perhaps they are manipulating that perception when it appears, even briefly, in others.

The assumption at the end of the episode seems to be that by successfully pulling Babylon 4 back in time, the crew has averted the Shadow attack on Babylon 5 in eight days, in which Ivanova sends out the distress call heard in part one. Does that mean that Sinclair’s flashforward to the firefight aboard B5 has also been averted? What about Lady Ladira’s vision of the destruction of Babylon 5? ([[Signs and Portents]]) If all those glimpses of the future are no longer true, how much validity do the remaining ones have? Each of them could be from a completely different possible future, none of which will end up ever taking place.

Was Zathras supposed to tell Sheridan, Delenn, and Sinclair about The One? Were Draal’s instructions simply to not reveal anything until prompted by Sinclair?

Where did he come up with the term, and with its definition? If he knows Sheridan is The One who will be, he must have been using the Great Machine to peer forward in time (not unreasonable, given its obvious time-bending abilities.) Will Draal be able to do the same and offer insights into the events to come? Zathras implies that perhaps he can do things even Draal can’t, and that may be one of them.

The distinction between the three members of The One echoes the migration of Minbari souls. Sinclair, after his transformation, appears to be fully Minbari, and is The One who was. Delenn is halfway between human and Minbari, and is The One who is. Sheridan is completely human and is The One who will be. Perhaps it’s symbolic of a shift of power from the Minbari to humanity.
####Notes

####Inconsistencies with [[Babylon Squared]] (B2). See also jms speaks.

  • Not an inconsistency per se, but in B2, there was no mention by Krantz of the explosion of the Shadow bomb or the presence of possibly hostile personnel on the station, which he definitely knew about in WWE2. If it’s not an inconsistency, why didn’t he mention it to Sinclair?
  • In B2, Krantz told Sinclair that Zathras was first seen in a conference room. “There was a flash, and there he was,” Krantz said. In this episode, Zathras was discovered in a supply room by security guards.
  • Zathras tells Sinclair and Krantz that The One has stopped B4’s motion through time to let the crew get off. But in WWE2, the station appears in 2258 by accident after Major Krantz unexpectedly powers up the time equipment. And the idea of faking a power drop in the fusion reactor to cause the crew to evacuate was Ivanova’s, not any of The One’s.
  • In B2, when The One appears in the corridor, there are audible grunts of pain; they’re clearly in a male voice, not a female one. When Sinclair returns to the station and removes his helmet, the B2 version of events includes a computer voice intoning, “Present time atmosphere now breathable.” No such voice is heard in WWE2, though arguably Delenn was meeting him just inside an airlock, and the suit computer was referring to the fact that there was no longer a vacuum outside.
  • Delenn puts her hand on Sinclair’s shoulder in B2, and her arm is draped in a red robe. But in WWE2, she’s wearing much darker colors.

Another possible inconsistency: Delenn claims that Sinclair’s transformation began the migration of Minbari souls to human bodies that ultimately led to the end of the Earth-Minbari War. However, in [[Points of Departure]], Lennier claims that the soul migration has been going on for roughly two millenia, twice as far back as Sinclair took Babylon 4.

The voice at the door seems to be that of Bruce Boxleitner’s real-life wife, Melissa Gilbert, though of course that doesn’t imply anything about which character she’ll be playing on the show. However, she’s been announced as a guest star in the season finale, so the flashforward may well have been only a month or two ahead.

War Without End part 1

Ambassador Sinclair returns to pull Babylon 4 through time ([[Babylon Squared]]) Part 1 of 2.
####Overview

####Guest Stars

Michael O’Hare as Ambassador Sinclair. Tim Choate as Zathras.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/060.html
####Backplot

The last Shadow war nearly ended in defeat when the command center, a Minbari space station, was destroyed by Shadow forces. But shortly thereafter, a replacement arrived out of nowhere: Babylon 4. With Babylon 4 in place, the Minbari, the Vorlons, and their allies were able to drive the Shadows off Z’ha’dum and destroy a good two-thirds of the Shadows’ warships. Until Delenn arrived at Babylon 5, the origin of the replacement station was a mystery to the Minbari.

Six years ago, just before Babylon 4 vanished, some of the Shadows’ allies recognized the station from the last war. A group of Shadow fighters tried to deliver a fusion bomb onto the station, whose destruction would look like an accident and would lead to a Shadow victory, or a stalemate, in the previous war. They were fought off by the White Star, which travelled back in time through the rift in Sector 14 to stop them. These events were recorded by Varn in the Great Machine.

The Great Machine is responsible for opening the time rift and allowing Babylon 4 to be pulled backward through time. However, opening the rift strains the Machine, and Draal, to its limits.

The White Star’s Vorlon technology includes the ability to learn from past experiences. Its previous encounters with Shadow vessels have strengthened its resistance to some Shadow weapons.

There is at least one Vorlon on Minbar, a fact that’s known to at least some of the former Grey Council.

In one possible future, Sheridan is destined to win the war against the Shadows, but not entirely destroy them; some Shadow minions will come to Centauri Prime, where an older Londo reigns as Emperor, and lay waste to the capital city.

While on Minbar, Sinclair gained a reputation among the Rangers for answering questions cryptically.

The Rangers were put together with the help of the Grey Council, or at least some of its number, including Rathenn, the Minbari who restored Sinclair’s memory in the comic issue “In Darkness Find Me.” He’s an old friend of Delenn’s; she asked Draal about him in [[A Voice in the Wilderness part 1]] And he seems to revere her, accepting Sinclair’s status without question at her behest.

At the close of the last Shadow war, someone who knew Sinclair would be on Minbar left him a note in a sealed box. The box was stored in a temple for over nine hundred years with instructions to not open it until a specific date, a date which has now arrived.

During their first visit to Babylon 4, Garibaldi and Sinclair both saw the same flashforward of Garibaldi defending the station against unknown attackers.
####Unanswered Questions

Who left the note for Sinclair? (See Analysis)

Sinclair has a scar on his cheek (as also shown in [[Babylon Squared]].) Where did he get it?

Where did Delenn’s note come from? How long has she had it?

What was the Vorlon doing on Minbar? Has he/she/it been there all along?

How far into the future has Sheridan been thrown?

Why did Sheridan end up on Centauri Prime, presumably some distance from Sector 14?

What did Londo mean by greeting Sheridan, “Welcome back from the abyss?”

Where did Zathras come from? Has there been a community of his people on Epsilon 3 for generations, or are they more recent arrivals?

Why was Zathras honored to meet Sheridan? What were the things Draal instructed him not to mention?

When Zathras was looking at the Great Machine, he said, “Not good.” What was he talking about? Was the strain of opening the time rift causing the Machine to malfunction?

Were the Shadows, or their allies, also responsible for the sabotage of Babylons 1, 2, and 3? If so, why didn’t they destroy Babylon 4 before it was finished?

Did Babylon 4 survive the war? If so, where is it now?
####Analysis

It seems likely that Sinclair left himself the note. In [[Babylon Squared]], Sinclair was shown to be present on Babylon 4 when it shifted through time; and from his message to Garibaldi, it seems the note told him he was destined to stay in the past and help defeat the Shadows then.

If that’s correct, and the Minbari holy books contain instructions about the box, it suggests Sinclair was involved in writing the books. Very possibly he was Valen, “a Minbari not born of Minbar,” as Lennier described Valen in [[Passing Through Gethsemane]]., Sinclair, as the Grey Council discovered ([[Points of Departure]]) somehow has a Minbari soul.

Which leads to the question, what does Sinclair’s time travel have to do with the Minbari soul migration, if anything? Does he have a Minbari soul because he’s a giant figure from Minbari legend, or vice versa?

Presumably, if Sinclair is Valen and Draal knows about it, that’s why Zathras was honored to meet Sinclair. What Zathras knows about Sheridan, though, is an open question — perhaps he has been watching recent events unfold on Babylon 5 and simply respects Sheridan’s stand against Earth and the Shadows.

Rathenn appears to defer to Sinclair. If a former member of the Grey Council looks to Sinclair for direction, Sinclair must be one of the most influential people on Minbar.

Londo’s description of Sheridan’s victory over the Shadows makes it sound like a fairly distant event, but the Centauri capital city was burning while Sheridan stood there. Perhaps the Shadow minions Londo mentioned have been slowly destroying the city, building by building, since the close of the war, and the Centauri have been powerless to stop them. Or, perhaps, the end of the war isn’t as far back as Londo implies. (It’s interesting to note that Londo doesn’t appear surprised by Sheridan’s appearance or by the fact that Sheridan hasn’t aged.)

Sheridan looks older (his hair is lighter) and may be dressed in something other than his uniform as he visits Londo in the throne room — it looks like he’s wearing a leather jacket, but his outfit isn’t shown clearly enough to tell for sure. If it’s different, though, could his trip forward be along the lines of the flashforward experienced by Sinclair and Garibaldi, rather than a physical transfer? If so, where is his body?

If Babylon 4 is being sent back to help defeat the Shadows in the previous war, will other equipment be sent too? For instance, loading the docking bays full of Minbari fighters (or better still, Vorlon fighters) could do as much to turn the tide of battle as the mere presence of the station, especially assuming that Minbari and Vorlon weapons have improved in the intervening thousand years.

On the other hand, perhaps the non-destruction of the Shadows in the last war wasn’t a matter of military strength after all; perhaps the Shadows hid somewhere such that they were impossible to wipe out. If so, will the same thing happen again? Londo’s accusation suggests it will, to some extent.

How long after Delenn arrived on Babylon 5 did she figure out where Babylon 4 came from? Were the Minbari really so uninterested in Babylon 4 that the Grey Council never saw a picture of the station? Did Delenn recognize the similarity in design as soon as she arrived, or did she find a picture of Babylon 4 in B5’s archives?

Along similar lines, was the station not identified as “Babylon 4” when it appeared in the past? If it was, the Minbari should have at least heard of the Babylon Project in its earlier stages, and would have known B4’s identity before Delenn arrived on B5. It’s possible the Minbari lost whatever records contained the name of their second base of operations, or that Sinclair convinced the Minbari to leave such information out in the interest of not altering the future.

If the Great Machine opened a rift for Babylon 4 six years ago (while, it should be noted, the machine was under Varn’s control, not Draal’s) and can still open a rift today for the White Star, will it be able to open other rifts to send more people back? Or is Draal simply not as capable of handling the strain as Varn was?

On the other hand, maybe the original time rift was generated from the present day by Draal, and Varn wasn’t involved at all. In that case, the Machine may only be able to manipulate time once.

If B4 was being pulled back in time, why did it reappear four years later than it vanished? Sinclair, according to [[Babylon Squared]], interrupted the station’s time travel to allow the crew to get off. But if it was travelling backward through time, that should have caused it to reappear some time before it vanished.

Maybe B4 will have to be pulled forward to the present day, from which point Draal can send it back — that is, maybe Draal can only open rifts between the present day and some other time, not between two arbitrary times.

The Great Machine’s time-manipulation abilities suggest that perhaps it was built specifically to pull Babylon 4 back through time. If so, who built it, and how did they know about Babylon 4? Their technology in that area exceeds the Minbari’s, which says that the Machine’s builders were First Ones. In that case, what was the role of Varn’s people?

Delenn told Sheridan that the Minbari did not have the technology to control a time field “as unstable as this one.” How much time-manipulation technology do they have?

If there’s a Vorlon on Minbar, could it have been responsible for Delenn’s childhood vision ([[Confessions and Lamentations]]?)

In [[Babylon Squared]], Zathras hands his time stabilizer to the space-suited figure (possibly Sinclair,) who promptly vanishes. Was that a replacement for Sheridan’s stabilizer, or for another broken one?

Ivanova’s wish has come true — she’s on Babylon 4 and Garibaldi is left behind. ([[Babylon Squared]])

In Ivanova’s distress call, she says, “This is Earth Alliance station Babylon 5.” Presumably in the heat of the moment her Earth Force training kicked in and she didn’t consider that B5 isn’t an Earth Alliance station any more. (See jms speaks.)
####Notes

As in [[Babylon Squared]], the term “unstuck in time” is a reference to Kurt Vonnegut Jr.’s “Slaughterhouse Five.”

Garibaldi’s attempted passwords: “Jeff,” “Jeffrey,” “peekaboo” (Garibaldi’s computer password, most recently used in [[Ceremonies of Light and Dark]],) “Susan,” “Michael,” “socks,” “fasten,” “zip” (the last three from the conversation between Sinclair and Garibaldi on their way to Babylon 4 in [[Babylon Squared]],) and finally, “hello, old friend,” Sinclair’s opening line in the message delivered to Garibaldi by the Ranger in [[The Coming of Shadows]].

Viewers outside North America may have some difficulty recognizing all the partnerships to which Sinclair compares himself and Sheridan.

“Butch and Sundance” were Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid, two outlaws from the days of the Old West (of more recent fame for the movie in which they were portrayed by Paul Newman and Robert Redford). “Lewis and Clark” were not Lois Lane and Clark Kent, but Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, who explored much of the territory of the Louisiana Purchase (a vast expanse between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains that the United States acquired from France in 1803) from 1804 to 1806, eventually reaching the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest. “Lucy and Ethel” were Lucy Ricardo and Ethel Mertz, the characters portrayed by Lucille Ball and Vivian Vance in the 1950s sitcom “I Love Lucy.”

The building in which Sinclair and Rathenn talk bears some resemblance in outline to the encounter suit of the Vorlon inside — and even more resemblance to a Shadow.