Chapter 1: prologue
Summary:
it begins with a body.
Notes:
(2016-09-15) Hello, and thank you everybody who has read this far! In hobbit-like manner, since it's my birthday today, I'll give you this gift in the form of a new story. This fic is set after "nou ani atlantus" and deals with its aftermath. As you'll have noticed from the tags, it also functions as a crossover, but any knowledge of NCIS isn't really necessary since I'll explain things along the way. In this verse, if you're an NCIS fan who knows the works, I've changed just a couple of things. This is set sometime after season two; Jenny is the Director, but Kate is still around (Ari didn’t kill her; headcanon what you will; I might explain it later if I figure the details out myself) because I like her too much. Also, I use the spelling "Sheppard" for Jenny for reasons which will be obvious and explained in time. First time I’m writing in this fandom so I hope it’s OK. Please enjoy!
(2018-04-02) Chapter updated/revised. I'm going to go through the rest of the fic, similarly to the other stories in this verse/series, fixing grammatical errors, continuity errors, and standardizing spelling from British to American; things like that. There's a slight change in formatting as well.
(2018-04-08) Chapters one through 31 have been checked now. I'm hoping to get an actual update of this fic up asap.
(2023-02-15) Chapter given a minor revision to change some punctuation to stay in line with the other fics in the series. All the dashes (-) in the middle of sentences are changed to em dashes (—).
Chapter Text
seeking antebellum
i.
prologue
it begins with a body.
Washington D.C., U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 14, 2006, C.E. (Terran time)
A chill wind cradles the industrial pier in a white haze. Gulls are singing far above, and the waters clash against the cement and stone soothingly. This part of the pier is meant to be closed down for repairs and, at this early time of morning, emptied. But there’s activity and voices and moving feet. Two white vans are parked on the nearest available space, off-kilter, and an area stretching a few meters around the edge of the pier is cut off by tape declaring CRIME SCENE: DO NOT CROSS, creating a perimeter.
Within the circle, the agents are hard at work.
The marine—identified as such by the dark inconspicuous cammies worn, the heavily military-issue boots, and the neat haircut—lies face down on the cold cracked asphalt, arms harshly forced back. It is as if he has simply been dropped there, forgotten, uncaringly. The sleeves have been partially pushed up as if by force or struggle, exposing wrists darkened by bruises. The scene is fresh and relatively undisturbed—the call came from a frantic, terrified construction worked, babbling about a body: a human and a Dæmon, lying there, splatters of blood. The local Sheriff, by no means an amateur, concluded that a dead marine at the heart of D.C. is NCIS business; he and the police have cleared off, sighing that they’ll gladly let someone else handle this mess. The paperwork alone is enough to cause headaches.
The man lies there silent but speaking the language of the dead, and they are here to decipher it. The worst part isn’t the human body: he is clean enough, though his hands are bloodied. The body is still in one piece. No, the worst thing is the Dæmon, lying some ten feet away: as if thrown there, a considerable distance. Beyond the natural borders of comfort. The distance alone could, if prolonged by force, cause death. It’s more obvious that that: a bullet has cleaved through the Dæmon’s throat, cleanly. Its once bright eyes are dull, half-closed, and mouth splayed open as if in the middle of a cry.
This was no accident—this was an execution.
The questions remain: by whom? and why? and exactly how?
Senior Special Agent Leroy Jethro Gibbs peers down at the pair of bodies, memorizing the details and the angles. Special Agent Anthony DiNozzo is kneeling, taking a high number of photographs, while Special Agent Caitlin Todd—former Secret Service—is taking notes; she has the statements from the Sheriff and the construction worker already. Not much to go on, but it’s a start. The last and newest addition to their team, Special Agent Timothy McGee—an MIT computer genius—is carefully measuring so that the scene can be recreated later in a lab, everything determined.
The air smells like it’ll rain soon. Got to get the bodies under cover before that.
Gibbs kneels by the human body to get into eye-height with the coroner; his Dæmon following, her Shape a warm-coated Siberian Husky and their Bond usually the quiet type, a whisper of comfort but they don’t use a lot of words explicitly. They savor the silence. When looking at a scene like this though, the splatters of blood, there is always a flare of anger. They’re good at this job, may even like it: finding the murderers and unveiling the plots but that doesn’t mean it’s a pleasant job; finding a marine dead always pisses them off.
“What have you got, Ducky?”
Dr Donald Mallard—preferably called Ducky by friends and colleagues—is the investigating team’s chief medical examiner, and he carefully traces the fallen man’s wrists. There are several lacerations and cuts, not only on the arms but the fists also, indications of a struggle; and there are deep, harsh bruises, an uneven pattern. Further up his arm, above his right elbow, the uniform jacket has been torn—by a knife, perhaps, something with a sharp edge—cut open, and there’s a small wound beneath.
“These bruises appear to be the result of someone grabbing with considerable force and literally pulling his arms out of their sockets. See, here?” He points so that his assistant can see more closely, though right now the man’s clothes are mostly in the way. “I reckons once we’ve had an X-ray there will be signs of a hairline fracture.”
“They came from behind,” remarks McGee, but Gibbs shakes his head.
DiNozzo smirks. “Let’s not draw conclusions here, Probie.”
“Cause of death?”
“I’ll let you know when I know, Jethro, that is a promise,” Dr Mallard says with a chuckle. His Dæmon is an old and wiry thing, much like himself, and there’s a grimly amused glint in its eye; after many years of working side-by-side with Gibbs, Ducky is very used to his impatient mannerisms and cold stares which in interrogation often prove quite useful. “As Agent DiNozzo so sagely put it, let us no draw conclusions just yet.”
“Can you give me at least a time of death?”
The examiner withdraws the thermometer with which he’s checked the victim’s current core temperature as accurately as possible; still just an estimation. “Well, considering the state of the body and the fact rigor isn’t fully set in yet, I’d estimate he died sometime between five and ten hours ago. I can be more specific once he’s one the table.”
“What else?”
“Judging by the distance of the Dæmon to the victim, it is possible that Agent McGee is not wholly incorrect in his assumptions. This man may have been held back by one attacker while his Dæmon was taken out. Poor fellow.” Mallard shakes his head. “What a miserable way to die.”
“Look at his hands,” says Todd. She’s a woman with dark hair pulled back strictly and she moves with certainty, having been on this job for a while now. Not as unsure and awkward as during her first days with NCIS, her first case.
Asking permission from Ducky and receiving a nod, she lightly grasps one of the dead man’s tortured hands with a gloved one of her own. The outermost layer of the skin of each fingertip has been removed, by something sharp like a scalpel. A lot of trouble. The obvious conclusions to draw is that someone is trying to hide this man’s identity. It’s worth noting, and DiNozzo snaps another couple of pictures, this time zoomed in on the ruined hands. Getting prints is going to be impossible.
“Got what you need?” Gibbs asks.
“Yeah, Boss, enough for an art gallery,” DiNozzo smirks.
“Oh, I’d no idea you even knew such things existed, Tony,” remarks Todd, sending her fellow agent a glance. “I thought you didn’t know about any kind of culture beyond your TV.”
The smirk widens. “Oh, there’s a lot you don’t know about me, Kate.”
Gibbs, in no mood for his team’s antics, merely gives them both a sharp look. The corer and his assistant take position to move the man’s body; “Let’s turn him over and have a look at his face.” They grab hold of his side and shoulders, and —
McGee steps back, shocked, and even Gibbs has to admit this is particularly gruesome.
“Well, that’s not something you see every day,” Ducky says, almost causally, slightly concerned: another mystery.
The marine’s face is gone. Reminiscent of a previous case, last year—a meat puzzle, they’d called it; part of this appears, at first glance, to have been executed partly similarly. As if someone took a knife to it and peeled it away, layers of skin and the top muscles too, gauging out the eyes, and it’s a horrible scene. Something incredibly stark and brutal, yet frighteningly controlled. Not just anyone would have the guts to do something like this. But the blood pooled on the ground beneath is a very small amount, too small for this to have occurred here. No trace of the face or eyes either: there is another crime scene needs to be found.
Maybe they could recreate the face in a lab, let the resident forensic do her magic. Give them a lead on who this really is.
McGee is clearly trying his best to not find the nearest bush or stone to retch behind. “Suddenly I’m glad I missed breakfast this morning.”
Gibbs hands out orders and the two medical examiners get the man entirely flat on his back. DiNozzo manages to move to continue taking pictures from this new angle. The man’s neck is exposed and shockingly clean, the collar roughly forced open. And the place on his uniform which would display his name and rank is also clean, the patch has been ripped off. Traces of another patch on his shoulder, but that too is gone.
Kneeling, Todd searches with a gloved hand, but shakes her head: “No dog tags. Someone didn’t want us to find out this guy’s identity.”
That’s usually the case. But this is taking it to the extreme.
The agents continue their search, upturning pockets on his uniform: there are stains, dark dried blood. And from one pocket McGee pulls out a cellphone. It’s a pretty fancy model, a smartphone of the latest tech, and could have been brand new apart from the crushed, dented screen, cracked in several places. It remains unresponsive, but maybe they can breathe some life into it in a lab. Like all other evidence it is bagged and tagged. Other than that, there isn’t much: a half-empty packet of chewing gum; a wallet, containing a crumpled up dollar bill and an even more crumpled up Starbucks receipt. No sign of an ID card of any sort.
He’s still wearing his watch. This wasn’t a robbery.
“Espresso Macchiato, huh,” says DiNozzo, snapping a picture before the receipt ends up in a plastic bag and clearly marked. “Well, he’s got decent taste.”
Todd snorts. “He had.”
“That help us figure out his name?” Gibbs says, impatiently.
“Uh, no, Boss.”
Lastly, the two bodies, human and Dæmon, are maneuvered into a shared body bag. Wearing gloves, they take care never to touch the Dæmon directly. Even in death, such a thing is utterly forbidden: and not everybody can make themselves to it even then, with gloves and clothes in-between. The bodies are cold and still.
It could be like any other murder; a thirst for revenge, a deal gone wrong, missing money, a relationship gone south …
But whoever did this literally carved off the man’s face. This was so careful, deliberate: yet they didn’t dump the bodies in the water, not too far off. As if … they wanted the bodies to be found. Yes, this is what his gut feeling is telling him: and Agent Gibbs usually trusts his instincts. This might be a marine, it might not. But the bodies were dumped pretty much on the doorstep of NCIS Headquarters.
A message?
but for whom? and from whom?
Chapter 2: a glimpse of starlight
Summary:
he wakes up night after night after night;
Notes:
(2018-04-02) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
ii.
a glimpse of starlight
he wakes up night after night after night;
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus · 456 days since Expedition arrival ·
January 16, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 115 days after the Uprising
one month earlier:
It always starts the same way: the cold relentless grip and he can’t breathe
he can’t breathe
he tries to stop them from controlling his flesh, from stepping onto the stage and drawing the weapon with his hands his hands no longer his own
he tries to stop them, but it doesn’t matter even if he tries to scream no sound can leave his mouth no pressure in his lungs he can’t breathe, and sometimes it’s an Ancient with cold distant eyes and a dangerous light in their hands, sometimes it’s a Goa’uld with a morphed voice and a haughty smile and yellow gleaming eyes and sometimes he is on his own, can’t determine the other shadow pressing near and he can’t breathe
he can’t breathe
he can’t
John wakes up in a flash. Like a weight in the center of his chest, holding him down. Takes a moment to find his own heartbeats again. The racing pulse. Shaking and sweating.
The alarm clock reads 04:32 in angry red. Hours yet before the briefing. The mission isn’t scheduled to start for another seven hours.
He turns over, but is far too restless, his bones ache and he knows that there’s no point in trying to go back to sleep. It’s always the same. Thirteen long, tiresome days since Icarus. Since the Goa’uld in Caldwell’s head, and Atlantis’ near-destruction. Thirteen days.
Exhaling, he rises from the bed. The Raven no longer at rest; a window is opened with a thought and, seeking an ounce of freedom the remembrance of it, they leap into the sunrise to take flight. New Lantean sunrises are beautiful. Like on Terra, streams of color, of vivid warmth but there’s something in the atmosphere making them even more intense out here.
Thirteen sunrises.
After each one, he thinks, keeps thinking, hopelessly: maybe we’ll get through the next one undisturbed.
“Offworld activation!”
The announcement is followed by the warmly familiar sound of a wormhole establishing, a blur of light stretching outward before collapsing, settling into a blue puddle. The daily routine causes no concern; the technicians at work don’t even blink at the sudden disturbance, and the marines below guarding the Gate take position. But it’s not necessary, as an IDC is sent through and identified. Three seconds later, the iris shielding the Gate has been lowered and AR-1 steps through.
Their collars are upturned and sleeves rolled down, and John steps onto the floor of the City’s hub breathing a sigh of relief. The lashing, gusting desert winds of P19-751 reluctantly let them go: he pulls down the scarf he’d tied around his neck to cover his face, and removes his aviators. There’s sand in places there probably shouldn’t be.
Albeit full of life, the City is remarkably quiet: there is the usual noise, the moving feet and murmuring voices, and the City Herself, of course, singing in welcome. But there is none of the harshness of the wind.
“That,” Rodney loudly proclaims after coughing a couple of times and wiping his forehead with a sleeve, “was a big waste of time.”
“Sheesh, I don’t know, I quite liked it,” John says, grinning, and the Raven stretches their wings and tries to shake some of the sand off. It’s stuck in their feathers like in his uniform, and the others are struggling with the same predicament. Something about the chemical or mineral composition of this sand really makes it stick to everything; Teyla’s Dæmon, Kanaan, grooms himself with worthy grace whereas Dex shakes his head, trying to get rid of the coarseness in his hair.
Lieutenant Ford pulls off his customary black cap—well, normally black; now covered in a fine layer of rust-colored dust. He’s already demanding they call P19-751 ‘Tatooine’. “For once, I got to agree with you, doc. There was nothing there.”
Dr Weir and her Dæmon descend from the Control Room to greet them. “You’re back early,” she remarks.
“Sandstorm,” John explains. “It came sooner than expected. Maybe we could go back in a Jumper after the storm’s abated, but there wasn’t any sign of any settlement.”
Rodney nods. “There might have been one, ten thousand years ago, but the planet’s climate must’ve changed catastrophically. No sign of any of the lush forests the database promised. Atmospheric pressure was a bit high, too, and the levels of CO2 and other such gases definitely indicate a run-away greenhouse effect.”
Teyla, sagely, adds: “The Ancestors described the planet as thriving, but sadly nothing remains.”
They’d set out hoping to find an Ancient lab; an old City; the means to create a potentia of their own; a weapon to fight the Wraith. Instead all they got was sand.
It’s been thirteen days since the whole thing with Icarus and the Goa’uld—a lot has happened since then. Weir and Carson are back, their duties resumed and their offices once again filled with the right people. And AR-1 is whole, back out there going on missions, like they should be. Caldwell has recovered enough to return to active duty—left with the Daedalus on their first Pegasus mission two days ago. Started complaining, after some time, after being stuck in the infirmary: there’s nothing for him to do in the City, he is still somewhat of a stranger here. He came here to do a job and the Daedalus was instead stuck in idle orbit around New Lantea for ten days, while frantic communication was exchanged between Atlantis and the SCG on Terra.
But the scars linger. Will linger, for a long time. It’d taken days before John could get some rest without the help of sleeping pills. Still has nightmares, waking up frozen, paralyzed in his own flesh and unable to move unable to speak unable to do anything—
There are still nightmares.
But there are good things, too. Rodney and Meredith are back.
They try to be discrete. It’s difficult. And even if they know that they’d probably be supported by everyone in the City, at least the veterans—and Weir wouldn’t tolerate nay bullshit; if the situation concerned not himself but one of the marines, John wouldn’t either. But he still fears it. The SGC and the IOA and everyone back on Terra, they don’t trust him, never have and why give them one more reason which can be used against him?
The promotion had come as a great shock. Had thought they’d leap at this chance to bring in someone else, someone already of higher rank—like Caldwell; someone else, like Colonel Everett—to take the reins. Would be easier to grasp, somehow. The brass aren’t fond of him. Instances of disobedience, and now, with his bond with the City—the Uprising—all of it. And Icarus.
They don’t know the full truth. Only Rodney and Mer do, for now. For now. He’ll tell the team, he’s promised himself, one day, when he’s ready to face the truth fully. And Carson knows. Ran the DNA sequencing and comparison in utter secrecy. John saw the conflict in his face when the results came clear.
Contrary to popular belief, though they have everyone’s DNA on file within the SGC, they can’t simply access it however they’d like to. The Registry is made for identifying the deceased. Sampling and analyzing is a slow, expensive process, it demands work, and other things take precedence and priority over actually sequencing people’s genetic profile. Their war with the Wraith and, back in Avalon, the struggle with the Goa’uld, the Replicators—all of those bad guys—they don’t have time do to that. There are legal ramifications, as well; the Registry is only accessed rarely, in special instances. Like when they found the old withered version of Elizabeth Weir in a stasis chamber in the City, a year ago. Then Carson, a brilliant geneticist, had matched her DNA with that of their Weir. Proven her words.
This … this is different. Finding out there’s one gene, ATA, built into your very core and part of you, that’s one thing;
This is another.
No one else knows about Icarus, about the bloodlines of the Merged;
So he can be sure, for now, that no one’s going to start poking around, to ask those questions. The reality of it all hasn’t really sunk in yet, to be honest, though it did bring some closure when he was told the truth. Accepting it is going to take a while.
Thankfully, the IOA hasn’t asked. They’re too preoccupied. There’s the Trust to deal with; they sent a Goa’uld, infiltrating the SGC, taking over Caldwell himself, with the goal to destroy Atlantis to stop the Wraith from ever getting to Terra. A long-shot dangerous plan and it would’ve succeeded if not for Icarus’ interference. Now the Ancient is long gone, carefully watched by the Others. They’ll make sure he doesn’t repeat his actions—he was willing to do anything for the City, anything—and John understands, and the thought is momentarily frightening, chilling to the bone. Anything for the City.
“Well, if there’s nothing to say, then I think we could postpone the brief,” Weir says with a nod. “I look forward to reading your reports.”
“Sand, sand, and more sand,” Rodney snarks and mournfully looks down at his PDA. The screen is virtually impossible to read. Dust is caught underneath the edges and the seams. “Did I mention the sand?”
They separate, each one to find some spare clothes. Quartermaster Murphy isn’t going to be too happy about the state of their gear—all TAC vests and other obligatory kit is to be returned, and cleaning it all out is going to be a rightful pain.
First thing as he reaches his quarters John steps out of his clothes and into the shower. Gets the grit out of his hair. Finds a colder setting than normal because the winds on that planet—relentless, never-ending: the storms there probably last for months or years—were unforgivably hot. The atmosphere was on the edge of too thin, poor in oxygen and rich in carbon dioxide, though they didn’t need any breathing apparatus or HAZMATs. Maybe they could rely the images back to Terra as a warning about climate change, a stir, waking people up.
After showering, he writes up the report. Normally there’d be two: one for Weir, for Atlantis itself, much more honest and on-point; and one for the SGC and IOA back on Terra, less personal and with an inherent distance, almost distaste. But the mission to P19-751 was the opposite of eventful. Boring, even. Not every day that happens, with their track record. Most AR-1 missions typically include enemy fire, an Ancient ruin, being hunted down by an alien lifeform, and at least one near-death experience.
John has to admit he’s distracted. For the past few weeks, nothing unexpected has occurred offworld. On the plus side: no new enemies, no Wraith ambushes, no angry natives chasing them off the planet with spears. On the other hand, there have been no new discoveries, nothing of the sort. Just silence. Calming, in a way.
The team’s working out well: there’s never been a five-member team before, not permanently anyway. But Dex is fitting into the picture smoothly, like the piece of a jigsaw puzzle, and nothing’s really had to change for this to happen. Natural adaption. Ford has warmed up to the Satedan now, has forgiven him for how he first came to be here: by accidentally ambushing him on another planet, on the run from the Wraith. The past is the past.
If only all things could be that simple.
The IOA are working on pulling the threads of the Trust and unravel them one by one, but the rogue NID organization has deep ties allover Terra and perhaps outside of it—probably outside of it—and there are Goa’uld involved. The Goa’uld empire might have been disbanded, while the Expedition were away from Terra, isolated during their first year, but that doesn’t mean they’re gone entirely. Remnants in the dirt, leaving traces. The System Lords are gone or have lost their power, but they’re still looking for some minor names. John has only skimmed through the reports.
That kind of job—the National Intelligence Department is involved too, and possibly other federal agencies, Homeworld Security and all that lot working under General O’Neill—it takes years. Demands miracles, sometimes. It’s all dirty work and undercover and secrecy, and whispers in the dark, so many uncertainties. John is being kept in the loop, carefully. Doesn’t get to know everything but hopefully enough. Not that it actually is: he doesn’t trust the SGC, nor do they trust him.
Just who the Goa’uld now acting as chief of the Trust is, and their agenda, is unclear. There’s no name, no face (though with a Goa’uld’s ability to switch host that wouldn’t be of much use), no location, nothing. Colonel Caldwell has relied all he could remember from the two torturous months he spent as a host, but most of it is vague and dim because the Goa’uld didn’t want to share any memories with its host. It needed his body, and was planning on killing off his Dæmon eventually, if the plan had worked and Atlantis imploded—
So many unanswered questions.
The Daedalus has resumed its original mission: ferrying people and equipment to and from the Aurora, which is still hovering in the void, incomplete. But they’ve got upward sixty people working on getting her patched up now, and soon, they hope, they can do a first test run of the hyperdrives. Get her to New Lantea. To Atlantis.
Back home.
The Daedalus has also dropped off a number of sensors in a grid, to form a somewhat crude but reliable warning system in case of the Wraith. If there’s any Hive activity within a few hundred thousand kilometers—a mere millimeter in interplanetary terms—the City will know about it within half an hour, and be ready to raise the shield or cloak Atlantis completely if necessary. That’s the choices they’ve got, really. Beyond the Chair and the few precious drones in storage, they haven’t got any weaponry to match the Wraith in firepower: even the Daedalus, as impressive as the BC-302 is, is no match for them. They do have the advantage of the Asgard beaming technology—the possibility of beaming nukes aboard—but they haven’t tested them yet against the Wraith. And the Wraith could probably defend themselves once they figure out what’s going on.
They defeated the Ancients. What chance then do the Tau’ri truly have?
But they don’t know about the Aurora. One slight, slight advantage. If only they could get the Warship fully operational again.
Major Lorne, instead of forming a Gate team off his own or rejoining the crew of the Daedalus, has opted to stay aboard the Aurora for now. With his ATA-gene he can oversee the repairs. And John has begun to trust the guy, at least somewhat. He’s of a reliable sort. And Air Force, so he’s got to give him that: in a City full of civilians and marines, it’s nice sometimes to have someone there who is somewhat similar, at least in experiences. Though the Major has been with the SGC a lot longer than himself. Began as a part-time geologist, overseeing offworld digs in Avalon, years before anyone knew anything about Ancients or old Cityships buried in the oceans, waiting, waiting;
Once he’s typed the brief report, John closes the computer. Hesitates for a moment.
He feels sore, still, after Icarus. Wakes up night after night after night, heart drumming in terror unable to breathe, chest tight, sweating; he tries to cry out;
He’s spent a few daring nights in Rodney’s quarters. Further out and away from the Citadel, but the area isn’t wholly private, and it’s always a risk. Always a risk.
The last thing he needs is to get dishonorably discharged because someone spots them stealing a kiss or a grasp of hands in a secret corner. And Rodney could get into trouble too. Not like he would, officially like that, but still. The whispers and the rumors and the glances. Little things which can make life difficult. Possible physical harm;
They haven’t talked a lot about it. Haven’t argued. But their Bond is strong and clear and John can feel his surface thoughts, if he lets him, and Rodney’s worried. Wants to be open about it and not have to care—to him, it’s difficult to grasp. He’s been a pretty open guy. He’s never had this kind of secret before.
He glances at his wristwatch. Not quite dinnertime yet. Maybe Rodney’s already in his lab—always hurries there after a mission. Working on those incomplete Ancient equations John managed to gather for him, as a belated gift: a hint at how to build a potentia. Ever since then it’s become Rodney’s number one project and he, stubbornly wanting to be the one to figure it all out, refuses to discuss it with the rest of his department. Convinced that Zelenka or someone else would proclaim themselves cleverer than he by stealing the answers. Not that John thinks it’d really happen, but the scientists have proven they can be surprisingly vicious if they want to, if they need to.
So he pulls on a spare pair of boots, blessedly sand-free, and heads for Rodney’s lab.
Three computers are running three different simulations at once. A few coffee cups, half-empty, are strewn about, and the hum of this room is different than elsewhere: noisier. Electric fans frantically working to cool the hard drives, joining in the harmonies of the City, the constant background of movement. A number of whiteboards line the walls, and they’re filled with numbers and symbols, both standard Terran ones, and archaic Ancient versions used in mathematics and physics, and Rodney is standing—hair slightly wet from a shower—in front of one, pondering. Hands in pockets, head slightly tilted.
John doesn’t need to warn him about his approach by clearing his throat: even in this state of deep thought, Rodney is somewhat alert, a thing taught by the desperation of war, the restless nights, the uneasiness of the Wraith hovering in the sky. And the Bond helps, too.
He doesn’t have the chance to voice a question, because Rodney holds up a hand, clutching a marker. “A minute.”
John smiles, and claims seat atop of an area of one of the desks which is relatively empty. The Raven settles on his shoulder. Rodney still hasn’t turned around, and, after a moment of deliberation, wipes part of the board using his hand, smudging the neat symbols and replacing them in stark blue. Organizes his thoughts like that: according to patterns and colors, using different markers for different parts, different boards. There are arrows and pointers all-over the place. A certain kind of chaos, and it’s pretty difficult to follow.
During the months he spent alone without him, coming to this lab, John became rather familiar with Rodney’s equations. Enough to finish them. He can, in an arbitrary manner, follow where he’s going but Rodney keeps skipping steps, not needing to write them down—too clever for that, his memory too sharp—when John would’ve had to, and he switches gears from one thing to the next, unhaltingly, constantly. Only two settings: on or off.
Once the astrophysicist has made the correction, he steps back, and nods to himself, approvingly, and John suggests: “Mess hall?”
Rodney looks quite interested. “Is it today they serve mashed potatoes?”
“Not-quite-potatoes,” John corrects. “You know, those orange ones, from Te’reem.”
“Ah. Good enough.”
Five days later, the Daedalus makes a swift turnabout to drop AR-1 off at the Aurora. The time has come to make a first test-drive of the hyperdrive engines; Major Lorne has already overseen a similar series of tests of the sublight engines, and it’s carried them a few thousand miles across the void, closer to P91-987. There’s a Gate there, the world sparsely inhabited, but with a Jumper it’d still take twelve hours from there to the Warship. The brief jump with the Daedalus—a merely fifty-six minutes, the blink of an eye in interstellar terms—is a welcome reprieve.
White light dissolves and takes them. One moment, they’re standing on the Bridge of the Daedalus: gray, dull, blinking lights, orders shared calmly. Then they’re on the much more spacious and colorful Bridge of the Aurora, and the hum of Ancient tech intensifies tenfold. Like an embrace.
Major Lorne is sitting in the Captain’s chair, and descends from it to greet them. “Colonel.”
“Major. How’s it been?”
“All quiet, sir.”
Repairs have really picked up speed since the Daedalus arrived with the extra raw materials and crew. However, the Aurora is nowhere near top-notch condition. They’re managed to seal off some areas physically but the breaches are so wide and violent that many sections of the hull are still missing completely. Thanks to the shield, that isn’t an immediate issue. The question is still where they’re going to get all the raw materials they need, and shape it, and transport it. Pieces far too large to fit through a Gate are needed, and it’s not like they know of any worlds yet out here who trade naquadah alloys in these quantities—or at all. Naquadah, and any variation of the substance, is a rare metal, and most settlements in Pegasus only focus on small-scale mining of much more common ores for their daily lives. Anything too big, too much, is a sign of technological advancement and, thus, makes them a bigger target for the Wraith.
Not to mention all the crystals which as of yet are wholly irreplaceable. They don’t know how to make those. Engineers back in the City are working the problem, but it’s slow and tedious work: hours of analysis and debate and trial-and-error, and there, too, they lack the raw materials. They’ve managed to determine the composition of the first layer of crystal. Maybe there’s a chemical way to synthesize it.
Peter Grodin, a British technician, as well as Sharpe, an engineer, are also present; Rodney goes right to them to be told the latest updates, double-checking all data. It’ll be a while yet before they attempt a jump.
It’s not going to be all the way to Atlantis. That would be far too strenuous for the drives. This is going to be done in micro-jumps: ten minutes at first, then fifteen if all goes well. A few hundred lightyears.
The City is farther away. Her voice is distantly dim, but present. Present: that’s what matters.
(many of the nightmares are full of silence, voices muffled and forced away and bonds cut)
They go through the motions: testing systems, checking the shields, one by one. Pre-flight routines which for a Warship over nine thousand feet in length take quite a while. But finally, they’re ready. John sits in the Captain’s chair, and Rodney’s overseeing the primary systems; Grodin by another console.
From the Daedalus, via a subspace link, Colonel Caldwell wishes them good luck, before the Tau’ri craft disappears. It’ll meet up with them at the designated coordinates.
“Shields at a hundred percent. Lifesupport: check. Power output: check.” Rodney crosses off the final thing on the list, and looks up from his PDA. Clutching it tightly, like a lifeline. This should work, but if a single calculation has been done incorrectly … “And the computer has calculated the point of reentry. We’re good to go.”
And John exhales, sees every system every star on a map in three dimensions, and thinks: jump.
The Aurora is taken by a flare of light.
Chapter 3: anchorage
Summary:
maybe it’s a mistake, the result of the invasion;
Notes:
(2018-04-02) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
iii.
anchorage
maybe it’s a mistake, the result of the invasion;
It always starts the same way: the cold, it grips everything, tightly, he can’t move and he can’t breathe. Feels the tightening of his lungs. And they can’t move, they can’t fly, can’t flee. Their wings are held down by an invisible force. The room is dark and unending, and the Gate doesn’t function, there is no wormhole to step through. In the darkness he tries to run but someone is holding him down.
someone is holding them down.
someone is holding them down—
John wakes, sweating, draws a sharp breath. another. inhale, exhale. inhale. inhale. His eyes wide open, and it’s difficult to move, and he’s shivering. Lights blinking online, sensing his distress. Inhale. exhale. inhale.
Closes his eyes briefly.
It’s always the same.
It’s always the same.
Surely, surely these dreams will stop soon?
They have to stop. They keep throwing him off-kilter and the team are starting to notice his lack of sleep, his mood crankier than usual, his drop in attitude and the fading hunger. Even Elizabeth has asked, once or twice. Not to mention Carson.
Maybe should ask for stronger sleeping pills, but—the thought of something else taking control, control of such a basic function, of his body, control over him—a harmless pill—no.
No, he doesn’t think he can do that.
Pulling himself up into a sitting position. Rodney hasn’t stirred, and Meredith is curled up between them, deeply lost in dreams. Pleasantly. John looks at them for a moment, avidly jealous of their ability to simply rest. Sure, they’ve suffered from nightmares too. In the height of the Siege, when the Wraith were upon them—but not like this. Continually, relentlessly.
The Aurora is drifting through space slowly; rather than doing one single big jump, they’re doing this in smaller ones with a lot of waiting time in-between so that the engines can cool off and be routinely checked out. Major Lorne oversaw the last jump, two hours ago. The next and final microjump through hyperspace is due in less than a couple of hours, and John’s going to be in the Captain’s chair for that one.
John sighs, wipes his forehead with a palm. Clammy. Shivers again. Then he stands and heads for the shower. Not as soothing as true running water: the chemical mist doesn’t provide smooth warmth, the same exact feeling of cleanliness. There is no cold, either, he can’t drown himself in ice and burn away the memory of the dream at least for a little while, a little while. But maybe it’ll strip away some of the horrors.
After getting dressed, he casts a final look back: the quarters he’s claimed as his own are vaguely empty, there’s a single round window facing the stars and the bed, and Rodney and Meredith are still deeply asleep. Rodney’s arm is thrown sideways across the edge of the mattress, he tends to toss and turn quite a bit, he’s almost face-down and he looks quiet and content and calm, and Meredith’s purring in that silent way which John has gotten to know means they feel safe. They don’t look concerned or in pain.
Won’t bother waking them. What’s the point? They need to be well-rested for the next jump.
John goes.
Lets them sleep.
He and the Raven head for the Bridge. A technician is there—the standard rotation of duties, three hours each during night-time (at least according to what their wristwatches says, Standard Atlantis Time: it’s midnight, sunrise hours away) and right now only one person has the watch. Grodin is standing by a console, running a diagnostic or something, sipping coffee carefully. Dæmon settled by his feet, a relaxed pose.
“Oh, good morning, Colonel,” Grodin says.
He rolls his shoulders to loosen the tension somewhat, tries to appear well-rested and alert. Probably not working too well. Asks for a sitrep, but nothing has changed. There are no alarms. The Aurora is flying without a problem, nothing’s exploded or gone off. All is well.
“… and the drives have nearly finished recharging and cooling off,” Grodin finishes his report. “Shields holding steady. There shouldn’t be a problem with executing the next jump."
The faster they can make the jump to Atlantis the better. John attempts to smile. “Sounds good. I’ll take over here. Get some rest.”
The Brit might not be too convinced, but recognizes an order. Might be a civilian but has been around long enough. He adjusts something on his PDA before disconnecting it from the port, and takes his leave without handing it over; John doesn’t need it. He can sit in the Captain’s chair and let the Warship inform him of everything that’s going on.
Sometimes sitting in the Captain’s chair is similar enough to the comfort of Atlantis. The music of connectivity. Something he can trust, and he takes seat, closes his eyes; doesn’t mean to sleep.
He can hear the City even closer now, and lets Her voice wash over him.
(what he wouldn’t do for a night without dreams)
A trickle of thought: Rodney’s wondering where he is. Knows where to find him. Appears on the threshold after a few minutes, clutching a cup of coffee and a sandwich.
“Morning.”
“It’s 26:00, you dork,” Rodney reminds him, but not unkindly. A wide yawn. “And we’re not in orbit around anything, so, technically, there’s no such thing as morning.” He approaches, takes seat in the reclining couch in the corner of the room. “Couldn’t sleep?”
The stars passing by slowly. At these speeds, relatively speaking, it looks like the sky is frozen in place, nothing coming nearer or disappearing. Space is far too vast for change to be noticeable at this pace.
John shakes his head. Can’t say it aloud: he couldn’t leave a note, in case Rodney or he forgot to get rid of it later, and someone walked in there, in any possible future, and found it. Then their secret wouldn’t be so very secret anymore. They’re already getting careless. He’s spent more nights than he should have curled up against Rodney’s body and they’ve breathed together and their Dæmons been close enough to touch. Savored those sweet hours to make them linger.
He leaves the Captain’s chair. Rodney looks well-rested, eyes brightening as he drinks his coffee, hair a little tousled. “Grodin ran a diagnostic a few hours ago,” John says, switching subjects. They’ve tried to press for answers once or twice before, aware of the nightmares but John would like to not talk about it, just stop thinking about it and maybe as the memory disappears so will the dreams. “Everything looks good. We’re good to go.”
Rodney nods, checks his watch. “Next jump is scheduled in forty minutes.”
People ought to begin dropping in any minute, but for this moment, they’re alone. There aren’t any surveillance cameras aboard the Aurora: there are less systems here than in the City, though rarely fewer questions. Not everything’s been figured out yet. But no one can watch them, and John joins him on the couch. A hand settled atop of an arm; they dare to kiss—here, right at this moment, no one can see them, no one can know.
Activity is ongoing again: scientists risen from sleep, and marines exchanging rounds of patrol. Most of the Warship is empty and uninhabited, and will remain so. The Aurora’s capabilities can be difficult to grasp. Once they’ve gathered all essential personnel in the Bridge, John directs the Aurora toward Atlantis. One final jump.
It’s been ten thousand years, but finally, finally the Aurora is coming home.
(The plead, sent by Icarus, wanting to be found: take us home)
This jump takes only twenty-one minutes and then the bright blue light clears, and space opens up: they enter orbit over New Lantea, a steady path and the Warship doesn’t protest. All systems green. The planet below, its familiar shape and oceans, and there, a tiny speck difficult to see without enhancing sensors: the City itself.
So tiny from up here.
The radio sparkles to life; not the subspace comms, this time, but their own Tau’ri gear, finally within range, and John says: “Atlantis, this is the Aurora. We’re in orbit now.”
“Aurora, this is Weir. Welcome to New Lantea.”
They’re home.
Repairs will be much easier now with the ship so close. The Daedalus can focus on its recon missions to the outer reaches of Pegasus, searching for Wraith bases to destroy.
While in orbit, the Aurora remains cloaked; Ancient sensors can still pick it up, but not the Wraith or any other such advanced technology. Not that they have come across another civilization yet with that sort of tech, but that doesn’t mean they don’t exist—there are many secrets hidden out there. Much like how they cloak the City, they’ve taken a cloaking generator from one of the Warship’s Jumpers, integrated it with the shield emitters; it took a while to figure out the optimal way to install it, but the good thing with Ancient tech is that they liked to standardize things. Crystals, plugs, wiring, a lot of it is interchangeable. In a few days, they hope, they can take the Aurora on its first official test-run: a mission, not too far away, with the Daedalus as backup in case there’s havoc on the engines or some other trouble. A planet observed without a Gate; initial scans of the atmosphere suggest viability; something could be alive there.
There are also the Genii to consider. So far, the Peace Treaty has fulfilled its goals: help in exchange for food, manpower for medicines. Once Cowen got to speak with Weir in person, as well, that helped. She wasn’t there when the Treaty initially was signed, far away on Terra and it’s not like they can let the Genii know there’s a whole other galaxy out there populated by humans, technologically advanced. That ships can go there. The Genii can’t know, and they can’t know that Atlantis still stands. As far as the Genii are aware, all that remains of the Lanteans are a few desperate survivors on the Alpha Site, its address a secret.
Inadequate; not enough protection; not enough to eat when winter comes. That’s why the Genii extended the olive branch, offering things in return for aid to complete their nuclear weapons. Only to be used against the Wraith. The Treaty had stated it clearly: no human settlement is ever to be harmed.
Cowen contacts them from time to time. And Weir has, diplomatically, carefully inquired about the so-called Rebel Faction once led by Acastus Kolya. The man is dead, dust since long ago but Cowen admits that some who still support him are out there. They want to no alliance with the Lanteans: only control of their technology, and they want to overthrow the current Genii regime. John knows how dirty politics usually is. How bad things can go. Cowen probably tries to reassure them that there’s nothing to worry about; doesn’t want them to be concerned, or to think that his power is less, that it isn’t secure. But no power is wholly secure, and John and Weir are both aware.
Everyone remembers the Storm and the Incursion that followed. All the veterans, anyway: but newer people too have heard the stories, serving as a warning that no place is safe. Not even Atlantis. Hurts to admit that, to know that even here, they aren’t unreachable and there aren’t just the Wraith—there are other bad guys, like the Genii were, like there could be others yet undiscovered. The galaxy is a big place. There could be a hundred thousand civilizations hidden among the stars and they’ve only just begun to scratch the surface.
AR-1 is busy. They’ve been catching up on missions, the usual schedule, since they were reunited and, in a sense, reformed. Ronon Dex is now an official member of the team. Had taken some arguing with the SGC. Elizabeth had approved, of course. Not only is Dex a good warrior and hunter and tracker, he’s an asset in other ways. He knows the lay of the land, many addresses they haven’t been to before; provides a direct link to Pegasus. He’s got intel on the Wraith. They burned Sateda and forced him to Run for years and years—they gave him freedom, and in return he’s chosen to stay. When John first asked him to join AR-1, the guy didn’t even hesitate. Said he’s sat around too long, unsure of what to do. AR-1 gives him purpose.
He and Ford have bonded pretty tightly. Not that different: one of a Terran Marine Corps, one of the Satedan Planetary Forces. John has seen them spar in the gym a few times, exchanging alien techniques to fight, traditional Satedan arts and standard moves taught all US marines. It’s good to see them work so well together. Dex and Teyla had formed friendship early on: foreigners to the Tau’ri, there was common ground. And Dex and Rodney, well, that’d taken a bit longer. Probably because Dex at first wondered what a soft scientist was doing on a Strike Team, and Rodney wondering what use a brutish Chewie-like caveman—Rodney’s words, not John’s—would be to them. Except they’d faced own a Wraith ambush together and saved each other’s lives and that kind of thing changes minds pretty quickly.
One day, one day he’ll tell them the full truth. Hasn’t found the right moment yet. He’s been thinking that he wants to do it some quiet night, when they aren’t under attack and when—when the Aurora’s back, he’d first thought. Now the Aurora is circling New Lantea, and he still hasn’t told them. About Icarus, about …
One day he’ll tell them.
One day he’ll tell them.
This one dream is different. It is no dream at all; not one he can recall, anyway. He wakes, never really closed his eyes but suddenly, energy, frantically beating, is urging him to move and it’s a memory. It’s not one he made himself, though, but a photograph, a print, a script that’s been handed over and he’s not sure why but it feels like it should be remembered. He gets up, and reaches out.
There’s a neat stack of papers atop the mostly unused desk, opened folders, and he can’t be bothered to find a datapad or computer—can’t find it immediately, this is faster, and if he waits then he’ll forget. This has to be written down now.
The sun hasn’t risen.
When it does, slowly, the warm glow is accompanied by the rest of the City waking and John hasn’t been able to tear his focus away.
Knocking. Unanswered. The doors slide open, and Rodney steps inside, halfway into a sentence: “… Sheppard, the brief starts in five minutes and—John?”
John sharply holds up a hand, the well-ingrained gesture for silence, the second the doors slide open, and Rodney makes a surprised noise, frozen on the threshold. John is sitting cross-legged on the floor, at the center of it, grasping a pen and not looking up;
Chaos. A grid of equations. He is surrounded by them. Notes, written in haste, covering one page after the other the other the other—
“Oh. Morning. What’s all this?”
“… Couldn’t sleep.” Woken in the middle of night, suddenly remembering—
“I … can see that,” Rodney remarks. Takes a step forward, careful not to slip on the sheets of paper on the gleaming floor and it’s like abstract pieces of art. Something to be admired; beautiful, but will take time to decipher. “Oh, this isn’t fair! You’re having a eureka-moment while I’m left with coffee-deprivation waiting for the meeting to start? They locked the espresso machine in there, you know. Atrocious.”
John doesn’t immediately reply. In the middle of a sentence. Can’t pause the thought to speak;
“Okay, not talkative, I get it.” Rodney grasps of the papers at random. They’re lying everywhere, spread over the floor, the desk, the bed. None of them piled neatly though it started out like that: tried to be systematic. Failed early on. Couldn’t take the time to organize anything, in case a thought slips away before he can finalize it;
“Of course it’s all in Ancient,” the Canadian remarks. Scrutinizes whatever it is he’s holding. John doesn’t look, can’t lose focus now. Pen keeps moving. “Though this part’s in English; is this even … ?—wait. This, this,” the astrophysicist points furiously, shaking the slip of paper between his hands, “this is a theory on Einstein-Rosen bridges. When did you study that?”
He hasn’t. Didn’t. John pauses momentarily—forcibly: he looks up, and sees Rodney’s expression which is often vivid but rarely this openly in complete shock over what someone else could possibly achieve, and Rodney’s looking right at him like he’s grown an extra limb, done something impossible. Which is kind of right, he supposes. He didn’t come up with this stuff, he’s simply, simply remembering;
“He was in my head, Rodney. Icarus. It’s … like the negative of a photo. He was there, and, and now I can suddenly remember stuff he never actually told me, or—I don’t know, but I woke up and realized I can remember.“
Icarus had said I’m clever and he hadn’t been lying at all. All that knowledge of an Ascended being, tucked away; tucked away but Icarus had been unable to use most of it without notifying the Others. But this, this John can do because it’s not interference anymore, it’s not interference.
A final parting gift—whether it was a conscious choice or not, John’s not sure.
Maybe Icarus had wanted to make amends.
Maybe it’s a mistake, the result of the invasion;
“Hm. That does make sense, actually. He was using your body as a conduit, essentially using a portion of your brain and therefore your neural network to store his own mind for a time. That’s how you remember. Just theorizing, of course, but—yes, that would make sense.”
“Yeah, I guess. Look, I have to get this down before I forget.”
Rodney watches him. Picks up another piece of the puzzle to study it. The man’s eyebrows is somewhere way past his hairline at this point.
“When did you start with this?”
“Uh, around midnight. I think.”
A glance at his wristwatch. “It’s been seven hours. Have you even moved since?”
No. Not more than to drink a glass of water at one point. Did that, yeah. Shy has done the flying and moving for them; “Not really.”
“Well. Right. Mission briefing’s starting in three minutes.” No reply. Rodney shakes his head, an echo of fondness and he activates his earpiece: “Elizabeth? Yeah, look, we got to postpone the meeting, Sheppard’s kind of busy with … with—I can’t believe I’m saying this, but—science stuff. It’s hard to explain, but this is important. Yes. No, I’m not just making this up. Fifteen minutes. … Oh, his quarters. Just sitting there on the floor, like—no, no, we don’t need a medic.” When he conversation is over, he looks at John and remarks: “Elizabeth’s worried you—“
“I heard. I’m fine. Just—”
“Yes, yes, keep working. I’ll just … be over here.” Rodney hops onto the bed, gathers some of the work, and silently begins to closely read it. John doesn’t need to look up to know his movements.
(At least one thing still remaining comfortably familiar when everything else is changing.)
The peace lasts for approximately eighteen minutes. Then there’s a knock on the door frame—still open, electrical lights falling onto the floor—and there’s Carson and Elizabeth, the latter with her arms crossed, and the former carrying a first-aid kit and wearing a stethoscope around his neck, prepared for any kind of emergency. But they pause and stare, and then Weir asks, slightly uncertainly, demanding answers:
“Rodney? Colonel?”
“Told you, you wouldn’t believe me,” he says, knee-deep in a very, very complex equation that he can’t believe came out of John’s hands. Not this swiftly and elegantly. This is lightyears ahead of what he should be able to do without further education;
“What’s this?” asks Carson, confounded.
“Just some theories that might revolutionize modern physics, so, your average Wednesday morning,” quips Rodney and nearly glares at the man as if he’s being far too obtuse. “And no, this isn’t my handwriting. Oh, this will take weeks to catalogue properly—these pages aren’t even numbered!”
Elizabeth’s arms fall to her side, relaxed but she’s frowning slightly. The mathematics is admittedly way over her head, but she does catch a glimpse of the symbols and there are strings of Ancient letters, forming complex sentences which, no doubt, are driven by scientific proof or natural philosophy rather than historical accounts, and there are Roman letters as well, forming a much more familiar language but the jargon is heavy, laden with complex terms intertwined with Ancient counterparts, one thought closely following the other.
“I guess the briefing has to be postponed a little longer than fifteen minutes,” she remarks eventually, gaze fixed on the pen moving in John’s hand. The Raven, for the moment, appears to be snoozing, perched on the back of the desk chair, head tucked under a wing. A pose of rest as if this frantic activity isn’t occurring at all, as if this is a normal thing.
Rodney makes a noise at the back of his throat. “Uh huh. Been at it for over seven hours now, but who knows, we could probably get stuck here for the rest of the day.”
“Seven hours?” exclaims Carson, bewildered and concerned.
John glances up briefly and shrugs. “Just about.”
“You must give it a rest, lad, and get some sleep.”
“Hasn’t even had breakfast! Preposterous, I know,” says Rodney loudly and nods and shares an incredulous look with Elizabeth, who tilts her head and raises an eyebrow; “What’s that meant to mean? Huh? Oh, ‘go fetch the poor man something to eat’, I get it. Isn’t that what the marines are for?”
Elizabeth clears her throat. “No, that’s not what I meant, although feel free to do so, Rodney. And, I must remind you, that’s not the proper use of our marines. Rather I’m wondering whether AR-1 should go on their mission today or not. The Aurora could wait another day. Colonel?”
The Aurora’s first real mission is due to start in six hours. Important. John forces his hands to still, to pause the thoughts he didn’t even ask for, and looks up. “No, we should go.”
“Not unless you eat and sleep first,” Carson insists; an order. The Scot doesn’t seem overly impressed by all of this, rather concerned, and he crosses his arms, sternly.
“I agree,” says Weir, and ignores his protests. “We’ll reschedule the meeting in a few hours. I’m sure the technicians won’t mind having some more time to double-check the Aurora’s systems.”
“So you’ve still got this Ancestor’s memories?” Ronon asks, dubiously; he’s not fond of unanswerable questions like these, stuff that cannot be seen or touched or proven with known science. This is the kind of thing which usually turns into something bad, into a rollercoaster of disasters and they don’t need it.
They’re in the Armory, prepping for the mission. Though they’ll be using the Aurora rather than the Gate, they go through the familiar motions of strapping on TAC vests and checking the ammo and securing their backpacks. Emergency kit in case something happens. They’ll take Jumper One to the Warship which is waiting in orbit around New Lantea, cloaked and hidden from all sensors that aren’t Ancient in design.
“Something like that,” John says, shrugging. Had managed to let go, eventually, and had followed the doctor’s orders to food and rest before they held a brief that afternoon. As predicted, the engineers and technicians hadn’t protested the prospect of getting a second chance at making sure everything with the Aurora is in order. Managed a simulation of the hyperspace engines—all gone without a hitch.
Ford fastens the last strap of his vest. “Huh. Haven’t still got those, I don’t know, those Ascension superpowers?” A vague wave of hand, indicating what happened;
Ford hadn’t seen it in person, but watched the security recordings afterward. How Icarus in John’s flesh had stepped out of the cell, held the marines standing guard back with a thought. How he’d made sure none of their weapons worked. How he’d torn a taser from a marine’s hand without being physically near.
(Those aren’t memories John desires to keep: he feels guilt, still, sharply, for letting it happen. That he hadn’t been strong enough to fight back and regain control of himself, his own body, in time to stop it but if he had, then Icarus might not have saved the City and the Goa’uld would’ve destroyed the New Lantean solar system by overloading the potentia, and no one would be left to remember.)
John grimaces. “Nope, and I really hope they won’t return.”
And Teyla nods, offers emphatic understanding though Ford remarks that it could’ve been a cool and useful power to wield against the Wraith. Rodney simply remarks that Ford has read entirely too many comic books as a kid, and this sparks a heated discussion of Marvel versus DC, and John simply rolls his eyes, relieved at the changing subjects and the focus slipping away from the original question.
They head for the Jumper Bay. The doors close.
Chapter Text
iv.
sign
part one
there’s power;
Aurora, in orbit around M31-927 (Deserum) · Pegasus
January 22, 2006, C.E. (Terran time · 122 days after the Uprising
This jump takes exactly fifty-six minutes.
It’s the Aurora’s third mission. The planet above is similar to Earth—several big landmasses, lush and green and there’s oxygen in abundance and minute traces of carbon-dioxide in the atmosphere. Oceans, glimmering and blue: jungles, deep and dense and covering most of the center of the mass. A speck of desert, hinted at. M31-927 is complex and layered just like any other planet, and there’s no direct readings jumping at them to indicate a technologically advanced civilization but that’s to be expected. The address was locked out, couldn’t be dialed from the City or elsewhere—Gate might be disabled or destroyed. Which is a bad sign since, a few months ago, John and AR-2 went to this planet on foot through the Gate without issue.
His bet would be on the Wraith. They must’ve found the Ancient facility. The one where Ronon Dex had hid out, making camp for a brief night and then, without planning to, ending up ambushing John and then the Wraith had ambushed all of them—back then, Ronon was a Runner, had been for so many years he saw no escape from it. Didn’t expect the sudden freedom offered.
From this viewpoint, Deserum—as the planet is called in the City’s database—doesn’t look like that much of a wasteland. Must’ve been different when the Ancients first named it.
John, sitting in the Captain’s chair of the Aurora, pulls the brakes. They don’t feel the Gs—the inertial dampeners handle that. Takes part of the fun out of the equation, really—as a fighter pilot, John likes to feel the tight turns, to know them to be real—but, well. At this speed, without dampeners, everyone onboard would become splatters against the windshield. Not the nicest way to go.
He directs his attention to the HUD, which pops up as a holographic image on the wide port with a thought. An outline of the planet: the first scan.
“Readings coming in now,” Rodney announces from the console where he’s standing. Multitasking as usual: he’s glancing at his PDA from time to time. “Got some lingering energy signatures. Matching them now …” A disgruntled noise at the back of his throat. “That’s from Wraith weapons’ fire.”
As suspected. When they couldn’t get a lock on the Gate, they’d drawn the conclusion that the Wraith must’ve ransacked the place and destroyed or buried the Gate out of spite. Not thought the Lanteans had a ship to get here anyway. Whatever the Ancients left behind in that facility, most of it must be ruined by now.
Have to check it out anyway.
“Damage doesn’t look too bad from here,” John muses.
No. From a thousand miles away, skirting on the edge of the atmosphere, Deserum looks peaceful and beautiful and not like a place of war. But, focusing more closely on the southern part of one of the bigger land masses, there it is: a plume of smoke. It’s dissolved, hard to see with the naked eye but the sensors can pick up the residual heat. This happened a while ago.
Must have been pissed off when they couldn’t find the Runner or the other humans reportedly seen with him, and finding the Ancient facility instead: it had managed to remain hidden and forgotten for ten millennia, discovered by mistake. The Wraith wouldn’t have wanted anyone to find it and rediscover that knowledge. Turned it into ash.
“They must’ve fired from orbit,” says Miko Kusanagi, reading the diagrams from the display hovering over her console, adjusting her glasses.
“Any activity?”
“No sign of the Wraith. Nothing’s happening in this quadrant of space. And if anything’s down there on the planet, it’s not active,” Rodney says, looking up. Frowning slightly. “With our luck the facility is probably shot to minuscule, irreparable pieces, and there’s no hope of ever figuring out what was actually down there.”
John wishes he could recall more from his own visit to the place. But he’d been a bit busy at the time with, you know, surviving. Had only had a brief look at a console: powered it up, and then in the next minute he’d gotten stunned courtesy of Ronon’s particle magnum and they’d spent that afternoon hunting Wraith.
“Don’t be such a pessimist. Maybe the Wraith missed.”
“Reading damage to an area of over twenty square kilometers,” Kusanagi reports.
Rodney snorts. “See, they completely missed.”
“At least they didn’t destroy the whole planet.” And John is glad the Wraith—so far—haven’t proved to have such an ability. If they did … Well, he’d rather not linger on it. “Looks like we’ll have to take a ride to get a closer look.”
Major Lorne nods, and they exchange places; without needing to touch any physical buttons on the Captain’s chair, John activates the comms linked to the Jumpers waiting in the Hangar. “Corporal, we’re going to head down to the planet. Transmitting coordinates now.”
“We’re ready, sir. Receiving coordinates,” Corporal MacGrimmon replies from Jumper Three. AR-4 is there with him. Gladys, the only one on their team with the ATA-gene, at the controls. Pre-flight check gone through while in hyperspace. Two other Jumpers are also waiting.
John and his team enter the Hangar after a swift walk. The hatch of Jumper One is already lowered, the craft prepared. John takes seat in the pilot’s chair with practiced ease and the team don’t need to exchange words to know their places.
“Jumper One, comms check.”
“Jumper Three, check,” Gladys says.
Echoed by Private Herschel, another marine with the ATA-gene and part of AR-9; her teammates Drew, Gamble, and Snow are sitting in the back. “Jumper Four, check.”
“Jumper One to Control. We’re ready to take off.”
“Copy that,” answers Lorne. “Happy hunting.”
The Jumpers power up and the Hangars is opened, vacuum greeting them. The small craft leave the Aurora, passing through the shields without issue, and head toward the planet. Atmospheric entry as smooth as it can be. The white clouds part: below them, a sea of greens. The woods are vast and appear, largely, undisturbed: there are no roads, no buildings, no markings of civilization.
The Ancients built here; but they didn’t live here, and they didn’t seed human life.
A bit odd. Why not? Planet seems nice enough. Dense with plants and wildlife and with a perfect concoction of oxygen and carbon-dioxide in the air. Suitable and thriving. Maybe they’d wanted this place for themselves? Conduct experiments in their hidden labs someplace where the Wraith wouldn’t come looking.
They circle downward carefully. The facility is located a few klicks north of the Gate, relatively speaking—north is, really, just a general direction according to the planet’s magnetic field. No energy readings are popping up. Neither the Aurora nor the Jumpers’ sensors can pick up any shadows of a Dart, of Wraith left behind.
“They probably took off when they couldn’t find anything,” Rodney remarks, looking up from his PDA briefly to stare out through the windshield as they descended through two thousand feet, thousand and five. John reads the numbers out of habit, and Gladys, to the port, does the same, the two Jumpers lining up.
“Let’s hope they overlooked something,” he says, dubiously cheerful.
“Yes,” Teyla agrees. “It would be a shame if nothing of the Ancestors’ technology were to survive.”
Though the chances of finding a real goldmine, like a potentia, are slim to none, maybe something of the place is still intact. Fragments of a database or archive. Or just spare crystals: those would be real good to find. Don’t have too many of those lying around and so far none of their own patchwork have managed to cut it. Some secondary systems aboard the Aurora are still not properly functioning because of missing crystals, and they’ve got three Jumpers out of commission because they’ve had to cannibalize their systems (and it’d felt kind of wrong to give the order to tear the small ships apart to mend the greater Warship; doesn’t sit well with him, as a pilot, to do that to a perfectly fine craft).
Nine hundred feet; and the sensors map out of a holographic impression on the HUD, echoing the fallen structure below. There’s still some lingering dust but not much.
“Whoa. They hit real hard,” Ford says, peering out: this close, just a couple of miles out, they can see it.
Most of the facility is simply—gone. The building; there might have been a tower there or two, rising toward the skies but they’re all gone now. It was one big thing, partly underground and now the ground is cracked, down to the foundations of stone. Slabs of metal and concrete-like stone mixed haphazardly. Navigating around down there on foot won’t be easy. A lot of forest has been blown away too, simply burned down to minimal stumps; though some trees are still standing, bare and gray like ash and slowly trying to recover, monuments of another time.
The scans come back, and John remembers vaguely, but only very vaguely, some of the layout last time he was here. Down by that slope there was an entrance into a hallway, leading to a lab. Geography a bit different this time.
“There’s a clearing to the west, near the entrance there. Looks like a good parking spot.”
“I see it, Colonel,” Lance Corporal Gladys replies.
“Copy that,” says Herschel from Jumper Four.
They set down the Jumpers half a klick away where the ground is stable.
The broken facility sits like a monument, a tomb. The sunrise is just breaching the sky, this part of the hemisphere, coating it beautifully pink, and the bright light settles long shadows over them all. John’s got his aviators on, and checks his gear one more time before they lower the ramp and step outside. The air is slightly chilly with dew. The ground is barren, but there are patchworks of grass here and there working its way through the soil. Despite the calamity, nature’s recovering. It’ll probably take this all back in a few years, now that so much of the old building is turned outside out and destroyed, overgrow it and make it disappear.
He takes point, meeting up with AR-4 and AR-9 by Jumper Three’s open hatch. Lieutenant Drew, leader of AR-9, is peering toward the tumbling building through her binoculars; her teammates next to her. Lieutenant Kemp is chewing on a piece of gum.
“That’s a bad habit, y’know,” mutters DeSalle, AR-4:s resident medic, and the guy’s pretty intimidating for a medic, but he’s a marine. “Could stumble and suffocate, and then I’d have to do the Heimlich maneuver on your sorry ass.”
“It’s for stress,” Kemp retorts. “Know how stressful this kind of life is? Though this planet’s kind of pretty. Should snap some pictures for the family album.”
Lance Corporal Snow, from AR-9, shakes his head. “It’s been shot to hell.”
“Probably ‘cause of you, Mitch,” MacGrimmon says. “Nothing personal, man, but your team is always ending up on missions with bombed-out cities or being chased down by Suckers through swamps and shit. You guys are like magnets drawn to bad stuff.”
Snow’s teammate, Private Gamble, crosses his arms defensively. “Not on purpose.”
“And nothing like the Frontiers, either,” Snow agrees, in a half-whispered mutter, not really meant to be heard by said team. John pretends not to hear it, anyway, though he notices how Ford’s forehead creases into the hint of a frown, picking up on that last part.
When John and his team approach, the marines stand at attention, bickering ceasing at least momentarily. They know to cut radio chatter down to a minimum on joint missions like these.
“We’ve got a basic schematic, McKay’s uploading them now onto our lifesigns detectors,” John instructs: “We’re going to check this place out and see if there’s anything—a console or any piece of tech—still intact. MacGrimmon, take your team west; Drew, south, and we take east. Stay in regular radio contact. What we’d really like are some spare parts, so if you find any intact crystals, bag them and we’ll sort them later.”
“And ZedPMs,” Rodney interrupts without looking up. “Find us some ZedPMs.”
“Yes, sir,” MacGrimmon says sharply in the Colonel’s direction, and pats DeSalle’s arm. “Let’s move it.” AR-4 and AR-9 are veterans, they know the drill. Won’t touch anything or do anything utterly incompetent, and even Rodney, who generally doesn’t trust that much in the marines’ ability Not To Screw Things Up (especially in the vicinity of Ancient tech), knows that.
The astrophysicist is too busy consulting the scanner in his hand to properly notice the two teams moving out, anyway. John glances over his shoulder. “So, seeing anything?”
“No, this place is as dead as it looks. Where was that lab your found last time?”
“That way.”
The rubble covers everything, and the nearby natural landmarks are all gone, burned to a crisp. But there’s a slope, gently moving inward, and the rising remains of a doorway. It was broad enough to allow three or four people in side-by-side, but most of it is blocked by now. The ceiling is collapsed. When they try moving one of the shriveled up pieces of metal, lying sideways across the doorway—the door itself is long since gone—there’s an ominous rumble, low-key like a growl and they step back.
“Perhaps we should sent for a team of combat engineers,” Teyla suggests.
“Or we can dig,” says Ronon; he looks to be up to that kind of thing. Well, he’s usually up to these kind of things: likes the missions, the killing of Wraith, even the heavy lifting.
“Actually, there’s a third option. There’s a tunnel,” says Rodney, triumphantly. Shows the lifesigns detector. Sure enough, there’s this hollow space just some fifty meters away, and it seems like the Wraith did miss. Some parts of the place weren’t set ablaze.
It wasn’t a door, but part of a longer corridor, now split in two—this was the second level down, probably, and the floor above it was blown apart. Ford drops a couple of glow sticks down there, trying to gauge the distance, and there’s an empty dull echo as they land. The floor is relatively whole, though there are a couple of uneven cracks in it, following the uncertain seam where the fire must have torn apart the structure.
“Who’s first? Seems like a Sheppard kind of thing to do, right?” says Rodney brightly. Recalls last time they entered a secret underground chamber—that whole thing with the Brotherhood of Fifteen.
(it had gotten them a potentia, but people had died.
good innocent people had died.)
Ronon and his Dæmon step forward unhesitatingly like they means to climb down there or jump without assistance, but John holds up a hand to stop them; “Hang on, Chewie. Safety first.”
Using the standard climbing rig, they descend; John first, then Ronon, Ford, and lastly Rodney. Teyla volunteers to stay up top and stand guard. They test the radio signal: clear within sight of the uneven hole in the ceiling, but just a couple of meters away the signal breaks into static. Typical.
They radio AR-4 to let them know what they’re doing. MacGrimmon and his team are, too, attempting to find a way inside, so far with little luck. Say they may be onto something, though.
“Okay. We’ll explore and be back in thirty minutes. If we’re not back by then, send a rescue team,” John instructs. Assume the worst. The standard around here.
Teyla nods. “Good luck.”
It’s dark down here, but the air isn’t entirely stale. It smells like rainwater’s been building up, clogging someplace close. The walls are lined with lamps and there are pillars, or were, placed at even intervals but there’s no power.
“The Wraith could’ve taken the power source,” Rodney says. “There was still some power here last time.”
“Yeah,” John says. “I accessed a console that wasn’t completely shot up.” Before Ronon had showed up and stunned him with his particle magnum. Man, that thing packs a punch. Doesn’t tingle like the Wraith stunners. The headache afterward had been surreal.
The Satedan has the grace to look slightly guilty, shrugging his shoulders. “I said I was sorry ’bout that.”
“The past’s the past and all that jazz. So, which way?”
“That passage’s blocked,” Ford says, shining the light from his P-90; in front of them, the path is out of their reach, debris creating a wall. But the corridor reaches out in two other directions as well, and there’s no particular sign of which one’s the better.
Fishing out a lifesigns detector from a pocked in his TAC vest, John says; “Ford, go with McKay that way. Ronon and I will check this way, and we’ll meet back here in twenty.”
“Wait, wait. Is splitting up a good idea?” Rodney interrupts, in that usual worried way of his. “That never ends well. You all know that. Have you never watched a horror movie?”
“Relax, McKay,” Ford says, grinning, rolling his eyes. “I’ve got you covered. If there are, like, zombies or something down here, I won’t let ‘em eat you.”
“Yes, well, that’s not what I—oh, nevermind. If you find a ZedPM or something, Sheppard, and I don’t, I’ll be very cross.” With that, the astrophysicist adjusts his backpack and turns toward one of the passages. His steps are hurried. Right, Rodney isn’t that fond of dark, enclosed spaces. Wants out as soon as possible. “Well, come on, Lieutenant, we haven’t got all day!” Ford snaps into motion, following. Unlike the doc, the young marine walks more steadily, flashlight showing the way ahead and he doesn’t nervously glance around every two seconds.
Ronon doesn’t have a torch, and John hasn’t got a spare, but uses his P-90 to light the way. They don’t small talk much. Not the Satedan’s kind of thing. Moving with quiet efficiency and grace. And John would normally like to send the Raven ahead, but with the uncertainty of how intact the place is, and the oppressing darkness, and the reoccurring nightmares—they still can’t bear parting. So they stay on his shoulder.
A Raven doesn’t have amazing nightvision, but maybe Ronon’s Dæmon has, their feline eyes glowing. There are rough patterns tracing the walls. Definitely Lantean: the stark beauty of this place, or what it once was, anyway. There are cracks in the floor, the walls, the ceiling. They pause now and then, as there might a shifting noise of wind indicating that there are pieces of steel and stone missing or broken.
“Sheppard.”
“Yeah. I see it.” Peering inside; could be a lab; could be a meditation chamber. Rooms like that practically litter every Ancient place ever built. Wherever they went, the Ancients sought Ascension.
The door is stuck half-open, looks a lot like the doors in Atlantis, and Ronon pushes it open with brute strength. Makes a guy kind of jealous.
A lot of it is in tatters. Glimmering pieces, like a thousand stars, scattered on the floor—that used to be crystals; one console is upside-down, overthrown as if by an earthquake. A pillar lying down, and there’s a sizable dent in the ceiling, swaying inwards. “Careful,” John says, unnecessarily perhaps because Ronon snorts and doesn’t reply, but it’s his job to be a worrier; he’s the leader of the team, it’s in the job description.
There’s one console intact, though. Question is: is there any power available, is the source gone, or is this a matter of broken circuits? Handing over his weapon, he gestures for Ronon to keep it aimed—safety on—in the direction of the console so that he can see what he’s doing. Then he lays his hand on what he thinks is the on-button and thinks on, please, on.
Sometimes politeness is the trick. Sometimes he’s got to be more forceful. Come online —
There’s a flicker of power. It resists. The trickle of energy—but it’s enough to make his mind aware of it, his ATA-gene sensing the tech, or the tech sensing his gene. It’s weak. The circuit could be leaking, not all the power getting where it should. But, hey, the console’s powering up. Sort of. The screen it’s tied to is lying on the floor, unresponsive, and there’s no hologram appearing either.
“So?”
“Give me a minute.” If he could just read the data coming from this thing … John exhales, concentrates. Like he does in the City. He can close his eyes and She’d show him things. Maybe other tech could do the same: transmit some of that data—hell if he knows how, the technical details—but if he could transfer that to the lifesigns detector …
Glancing at the small device in its hand, the screen is changing, from the transparent map of the compound to something else. A stream of Ancient letters. “Okay. That … tells me nothing,” he admits. Seems like a jumble of nonsense, no real words—he’s pretty good at the language, and this isn’t Ancient though it uses the characters. Like someone’s typed a smattering of keys in a hurry without looking at the keyboard. He lets the data download, anyway. Kind of a lot of it.
He tries the radio. The intermittent signal is weak, but some of it punches through the stone: while it seems unable to travel upward, at the moment, it is able to move sideways. “McKay, this is Sheppard. You reading?”
“…Yeah, we’re reading you but the sign … weak. Did … find something?”
“Yeah, I’m downloading data from a console now.”
“.. kind of data?” Rodney sounds excited in that way when he’ll blink a couple of times and then abandon whatever he’s working on, full attention shifting.
“No idea. Have you found anything?” No answer. Signal must’ve been lost mid-word. “I repeat, have you found anything?”
“No. Just broken parts,” the Canadian sighs ruefully.
“We’ve got another fifteen minutes. Make the most of it.”
“You’re breaking up. Did you say ‘make toast’ …?”
John rolls his eyes. “I said, let’s make the most of it. See you guys in fifteen minutes.”
“Copy that, sir,” Ford says. Kid sounds like he’s smirking, clicking his tongue. “Ford out.”
It’s still downloading and the scanner, while an impressive piece of tech, may have been modified by Rodney to handle doing more than just scan for lifesigns but storing this amount of data was never its intended purpose. It makes a noise like in protest, and then the flow simply stops, and John guesses that’s it. Memory’s full.
He tucks it into his pocket. Doesn’t want to lose it. The nerds back in the City can analyze that data later. Glances at his wristwatch. Three minutes.
They head back to the juncture; no sign of Ford or Rodney yet. Place looks the same, but a few of the lights in the corridor are weakly trying to come online, spluttering.
In the shadow of the sun above, Teyla is patiently waiting.
“Heard anything from MacGrimmon or Drew yet?” John asks.
“They found what looks to be another way in a few minutes ago,” the Athosian reports. “But they did not mention any particular finds.”
“Not much of the place’s intact. I doubt we need to hang around for long. Got a portion of a database here, though. Maybe the geeks back in the City can figure out what it means.”
Heels clicking on stone. When Rodney and Ford reappear, Rodney’s face is gleaming with anticipation, and he’s speaking excitedly: waving his scanner in front of them like it’s a grand revelation.
“There’s power!”
“Yes, Rodney, we know,” John says, dryly. “I had to turn it on to access that console.”
“No, you don’t understand. There’s power,” Rodney stresses, looking at them all like they’re on the wrong planet altogether, unable to follow his line of thought.
Then it clicks. “Oh. Oh!”
“Yes, oh.” Rodney grins wide and clicks his fingers. Makes some adjustments to the scanner in his hands. “Let me see if …” The sentence is left hanging, incomplete, as the scientist works.
Ford just looks between the two of them like they’re the aliens, blinking. “What? What?”
“There’re a power source and it’s not depleted and the Wraith didn’t take it,” John translates. “So if we find it, maybe we could take that back to Atlantis.”
“A ZPM?” the Lieutenant asks, finally interested; if they found another one, they’d have three for the City and one of the Aurora. They’d have no problem raising the shield or summoning weapons, well, at least until they ran out of drones and that’s a whole other issue. More energy is always welcome.
“Let’s find out.”
Like exclaiming eureka!, Rodney doesn’t quite dance but almost, and gestures upward. “Okay, first off we’ve got to get out of here and go two hundred yards west. The source of the energy signature is emitting from thirty feet down.”
It could be buried under all of the rubble. But if it’s viable, they could have the Aurora jump to Atlantis, gear up an excavation team—yeah, that’d work. Enroute, once they’ve all climbed out and move in a circle around the worst of the destruction searching for an entry point, John manages to raise AR-4. Lieutenant Kemp, sounding like he’s still chewing on that gum, answers.
“We found a way inside though this large broken window,” Kemp says. Obviously following the same procedure as AR-1, leaving a person to stand guard, just in case. “Uh, northwest of you guys, like, there’s this tall cliff covered in moss.”
“Perfect,” Rodney cuts in excitedly. “That’s close to the power source.”
“We’ll come to you, Lieutenant,” John says. “We might’ve hit the jackpot. AR-9, do you copy that?”
“We hear you, Colonel,” Private Gamble responds. “Be there in five.”
Okay, so, maybe it’s too early to say that.
They enter carefully so not to cut themselves open on the thick, sharp glass: jagged pieces still in the frame, hints of color still there, those lovely geometrical patterns the Ancients had been so fond of.
The two other teams meet up with them and Drew asks, slightly suspicious, if they had anything to do with the lights suddenly coming on again. John explains the situation—Rodney doesn’t make any comments about ghosts, too distracted for that now.
“This room’s accessible,” MacGrimmon says. “But the whole place is unstable.”
“What’s this, a lab?” Ford wonders, peering around what once had been a wide, probably impressive, chamber; now it lies shrouded.
“Looks more like some kind of gallery,” Gladys says. “Found a couple of crystals that looked intact; Snow’s got them.”
“Good work. What about those consoles?” John asks, but she shakes her head ruefully; so such luck.
“I couldn’t get any of them to work, sir, even after the lights came on.”
“Okay.” Could be broken conduits or crushed crystals or who knows what else. “Rodney, how’s it going with that power source?”
“Patience,” he mutters, pacing back and forth. There’s no clear, obvious route—of course there isn’t. Nothing’s meant to be easy. If it is, it always ends up being a trap, too good to be true. “Huh.”
When Rodney doesn’t elaborate, John waits for a few moments but nothing more’s forthcoming and he knows that tone of voice. That sort of huh means that he’s found something, and it’s not the Very Bad We’re About To Die-kind of thing, but more of a This Could Be A Good Thing.
“Want to expand on that?”
“If I’m reading this right—which I am, by the way—there’s another level below. There’s a big hollow space and there’s a tunnel leading to it, right …” Rodney moves, toward the end of the gallery, or courtroom, or whatever it actually once was. Feet squarely on the tiles, he walks around, like marking a circle. “… here.”
Leading his team in the pointed direction, John asks: “Structurally intact?”
“As far as I can tell. And that’s where the energy signature is coming from.”
“I can’t see any stairs,” Ford says, and John reaches Rodney’s side. Something with these tiles. The pattern: they’re forming a square. Right where …
Oh.
“That look like a hatch to anybody else?”
It’s heavy and awkward, but between John, Ronon, MacGrimmon, and DeSalle, they get it open. If there’s an automatic mechanism to it, it’s broken since long ago. Dust rises like a cloud, and Rodney takes a step back, coughing. Covers his nose with the sleeve of his jacket.
The air settles, and they peer down. Darkness, but power’s running and there’s a hint of artificial lights, flickering uncertainly like they’re about the kick the bucket any second now. This whole place feels like that: trembling and about to give away.
A secret underground chamber. The Ancients sure were fond of those.
“So,” says Rodney cheerfully: “Who wants to go first this time?”
Chapter 5: sign, part two
Summary:
this is not a good fucking day—
Notes:
(2018-04-02) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
v.
sign
part two
this is not a good fucking day—
John wakes up in that rapid, uncomfortable way he only does when something’s wrong, something’s very very wrong—suddenly and in pain, and for a moment nothing makes sense;
No alarms. No blinking lights. No chopper crash or Jumper malfunction. Air tastes—different. Like sand. No, heavier than that; heavier … soil. There’s dust in his face, probably coating his lungs, and he coughs, tries to drag himself up. Can’t. A heavy weight settled over his legs and tendrils of hurt, like white and red clawed into his skin, somewhere in his midriff. He tries to clear his vision, but the darkness doesn’t go away. Gray and blurry at the edges.
Silence.
Silence.
Noise.
A groan. John shifts, wants to be able to look around and find the source of that brief sound, confirm it. Power, he realizes, the power must be out—there’s none of that hum of Ancient tech, there’s only the silence and the rocks. The tunnel collapsed—
The tunnel collapsed—
shit.
John inhales, and at least the Raven can move. Sort of. Their wings are whole, even if they can’t see either but the Bond isn’t broken it isn’t broken (the important thing)—“Rodney? … Rodney? Rodney.” He’s not sure if he’s saying it aloud or over their Bond, continually, just to make sure to make sure.
“… ugh.”
Alive. Exhaling, remembering how to breathe. They’re alive.
Still can’t see them. Too dark.
“You okay?”
Voice hoarse, like his airways aren’t clear enough. A sudden thirst for water. For clean air. Isn’t sure which. Both.
“No,” Rodney says. Somewhere to his left. No, more beneath him. More noise, scraping-like, and then a flicker of light from a torch. It falls blindingly across his face, and John has to lift his right hand to shield his eyes from the sudden sharpness. Something wet and warm is dripping onto his cheek, and when he draws his hand away, he can see the red blurry spots. Head wound? If there’s a cut, it doesn’t feel that deep. “No, I’m not okay, we’re buried underground and who knows when we’ll be rescued by—”
Coming into sight, Rodney stops short. Something in his chest twists. All of Rodney is gray like ash, and there are bruises and cuts forming on his face and hands, and John’s guts twist and he doesn’t like it doesn’t like it. Wants to be able to make this just another bad dream.
“You don’t look so good.”
Their Bond is immediate alert in that way which means Not Good, filtering through, not quite clear-cut: concern, fear, hints of pain that could be physical or emotional or both and he’s not sure which one of them is the source.
“Thanks,” he says, wryly. Wants to move, but the weight—pressing down—pressing down—
What was once a column carrying the ceiling up has split in two, and it’s lying now atop of him and John recalls now, the crunching noise the rumbling and the instinct to back away, he’d grabbed Rodney and turned them around, trying to shield him and then the darkness and the radios short-circuiting—
The tunnel had collapsed. Then the silence, and John can’t recall anything more. Must’ve hit his head.
Rodney evidently managed to get away from the worst of the falling debris in time, and he and Meredith move closer, kneeling. Not actually saying it, more like transmitting an impression: they’re wondering if he can move and how bad’s the pain and oh, oh, the panic leeching off their souls. Rodney isn’t good with dark, tight spaces and certainly not while knowing that the building atop of them has collapsed and not knowing if their team’s all right if they’re alive.
They’ve got to be alive. John isn’t going to accept anything else, not until evidence is provided, solid and touchable and probably not even then. No, Teyla and Ford and Dex are alive, have got to be, and Drew and MacGrimmon’s teams—they’ve got to be alive.
“Try the radio.” He makes it an order, voice like sandpaper.
Have they got any water?
“Already did, before. No signal. You were out for several minutes. And I tried shouting and screaming and got no reply so I’m guessing no one’s close enough to hear us, either. I’m good at shouting and screaming in an emergency.” Something held up. A flask. “Here. Drink,” Rodney says, briskly, and John grasps it and takes a few gulps. The water is heavenly even if it is nowhere near cold.
He was unconscious that long? Shit. All right, the concussion. Must be it.
Glancing down, detached, like this body is someone else’s, and this pain is merely temporary and someone else’s; if he closes his eyes, maybe he could fly away with the Raven and it’ll all be okay. There’s rubble all-over him, and he can’t move his legs: his arms, albeit physically free, feel heavy, like filled with lead.
Manages to formulate a sentence, because Rodney’s looking down at him concernedly, waiting. “My legs are stuck.”
The Canadian reaches out to shift one of the smaller blocks of stone which is holding him trapped. Starts digging. Shouldn’t do that, John thinks, he’s not wearing gloves and some of those edges look real sharp and it’s heavy and unstable. More dust falling. Noise. Noise: the rumbling. The rumbling;
“Hey, stop! Easy, easy,” John interrupts, and Rodney pulls away. “That could make it all come down on us.”
"Good … good point. So, not a good idea. Digging.” Voice reaching a higher pitch. His hands are twitching. “What should we do? You know I’m claustrophobic, right? Because I might go into shock or rather I probably will, at some point, and you’re injured—God, we can’t just leave you here, we got to dig you out—”
Meredith, curled up between them, might be close to hyperventilating.
“Rodney. We’ll be all right. Ford’ll radio the Aurora and they’ll send down some combat engineers and we’ll be fine. You hear me? We’ll be fine,” he insists, grabbing Rodney’s sleeve to make him look at him. Finds his wrists and holds onto it, sensing the staggering pulse beneath the skin. A nod, shaky, energized. Situations like these Rodney would like to pace but it’s not possible at this moment.
Rodney, we’ll be okay, he repeats, clinging to the words. Sees Rodney’s breaths slowly even out and relax, though his body remains tense and flooded with adrenaline, his heartrate elevated. We’ll be okay, you hear me?
Then Rodney says, abruptly, struck by an idea: “Can you contact Atlantis?”
thirty-eight minutes earlier:
They watch the glow stick tumble down, and count the milliseconds until impact. Reckons that that’s at least thirty feet. No sign of any stairs or ladder: so the Ancients wanted to keep this place out of reach. Or maybe they used transporter technology to get down. But they don’t exactly have that lying around. The rope lets them descend, one at a time: John takes point, and Teyla is right behind.
Lieutenant Kemp and Private Herschel offer to remain on top. Don’t do too well with dark, tight spaces, and Herschel can fly a Jumper away from here in case of an emergency.
His feet touch the ground, solidly. Down here they’re getting no radio signal, just like before: got to be right under the open hatch, but just two feet away there’s only static.
“How far is that energy source?”
Rodney consults his lifesigns detector. “Less than a hundred meters.”
John nods, and looks back up at the two marines waiting. “We’ll take a look around, and if we’re not back in thirty minutes, assume we’re in trouble.”
Kemp doesn’t smirk but almost, chewing on his gum and hefting his gun. “Yes, sir.”
It smells kind of damp down here. Could be a crack in the wall, ten-thousand-year-old piping having sprung a leak; erosion, eating through the ground and the concrete. Even if the Ancients were good architects, they didn’t mean to leave any of this behind without supervision for ten millennia.
Too good to be true; of course, in hindsight, finding anything remotely useful is too good to be true, and John reckons he should’ve known better, should’ve assumed that shit was about to hit the fan. When they find the room with the triangular console, formed just like the one in the the City’s Core, it’s too good to be true.
It’s a potentia. Its glow warm and familiar.
“It’s nearing maximum entropy,” Rodney says, disappointed, holding up his scanner to get a reading. “It’d give us ten minutes of shield, maybe, or enough juice to run a the computers in the Control Room for half an afternoon.”
“Damn.” Was hoping for something better than that. "But better than nothing. Bag it.” He nods, and Rodney approaches the dais, placing his hands on the control surfaces on the sides to unplug it—
The whole place rumbles.
Ronon, by the doorway, clears his throat. “Sheppard …”
Yeah. Felt that too.
Earthquake? The Aurora’s scans hadn’t indicated any kind of geological instability. And then John wants to smack himself, because, of course. He powered up that console and forced the system online—including the power source itself. Breathing life into the place could have made it unstable. His command could’ve been heard by other (relatively) intact pieces of tech in the vicinity, and upset the whole place. Or it’s the fact that, well, it’s been shot to hell by the Wraith and the building is about to collapse, and their timing simply sucks.
“Yeah. We should probably …”
Then the first explosion happens, and everyone is rocked off their feet for a moment. Catches their weight against the unstable walls. Torchlight scattering uncertainly as they twist and turn;
It came from the other side of the compound. Shock-wave travelled through the ground, past them and into the woods. The Aurora, John thinks, distantly, her sensors must’ve picked that up, and Lorne’ll figure that something’s wrong and—
“The hell was that?!” Ford cries.
“The conduits,” Rodney gasps. “They’re exposed, and power’s on, meaning it’s just pouring energy and something must’ve ignited—”
Another low groan. Like the trembling of a bass note: it stretches throughout the whole complex. A sigh. It’s picking up the pace. Fragments of rock—gravel in size—fall from the ceiling. Small pieces breaking off.
“Less talk, more running,” John orders. “Everybody get out!” Presses the button of his earpiece: “Herschel, Kemp, fall back to the Jumpers, fall back now!”
If they hear it, they don’t reply. There’s static. Interference. Maybe the structure is shielded, maybe there’s simply too much rock in the way. Doesn’t matter. Hopefully, they’ll understand, procedures, they can’t have missed the explosion.
Rodney’s scrambling to obey. Gathers his PDA, shoving it into his backpack. “The ZedPM—” he starts.
“Leave it!”
The potentia is nearly depleted, and their survival is more important. Rodney, incessantly refusing to listen to orders when it suits him, grabs the thing anyway and the consoles darken, and the glow of the potentia in his hands is so dim it’s nearly indistinguishable in the bright white from their torches.
“Move it, McKay!”
Slings the pack over his shoulders. Fastening the straps, fingers slipping. He’s running already—can be pretty fast if properly motivated.
The sprint is short. Should be short. It all happens in mere seconds;
Eighty meters. Turn left. Seventy meters. MacGrimmon and Gladys are already by the hatch, sentries: starting to climb, and Snow and Gamble and DeSalle are right behind. Fifty meters. Snow’s grabbing the rope, following. Forty meters.
More pieces of rock are coming lose and it’s not gravel-sized anymore, and the rumbling hasn’t stopped.
“Colonel!” Teyla is shouting, looking over her shoulder.
“Go! Go!”
They can only climb one person at a time. One person at a time—
Ford’s the first one out. His Dæmon clinging to his shoulders, claws digging into his vest. Someone from AR-4 reaching out, arms grasped to help hauling him up; Teyla next, Kanaan gracefully climbing the ragged walls like a great cat, following. Ronon is halfway, fifteen feet above the floor, his Dæmon in the middle of a leap upward, when the whole place tilts sideways.
No.
No, John realizes, it’s the ground itself at an upheaval. One of the walls, the one to the left, keeping the hallway up—it’s collapsing, and John reacts in a split second, grabbing Rodney’s backpack and forcibly yanking him backward. Twists, turning his body into a shield and he glimpses Rodney’s face, pale and shocked. Falling into a heap and the dust makes it hard to breathe, eyes watering. Shouting;
The P-90 slips of out of his hand but is still attached to his vest, and in its white light spilling from the ground he sees the ceiling collapse and the hatch disappear.
When John opens his eyes again, Rodney’s shadow is hovering over him, close enough to touch. His face is illuminated by the pale blue light from the lifesigns detector in his hands. Deep lines of worry: he’s got different kinds of frowns, John has learned over the past year of working and living alongside him, and this one means they’re in trouble and someone’s hurt and this someone is him.
Rodney, he thinks at him to get his attention, and Rodney’s head jerks up, and he stares wide-eyed. How many minutes did it take? John had had to concentrate hard enough to lose track of time, and that’s not a good sign.
“Did it work?”
His neck is hurting too much to nod, so he says, “Yeah, I think they got the message.”
Couldn’t be too eloquent. He hadn’t found himself able to broadcast clear simple sentences, but She’ll understand, hopefully, and translate the information into something useful and let Elizabeth know.
“Good,” Rodney exhales. “That’s good.”
The small machine in his hand bleeps rather mournfully, and John can see from this angle that the screen is cracked. Making some adjustments, the astrophysicist sweeps it over him. Like a medical scanner, John guesses, and tries to ignore the climbing pain from his left leg. He’d landed, twisted with his hip sideways. And he knows what broken bones feel like, and just breathes for a minute. Wants to close his eyes but that’d just worry Rodney and Meredith immensely and they don’t need any more adrenaline right this minute.
“You okay? You never … answered my question.”
“Am I okay … ?! No, of course I’m not, but yes. Yes. I’m not obviously physically injured unlike some people—now, lie still.” Voice sharp. “You’re hurting. Don’t say you don’t because we can feel it.” He glares at him when he’s about to protest: I’m fine, we’re fine, we’re all fine.
Must’ve broadcast the pain over their Bond. Couldn’t help it, as they fell, flaring;
Whatever he’s doing with the scanner, it’s finished, and the results can’t be too good judging by that look on his face. The verdict: “Your ribs are probably very, very bruised even if this tells me they’re not broken. There’s a fracture in your left tibia, and probably another—I hate to use the word ‘minor’, but it’s not as bad—to your fibula. And this piece of, god, is that metal? That’s metal. You’ve got metal in our leg. Thigh. Vastus lateralis.”
A shaky exhale, inhale.
“You should be glad I remember all of this stuff—I read it all back in college when I was set on becoming a doctor for two weeks until I diagnosed myself with half a dozen illnesses, and, and—The point is, your leg’s broken and there’s metal sticking out of it and that is not in any dictionary a definition of ‘fine’ so don’t say you are.”
Nodding makes him dizzy. “Great. Sounds … painful.”
A roll of eyes. “And you probably have a concussion. Your head’s bleeding, there’s a cut over your eyebrow. Not to mention all those scrapes and bruises I can’t see under your clothes,” he concludes, sourly. Lowers the scanner.
(Rodney doesn’t comment that he pushed him out of the way, and that he woke up with John’s head limply resting atop of his lap, and feeling like one big confused bruise and he and Mer had pulled themselves free, looking down in horror at this mess. Fumbled for light. Only as an afterthought wondering about the state of his backpack and the tech hidden inside; the PDA might be broken, all recorded data lost. Same with the lifesigns detector John had used to copy data from that other console.)
“Looks worse than it is. We’re not dead, that’s the important thing.” Another exhale. “… Want to say something snarky now?”
“No. My head hurts too much for that.”
He doesn’t laugh, mostly because his ribs are so bruised it’d only be a big pain in the ass—tries not to cough or breathe too deeply. Aggravating. “Look, they’ll have gotten word to the Aurora by now. Probably’ll start digging any minute. We just got to sit tight.”
Any minute now. Any minute …
The Aurora has been away from Atlantis for less than a day, and they aren’t due for a check-in for another three hours—no one expects to hear from them until then.
Elizabeth Weir is sitting in her office, going over the last databurst package that’s going to be sent to Earth. Not many changes since the last update, other than Aurora’s second mission reports, and some notes from Colonel Caldwell regarding the Daedalus. The Tau’ri craft is scheduled to return to Earth soon, and Elizabeth is mangling the rooster: a lot of people are on the waiting list for a long, well-deserved break. A few dozen marines have requested leave: very few of the Original Expedition have yet returned to Earth since first stepping into the Pegasus galaxy. Yes, they have earned it.
Then there is the question of Colonel Sheppard recently showing having retained some of Icarus’ memories. The incident is still a sore spot—for them all, but Elizabeth has a nagging suspicion it hit the Colonel harder than he would like to admit. He is difficult to read, and given all that’s happened, it’s not that surprising that he tends to be closed off. Not wholly alone, though. He has his team and friends and, Elizabeth thinks, they are somewhat like family, after what they’ve gone through the past year. Genii incursions and Wraith attacks notwithstanding, the flow of loyalty between Sheppard and the others of this City is something quite remarkable, something she hasn’t really felt before. Then again, she admits wryly, she has never before been in charge of two hundred people exploring the stars of another galaxy, inhabiting an alien City which speaks.
The other thing. Despite the time that’s passed since the confession—and the rollercoaster which followed—she hasn’t quite grasped it yet. Oh, a Bond, that’s easy to comprehend. She and Simon are inseparable. A Bond between human and Dæmon—a law of nature. But the Ancients took those laws and twisted them and made their own.
In the weeks since the incident with Icarus, there is something more going on, which she cannot put her finger on. But she believes that others in the City know and they wouldn’t keep undue secrets if there was a threat—but her Chief Medical Officer has been a bit distraught, as of late, and Carson assures her that it’s fine. No one’s life is in direct danger. There is no medical emergency or outbreak on the edge. Confidential, he says, an oath he can’t break; and Elizabeth is starting to think she has an idea what it is about, or at least about whom.
“Dr Weir?”
The voice in the headset startles her sharply. “Yes, Peter?”
Grodin speaks, and there is a sense of befuddlement and confusion in his tone, rather than a pure emergency, and there is none of that familiar noise of the Stargate turning and the chevrons locking. Not an incoming wormhole.
“You’d better come see this. I can’t quite explain it, but it looks like a glitch.”
Closing her laptop, she exits her office, and walks across the bridge to the adjourning Control Room. The usual traffic on the floor, the usual movements by the consoles. Except it’s stopping. The scientists and officers on duty are pausing their work.
The screens are flickering.
“Power levels are steady,” comes the report a minute later: “There is nothing wrong with the ZPMs.”
One of the techs begins to run a diagnostic on the power distribution. And within a couple of minutes, words begin to gather, a primary analysis. It’s not the lights, either, or any other part of the City that’s being affected: no one is calling to mention a surge or disturbance. It’s just the screens hovering over the consoles in the Control Room which are showing any signs of deviating behavior, and Elizabeth watches the proceedings, arms crossed.
“Is this a virus?”
“I don’t know. The computers can’t detect anything,” Grodin admits. “There’s no other malfunction. It doesn’t make any sense.”
“Isolate the—”
Then, as if stabilizing, the screens form a uniform image. All white except for a string of words, spelled out in Ancient, and Elizabeth looks at them closely. Eyes widening.
Grodin has been around long enough to be pretty fluent in the language, and he looks at the message in disbelief. “The City is telling us …”
“Contact the Aurora, and Colonel Caldwell too, right away,” she orders, urgently, chest tightening with concern. People obey, not asking why. Used to trouble being thrown their way, and an explanation will follow eventually.
deserum, it reads: trapped. rubble. injured. help. no signal. send ship. help.
The City is speaking.
It’s been half an hour. He thinks. What John’s internal clock is telling him, anyway, and it’s pretty well-tuned for someone stepping through wormholes constantly, with the instant Gatelag, and flying through space where time is an abstract concept and there are no sunrises to measure. Forty-five minutes, tops. His digital wristwatch is broken. Probably caught against a rock, screen and microchip splintered.
Rodney’s digging. Carefully and slowly. Won’t stop. Argued about that, for about five minutes.
There haven’t been any more explosions. John supposes that’s good. Sort of. Power’s offline but if there’s any residual charge left—hard to tell—but if there is and if the broken conduits are still leaking, a small spark may set off another chain-reaction.
At least it’s not the potentia, intact and put away in Rodney’s pack: if a thing like that was disturbed, this whole planet would implode. Probably the whole system. All in a fraction of a second. They wouldn’t be left behind having to worry about it.
“… that time when I debated with Nye in the middle of a classroom, did I tell you about that?”
“Uh, maybe; did you?” John says, pretending to be listening. Rodney’s voice is soothing even if it is tense and stressed out right now. Very much so. He lets him talk; it helps Rodney focus, and steers him away from a panic attack. And he’s already insisted and Rodney’s not listening, adamant that he can dig him free. Says they got to see to his leg, at least. With what, John’s not sure. They’ll improvise. Wing it like they always do, and it’ll be fine, it’ll be fine.
“Back in ‘99, I was visiting Harvard to give a lecture —”
“I almost went to Harvard,” John says, out of the blue—it’s getting more difficult to think; shock or blood loss, maybe, and there are steps to take, John’s been drilled to handle this and tries to distract himself—and Rodney pauses his hands for a moment.
“Really? Figures you could study at any place you wanted.” He doesn’t sound too resentful, though.
“Dad’s thought of rebellion was to not go to the university he wanted us to,” he says, holds back a chuckle because his ribs hurt. “So I didn’t go there.”
“Of course. Right. Anyway, I was giving a lecture on theoretical spatiotemporal dynamics on the edge of a black hole. That was six weeks before I was recruited for the SGC to solve that issue with Teal’c almost getting eaten by a wormhole and Carter started hating me (sort of). It was this open lecture and several notable persons were there, and, right before the break, like three minutes before I’m delivering a crucial piece of evidence, Nye’s there and standing up questioning my research and asking about mathematical proofs like I’m some kind of confused amateur—”
The rant goes on. He keeps digging.
Someone should have heard their voices. Raised them, but there’s not even a dull empty echo. Too much debris in the way. If several portions of the place collapsed all at once—and John knows they weren’t all out, Ronon was mid-air and what if the upper levels came down too, burying them all?
Trying to stay positive: they got their hands on another potentia. Nearly worthless but, still. That’s something to die for, eh?
The City heard them. He thinks. The reply is but a touch to his mind, Deserum is quite a bit away from New Lantea, but sometimes he receives impressions. Relays them to Rodney to keep their spirits up: the Control Room, Elizabeth got the message. Radio contact, the Aurora or the Daedalus or both—help’s coming. help’s coming.
Rodney isn’t talking about that lecture anymore, or even complaining about his fellow scientists and questionable methods or whatnot. The scraping noise. He’s using a piece of metal—bit of a wall panel—as a shovel, at intervals. Might just be his imagination, but the pressure isn’t that bad anymore. Progress.
“You know, if all you wanted was some time alone with me, you’d have asked,” John murmurs, and Rodney rolls his eyes.
“I always blow up buildings for a romantic touch. How’s your head?”
“’s okay. It’s stopped bleeding.”
Brief pause. Rodney’s resting his hands.
“Next mission, we’ll just stay aboard the Aurora and let the other guys scavenge the Ancient ruins,” John suggests. “Major Lorne needs the exercise, anyway.”
“Sound like a good idea.” Stretching, rolling his shoulders, the astrophysicist grabs the makeshift shovel.
He keeps digging.
[John, they are sending help] the City sings, half an hour after he first tried to make contact. [you are injured]
maybe She’ll display it as a message, too, but he can’t lie. yeah.
[help is coming]
“… Ronon. Ronon, you must cease,” Teyla says, again, with force. Her hands are on his shoulders, and she wrenches him away from the rubble. The hum of engines above: Gladys is in a Jumper, circling, circling, using the sensors to search for lifesigns. Unfortunately, there is a lot of interference.
The Satedan doesn’t answer, just stares at the ruined place where the hatch used to be, and then at his hands, which have become ruins too. His Dæmon, Melena, is still pawing at the ground as if it would make a difference, and refuses to be comforted.
By her side, Kanaan is restless and cold. It has been several minutes since their narrow escape, and there has been no word—no radio signal—nothing.
Combat engineers are closing in. Ford is speaking with MacGrimmon, who then rushes up to meet them, and orders are shared, but Teyla focuses on her friend for now rather than listening: recognizes, dimly, some of the names and designations. The marines are spreading out, forming a pattern. They know what to do.
A couple of medics arrive at the scene, and there’s Dr Janet Mallory, who acts as chief aboard the Aurora’s infirmary, and Teyla waves her good arm to make them seen. “Janet! Over here.”
Janet is by their side in an instant and shrugs off her medpack. Starts giving orders as she takes a look at the Satedan. “Are there any other injured?”
Aiden, in a daze, but controlled—he’s young but he’s a trained soldier—gives the doctor the lay of the land. They all managed to get out, in the nick of time. Ronon was nearly lost to them, and two others were hit by falling debris, but none of them lost consciousness. The medics get to work. They have people spreading out in the immediate area. At least they know where to start looking. But there is a thick layer of obstruction between them and Rodney and John, and Teyla fears that they may not be alive. The lifesigns detector in Private Herschel’s hand remains empty and unblinking, the marine looking at it in frantic determination and refusing to believe. Teyla knows the feeling all too well.
She was lucky, herself, escaping with a few scrapes and there is what feels like a light burn on her arm after having been dragged along uneven jarred ground for cover. Her uniform jacket is torn. After the second explosion, they had to flee from the ruins of the hatch, as the room they were in caved in on itself; they threw themselves out of the window. Lance Corporal Snow cut himself on some glass, and now a medic tries to make him sit still long enough for a Jumper to pick him and the other injured up and take them to the Aurora for treatment.
But Ronon refuses to move. He will not leave, and Teyla understands. John and Rodney are team, and friends, and they all wish to help them.
“I really need to get you under a scanner,” Janet says, with an eternal kind of patience which has been honed for many years after working with combatants. “You won’t be able to help anyone unless I get to treat your injuries.”
“Ronon, go with her,” Teyla agrees. “Aiden and I shall stay down here and oversee the excavation,” she adds. Exchanges a nod with Aiden. They won’t leave.
Eventually, the Satedan and the two injured marines are coaxed away. A nurse sees to Teyla’s arm, binding it. Fortunately, the damage is not severe.
Major Lorne is in the Bridge of the Warship, pacing, and has Dr Zelenka scanning the planet’s surface with powerful instruments and hoping, hoping, hoping; he’s speaking with Ford over radio, continually. Teyla has activated her earpiece to be able to follow the movements.
“… still nothing. We’re having difficulty tracking anyone down there,” the Major is saying; “It could be something with the compound or the atmosphere. It doesn’t have to mean they’re dead.”
“All the rescue teams are on site,” Ford acknowledges. “We’ll keep looking.”
Teyla knows the Tau’ri will not accept the truth until they find bodies.
John can finally move. Relatively speaking, anyway. Because, fuck, that hurts. He’s broken bones before. His arm, his collarbone, a childhood accident. Years ago. Almost forgot how bad that was, but he’s got a pretty high threshold for pain—tries to have that, anyway. Last time he injured one his legs like that, their chopper got shot down in Afghanistan and he almost bled out next to Holland’s unmoving body;
“One … two …”
On an unspoken deliberate three, Rodney bends his knees, arms clasped under John’s armpits tensing, and he tugs; drags him back; and John bites his lip as his legs and hips are jostled, swallows a cry. But they’re breaking free. Breaking free. And only a little bit of dust rained down on them, not a mountain.
Air’s getting thinner. A subtle difference, but John’s been trained to fly jets in high atmo and knows to handle pull of G:s and knows to handle minutes with a lack of oxygen. There’s no draft here, and the tunnel’s blocked. Radio signal dead and they haven’t heard from anyone, even noise: they’d cried out, but if the tunnel was blocked far enough—if the others didn’t make it far enough—if the second explosion ruined more—
No, they’re alive. Got to be.
“You’re heavier than you loo—ooh. Oh. That’s, that’s a lot of blood.” He sounds kind of nauseous when he says that.
Breathing raggedly, and looking almost like in physical pain himself, all too guilty, Rodney’s grip relaxes and he’s laid down on the hard, uneven floor. Leans against a jutting piece of rock. And John sees what he means. Yeah. That’s quite a lot of blood. Ironic, really. Shrapnel piercing almost the same spot as his old scar.
Heartfelt: “Carson should be here, stuck with some poor bastard, and we should be up there staging a big heroic rescue,” Rodney nearly weeps, wiping his dirty hands on his pants. Gropes for his pack, the flask of water, hands it over.
They don’t have a medpack. There’s always an emergency kit in the Jumper, and Ford’s back carries some supplies. All Rodney’s got are some Tylenol pills and an epi-pen—standard issue for AR-1: the last thing they want is an emergency allergic reaction with no way to treat it. John’s already swallowed three pills with some water, and they may have cleared his headache a bit (and they’d argued whether he should actually have them at all, considering the concussion) but his leg’s on fire.
“Do I … leave that, or pull it out? Oh, god, it could be lodged in a major artery and be the only thing causing you not to bleed out. How are you still conscious and not screaming? Don’t answer that,” Rodney adds, sharply. Has seen him in pain before. Not this bad, though. Only with the Iratus bug, the first week as a team and that hadn’t been a good day but there hadn’t been nearly as much blood or signs of actual trauma. Or dirt. Or the building atop of them about to collapse, burying them alive, air slowly running out.
Got to stay awake. Head injuries—got to stay awake. Coherent. “Can’t your do that thing with the … thing?”
Thankfully, despite the delirious slip of tongue, Rodney understands what he meant to say. Sweeps him with the scanner again. In a minute, he’s saying: “It’s not destroyed a major artery. I think. This … might not be accurate.”
Doesn’t feel that deep. Honestly. Not that Rodney believes him. And John’s only a little lightheaded. “Okay, so, pull it out.”
“You know that’s one of the first things not to do with a puncturing injury! You could bleed out or get a raving infection, oh, you’re already probably developing one. And you know I’m not that kind of doctor,” Rodney says, cries, huffs. “I’m not qualified for this!”
“Rodney …”
Another rumble. The argument about to rise falls before it reaches anywhere near a crescendo, and John holds his breath, counting the seconds before the world silences again. A crack in the ceiling—previously a few millimeters wide—broadens in one swift stroke and stretches from beginning to end, right above their heads—
It takes thirty seconds before it settles.
Rodney’s breathing heavily. “We can’t wait here. We got to move.”
“Where to, exactly?”
“Hallway isn’t blocked that way.”
“We have no idea what’s there.” But John is running out of energy. Can’t bother to argue for too long. If he does, if he passes out, things’ll only get worse. Without communications and with the dead weight of an unconscious body and their Dæmon next to him, well, Rodney would snap. “Okay. First. My leg; you got to splint it.”
“What about that?” A vague gesture at the ugly piece of shrapnel crisscrossing his thigh;
“Like you said, it didn’t split an artery and I’m not bleeding out. Not that fast, anyway. Fractures first.”
“It’s more like, uh, real breaks rather than fractures—okay. Fine. Right. On it.”
Skin’s broken in some places, but there’s no glint of bone. First question answered: it’s not an open break. Thank god. Rodney looks ready to faint at the mere notion.
John thinks he would have been screaming a lot more of that had been the case.
He’s freed the flashlight from John’s P-90 and now holds it between his teeth as he searches the ground for any kind of resources that might be useful. Littered with twisted pieces of metal and the remains of what was a chain of really fancy lights, placed in the wall to form a line to follow. Searches, frantically. For once in silence, as he can’t speak with the torch like that and John simply breathes through his nose.
Radio’s still silent. Bad sign. Very bad sign. They’re about thirty feet down. Even if they dug straight up, punching a signal through…
Sometimes, the whole structure groans and shifts like a living machine in discomfort, and every time they’d freeze up and listen. Nothing more coming down. No more explosions. No more explosions.
With a triumphant cry, Rodney fishes something up. The lining panel from a wall, no, a door. Thin and sort of straight and sort of the right length. Then Rodney shrugs off his TAC vest, his jacket, and his t-shirt. Using a pocket knife—standard issue, and John doesn’t think Rodney’s had to have to use his before, there’s a first time for everything—to tear it to strips. Dust and ash has managed to slip under his clothing somehow because his torso looks much like his face, same state, and there are a few bruises forming and for once Rodney isn’t complaining about them. Normally he’d be—he should be—the guy to whine about pricking his finger; he shouldn’t have to need to worry like this about, shouldn’t need to—
“I’ve never done this before,” he says. A note of helplessness. “What do I do?”
John walks him through it. Has him unlace his boot, pulling it off carefully, slowly as to not move his leg more than necessary. Cuts open his pants. Clenches his fists through it all. Doesn’t dull the pain, exactly, but once his leg’s straight and tightly bound, he can breathe a little easier. There are a couple of strips from the ruined t-shirt left, and they bind that around the shrapnel, very makeshift and probably not that good or proper or anything, but it provides some padding for the bleeding. Slowing down.
“So, I should really keep this still and elevated,” John says, as lighthearted as he can make it, “but we’ve got to move.”
Rodney pulls back on his jacket, abandoning the TAC vest. Quickly he goes through John’s pack, grabbing a couple of things—extra powerbars, spare batteries for the torch, his lifesigns detector with the earlier taken data, ammo because John always carries with him as much as he can—and places it in his own, stowing it next to his laptop (probably broken) and the potentia (hopefully not about to break). John’s not going to be able to carry that and this way they’re not leaving behind anything too important. Then, decisively, John makes no noise (or tries not to) as Rodney supports his shoulder, taking a lot of his weight. On his feet. Or foot.
“Could be another way out,” Rodney says, nodding away from the collapsed tunnel. It doesn’t look that much better that way, to be honest. Debris littering the floor. Ceiling bent and walls uneven. And it’s dark. John’s glad he’s not claustrophobic.
Everything trembles again, and John curses, this is not a good fucking day;
It’s been well over an hour. Where the hell are those combat engineers?
“What happened?”
Dr Weir’s face is tense and drawn on the HUD, and Ford shakes his head, wishing they had better news. The three-way conversation between Jumper One, the City, and the Aurora, is managed on a subspace frequency and it’s risky, it could be picked up. But this is important.
“There was a series of explosions, causing the tunnel to collapse, and the place was already unstable. We’d just found the ZPM when the first one happened. The Colonel ordered us to fall back to the Jumpers, then the ceiling caved in. AR-9, AR-4, Ronon, Teyla, and I just barely managed to get out,” the Lieutenant reports, stone-faced and he will remain so until he’s too tired to stand up.
“We think,” adds Zelenka, adjusting his glasses—he’s standing next to the Captain’s chair in the Bridge of the Ancient Warship above—“it could have had something to do with the power conduits of the facility. We are going over the data now, which we recorded continually while the teams were down there.”
“I … the doc said something about a conduit. A, a leak …” Ford remembers, stomach churning. “When it happened.”
“Makes sense. A single tiny spark could set off an explosion, and even if the power was cut it was too late; the structural integrity was already failing.”
Weir nods. Distracted by concerns. “What about casualties?”
“Snow and Gamble got scraped up, but they’ll be okay. Dex, he, uhm, he started digging with his bare hands and got them cut up pretty bad—the docs have him in the infirmary now. And there’s … there’s no sign of the Colonel or McKay yet.”
Ford can’t imagine that they’re dead. After all they’ve been through, as a team, all this shit and they have a mission without Wraith or even enemies and they end up dying in a collapsed building? That’s the worst of karma. No, they can’t be. They’re stubborn, both the doc and the Old Man. And they have people looking for them. They’ll keep looking.
“We think they’re alive, or … or at least Colonel Sheppard is. The City received a message,” Weir says.
Ford knows about that Bond—Link—thing; but, well, it’s not like it’s a visible thread. Hasn’t seen it in action. The Colonel’s a pretty private guy and he hasn’t shown it off or anything. Got even more uncomfortable about it, seems like, after Icarus. And it’d freaked Ford out a bit to see him like that, with almost-glowing-eyes and with the telekinesis and shit (even though: wow, extremely cool). But he hasn’t really thought about whether that Bond allows for the transference of words or merely ideas, how strong it actually is. They—McKay, mostly—keeps insisting that being too far away, say: a galaxy away, from the City could hurt him, maybe even kill him. Like cutting a Bond between human and Dæmon. Makes Ford shiver at the mere thought.
“How the …?” asks Major Lorne. Then, like knowing there’s not enough time for lengthy explanations and that the question will be cleared up eventually, he changes the question to: “What was the message?”
He doesn’t know about the Bond, not like that. It’s an open secret—in a place like Atlantis, a base like that, gossip is unavoidable and it’d gotten out, bit by bit, after the Uprising. But people don’t understand. Hell, Ford doesn’t understand, but keeps nodding, pretending that he does. Only McKay has seemed to grasp what it really means, but Ford isn’t so slow on the uptake as to let that out. If the two—well, there are several kinds of Bonds, between Dæmons and humans; he knows his parents had that, and he wonders if he’ll have the same, one day, but he’s only twenty-six, there’s plenty of time. Anyway, Ford’s not going to spread harmful rumors when he for once likes the CO without fear.
“It was very vague,” Weir says. “But it said there were people trapped under rubble on M31-927, requiring medical attention, and that we should send a ship. The Daedalus has been notified.”
Ford nods. Good, they can beam them up and out—if they find them, their signal—when they find them. Really got to install beaming technology on the Aurora, if the Asgard will just let them.
Medical attention. “They’re injured?” Ford asks, anxiously holding his breath. “We know who or how? how badly?”
“No, I’m afraid not. We’ll keep you notified if that changes.”
“Understood,” Major Lorne says. “We’re still scanning for survivors.”
“All right,” Weir says, like it’s the last thing she means and means to maintain a semblance of professional order, doesn’t grimace or sigh too loud. But they’ve lost people before, and Ford’s heard her voice at those times. “Keep looking. The Daedalus is on its way, but Colonel Caldwell was dropping off supplies at the Alpha Site so it’ll take them at least another hour to get to you.”
“Copy that. We’ll keep looking. Aurora out.”
“Weir out.”
The HUD shuts off, and Ford leans back in the chair, winded. Adria’s curled around his forearm for comfort for support like a pillar, and he sits for a moment, considers the possibilities if this isn’t one of those times when the Daedalus will arrive in time like a deus ex machina and save their asses—what to do then? what to do then?
Then he stands, shoves on his cap, and exits the Jumper. Teyla’s in the field, giving directions, listening, watching: the crumbling facility is slowly rising to the skies as dust and ash, and the formations which were rooftops are gone. Lieutenant Kemp is waiting by the lowered hatch (all serious now: the expression doesn’t suit him), and together they walk back. It looks like something out of those tapes of villages that have been bombed, and Ford’s never been to Afghanistan or any of those places, haven’t seen them. Saw the video from Sateda, the leveled cities. But seeing even this hint in real life, that’s something else. The air smells uncomfortably chemical.
Shouting. Over the radio, one of the combat engineers, Harris, repeats: “Step back! Step back!”
They pick up the pace, coming to a halt atop of a slab of rock, overlooking the area. People are moving out of the way as quick as they can, following the orders of evacuation. And Ford grips his P-90 tight enough for his hands to burn and they can’t do anything but back away and watch in horror as yet another portion of the place collapses.
The hatch. Right where it was—where the Colonel and McKay were last seen; it’s gone—
They’re running out of time.
Chapter Text
vi.
sign
part three
“don’t you dare.”
And they’re trying to run—stumbling; John can’t walk properly, and Rodney is shouting, come on! hurry! and there’s no time. There’s no time. Pain has to become secondary. The tunnel is breaking apart. The place where he’d been lying, stuck under the rubble minutes before, is demolished and disappears in a second. There is so much noise: loud loud loud noise stone crunching and shifting like a giant, a monster waking up. They try to run. Away from it, away;
hurry hurry hurry
The ceiling topples down. The ground is rushing up to meet it. They’re going to be swallowed and buried alive. Rodney’s tugging him along. Shouting, aloud or through their Bond, it’s not clear which. The floor is uneven. John stumbles. They’re both swearing and his breathing’s too fast and too shallow, probably, more than what’s good. The pain getting to his head. But adrenaline can work miracles, and the tunnel getting narrower and narrower is a damn good motivator to get the fuck out of there.
Rock, metal, concrete, dirt. All falling. Then, a few meters away, it stops, as if pausing and changing its mind. They don’t slow down. The respite is only temporary. The cracks will reach further, and what if they run out of tunnel before that? there’s no time—
They’re trying to run.
Eventually, the pace slows down, minutely. The cracks don’t reach any further, for the moment, and the walls cease shaking. His leg aches, and what’s left of his pants is soggy and heavy with blood. Rodney’s gasping for breath, muttering about how heavy he is, about how bad a mission this was, what a bad idea it was to enter that hatch to begin with—what were we thinking, going down there as if it would go without a hitch? when has that ever worked out?!—and that the ZedPM better be worth all of this fucking trouble.
“Only the second one we found hidden underground.” John tries to make it sound light.
Rodney rolls his eyes, or would have if he’d had the energy to care to fulfill the action. “Yeah, and we didn’t get buried alive that time.”
The dust is settling. The air still stings in his eyes, and John blinks, vision wet with tears caused by the swirling dirt. But there’s no more rumbling.
The pace is something closer to walking than jogging, now. Languid. Rodney keeps shooting him glances, looks at his leg, and blanches each time. Almost like he’s hoping that he’s only hallucinating the damage, and he won’t listen when John insists it’s looking worse than it actually is.
“That lie never works. Stop saying it,” Rodney mutters. Sounds … angry.
Something like guilt tugs at John’s soul, making his belly feel empty and heavy and dark.
They keep moving.
If the rest of their team was near that hatch when it collapsed …
(No. John refuses to think it. They made it.
They made it.)
The dust settles, and the hatch is gone. The walls, the roof, the window they’d broken through to escape. Gone. It’s a twisted mess of wires. A glimmer of crystals, the innards of consoles and control panels. Pieces of walls and ceilings and floors turned to soup.
Aiden and Adria stand at the edge with Teyla and MacGrimmon, relaying the word to Major Lorne. The Aurora picked up the disturbance, a peak in the sensors. Still no lifesigns. Still no lifesigns. The radios are full of chatter.
The sizable crew of combat engineers keeps at it, though, refusing to give up until the order’s given to back off. They keep digging. Whole place is unstable. Major Lorne wonders if they should evacuate. There could be another explosion, tearing them apart, and they don’t want (any more) casualties.
“No,” Aiden shakes his head. They’ve got to keep going, searching, continue. They can’t give up. The Colonel wouldn’t give up on them, would refuse to leave anyone behind.
Teyla’s getting tired. She’s trying to hide it, but Aiden thinks he’s gotten to know her pretty well over the past year and a half; being a team does that. The gash on her arm is bleeding through the bandage, sluggishly. Not a lot, but it’s just the tip of the iceberg. She hasn’t stopped moving until now, and he hands her a flask of water from his pack.
“We’ll find them,” Aiden says. The third or fourth or fifth time.
She doesn’t answer right away, thanking him for the water. Takes a sip. If she sits down, if he sits down, they’ll exhale and exhaustion could make them fall asleep. So they remain standing.
“It has been nearly two hours,” Teyla says. “And we cannot detect them with any of our devices.”
“We’re having trouble tracking anyone on this planet,” Aiden argues because he can’t believe. “It’s interference or something, like Zelenka explained. And the City got that message earlier. Look, they’re down there.”
“I am merely saying we must be prepared,” the Athosian says, solemnly. She and her Dæmon looks right at them, unblinkingly. Kanaan has always been a bit creepy and otherworldly, sometimes so utterly alien in demeanor. Doesn’t hesitate meeting eyes or even speaking to them—Aiden has seen it happen; Kanaan addressing the Colonel and Weir and several others, in ways which strangers or even friends normally don’t. Hell, Adria has never spoken with anyone on the team or in the City or anyone apart from his parents. It’s just—not quite normal. Sure, they’re good and they’re friends and all, but, still: it’s creepy. Now Kanaan says, a low murmur making Aiden shiver: “It is difficult to mourn lost friends.”
He shakes his head again. “They’re not lost.”
“Aiden …” Teyla’s eyes are soft and kind, deeply understanding. She’s lost plenty of people in her life. Seen Wraith Cullings up close.
(The closest he’s been was when there were twelve Hives above Lantea, and the shields glowed yellow and red like a rising sun under the fire. No one died that day, thanks to the shields, the ZPMs, the Colonel in the Chair.)
Aiden’s vaguely aware that MacGrimmon has backed away, giving them a moment. A team sticking together.
After the Genii had killed two from Tyler’s team, Aiden had shared scotch with him and watched Tyler shake and curse his now-dead teammates’ quirks and reminiscing about the missions they’d shared, and he doesn’t want events repeating themselves.
“I can’t accept that,” he says, fists clenching. “I can’t.”
Forty-two minutes later
Major Lorne orders him and Teyla to return to the Aurora.
He almost considers disobeying, like a good marine shouldn’t do;
“Break. Let’s, let’s take a break.”
Rodney’s panting heavily, and John can’t physically nod without risking throwing up—but nudges, alongside their Bond, something like all right, let’s, and lets Rodney lower him down. Gropes along the knobbly wall for support. There’s this jutting formation like a slab which makes a place as good as any to sit down, and it’s not all the way to the ground. He can lean against the wall and Rodney helps to prop up his leg straightly, keeping the blood inside instead of outside his body for a few more minutes. He decisively doesn’t scream.
They’ve tried the radio a few more times. Static.
“We are never again going inside underground bunkers, or chambers, or anything like that,” Rodney swears vehemently.
“Yeah. Next hatch we find, let’s send, let’s send some other guys,” John agrees. A whisper.
“Please don’t pass out on me.”
“I’m trying not to.”
It’s been an hour a half. No. Two. More? Can’t tell. He’s losing the sense of time, and that’s worrisome. Blood loss is getting to his head. His Dæmon is feeling it. They have a problem moving without being all stiff and, if this corridor was wide enough to fly in, they probably wouldn’t be able to do so in a straight line. All wobbly-like. They’re clinging to his free shoulder, the side which is not pressed against Rodney’s as they walk—well, Rodney walks. John sort of … hobbles along.
“Are you going to throw up? You’re turning green.”
“No.”
Peering in the continual direction: the white light of the torch reaches only until the next wall or juncture. Every time they hit a crossroad or a door, they’ve got to decide which way to go. The now rather useless schematic provides little help. Pathways which on the scanner are shown to be clear and broad are full of debris, partially or wholly blocked. They’ve turned around twice to go another way. They could be just heading deeper into the maze, they know. Breaking that rule of Stay Put and Let The Other Guys Rescue You. But every ten or so minutes, the place tilts and groans. Threats. There have been two more what could’ve been explosions, the place swaying and sweeping like in a dance. Far off enough not to kill them, but close enough—too close.
“I was going to bring a grand piano.”
John blinks. Blearily. Wipes his forehead with the back of his hand, and catches sweat and blood. Probably running a low-grade fever, he reckons, but doesn’t say it. Rodney’s already aware. Keeps bleeding emotions through their Bond far too vulnerably, he can’t stop it.
“To Atlantis,” Rodney goes on, pacing. Three steps forward, turn, three back, turn. Air’s hot down here, he’s said, except John can’t feel it. Keeps shivering. “I was going to bring a piano. A proper one. Steinway, or Baldwin; those are good too.”
“Okay. Through … through the Gate? Do those things even fit?”
Conjuring up the image: almost makes him laugh. Considers the bizarre request, a bunch of marines lifting a block of black and white and heaving it through the event horizon while General Landry and Weir look on in utter befuddlement. Then another image: of Rodney’s hands, he’s got pretty nice hands (the feel of them the contour the press on his sides and his flesh and he’s got good memories associated to those hands) moving across the keyboard—what would it sound like?
“The Daedalus could beam it up and ferry it over. Would need to be re-tuned, of course, right away—new planet, new climate … it’s always the bother with instruments. I don’t know if you’d know, but it is. There’s this building on the East Pier. We could convert it into a concert hall …”
John squints at him. Rodney’s half-turned away, illuminated by the single flashlight between them and it makes his hair glow like a halo of gold. “You’d bring a piano to Atlantis?”
“The digital one we built last year is adequate, but nowhere near good, and people are always poking at it and breaking it,” Rodney says, arms crossed. “Nothing like the weight of real keys.”
“Okay,” he says, agrees like it all makes sense. Would. The image of Rodney’s hands seared behind his eyelids, permanently. “You played, when you were a kid, right?”
Hasn’t heard him play. Bet he’s brilliant at it, though. It’d be precise and beautiful, the same way as his calculations. Maybe a bit messy and rough around the edges, the same way as his mind when he’s caught up with a bright idea. Would like to hear him play. To see if the idea matches reality. They’ll ask, once they’re back in the City. They’ll get them a piano and watch Rodney’s hands moving deftly and listen listen listen;
John catches himself closing his eyes, and jerks himself awake, violently. If he falls asleep, he might not wake up again, taken by the comforting warmth;
“We should get moving.”
With a grunt, Rodney hauls him back up. Makes him dizzy.
They keep moving.
They try the radio, again. Like clockwork. “Ford, Teyla, this is Sheppard. Come in. Anybody? This is Sheppard. Please respond.”
That’s how it started, anyway. He’s soon too out of breath to speak long sentences. Rodney takes over. Repeats. No reply.
“There’s thirty-two feet of dirt and rock and steel above us. Not to mention additional debris, and the direction we’re going in—”
Almost stumbling a couple of times. Continuing onward. “You even know which direction we’re going in?”
“Back the first way we came in through. There was a hole there, remember? We find it, climb back out … happily ever after.”
“Oh. Great.”
“Hey, hey, don’t pass out.”
“I’m … not going to.”
“Well, good.”
They’re turning again. Left. Is it just him, or does the air taste a little less stale here?
“… Prime/not prime? It’ll keep you awake.”
"I don’t know if I can think —”
“Five thousand seven hundred and thirty-seven.”
[Prime], the Raven decides, unblinking, and John echoes it. Can’t see Rodney’s face but hears the approval in his voice.
“Three hundred and nine.” The corridor is sloping downward, a gentle tilt of a degree. Feels the weight of gravity increasing.
“Not prime.”
“Seven thousand one hundred and eighty-three.”
“… Not prime.”
“Nine thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine.”
“Prime. You’re … dumbing it down for me.”
Rodney huffs a laugh: breathing: “And you’re just showing off.”
still here, he tries sending the impression to the City as they slowly move forward, still ticking.
Hopefully the message will be passed on.
Faint and faraway, but undoubtedly Her, Atlantis returns with a not-quite-query: [you are worsening]
we’re fine, we’ll be fine.
Pretty sure that once the word reaches the people in Atlantis, they won’t be believed. AR-1 tends to get into too much trouble for that.
The image clears up on the HUD of the Warship’s Bridge. Major Evan Lorne has been sitting in this chair on and off for the past two hours, whenever he isn’t pacing. The Aurora is locked in a lazy orbit around the planet, hovering directly above the ruins of the Ancient facility. So far, nothing. Fourteen minutes ago, yet another part of it completely collapsed.
When they’d lost the hatch where the teams had entered the compound, so close to where the Doc and the Colonel had last been seen—the flare of worry had reaches all the way through the atmosphere. Everyone on this ship, and on the ground, are tense and quiet, working as quick and hard as they can. This isn’t just any other team of marines trapped down there. Lorne has been around long enough to understand this. They’d do anything to help any poor sods stuck in this kind of situation, anything they could—but this is different. Dr McKay and Colonel Sheppard are a cornerstone of the Expedition.
They don’t leave people behind. It’s something of a mantra, and SG-1 adheres to it, the SGC in general, and Lorne’s seen that ever since he started working for the Program, those days digging away on P3X-403, when he was part of Edward’s team—the whole mess when their dig for naquadah accidentally disturbed some indigenous holy place and pissed off a whole bunch of Unas. First offworld action Lorne saw proper. Part of SG-11 back then. Lorne’s major in geology had come in handy. Was pretty interesting, and then shit had hit the fan when Lieutenant Ritter got killed and SG-1 came to rescue him and Lorne had been dragged along as a witness and Dr Jackson had, eventually, made some kind of peace treaty with the (understandably very angry) Unas. Back then, Lorne was a different guy. Had no real comprehension of the fact that aliens may look different and not even have Dæmons in some cases but that doesn’t make them any less sentient, and it was a harsh lesson learned. He still regrets it sometimes, thinks of poor Ritter who got strung up like that. His first team; and even SG-11 hadn’t stayed the same for long.
(The year after that, he’d left SG-11 behind and set out to pilot an F-302. Became part of the 1st Space Fighter Wings. Saw Anubis’ ship blow up thanks to General O’Neill. Then, after that, when they’d figured out the thing with the ATA-gene and Dr Beckett had smilingly told Lorne that, yeah, you’re part-alien, Lorne hadn’t even known how to react. The Battle of Antarctica changed a lot of things.)
It’s far too routine with the SGC: teams splintering and reforming and changing shape. People moving on and passing on and passing by. That’s why, in a way, Pegasus is so different. Teams are more out here. Closer than SG-11 ever was. Back there, Earth was a wormhole away, and Lorne had a comfy apartment and other friends waiting, and off-duty he could call his girlfriend or some old buddies and catch up. These guys out here, they only had each other for a year, and the Athosians and other sparse allies. Some stuff he’s heard whispers about, things they do for each other (unconditionally)—
But this deep, deep loyalty, that’s new. Not like it was back in the Milky Way. This loyalty is like blood flowing through the Expedition; the City makes the bones, and the people are the flesh of the body, and the Colonel and Weir and maybe all of AR-1, they make up the heart and soul. If Lorne had the time to be poetic, yeah. If he would make a painting out of it.
“Aurora, this is Dr Weir. I just wanted to alert you that we just received another communication.”
Just how that communication thing works, what it even is, how it’s possible—Lorne really wants to know, because they haven’t gotten a radio signal through yet, and the Doc and Colonel wouldn’t have the equipment to receive a subspace communication. Yet, Dr Weir is serious and adamant.
Lorne’s seen a lot of weird shit in his years with the SGC. Disbelief won’t get him anywhere. Better to just nod and smile, nod and smile. Ask questions later.
“One day you’ll have to explain how that works, doc,” he says.
Dr Weir nods. Distracted. “Once you’re returned to Atlantis,” she says, and implied is the continuation: with the survivors.
And he’s heard whispered rumors in the City—once or twice—about the Uprising, about Colonel Everett and something about Colonel Sheppard; he was a Major then; being able to hear the City speak, something about a Bond Unheard Of, but that’s ridiculous, the City isn’t a Dæmon, Atlantis is a City not a sentient being. It doesn’t make sense. But Dr Weir isn’t joking. Wouldn’t be. So Lorne nods: just got to accept this. Hell, this is outer space. Impossible details like that, important and vague, shouldn’t be so surprising.
Teyla Emmagan came aboard in Jumper Eight two minutes ago, and now she enters the Bridge at a jog. Doesn’t slow down until she reaches the center console. Her face is streaked with dirt. A bandage is tied around her lower right arm, and her body is probably a motley of bruises they can’t see.
Lieutenant Ford is still down there, overseeing the excavation, along with Corporal MacGrimmon and Lieutenant Kemp from AR-4: they’re refusing to go anywhere else, even if they’re not real combat engineers, not trained for this situation exactly but they know how to follow orders. The rest of AR-4 and AR-9 are already on board the Warship, the injured in the infirmary being treated by Dr Mallory and her team. Out of AR-1, only Ronon Dex is in there, and apparently the guy is growling and upsetting the nurses and wants to go back down to the planet. Docs had to sedate him. Probably will wake up pissed, if his impression of the guy is anything to go by.
“Major,” she greets, and addresses the face on the HUD. “Dr Weir. I overheard the radio chatter—another message?”
A hint of hope. Emmagan and her people are a lot more used to giving up—maybe not the right words: rather accepting this kind of loss—than the Tau’ri, because of generations and generations of subjugation to the ever-present Wraith. She’s no longer armed with a P-90, and her TAC vest is off. Standing there on the Warship’s bridge, in her dirty uniform, she doesn’t look that alien. If not for the unusual shape of her Dæmon, she could’ve been Tau’ri. Just another human among the rest.
(To her, all the rest of them are the aliens. Even Ronon Dex, in a way.)
“Yes,” Dr Weir answers. “Less than ten minutes ago.”
“So they’re still alive?” Lorne asks.
At least the Colonel, Dr Weir had said, earlier, the first message they got. And her concern is deep and she’s got to be worn with anxiety. Millions of miles away, there’s nothing she can do but wait and wait and wait.
“Yes. For now. It … It sounded urgent. One of them is injured; we think it’s quite badly.”
An exhale, almost shaky—relief. Because there is at least one living soul hanging on, calling out. Emmagan says, faintly amused as if she’s heard the same excuses many times before: “I assume he claimed to be ‘fine’?”
And this time there is a hint of a smile, tired, knowing. “Yes.”
It is only a brief respite. Dr Weir doesn’t have any promises. The messages may stop coming. And they have only one voice.
What if one of them didn’t make it?
What if they don’t make it?
Major Lorne isn’t ready to face that storm. Doesn’t honestly think anyone is ready for that. The Expedition are a tight bunch. Close. And a team is even worse. He’s been with the SGC long enough to understand, if Emmagan and Ford and Dex lose their teammates … Not to mention if there’s only one survivor. The guilt. Could claw away at a guy so deeply they’re taken by it. Lorne has seen it happen. Has felt it happen. (Ritter’s guts cut open and his Dæmon on a spear, and they weren’t even that close and Lorne had stared in horror and had nightmares for weeks afterward; what if I didn’t let him wander off, what if I’d stuck closer, would that have saved them?) And he’s seen the Colonel’s record, the non-blacked-out parts anyway, and can’t think he’s entirely completely free from PTSD from the shit he’s been through, that kind of career. Doesn’t know enough about the Doc to make a similar assessment, he’s civilian; civilians are … they’re not trained to handle this kind of thing.
(is anyone truly?)
“Colonel Caldwell will be here in twenty-three minutes,” he says, half an eye on the screen to his right where Lieutenant Terrace, acting as the Aurora’s Communications Officer at the moment, is keeping track of the Daedalus’ approach. Relatively speaking, because they can’t track them for real in hyperspace: only make estimations. But if they can’t get a lock on their the signals of sub-q:s, or lifesigns, if the Daedalus can’t beam them out …
But the people of Atlantis are stubborn. Other kinds of people don’t fit out here, in this pattern.
“Understood.” Dr Weir looks at him and then at Emmagan. Already gave the order earlier to hold position and search for another two hours. If they haven’t found them by then …
“We will find them,” the Athosian bows her head. A vow.
Dr Weir speaks for them all. “I really hope we do.”
Then they’re stopping again, and John thinks it’s a bit too early for another break, but Rodney’s looking into an archway. The door must have been open when the building was destroyed, locked in that position. The control crystals to the side of it are completely fried. Inside, it looks like a lab. And it’s more or less intact, and, hey, this corridor has been more or less intact for the past fifty meters, so maybe this part is less affected. Meaning they’re nearing the end of it. Hopefully.
There’s something inside there other than ten thousand year old consoles.
“Wrong way,” John mutters.
“No, just—a detour, that’s all. It’ll only take a minute. There’s something familiar about this …”
At the center of the room, there’s this device resting on a table: sleek, with a blue crystal at the top like a pinnacle and right now it’s dull and blank. Around it is a set of gray stones, with some kind of rune on them, a dozen of them or so.
Warily, John leans against the door frame, and lets Rodney do his thing. Humming on his breath and muttering all the while, the astrophysicist tries to analyze the thing at a distance. The machinery does have an Ancient vibe to it, though, at the same time, is a lot more complex-looking than usual. Not the clean white lines or square geometric shapes, but an intricate pattern. Almost Wraith-like in design, organic and alive, and the thought makes him shiver.
There’s no hum. It doesn’t respond to their presence. Broken? No power. Doesn’t matter. John would like to sit down, but then he wouldn’t be able to get back up.
“I think I know what this is,” Rodney says. “There’s an old SG-1 report, when they’d found something similar to these stones. These are a form of Ancient communication devices.”
Communication. Communication. A way to reach their team, or the Aurora—
“Radio? Great, let’s use it.”
“No, not at all like a radio. They create some kind of physic link between two people each touching a stone of their own. O’Neill actually ended up sort of linked to this guy for years and no one noticed until last year—long story short, he rather liked it so he didn’t mention it until this guy, some Common Citizen Joe, started getting very worrisome visions about the SGC and eventually contacted O’Neill, something about death-threats, I don’t know, I only skimmed the report.” Rodney speaks rapidly: “The important thing is, we only found the stones before. This device, it could be some kind of stabilizer … O’Neill only received visions, but the full purpose is probably to, well, to be able to communicate through someone else’s body.”
John shivers. Not liking the sound of that at all. Visions. Psychic link. Someone else taking control of your flesh to speak; is that what it is?
Hearing him, Rodney adds: “As long as nobody touches the stones with their bare hands we should be fine. Will be fine.”
Warily. His grip of the door frame is faltering, starting to slide down. It’s getting more and more difficult to breathe, as if the atmosphere is thinning out and he’s reaching for the upper layers. “If that thing … ends up zapping you—”
“It won’t! Trust me. I’m a hundred percent sure the device isn’t even activated yet. I need to take this to Atlantis, to my lab to analyze it.”
“Rodney, I can’t even walk properly. I can’t carry shit. That thing’s interesting and all, but if we can’t use it to raise the Aurora, I don’t see how useful it is to us right this moment.”
Slipping off his backpack, the Canadian is already taking off his jacket and using that to grab a few of the stones, stuffing them in the bag, next to the dim potentia which isn’t making any noise. Then he looks at the terminal and says, thoughtful: “It doesn’t look that heavy.”
He wants to roll his eyes. “That’s what you said about me.”
“If we could come back—”
“Rodney,” John says, sternly. Tiredly. Taking the last breaths he’s got. Lungs don’t feel like they can fit that much in them anymore, refusing to expand contract expand that way they should and his vision is blurring, pulse rising, heat. “Rodney, this place’ll be collapsed before we’re back. Maybe some combat engineers can get at it. Maybe. Maybe if they get back, but.” Getting harder to breathe. Breathe. Breathe. “We got … we need to focus on finding a way out—”
Ends up stumbling across the last sentence, the last word, like a scratched record and the room is tilting.
No. He is tilting.
Ah, shit, he thinks, blinking at the rust-colored ceiling and all the cracks in there and then Rodney’s there, his face swimming above in a halo of light, blanketing, and John blinks up at him dimly and wonders why he looks so pale and silent all of a sudden when they were that close to yelling five seconds ago—
“Aurora, this is Colonel Caldwell. The Daedalus is on approach.”
“Daedalus, this is Major Lorne. Good to hear your voice, sir.”
“We’re still nine minutes out. Have you found them yet?”
“No … No, sir. Nothing yet.”
Colonel Caldwell knows enough about the Expedition not to tell them to give up. Say: it’s too late. They don’t leave people behind.
“… Sheppard? Sheppard. John. John, wake up. John.”
The mantra keeps repeating. Over and over and over: over and over and over:
Someone’s touching his face. Annoying. He wants to go back to sleep. Sleep was nicely dark and warm. Hands, fingertips touching his cheek and his brow.
“John. Sheppard, wake up. Sheppard. Oh, please don’t be dead—”
“… ‘m not … dead.”
“Sheppard! Oh, thank god. You’ve been out for at least fifteen minutes—you’ve lost probably half your body weight in blood, it’s all-over the floor.”
He’s lying down, and the ground is hard except there’s something softer under his neck giving some kind of support. Still in that room. With the rust-colored ceiling. Pretty patters in it. Even as he speaks Rodney’s moving, poking at his leg, and he tries to swat them away but can’t, it hurts too much to move, and Rodney’s hushing him. Apologizes. Shouldn’t be doing that. Shouldn’t need to.
“I’m just checking. I don’t think the fractures have gotten worse but you really, really need a doctor. Why didn’t you tell me you were about to faint?”
“… Didn’t exactly … give a guy a lot of … of breathing space.”
The hands still, and John opens his eyes. Rodney’s face is drawn and there’s that expression again, like someone’s kicked his puppy. It’s rare and open, and most people think he’s merely capable of sneering haughtily and unable to address guilt;
After a moment, he feels a bit more clear-minded. Enough to attempt sitting up, anyway, but Rodney says he should probably lie down and now, he realizes, he’s propped up his injured leg atop of the pack, and that’s Rodney’s jacket rolled up under his neck and aching shoulders.
“… Where’re we at?”
“I’ve activated the ZedPM, which is about half an hour from reaching maximum entropy. I was a bit too optimistic with my earlier assessment,” Rodney gestures at a corner. “I’ve patched the radio to the control crystals borrowed from that broken console to try and strengthen the signal, but, no luck yet. I can only point the signal in one direction at a time —”
So if the Aurora, or people on the ground above, aren’t listening anywhere near that particular spot at that particular moment …
Shit.
“Keep trying.”
They don’t leave people behind.
Releasing a slow sigh, John closes his eyes. Wants to pinch his nose. There’s a headache like an explosion building up behind his eyelids. Forces himself to say awake.
Rodney stands. Goes over to the console to try and send another message. apparently what he’s been doing for the past eight minutes, over and over, while John was out. An SOS. Subspace bursts. He explains the hows and whys, but John’s ears are ringing, and he can’t really remember properly what’s being said. He wants to go to sleep.
“Major! Major, we’re getting something! A signal! Look, look.”
The Czech nearly runs right into a passing-by marine pacing the deck, gripping a datapad and looking to be in a frenzy, and he rushes to a center console, presses a few buttons. Plugging in. “Listen to this.”
It’s some kind of subspace burst, he starts explaining, and Lorne is radioing Lieutenant Ford already to tell them they’ve made contact. They’ve made contact. People are pausing their work, relief threatening to break out into cheers. One of the techs is leaning onto their workstation as if they may pass out. None of them have taken breaks to rest or eat or clear their heads.
It keeps repeating, intermittent noise in an artificial pattern which can only mean one thing. Three short burst, three long, three short, repeat. repeat. repeat. Morse code: Save Our Souls.
“Lieutenant, I think we’ve found them.” And he turns to Dr Zelenka: “Can we trace that signal and find lifesigns?”
“Already on it.”
He has Lieutenant Terrace turn on the comms in a flash. “Daedalus, we have something …!”
Rodney’s hunched over the potentia like a grieving man. Hands twitching like he wants to start pacing again. Makes the whole room sway and swim like in a drunken stupor. John can’t follow the movement without feeling seasick. The Raven isn’t flying. Shy’s weak like him right now, and they can’t lift their wings. Meredith’s curled up on the dirty floor next to him and she’s nice and warm and John relishes that. Everything else is damned cold, and that’s the blood loss talking, he knows, knows the signs. How many minutes before …?
They don’t leave people behind.
Rodney abandons his pacing, and settles down next to him. Doesn’t seem very comfortable. The cracked floor is hard and cold, and he sits down and they’re alone and he takes his hand. Like Meredith it’s warm and nice, and Rodney looks own at him without smiling. Of all the ways they’d thought they’d go—
He’ll make it. Yes. John knows that. There’s enough air here for—for one person and their Dæmon, for a few more hours—and the human body can survive without water for a couple of days—Rodney’ll make it, he has to, help will come eventually, and Rodney’ll make it even if John doesn’t;
Rodney, flinching like he’s been shot, frown deepening, says: demands: orders: “No!”
Didn’t meant to think that so loudly.
“Don’t say stuff that like, you, you—” Rodney struggles coming up with an appropriate insults. It tugs at John’s heartstrings almost as if he’s playing them; the musician sitting by the piano, maker of harmonies, and these melodies are theirs alone. “You self-sacrificing moron,” he settles on, hardly new or inventive. Thumb moving in circles on John’s shoulder, near the nape of his neck. “Don’t you dare.”
When he leans in, asking if it’s OK, his lips feels chapped against his own. John sighs into the kiss. The hand cradling his own hardens its grip, furiously, and they both might be trembling. For a long moment, neither of them speak. At least not aloud or in words. Just sitting there, holding hands. Then, after a couple of minutes, Rodney leans back to breathe.
“I tried … telling the City,” John murmurs.
“Yeah?”
“She keeps saying … help’s coming, but …”
But they don’t know where they are, radios are broken and what if they can’t detect their lifesigns or their subcutaneous transmitters? Then how will they be dug out or beamed out? He leaves the sentence hanging unfinished. Focuses on breathing. Tries not to close his eyes. Rodney doesn’t want him to close his eyes. Fear.
“Once we’re back in the City,” Rodney begins saying, but halts like after a false start. Tries again. “After all we’ve been through, we should—There is—Time’s in a short supply and, and—No, my point is: weshouldtotallygetmarried.”
In a situation where he was feeling a bit stronger, John might’ve started laughing from pure surprise, pure shock of that simple pure statement. Now he just blinks once, twice, and stares at Rodney, whose gaze darts uncertainly sideways and he’s fiddling with his sleeve, thinking shouldn’t have said that shouldn’t have bad idea mission abort abort I’m a fool, and those thoughts taste all wrong, bitter regret that shouldn’t be there.
Then his brain manages to catch up and John cracks a smile, on the verge of a chuckle. In the dim light, Rodney’s crooked mouth is beautiful. There are wrinkles around his eyes because of all the frowning, and clear traces that he’s tried to wipe away the dust on his forehead with little success. His eyes are bright and clear and vibrant. All of him so vibrant.
Oh. Oh!
“Yeah.”
So what if it’s illegal and there are regulations and they can’t even walk through the corridors holding hands openly like some other couples, there are many of those these days, marines and civilians in a maze and they don’t have to care as long as they’re straight, don’t have to hide it; but there are plenty other planets in this galaxy alone and other human cultures where things like that are allowed, where no one would blink, and they’re already holding so many secrets. What’s another to add to the pile?
He looks up at Rodney and inhales enough oxygen to muster a smile, control his body.
“You’re—I, I didn’t mean it. Seriously. Like,” Rodney staggers over the sentence, embarrassed as if earlier his tongue has slipped and he hadn’t meant to say it, and something in John’s chest aches at the notion that Rodney might not have meant it. Might not want it. Then Rodney’s facade breaks, cheeks warm, and John can feel his pulse, maybe it’s his own, unclear, through their Bond. It’s alight. Fire. “I—You mean that?”
An effort to speak. “Why … would I lie about that?”
(no more lies)
“We should … should do it … on New Athos," John adds, out of breath; all that kissing was probably not a good idea considering the lack of oxygen in his limited amount of blood, but. And Ford and Teyla already know, pretty much, and—Not so sure about Dex, Ronon’s a good guy, can keep a secret and they’re team, they shouldn’t be lying to each other in a team. Should have told them all already about Icarus and all that shit. Once they’re back in the City, he will. He will.
And just like that, he makes another silent promise. They’ll get through this, not the last of miracles they’ve managed to pull off, and he’ll tell the team the unabridged truth, get that weight off his chest, and he and Rodney could go to New Athos, where Halling and his people are building a new village, a new home. Don’t need a whole bunch of witnesses or a party to exchange vows. Can’t do it a Terran way, anyway, until laws are changed. Just the two of them. Maybe Halling or Teyla could fasten their hands and proclaim it.
Rodney’s uncertainty is falling away, giving into the pressure of a smile, returning it.
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s a yes?”
Is it possible for emotions to be physically manifested into something touchable? “Yes, Rodney.”
The Canadian exhales, a chuckle like he’s not sure what other noise to make to properly convey emotion. “I, wow. I never thought I’d actually ask that question. Have the chance to, you know. I didn’t think we’d get that far.”
“No?” he tries to whisper, but it’s becoming a true effort to speak aloud. Squeezes the hand instead, and repeats across their Bond: Why not?
“Because people are complicated and, uhm, well, I rarely get this far into a relationship before it fails completely because of my lacking people skills and I’m being called a pain in the ass because science takes up more of my time than they think it ought, and—and it doesn’t work out.”
And John remembers his own failed pasts and how he nearly married Nancy but they broke that off, a few weeks into the engagement because they both realized it wasn’t going to work out, with their own secrets they wouldn’t share for different reasons. But he’s come to clean to Rodney, and maybe that’s why it works. They’re—on the same wavelength. And when they met, it just clicked. They clicked, and that friendship has never faltered.
This will work out. They’ve made it this far. Survived space together. One disaster after the other. A pretty solid foundation.
Thought the same at first too.
“You’re utterly ridiculous, you know that. How could anyone turn that pretty face down? Let me guess, you didn’t think you were good enough or something other, something—ridiculous. Someone needs to have a lengthy talk with you about that. And self-preservation,” Rodney goes on, almost on a spiel, but there is no anger or heat behind the words. “You really have no sense of self-preservation—”
First time they met, Rodney was wearing that orange fleece. Wonder what happened to it. John had sat down in the Chair in Antarctica, and stared dumbfounded at the holographic universe unfolding over his head. A lifetime ago. If not for that moment, they’d never have met, and he wouldn’t have a Dæmon, and he’d be alone. If not for that moment.
He’s got to thank Carson for accidentally launching that drone. If he hadn’t done that and inadvertently forcing John to inadvertently impress General O’Neill with his flying, he might not have been allowed down into the belly of the secret facility, the Ancient outpost, and he’d never have met Rodney.
Funny how things turn out.
“… with me? John? If you pass out again …”
His eyes had slipped shut again, and he forces them open. Still here.
Rodney swallows, head bobbing, and something physically tightens in his chest, making it even more difficult to breathe. “Don’t do that. You almost gave me a damned heart attack.”
Talk to me, Rodney. It—it keeps me awake.
“Okay. Okay. You said yes. God, I never thought you’d say that and I didn’t think I was going to ask until, I don’t know, at least another few months, and given the extremely ill-wrought suppressing laws of your country I thought I was going to have to wait until the next century or something. New Athos, huh? New Athos. Yeah, we could, we could write it off as a friendly visit to the neighbors in the report. Park the Jumper on the other side of the continent where no one can bother us. It won’t be a religious thing because I’m atheist and—I don’t know what you are, huh, haven’t considered it before … but we don’t need a priest. Or. We could? if you like?”
Inwardly, he smiles. This kind of pain is good. Nah, I’m good. Not like they could actually bring a priest, anyway, of any Terran religion, bringing in an outsider like that, without spilling the whole thing, break the secrecy and then a whole other storm would tear them apart. Can’t exchange physical things, either. Things that can be shown or discovered or broken.
“Yeah, and we’ll ask Teyla to attend. And Ford. He won’t talk, will he? I know he gossips as bad as the rest of them,” Rodney’s babbling now. It’s really really cold. John’s struggling to catch the body heat lingering in the air. “But they’re team. They could, they could act as witnesses. Or best men. Best men and woman. Is that a thing, a best woman? We’ll make it a thing. ‘Cause I imagine you want her as your best woman. Ford’ll act like a total loon, I can imagine it. He’s really a big child with a gun and needs supervision. Do we invite Ronon? He’s team. And Carson and Elizabeth? Or would that complicate things too much? Because, because I would have Carson be my best man, not like we’ve talked about it but not because we’re not friends but more because I never thought I’d get married and he’s not. I’d like to make it legal on Earth, at least in Canada and your less than admirable country, but, as said, the rules are severely outdated and —”
Doesn’t matter, John interjects. To them, to them it’ll be true and real and that’s what matters.
He almost wants to laugh, edge of hysteria. They’re down here, trapped under at least thirty feet but probably more of rubble and Rodney’s holding his hand and asking to marry him, asking to marry him, and discussing it like one’d talk about the weather or the repairs of a spaceship’s sensors or wormhole theories—John looks, vision all the blurrier, at Rodney’s face and then at Meredith between them and the Raven resting beside him, unable to move. The four of them together like this. Fits. Warmth. Rodney’s not ceasing to talk, his voice is weaving a blanket, draping it over them.
“… or we could make sure to go to some backward planet and make sure the natives need to perform some marriage ceremony thing and insist it’ll be the two of us—put a spin to it, and no one could give you a hard time for that, could they? I know at least three candidate planets for that. If aliens made us—”
Scratching noise. Interrupting. No. That’s static breaking into something artificial and deliberate, and John hears is vaguely like at the edges of a dream. Rodney tenses.
It’s clearing up. Forms into something else. A voice.
A voice.
“… read? Colonel Sheppard, Dr McKay, please respond. I repeat, this is the Aurora. Colonel Sheppard, Dr McKay, do you read? Colonel Sheppard, Dr McKay, please respond—”
See? John wants to smile. Said they’d come and find us.
Rodney scrambles to his feet. practically throws himself at the radio to press the button. “Oh, thank god! Yes, we’re here! We’re here!”
They don’t leave people behind.
The voice—who’s that? Major Lorne? maybe—sounds so utterly relieved and exhilarated and there’s whooping and hands clapping in the background.
“… lost your radio signal, but we’re now reading four lifesigns,” Major Lorne is saying. “The Daedalus is inbound. Are you injured?”
Concerned. That should be him, not Rodney, answering. He’s the team leader. He should—
“We need a medic, Sheppard’s got a broken leg and he’s lost blood and passed out.” A glance in his direction. Keeps his voice steady but it’s climbing another octave as he speaks, frantically picking up the pace. “He’s awake now. He’s, he’s in a bad shape.”
In the background: someone calling out an order. Major Lorne might be nodding in confirmation but they have no way of seeing it. “We’re coming to get you, doc. Hang tight. The Daedalus is on its way, they’ll be here within four minutes to beam you out. Just hang tight.”
The ship isn’t meant to be here. In another quadrant of space. Checking out … Something. Can’t recall. Mission briefing. John breathes through his nose, eyes closing. We’ll owe Lorne and Caldwell a beer. A good one.
[Mm-mm.]
Neither of them can move. Neither of them can move.
“Okay. Good. Good,” Rodney keeps repeating that. Like in shock. If his tone is less than steady, John’s not sure if it actually is or if he’s imagining it. There’s a growing noise, static, deepening and it’s getting more and more difficult to keep his eyes open. “Could you hurry it up? Sheppard’s lost half his weight in blood!”
“Doing our best, doc.”
Then Rodney is next to him on the ground, and clasping his hand. “You heard that?”
Yeah, John murmurs, and sighs. Rodney's hand is warm and nice. Should hold it more often. More often. More often.
“Hey. Hey, stay awake. Stay with me, John—stay with me. You made a promise, remember? I’m not going to let you get away from that. You hear me? Don’t you dare break that promise. John. John, open your eyes. Sheppard, stay awake—”
This cold might be frightening and, and he might be afraid, he realizes, dimly. Should he be afraid? He’s bleeding out, in the dust, like those bombed destroyed houses on Terra, before the Gates, before he knew they existed; like the windowless cellars they’d crammed them in, after the IED, they’d killed off the Captain with a headshot playing Russian Roulette and he hadn’t know if the next dawn would be the last, but he hadn’t felt this cold then, and Rodney’s holding his hand, now, his hand, warmly, and distantly far away there’s the City singing and the Raven is too tired to fly, too tired, they’re too tired
they’re too tired
they’re too tired
Chapter 7: peace / war, part one
Summary:
for once, blessedly, there are no dreams.
Notes:
(2016-10-24) Thank you everyone for reading and leaving kudos/comments! Without your support I wouldn’t have gotten this far with this fic. If you’re wondering when Gibbs et al are going to show up again, I haven’t forgotten about them! There is a plot, which will show itself eventually.
(2018-04-03) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
vii.
peace / war
part one
for once, blessedly, there are no dreams.
They tell him in the past tense what happened.
The first surgery took four hours. Overseen by Dr Mallory. It’s all done on the Daedalus. The minute he and Rodney had been beamed aboard the ship jumped into hyperspace, heading back to the City, the Aurora in tow. Radio chatter: Major Lorne and Ford and the others on the Aurora being told that they’re on board and safe.
John didn’t hear the announcements. Doesn’t recall much: only the bright light and that reeling sensation of displacement, the suddenness of a different kind of gravitational pull and the taste of clean clear recycled air. Oxygen, he finds out later; they’d put a mask on him within the twenty first seconds.
(He’d fumbled with his hand, reaching out, but Rodney was on another gurney. Everything was too clean and white.)
Kind of glad he can’t remember clearly. He was probably delirious and pretty out of it. Hypovolemic shock. Splatters of red on the Daedalus’ gray pristine floors. Must’ve pissed Caldwell off. The guy likes his ship in a good state—what commander wouldn’t?
Once they reached Atlantis, fifty-eight minutes later, Beckett was beamed up along with Dr Frost, an orthopedic specialist who recently joined the Expedition, to work with the team of surgeons. Didn’t want to move him and make it worse. There’s blood on the floor of the small operations theater (the Daedalus is well-equipped) and there’s a lot of tense silence as they work, and the City held its breath. Deeply out of it, general anesthesia. Didn’t dream. They got the shrapnel out and set his legs properly, and then he was beamed to the City’s infirmary and put under the Ancient scanner for a better look. A second surgery followed a few hours later, to clear things up. Carson had him sedated.
(A hint of a memory: the press of a hand in his own before the light took them, and Rodney’s voice chanting and shouting angrily orders pleads, and the warmth of his Dæmon curled up at their side, the Raven and Meredith together. Then the light had taken them, and the hand was forced away. The Raven hadn’t been able to fly. Rodney had lifted Shy onto the gurney, wearing gloves, murmuring. For show. Can’t let anyone find out, to know, the depth of their Bond. Can’t let them know.)
Lost over one fifth of his blood, slowly, and they’d pumped him full of plasma to give his heart a chance not to fail while finding real blood for transfer. No shortage of donors, apparently. Word in the City had spread faster than the ship had reached New Lantea. Subspace comms. Weir had found out five minutes after that brief radio contact that he and McKay were still alive. Carson had rounded up the volunteers, those with compatible blood types and John’s glad that, at least, of all weird crap to inherit and for people not to know, an alien blood type wasn’t one of them. Same as his mother, or some other wholly human ancestor. Icarus having nothing to do with it. (Or just a little. Maybe the Ancients were a lot more like humans than previously believed. John doesn’t know, and doesn’t care to think about it.)
Dreamlessly, he sleeps.
He wakes up in the infirmary in Atlantis. She’s singing quietly like making a blanket for them to feel safe in, and the lights are on but only softly so, nothing sharp. There’s an IV attached to his arm, and if they’ve given him morphine—yeah, that’s the cloud he’s been walking on. A certain kind of aftertaste. Not overly pleasant. The ceiling—it’s not the same as on Deserum. It’s whole and unbroken.
This is home, this is safe; and he breathes. Too deeply and his ribs hurt. Yeah, right—now he remembers. Bruised. Sure feels like it.
There is no dust in his hair. Oh, there was a sponge bath, wasn’t there? Probably. He hates it when that happens. The poking. Always makes him uncomfortable, the thought of being touched when unconscious and unable to do anything himself. Showering is going to be a pain in the ass until he can get this cast off.
Carson is slumped over in a plastic chair next to the bed, half-asleep, hair all askew, and there are dark bags under his eyes. His Dæmon, small and innocent-looking, is curled up on his lap, long ears slouching, and its human has a hand curled around its side softly.
“… Hey, doc.” It’s meant to be cheery, but it comes out as a croak.
The Scot blinks, dazed. He and his Dæmon both exhausted, and John feels kind of guilty to not have let them sleep a bit longer. But that position would give one crick in the neck. Jumping into full doctor-mode, the doc’s on his feet, checking on the patient and the equipment.
“How long was I out?”
“Unconscious or out of surgery? Because you’ve had two. One here, one on the Daedalus.”
“Oh. Unconscious?”
“Little over a day. I was tempted to keep you under longer,” Carson says. “You lost a wee bit of blood.”
Hah. With Carson it’s always a wee bit of blood loss, or a wee bit of radiation poisoning, or a wee bite from an alien creature that’ll kill you if left untreated.
“We removed the shrapnel and cast your leg. There were two breaks, one to the fibula and tibia respectively, but they were clean and thankfully not major, and neither required any internal fixation. What had us worried was the blood loss. We have to be on the lookout for an infection as well. You’ll be off your feet for a few weeks, lad.”
He sighs, relaxes into the pillows. A broken leg. That’s, what, six weeks? eight? when it comes to minor, normal fractures. He read that somewhere, he thinks. Catches that look on Carson’s face, and the Scot lowers his voice so that no nurse passing by can overhear:
“With your genetic heritage, it might be a bit shorter. We know they had a pretty good immune system; it stands to reason they healed physical injuries quite fast, by human standards.”
“Right. You know, you could check that out in my medical records, doc. I’ve been injured before.” No one had noticed anything weird then. Out of the ordinary. And that’s lucky, he supposes. Lucky no one’s found out and made him into a lab rat, something alien to be studied.
Carson doesn’t look amused. “I know. You’ll have a new scar pretty much atop of your old one there.”
“At least I don’t have to worry about covering up someplace new,” he tries to say lightly, but the doc only shakes his head, disapprovingly.
“Get some rest.”
“Wait. What about Rodney? And my team?”
“They’re fine. They have some bruises. Ronon was in quite a state, when they dragged him back,” the doctor says. “Tore his hands up trying to dig you and Rodney out before the combat engineers got there.”
Oh.
“Where are they?”
“They’re fine,” Carson repeats, as if sensing that he doesn’t quite believe that to be true, won’t believe it until he has proof, seeing with his own eyes. But the City sings, [it is the truth] and there are the dull blinking heartbeats, lifesigns moving nearby, some closer than others—John inhales, exhales, soaks in the emotion of safety and nods. “I sent them away to sleep and eat. They’ve been hovering by your bedside practically every hour, and I’m sure one of them will be back here before you know it. Get some sleep, lad. Visitors will have to wait until morning.”
Morning. Sleep. Sounds nice. He’s not even sure if it’s night or day on this side of New Lantea, and he can’t bring himself to glance sideways in search of a window—instead his eyes slide shut, and he sleeps.
For once, blessedly, there are no nightmares.
The second time, he wakes up feeling sore. Not that rested. Medically induced sleep: between the pain and the drugs, it’s difficult to feel rested afterward.
This time, Rodney is waiting in that plastic chair, and there’s Teyla and Ford and Ronon. Hanging around. Must’ve been allowed inside by Carson. Been a few hours, then. Teyla is speaking with Ronon in low tones in a corner, while Rodney’s playing with a datapad, and Ford’s leaning against a wall, arms crossed, tense. Looking at him on the bed like a sentry.
John cracks open his eyes, and the Raven stretches their wings. Feels sore, too. “Hey, guys.”
Reactions immediate. Ronon and Teyla move from their conversation to stand by the side of the bed. Starts feeling a bit crowded, but not necessarily in a bad way. They’re walking unsupported and he can’t see any major injuries and they’re all accounted for, and John releases a sigh of relief. They’re whole. They’re alive.
“Hi there, Sleeping Beauty,” Rodney says. “How are you feeling?”
He wants to reach out again, but can’t do so physically. Rodney’s thinking the same. Keeps his end of their Bond open. John cracks a smile. “Like I’ve broken something but the docs fixed me up. I’m all right. You guys okay?”
“We are fine,” Teyla says, with a smile. Unlike Ford and Rodney, she’s out of uniform, clad in more comfortable traditional Athosian garb. There’s a scrape on the side of her cheek, scabbed over, and there’s a healing abrasion on her right upper arm. Makes him wince. They’re all looking a bit like that: freshly showered and dressed in clothes free from dust, but there’s something lingering around the eyes, and their shoulders are still tense and slouched. Tired. Ronon’s hands are covered in white bandages, and the expression on his face is a bit difficult to read. Not quite dark, but somewhat guarded.
Ford shifts his weight from foot to foot, and John can tell the kid feels guilty about something—irrational. Should have a more private conversation later, once his head is a bit clearer. This is not Ford’s fault, whatever the kid is thinking. Ford got the team out of there, out of harm. Did a good job. Followed orders. He has to know that.
He wants to talk privately with Rodney too. Mostly to make sure that that conversation, the minutes before the light—that it wasn’t a hallucination.
“That’s good. And MacGrimmon and Drew’s teams?”
“Lance Corporal Snow and Private Gamble were mildly injured,” Teyla says.
“They’re fine, though,” Ford adds. “Doc’s already let them go.”
“You were the one with all the bad luck,” Rodney says, and pokes him in the side. Causes him to grimace. “Oh. Bruised ribs. Right. Sorry.”
They’re not broken. It’ll be fine. John smiles and rolls his eyes; honestly, it’s all right. His team is safe, his people aren’t hurt, they got back to the City—it’s all right. “You find anything, I mean, that data and stuff …? Don’t tell me we went there to get buried alive for nothing.”
“Still working on deciphering it. I lost my laptop,” Rodney says, mournfully. “But the data you downloaded onto your scanner was still intact. It’s coded somehow, and not in a way we’ve encountered before.”
“So you’ll have it all laid out for us in a couple of hours,” John says, knowingly.
One by one, they disperse. Ford, heartfelt, showing that he’s still pretty young, says that it’s good to have him back. The guys in the Citadel have been wondering and asking. Restricted access to the infirmary—Carson loathes it when too many people wander in and out. Demands peace for his patients; not that John will complain. Frankly, the fewer people who gets to see him anywhere near his worst, the better. Teyla greets him the Athosian way, forehead to forehead. Dex just stands there looking his gruff and looming self for a couple of minutes, his Dæmon prowling by his feet like a beast that could pounce and kill in a second if motivated. Inclines his head at last before he filters out.
Then it’s just him and Rodney there, and the astrophysicist doesn’t say anything. Claims the chair, pulling it up next to the head of the bed. Their knuckles brush. His hands don’t feel that cold anymore.
“Did you mean what you said?” John asks, finally.
Relief, something almost like joy, washes over Rodney like a falling river and immerses him. “Yeah. I’m so glad you remember that. I wasn’t sure if—I mean, you were … you were in a bad shape.”
“I remember, Rodney.”
“Okay. Good. Good, because I have no idea how to say it all again.” Rodney exhales. “So you, you still …?”
He smiles. “Yeah, Rodney. We promised, didn’t we?”
And Rodney nods. Both delighted and scared all at once. A bit overwhelmed. Their Bond flares with raw emotion. “When?”
“I want to be able to stand up on my own two feet. It’ll take a few weeks to heal,” he says. “I … I want to come clean, to the team. First. About Icarus, and—I mean. That could be a time as good as any.” To drop a hint. The words tie up awkwardly in his throat, not sure how to break them free. This is a pretty big damn step. It’s a huge step and they haven’t been together that long. But it feels like the thing to do. The right thing to do. A place like this—a galaxy like this—things are too easily shattered, and John doesn’t want to waste time.
The Canadian nods repeatedly. “That makes sense. New Athos?”
“I like that idea. Yeah. Let’s.”
He can talk to Halling, they’re—well, if they’re not friends, they’re pretty good acquaintances. The guy’s not only the current leader of the Athosians, but John’s had a good rep with him ever since he and the rescue team saved him from the Wraith and reunited him with his son Jinto a year ago. One of the good guys. Will be able to keep such a secret. He thinks. Yeah, once John’s explained the need for secrecy, the man will hopefully understand. If not, there’s always Teyla. She’ll get it. (She doesn’t approve, she’s made clear: DADT, all of that. There’s a lot of Tau’ri stuff she doesn’t approve of.)
They don’t want to waste time.
Over the next few days, Weir drops in to say hello, as does Bates though in a more stilted manner. Still haven’t had an official mission debrief, because John would prefer to be there. They’re still working on decrypting that data. And they brought that communications terminal and the stones, apparently.
John had told him to leave it behind. Rodney’s about as good at following orders as himself, so he’s not that surprised, really. Grabbed it when they were about to beam, automatically taking it with him. Now they’ve got it set up in a lab to take readings—all while being careful, Rodney has assured him. Well, John is dubious. Rodney is willing to go to great lengths for science and discovery, and this Ancient device is just waiting to be explained. In John’s mind, half of the time it turns out the alien machine is dangerous to everyone involved.
Most of the time, he sleeps. Gets his strength back, slowly. He’s resolved not to leave the infirmary in a wheelchair, but on crutches, carrying his own weight. Carson disapproves, of course. That glaring match lasted almost a whole afternoon—the highlight of which was Rodney dropping in to talk about, well, it was something, but he’d brought food, hot actual food, from the mess hall.
He reads. Tries to finish War and Peace. Sometimes he wakes up to find the assortment of get-well cards from the other citizens of Atlantis resting on the bedside table steadily growing in number. A memorable moment had been to find that not-flower from the Botany Department. So, they classified it as a flower, but John remains doubtful, because it sure looks nothing like it. But it glows in the dark, a soft warm blue, which is pretty cool.
He makes a point to have Ford find a good bottle of Athosian hot cider for Caldwell as a Thanks For the Rescue. The man’s timing was crucial. Had the Daedalus appeared just five minutes later, John’s pretty sure he’d have bled out, and that would’ve been the end his story.
The third day, he develops a fever. The docs worry, keeping an eye out for an infection, and pump him full of antibiotics. He sleeps a lot, in uneasy fits interrupted by movement around him as Carson or Dr Mallory or someone else checks up on him. Cold and shivering and sweating.
Afterward he vaguely recalls how Rodney had been there, holding his hand when no one else is nearby to see. The worst of the fever lasts only a few hours. Carson is very relieved about that.
Sometimes, in intervals, he finds Teyla or Ronon by the bedside, and they talk softly. Promising a movie night as soon as he’s better. Teyla says they got word from the settlement on New Athos; everything’s going well, homes are being built. It’ll be more permanent than it was on Athos, though some hunting parties are on the move, too used to their old way of a migrating life to change it. It’s a mild summer on New Athos right now. Ronon doesn’t talk a lot but when he does his sentences are pretty well articulated and thoughtful and, yeah, John thinks the guy is much more than a mere soldier with a big gun and most people aren’t aware of that, taken aback by his brutish exterior and all-too-fixated on his past as a Runner (John knows plenty of marines who are itchy to have a look at the sword he always carries around. Ronon never lets anyone touch his sword).
Ford drops in, too, and not merely out of a sense of duty to report as XO. John has him sit down, as a friend, and looks him in the eye and tells him there was nothing else he could’ve done, and he did a damn good job getting the rest of the team—all three teams—out of harm’s way. After that, Ford relaxes a bit, less agitated, less nervous: a good sign. He’s a good kid. Dedicated. With a sense of wanting to stick to regs which John doesn’t have, not anymore (and maybe he’s never had). Colonel Sumner had made a damned good choice picking him as his second-in-command, and John is glad he stuck to him.
Once the fever’s passed and he can sit up and do stuff like eat without assistance, Rodney brings a chess board and they spend a day playing until Carson sighs and rolls his eyes and chases Rodney out of there, demanding he let John sleep. John isn’t able to contain his chuckles at the grumbling tirade which followed.
(He wins three games out of five. Rodney claims he’s being kind enough to let him win because of his disadvantage being hooked up to an IV dulling his mind with painkillers. John and Shy don’t really believe him, but don’t call him out on it, mostly because Rodney’s pretty adorable when he’s all flustered as he demands another rematch. The day Rodney admits someone else is smarter or better than him, well, that would be a very strange day.)
After five days he’s finally released. Carson has scanned him twice every day, measuring blood and muscle and bones regrowing antagonizingly slowly, and John thinks that one day, soon, he’s got to come clean to his team and the rest of the City, to Weir, about the truth. Finally a plus side: he heals a little, little bit faster than the average Tau’ri. That’s always been the case, but John doesn’t think he’s noticed it—hasn’t reflected over it. It’s nothing so swift that it’s miraculous, or they would have noticed when he was a child; yet another reason to be labeled a Strangeling, and something even harder to hide, especially from bullies.
But after five days his leg is in a stable cast and he can finally wear some real clothes, not that flimsy hospital gown, and manages lift his weight onto the crutches. Carson has him carefully walk a couple of laps around the room before he lets him go; promising to return for a check-up tomorrow. Not entirely out of the woods yet. Once he gets a bit stronger there’ll be a strict regime of physical therapy to get back in shape. It’s kind of awkward to move, but at least it’s only his left leg that’s out of order.
He heads for the Control Room first. Has to stop repeatedly to say hello to people passing by. The Aurora is in orbit around the City, cloaked; as if put on stand-by, and most of her crew are down in the City at the moment, taking a few days off or busy with other duties. Major Lorne is also down here and in the Gate Room when John enters it, suddenly realizing he’s got to tackle these stairs somehow without falling flat on his face.
“Colonel,” the Major greets. “I didn’t think the doc would release you yet.”
“I think I was driving the staff up the walls,” John says with a grin.
“It’s good to have you back, sir.”
“Good to be back, Major.”
He’s going to be stuck behind a desk for over a month. That … sucks. It’s starting to sink in now that, just as his team was getting starting, going out there again, with their own flagship no less—he’s back unable to do anything but sit on a chair and stare on a screen and listen to the reports.
While he was out of it, AR-6 secured nearly half a ton of wheat-like grain from a friendly planet, which was highly welcomed by the City’s kitchens. Two days ago, AR-12 escaped a Wraith ambush without casualties; P42-457 is off-limits for the foreseeable future. AR-12 spotted at least one Hiveship landed there; hibernating or just at rest, it’s unsure with. The Aurora will swing by in stealth mode and get some scans, estimate the numbers. Major Lorne will handle that mission.
Somehow he gets up the stairs without falling or stumbling. Mission a success. The Control Room is busy, and Grodin and Chuck are the two chief technicians at the wheel today. Two teams are out there, currently. Even though stuck in the infirmary with nothing to do, John’s been kept in the loop by Ford and Bates, regularly. He waves hello, hurries past them—though the word is relative as he can’t move that fast as the moment, and everyone seems to want to say hi and ask how he’s doing, and John just smiles, his trademark greeting, and nods his head and say he’s all right. That it’s good to be back on his feet. That, at least, is no lie.
Weir is in her office, the glass doors are closed and she’s looking at her laptop, rubbing one hand to her forehead like she’s got a headache. Busily typing. Crutches aren’t very silent and discrete, but she’s distracted enough so that he has to knock on the door frame as it slides open.
“Hi there.”
“Oh, hello, John. Carson didn’t say he had released you from the infirmary yet.”
“He just did. Headache?” he asks, sympathetically.
“It definitely feels like I’m developing one,” she sighs. “We received anther databurst from Earth while you were in the infirmary. The IOA wants another word. They’re demanding a conference as soon as possible.”
“Ah.” He lowers himself into one of the comfy white armchairs. “I suppose you told them where to stick it.”
“I did,” Elizabeth says. “It’s not just that. The IOA have noticed the lack of Wraith activity in the last few months. At least as far as Atlantis itself is concerned. They think it’s time to put one of their own in charge.”
“They can’t do that,” he protests sharply. Resists the urge to stand up to make a point. Have the IOA completely missed the last report about P42-457? Can’t they get what it means? The Wraith are still at large, and they’re amassing an army. Probably searching the skies for potential feeding grounds: so many of them, hungry and starving and craving. The people back on Terra, they have no idea. No idea. The Wraith are nowhere near gone, they’re just more silent than before now that they think Atlantis is destroyed. Heads turned elsewhere. Far too many humans die every day from Cullings. But since they’re a galaxy away, the IOA can’t grasp it and, most probably, they’re cold bastards who care more about numbers and keeping to a budget than they do about people. That’s almost always the case. “You’ve done more for this City and this galaxy than any of them.”
“Well, now that it’s relatively safe …”
Unsaid: they don’t trust her. She’s proven to be a wild card. Since the Uprising. Maybe since the beginning. Since it all went to hell, Sumner dying, waking the Wraith, finding themselves in a new conflict and now Terra is, inevitably, drawn into the orbit of it all. The IOA are cursing that they weren’t there from the start to stop it all.
Hell, if the IOA had existed properly as a body when the Expedition left, they probably wouldn’t be here, the risks deemed too great. Not outweighed by the potential hopes of meeting Ancients and making discoveries to make the world go round. Even if Dr Jackson had figured out the eight chevron and they’d have dialed Atlantis … No, they wouldn’t have sent an Expedition while there were still threats in the Milky Way. While it’s true that the Goa’uld System Lords are for the most part gone, there are remnants. And there are still unexplored things left to find. Space is big. Really, really big.
To explore it all would take more lifetimes than Terra has to spare.
“That’s not all. I was waiting until you were out of the infirmary to say this—Dillion Everett’s trial was five days ago.”
Whatever light that was in his chest before, it sinks at the mention of that name. Brings back memories he’d rather not think of.
Elizabeth’s tone of voice implies that it didn’t go exactly how she’d hoped.
“Okay,” he says, carefully;
“They’ve declared him not guilty and that he acted within reasonable parameters for the situation.” And John understands: a Colonel, pushed into an unwanted situation with limited intel, no true idea of the foe about to be faced, finding a City at disarray under the sway of a Strangeling; of course he reacted the way he did; feared the Strangeling was more than that, an enemy, a Snake. The incursion. He can’t be truly angry or disappointed. “But—well, this was the part that surprised me, since Everett struck me as a very proud marine—he resigned his commission.”
“What? Really?”
Huh. Everett seemed, just as Elizabeth says, like a very proud marine. A guy who wouldn’t back down and certainly not betray the Corps. Prideful. Clinging to his command and his power and to the spirit of simply being a marine, embodying it somehow, in another way than the marines John has gotten to know the past year and a half—the people of the Expedition have all changed, one way or another. Though the marines still remain undoubtedly marines, taking pride in that; and John would lie if he said he’s not doing the same, being a pilot in the Air Force. Being part of something (though being part of the City is something hundredfold greater).
“Yes,” she nods. “It’s all being sorted. He has General Landry’s support. Apparently they’re agreeing that this is better left behind us, and the only way ahead is forward. For Everett, that meant leaving the U.S. Marine Corps.”
Forward. John nods, distractedly. A moment, a flash: the battle inside the City as they roared through hyperspace, marines fighting marines, the blood and the dying, one soul too many because no one should have died that day. No one. No one.
“I suppose it could’ve been worse. What about the rest of his men?”
“Major Wolfe, previously his second-in-command, is still with the SGC. The majority of the other marines have been reassigned at their own request. They all passed their psych evaluations, I’m told, with various degrees of success. Some of them are scarred by the incident.”
They would be. John is, too. They all are, and dealing with it in different ways. Most by not thinking about it at all. Probably a bad way to deal. Heightmeyer, the City’s psychologist, would certainly agree. He’s been in her office a couple of times (at Elizabeth and Carson’s insistence).
Picking idly at a loose thread poking out from the armrest, John asks: “Who does the IOA want in charge instead of you?”
“One of their own. I’m sure they would prefer a committee.”
John laughs, dryly. “And a committee to decide the names of that committee.”
Elizabeth unclasps her hands, closes the laptop. Tense. They’re all tense and weary, these days. Keep looking over their shoulders.
“They want to replace you too, John.”
Of course. Nothing new. They’re scared of him. The IOA, the brass—everyone who’s been told about his Bond with the City, how She speaks with him and they think he has the power to overthrow the world if he wants to, probably, burn something down; that’s what Strangelings to. That’s why it’s such a refreshing relief to have General O’Neill on their side in this mess of politics and decisions, worlds away. All while trying to sort things out here in Pegasus, fight the Wraith, help people, build a better Alpha Site, fix things with the Genii—so much to do and no rest no rest for the weary.
“Oh, tell me about it. Who are they rooting for? Colonel Caldwell, or someone new?”
“That’d be Caldwell,” she says, mirroring his wry smile. “He’s proven to be trustworthy.”
“He’s one of the good guys, you know,” he has to say, because it’s true. Caldwell was on their side, however briefly, in the aftermath of the Uprising. Pragmatic and logical and loyal to the right degrees without being obsessive. And he’s doing good stuff and acts a middle-ground between them and Earth, a solid link. Yeah, John’s guts want to believe that Caldwell is trustworthy. Especially after they got that Snake out of his head.
“Yes. Yes, he is,” Elizabeth agrees after a moment. She looks at him, and he probably still is pasty and pale and not that striking, because there’s a flicker of concern. “If you’re up for it, we’ll debrief this afternoon.”
“I’m up for it. Better get it over and done with.”
Time to see if Rodney’s made any headway with that decryption.
He’s not working on decrypting that data. Sent it to Zelenka and the B-team in the meantime. No, Rodney’s all focused on the communication stones and the terminal. Presents this, three hours later—after John has had a solid lunch in the mess hall along with Teyla—complete with a PowerPoint presentation. Pictures of the device.
For the third time, John rubs at his forehead and waits for the painkillers to kick in and eliminate the headache.
“And these stones are safe to use?” Elizabeth asks. Her face is marred by a frown. She’s read the old reports.
“Well, it’s not like a permanent Bond. The link is completely temporary, and they provide instant communication in real-time. The stones were never meant to be used separately, only in conjunction with this terminal, if the database entry is correct. This is pretty useful. With these, we wouldn’t need to open the Gate every time to report to Earth. We’d save potentially huge amounts of energy,” Rodney says, nodding enthusiastically. Then pauses: “But the link would be physical. It would be, in essence, like inhabiting someone else’s body for a time.”
“Possession!” cries Ford. “Okay, I’m never touching that thing.”
“Don’t worry, Lieutenant, nobody’s asking you to.”
“The notion is … disconcerting,” Weir agrees. Still frowning.
In light of all that’s happened later, the memories still so fresh—otherwise they may have been able to greet this idea with more enthusiasm. But now, no, that’s not possible. People aren’t going to volunteer for a test that easy. And John thinks: maybe, maybe. But only with one person because there’s only one person he trusts that much, and not across the distance between galaxies. If Rodney is so eager to try this out, then he could do it, briefly. But not with anyone else. Not with anyone else.
He doesn’t need to use words to make Rodney understand this. Meredith is looking at him with sharp, gleaming eyes. Silently.
“Look, if nothing else, this could be used for emergencies. They don’t require an external power source,” Rodney says as if there’s no pause or invisible dialog ever going on.
“All right. For emergencies only. If you’re going to run tests, I want to know,” Elizabeth decides. “I want this to stay in this room. The IOA will no doubt leap at this discover and order us to use the stones.”
Quick, instant communication. Saving power. Oh, yeah, the IOA and other people back at the SGC and at the Pentagon will be happy at this discovery. See other applications. Ignoring the whole Possessing Someone Else-issue and the questions of bodily consent.
John nods. “What do we write in the reports?”
“Well, it’s not like we know for certain how to activate them,” Rodney says, after a moment. “Or know for certain what this thing even is. It could be a piece of junk.”
(Relief.)
“We’re sending reports to Earth tomorrow,” Elizabeth says. “That will have to include this mission. What about the data?”
“Working on it. It still looks like a bunch of nonsense. In fact, it’s almost like it is nonsense—not an encrypted text, but just random ones and zeros thrown together. Maybe the transfer didn’t work properly, or the source was simply too damaged,” Rodney explains.
“Let’s focus on that, anyway.” Feed the IOA something that’ll keep them mystified and hopefully distracted.
The briefing comes to a close, and they file out. Mission reports to write: the important things have already been said.
John heads for his quarters for a shower—a real one. Not the odorless chemical mists available on the Aurora. Takes a while, with the cast and all, but the hot water is soothing. The rest of that day a blur: he’s tired, and the return to his own bed is welcome like an embrace.
Another night of sleep without dreams.
Without nightmares.
The peace doesn’t last.
Of course it doesn’t last. But he’d been hopeful enough to think it would’ve. Could’ve. Once he’s been back in his own quarters long enough, relaxed, sinking into a state of it’s safe it’s over it’s fine—he wakes up shivering for all the wrong reasons.
Rodney isn’t with him tonight. Usually, John would go to his quarters, not the other way around. It’s a lot less suspicious, fewer people hanging around. The Citadel is full of marines. Many of them restlessly pacing, or hanging out in the Library or rec rooms, all hours of day or night. Sneaking into the commanding officer’s quarters would be very difficult without being seen. By comparison, the hallway where most civilians have their personal rooms is often desertedly empty. The scientists spend their time in their labs. Rodney is no exception. He only uses his quarters to sleep, and even that is hard to come by: when caught up in an important or interesting project, it takes a lot of coaxing to make Rodney leave it long enough to get some proper rest.
John sits up, blanket slipping off his shoulders. He thinks lights on (softly softly), and the City obliges. Doesn’t bring the lights on at full power, only a mild glow so he can see what he’s doing. A glance at the clock on the bedside table. 03:28. An awful hour, because if he falls asleep again, he’ll wake up disorientated and heavy and not feeling rested at all. If not for his leg, John would’ve gotten up and gone for an early run or something, clearing his head.
He runs a hand through his hair. Finds his forehead clammy with sweat.
It’s not cold. But he feels cold.
The dreams are always the same. The grip: he can’t move: he can’t hear the City or Rodney or Meredith, just the silence, and Icarus—voice great and booming and mocking—declaring: I am your father (join me)—but it’s not as hilarious as it could’ve been, and he can’t shake it off. Lingers at the back of his mind, constantly. In the darkness he can’t move and he puts a bullet through Caldwell’s head and sometimes Elizabeth or Ford or Lorne or whoever else is in his way—
This night it had been Rodney.
Maybe it’s what happened on Deserum, the building collapsing and being trapped and Rodney frantically telling him to stay awake. He’s never felt that fire before, so much worry and fear. They haven’t been this close, their Bond so alive, before. The first time he died, they didn’t have a Bond. The thirty-eight minutes the Jumper was stuck in the Gate and the Iratus bug clinging to his neck, Rodney had looked at him then with pure fear but this, this had been even worse because this time John could feel his thrumming heartbeats and know it was real.
This night he’d seen Rodney standing in front of the Gate, in the way, in the way, and Icarus forcing his hand up and the gun in his grip so heavy so heavy and John had screamed and wept and the trigger; the gunshot he saw the bullet speeding through the air leaving behind a trail of dust just like it killed Kolya and this time Rodney this time this time—
[John]
He closes his eyes, exhales through his nose. The City addresses him like that when Her sensors detect something’s wrong. Elevated heartbeat. Maybe She can see how bad off he actually is and he wonders, then, if it’ll show for the rest of the day. They have a brief this morning, he and Ford and Weir and AR-2, about an upcoming mission. A meeting, and he’s got to appear and smile and be ordinary. Just another day.
He can’t get the picture out of his head. The horror on Rodney’s pale face. The blue glow of the event horizon as he fell through it—
[it is all right]
No. No, it isn’t.
He’s too tired to argue.
She sends an impression, as if understanding that words won’t soothe him: an image, a sound, of Rodney and Meredith in their quarters, asleep. They’re curled up, Rodney’s sprawled out on his side and he’s snoring loudly. Relaxed. No care in the world. Not stirring. No nightmares. [this is what is real], Atlantis tries to convince him.
John can’t stop shivering. Bile rises in his mouth, and he clenches the sheets hard, tries to steady himself. Then he pulls off the covers, reaches for the crutches, and hobbles over to the bathroom. Splashes some water on his face. It feels like ice. He leans over the sink, breathing, breathing. Just stands there for probably what’s the quarter of an hour, or more. Dizzy.
Eventually he moves back to the bed, sinking down onto the mattress. Sits down. Can he sleep? Part of him wants to. His body is tired. Part of him is terrified to back there and be assaulted by the same images again again again;
There’s a tug. Not physical, or even really clear. But it’s unmistakable, and he closes his eyes, focuses. Apart from what happened on Deserum, they haven’t really used their Bond that much. Expressed actual words rather than vague emotion and state of well-being. But he might get used to this. The Raven is certainly pleased.
It’s a big step, he knows. Forming Bonds. It’s important.
Rodney—that you?
A sense of agitation and worry and concern and warmth that might be love floods his system and threatens to short-circuit it. John takes a shuddering breath.
I’m coming to you, he feels him think, and John almost shakes his head.
You don’t need to.
Shut up, you dork. Let me.
Seven minutes later, the doors slide open. Rodney’s clad in PJs with a mismatched t-shirt with pi spelled out on it to two hundred decimals in tiny, fading print. The corridor, John glimpses behind him before the doors close, is empty. Meredith doesn’t hesitate, leaping onto the bed, and then Rodney settles next to him, coaxing him to lie back down. He feels warm and nice. An arm is cradled over his chest, careful not to disturb his healing ribs.
With a thought, the lights are dimmed and turned off completely. The silence isn’t heavy, but relaxing and comforting. The faint hum of Ancient machinery. Airconditioning. Faraway: the ocean, waves rhythmically beating upon the piers.
“You didn’t have to come, you know.”
“We really need to talk about your sense of self-worth and all that,” Rodney mutters, wryly amused, before his expression turns much more serious, and John suddenly avoids looking into his eyes. If his leg wasn’t so uncomfortable he’d roll over onto his side. “It was another one, wasn’t it?” When he doesn’t answer right away, he presses: “Another dream. I know you keep having them.”
“I thought they’d stop by now,” John says, avoidingly.
“John.”
“Rodney.”
Huffing.
“Yes. Fine. It was another one. It.” His tongue latches in his throat, and it’s difficult to breathe. He doesn’t realize he’s actually stopped talking, stopped breathing altogether until he hears Rodney repeating his name, stroking his throat, his scar there. He’s counting down. Rodney’s peering at him, blue eyes glimmering, shadows in the night. “It was you. This time. I—it wasn’t Caldwell I was shooting.”
“Okay,” Rodney says, uncertain.
No. It’s not okay, John wants to scream.
“Have you talked with Carson?”
“No.”
“Maybe you should—”
“It’ll be fine,” John says, quickly. (Too quickly.) “Look, it’ll be fine. It’s probably just what happened on Deserum, it—it got to my head. It’ll be fine.”
Rodney doesn’t believe him, clearly. Holds him anyway and doesn’t argue, for once, even though he seems to be on the verge to. Too tired.
John wishes this could be every night: not the dreams, but Rodney’s side melded to his own and Meredith resting by their feet and the Raven on the headboard, head under their wing trying to seek sleep. Together. At peace.
Rodney relents, sighing. “Get some sleep.”
And John really tries to, watching the ceiling through half-lidded eyes as the lights dim and Rodney’s breaths even out, steady like the pulse he shares with Meredith. The pain is dull now, a throb barely noticeable, but starting to break free since it was a few hours since he last took some pain meds. He tries, tries to follow him. It takes a long time. Then he’s falling, a rushing disquiet sensation and he doesn’t continue dreaming.
Chapter 8: peace / war, part two
Summary:
he should be able to trudge through this just fine. just fine.
Notes:
(2016-09-27) Thank you all so much for reading/leaving comments/kudos! I’ve passed my first exam for this semester and this week I’ve got no scheduled classes or any hand-ins to complete, so I’ll be free to write however much I’d like. I hope to be able to update again soon.
(2018-04-03) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
viii.
peace / war
part two
he should be able to trudge through this just fine. just fine.
Six days after the events on Deserum, they have a Team Night, and John decides it’s time. He’s been waiting too long, anyway. He needs to be truthful. Still working on that. The habit of lies is dangerously easy to fall into.
When telling them about Atlantis being self-aware and sharing Her voice in his head, like the Bond with a Dæmon, it’d been a different situation. Pressed. Stressed. The Wraith had been upon them. They’d sat in the Conference Room, by the triangular table, he and his team and Weir. Later, word had spread through unofficial channels to the rest of the Expedition and onward, to the brass on Terra (and they don’t understand it; they will never understand it; they’re afraid of it, like Everett was). This, he supposes, will help it make sense. But it feels like a bigger bombshell to drop, somehow.
They’re watching Jaws. Whichever of them it is—John can’t quite focus on what’s happening on the screen. Ford’s idea. He wants initiate Ronon and Teyla to more Terran culture. (They’d debated: Rodney had said haughtily he didn’t care that much what they watched which is, of course, a lie, and John has suggested Back to the Future for next time; there’s a long list of stuff Teyla and Ronon should have the chance be introduced to, if only to get the references and the jokes.)
People spend a lot of time in this movie screaming. Teyla’s munching on popcorn and Ronon is actually looking quite amused—keeps pointing out the blatant errors. John’s leg is neatly propped up on a chair, and in the murky darkness he can lean against Rodney’s side, next to him on one of the white sofas, and no one notices or pays heed and there’s a bowl of snacks in Rodney’s lap hiding their overlapped hands from view. Allowing them to meet and touch however briefly when no one’s looking. Ford’s enraptured by the screen. The windows outside are dark, the moons of New Lantea just beginning to show and the piers glimmering with a thousand artificial lamps adorning the towers.
One of the characters gets eaten by the shark and Ronon asks if sharks are very common on Earth, and if this is some kind of pseudo-documentary on typical shark behavior—well, not that he uses those exact words, but it sounds a bit like it. If water-dwelling Dæmons were possible, John figures, the Satedan might have had one like that. Not that his current isn’t quietly deadly, curled up on the floor next to Kanaan. Athosians aren’t as big on the whole Don’t Get Too Close taboo. No touching but not that same inherent aversion to contact either. Seems like Satedans are quite the same, with people they trust, with … with the team like this.
As close as family that John’s ever gotten since he passed through childhood and left it behind.
Ford chuckles at the question, answering no.
“The statistical likelihood of getting eaten by a shark is much lesser than, say, crashing and dying in a plane,” Rodney says. Then he pauses, adding: “I guess that goes double for some of us,” and he glances at John, who rolls his eyes.
“You had to say that, didn’t you? With our luck something will mess up our next Jumper ride.”
“Superstition.”
Teyla looks faintly displeased and befuddled. “Surely speaking of such events will not cause them to occur?”
“Like I said: superstition.”
The boat has sunk and it’s nearly over. John takes a sip from his drink (non-alcoholic because it’d mess up with his pain meds and Carson has a really dangerous cold glare that he’s started using more and more often), feels Rodney’s hip against his own and his relaxed presence, and he uses that as an anchor to reality.
“There’s something I need to tell you guys,” he blurts. “I’m half-alien.”
After a moment of wide-eyed silence, Ford turns to look at him, and Teyla’s glancing at him too, her expression difficult to read.
“Half-Ancient, Colonel Dramatic,” Rodney corrects, with ease, waving a hand casually as if this is a completely normal statement. John resists the urge to roll his eyes. “Be precise. Couldn’t have waited until the movie was over, huh? And, technically speaking, the term would be Alteran because of the genetic strain due to cultural and temporal division caused by—”
“Yeah, well: that.”
“Okay,” says Ford, uncertainly. Thinks for a moment, then blinks once, twice. “What does that mean? You’re more Ancient than just having the ATA-gene?”
“Yes, Lieutenant,” Rodney goes on, “that’s what he means.”
“He can speak for himself,” John interjects, glaringly, crossing his arms, but there’s no real bite in his words.
Ronon, silent up until now, uncrosses his arms and there’s something triumphant about this grin, the glimmer of white teeth. “I knew it.”
And John recalls their meeting on Deserum and Ronon staring at the Raven and the distance between them, their wings, and his incredulity and fascination and insistence that he’s an Ancestor, that he’s got to be. And how John had chuckled and answered not really because at the time it had sounded like such a ridiculous statement. It’s not funny anymore, though.
“You did? You told Conan before?” Rodney sounds a bit outraged, in his typical fashion, arms flaring outward and John nearly gets a hand in his face. He has to lightly grasp his wrist and give him a look; calm down, buddy.
“Nah,” the Satedan shrugs, for once not even glaring threateningly at Rodney for the use of the nickname. Too distracted. “Thought it was obvious.”
Teyla reaches out for the controls and presses the pause-button, and the screen freezes. The sudden silence of the room is a bit unsettling. But she doesn’t look angry or upset, nor does anyone else, so John takes that as a good sign.
And she asks: “How did you find out?”
“Beckett analyzed my DNA. After … Icarus told me.”
“Oh,” says Ford, and the kid shifts restlessly as if he can’t process this information. John can’t blame him. “That why you’ve been, uh—You’ve been kind of, I don’t know, uptight all since that happened, sir.”
John nods. “Yeah.”
Ford shudders. “It was kind of cool, what he could do, the telekinesis and stuff—but that guy freaked me out.”
“That makes two of us.”
“John,” Teyla says, brows creasing, “the Ancestors have not been alive in corporeal form for many generations. Dr Beckett once explained how they went to Earth after the War with the Wraith, but few went there and even fewer survived—they intermingled with your people giving you the ATA-gene, but even so, for one of your parents to truly be an Ancestor …”
“Yeah, there’s that. Apparently some of them, uh, cheated? Ascended and then descended, or something like that. I’m not a hundred percent sure how it happened, but. Yeah.” John exhales, inhales. “Icarus did … that.”
“Ica… oh, shit. Shit.” Ford, now realizing he’s still grasping a handful of popcorn, drops them carelessly on the table and they scatter. “Whoa. That’s—that’s just weird.”
Rodney snorts. “That’s the general consensus of our lives.”
“Actually it, it explains a lot,” John says, thinks he has to—should. “Like how I can hear the City. And why my Dæmon didn’t Emerge right away.”
That part Ronon doesn’t know about, not in detail. Has been told the rumors afterward, of course, but he wasn’t here to witness it. He was a Runner at the time, unaware of the City even existing, nevertheless the Tau’ri. Now, though, he seems to accept those words with grace. “The Ancestors were born without them?”
“Sometimes. Apparent it has to do with Ascension. Something to do with their evolution.”
Rodney, of course, fills it in for them. He’s read all he could about that, and has had John talk about it more than once. Taking notes. All things Ancient is important to document and since they were (probably) pretty xenophobic and paranoid, they left all their archives unindexed and difficult to search through. Few notes on their own biology and background. “The closer they were to Ascension, genetically speaking, the later their Dæmon would Emerge,” he says. “Apparently some of them never had one, making it easier to Ascend in the first place.”
“Weird,” Ford repeats. Then: “Does anybody else know about this?”
“Just you guys and Carson.”
“Perhaps it would be prudent to inform Dr Weir as well,” Teyla advises sagely.
“I’m thinking about it,” John admits.
Teyla smiles. It’s gentle, somewhat understanding. She too is one of the odd ones out, not only by having joined the Tau’ri and appointing Halling as the leader of her people in her stead. She’s one of the few Athosians who have the Gift to sense the Wraith from afar, to warn her people about their presence. A Gift which might also be somewhat of a curse. There should be something behind that which can be explained, scientifically and methodically, but they’ve never really had a chance to study it, and Teyla has never asked them to. It’s just A Thing That Is. Maybe she’s thinking that about this, too. She’s been on the team long enough, known him long enough, to accept that. It’s what John hopes, anyway. He doesn’t want different treatment, he just wanted them to know. Be truthful because they’re team and a team shouldn’t (have to) lie to each other.
They unpause the movie, but no one’s attention is properly on it anymore. Eating their popcorn. As the credits start rolling, the Lieutenant turns to him, and for a moment it’s obvious he’s still so young and a kid at heart, and he’s grinning, face full of curiosity. And if he wasn’t his superior officer, John supposes he would have to start awaiting X-Men jokes from this point on. Or Alien jokes. Or Star Trek. (Is Ford old enough to know what that is?)
“Can you still do the telekinesis thing?”
The fact that they took it well takes some tension out of his body, and, next morning, he actually does have a bit more of an appetite than usual. They sit together at their usual table, and it’s like it should be. Rodney’s talking animatedly, poking at both a PDA and his food simultaneously, explaining something about … something; John isn’t listening to the words as much as to his voice, his mere presence. This is how it should be. The team together and without feeling the need to hide secrets from each other.
There’s still the one thing. Of course. And though they talked about it, in passing, while stuck in the debris of Deserum—John’s not sure how to actually breach the subject, and neither is Rodney. Because he’s pretty sure Teyla and Ronon wouldn’t react badly, but that doesn’t mean others won’t. If Ford—well, Ford saw them kiss, after the City landed on New Lantea and Rodney just couldn’t help himself. To admit it aloud though is to break laws.
They break the laws of physics on a daily basis out here, but this kind of thing …
John pops another grapefruit into his mouth, and doesn’t look at Rodney right away (and probably a good thing because he can be distracting).
It can wait another few days. Anyway, they’re going to wait until his leg is healed so that he can return to their mission schedule, and Weir won’t have any excuses not to let them go to New Athos.
Then.
AR-1 is at a standstill. They won’t be for long, though. Ford can handle their missions. With four people already on the team, Elizabeth doesn’t feel the need to add someone else, an outsider, a temporary replacement. John has full trust that Ford can handle this. It’s good training, too. Just because his leg’s out of commission it doesn’t mean their duties have ceased.
But he can’t be stuck behind a desk for another month. He just can’t. He nearly, nearly pleads; looks at Weir with his best large wounded kicked-puppy eyes, and she sighs, arms crossed. It’s been twelve days and he has nothing to do. Has signed his name and read more official-looking paperwork more times than he cares to remember. Can’t take runs around the South Pier like he used to. Can’t a lot of things. Hangs out in the lab so much that even Rodney’s getting cranky. Well, it’s not like he can resist drinking his good coffee.
“I’ll just sit in that chair the whole time,” he argues. “No running around or anything.”
“It’s not like you can run right now,” Rodney murmurs, rolling his eyes. The fondness in his tone—John’s not sure if the others can interpret it like that, but he wants to grasp his shoulders, return it somehow, openly.
“I’m serious.”
“So am I.”
Elizabeth clears her throat, interrupting them before they can really get started. Bates, by her side, has his arms crossed and isn’t even trying to hide being a bit amused at their banter. It’s such a familiar thing to slip into. Like a glove.
“The Aurora is not meant to engage the Wraith at this point,” Weir points out.
Their only tactical advantage: unawareness. The Wraith aren’t meant to know the City is still standing. The Wraith aren’t meant to know the Expedition has access to not one but two Warships, one of which is Ancient. The Wraith aren’t meant to know about contact with Earth being established, a link of reinforcements and extra supplies now a constant. If they reveal the Aurora (and they will, one day: they must) that advantage will be lost. The surprise will cease. They need to choose that moment well, John knows. They’ve discussed it all before. They’re already looking for that moment: a battle in which they can make a difference. Preferably taking out a Wraith ship or two.
(There are over five dozen Hives in this quadrant of space alone. Over a hundred, if not more, in all of Pegasus. And the Wraith are probably growing more of them right at this moment. Relentlessly.)
“And we won’t,” John says. It’s a humanitarian mission. Easy. Swift. “We’ll drop out of hyperspace, stay cloaked, and send the Jumpers down with supplies. Then we’ll turn around and be back in time for dinner.”
“Colonel,” Bates says, with a stern sigh and crossed arms. “You’re on medical leave.”
“That’s just a technicality.”
“What’s Dr Beckett saying about this?” Elizabeth asks, eyebrow raised, and John shifts a little in his chair.
“Oh, he’s—”
“Grumpy,” Rodney cuts in, knowingly. “He’ll threaten to sedate you and strap you to a bed, Sheppard.”
John tries not to let the blush rise and show, hearing words like that from Rodney’s mouth. It’s bad enough he has to struggle day-to-day not to reach out and touch him. The statement is followed by an echo from Mer, shared quietly: it’s a good idea, and Rodney, the smug evil bastard, just smirks.
“So, he doesn’t know yet that you want to go on a mission only twelve days after a major surgery,” Elizabeth concludes. “Colonel, I know you’re eager to return to your duties, but I can’t allow you back on active duty until you’re healed and cleared by Carson. Not even to command the Aurora. Major Lorne will handle this mission.”
Ah, damn it.
He’ll try again, in a few days. Elizabeth knows, after all, how stubborn he is. Seems resigned to face this battle. John is set on winning it. Eventually.
He watches Ronon beat a marine into the mat for the second time. Guy simply doesn’t know when to quit. Those bruises will last for days. (Ronon’s had a stern talking to, though, weeks ago, about not breaking people. Or things. That time when Corporal Hester showed up with a fractured wrist and a broken nose, Carson had nearly yelled at the Satedan, who had stoically stood there taking the shouting and then nodding, saying, almost reluctantly like a kid in the playground being dressed down: fine, no more broken bones.)
John’s sitting in the alcove under one of the large, multi-colored windows. His hands are itching. This change of routine, so abrupt, has left him very restless. Normally, a day like this, without missions, he’d be sparring with Teyla for at least an hour. He’s been getting better at banto’a. And Ronon has shown him a few tricks, too, but their sparring matches are even more brutal: while banto’a relies much on efficiency and speed and agility, Ronon is raw power and merciless strength. The Satedan and the Athosian sparring always draws a crowd. There have been bets. Since they’re both team, John tries to stay clear of that, and not pick sides. Each battle always ends differently. They’re evenly matched.
Lance Corporal Snow and Ronon—not so much.
He watches them exchange blows and winces when appropriate. A small PDA is resting on his knee; he’s got his leg propped up on a chair (Carson’s insistence), and he’s reviewing some files. Several teams are expected to leave with the Daedalus tomorrow, including AR-9 and AR-4. Also Olsen’s and Markham’s teams are going. Several people who haven’t seen the Earth in over a year and a half. Families and friends waiting. John knows there’s a Lieutenant who has exchanged emails with his wife and there was a baby born seven months after the Expedition left. Others, too, have kids and girlfriends.
At least there’s one thing not to be jealous of, he supposes. He can’t hold Rodney’s hand just like that, with ease, without judgement—but he can see his face every day and speak and assure each other that they’re alive and well. They don’t have to rely on very long-distance calls.
Groaning, Snow’s getting back to his feet. Ronon’s not a big talker but he does say he’s an adequate fighter—Snow beams at the almost-praise. The guy usually doesn’t smile a lot, and Ronon usually doesn’t hand out praise like that.
He and Gamble have both healed by now; there won’t be scars, thanks to the wonders of the various medical devices the SGC is equipped with. They both got cut up on Deserum, leaving their team on stand-by until they’re fit for duty again. The last few days they’ve spent packing, just as the others who are going with the Daedalus. There are scientists, too, including Miko Kusanagi and Dr Zelenka. It’ll be weird when they’ve gone. Suddenly the new influx of strangers—newly recruited marines and civilians—will feel all the more prominent; they haven’t really become part of the Expedition, not like the original crew. Rodney complains sometimes about the New Guys touching things they oughtn’t and screwing things up because they lack experience. They don’t get how things are done around here.
Not that they’re bad people. John’s met the new marines, checked with Bates and Ford how they’re taking to the City. Thirty-eight of them. Some are new to the SGC; some are veterans. Plus, he’s approved some more who are going to return with the Daedalus, meaning they’ll be in the City in two or so Terran months. Several of those will be proper Air Force pilots to man the F-302:s which have been commissioned for the Aurora. The SGC has fifteen of the sleek fighters standing by for deployment and the Daedalus will transport them to Pegasus. It’ll be a nice addition to the Jumpers. While the Ancient craft are the best thing he’s flown, hands down, the F-302:s aren’t that bad either, as far as he’s heard. He’s spend some time talking with Major Lorne about them. Turns out the Major was there during the Battle of Antarctica. Told a story differentiating a little from the stilted impersonal reports—John has already read them all. Lorne had flown under the command of Colonel Cameron Mitchell in that dogfight.
One day, the Aurora will fight a Hive, ship to ship; it’s inevitable. And though it’s a terrifying reality, John can’t help a surge of excitement at the thought. Because: space battles.
And maybe he wants to take a spin in an F-302 someday only to feel like a kid again, running around in the living room pretending to fly an X-Wing.
John is so distractedly deep in thought that he has to be nudged back into motion. Shy murmurs: [Hey, look, Teyla’s here.]
He follows the Raven’s gaze. The Athosian is standing in the open doorway. A bag is slung over her shoulder, and he can see the banto’a rods he’d given as a Christmas gift poking out of there. He waves hello. She inclines her head in greeting, walking around the edge of the mat to sit down next to him.
“Hey. How’s it going?”
“All is well,” she says, smiling. Kanaan settles by her feet, waiting. “I was hoping to catch Ronon for a spar before my meditation.”
The Satedan undoubtedly heard that, though he makes no sign of it: he’s standing in the center of the room, a display of ferocious unbroken concentration, and Snow is circling him, waiting to strike. Yeah, the guy’s persistent. Few people manage to last this long.
When the Lance Corporal hits the mat for fourth time, John winces. Ouch.
[Yeah.]
“… okay, okay! I yield!” Snow gasps, and is released. “Fucking shit.”
Ronon’s grin is all teeth. “Don’t think that much. It slows you down,” he says.
“No kidding.” Snow keeps cursing all the way out of the gym and to the locker room, accompanied by Lieutenant Drew, who’s smirking and shaking her head, and John snatches the edge of a conversation: the Lieutenant saying: “You need to stop making bets with Gamble about beating the guy. You’ll never win.”
“Never say never,” Snow answers before he’s out of the door.
Teyla stands, turning to Ronon, who’s toweling his sweat-drenched face. She gives him a minute to drink some water before asking for a match. They’d already planned it last night.
“Best out of three?”
Ronon is strong. He wields two banto’a rods but not exactly like the Athosian; there’s a Satedan art which is similar yet not the same. Dissimilar movements. Harsher. Teyla is one of the most graceful people John has ever seen. Their fight is a dance. One day he might, he hopes, be half as good as them. Unlike the earlier match with Snow, this isn’t over in just a couple of minutes; they could go at it for half an hour, he thinks, if they had to. Even longer than that. Neither wants to yield. John alternates between watching the match with his own eyes and letting the Raven do it for him while he returns to his PDA. Sometime halfway in, a few marines have paused their lifting of weights to watch the events unfurling.
Ronon wins round one. Markham and Stackhouse cheer; though, unlike a couple of the marines watching who are still quite new, their own workout isn’t forgotten. Original Expedition members have an easier time to ignore things and not stare. The newcomers—John recognizes them as Yates and Whitney—look enraptured and fascinated and may be considering whether or not to challenge either the Satedan or the Athosian in the near future.
Teyla wins round two. Very clever move, that flip and sticking out her foot, using her lithe body to her advantage. Lance Corporal Gladys, also watching, is clearly betting on Teyla being the winner today.
Ronon’s panting heavily, and Teyla smiles, dangerously: “Are you ready to give in?”
“Never,” the Satedan answers, rising, retaking position.
They’re twenty second into round three when there is an unmistakable tug, demanding attention. Rodney’s presence peaks, a hum rising in pitch and he can make out words: I figured it out. No preamble. His words are rushed, excited.
John relaxes in his seat, leaning against the wall, and follows their Bond quietly. Want to specify?
The lab, Rodney’s thinking, I need you here/come quick/where are you?
He makes a swift calculation of the trek from the public gym to Rodney’s lab—right now, he thinks, he ought to take the transporter. Carson already thinks he’s getting too careless in his restlessness. Give me twelve minutes. He wants to see the end of the match first.
I mean right now.
Rodney doesn’t sound stressed or anxious, so it can’t be a warning, can’t be a distress call. What exactly did you figure out?
That’s definitely a smug smile. The encryption.
Ah. So he’d taken it back from Zelenka to work on it personally. No surprises, really. Rodney likes hogging his science stuff in order to be able to make all the big discoveries and take credit.
Hang on.
He lingers long enough to see Teyla win round three. As the Athosian and the Satedan bow their heads to thank each other for the sparring match, he pockets the PDA and gathers his crutches, getting to his feet. Ronon and Teyla look at him without actually asking a question aloud, in that way a team does—he just shakes his head, and Ronon grabs his towel and heads for the showers, and Teyla remains to continue her workout.
Markham approaches her to ask for a sparring match—few people actually dare do that; Teyla doesn’t offer it to just about anyone, either. But Markham is part of the First Wave. Has been here long enough. Yates and Whitney are trying to be stoic but John thinks there’s a hint there of disbelief; they’re more impressed by the Athosian and the Satedan than they care to admit aloud, and preferably a bit scared. John likes to think so, anyway. Knows that he himself isn’t that intimidating or impressive to look at. If anyone ever doubts AR-1:s effectiveness, he knows just to whom he should direct the disbelievers.
Lance Corporal Gladys exits the gym with him, and they end up both going to the nearest transporter. In a sudden unexpected surge of insight, John realizes their small talk is probably so extremely otherworldly, if an outsider could just hear it. Discussing alien planets like the weather. AR-4 visited the Manarians yesterday. Their last official mission before their return to Earth.
Still a bit wary of them: since at least one of the Manarians betrayed them to the Genii, leading up to the incursion during the Storm, they haven’t had that much contact with them. Ceased trading. They were always stuck-up suspicious bastards anyway, in John’s personal opinions, giving him these weird vibes. Gladys’ shoulders are tense when she talks about them, no doubt with the memory in mind.
“They were a bit—okay, they were not really pleased having us there,” she says.
He hasn’t had the time to read their reports yet. “Was there an incident?”
“Not as such,” Gladys says. Since they’re both technically off-duty, they both don’t use rank. It’s nicely familiar, actually, being able to be so relaxed with a subordinate. It doesn’t feel like blurred lines, at least not in a bad way. The Brit isn’t trying to offer extra support, or even noticeably slow down her step to allow him to keep up. John’s getting far more adept at walking with the crutches over the past few days than he wants to be. He’s glad, really, that the Lance Corporal acts like he’s not actually injured, that this is just another normal day in outer space. She’s been here long enough, too, not to even blink at the Raven. She doesn’t flinch when Shy flies over and past them, reaching the transporter two hundred yards away in record time.
“But there was definite tension,” she goes on. “J.J. had us out of there before anyone actually had the safety off. I don’t recommend going back there.” Then she switches the subject and he lets her, because he knows too well himself how it is to return from a tiring mission without any lingering mood to think about it. “Do you know when you’ll be back on duty, sir?”
“If the docs will have their way, not until another two months,” he says, morosely. “I think they’re trying to keep me off my feet on purpose.”
“Permission to speak freely, sir?—Your team gets in a damned lot of trouble.”
He chuckles. “I know. It’s like we’re carrying around a sign on our backs.”
“Maybe you should find some of those personal shield things,” Gladys suggests, lightly.
“With our luck, the Ancients only made that one we found and decided making more was a waste of time.”
“Yeah. Sometimes I think we’d need them for all of us.” She makes a face, considering a thought. Adds, quietly: “Some more than others.”
Yeah, he thinks, doesn’t say it aloud. His radio crackles this time, Rodney demanding to know where he is and why he is so slow and it has definitely been more than twelve minutes now, hello, why isn’t he responding?
John rolls his eyes, and Gladys looks oddly knowing as he answers the call, patiently.
They reach the transporter and a scientist carrying a datapad under his arm exits it that moment, sparing them a glance and a brief hello. They step inside. John presses the spot on the map which is closest to Rodney’s lab, and the white light flickers around them, unseen. A whooshing noise. Unlike with the Asgard transport beams, there is no sense of displacement, reeling and sudden. He steps out, and the doors close again, taking Gladys to another part of the City.
A series of rooms acting as labs are less than fifty meters away from here, the corridor brimming with light and life. Mostly civilians in this part of town. Most of which are walking while looking at their datapads, distractedly. One of them nearly trips over his crutches and stutters a flustered apology.
Rodney is hunched over one of the computers as he enters the door. His back is turned, and for a second John stands there looking at that tantalizing glimpse of skin, the nape of Rodney’s neck, the curve there, and it takes two seconds to catch up with reality.
“Hey. What's the fuss about?”
Meredith is perched on the desk, in-between datapads and coffee cups, and she watches him approach with clear eyes and there’s such an intensity in that gaze that John almost wants to blush.
Rodney types a command, and directs their attention onto the large screen on one of the walls. It goes from dark and empty to full of data. A scroll of text. This time, however, it’s not a bunch of random letters and nonsense. No, this is an Ancient text.
“Some data is missing,” Rodney admits, ruefully, “but that’s because of irreparable damage to the file. Can you read that?”
He concentrates for a minute, tracing the words. Looks to be some kind of log. Personal? The wording … It’s oddly emotional, not as detached as he’d thought a scientific log would be.
Nothing sticks out. Except one word, and suddenly John feels chilled to the bone. A bad memory. Because this word—he has heard it a couple of times before. Once explained by Chaya Sar—a lifetime ago—on Proculus, when she’d given him a glimpse into the life of an Ascended being, when she’d told him about Merging with Dæmons and explained why he was born without one. And the second time, Icarus mentioned that word in passing, you haven’t encountered them yet, have you?—Ori.
Though the City has told him a bit about that, too. The First War. A dispute based on differentiating world views and Ascension itself. He doesn’t actually know a lot. Yet, there’s something, an instinct telling him that this is something they need to stay clear of. Avoid.
“So…?”
“It mentions the Ori,” he says at last, and Rodney frowns.
“The what?”
And, oh. Right. Because Chaya Sar had told him, but no one else. And John has never paused before to tell anyone else, because it wasn’t relevant. “A faction of the Ancients, who are apparently still back in their home galaxy. This here … it mentions—I guess this means the communication device. They were using it … to …”
Rodney clears his throat. “You didn’t finish that sentence out loud, you know.”
“I’m still translating. Hush.” John leans against the desk, concentrating, and tries to put some weight off his good foot. Grabs a chair to sit down. “They were trying to reestablish contact with the Ori. This—this sounds like there was a faction or something, because here it says: ‘The Council greatly opposes making contact’. Huh.”
“So the Ori are Ancients?” A hint of excitement rises in Rodney’s voice at the possibility of there being a whole civilization of Ancients still possibly out there, alive and whole. But John shudders, suddenly. “They wanted to contact their home galaxy. That’s why they made the stones!”
Maybe.
And John thinks about what he’s heard from Chaya Sar and Icarus and (reluctantly) the City, about the Ori, this First War. Details vague. The Ancients didn’t want to remember that and hadn’t been happy to share information; the segregation had been so deep that the Ancient people had split in two, and one part of them fled their very own planet, the galaxy unnamed which not even the City wants to reveal the name or location of. A secret, like a family ashamed of their black sheep, and they hadn’t mentioned the grudge in their records if they could help it. Whatever life is left there in that faraway galaxy, the Ancients hadn’t seemed too keen on reconnecting. Until ten thousand years ago.
They’d wanted to forget. Until the Wraith.
“There was a war which made the Ancients leave for the Milky Way.”
“Huh. Oh. And you didn’t tell us you knew this, because …?”
John crosses his arms, wryly. Habits. “I don’t know. It just—didn’t come up. I didn’t know if they’re still around, anyway.”
The astrophysicist ponders this. “A war?”
“Yeah. The Ancients wanted to Ascend and leave all this, the mortal plane or whatever, all behind, no interference. The Ori … they thought they were superior. At least that’s the impression I got from Chaya Sar when she told me. And Icarus …” Saying the name is disquieting. Tastes badly. Wrong. It will be like that forever. “He said he hoped we’d never meet those guys.” For an Ancient to have that opinion: that says a lot. (Or maybe nothing at all.)
the Tau’ri have not encountered them, have they? no. I would keep wishing that they do not.
“If they’re like the Ancients, they’re advanced. Really, really advanced.”
“And seeing as the First War happened millions of years ago, who knows where they’re at now,” John concludes, matching his frown. “Here, this part … ‘Reestablishing contact with Celestis could unite us against the Enemy’ … Guess they wanted to bring reinforcements to fight the Wraith.”
“Maybe that’s it. If they build the facility near the end of the war with the Wraith, they’d explore all options,” Rodney thinks aloud. “Desperate times.”
“Still.” Not entirely right. “I don’t think we should make contact with them. I mean, the Ancients don’t have the best rapport with any alien race—anyone different from themselves. The last thing we need is another enemy.”
“Too right,” Rodney sighs. No hiding the disappointment at that bleak outlook. “But they’re a galaxy away, aren’t they?”
“Yeah.”
And something is telling him they’d better keep it that way.
Elizabeth isn’t wholly convinced. He can tell. She’s curious. Has always been fascinated with the Ancients. Now confronted with the possibility that there is a whole civilization of Ancients just waiting around the corner—metaphorically speaking—of course she’s curious.
There are records of the First War, mentions in the City’s vast database. Took some coaxing for Her to pull them up, but eventually she relented. Maybe knowing that knowledge is needed. John hands over the datapad and watches as Elizabeth skims the words for herself even as he narrates, outlying the major steps: two opposing factions, the issue of Ascension at the heart. This is big stuff. This is the reason the Ancients ever came to the Milky Way galaxy. Passed by Ida, meeting the Asgard, on the way.
A long slow journey. They didn’t have hyperspace capabilities, though there was some kind of Faster-Than-Light drive. The record is incomplete, yet staggering. The journey took generations. Eventually, they reached a planet they found suitable. And they developed the idea of Stargates. Built them; built ships. Built a lot of ships: sent them out to search the stars, to find planets and place Gates there. A little piece of the sky at a time. A little at a time.
(Their singing Cities came much later.)
Eventually, Elizabeth lowers the datapad. “I see why you’re concerned, John,” she says at last. “If the war was that severe …” And the Ori have got to be technologically powerful, if they’re still around; it’s left unsaid. “The last thing we need right now is another foe.”
Rodney, impatiently, crosses his arms. “So what do we do? Just … put this aside? Do we share this report with the SGC?”
“No,” Weir says, suddenly. “If the IOA got wind of this, I could bet they’ll demand us to make first contact. I’ll speak with General Landry, and O’Neill if need be.”
The General will understand—O’Neill has seen and been through so much strangeness with the SGC. This kind of announcement won’t make him bat an eyelash, only remark something casually and then start making emergency contingency plans.
“The data was missing,” Rodney says loudly. Nods several times as if having a bright idea, and the gesture is a bit too big and obnoxious to be natural. “I’ll go check on that device one more time.”
The hint of a smile plays at Weir’s lips, returning the nod, and Rodney goes. The office feels oddly cold without him, but John tries not to linger on that. Makes him distracted. Instead he turns to Elizabeth.
“How’s the Daedalus’ preparations going?”
“It’s all on schedule,” Elizabeth says. Advises her notes. “Forty-six people will be leaving the City this wave. Forty-one are returning.”
He nods. The numbers add up. It’s a shame to see some people go: both civilians and marines. But it’s been a harsh year in outer space. With all that’s happened—even when they’d been warned and prepared to maybe not ever return to Terra—it’s difficult. Some people have been broken and shattered like leaves strewn across the ground, dying in fall. They’re simply not made for this. There will be those who will want to leave the SGC behind altogether.
(and part of him can’t help wondering: when will be the time, when will be the day that Rodney reaches breaking point too?)
Colonel Caldwell is sitting in the City’s commissary. It’s rare enough a sight to make John pause at the threshold.
There are the usual folks, teams and marines and civilians intermingling, speaking and laughing as they eat. The smell of hot food gives the large room an almost homely feel to it, even if it’s still a typical mess hall with all the noise and the movements. One more downside of hobbling around on crutches: no hands. It’s the little things, day-to-day, which makes him tired. Stuff he suddenly can’t do as easily or on his own. But at least Carson is only demanding a check-up once every two days now. John is seriously getting sick of the infirmary.
Ford is holding their trays. Rodney will meet up with them later. In his lab—now that the mystery data thing has been solved, he’s back at trying to crack the ZPM equation so that one day they may be able to build their own and have access to unlimited green power. It’ll win him a Nobel, for sure. They could declassify the SGC and give the people on Terra enough potentiae to solve the issue of greenhouse gases and at least some parts of global warming forever.
(or start a war, the darker more realistic part of John’s mind adds. power like that can be harnessed for all the wrong things)
Teyla has gone to New Athos to visit her people, and Ronon went with her. The big guy doesn’t seem to like staying in one place for too long, can’t handle it. Oppressing. After that kind of life, Running from the Wraith—for the Wraith—for years and years and years—John can’t fault him for it.
There are plenty of downsides to his injuries, but the cooks are taking pity and there are very often desserts. Only, before Deserum even happened, John’s not in the mood. Hasn’t had the heart to say no thanks every time. Rodney’s more than happy to eat for him, though, even if he frowns every time John leaves a meal unfinished.
The table is occupied by Elizabeth, too, who smiles hello. Caldwell greets them both pleasantly as they take seat.
The Daedalus has landed for the first time in weeks; their missions have been days-long and overlapping for most part, with a rotating crew who all knew what they’d be in for. Or close enough, at least. They’ve tried to move quietly. Encountered the Wraith ship-to-ship only twice, and both battles had been quick. The first one was over easily, far too easily, but then the Wraith figured out how to protect their shields from being penetrated by the Asgard beaming technology, preventing them from taking out the enemy by transporting warheads and watching the Hives go out without breaking a sweat. They haven’t worked out yet how to undo that, to find some other way past their shields.
He and Caldwell has had an okay rep, he considers, since the Goa’uld was removed. A somewhat shared experience. They don’t talk that often, and when they do Caldwell is all business, and John has no issue with that. Caldwell’s one of the good guys.
“I received the updated list of personnel that’ll be returning with us,” Caldwell says, taking a bite of the not-quite-pasta, made from an alien grain. The flavor is heavy. John is so used to it, by now, that the thought of pure Terran food is kind of alien in of itself. “Some new faces are transferring.”
No surprises there. The tour hasn’t been that long, but for some people, it’s enough. It’s enough.
As they eat, Elizabeth and Caldwell fall into easy conversation, and instead of joining them, Ford turns to him and latches onto the unfinished debate from their last team night. Sort of. He tries to be subtle about it, in his own way.
“So you can’t …” The kid waves a hand around like casting a spell. Not exactly subtle.
John raises an eyebrow. “You aren’t going to let that thing go, Lieutenant?”
“Nope.”
By his side, Elizabeth glances at them. Not worriedly, only sort of bemused.
“So …?”
“Nope.”
Ford’s shoulders slouch just a little bit. “It’d be kick-ass.”
Jeez, the kid’s a menace. But in a good way. And if Rodney could see them he’d be spluttering and laughing his ass off, no doubt, before launching into a highly scientific explanation as to why John isn’t able to Do That Thing anymore without Icarus or some other advanced energy-based creature taking over his veins and heartbeat and neural system.
John just shakes his head and tries to eat his pasta.
The Daedalus’ liftoff is a surprisingly somber affair.
Some people have chosen to take that long route. Maybe because it gives them some time to think: twenty-seven days in hyperspace. Yeah, it’ll give people time to mull things over and come to terms with not having seen Terra for a year and a half. Prepare speeches and hugs. But most Expedition members walk through the Gate. They dial the same morning, after watching the Daedalus rise from the East Pier and over the water, through the sky. Breaking past the atmosphere and into the stillness of space. Then they’d jumped into hyperspace and, in a flash, were gone from the City’s sensors.
The Gate remains open for eleven minutes.
The night before, there’d been music and dancing and drinks had been passed around. Teams shook hands but soon enough that wasn’t enough, the goodbyes heartfelt and John had watched the embraces and the promises of email exchanges. Some demands had also been made to return with some Terran things which simply are irreplaceable. But that night had been full of light and noise, and now, at dawn, they’re crammed in the Control Room in silence. The Gate Room is crowded too. Audience. People standing in line, bags slung over shoulders. Waving goodbye.
One step, one step and they’re out of the Pegasus galaxy and back on Terra.
They can choose not to return.
They can choose not to come back.
Sometimes he remembers things. Not as overwhelmingly as that time when he’d stayed up seven hours straight scribbling nonsense on the walls, trying to get the thoughts out of his head and clear it. But still as sharp. Tidbits of information: in Ancient: how to build a hyperspace engine; the functions of time; and odd memories that have nothing to do with learning at all.
(the picture of looking up, ten thousand years ago, from the bottom of the ocean of Lantea, when the City still rested there, and Icarus stood under its shields waiting for the chance to help his people. A discussion with Ianus in a hallway. Vague: standing before the Council, asking them to send a ship after they lost contact with the Aurora; a mother saying goodbye, we will meet again; a childhood of never seeing the sunlight in person, only holographically.)
It’s just as disconcerting as the nightmares. But some of this stuff could be useful, and he tries to write it down. He’s still got all the notes from that seven hour phase when he wasn’t himself. For some reason, he doesn’t want anyone but himself and Rodney looking at it all yet. Most of it remains in a jumble, unnumbered pages, nothing making sense. One day it might.
He wants to forget.
He wants to be able to just forget.
AR-1 is on a mission to a neighboring planet, six lightyears away, led by Ford, and John’s stuck back in the City and he can’t sleep. The mission scheduled them to leave around midnight for practical reasons: days on that planet are short, only four hours of sunlight, and they’ve got to catch as much of that as possible. There were some interesting readings. Magnetic fields or some such. A dense core. John had only listened to the explanation with half an ear.
He can’t sleep. With Rodney by his side, he might’ve, but—
This growing codependency is almost terrifying. He’s a grown man, for goodness sake. Shouldn’t have this need for touch to fall asleep without dreams. And after some of the shit he’s seen and felt before—the minefield which was Afghanistan—the dust of Iraq—shit, he should be able to trudge through this just fine. Just fine. What’s a guy taking over your head to driving over an IED on the road and having your team killed off one after the other—
So he ends up at Dr Heightmeyer’s office. Carson has urged him to do so more than once already. And John still can’t stomach the thought of sleeping pills.
(Teyla has guided him through meditation a couple of times but it won’t stick. At least not right away and what he needs is a solution. Before he broke his leg, he’s sat on the floor and breathed and breathed until his neck grew stiff and his knees ached, and now he’s tried lying down flat on his back, relaxing every muscle, breathing, but it won’t work it doesn’t work.)
Heightmeyer is a kindly woman with a kindly face, and her Dæmon is feline and even if it’s completely different from Meredith, in form and color, the shadow of similarities makes something tug in John’s gut, almost (irrationally) like jealousy. She says she’s frankly relieved he finally turned up. There have been times in the past when Carson has nearly ordered him here. But John has always put up excuses. Something with psychiatrists and psychologists; the idea of them breaking you down, analyzing you like numbers; maybe it’s that. Maybe it’s his general aversion of medics of all kinds. But, most of all, it’s shame. To go here is to admit that something is wrong.
He apologizes. It’s late. She just smiles and shakes her head. Says she’ll gladly do her job and help no matter the hour. It’s hardly the first time. Space is large and hectic and frightening, and Heightmeyer has been busy ever since joining the SGC with facing scenarios so far outside the normality of Earth that she’s used to it, now, the most otherworldly statements and sights. She knows how to filter that down to words.
He’s still tense, and wants to leave. Doesn’t. He’s not going to be a coward. Instead he moves to sit, when asked to, and the doors slide shut behind him. The Raven isn’t flying, clinging to him, clinging to their wholeness as if it makes things better somehow. Once he’s off the crutches Heightmeyer sits down too.
The wide couches in her office are identical to the hundreds of others spread through the City, and somehow that familiarity is a comfort. The room is much like any other in the City. High ceiling, very spacious, yet adorned in such a way that their voices don’t echo. They’re many levels up and through the half-lidded blinds they can see the ocean sink and rise steadily, wave after wave after wave. It’s cloudy tonight, and few stars are visible. Heightmeyer has placed a few potted plants below the window. Most of them don’t look Terran—gifts from the Botany department—but there’s one exception, a single daffodil in a simple clay pot. Must have been grown from the seeds they’d brought with them from Earth: the botanist made sure to bring a lot of them. Mainly edible things, vegetables and roots, but evidently some plants for aesthetic purposes too.
He glances around the room, carefully, never turning his whole body or head. Reflexes kicking in. Military training. Don’t take your eyes off—but Heightmeyer isn’t meant to be an enemy, and sits in front of him, calmly. Asks ordinary things. She doesn’t start prodding right-away why he’s here. Anyway, she can probably guess.
Lets him take his time.
She asks how he’s finding it having the whole team back in the City, and then the lack of movement because of his injury. He can answer to that somewhat truthfully. That he’s bored out of his skull. Heightmeyer doesn’t take notes, and he’s grateful for that.
Eventually, she asks—very straightforwardly past the necessary point of small talk—how long he’s been unable to sleep. He almost winces. Is it that obvious? Or maybe just the hour he dropped in at. Just that. Yeah.
“Uh, a while.” A heartbeat. “Since Icarus. I … dream about it.”
“Would you be comfortable describing one of these dreams for me?” When he doesn’t answer right away, she goes on; “It might help to process these dreams by talking about them.”
Noise is stuck in his throat. For a moment, he can’t breathe. He has to look away and out the window. She lets him. Taking his time. The waves wash upon the piers.
“It’s, uh, it’s usually the same. I’m in the Gate Room, and Icarus is in my head.”
“Can you do anything about it?” she asks, gently, not startling at all and the question makes him shiver.
“No. No, I—I can’t move or anything. I couldn’t stop him.”
“What happens next?”
He forces himself through the motions. It always follows the same pattern. Predictable except for the ending, who will be unveiled, which face. “I’m holding my 9mil. It’s loaded. I can’t stop him from pulling the trigger. It’s—someone else, standing in front of me. The Goa’uld.”
“I see. I’m aware that at the time of the incident, Icarus attacked Colonel Caldwell. You see the same thing happening in your dreams?”
“It’s … him, sometimes, yeah. As the Goa’uld.”
“But not always.”
He relents: “… Sometimes it’s other people, from—my team.”
“People close to you. This isn’t so strange,” Heightmeyer says. “You suffered a trauma when he forced you to do things without your consent, causing a deep fear of something like that happening again. You don’t want to hurt the people you care about.”
He looks back at her, and doesn’t know what to say because trauma? is that really the right word?
Finds it’s difficult to breathe again. Whispers: hoarsely: (dis)agreeing: “No.”
(Can still see it: feel the gun in his hand the weight of it and felling them one by one Rodney Teyla Aiden Elizabeth)
I don’t want to hurt them.
“How often do you have these nightmares?”
“A few times a week.”
“Have you talked with anyone else about this?”
And for a moment he considers lying, because—
“Rodney,” he blurts, out of control, and then straightens his back, awkwardly. “And I think Teyla—sort of knows.” She’s always sensing a lot more than she lets on, clever and bright-eyed. Ronon, he’s not so sure about. They’re a good team and friends, but they’ve rarely talked about … issues with each other. That one night, when watching A New Hope, before Rodney and the others had returned from Earth—Ronon had talked, very briefly, about Sateda and past regrets, and John had revealed a little bit about Afghanistan, and about the Storm, losing people. As for Ford, well, they’re team and he’s his XO and they’re friends, but neither have ever sat down like that, and John’s not sure if they ever will reach that point of comfortable familiarity … “I think.”
Heightmeyer seems pleased about this, however, and doesn’t note or ask anything in particular about Rodney or Teyla or anyone else by name. “That’s good,” she says. “It’s good to have a support network of friends, and I know how close a team is.”
And suddenly he wants to say, dare to say, be free to say I don’t dream when Rodney’s there with me, but he can’t. Even if Heightmeyer won’t spread the word; her knowing, it would … it would make things ever more awkward. He’s pretty sure she can tell things just by looking at him. And she’s seen his record. The tiny words in fine print. She’s got to be well-aware that he hasn’t seen a shrink since forever. Only when he’s basically ordered to by the brass. After that IED. After the chopper went down. The hot swirling sand the dust making it hard to breathe making it
He’s been quiet for over a minute, and then suddenly reality is back. Heightmeyer’s brows are creased in a worried frown.
Something must be seen on his face. “I take it you’ve refused taking sleeping pills?"
“Yeah. I just—can’t.”
“That’s understandable.” When he just frowns confusedly, she goes on: “John, someone took control of your body against your will. The last thing you want is to lose control.”
“I can handle pain meds, as long as they don’t mess up my concentration,” he says, feels the sudden need for justification for this weakness. “But. Yeah.” The thought of falling falling falling without the ability to stop himself is terrifying.
As of late, the dreams are leaving him tired and jittery, to the point where he thinks someone is bound to notice. Not just the dark rings slowly growing under his eyes. His lack of appetite. He’s let Rodney eat his desserts for days on end, not stopping him from stealing them and even Ford has noticed that, raised an eyebrow; John had waved his hand, changed topic.
“There’s prazosin,” Heightmeyer offers. “It helps against high blood pressure and there is a documented use of it to ease chronic nightmares. However, a side-effect includes lightheadedness and a risk of fainting, so I assume you would prefer not to use that. But there are alternatives to medication.”
“Teyla’s tried to show me how to meditate,” he says, suddenly recalling it. Last time was three weeks ago, before his injury.
“How did you find it?”
“… Difficult,” he decides on, finding a word that’s somewhat fitting.
“Was it the sitting still for that long, or the act of relaxing?”
“It’s, it’s more like—I had the time to think. Teyla says it’s meant to give an opportunity to think of the, well, the right things, but I get distracted.” Not in a good way, either.
Heightmeyer nods. Still hasn’t taken any notes. Will she, once he’s walked out the door? This wasn’t an officially booked meeting, after all. He’d called unsure if she’s answer, at midnight. She really deserves a raise, putting up with this. Her sleep being ruined by someone else’s ruined sleep. The irony isn’t lost on him.
She suggests he return, properly, in a few days. That he try meditating. Listening to some calm peaceful music, perhaps. And John agrees, eventually, because even if it’s hard to form the words, and there’s still a weight in his chest and maybe that’s got nothing to do with the nightmares at all: his team is away from the City, Rodney is away from the City.
Even She can’t stop his dreams; they aren’t One.
When John finally takes his leave, it’s been well over an hour, he realizes when returning to his quarters. The alarm on the bedside table glaring red. He dims the lights with a thought. Leaves a window open slightly, and this way he can hear the wind and the water.
Slipping back into bed, he closes his eyes.
The City hasn’t sung for him intangibly for a long time. He understands Her words now. But now he seeks that same lullaby that was being poured through the halls when the Expedition first arrived here, the first living beings to set foot in the dark corridors for ten thousand years;
If it won’t stop the dreams entirely, only momentarily, it’ll be enough until Rodney returns.
The team had better not get in trouble on that planet.
Chapter 9: peace / war, part three
Summary:
“if this isn’t a life-or-death situation and instead a huge waste of our time,” Rodney declares, the transporter doors swishing open, “I’m calling in sick tomorrow.”
Notes:
(2018-04-03) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
ix.
peace / war
part three
"if this isn’t a life-or-death situation and instead a huge waste of our time,”
Rodney declares, the transporter doors swishing open, “I’m calling in sick tomorrow.”
It’s strange being on a mission without John.
Rodney realizes, halfway between the village and the Gate, that he doesn’t like it at all.
Technically, it’s AR-1:s seventh mission since M31-927; their seventh mission as a four-person team; their seventh mission without Sheppard, and that’s just not right. And they’ve been splintered before, yes, temporarily, with weak promises of reunion, in the aftermath of the Uprising when all senior staff were forced to go to Earth and endure the questioning of the IOA and General Landry and the others. That time, leaving John behind, a galaxy away, had felt harder than it should have; they’d grown too attached. Too quickly. Too much.
Rodney doesn’t generally consider himself very—clingy. That’s the word. A typical Sheppard kind of word. The man often behaves and speaks like a five-year-old. And Rodney’s trying to focus on this, on this planet and their mission and not on John who’s stuck with an injured leg a star system away. Right now, it’s nighttime in the City. Probably asleep.
Can’t stop thinking and wondering.
No, he hasn’t been this attached to another human being ever before, in this lifetime. It’s … frightening. Frightening, how easy they’ve slid into this motion of Being One, even talking about we and us —he’s never been plural with anyone but his Dæmon; he and Meredith are two sides of the same coin. When they’d stepped through the Stargate toward Atlantis for the first time, there was never ever a thought of letting someone else join that fold. Never. Nevertheless someone like John Sheppard: flightily mysterious and with that casual smile he uses to hide everything from the world and born without a Dæmon (and Rodney is still working on accepting that John’s so quiet and unprotesting at being called a Strangeling; no one should have to endure that) and with an unreasonably high IQ he, for some unfathomable reason, wants to pretend he doesn’t have (but Rodney is no longer fooled) and too pretty for his own good and half-alien (minor detail). Mostly though, it’s—John is John and unreachable and yet, yet Rodney has managed to grasp him, anyway, like defying the laws of physics.
No. It’s not right to be on a mission without him.
Too quiet.
Ford’s doing an all right job, Rodney supposes, because they’re for once not in a life threatening situation, surrounded by Wraith hellbent on sucking their souls dry, or trapped aboard an exploding starship. But this quiet is unsettling.
Teyla’s talking to the village elders. Chances of diplomatic relations and, perhaps, trade. The readings indicated that the planet’s crust is crammed with various ores, including naquadah, and if they could set up a minor mining facility someplace uninhabited—so not to disturb the natives—that’d be ideal. One can never have too much naquadah. And the soil is rich, judging by the wide expanses of growing fields surrounding the valley, full of foodstuffs. Can’t have too much of that either.
Ronon is … well, the Satedan is mostly looming in the background, his Stoic Warrior face on, and Rodney could bet the guy is almost as bored as he is. Because, honestly, couldn’t they have sent someone else? And then, oh, wait, he recalls—most First Wave teams went back to Earth five days ago, and what they’ve got left are the newbies and Elizabeth maybe doesn’t trust them well enough yet for a mission like this. Naquadah is important. But what Rodney would like to find, most of all, is an Ancient ruin full of Ancient tech to breathe life into, or a ZedPM—and there’s a huge gaping part of him (empty; painful; like someone’s taken a knife and carved a hole in his spine) wishing for nothing else but to back, step through the Gate back to Atlantis.
Dependent. He’s—he’s become dependent on closeness for happiness, it dawns on him, suddenly. While he’s sitting there uncomfortably cross-legged on the hand-woven mat of the chief’s tent, Teyla’s soft voice lullingly sharing words with the gruff chief, the smoke and smell of candles wafting around them, his back itching, the TAC vest too tight. It dawns on him: it’s too silent; John should be here, and the Raven, the twosome always getting into trouble and poking at stuff and making bad jokes, urging them into debates and banter relentlessly. It’s too silent; John should be here, by their side, flashing that carefree smile and remark at Rodney’s impatience with this mission to Backwater Planet No. Eighty-Nine. It’s too silent. John should be here.
Their Bond—thin, fragile: not meant to be stretched to these distances—is a finely woven thread of white light, and it’s not alight with fire so Rodney can know, at least, that John isn’t in pain or distress. Except then, somehow—like being woken in the middle of night: it is. Just a faint thing, barely there. But Rodney has gotten used to listening to their Bond. John is usually so shut-off. Tries to be. Careful. Wears masks. But this fire is real. It’s not physical pain as much as it is emotional, and somehow that’s worse.
For a moment, Rodney’s breath catches in his throat, all tight and heavy, and something’s hammering away in his chest harshly just like he’s run a marathon to escape a horde of Wraith but this isn’t fear or terror or panic for his own life. He can’t do anything, only listen. He hates being unable to do anything. He should be able to—
(when they’d been stuck on M31-927 all alone not knowing if their team had made it if they’d come home alive, Rodney had grabbed his hand out of sheer desperation and the blood, he still can see it, and John protesting saying he’s all fine it’ll be fine I’m fine, the liar, trying to calm him down make him comfortable. as the air was slowly running out and John fell down, Rodney’d grasped his hand and the words had been unstoppable, he couldn’t help but blurting out what he’d been considering silently for the past two weeks and John hadn’t seemed aware, he’d shielded his thoughts well enough—they don’t pry, they never do that—ever since Icarus fears of being unable to move;
Rodney almost wished in that instance that he had, just gotten a glimpse, something, so that he could’ve been more prepared for the answer. and then John had smiled so beautifully and said yes; yes, of course and they made plans, started making plans—set on making it out of there alive. promising.)
It takes a minute for him to refocus. The tent. The deal being made. His aching knees and protesting joints. Lieutenant Ford, by his side, somewhat jittery though he’s trying to stay calm. Ronon shifting impatiently, wanting to be someplace else fighting Wraith preferably.
The fire is fading. Another nightmare?
That’s got to have been another nightmare. Rodney—who has had own fair share of them (continually; he still sometimes dreams, in times of high amounts of stress, of being eaten alive by a giant whale—sometimes it’s not that at all; sometimes it’s a Storm raging and the towers of the City quaking and swaying and trembling, bowing to the harsh winds, and as lightning strikes a hand’s reaching out grabbing Meredith by the neck and they can’t move can’t scream can’t do a single thing to stop it but it’s been a year now and Rodney hasn’t dreamt of the Storm in over three months)—had hoped they’d stop by now. It’s been weeks. They should have stopped.
“… and you may explore the area you have specified,” the chief is saying.
And Teyla is nodding: “That is a fair offer. Then we are in agreement.”
The people of P9X-182 don’t shake hands, but do some kind of salute with a touch of the chest (which is a big deal around here: that’s where the spot where a Wraith’s hand would be when it feeds). Teyla reciprocates it and quietly urges the rest of the team to copy it too. Rodney finds it awkward, but he’s been with the SGC long enough to roll with it.
Can’t concentrate, though. Can’t. His thoughts inevitably turn back to Sheppard, in one form or another. Even if in abstract equations.
They should tell the team about their plans, soon, shouldn’t they? shouldn’t they? They’d said they would. Promised. John wants that. But it’s right there on the verge of impossible, balancing on the edge of what can be done. Every law and rule and regulation is working against them. Teyla and Ronon won’t understand—well, they’ll say that they do, but they won’t, Rodney knows. They’ll think the regulations are another illogical Tau’ri thing which doesn’t make sense. And Ford—Rodney isn’t sure. Ford’s loyal, to the team, to Atlantis, to Weir and Sheppard and command. But he’s a marine, and he might not agree that—
Though, he was witness to their kiss, in the Chair, as the City had landed on New Lantea and Rodney had burst forward and grabbed John’s face in his hands and kissed him, and Ford and Teyla had been there to see it. Rodney remembers. That’s when Ford had told Teyla about Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and that she couldn’t reveal this to anybody without risking John being demoted or dishonorably discharged from the Air Force. And Rodney doesn’t want to take that away from John, not just because Sheppard clearly was born to fly, but because, selfishly, that would also take him away from Atlantis.
Yes, the Lieutenant is loyal; dangerously so;
New Athos, they’d said, decided, and John hasn’t wavered from it. Rodney doesn’t really have a preference. Maybe the City itself would be the better place, the best place (right there in the Gate Room before the open wormhole and glimmering lights), except the City is full of people and surveillance and never quite enough—never private enough—to exchange vows, and on New Athos they could be alone. Take a Jumper. New Athos has got both forests and oceans and there are continents far from the Stargate, unexplored, where no one would disturb them. Interrupt. Isles of solitude.
(And: would that be like eloping? It would, in a way, wouldn’t it? Technically speaking. By dictionary definition.)
Finally, they’re standing up. Rodney sighs in relief, groaning at the pain in his stiff shoulders. The deal’s made. The inhabitants of P9X-182 will receive medical supplies and manpower (galactic trading constants: in Pegasus there are rarely things like money to be had, and they’re not really useful over planetary borders) to help rebuild their houses from the last Culling—another, much more grievous, galactic constant. This village was Culled nineteen rotations ago. Fires still being put out.
In return, they’ll let the Lanteans mine a few miles south of the Gate, an uninhabited area. There are some clauses and conditions, but Rodney only listens with half an ear. So, now they can send back a group of geologists to start digging for naquadah—Elizabeth will be pleased to hear that. They need the ore to make repairs to the City and the Aurora, which will undoubtedly be damaged in a future battle.
They walk back to the Gate, Ford talking vividly with Teyla and Ronon, but, for once, Rodney remains morosely silent, and Meredith doesn’t walk rapidly by his feet but rest on his shoulders, sensing that what he needs is the comfort of closeness, this physical thing which he’s lacking; John is six lightyears away, untouchable and unseen.
“Hey, doc?”
He’s not in the mood to be bothered by relentless energetic questions or, worse, merciless teasing which isn’t at all like John’s banter—“What is it, Lieutenant?” he says, snidely, trying to convey leave me be with a sneer.
Ford doesn’t back down, glancing over his shoulder and Rodney has to admit that the young man’s expression is genuine. The hint of a frown. “You’re real quiet back there.” Unsaid: you usually never are, so something has got to be up. “Anything interesting on the scanner?"
He isn’t even holding it. Hasn’t bothered to pull it out of his backpack. “I would tell you if there was, and there isn’t, so there is nothing to say,” Rodney nearly snaps, something violent beneath his skin threatening to break through. He takes a breath. That wasn’t anger—but another rising pulse—nightmares. John is in distress, he realizes, once more and out of reach, and it’s bleeding through and he can’t do anything.
“Rodney,” says Teyla, gently, imploringly in that voice she uses when approaching a wounded animal, and she’s worried and also probably reprimanding him for being unnecessarily rude. And Rodney doesn’t like it, and grits his teeth because he’s fine, he’s fine, he just wants to get back to Atlantis right now.
The Stargate rests at the mouth of the valley, between two rising peaks at a distance, mountains massive enough to easily compete with Mount Everest, disappearing into the clouds. It’s a sunny if somewhat cloudy day, brief as they are this time of year on this planet—merely four hours of sunlight before dusk, and a long night following. Spring reaching into summer. There’s still some frost in the air.
Without being given the order, Rodney starts to dial, and the glowing symbols of the Stargate spin, lazily, in a circle, settling one chevron after the other. The moment the event horizon flares outward and settles, the Bond is much clearer, like a bell that’s been dulled suddenly ringing loud and free.
(The fire’s gone out. John is probably awake. Always has trouble falling back asleep after dreaming.)
Rodney dumps the gun and the TAC vest with a happy, weary sigh and scratches that itch. Finally able to reach it.
05:13 hours. The team has got a sleep-in, to catch up on the Lantean time, and the debrief isn’t until well past noon.
He passes by the Control Room (Chuck is leaning over a console half-asleep; Rodney grumbles about inefficient people being inefficient at their jobs, and the guy startles and looks somewhat sheepish, if annoyed at being so rudely woken), checks the City’s sensors, counting the lifesigns and, no surprise, John’s quarters appears to be empty. There is, however, a pair of blinking white dots right there in Rodney’s lab on the three-dimensional map.
He’d slept all afternoon yesterday to power up for this mission, and he’s not particularly keen to sleep yet. Instead he grabs some coffee and heads to his lab. The door is closed, but unlocked, and within the computers are on stand-by, screens dark with the exception of a simulation quietly running in the background, and the machinery is softly humming and beeping. The Raven is nested up in the rafters, where the ceiling meets the wall, the crook of a beam carrying the room above, with their head tucked under a wing and Rodney has gotten used enough to the sight by now to know that the Dæmon’s asleep. A blanket is peeking out from beneath the main desk, and Rodney nearly stumbles over the foot sticking out behind the pile of boxes—some electrical supplies Rodney hasn’t sorted out yet.
Swears softly on his breath.
Seriously? Of all places …?
He puts down the already half-empty cup on the edge of the desk—relatively clear from clutter—and moves closer. John doesn’t stir.
Safe. John is usually a light sleeper, flinching at any little noise and reaching for his gun (trigger-happy, Rodney’s called him once, and the Colonel had scowled but not argued against it) but now he doesn’t, and something in Rodney’s chest contracts and warmth pools in his belly, thinking that John feels safe enough in here to close his eyes without having to keep a gun within grasp.
One of the whiteboards is changed. Rodney only barely notices—out of the corner of his eye. An equation filled in and corrected. A little thing, and he shakes his head—really, should make him do an IQ test. Hasn’t been able to convince him to join the City’s Mensa club. The Colonel firmly doesn’t want to be labelled a Geek, even though he doesn’t have that much qualms about associating with them. Or making out with one. The thought causes Rodney to smirk.
For a moment, he considers walking out of there without ado. Because he’s not going to sleep right on the floor, not when there’s a perfectly good bed less than a hundred yards away. Not going to happen.
The light is dim, but some falls from one of the windows, gently, pale and blue and cold from the moons of New Lantea. Nearly full. Huh, maybe they ought to start measuring the month cycles of this planet. Give the B-team something to do. And they could make a poll to make up names for the months. Of course, the marines can’t be allowed to participate because they’d only come up with the most ridiculous things—Ford has demonstrated the marines’ general ability to only name things nonsensically many times enough. Idly, the thought passes by (he can never stop thinking), and he crouches down next to John’s head, poking his shoulder.
“… R’ney?” comes the murmur, fifteen seconds later. John blinks a couple of times, blearily, eyelids heavy and his hair all ruffled. You’re back?
“There’s a thing, you know. Called a bed. I don’t know if you’ve heard of it, but it’s a very soft and comfortable invention,” Rodney says—not too loud, carefully. The man on the floor groans, squinting up at him. “Come on. That can’t be good for your leg, or your neck.”
“Nah, ‘s fine.”
Rodney rolls his eyes. “And this floor is icy cold.”
The pilot makes a contemplative noise at the back of his throat, patting the floor next to him with a hand. “… You could help me fight the laws of thermodynamics by getting down here.”
Oh, he’s such a ridiculous, ridiculous man.
(And Rodney can’t stop himself from falling.)
With a low-pitched whine, the machine crosses his body and then is guided aside. The screen is set up at an angle so from the infirmary bed John can’t see the results, but Carson isn’t frowning grimly. Instead he’s nodding, making some note on his datapad.
“It’s healing nicely.”
The doctor is no longer demanding that he visits the infirmary every second day for a check-up. This is the last full-body scan, John reckons, since his ribs are pretty much healed now. It’s been almost eighteen days. Still taking iron supplements because the blood loss. He’s no longer on any heavy-duty pain meds, just simple oral ones to take the edge off.
“When can I get rid of the cast?”
“When I say so, Colonel,” Beckett orders, his voice a grave typical impression of his mood: ‘I’m the Medical Professional, You’re the Patient, Shut Up and Listen’.
John rolls his eyes, sitting up. He’s still sore, somewhat, but it’s not that bad. Not bad at all. The physical pain, that he can deal with. And he’s regaining some mobility, slowly, surely. Getting handy with the crutches. He hasn’t almost fallen on his face for days. But, god, he’s bored, and he’s done so much paperwork that for once he isn’t behind on any of it and even Bates has noticed that. He thinks Weir and the others may be getting agitated with his attitude. He asks (pesteringly) to join the Aurora on missions every second day, and each time, the answer is the same: not until he’s back on active duty. All he’s allowed to do is sit around and wait and watch.
AR-1 has been on seven missions in his absence. Thankfully, mostly without issue. There was a Wraith patrol one of them, a planet in the throes of winter, but they escaped unscathed. John has read the reports, again and again and again. And when he runs out of those he spends hours in Rodney’s lab. Correcting equations when the astrophysicist isn’t looking. (Rodney isn’t even pretending to be displeased and annoyed anymore.)
“Can I return to the gym, at least?”
“Well,” the doctor considers for a moment, “perhaps. How are your ribs feeling?”
“No pain at all.”
Beckett’s eyes twinkle. “Still a wee bit sore, then,” he translates.
“I never said that!” John crosses his arms. Seriously. Medics. They never believe him, always thinks he’s playing down and—okay, fine. He does that. A lot. Usually. But the thing about his ribs is true. And the scans can’t lie. The damage has healed. He’s fine.
His leg looks better. The scar tissue is still dark and raw and starkly visible, just half an inch from his old wound, which was similar but not as bad. Shrapnel hadn’t pierced as deep that time. Which is lucky, because if it had, he’d probably have bled out in Afghanistan, and that’d be the end of it all.
“All right, you can lift some weights and such in moderation. It’s good to keep your body in trim, after all, and it will help with the excess energy,” the Scot adds with a smile. And yeah, maybe John has been more irritable than usual over the past couple of weeks—for more than one reason. The pain, the dreams, the straight-up refusal from Weir and the rest to let him go on any kind of mission, even as audience aboard the Aurora—John is restless. There’s nothing as tedious and straining as being grounded by an injury. “As for your leg, it’s coming along nicely. No signs of swelling, which is lucky, considering there was some displacement. And you’re doing well on your physical therapy; just remember not to stress it. The pain being lessened doesn’t mean the bones are healed enough to bear your weight and I’m serious about this, John—the last thing I want is to have to perform corrective surgery.” John takes the stern warning look sent his way with grace, nodding and smiling. “You’ve only lost a bit of leg muscle mass, but I think you’ll bounce back in no time. But it will be several months before you regain your previous range of motion.”
Great. Now he’s never going to outrun Ronon on their morning runs around the South Pier. John’s missed them. The routine. Sometimes Teyla would join them; and Ford, once or twice, though the kid tends to stick around other marines for his workouts. The prospect of waiting for weeks even after he can walk again without crutches is rather bleak.
But, hey. Trying to be positive: he’s only got one broken leg, not two.
“Well, then; off you go.”
John slides off the bed, gathering his crutches.
“Thanks, doc.”
“And no strenuous activity, Colonel,” Carson adds when he reaches the threshold. “I mean it!”
Does this count as a strenuous activity?
He’s lying still on his back, after all, leg immobilized and taking care (trying to) not to jostle it. Mostly still. Toes curling—an involuntary reaction—and his breaths come in sharp gasps, hollowed out—he is the thing that’s being hollowed out, but this is the good kind of pain;
They’d started out careful and anxious, not knowing their own boundaries or where to draw the lines. Each touch had been frantic and soft all at once. Growing bolder now. They’re getting past the stage when kisses in the middle of things feel awkward, and instead each one of them is a wonder and John has a small difficulty breathing but it’s for good reasons. The kind of breathlessness he seeks.
The thing is, neither of them jumps at the chance of sex as soon as they can. Not that they can, but they don’t feel that urge every waking moment, and that’s that. He’s glad, they haven’t exactly talked about it; it works out anyway; a silent agreement. It all simply—the pattern fell into place, unbidden;
Over the weeks, John has come to realize a few things. One: he’s a huge sap. Not that he’s admitting it out loud.
He blames the lack of a lustrously romantic teenagehood. Like the one portrayed in the movies. Where’s the realism in that? John’s teenage years certainly were nothing like that. He had a single crush he could remember, and he wasn’t the best at social cues and stuff at fourteen or fifteen or however old he’d been. And Rodney’s teenage years probably weren’t like that either. Maybe that’s a poor excuse. Does he even need one?
He’s always been averse to touch. Like with trust, it’s a slow thing. Physical contact is—there’s a limit to what’s okay and when it reaches into categories of uncomfortable and weird, and often, often with most people, a shake of hand is the limit. John’s not sure if people actually notice that. The thought of hugs make him shudder. The team, as close as they are (other kinds of bonds, unbreakable and without doubt: they would all defend each other; John is ready to start wars to save them)—there’s respect. And of course there’s little things going on with the team—a pat on the arm; the Athosian forehead touch; standing shoulder to shoulder; that sort of thing, especially after missions gone wrong. But they’re not exactly cuddly with each other.
With Rodney, he craves it.
The second realization: he’s a cuddler when Rodney is in the same bed. A horribly horribly clingy cuddler. Almost ashamed.
Maybe it is codependency—the definition to be found in the dictionary; that would be a picture of them, hands intertwined and refusing to be separated even by galaxies. Settling into his bones and flesh and soul, searing a place there like a burn; Rodney belongs here with him in Atlantis; he belongs here with Rodney in Atlantis. He doesn’t shy away from his touches. He wants more.
Sensing the thought, fleetingly crossing his mind, Rodney huffs a laugh. Mouth warm upon his skin.
It could count as a strenuous activity, Rodney thinks in response. The hint of a smirk.
John has got his good leg bent at the knee, foot planted atop of the mattress, and Rodney’s cradled partly atop of him, on his side. Covers pulled aside in haste. Shoes and clothes tumbled onto the floor, carelessly, doors firmly locked. Rodney’s broad hand (burningly scaldingly comfortingly) traces his newest scar, slowly, gently. And there’s still a shadow of distress on his face every time he sees it and John wants to chase that shadow away, so far so far that it’ll never again be discovered.
His leg makes everything too difficult because he wants to be able to move and grasp Rodney and climb atop of him and ravish him. Has to settle for this—for now—for now. Not that it’s bad.
In the low light, a sliver of moon slipping through the windows, John reaches out and pulls him up for a kiss, to distract him, to get rid of that shadow. “Hey. Want to help me out of these?”
The thought of struggling to stand to undress almost breaks the mood, and Rodney suggests, pondering with the same certainty he would any obstacle: “We could cut them off.”
Oh, that’d be amusing trying to explain when it’s time to do the laundry—AR-1 has a reputation to work their way through clothes and gear faster than any other team, being hunted and chased and shot at continually, but a pair of cut-apart boxers? Yeah. That’d be an interesting conversation. John decides he’s desperate but not that desperate.
“Hips up.”
“Geez, you’re bossy,” John smiles, obeying, supporting himself with his elbows and his good leg, straining. Biting his lip. The expression on Rodney’s face is utterly captivating: pure concentration: just like he would look at a potentia or brightness of an exploding star, marveling—
“Don’t deny you like it. It’s my second best charm,” Rodney says without hesitation and tugs the boxers down, skimming over his thighs and calves and feet, and the air’s slightly chilly, goosebumps breaking out on John’s skin, and Rodney’s hand returns, a motion of certainty just as John speaks;
“And what’s the firs-a-aah.” Noise is shocked out of his throat. And he’d thought he was breathless before.
The astrophysicist’s smile widens, smugly.
Relentless—can’t fight the groan escaping and he doesn’t want to fight it either—John clutches the sheets, the muscles of his belly contracting and holding still, tense. “Oh. That’s cheating.”
“That to me sounds like a challenge.”
Rodney reaches out with his free hand without looking, fumbling for a moment until he collides with the bedside table and pulls out the top drawer. He nearly loses his balance, close to toppling over, but steadies himself quickly grabbing a shoulder and John returns the gesture, clinging to him. Unmistakable noise. Expertly at ease (impatiently heatedly needily) Rodney rips open the package and rolls on the condom, let me, here, and John physically aches as Rodney leans in for a wholly different kind of kiss and John can only breathe, tangling a hand in Rodney’s short hair, seeking something to hold onto an anchor steadily—it’ll never cease to take him away, how amazing the simplicity of it is—
A call from the City-wide comms: one of the technicians working on shift. The demand rings out through the quiet room, disrupting the air and they both abruptly still.
“Colonel Sheppard, report to the Control Room immediately.”
Of all things to ruin the mood. From a hundred down back to zero in two seconds flat. John bites back a whine of frustrated disappointment.
When he withdraws, Rodney’s cursing.
“… Their timing,” he grumbles, gratingly; followed by the whisper of an insult less than savory, and his voice tickles against his skin making John shiver. “It’s like they’re doing it on purpose! They should be reprimanded for that. Or fired. Definitely fired.” fired; let’s fire them into space on a poorly engineered rocket to a moon without atmosphere, more like—
Rodney wasn’t called for; he follows anyway. Curiosity takes over.
For once, John’s glad about the crutches. Makes a good excuse why it takes them so long to appear. They both have to splash some cold water in their faces and he’d have preferred an icy shower, to get rid of the sting, but the demand was urgent, and if there’s a disaster on its way … So they hadn’t, but John had been unable to look away from Rodney for more than three seconds at a time before being drawn back and Rodney is reacting in the same manner. Like two stars in a binary orbit. He’s not sure if his hands are completely steady, or, for that matter, his legs.
It’s very very difficult to walk through the corridors as if nothing’s going on, no, we weren’t interrupted or anything—he could thank every deity in the world that it’s night so there aren’t that many people on the move and they don’t bump into anybody except for a busy scientist clutching a datapad and they’d passed by without even looking up, headed for the Library probably. Which is just as well. John doesn’t feel well-composed at all. Every time Rodney’s arm brushes against his own, he’s back in bed and Rodney’s mouth hotly—
Okay. Let’s … not. Not now. Fucking damn it.
Right before the transporter carries them up and away, Rodney blurts, “We should fire everybody.” and the thought continues, an abstract image of the City quiet but for them and there’d be no need to hide;
John sends him a look. “Yeah, that’d make us popular.”
But he is relieved by this sudden insight that Rodney isn’t set on leaving anytime soon and wants him in the City for himself just as much as he and that’s something John can live with. More relieved than he can properly articulate.
“If this isn’t a life-or-death situation and instead a huge waste of our time,” Rodney declares, the transporter doors swishing open, “I’m calling in sick tomorrow.”
It’s not the Aurora making contact via a Gate, nor is it an offworld team returning early under fire, or an ally pleading help—the Genii have been speaking with them on the Alpha Site from time to time. A team of scientists (heavily guarded by marines armed with both P-90s and stunners) have been helping them with their nuclear weapons, in accordance with the Peace Treaty signed just a few weeks earlier.
It’s the SGC.
The databursts to Terra are regular like clockwork and usually words don’t need to be spoken in real-time. Mission reports, messages, and other files are sent in a compressed burst; it takes a couple of seconds, minimizing the impact on the power supply. Even though two potentiae are currently hooked into the City’s Core, they can’t be too careful. This time, however, Elizabeth is standing in front of a screen in the Control Room, and on the other side is General Hank Landry.
The man’s face is shadowed and carved into a deep-set frown. Displeasure, stress, or simply age, is hard to tell. There’s a certain sharp edge to his voice, and his Dæmon is a gray thing, severe in its quietness, with thin eyes and a crooked nose. John inclines his head in greeting, exchanges the customary words.
“What’s this about, General?” Elizabeth asks. To an outsider she’s perfectly polite, but John knows her well enough to recognize her tense shoulders.
“I know you prefer to be frank, Doctor, so I’ll cut to the chase,” the General says wryly. “You know Homeworld Security has been trying to wheedle out the major players of the Trust for some time now.”
“Yes, we are aware of the situation.”
“Some weeks ago, well before the situation with the Goa’uld on Atlantis arose, we planted an agent undercover. Only recently did his mission priority change, to find out more about the plot to destroy Atlantis, and just how many Goa’uld there are on Earth right now. A week ago, we lost contact. He missed his last two check-ins. There is no telling where he is now.”
“So he may have been compromised,” John says. Can’t think other than pessimistically. If the Trust figured it out; or if a Goa’uld got into the agent’s head, whoever he is—
“Possibly. However, we intercepted a coded message a almost three days ago which Colonel Carter managed to crack, and we realized that this is probably bigger than we first assumed.”
“If it didn’t have anything to do with us, you wouldn’t be telling us this,” Weir points out, arms crossed.
The General’s already pinched expression worsens. “The message wasn’t sent to us directly, but to one of the marines under Colonel Sheppard’s command, but we intercepted it. Lance Corporal Snow went missing over twenty-four hours ago.”
Snow. Part of AR-9. He and his team returned to Terra for a two-week leave six days ago along with many others. What’s he got to do with this? John had no idea the LC had any ties to an NID agent—probably NID; it’s the most logical explanation; he’s not sure if the FBI or whoever else know about the Stargate.
Weir has got to be thinking the same thing, showing on their faces because General Landry goes on: “Colonel, did you order LC Snow to partake in any kind of investigation of your own?”
John straightens his back. Oh, the IOA are going to have a field day with this: yet another reason to doubt him; sending one of his marines to do some dirty work beneath their noses. “No, sir. I had no idea Snow had ever known any agent, federal or otherwise.”
“Well, it has the feds in an uproar,” the General says grimly. “General O’Neill is communicating with the NID right now from the Pentagon, and no one has seen or heard a whisper from either Lieutenant Snow or the agent. The possibility of a leak is getting us all worried.”
“What about Snow’s team?”
“AR-9 are currently held in the Mountain under supervision.”
Under supervision. Meaning: they don’t trust them. They’re suspects, and conflicting emotions rise. Anger at this obvious distrust; and the knowledge that this is just how it is. They’re going to be questioned, no doubt, by the NID and the IOA, asked again and again. If Snow is somehow involved—then his team could be accomplices. Holder of secrets.
A team is like family. You don’t keep secrets from each other.
(One day he’ll come fully clean with his own.)
“I see,” John replies, carefully. Shares a look with Weir, and Rodney doesn’t have to: their Bond lets them know, and Rodney’s side ghosts against his arm, comfortingly. Standing so close that it doesn’t look unnatural or strange.
“And what is the IOA saying about this?” Elizabeth wonders.
“The IOA,” the General says, “oh, I’d prefer not to think about the IOA. But they are involved, of course. They can’t keep their noses out of anything. They are demanding the immediate questioning and detaining of AR-9, Snow himself once he’s found, and they want a word with you, Colonel.”
Oh, wonderful. But he can’t do anything but dutifully reply: “Yes, sir.” Doesn’t mean he has to be enthusiastic. “I’d prefer a word with my marines, if that can be arranged, sir.”
“We’ll see what can be done. The next databurst is scheduled in fourteen hours—Mr Woolsey is going to be speaking with you then. Be there. We’ll let you know if anything changes. Landry out.”
The screen fizzles into darkness, and the Gate shuts down.
Weir sighs. She’s apparently been kept out of the loop as much as anyone else around here: fed just enough information for the paperwork to be approved, but not enough, never enough to truly know anything. Now an agent and a marine are missing for unclear reasons, and they haven’t really been told anything. Whatever the coded message entailed, the General refrained from sharing.
Perhaps out of own volition; perhaps under orders from the IOA. The civilian bureaucrats may be as far as one can come from the Air Force or the Corps, but they still have that power. Since they clearly think Atlantis cannot be trusted—if one of his teams is involved in this shady affair …
The thought doesn’t sit well. Like politics, there are just so many gray areas, and there isn’t enough intel. John crosses his arms.
“This doesn’t make sense.”
Rodney’s frowning. “How do you mean?”
“There’s something they’re not telling us. Plus, what would Snow have to do with an NID agent?”
“If,” adds Rodney: “it is the NID.”
“If it’s not, who else?”
Elizabeth nods.
“But you’re right, John. Something doesn’t add up.”
A video link is created directly to the Conference Room, and John sits behind the table, Ford and Bates with him; this is something they need to know. A missing marine is all their business. Weir, too, is present, but not Rodney. Isn’t allowed to be here, and he’d grumbled about it, loudly, but nothing could sway the minds of the SGC or the IOA.
On the other side, there is a similar set-up: but the room is a concrete gray, without windows, and the three remaining members of AR-9 are lined up, side-by-side. Their expressions are coolly detached, but there’s a hint of concern, of pure worry for their teammate, and annoyance at being stuck in the Mountain. They haven’t been let out for hours, constantly under guard, and all their means of communication have been taken away. As the image clears, they straighten. A man in a suit—Mr Woolsey; John vaguely recognizes that balding head—is also present. The man adjusts his constricting formal tie, clearing his throat, as if unaware the camera’s rolling and John sees a his Dæmon is a gray thing, utterly unimaginative, with clear eyes.
“Ah. Dr Weir, Colonel Sheppard. I’m Richard Woolsey of the IOA.”
“A pleasure,” Elizabeth says without passion. “What’s the situation?”
“On point, I see. Well, we’ve determined the last location of the missing Lance Corporal … Mitchell Snow,” the bureaucrat consults his paperwork, a black neat folder resting in his hands. All of him is like that: completely organized. Nothing out of place. He also looks decisively uncomfortable, like he’d rather be elsewhere, sorting paperwork or doing whatever else the IOA normally does. This isn’t exactly a normal situation—oh, but with the SGC whenever is there? “Twenty-nine hours ago, Snow was sighted leaving Cheyenne Mountain, and this is backed up by several marines on patrol at the time. Outside of the gates he took a cab, possibly downtown. Then we lost him.”
That’s it? All of the expensive gear and clever people at the SGC’s disposal and all they got is that? “I want to know what the hell’s happened to our marine.” John barely manages to keep the growl out of his voice. He’s tired of games. If Snow is in trouble …
“That is understandable, Colonel.”
Mr Woolsey gestures to AR-9, and the team’s leader, Lieutenant Drew, is suitably pissed off.
She nods. “Sir,” Drew says, voice tight but controlled: “I don’t know where Snow is. We tried texting, but he wouldn’t answer anymore.”
“He could just have found someplace to crash for the night,” adds Lieutenant Gamble. “There’s no way Mitch was in any of this shit, sir. We’d know.”
A team doesn’t lie to each other. Not if they’re meant to work, and AR-9 are veterans, part of the First Wave. They experienced the Siege. They’ve seen and done things some people can’t ever dream of. And John wants to trust and believe in all of them, but right now he can’t trust anyone—that’s not right. That’s not right.
“So you don’t have any leads,” concludes John, frowning, facing Mr Woolsey.
“Not, not as such, no. The Prometheus isn’t back until tomorrow, and then we’ll scan the planet for Snow’s subcutaneous transmitter.”
“And the missing agent?” Bates asks.
Again, Mr Woolsey clears his throat. “That is strictly need-to-know, Sergeant, and—”
“Our marine is missing. We need to know,” John cuts in, and maybe it’s the tone of voice, or maybe just the way the Raven stares at the screen, right at the camera lens and John is aware of the effect that can have. Mr Woolsey shrinks back a little. Nods, stressedly, and clears his throat;
“Fair enough. The agent, codename Specter, hasn’t been in contact for nine days. Earth-time, that is. We intercepted a text sent from his phone, which we’ve tagged, to Lance Corporal Snow but we don’t know if Snow read the message or managed to understand it. We’ve also lost the trace of the phone. That was yesterday, on the thirteenth of February. The same day, Snow disappeared. His team tried to contact him but got no reply.”
“This right, Lieutenant?”
“Yes, sir,” Drew answers without hesitation or doubt. Ready to take charge, and ready to take responsibility for her teammate. “We were going to have a team night at a local place last night—some pizza and a pool-game—and Snow said he was under the weather. After that no one could get hold of him. I thought he was sleeping off whatever it was.”
Ford’s hands are knotted, weight resting on his elbows and he leans a little closer. “Couldn’t you track his phone or something like that?”
“We’ve tried,” Mr Woolsey says tiredly. “It appears to be turned off.”
Or disabled. Broken; destroyed; sabotaged. Either by mistake, or deliberately—by himself or someone else.
It must be deliberately. Snow wouldn’t drop off the map so conveniently after receiving a message he wasn’t meant to see from a person he isn’t meant to know; wouldn’t leave his team behind if it wasn’t serious. It gnaws at him: one of his marines isn’t entirely who he’s meant to be, and John knows all about secrets and their worth. But this secret is creating a bigger mess and the SGC and the IOA are all involved, and the NID, and where does that end? And what about the rest of AR-9?
They’re sitting there together. Not kept in separate cells to be interrogated, meaning the IOA might not suspect them anymore, at least not that deeply. Even if they aren’t letting them out of sight. They aren’t cuffed. At least that’s something.
Mr Woolsey clears his throat. Changes subjects abruptly. “I’ve just been informed that you found an Ancient communication device a few weeks ago.”
So the reports got to Earth and they figured they probably weren’t telling the whole truth. Rodney’s not a very good liar. But John cannot fault him. It was just a delay of the inevitable.
“We did,” John says, sharing a look with Weir. Thinks he can tell where this is going, and he won’t like it. Doesn’t like it.
“I’m also told that using this device should be safe.”
“Look, what is it the IOA wants?” he asks, tiredly. Arms crossed.
The representative shuts the folder in his hand with a snap. “The IOA wants you to use the stones to report directly to us, Colonel, seeing as you seem unable to leave the City.”
Of course. Should have seen that one coming. Weir interrupts: “We’ll need to discuss this. The stones have never been properly tested and I’m sure you’ve read the report, Mr Woolsey, concerning the only earlier time this technology has been used—by accident, no less.”
“Ah, yes. That was a … unique situation. However, we know you found the terminal meant to be used in conjunction with the stones, and we deem the advantages to be worth the risks.”
They’re just so eager for a word—or grilling—face-to-face. John resists the urge to roll his eyes and groan. Tries not to think of it too far, because of the implications: Rodney said the stones created a psychic link. Made you physically step into someone else’s shoes, and the implications of that …
After what happened with Icarus, not too long ago, he didn’t think the IOA would have the guts to suggest it.
After what happened with Icarus, John’s not sure he could do it. If anyone would volunteer to be on the other end. One thing is certain: he doesn’t want just anyone messing around in his head, in his body—
“As I said, this will have to be discussed,” Elizabeth says, sternly, won’t back down and John is so so so relieved. “I will not use authorize the use of any tech that hasn’t been further analyzed and safely tested.”
Using them would mean someone would need to be on Terra, be sent there, after touching a stone to ensure a connection—if something goes wrong …
And John doesn’t want to go. Suddenly glad that they don’t know what Icarus said, that leaving is painful oh so painful but possible; he’d probably survive it. Probably. But the IOA don’t know that. In fact, the only people who know that is himself and Rodney. Couldn’t keep that from him.
He’d thought he’d seen the last of Terra.
“There has been a development. They’ve found the body.”
“Have they discovered his identity?”
“We made certain it would take a while to work out, but I know about these agents. They’re good. They’ll make a connection, and once they do …”
“And he is on Earth?”
“Not yet.”
“Then it’s time to move forward.”
“Then it’s time to move forward.”
Chapter 10: wednesday
Summary:
the letter arrived fifteen days ago.
Notes:
(2018-04-03) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
x.
wednesday
the letter arrived fifteen days ago:
New York City, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 15, 2006, C.E. (Terran time)
A sprawling hectic city isn’t always the best place for every kind of Dæmon. Cities are busy places, with crowded streets, and the underground and the taxis can’t always fit you if your Dæmon is a lion or bigger than that, and sometimes people have had to adapt when the cities can’t. The stress, the noise, the flashing lights.
But he likes it here. He guesses that, after all, he is a man of the city even though he raised his family outside of it. It might have turned out differently if his youngest wasn’t a …
Well, the years have gone by, and there’s no use in dwelling on the past.
He looks at the timetable and then at his watch. Two minutes past. Right on time.
The rumbling rhythm of the carriage grinds to a halt. The doors open, and people stream through: the man and his Dæmon step off the ground and onto the train. The familiarity of it another part of the rhythm, and he’s carrying a smart brown portfolio in one hand, and a newspaper is folded up under his arm. Coat neatly pressed and tie chosen with perfect care. A symbol of a businessman: wealthy, successful, and yet relatively anonymous. His withered face and graying eyes evoke a sense of time gone by, opportunities barely caught up upon. His Dæmon is a large and proud thing with groomed fur and an air of genteel importance, and people unconsciously make way.
A pleasant voice—recorded previously, heavily edited to make new messages—announces: “Large Dæmons please use carriages two through three. Mind the gap. Mind the gap. Doors are closing.”
He finds his seat, the usual one if he can help it, by the window and this carriage is adapted for Dæmons of his size, so they can stretch without hindrance or fear of bumping into a stranger. Joins the other commuters who are of every kind and sort imaginable, and were he younger and his ears not as poorly they now are he might have contented himself with plugging in a pair of headphones. Instead he places the portfolio between his feet and unfolds today’s paper. Skims the headlines as the train begins to move and leaves the platform behind. The conductor checking his ticket is a redhead with a gentle smile and the perfect costumer attitude, and he returns the pleasantries dutifully.
So far has been a good day. The meeting went well and tomorrow, he hopes, the deal will go through. The CEO of Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics had seemed a shrewd man, if a bit young; but most people feel quite young nowadays. A smooth, convincing voice. Rather peculiar accent.
Yes, he feels, this has been a commonly slow but lucrative day. The coffee tasted good. No displeased worker or customer or business associate has called to curse his name and generation.
He isn’t nervous or worried. Or, perhaps: he is, in a certain, new way. Not the usual way because he’s worked this business for a long time, and he’s done his part, by far, to become the mogul his great grandfather wished to become when he first started the first shy shop. The corporation is thriving, and he knows how to deal with it. No, that isn’t it.
The letter arrived fifteen days ago. Fifteen days; and he cannot quite believe it. He spoke, long and well, with the Colonel and watched a tape and there was even a second letter, signed by the President himself and he hadn’t quite known how to react. To know all of this. This is a heavy secret, and it makes him suddenly look at his fellow citizens, the people at work at the company, on the street, in a whole new light.
The world is, suddenly, both vast and utterly tiny both at once.
This sensation is unlike one he’s had for a long, long time. Not since, perhaps, the result of that autumn trip to France, their first as newlyweds and their son had been but a small thing, clinging to shoulders (wept and slept, one after the other, constantly, the whole trip which took half an eternity for so small a child). He had looked at the blooming countryside, awed, overwhelmed by the surge of youth and they’d been so happy. It was before it all began. It was before they started drifting apart.
It was a slow process, the fading. The arguments were not wholly a surprise. But they had parted amicably—would have parted amicably—and he is proud of that, that they would have remained friends, continued to exchange cards. Moving on, contently. Like saying: this is enough, and we are both aware, and there was no need to part as enemies.
(He makes a point to visit the graveyard when it is due, making certain the flowers are fresh and lively. Valerie had so loved the yellow chrysanthemums.)
He yet hasn’t answered to that letter, because words escape him. Oh, he knows all the formalities, could whip something together in an afternoon—but the olive branch, offered; this action, he feels, must be returned with care. It’s been so long since they spoke, since he even saw his youngest son’s face.
And that is another truth to come to terms with, because, oh, he knows. He isn’t sure if his son knows—he is his son, despite it all—and he cannot even explain it, because he trusted Valerie fully and utterly and they loved each other, back then, and in the end, does it even matter? She never mentioned another; and at the time to bring up questions of paternity wasn’t a thought. They didn’t want to disrupt their happiness.
Then, then the child had been born, without a Dæmon and with a stranger’s eyes, and he had thought: it will pass. In an hour, a day, the child will turn out to be perfectly normal. (He had prayed. It changed nothing.)
The letter came as such a shock. He’d cancelled his afternoon and, once the Colonel had explained it all (barely scratched the surface) and left, he’d sat down in his favorite chair with Irene curled up by his feet. Sat down, and he’d nursed a glass of whiskey and read it through again. Looked closely at that attached photograph, a simple two-dimensional square of color and seen a face so strange and familiar all at once. On a whim, he had tucked it away. And he had called his eldest to tell him: Johnny is still alive.
So enraptured in his musings, the man doesn’t first notice how someone takes seat opposite to him. Giving up on the newspaper, because he cannot quite read the words—too distracted—he folds it up, meaning to put it away, and the stranger clears his throat: “Excuse me. Would you mind if I borrowed that?”
He looks up and smiles graciously. “Please. I’m finding myself a bit too distracted to read anyway.” Hands over the paper.
The other is a man, roughly of the same age he guesses: a stern face, with a tight haircut—buzz? is that the word?—and he’s wearing a black jacket. No formal dress, something rather more causal, yet contained. Heavy boots, and the man’s Dæmon is a gray wolf. Not an unusual Shape; plenty of people have that, though this one has a curious scar to its upper back, near where the spine meets the neck.
The man glances through the headlines, grimly displeased or perhaps, to be fair, that might be his default expression. Something makes him think that this man might be military, or the like. A veteran. The way he holds himself, and the scar of his Dæmon. Abruptly he seems to recall something, and offers a hand in greeting. Very firm handshake. The kind of thing he’s learned means either a reliable person or someone simply confident.
They don’t really exchange pleasantries, and the man admits he’s only passing by. Not from the City. Doesn’t look like a tourist, though. Doesn’t have any baggage with him, as far as he can see.
A gentle automatic voice announces the next stop and he glances at his watch. Right on time. Stands up and moves toward the doors and, after a moment, the man follows. “Thank you,” he says pleasantly and hands the paper back; but he shakes his head.
“Oh, please, keep it.”
The carriage stops moving. The doors begin to slide open. Five or six people are also waiting to get off: youngsters with backpacks, looking at their phones, those new fancy blueberries or whatever they’re called, or listening to MP3s or those iPod devices. Someone with a book. An elderly woman clutching her purse tightly and worriedly. This is all background noise, and he pays no heed to it, and moves outward with the rest of them. A foot touching the platform, and a sharp cold like steel enters somewhere below his ribcage, to his left side.
Irene is growling. This in itself is unusual, this sudden poise and it is what makes him first wonder what’s wrong. And then he begins to understand that the coldness spreading from his side isn’t quite coldness, and the warmth might be blood, and he raises a hand almost confused and someone is crying out in the background. He’s falling, and can’t recall just how he came to lie down there.
The old woman with the purse is shouting. Grabs the arm of one of the youngsters, one with those phones and it’s got this shell with a glimmering bundle of fake stones on it and why he notices that, he isn’t sure. The sunlight falling onto the platform is very bright, very clean and direct and he has to blink several times trying to clear his eyes, but his vision is blurring anyway, and it doesn’t make sense;
The old woman frantically shouts: “Call 911!”
Why would they need to do that? he wonders, drowsily.
Irene is so worried. Their Bond frantic and alight and he can’t quite understand it, at first. Why this fear is so sharp.
Presses a hand to his side. Hand comes back covered in something brightly red. Oh.
“… hang on a second!”
Albeit the shout cannot be heard, he says it anyway, one more time, and hastily cleans his hands with a kitchen towel. Throws it over his shoulder and strides to the phone mounted on the wall. His Dæmon leaps with him.
The food is prepared, the table set, candles lit, and Laura is due to arrive in ten minutes. Perfect.
He unlatches the phone from its cradle, clearing his throat. “Sheppard residence. Hello?”
The speaker is unfamiliar. “Mr David Sheppard? I’m Dr Green of the Bellevue Hospital Center, New York. You’re listed as an emergency contact of Mr Patrick Sheppard.”
He nearly drops the phone. That could only mean bad news and he’s already trying to sort through his mind, who this could be about, and—no, not Laura, she’s in her car ten minutes away and nowhere near—
“Yes?” he asks, carefully.
“Your father, Mr Patrick Sheppard, has been injured in an incident. I’ve just finished emergency surgery. Would you be able to make your way to the hospital anytime soon?”
“I …” Breath leaves his lungs. Incident? what kind of incident? surgery? Dave simply doesn’t understand. “I’m in Iowa right now. Is it serious? Is he all right?”
New York. Brooklyn. Yes, he’s been there for some business meetings with some other corporation representatives. Would be coming back on Friday if all went well. Dave remembers now. They spoke on the phone just fifteen days ago, and he’d mentioned it, in passing. Seemed pleased. Mostly that conversation had been focused on Johnny, and Dave had swallowed the words, just as shocked then as he is now;
Like Lazarus rising, no one had expected to hear from Johnny again. Dave hasn’t attempted to send a card for years and years and years —
“His condition is stable and no longer critical,” Dr Green says. “But I’m afraid this might change for the worse, given his age. Some officers are here and they could maybe answer more of your questions.”
Officers?
He could ask for details of what’s happened—is this an accident? a car on the road, veering off-side? broken bones? he doesn’t know—but he says, nodding, searching with a hand for something to write with—“I’ll find a plane to catch,” he says. “Do you have my mobile number? Could you contact me if anything changes?”
“It’s in the records. We’ll call if it’s necessary, Mr Sheppard,” the doctor promises.
Dinner will have to wait.
The flight is long and boring and the engines drone on and on and on, a loud unearthly noise. Normally, Dave would attempt to sleep through it. This time he can’t. Laura clutches his hand, a press of elbow against his own.
For a panicked moment, as he’d thrown some clothes into a bag, hurriedly packing, the thought had struck him: if he dies he’ll miss the wedding, and his dad had been so looking forward to finally seeing one of his sons happy—then the thought had drifted away, and Laura had driven them to the airport. Found last-minute tickets. He’d taken it from the emergency fund, the one they’d set up in case the car breaks down or something similar. He’d never though they’d end up on a flight to New York because his dad has been injured.
He managed, after an eternity, contact the police. Or they found him. One way or another. The guy at the other end sounded tired and distracted like this was his fiftieth case today and he’d not had enough coffee. Dave had, after a moment of finding himself shakingly uncertain, let Laura do the talking.
Stabbed. A hit-and-run mugging, they said, and one witness—an elderly woman, who’d called 911—said something about seeing a man wearing dark gloves rushing away but it was on a crowded platform. There ought to be security cameras, Dave thinks, but there is no reply to that question. And he wonders what the woman’s name was so he could forward a thank you.
Then, it’s well past nightfall, and they’re leaving the hotel (cheap beds; shower, no tub) behind, a cab rushing them to the hospital even at this ungodly hour and Laura tips the driver generously. Then they’re being led through the sterile white corridors, full of nurses and doctors in a hurry and patients waiting in line, and there’s a somewhat private room without a view. He’s come out of surgery, and he lies on the sheets pale and unmoving and hooked up to machinery, and it’s all wrong, and it’s been several hours now and Dave cannot for his life make any sense of this. The doctor tells him and Laura about the chances of survival, before leaving to check on his other patients.
It’s crowded and loud and silent all at once.
They break their vigil to get something to eat in at the hospital cafeteria. The food is bland. Dave stirs his coffee (one cube of sugar, no milk) but almost forgets to drink it.
At the eleventh hour, there’s a visitor. No, two. They’re clad in dress blues.
“Mr David Sheppard?” one of them says; she’s blonde, carrying herself tall and proud and with a firm professional smile on her face. The white man next to her is also generically pleasant-looking and his shoulders are broad, and Dave is no expert on the languages of the military, but both of them bear quite a lot of medals on their chests. Their Dæmons are fierce, what one would expect from military types, quiet and calculating, though the man’s appears to be unsettled, pacing, perhaps impatient. The woman’s is very still, efficiently so, all well-preserved energy. The second thought strikes him: they’re military, not cops. What are they doing here? asking his name?
“Yeah? That’s me.” He stands up, offers a hand. “Can I help you?”
“My name is Colonel Samantha Carter, and this is Colonel Cameron Mitchell. We’re with the U.S. Air Force.” The woman shakes his hand first, then the man. Empty pleasantries.
And suddenly he thinks of the letter his father had talked about in that phonecall—
“Is this about my brother?”
The two exchange a silent look. Difficult to say if they’d anticipated the question.
“Not quite,” says Colonel Mitchell eventually. Turns to Laura. “I’m sorry, who might you be?”
She extends a hand to shake. “Laura Shannon. I’m Dave’s fiancée. What’s this about?”
Colonel Carter lowers her voice, speaking with the other Colonel for a moment—“The General didn’t mention other family.”—“Family is family, Sam.”—and Dave cuts in, declaring without hesitance: “Whatever you have to say to me, you can tell Laura as well.”
“All right, Mr Sheppard.” The door is closed, and the windows covered up, and now Dave starts getting really nervous. “We believe this was a deliberate attempt at your father’s life, and, if we’re right, it has to do with a letter he received from your brother fifteen days ago.”
“He … he mentioned that. But he said John’s location is classified,” Dave says, uncertainly. Doesn’t like it. What was in that letter? His father refused to let him see, to send him a copy. Said … he’d said a Colonel Carter of the United States Air Force delivered it, and made him sign an agreement of silence just to know the contents. This Colonel Samantha Carter? It must be. It can’t be a coincidence. It must be.
What the hell was in that letter, so strange and important that their father ended up attacked for it?
“It is. It’s got to do with just that. Your father knows things, and we think someone might target you as well.”
Laura grasps his hand. “Just who—?”
“That’s classified. But if you both would be willing to sign some nondisclosure agreements, we’ll tell you everything,” Colonel Carter says, kindly, as if understanding what an otherworldly situation this is, or maybe just good with people. “And move your father to safer location as well.”
And Dave can hardly breathe because what? what is this? what the hell is this?
A few hours ago, he was at home, preparing soufflés and they were going to have a nice night together. Now his dad is in a hospital bed, and these two—Air Force—they’re saying this has something to do with his brother, it’s classified, it’s dangerous—someone’s tried to murder his father. His blood grows cold with fear. Someone tried to murder him. What if it happens again? Another attempt? What if Laura or he are next on a list?
Laura is already nodding. “Okay. Okay. Who are you guys really?”
Colonel Mitchell hands over a stack of papers. There is a line at the bottom to be filled in with names.
Dave glances up at them, eyes narrowing. “If we sign this, is there a possibility I could speak with my brother?”
“That can be arranged, yes.”
And Dave signs the line and isn’t sure if he will begin by yelling at his brother, or simply envelope him in a hug like when they were kids, those rare times before they fought and taunted each other. They are, after all, brothers. Dave’s not sure if Johnny has forgiven him for all that he made him endure, taunting him as a kid, that odd one out, the Strangeling (and no one knows about that, his father has made them swear on it: this is a thing that Cannot Be Known). He’s not that child anymore, relentless and selfishly mean.
Once the paperwork is handed back, Colonel Carter fishes up a phone from her pocket. Dials a number which cannot be seen from this angle, and she doesn’t say hello.
Instead: “Jack, it’s Sam. They’ve signed it.” Whoever this Jack is, whatever he says, the reply can’t be heard. Carter is nodding. “We’ll arrange it. Oh, and they want to talk with Colonel Sheppard, so … Yes, yes, that’d be ideal. … Tell Lionel to stand by. … Will do, sir. Thanks. Bye.”
The call is disconnected. Mitchell looks faintly amused. “All well in the White House?”
The White House? The …? No, no, this can’t be real. Dave is ready to pass out at this point. Nothing of this makes sense. Not here, not now. Not on any place on God’s sweet green Earth will this ever make sense—just who are these people? what is this?
“Yeah. They’re waiting for our signal. Now, Mr Sheppard, Ms Shannon, this is going to sound completely ridiculous,” Carter says with an entirely straight face, turning back to them. “We’re part of something called the Stargate Program, which uses an alien device to travel between planets.”
“There are also spaceships,” adds Colonel Mitchell, helpfully.
“What the hell?” Dave blurts before he can stop the thought.
Laura glares at them, furious. “We didn’t fly for three hours to listen to a bad joke.”
“I’m afraid this isn’t one, Ms Shannon,” Carter says, apologetically. Sounds genuine and not at all amused, and she glares at her colleague slightly tiredly.
Then she directs them to stand up, some way from the bed where his father lies unconscious and wrapped in white. Colonel Mitchell stays back. Asks them to stay calm and still, and promises to arrange things for his father. Then Carter picks up not her phone but what looks like a radio; an earpiece of some kind. Places it in the curve of her ear, presses a button. And she says: “Prometheus, we’re ready.”
And a set of strange things—are those large metal rings?—sweep into existence around them from above and they are taken by a sheen of brilliant light;
Chapter 11: soul
Summary:
they make a deal.
Notes:
(2016-11-15) (yeah, I’m evil. sorry)
(2018-04-15) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
xi.
soul
they make a deal.
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 15, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 141 days after the Uprising
He can do this. He can do this; (exhaling, inhaling)
Rodney has said, several times, that switching it off is easy. Just remove the stones from the device—without direct contact of skin—and the connection should be instantaneously cut. Should. The key word here which makes this all the more frightening. But if this could work, then they have another means of communication to go to Terra—not that he feels the pressing need like absolution but with these, he could do that.
He has to. There are orders. They’re expecting him on the other side.
There’s only one person he trusts enough.
Rodney, too, doesn’t look entirely comfortable. One of the reasons why they chose to do this privately, just the two of them. Weir has given her go-ahead to test this, once Rodney explained he’s confident how the stones work, that it’s safe. It’ll be safe, and if this test is successful, others could make use of the stones too. Use of the Gate requires power and power isn’t limitless. The two potentiae will, slowly and surely, drain away and they haven’t figured out yet how to make new. Rodney’s working on it, though. Working on a lot of things. This way, if they lose the Gate, they could still be in contact with Terra, without the need to send the Daedalus to and fro: this communication would be instantaneous.
There’s still the sharp issue of using someone else’s body to do it. To normal people, he reckons, the very idea would be utterly alien but out here, the possibility is all too real and John has had nightmares like these and what if something goes wrong? what if they’re stuck?
But Rodney says it’s safe, and he wants to trust him.
John needs to trust him.
“On three,” Rodney suggests, and John nods. The device is online, the spiraled crystal at the center glowing blue and Rodney is already holding onto a stone, so that it’ll imprint on him; John holds the other. Then, without speaking aloud, a common command, John inhales exhales one more time and closes his eyes and places the stone in the device.
He can’t feel anything. There’s no pain, no—not even a vague sense of vertigo. Simply …
Opening his eyes. The room’s all wrong. Wrong height, the sense of smell—different. And the light, it’s the same, it falls the same and yet not and his body feels—different. Height and weight and it’s all different. He blinks, draws a sharp breath. He’s sitting in front of himself.
In front of his body. Makes him want to squirm, makes him want to get out get out and some of that distress must show on his face, across the Bond because the man now wearing his flesh frowns and abruptly withdraws from the stone, using a clean cloth set aside for this purpose to lift it away from the terminal, and John is back.
Immediately and without thought; he can breathe again.
Rodney looks concerned. “You okay?”
“Yeah,” John says, after a moment, nodding. Looks down at his hands. They’re his own once more. “Let’s—let’s try again.”
A test of a few seconds won’t do. They’d agreed on half an hour. Then an hour, at least, before someone else should try, or before anyone is sent to Terra with a stone to try it at a distance. Perhaps another planet in Pegasus, first. To make sure.
“Only if you’re sure. We could do it some other time,” Rodney says, as if time is not an issue. Stone still in his grasp, hidden under white cloth so innocently.
But John is sure. He wants to be able to do this. He wants to be able to—to gain that confidence in his own control again. Stop fearing it. Face it head-on. That’s worked out before, so why not now?
If this works, it could stop the nightmares.
“Rodney, I’m sure.”
And they try: again, placing the stones back in the device and John’s whole body is tense, waiting for it, waiting;
He looks down at his hands, and the callouses are new, not utterly foreign because he’s held these hands and kissed them gently, he knows them, but they’re not his. Breathing is different, a little heavier, and each muscle each nerve each inch of skin he feels it, feels it as if reborn. Looking up, there’s his own face, smiling wryly and then his own voice, remarking: “Thank god you’re on painkillers. You are, right?” His own hand, lightly touching the top of the cast. Then his own throat being cleared: “Oh, this is weird.”
“You’re telling me,” John says, with Rodney’s voice, and glances sideways at the wall and the full-length mirror mounted there. From the outside it doesn’t look that out of place: the Ancient device, humming quietly,
Interesting, the hum is … quieter. Much more subtle. And the City—he can’t hear Her like he usually can; this song is duller—
he can’t hear—
he can’t
“Sheppard? You’re spacing out—oh, that’s strange. Talking with someone else’s voice. Hey, John?”
Realizing, dimly, his breathing’s picked up and vision grown dimmed and blurry, he blinks a couple of times, tries to find foothold. Pressure: intense, and somewhere atop of his chest like pulling Gs and not at all, not at all like it—and where’s this physical pain coming from? And Rodney reaches out and grasps his hand, disconcerted. Repeats his name. And John clings to the sensation the pressure on the hand that isn’t his own and the voice, it sounds alien, no resonating deeply through bone but through air; his own voice, differently, it’s all different and too silent—Rodney’s body doesn’t have the DNA of his own, and it makes sense, makes sense that he can’t hear Her or sense Ancient tech like usual, but that logic is no comfort—
On repeat: repeating again: his voice / wrong wrong wrong / repeating his name and someone’s saying You’re right here, breathe, breathe with me, in, out, in, that’s it, that’s it, can you hear me?, breathe;
Eventually, his gaze clears, and his pulse isn’t racing, albeit still elevated in fervor, and he looks at Rodney and tries to say something to apologize for messing this up because he’d thought he could handle this but he can’t find the words, the ability to speak.
Breathing deeply. A second passes, and Rodney is frowning at him, Not His Face and Not His Voice. “Should I call for Carson?”
Breathing deeply. “No,” John says, hoarsely. What just happened…? He hasn’t—before—(for years and years and years, crawling in the dust, didn’t know about Stargates back then, didn’t have a Dæmon, he was alone and there’d been low haunting points when he’d curled up in the shower helplessly lost but he’d managed to pull himself back up back up back up).
Rodney—his eyes should be blue, not such a terrifying glimmer of green—is looking at him, expression careful, slack with worry, something hard around the edges and Meredith is closer now, almost touching, and something through their Bond trembles with anger/concern/should we stop?.
“I think you just had a panic attack. Look, that’s an argument not to use the stones, a big definite con,” Rodney says, insistently. “We should call Weir and tell her that it won’t work. The IOA can’t have us use the stones if this is what happen—”
Breathing deeply. John shakes his head. Doesn’t want to give up. Because he’s stubborn and not a quitter. Even if it might be a bad idea. You stubborn sonofabitch, Lyle Holland had told him before he’d died (trying to convince him to flee to go home but there was no home), and, yeah, he is. Fuck yeah he is.
“Just … just give me a minute.”
Once he isn’t shaking uncontrollably, he realizes something else. Their Bond, as well as his Dæmon Bond, is perfectly intact. And Shy is utterly confused, because before the switch they’d been perched atop the back of a chair—a normal place—while Meredith had been resting on the mattress, next to Rodney. Now, suddenly, now they’re in each other’s place and Rodney notes this with a thrill of excitement.
“That makes sense. A Dæmon is a metaphysical manifestation of energy, and granted I’m not a medic so I don’t know all the mumbo-jumbo, but—oh, of course. That’s why it works. The Dæmon ensures a stable link of communication,” Rodney’s nodding to himself, and god is that strange to look at: his own face, his own hands his own voice all of that movement that is so Rodney and now it’s him—gives him a headache to think about—John can’t tear his gaze away. Rodney continues to explain: “That’s how you remain you, and I remain myself, while we’re in each other’s place.”
How the Ancients ever figured out the science behind this is way over John’s head. He simply accepts this, for now. Tries to learn how this body works. There are all these little things which he’s only felt from the outside before. Notices the slight twinging ache in the left knee, and shifts; they’ve been sitting like this for a while, chairs facing each other, John’s injured leg propped up on a cushioned pallet—at the other side: now Rodney has to deal with the slowly healing injuries, the leg heavily cast and unable to move.
Wonder how he’s feeling?
Someone else in his flesh;
“John?” The frown returned. He might’ve stopped breathing. The hand gripping his own tightens, and the tremble is back.
I can do this, John tries to tell himself, like an order shouted by a drill instructor, an angry Sergeant with a stern unmistakable face. He has to be able to do this. If his presence on Terra can help unveil the truth, he’s got to be there; a marine is missing, a team splintered and John can’t just let that be. Not if he can help it. Inhaling, inhaling, he forces his hand to still. Tries to.
They’re all in the wrong place. But the Bond is intact. And he can sense Rodney, too, a distant thing but the City is utterly quiet and he notices something else. Rodney, with borrowed hands, scratches at his forehead as if struck by a headache. Noise. Can he sense Her now? or just the echo? It’s in his body’s DNA and now Rodney is in that body—
Rodney looks at him. “Is that—is that what you hear all the time?”
Can’t hear it now. John nods. “Yeah.”
“Wow. It’s,”—Rodney struggles to find the words—“… beautiful,” he settles on, eventually, hesitating. “But I can’t really make sense of it.”
“But you can hear Her now?”
“Sort of, I think. It’s reminiscent of a Bond, to be sure, but—well, I can’t make sense of it. Like a foreign language. It’s not really Ancient or English, but something in-between? Or, sort of. I’m guessing that your genetics make you perceptible to it, but you’re not in here, anymore,” Rodney taps the side of his head. “So to speak.”
It works. But John isn’t sure if he can live much longer with this silence. He’s only got bad memories associated with silence.
Checks the time. Eight minutes. Got to last at least thirty, preferably an hour if this is to be of any use. Best if they could do this once, get it over with, and not have to switch back and forth.
“How did the Ancients even come up with this stuff?”
“The idea is very effective,” Rodney remarks. “I mean, instantaneous communication over vast differences—if this works like the database indicates, it should handle the vast spacetime between galaxies without issue.”
(should; should; should)
“Yeah, but—well, why? The Ancients stuck around pretty much only one galaxy at a time,” John points out—looks down at Not His Own hands briefly, and it’s like sensation is slowly creeping back and replacing itself. Getting familiar. He has touched these hands before, held them; “They had subspace comms and the Gates; why would they need the stones?”
Contacting the Ori—that was the point of the outpost on Deserum. The hidden goal. A way to win the War against the Wraith. John wishes they had taken the stones with them or had them destroyed, instead of just dumping them there, to be stumbled upon in the future; though they must’ve brought a number of stones with them to Terra too, given that General O’Neill once ended up accidentally linked a random civilian. What did the report say—didn’t the guy find it in a junkyard sale? How the heck did it even get there in the first place? Unbelievable. The Ancients must’ve left it on Terra, by accident, and an archeologist must have dug it up thousands of years later, and it was handed on and discarded and sold as a cheap souvenir.
“Requires less power—probably the main reason. Not to mention it seems efficient and, as far as we’ve determined, can’t be hacked into.”
He makes a humming noise, nods. Not his voice.
Ten minutes. Almost halfway there.
“Chess?”
John blinks. Involuntary reflex: to control this face is unnatural and difficult. “What, now?”
“Well, what else are we going to do, stare at each other for thirty minutes?” Rodney rolls his eyes. Camera’s rolling, he adds, silently across their Bond.
They’re filming the results, a measure so that, if anything goes wrong, they have something to analyze and evidence to show the IOA and the folks back on Terra. A good idea made by Weir and Carson, but also incredibly impeding. Being watched. They have to watch their tongues, their hands.
Got to remember to edit that. Later. Because John seriously doesn’t want anyone to be privy to what happened earlier when he couldn’t breathe and—No. Even if Carson might be pissed off when, if, he finds out. But he doesn’t want anyone to see. Ashamed. (Hadn’t Heightmeyer said something about that, about seeking comfort and help with others? Release himself from hiding. Yeah. She’ll be pissed too, or disappointed, and another kind of shame threatens to rise in his throat, like bile, like sickness itself.)
It’s up to John to fetch the board, resting on the desk. And it’s surreal, so surreal to stand up without crutches. Unsteady. Everything at the wrong height, and the difference between isn’t even that big. A couple of inches. Yet he feels it, the center of gravity changed and the floor beneath these boots doesn’t give and each breath is an effort, alien muscles alien bones alien blood rushing past his ears. Each step staggering, unnatural. Slow.
They set up the board between them, on the table next to the terminal. It glows: an imposing shadow. Unforgiving.
Seventeen minutes.
Rodney (John’s hands: wrong hands: this will never be normal) makes the first move, a pawn. And John can’t focus on the game, only feel the offset of nerves at the wrong place wrong place and makes a precarious leap with a knight. In five moves, Rodney has taken that knight and his king’s cornered, and Rodney (John’s face: his mouth) smirks smugly.
He loses the game spectacularly. Next time, next time he’ll extract his revenge.
For now he can only focus on breathing.
(wrong set of lungs: the air tastes differently with this tongue)
“Right. That’s half an hour. Shall we?” Rodney gestures at the terminal.
The disconnection is immediate and without a sound. Winded, John steps back. This heartbeat is much more familiar and yet he feels uncertain, and Rodney’s step wobbles too. Suddenly relieved: he’s not the only one finding this experience far too Out There for comfort.
A radio call. Weir is in her office, at work, and though her voice echoes that she’s pleased that the test worked without issue—John doesn’t mention his Almost Freaking Out—there is a trace of something else, recognizable and they all feel the same: if this works out safely, then the IOA will be happy. And people could start using the stones regularly. Contact with Terra made easier. And the IOA and the SGC and the brass can begin to make harder swifter demands and John seriously doesn’t want any more to do with Terra than necessary: the supply lines are important, the Daedalus’ missions, the letters from loved ones because far from everyone is letting go. They have people back there they care about. But John is selfish about this. He wants to cut the ties and be free, free from those rules and the overhanging shadows and doubts. Wants Atlantis to become truly independent.
Not that that’s going to happen anytime soon.
The next step, after some rest, is a two hour-attempt. Then, twelve. And finally twenty-four and if there’s no glitch, if there’s no danger, then they may consider sending someone to Terra—and Rodney has said he could go. The Daedalus will bring him back, or a potentia. Either way, it’d work out, and John could go there, speak with the IOA and partake in what’s become an investigation into Lance Corporal Snow’s disappearance, while Rodney continues his scientific work in the City.
They turn off the camera.
John’s leg aches.
“Before handing that tape out to the public,” he says, “remove that bit—when I—would you?”
“Of course,” Rodney says, popping open the camera to grab the memory card. “Now: break. Coffee? Let’s see if they’ve still got any muffins left.”
“Sure,” John says, grabbing the crutches, hauling himself up. Refuses the helping hand which Rodney seems ready to offer.
And in strikes him, suddenly, how unnerving Rodney finds it—still; yet—to see him like this, injured, for real. Because, while he’s been wounded in the line of duty plenty of times before, in Atlantis it hasn’t been this severe. Discounting the Iratus bug which nearly sucked his soul dry (John prefers not to think about it), but he’d healed swiftly and, though he’ll bear the scar for the rest of his life, he’d been back on his feet quickly enough. On active duty within a couple of weeks. And life had gone on. Life had gone on. Rodney hasn’t before experienced him like this: completely grounded.
(So many scars he still hasn’t explained. He’d said, first time they’d properly touched, when Rodney came back from Earth—the astrophysicist had touched them all and wondered, and John had said he’ll tell the tales one day.)
Their flesh and minds displaced for one thousand and eight hundred seconds—Rodney had felt the lingering pain and the weakened muscles, his heartbeat, elevated, breaths tasting wrong—was that how he felt too? wrong wrong wrong;
This time of day, nearing sunset, the mess hall is appropriately empty. After dinner. A team is sitting in a corner, having returned a couple of hours ago from their mission, and there’s a civilian sitting near one of the large windows reading a book and lazily picking some grapes off their plate, but otherwise it’s quiet. Rodney fills that silence immediately. Wormhole theories. Mathematical nonsense. John nods when appropriate (he hopes), can’t quite focus. The coffee (real Terran stuff) is heavenly hot, and John has just recently been allowed to return to his habits of drinking it. Messed up with the heavier pain meds, but he’s off those now.
Of course, they can never have a moment uninterrupted; and John can’t even be surprised, just indignantly annoyed as Peter Grodin’s familiar voice calls over the City’s intercom speakers. Demanding attention. He sighs, exchanges an exasperated look with Rodney.
“Colonel Sheppard, report to the Gate Room immediately.”
(At least this time they weren’t in the bedroom. Small mercies.)
Mentally checking the timetable: no team is meant to dial in for another six or so hours. Could be an emergency, and part of him wishes it is that: a team coming in hot, enemy fire on their heels. Unruly locals. Not Terra, he would’ve prayed if he had time: anything but Terra.
Elizabeth meets him by the stairs to the Control Room and she says, voice tight: “John, General Landry is ordering you use the stones now to go to Earth. It can’t wait.”
He can see it in the lines of her face; something’s wrong.
Something’s happened.
No; no, not now (not again)—
Still alive, are the next words. Patrick Sheppard isn’t dead, but his heart was close to failing for a second, and his liver is damaged, and he’s still not out of harm’s way. The call comes from General Landry. It’s difficult to read the man’s expression. John can’t quite hear what’s being said, at first. It’s just so surreal.
(a wish not coming true)
It’s not as simple as flicking a switch and walking through the Gate. First, a radio connection is established and General Landry is already waiting on the other side, impatiently. At least they can tell him some good news: AR-9 is no longer under suspicion, alibis confirmed and whatever’s happened to Snow, they can’t be involved. Could have told them that, but nobody would listen.
Elizabeth’s words yet ring heavily in his ears.
Six Terran hours ago, Patrick Sheppard was almost killed. Out in the open, under the sun, in front of witnesses but the person responsible escaped (no clear description: hooded face: gloved hands: disappeared into the crowd). Clearly not an accident. Colonels Carter and Mitchell have gone to New York, ringed there by the Prometheus now in orbit around Terra and they spoke with the NYPD. A stabbing like that is intentional.
And there’s a brief debate and John has made it clear he won’t just switch with anybody—in light of what happened with Icarus; after the Goa’uld in Caldwell’s head. But, oh, oh god he doesn’t want Rodney to leave the City again so soon not again—
The Daedalus could take one of the City’s two remaining potentiae. Bring it through the Gate now and the ship would make the trip from Terra back to New Lantea in under a week. Yeah, that could work. And with Rodney on Terra, he could make sure the IOA or the SGC or whoever don’t claim the potentia for themselves; they need it back in the City, in case of the Wraith. They all know it. The Generals know it.
They make a deal.
Rodney is given two hours to pack. Once he’s on the other side, they’ll switch: and John will be able to walk around on Terra for the first time in over a year, and Rodney can continue his research in the City; it’ll work out. It’ll work out.
The mystery of Lance Corporal Snow’s disappearance and the missing NID Agent—but what does his Father have to do with this? Patrick Sheppard doesn’t have anything to do with the SGC. Except, of course, except he’s the man who raised him and gave him his name. Dave has been taken into protective custody, as far as John’s grasped it. Been read in on it. Being read in on it right now by Colonel Carter and Colonel Mitchell. It doesn’t make sense. Snow and the Agent and now this attack; none of it seems related; none of it makes sense. There are pieces missing.
“You sure about this?” John asks, again.
“We don’t have time to second guess ourselves,” Rodney says, face dark and serious. “Yeah, John. I’m sure.”
I’m not, John almost answers. Doesn’t need to. Rodney pauses momentarily to reach out and squeeze his hand, before returning to propping his duffel bag full. Not that there’s much. Since he’ll, technically speaking, remain in the City, he doesn’t need to bring his laptops full of research. Just some clothes and a toothbrush. Takes one computer though. Just in case.
Then he slings it over his shoulder, and they walk out of Rodney’s quarters side-by-side. The doors slide shut. Finally, exhaling, Rodney taps his earpiece. “McKay to Weir. We’re ready.”
“Understood,” John hears the reply. “Stargate Command is ready to receive you. I’ll tell Chuck to start dialling.”
He realizes he’s shivering. Cold. Shit.
Only a little while, he tries to tell himself. The Daedalus will be on Terra in twenty days. Then it’s another week. Then—Rodney will be back. But so soon, so fucking soon, far too soon. They’d made plans—
“Don’t eat any lemons,” Rodney says as they enter the transporter. “Or anything else I’m deathly allergic to.”
“Of course I won’t. Don’t try running around the piers.”
“Of course I won’t!” he huffs, affronted. “You have a broken leg, if you’d forgotten.”
John musters a smile, bright light carrying them upward. “There you go.”
“Also, I packed several epi-pens.”
The doors swish open, and they walk toward the Gate Room. This time, the Raven doesn’t fly ahead, but keeps the same pace. Meredith walks close enough for John to feel the brush of a tail against his good ankle. The rest of the team is waiting for them there to see Rodney off, and they both knew it and yet, as they enter the room, Rodney looks somewhat surprised. As if he hadn’t quite believed that they’d be there. The realization is painfully sharp, both on his face and across their Bond.
Teyla insists on wishing good luck the Athosian way, forehead to forehead. Ford shakes his hand. Even Ronon doesn’t look that gruff, slapping his hand on the Canadian’s shoulder and Rodney very badly tries not to wince, but grumbles all the same. The three of them smile, gently.
John wants to kiss him. He offers his hand instead.
The Gate is turning.
“I mean it. No citrus!”
He manages to smile. Too weakly. Doesn’t want to. Like wearing a shield. Says: “Rodney.” Letting the infliction convey all the little meanings hidden in those two simple syllables.
“Yes, well.” Clearing his throat, and Rodney’s gaze flutters from John’s face to his hands and back up again. “Can’t be too careful.”
I trust you, Rodney’s thinking clearly so that it can be shared, and something in John’s ribcage swells and contracts painfully all at once. And once we’re back, we’re going to New Athos.
The event horizon stabilizes, and, with a final look over his shoulder, John’s hand yet echoingly warm, Rodney walks through the wormhole.
Chapter 12: in the flesh, part one
Summary:
the worth of a name.
Notes:
(2018-04-04) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
xii.
in the flesh
part one
the worth of a name;
NCIS Headquarters, Washington D.C., U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 16, 2006, C.E. (Terran time)
It’s raining. The sky remains cloudy and gloomy, and the wind rattles, unforgiving, against the windows.
It’s just another morning in the office, hectic and boring and there’s a lot of movement. Their fronting team is working on a new case, a brutal murder and Cynthia Summer doesn’t know all the details—she’s not involved in that, as the Director’s PA. There are bigger things on her mind. The sorting of the week’s duties, and meetings to schedule, and calls to make.
The Director herself is in a meeting in SatCom and will remain there for at least another two and a half hours. The vague details she heard beforehand didn’t sound good. A political mess which the Director is part of, trying to hedge another conflict; the usual.
It’s a bit chilly, a draft escaping from somewhere, and Summer would’ve called the janitors to do something about that if she weren’t so busy. She hasn’t touched her coffee yet. She doesn’t like to bring food or drink to the desk; too messy and disturbing. Her Dæmon (feline; small; a speck of white against the dark smooth carpet) rests under the desk, breathing for the both of them, tail flickering slightly impatiently but right now no one is here to witness them and complain.
It’s been a hectic week. Three ongoing homicide cases—the last one (double murder; quite nasty) was solved just three days ago. And there’s more to NCIS than solving such crimes. There’s counter-intelligence and surveillance for domestic terrorism and other such work, which isn’t nearly as shocking to her (she’s been in the business long enough) even if it can be just as darkly disturbing as murder. Summer knows. Is used to it. She’s worked for various departments in this and other agencies before landing this (quite sought-after) spot. Doesn’t pay as well as it could have, but that’s usually the case.
At 09:23, the phone rings. Summer can’t recognize the number straightaway, but not just anyone would be calling a number within HQ, and she picks up the phone, bearing the usual graceful smile, polite and warm and far too used to dealing with various stressed, unpleasant, impolite people who think that she’s just an assistant who picks up the trash after her boss.
“NCIS, Director Sheppard’s office,” the secretary answers, her voice pleasantly smooth. Shakes her head, even though the person on the other side can’t see her. “Yes, this is the number, Mrs …? Ms Mayfield. I see. … No, the Director is in a meeting right now and she—No, not for another two hours. Can I take a message? … Hello?”
In response: only the telltale shuffle of someone hanging up. With a small sigh, she places the phone in its cradle. Then she notes the time and number, for the record. Likes to be neat like that. The Director hadn’t said she was waiting for someone to call, but maybe it’d slipped her mind. She’s busy, running this place, and she’s only had the job for a few months. It’s tough. Summer can appreciate that, especially as a fellow woman in a workplace dominated by men. Even if she’s a secretary and not a Special Agent running on the front and finding bodies in disturbing degrees of decay.
The day continues to move forward. It’s not until past noon that the Director returns to her office after a long, tiresome chat with SecNav, and Summer makes sure her favorite blend (a teaspoon of milk, no sugar) is waiting on her desk.
The Director smiles in greeting as she crosses the threshold (only sign of stress is her Dæmon, walking in step with her: the Savannah Cat’s ears downturned and eyes darkened and posture tense). Summer forwards the latest notes, and the morning’s call is mentioned only hastily, passing by.
“From who? I wasn’t expecting anyone at the time,” the Director says. “Did they leave a message?”
“No, ma’am,” Summer says. Tries to recall the incident more clearly. “Mayfield, she said her name was; the VP of …” Summer advises her trustworthy notebook. “… Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics. I told her you were in a meeting, and she just hang up. She didn’t give any indication whether she’d call back.”
Odd. The Director says she’ll look into it, and then suggests they eat a late lunch out together. The matter dropped for at least a little while. Her schedule is clear until 14:00, and Summer is flexible in her work. She prefers this boss over the last one; they eat out every now and then, try to get away from the confines of the office. Even if today’s raining.
Director Sheppard used to be a Special Agent before taking this position, and Summer has glimpsed (only glimpsed) some of her record, and she’s from a different world—but they click, and Summer’s glad for that. Isn’t sure if she could stand working for some obnoxious know-it-all in a strict suit, although the Director’s suit is very strict.
There’s a sushi place three blocks down. They take a cab, huddling under an umbrella each. It’s still raining, though the wind has lessened. The food is nice, and they talk about non-work-related things. The Director clearly is strained and stressed. Summer wonders if she’d take offence if she cleared up a weekend for her at a spa. She’s got a cousin who knows a guy, and they could fix it up for a low price. Yeah. There’s a minuscule gap in her schedule near the end of the month; yeah, she’ll make the call.
The Director—No, call me Jenny, she asks now that they’re not at HQ anymore. Off-duty. Jenny has got a firm grip of reality, and hands hardened from handling a gun, and her nails are perfectly manicured. She’s also got a good sense of humor, and for a moment they’re just friends having lunch, not a boss and her secretary. Yeah, it’s real nice. And the food’s good. They eat languidly, discussing the latest movies, the movement of politics, whatever else that strikes their fancy.
It’s nearly half past one when the Director’s cellphone rings. Not expecting the call, she frowns as she picks up. “Director Sheppard.”
And Summer had been hoping for an (for once) uninterrupted lunch.
Good news? Bad news? Summer tries to gauge the Director’s reaction. Her shoulders tense slightly, and the frown deepens. The Director says—sharp and controlled; heated: “‘Outside of our jurisdiction’? All due respect, sir, I don’t think so.”
Bullshit news, then. Summer has seen this thing happen before. Another agency meddling with NCIS business; perhaps out of goodwill, but mostly not; mostly to take the credit themselves. Well, she thinks, no more sushi today; the Director becomes single-minded like this and won’t eat. Summer flags down the waiter to settle the bill and asks for a take-away bag for the remainder of the food; no point in letting it be wasted. She makes sure to leave a generous tip. The waiter looks tired beneath that pleasant smile.
The call lasts for several minutes. All carefully worded, and no yelling is involved on either side, merely deliberate sentences which would chill Summer to the bone if she wasn’t already used to it. The Director isn’t happy, but her face as pleasant as always: she’s using her smile, a powerful tool, like a shield.
They flag down a cab, rushing back to HQ with grace, and during the ride the Director places a new call, by the sounds of it to warn HQ that they’re returning in a hurry. The door is held open for them as they arrive, and Summer isn’t directed otherwise so she follows the Director to the plaza where the agents are at work. Busy: people speaking, debating, computers humming, fans working hard to keep up even though it’s a cool day. The Director sees that the pen she seeks is empty—the one belonging to one of their best teams, Summer notes—and asks a passing-by agent for Gibbs.
“Interrogation, ma’am,” Agent Cabot answers dutifully. Nods to herself: “All his team’s there. I heard they got their hands on a suspect for their case.”
Summer doesn’t get to see Interrogation a lot. She’s the PA, not an agent, after all. Now she watches the Director turn down the hallway, opening a door to the surveillance room hidden by a one-way mirror. Can hear her talking with whoever’s inside—one of Gibbs’ team—and then, eventually, the other door opens and Senior Special Agent Gibbs emerges, his face a storm after being interrupted in an interrogation. The Director doesn’t even blink.
“My office, Gibbs,” she says, without preamble. “It’s about your case.”
And the agent appears just as pissed off as the Director, and Summer makes a note to fix them both some coffee, following them upstairs. She settles at her desk, watching the doors of the Director’s office close behind them. A slight headache is starting to grow behind her temples. Summer digs out a couple of Tylenol from her handbag, before taking the phone in hand to make yet another call.
Just another day at the office.
six hours earlier:
“… time of death between four and six a.m. on the fourteenth. These abrasions on his knuckles are a tell-tale sign of a fistfight.”
he had tried to fight; to survive; wrestled free. The scene can be imagined and reconstructed, the frantic movement the reaching for a weapon (but it was taken out of his hands)
The coroner is gathered alongside Agent Gibbs and his medical assistant, Mr Palmer, around the flat table where the dead man is lying. They haven’t yet been able to identify him. The unknown John Doe is quite tall, a fit man, at the height of his health and somewhere between twenty and thirty years old—and that’s all they’ve got so far, and it’s making Gibbs restless. He doesn’t like the unknown, the mysteries piling up without answers.
Their resident forensic technician is at work with trying to digitally recreate the man’s face based on his muscle and bone structure, but it’s slow work, and it only given them a baseline to work from. At this point, they can’t be certain that the man actually is a marine, or if he simply was dressed as one. The uniform is genuinely real, but all identifying marks have been removed from it.
Closer inspection proved that the man’s teeth had been ruined, deliberately, far too much for him to be identified by dental records. Now they’re trying to match his Dæmon with Corps and Navy records. That, too, is slow work. Not all information has been digitized, and only in recent years did it become standard to photograph both Dæmon and human, together, rather than simply the human face—deeming a Dæmon too intimate information; no law or regulation can force anybody to reveal theirs like that. The Corps tend to have written records, though, if only a simple statement of Undetermined if the Shape isn’t to be divulged. This man’s Dæmon has been shot at point-blank range, throat torn up and its muzzle a mess. It was beautiful once. Hopefully, there’s a picture somewhere. But few Dæmons are entirely completely unique in Shape—exceptions exist, of course, as well as variations.
Dr Mallard isn’t going to cut it open like the human. Not like that. Will avoid touching for as much as possible. What he can do is try and make them more presentable, dignified in death like in life. Clean up its sorrows. Have a photo taken for identification.
“… And I noticed, here, a curious wound to his right upper arm. Measuring one by half an inch, this is a precise incision, and whoever did it knew exactly what they were looking for. I’ve sent a sample up to Abby, there seemed to be trace amounts of some material causing minimal irritation,” Ducky says, peering at the damage through a looking glass. “It seems that something was surgically placed right here several weeks ago—possibly months. The lack of bleeding suggests that he was already dead when it was removed.”
“What thing could that be?” Gibbs muses.
“Well, whatever it was, it wasn’t organic. Dear Abby may have more answers about that. I have, however, managed to determine the cause of death. This poor fellow was alive when his Dæmon was shot. It was killed it instantly, but evidence points toward the man living for a little while longer afterward.”
Mr Palmer blanches, and Dr Mallard is clearly disturbed at the notion. Not a lot can make a medical examiner uneasy: they spend their days around dead bodies, after all. But this is an unusually cruel way to die.
“A Ghosting,” Gibbs echoes. It’s rare. Most people simply can’t hang on that long. They perish the second their Dæmon does. But a few hang on; try to hang on;
“Yes. He was held back by one person using both hands, in the process dislocating his left shoulder and causing a hairline fracture, here, to the wrist. Whoever did it was careful, wearing gloves of some sort. I haven’t gotten anything from the skin or fingernails.”
“Trace materials?” Usually, there’s something. A single fiber, a strand of hair. Something.
“Very careful, Gibbs. There’s nothing—yet. Perhaps Abby has been luckier.” Ducky clears his throat. “As I was saying, he was held back by one unknown assailant. It is clear both hands were used to hold him back, while someone else took the Dæmon out. Which means—”
“We’re looking for more than one killer.”
Heavy metal blasts loudly through the speakers, easily covering up the soft sound of the doors sliding open and a man stepping inside.
A woman is at work by one of the elevated desks: a multitude of computers and other analyzing gear are also at work, beeping at odd intervals, clicking through screens or showing diagrams. The woman, young with dark hair fastened in ponytails, doesn’t at first react to the new presence in the room, until her Dæmon turns its head, spotting him. She turns around with a wide grin on her face.
“Just in time, Gibbs!”
“Hey, Abs. Anything to tell me?”
Forensic technician Abby Sciuto happily reaches for the sizable red cup of Caf-Pow in his hand, but Gibbs gives her a stern look, refusing to hand it over straightaway. A pout. But he won’t budge. Eventually, Sciuto sighs, arms uncrossing.
“Well, I’ve only just gotten started. Patience is a virtue, you know,” she says but walks over to her main desk, two computers in front of her. The broken phone has been pulled apart into its main components and hooked up to the machinery via wire, and Sciuto gestures vividly at the screen, basically thrumming with excitement. “All right, so the clothes yielded nothing. I mean nothing: no fibers, no residue, no chemicals. Very clean. Nothing we can trace. There’s some dirt caked on the boots though which I’m running in the spectrometer right now. The digital reconstruction isn’t finished either. Oh! the slug. It’s from a 9mil handgun, pretty standard. Haven’t been able to trace it—yet.”
They haven’t found the weapon itself; the murderers didn’t dispose of it anywhere near the first crime scene. Not far from the pier where they’d found the bodies, DiNozzo and Todd had managed to retrace the steps of the events, leading them to a back-alley even closer to NCIS Headquarters and there was blood there, hints of violence upon the ground and hidden behind a trash can, but any other material evidence had been removed.
“But I might be able to put a face to our marine.”
Gibbs shakes his head, doesn’t chuckle, and Sciuto pouts apologetically.
“Sorry. That was bad. Anyway, I have managed to restore part of the phone’s memory. Pretty empty, actually, but we’re no longer guessing.”
“Abby.”
She beams. “This is not an untraceable phone. I managed to backtrack when and where it was bought. The name is …” She types, rapidly, and a name appears on screen. “Mitchell Snow. He bought this phone from a store in Colorado Springs just three days ago. Or at least his credit card did. Pretty fancy too; this is the latest model.”
“What about the contents of the phone?”
“Still getting there. There’s not much on it,” she admits. “No photos, no media … It could be of course just because it’s such a new phone and he hasn’t had the time to add anything. But I found this: there’s just one contact, which looks like a group text. You know, you hook up several people to this number so you can send mass messages, sort of like a group chat—” At the impatient (and partly uncomprehending) silence, she moves on, pointing at the plasma screen where everything is magnified: “It’s this one.”
A string of messages, under an elusive and cryptic codename:
AR9.
“Facial reconstruction?”
“Another hour, tops.”
“You got thirty minutes.”
Before Gibbs takes his leave though he finally relinquishes the Caf-Pow, and Sciuto accepts the beverage with glee. Then he’s out of the door, and Sciuto returns to working on the digital reconstruction. She’s used to working against impossible odds and impossible deadlines. (She can swear Gibbs only makes up the numbers to keep them on their toes.)
“We have a name. Find me everything on Mitchell Snow.”
“On it, Boss!”
They set to work, not bothering to bicker or point out the probability of there being more than one Mitchell Snow—neither are unique names—in the Marine Corps or Navy or Army. They know the drill.
The guy might not even be a marine; for all they know it could be some kind of set-up, a civilian dressed in a uniform not belonging to him. But the name is their only lead so far. Sciuto is still working on the digital face reconstruction. Once they have that, they could see if it matches whatever they find.
And eventually, within the hour, they find it: a number of possible people with the right name, and when lined up against the digital facial reconstruction, there’s one pretty good match.
Agent DiNozzo feels a certain amount of annoyance. They’ve run into far too many walls on this search. Documents he couldn’t access, files he couldn’t read. This guy is high up—not in ranks, but in secrets. A deep conspiracy. Not the first time NCIS has grappled with one of those, though.
“Lance Corporal Mitchell Snow, USMC. Born ‘81 in Virginia; Snow joins the Corps at nineteen and advances quickly through the ranks. Tours in Iraq and Afghanistan which both got him awarded and promoted. No issues during any of this time, no black marks—Snow behaved impeccably, it seems like. A real poster boy,” DiNozzo says, clicking through the images on the widescreen they use as an electronic pinboard for each case.
The man in the photographs is tall and handsome, back ramrod straight. A proud marine. He looks pleasant, the kind of guy who is easy to talk to. He also appears a bit like, well, like a Common Joe, could blend into the background easily enough.
“Married?”
“Nope. If there’s a girlfriend, we’ll find out, though, and other family too.” DiNozzo clears his throat. “Speed forward to November, 2003, and Snow’s off the radar, assigned for … something we don’t know. Yet,” he quickly amends at Gibbs’ glare. “That gives us a thirty-eight-months’ blank.”
“We couldn’t even get a location or codename,” explains Todd, clearly frustrated and confounded. “It’s all classified.”
“But,” DiNozzo adds, quickly. “We’ve got this: the base—wherever, whatever it is—its current CO is a Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard. And, you won’t like this, Boss: he’s Air Force.”
A zoomie in charge of a marine officer? Gibbs has never come across his arrangement before. DiNozzo is right, he’s not fond of it. He’s not had many dealings with the Air Force. They tend to be overambitious flyboys who possess little awareness of the real world, how battles are truly fought. The few encounters he’s had haven’t upped his impression of them much.
“Get hold of that CO,” Gibbs barks. “And give me a background check—I want to know everything about him. And follow the red tape—someone’s paying Snow’s paychecks. Give me a location.” Red tape is useful way to find out where a person is stationed if the name itself is classified information. Money always comes from somewhere.
They’ll find the answers.
Mrs Snow sits in the sofa clutching a cup of hot tea without drinking it, and she looks at the Agent hopelessly, helplessly. Her Dæmon is curled up against her belly in her lap, slack in shock and terror and weariness. The house is quiet.
“Is … is my son dead, Agent Todd?”
There’s a sudden hardening of her aged features, something of recognition or resignation. The realization settling. Her son might be dead. Her son is probably dead—unless the corpse in the morgue is someone else, a stranger. The woman sighs, closes her eyes briefly; Mitchell Snow mightn’t simply be missing, run away—her son wouldn’t run away. She is certain of that, and Agent Todd wants to agree, after seeing the man’s file, the promises of past heroics. But she’s learned by now not to be too optimistic.
“I have a picture, Mrs Snow,” Todd says, with practiced gentleness even if she hates this part, talking to the victim’s (possible, probably victim) family; “of a digital facial reconstruction. Does your son look like this?”
They’re not going to ask Mrs Snow to identify the human body, because there’s nothing left of it that’s appropriate for a civilian to look at, nevertheless the mother of the victim. And having her look at the Dæmon is also out of the question, because they were shot at point blank range. Mrs Snow nods, shakily, and Todd hands over the slip of paper. She looks at the picture for a long while, and puts down the cup with a clinking noise against the tabletop. The tea isn’t spilled, but only barely.
“That … that looks like him. Yes. It … yes. Oh, Lord. Mitchell.” And a broken gasp breaks free from her throat. Nearly a sob.
Todd gives her a minute to compose herself.
“I’m so sorry, Mrs Snow.”
“I always knew it could happen, one day. In … in action, but no one’s—This wasn’t in action. Was it? You wouldn’t be here if he was killed in action.” Todd can only shake her head. Offer more condolences. Mrs Snow sighs, closes her eyes. (No parent ever thinks they will have to bury their child. No parent should have to.) Mrs Snow hands back the photo, and her hands are quite steady, though she swallows repeatedly, and her Dæmon has gone entirely still. Shock. She doesn’t ask how he died, or why she’s only seeing a photo of Snow’s Dæmon and not his face, and Todd is relieved. She’s not sure how she would phrase it: the damage done. No mother should have to imagine it.
“You mentioned a phonecall?”
“Yeah. Yeah; I think it was three days ago. No, four. Yes, I’d just come home from the office when the phone rang. Almost missed it. It was Mitch.”
“What did he say when he called?” Agent Todd asks gently. “Can you remember?”
“I—he sounded happy, a bit tired maybe. He’s been on assignment for over a year, see, I hadn’t heard a word from him in person for so long. Only in the last few months did I start receiving emails again. Mitch always tries to stay in touch, let me know that, that he’s all right,” Mrs Snow says, nodding to herself. Though her voices trembles slightly, her words are steady: “Mitch never told me where he was stationed. It, it sounded important, he was proud to be part of it. I could tell. He called, he said he was going to come visit, that he was back finally. Couldn’t tell me anything about work, and I wouldn’t ask. I understand.” She glances sideways, at the drawer in the hall, the photographs lined up on the wall. “My husband was a marine too.”
Todd makes a brief scribble in her notebook. “Anything that struck you as odd about this conversation?”
“No. He sounded happy,” Mrs Snow repeats. “Said that there were some … I can’t recall correctly the words, but he said he’s seen such amazing things and wished he could tell me all about it. But it was a secret, of course; all classified.”
“Do you know where he was stationed?”
A shake of head. “Not exactly. In Colorado Springs, I think. From the stamps. Before he left on this new assignment, he sent a couple of letters.” And Mrs Snow shudders, has to pause for breath. “That was before his father died. Harold passed away last summer, when Mitch was away—bone cancer. I … I couldn’t get hold of Mitch to tell him until three months ago.”
And now her son is dead too.
“We’ll get to the bottom of this, Mrs Snow, I promise.” Agent Todd hands over a small white card with fine neat print on it. “If you can think of anything else, please don’t hesitate to call.”
They can’t get hold of Snow’s CO. The numbers are all wrong. Keep getting thrown into loops. And it’s ruining his day. This is the fifth call this hour which has led to nowhere, because the person on the other end just refuses to give up and answer to questions. Snow’s CO is unavailable. Overseas, they say. When’s he going to be back? Not any day soon, it sounds like. Very busy guy. Oh, and where’s he stationed? Nope, sorry, can’t say (well, that’s not exactly how they word it). The closest thing DiNozzo has managed to figure out that this has something to do with Colorado Springs; with Cheyenne Mountain; with NORAD, and that’s only thanks to his finely tuned detective instinct coupled with the wonders of the internet.
It’s nowhere near a complete answer. The Other People certainly don’t want to give them up. But DiNozzo can be a persistent bastard when he needs to.
It’s like the CO doesn’t even exist properly. Or, rather, that he ceased existing about sixteen months ago. Oh, there’s a record, all right, a firm paper trail, and with the name in hand he also can hunt down the guy’s birth certificate and every other official deed there is to legally obtain. DiNozzo has managed to find it all:
Born in 1970 not far from Omaha, Nebraska; son of a wealthy business mogul—something in the family: seems like the last three generations at least of that company has had a CEO with the same name; hell, they built their grand house in the early 1900s (grainy photographs). The mother, and Patrick Sheppard’s late wife, a French immigrant. One sibling. Not listed in a public or private school for the earliest years, but DiNozzo isn’t that surprised, honestly, that a family with that kind of money can afford the effort of home-schooling, private tutors. Enrolled at a public school at age eleven. No notable incidents during adolescence, no mentions of dangerous escapades of the kind which white rich boys can get away with nothing more than a smack on the shoulder.
Time goes on: guy grows up. Enters university at only seventeen, indicating that he’s some kind of child prodigy and DiNozzo is kind of surprised that such a guy (if the notes from the university professor is correct) would join the Air Force because that can’t be that challenging and stimulating and well-paid, can it? Not that the guy needs to get paid, with that implied inheritance and all.
(Though DiNozzo can relate a bit, wanting to make your own name, considering his own relationship with his old man; the need to break away and show the world that you’re more than a rich man’s brat.)
Enters the Academy at nineteen—seems he earned his Bachelor’s far more quickly than the average. So a secret nerd, DiNozzo concludes. Graduates from the Academy with high marks, and DiNozzo managed to get hold of one of the old Drill Instructors—Chief Master Sergeant Mills, who’s since moved on from the position, but as a Sergeant she’d been part of the personnel roster overseeing the ‘90-‘93 graduates. “Yeah, I do remember him, actually,” she’d remarked over the phone. “Struck me as the quiet type, but with good leadership skills, and not too bad marksmanship. I try to keep an eye on my old cadets. Last I heard he was in Afghanistan.”
Though not a marine or anything of the sort himself, DiNozzo has picked up a thing or two from working with Gibbs. And one thing he’s learned is that, sometimes, even the most dreamily perfect marine or airman would turn out to be a huge disappointment. CMSgt Mills sounds like she recalls her old students with fondness (albeit the battleworn and weary kind) and DiNozzo doesn’t think she’d appreciate to hear that, as far as DiNozzo now’s found out, the guy might have been the latter, because there’s a black mark, a court martial, and usually those a big flaring red warning signs.
The military record is quite interesting and full of darkened out parts. Iraq, Afghanistan, Sierra Leone, Kosovo … the list goes on; guy’s been to every continent on Earth. Reported MIA twice. Actually considered KIA for over two days, before suddenly miraculously reappearing (first tour in Afghanistan, and DiNozzo couldn’t access all the details but it sounded messy and gory and unpleasant all around). That’s up until 2003, when, after a second tour to Afghanistan, he receives a black mark and faces court martial for reasons noted as disobeying orders while attempting to rescue three fellow servicemen, none of which unfortunately survived. Then, by the coming of the next year, the guy—a Major at the time—is reassigned to Antarctica of all places. Some distant outpost. MacMurdo. Tasks unspecified. Where, conveniently, he disappears off the map.
After that, his record is basically off-limits, though his promotion to Lieutenant Colonel is noted in December 2005. For a year, there aren’t even paychecks being noted, until September in ‘05, and there’s a big peak that month as if, for a year, the CO wasn’t being paid at all, and then suddenly it’s all dumped in his bank account. Speaking of which there hasn’t been a single withdrawal from any of the guy’s accounts since October 2004. Nothing big and nothing small. Nothing. That is more than little bit suspicious, and can’t be a coincidence.
(Just like with Snow; the dead marine hasn’t spent a penny between that same time and until four days ago.)
The rest of the guy’s record is just … silence. Words in the margins: from the rest of the paperwork (there’s a lot to filter through) there are well over a hundred marines attached to the same mysterious Non-Place as this nonexistent CO.
Doesn’t make sense, his Dæmon thinks, wording it for them: It’s a conspiracy.
“… and for how long would that be? … Right. Okay. … Thanks. I’ll call that number. Bye.”
Swallowing back a frustrated sigh, DiNozzo disconnects the call.
“You know what bothers me?”
“Tony, some of us are trying to work here,” McGee responds without looking up from his desk. He’s is consulting his computers for answers; it’s what he’s best at, rather than talking to people. Still working on that bit. Computers are reliable, they can be taken apart and data analyzed and trails followed, and they’ve caught bad guys that way in the past. Even if DiNozzo disagrees that it’s a proper Method of Investigation. McGee’s Dæmon does take the time to glare at the guy, though. DiNozzo isn’t perturbed.
“The only place with a name I can trace this guy to at this moment is NORAD. I mean: NORAD. What the hell’s up with that? Headquarters are in Colorado—that’s nowhere near Antarctica. And it’s not just that it’s NORAD, it’s that is so damned classified. I’m telling you, someone doesn’t want us to know about this.”
McGee glances up for a second at that. “Uh, you know what NORAD stands for, right? North American Aerospace Defense Command, so, it’s not that odd for the Air Force to be involved with—”
“It’s a conspiracy. NORAD has a secret listening post in Antarctica, and Snow could’ve been a leak or something, and now they’re trying to cover it up,” DiNozzo goes on as if not hearing this argument, standing up and walking over to the other agent, hovering near his desk in an obnoxious manner. Loves to tear at his fellow junior agent’s proverbial pigtails. While Todd has long since gotten used to it and has proven to be efficient at extracting her own revenge, McGee is still kind of soft and easy to tease, and DiNozzo simply can’t resist. “Snow was more than a simple marine. I’m telling you, he’s part of the guys who hide aliens at Area 51. NORAD is all about that, aren’t they? They capture all the UFOs and tell the rest of us that they’re, I don’t know, asteroids or broken weather satellites. Hey, Gibbs should have high enough clearance to see the aliens, so—” A sudden chill runs up his spine, and DiNozzo freezes, awkwardly. Voice turning flat. “He’s … standing right behind me, isn’t he.”
“Get back to work," Gibbs growls, having reappeared in the room and holding a Starbucks cup in his hand. The younger agent tries not to flinch, before reluctantly moving back to his desk. “What have you got for me?”
“Uh, nothi…not much. Yet,” DiNozzo amends quickly. “I can’t get hold of the CO.”
“Damn it, DiNozzo, I don’t have time for this. McGee?”
“Three years ago, shortly before his last assignment, Snow bought an apartment here in D.C.,” McGee relays his latest findings, hurriedly. Doesn’t want to make Gibbs even more displeased and, God forbid, angry.
“Got the address?”
“Yeah.”
Gibbs launches a pair of car keys at the man, who catches them deftly from a lot of practice. “You know what to do. DiNozzo, you’re with him.” If the man can’t find the CO, then Gibbs has just got to do that himself.
“Yes, Boss!”
He watches the pair leave, without amusement, and hears the elevator open with a ping. Closing. Disappearing. Then Gibbs reaches for his phone. He’ll find that CO, even if he’s surrounded by more walls than the Pentagon itself—dig him out of his hole—his clearance should get him through to anything; even if DiNozzo is only dreaming about Area 51 and his conspiracy theories—he’s been watching too many of those movies again. A bad and annoying habit and it grates on Gibbs’ nerves every time DiNozzo can’t help but make illogical references to popular culture instead of focusing on the case at hand.
There are no such thing as aliens, his Dæmon thinks for them, and Gibbs shakes his head quietly and starts dialing.
Snow’s apartment is on the sixth floor. They take the elevator.
It’s quiet: the door isn’t disturbed, and the lock securely in place. The landlady is grim and bored-looking with crossed arms, and only asks them not to make too much of a mess. Sounds rather pissed to hear that the tenant’s dead. “He was hardly here anyway,” Mrs Tyler remarks. The marine was obviously away from the States more than he was present, at least for the last couple of years.
The hallway is pretty empty. A couple of forgotten knickknacks, and there’s a layer of dust—this place hasn’t been properly cleaned out for months, if not longer. A pair of discarded shoes.
They enter the routine, white gloves on to make sure nothing’s contaminated. “All right, Probie, you take the kitchen—”
Then there’s a noise that shouldn’t shouldn’t be there and DiNozzo silences immediately, reaches for his sidearm on reflex. That was a heavy footstep. No, two. Whoever it was reacted quickly, though, silencing and the agents share looks. A slow nod. The living room area is just ahead; someone’s in there, and it makes no sense because the door was locked and untouched, and this is six floors up. If they scaled the building—
“NCIS—hands in the air!”
A shadow moving; someone, out of sight, demands: “Prometheus, get them out of here!” and there is a strange whooshing noise, difficult to define properly—it’s not running water, more like a spike of energy, and then in flash it’s gone. McGee and DiNozzo storm around the corner together, weapons drawn.
There’s a marine: dark skin, neat buzz, perfect poise and his arm is raised to fire, the grip of his handgun without doubt or hesitance. And there’s another guy, who also has got a 9mil in his hand and empty thigh holster and a very annoyed, darkened expression on his face. The marine’s clad in black cammies minus the bulletproof vest, but the other guy looks civilian—more or less—without any defined abs or the right haircut or any other sign of being a marine—no, he couldn’t ever be. Even if he’s wearing similar clothes to the marine and doesn’t appear ill at ease in them.
A tense silent moment where the agents and the two strangers stare each other down; the marine’s Dæmon is tense, ready to pounce, claws out. Whatever the other guy’s Dæmon is, the Shape has got to be small enough to be hidden in a pocket.
“Put down your weapons. Slowly,” instructs DiNozzo.
Sharing a look, the two obey, the civilian going first. Their guns are put on the ground and then kicked toward the agents. Empty hands raised above their heads. The civilian goes so far as to break into an easy, disarming smile, and it’s kind of unsettling, that swift switch.
“Stand still. Hands above your heads, feet apart.” McGee approaches, quickly pats them both down. Finds them armed with more: the marine’s got a pocket knife, some extra ammo. And the Other Guy is carrying two knives, not just one, stands ramrod straight almost impatiently as they’re taken. Radios: earpieces, neatly fitted. Some kind of PDA though the design is very strange, none of them has seen anything like it, and the screen is dark and there’s no obvious on-button. McGee bags it all.
And the civilian—he’s got sort of a crooked mouth, his blue eyes glinting in the dim light—says: “We aren’t criminals.”
“Uh huh. Looks like breaking and entering to me, doesn’t it, McGee?” remarks DiNozzo wryly.
“Sure does,” McGee agrees, never taking his eyes off the two suspects.
“Any sign of that? Because you’ll find we didn’t pick any locks or break any windows,” retorts the Other Guy. “We’re just visiting.”
“Stop chattering and let’s get moving,” DiNozzo orders.
Cuffing. No protests, but the Other Guy rolls his eyes again like this isn’t that serious, merely an annoyance, a hitch in the wheel of his day. The marine doesn’t put up a fight. They lead them through the building to the black car parked outside and a curious neighbor pokes their head out the door, peering at them with wide eyes, and DiNozzo flashes his badge and exclaims calmly: “Federal agents. Nothing to worry about.” before they step into the elevator.
“Oh, that’s real comforting,” remarks the Other Guy on his breath, and shares a look with the marine, who seems less amused. “Isn’t that right?”
“If you say so, sir,” says the marine, stoically, as the elevator starts to move downward. Somehow, that tone of voice—it’s as if this is a far too usual occurrence to be normal.
And how the hell did they get up there, anyway?
Gibbs might be pleased, at least. To have someone to glare at and grill: this is, no way, a coincidence. No way. These guys have to be involved, somehow, and DiNozzo takes glee in the thought that Gibbs will find out. No one lasts through his interrogations without giving up something.
Chapter 13: resurrection
Summary:
(a case study in conversations)
Notes:
(2016-11-20) Thank you everyone who has read, left comments and/or kudos! Now, I don’t live in America or has ever been there, so all geographical errors are my own. There’s a mention of a place in Washington, D.C., here (same as in the prologue) which may not, technically, exist, at least no the shape and form I’ve imagined it. Please roll with it. (This is a universe with Stargates, after all.) Time zones are also confusing to me, so I hope things make sense. Also I’m trying to fix any possible inconsistencies in details or plot compares to earlier chapters. I haven’t finished drafting this story to the end so there are still some things which are unclear to me, and I may have changed my mind about a couple of (minor) things, but I try to keep up and go back and revise as necessary. Please enjoy.
(2018-04-04) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
xiii.
resurrection
(a case study in conversations)
to: Amanda Herschel; Tanya Drew; Alexander Gamble
from: Mitchell SnowHey guys, Ive bought that phone now. R these the right numbers?
-Mitchtext sent: 2006-02-12 10:04 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow; Tanya Drew; Alexander Gamble
from: Amanda HerschelYep! Let’s make it group text to save time, y/n?
-A.H.text received: 2006-02-12 10:13 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow; Amanda Herschel; Alexander Gamble
from: Tanya DrewWorks fine with me
/Drewtext received: 2006-02-12 10:13 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow; Amanda Herschel; Tanya Drew
from: Alexander GambleSure!
-Gtext received: 2006-02-12 10:14 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow; Tanya Drew; Alexander Gamble
from: (unknown number)Done and done :) This be the number ^
-A.H.text received: 2006-02-12 10:22 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow, Amanda Herschel, Alexander Gamble (Group text: AR9)
from: Alexander GambleNo emoticons! Seriously, we’re not twelve. Btw Drew when are you leaving Colorado?
text received: 2006-02-12 10:24 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Amanda HerschelHey :/ I like them! ;) they convey … emotion :DDD
Dont go!! :'(text received: 2006-02-12 10:26 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleStop it or I swear to god
text received: 2006-02-12 10:27 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewDon’t make me separate you two. I am not going to play drill sarge! Fucking hell guys
Going to get flight tickets whenever the brass are ready to release us. It’s like they think a year in Pegasus has left us unable to handle society. Hopefully tomorrow. You?text received: 2006-02-12 10:35 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Mitchell SnowLol yeah right. Go Team Herschel :DD
text sent: 2006-02-12 10:39 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewDID YOU JUST… LC for one second could you not encourage them? I could make it an order
text received: 2006-02-12 10:42 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Mitchell SnowSorry Lt!!
Ma’am
Your honor
Seriously tho Gam u could chill a bit, u know? I dont see how emoticons are that bad??text sent: 2006-02-12 10:49 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleYeah, it’s not as if we’ve lost control of reality but yeah, I’m thinking of doing the same. Visit the old folks and such. Do we know yet when return flight is going to be?
Also Mitch you’re a dicktext received: 2006-02-12 10:52 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Mitchell SnowThanks Gam
Anyone heading west? Planning on going to DCtext sent: 2006-02-12 10:54 A.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Amanda HerschelNope sorry but we will c each other back in the Mountain after :) and I think return flight is sometime around March 20 …? :/ not sure. I am going back to Germany anyway for a couple of weeks
text received: 2006-02-12 10:59 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow
from: (unknown number)1101011001151111094911611184114117115116 67105116121677910097110103101114 1001101161141011121081211141051151071161149799 11997105116102116104114111114100101114115
text received: 2006-02-13 11:14 A.M.
to: (unknown number)
from: Mitchell SnowIs this a joke…? Sorry, u must have got the wrong number, man
text sent: 2006-02-13 11:31 A.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow
from: (unknown number)B.M. Don’t call back. Delete messages after reading.
text received: 2006-02-13 11:44 A.M. GMT-7
to: (unknown number)
from: Mitchell SnowBradley…? How did u even get this number??
text sent: 2006-02-13 11:49 A.M. GMT-7
to: (unknown number)
from: Mitchell SnowDeciphered the message. What do you need? Btw deleting as asked
text sent: 2006-02-13 12:13 P.M. GMT-7
Deleted 2 messages from Inbox.
Deleted 3 messages from Sent.
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewHi folks. Pool game Harry’s at 1900 anyone? They serve those fries you like, Gam. C’mon it’ll be fun, we haven’t seen each other for a while bc of these meetings with the brass. Heard no one got away from that.
text received: 2006-02-13 15:19 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleSure, why not! Just team? JJ and co are still around, could ask em to join?
text received: 2006-02-13 15:21 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Amanda HerschelJa! C u there! :D I ran into Gladys just a while ago I can ask her on behalf of AR4, y/n?
text received: 2006-02-13 15:22 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewSounds good. Ask away
Mitch how about you?text received: 2006-02-13 15:26 P.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow
from: (unknown number)Please trust me. If I’m right a lot of people are in danger.
Will send details latertext received: 2006-02-13 11:24 A.M. GMT-7
Deleted 1 message from Inbox.
to: AR9
from: Mitchell SnowU go im not really feeling it. Head cold. Tomorrow maybe
text sent: 2006-02-13 15:38 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleThat sucks man, you have the worst luck. The docs should up your constitution with a shot or something
text received: 2006-02-13 15:30 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewTake care of yourself buddy. But better here than on duty in the City I guess. Just a head cold?
And you’re one to talk, Gamtext received: 2006-02-13 15:30 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleHey I didn’t break my wrist ON PURPOSE. And the other thing was an accident holy shit
text received: 2006-02-13 15:30 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleP99 was a rollercoaster it wasn’t my fault I repeat NOT MY FAULT. I blame the rocks
text received: 2006-02-13 15:31 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Amanda HerschelJa we know. You always blame the rocks. Learn to chill, Gam :p
text received: 2006-02-13 15:32 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleIm not a fucking geologist next time a place like that on the list I vote we vote for Maj L to go HES a geologist
text received: 2006-02-13 15:39 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewTake it easy Gam it wasn’t your fault
And don’t start it all up again Herschel. If tonight’s ruined because of this you’re all getting your asses kicked by me not to mention DeSalle if he showstext received: 2006-02-13 15:41 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Amanda HerschelYes ma’am sorry ma’am it wont happen again
Sorry Gam :( U know I didn’t mean it like that yeah?text received: 2006-02-13 15:43 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleYeah.
No wait no, you owe me a beer for this, a good one tootext received: 2006-02-13 15:43 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Mitchell SnowWill sleep it off. See you guys later
text sent: 2006-02-13 15:44 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewOK see you
Btw G & H you two need to stop doing that. I don’t need to or want to check my phone every five seconds just to see you two at it.
Are JJ and co coming or not?text received: 2006-02-13 15:47 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Amanda HerschelYeah think so at least Gladys and Kemp :)
text received: 2006-02-13 15:50 P.M. GMT-7
to: Mitchell Snow
from: (unknown number)N38°52'24.459" W77°0'3.701" 10:45 Zulu
I’ll explain everything
Come alone. They may be watchingtext received: 2006-02-13 16:02 A.M. GMT-7
Deleted 1 message from Inbox.
to: B.M.
from: Mitchell SnowWhere are you?
text sent: 2006-02-14 05:48 A.M. GMT-5
A man in a hoodie stands waiting, trying to look like any casual morning jogger, by the corner of the alley where it meets the pier. It has been over seven minutes since the last text and no answer, and not a shadow of the other man.
They shouldn’t be late. Bradley was the one who decided the time and place, after all, with precision, and Snow rushed to be here. It’s not like him to be late.
His Dæmon is pacing, tail swishing to and fro: They’ll be here, the Lance Corporal thinks, they’ll be here. Bradley’s an old friend. Known each other since earliest childhood. Never let each other down; and he wouldn’t send messages like that if it wasn’t serious. They’d thrown themselves onto a late flight, a slight dent in his accounts but he hasn’t touched his paychecks since they shipped out nearly a year and a half ago.
It’s a chilly, damp morning. He only had half a bagel and some coffee for breakfast, and his neck is stiff, and he’s starting to think this was a very bad idea. A prank. A poor one in taste, but a prank nonetheless. Did the team put them up to this?
But Bradley had sounded real urgent.
He’d followed the instructions, deleting every message both delivered and sent to that unknown number. Written down the first message, though, and the last. The coordinates which had brought him here. He’s barely slept tonight because of that. Sat on the plane thinking, worrying: just how much trouble is Bradley in? This is deep. Fuck, this is deep and dangerous, and Bradley wouldn’t lie, no, he wouldn’t. And they’re old friends and he knows Bradley works for some government agency, whichever acronym it was, and this has got to be serious. The first message got Snow real concerned and conflicted, once he figured it out. It suddenly became personal, in a way. Was that why Bradley messaged him? Because he’s not just with the Program, he’s with the City?
He unpockets his phone, and considers calling. Whom, though? Bradley had explicitly said not to call, and if it’s all true … If he’s undercover or some shit, no, Snow can’t blow that for him like that. Texting so far has been of no use. But there’s the team … If Bradley’s telling the truth, then the City and the Old Man are in danger and his team could let the SGC know; they could—
Quickly, he types a brief message. Decides to wait for a bit longer. Maybe Bradley is only being careful. Or stuck in traffic. Something. His thumb hovers over the last button for a moment. How’s he going to explain this to the team? Drew’s going to be pissed, he knows, and the others too. Taking off without telling him that he might be walking right into a trap—knowingly—hell, as if he’s one of the Frontiers who’s decided to go on an adventure on his own. If this was Pegasus, he’d have his head chewed off.
This had better not be a joke, he thinks, and presses send.
It’s been nine minutes when there is a sound of tires on asphalt, out of sight, behind one of the large containers. Off beyond the area which is sealed off because of construction work. No one has started working yet. It’s still early, and only the busiest streets are crowded with commuters, people on their way to the office. It’s a bit strange to be back. Very strange. So many people, and no direct threat of alien ships in the sky, no Wraith hunting them down. It’s kind of refreshing.
On instinct he crouches down behind a couple of trashcans, barely daring to breathe, and peers through the crack at the pier.
Now a person comes into sight, their Dæmon right beside them. Pretty large, canine, dark fur, and there’s a slight mist hanging over the water and sweeping over them, making it difficult to see until they near. Their clothes are dark, and the person’s steps make the same noise as a pair of heavy issue military boots would, Snow thinks, distantly. He’d previously kept his ungloved hands buried in his pockets to preserve warmth but now he pulls them out, and his muscles, for some unknown reason, tense, preparing to run. An instinct, deep-rooted. They’re getting closer. Snow realizes they hadn’t agreed on a codeword or anything like that. Should have. Foolish, he thinks, and his Dæmon presses closer; seriously, we are. Taking off like that on a whim because of a coded text and maybe it wasn’t Bradley?
The team’s going to wonder. He left the Mountain in a hurry yesterday afternoon, stopping by to grab his bag and he didn’t say proper goodbyes. Sat on a plane and on a bus for too many hours, and the time zone difference is still grating on his mind. At least, with the Gates, changes like that were instantaneous. The shock and delay came after a while, out there. Going from a snow-covered morning to a desert in dusk in a heartbeat.
There’s something off about the picture, Snow realizes, because he knows Bradley and even if they haven’t seen each other for a couple of years, there’s no way his Dæmon would just be switched in Shape like that. Would it? No. Switching is a difficult task once you’re an adult and you’re Settled. Requires effort and a power of strong, strong and relentless, because switching Shape as an adult usually means something has changed, deeply, within you, and there is a need to break familiarity and comfort and exchange that with something frighteningly new. Snow has never heard of that happening. Not really. (The Colonel doesn’t count—everything with the Old Man is a bit alien, and Snow has realized, like most people in the City, that it’s easier to move on without asking too many difficult questions.)
Because, while close enough—no, that isn’t Bradley, and the person’s closer now for him to see they’re wearing cammies, dark, nondescript. Same as Expedition marines. Exactly the same, though there’s no name tag or flag on the shoulder and no other patches to identify the man and Snow hesitates. Draws back a bit. Doesn’t look like they’ve been seen yet, because the guy and their Dæmon have veered offside, closer to the water’s edge, and their back is a bit turned, and Snow realizes he’s unarmed. Didn’t take a gun or a holster, and it had felt strange, for sure, a habit deeply ingrained—they wouldn’t walk the City unarmed, not even there, where they’re meant to be safe but never truly were. Every day, every moment. But this is Earth and he’s playing a civilian right now.
The hair on his neck is rising by a chill, and he becomes aware of the wind changing, a gust carrying noise from behind them, and Snow’s Dæmon peers behind them, at the alleyway, but it looks empty enough. Doesn’t shake the feeling.
Then the van appears. It’s common enough: dark-tinted windows. The driver’s wearing a uniform like some kind of service worker, maybe, though Snow can’t tell for sure. It’s dark blue. The driver remains seated, but the guy on the pier turns to them and the back doors are thrown open, and Snow really thinks they ought to have seen him by now, even as he’s trying to be quiet and hide. Someone’s being tugged out of the van. They’re trussed up and their face hidden by cloth, and they seem to be trying to struggle a bit but tiredly, tiredly, and held by a very large guy with meaty hands. There’s something hanging from his belt. Gun?
Ah, shit, Snow thinks, and his own hands are empty but he’ll be damned if some guy gets executed on his watch. Diversion.
The tied-up person (business suit; gray tie; white, judging by their hands) is kind of familiar. No sign of their Dæmon all at once, probably still in the van (chained?), but … Snow’s got a gut feeling. Like the instinct telling him to flee or fight because this is a very bad, disquieting situation. As strong. That … That’s Bradley. And they’re in trouble, and Snow isn’t going to just sit here and watch as the other guys kill and dump him in the water—
This is a bad idea, his Dæmon whispers, but let’s go for it, Daredevil, and Snow gropes on the ground for anything to use. There’s gravel and small stones there, and one that’s roughly the size of his palm, and he grips that tightly.
I’ll throw and you’ll bite, he decides. Just like always, huh?
And he stands up. Quietly, but the movement was noticed, heads turn as the marine launches the piece of rock and the Dæmon leaps out, aiming to tackle the first guy’s own Dæmon, which is nearest. The stone smacks the guy square in the face, and they stumble half a step back, cursing—he thinks that’s a curse, at least. The language is foreign and gratingly harsh, and where’s he heard that before? where …?
And then, too late, he realizes just under just what circumstances he’s heard such words before, and the large man raises the zat’nik’tel in their left hand and fires, and the bolt of energy blazes through the air and the marine can’t duck faster than light can travel; his Dæmon tumbles and falls, cracking onto the asphalt, and Snow falls with them, eyes dimming and then the first guy is standing above him, expression hidden in shadow but their eyes dangerously glowing, and in their hand they’re holding a knife.
It’s the last thing Snow sees.
to: AR9
from: Mitchell SnowGuys I think there’s trouble, smth to do with the City. Im in DC to meet a contact, maybe there’ll be answers
I’ll call when I know moretext sent: 2006-02-14 05:59 A.M. GMT-5
status: failed to deliver
You have 1 missed call
from Tanya Drew at 14:56 P.M. GMT-7 (2006-02-14)
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewHey Mitch, just wondering what’s up. Call back?
text received: 2006-02-14 16:15 P.M. GMT-7
You have 2 missed calls.
from (hidden number) at 16:25 P.M. GMT-7 (2006-02-14)
from (hidden number) at 16:49 P.M. GMT-7 (2006-02-14)
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewWe’re in the Mountain, Gen L wants to walk with you asap. Yeah he’s the one who’s been calling you, pick up. THE GENERAL. I’m serious, LC
text received: 2006-02-14 16:55 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleMitch?! If we get in trouble bc u ill kick ur ass
text received: 2006-02-14 16:55 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Alexander GambleHey Mitch they’re going to lock us up n take our phones bc some stuff bout a hijacked message or whatevr I AM PISSED WITH YOU
Answer ur damned calls mantext received: 2006-02-14 18:14 P.M. GMT-7
to: AR9
from: Tanya DrewNot kidding about the brass asking for you LC!!
text received: 2006-02-14 18:15 P.M. GMT-7
to:AR9
from: Amanda HerschelMitch?? Hallo???
text received: 2006-02-14 18:15 P.M. GMT-7
You have 1 missed call
from (hidden number) at 19:01 P.M. GMT-7 (2006-02-14)
Chapter 14: rebellion
Summary:
strange. it doesn’t hurt to look at it now. he hasn’t missed the moon. he hasn’t missed Terra, even if the planet is undeniably beautiful from up here.
Notes:
(2018-04-07) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
xiv.
rebellion
strange. it doesn’t hurt to look at it now. he hasn’t missed the moon.
he hadn’t missed Terra, even if the planet is undeniably beautiful from up here.
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 15, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 141 days after the Uprising
Half an hour after the Gate is closed, John is sitting in Weir’s office. The glass door is shut, and her desk, usually so neat, is occupied by the large communications terminal they’d found on Deserum. The crystal at the center glows the same hue of blue as the chevrons of the Gate as it locks, without a flicker, and for a moment he stares at that and wonders what the hell he’s doing, what the hell he’s thinking. Why did they agree to this?
Carson’s there, holding a scanner, just to make sure everything goes well, physically, medically. And Heightmeyer is also present, in the background, near the doorstep which is now closed and there are really too many people just waiting and watching; he feels like they’re in a cage, and this one he walked into willingly and he gave the jailors the keys and said Good luck.
The plasma screen mounted on the far wall is alight with movement, depicting events happening three million lightyears away and, technically, only zero point three seconds apart because that’s the time it takes for the signal to travel through the open wormhole. Rodney is similarly sitting on a chair in front of a laptop in what looks to be one of the gray dreary labs under the Mountain. It’s been so long since John was there, he can’t remember the details very clearly, though he did spend those last few days before Leaving Day in then Rodney’s lab in the Mountain—the SGC’s new lightning switch, poking at bits and pieces of Ancient artifacts, the docs delighted every time something happened. It might even be that same room. There’s a hint of white coats and computers and desks and teeming whiteboards, and General Landry standing behind Rodney, waiting. Meredith is out of sight from the cam. Seated on the table, maybe, next to the laptop cam. Rodney isn’t paying the others any heed, but there’s a minute twitch to his hands, telltale: he’s anxious too, wants to get this over with. The stone Rodney brought with him—had it imprint on himself—is resting lightly in his hand. John can glimpse the shimmer of gray through his fingers.
A nod. They don’t speak; they don’t need to. If they start it might lead to arguing and as much as he likes their banter, this kind of argument isn’t one they want to have in front of so many witnesses. John places his own stone in the terminal slot. There’s no sound or blinking light.
The switch takes a millisecond.
there; not here;
Momentarily winded, John finds himself, rigidly, pressed downward by Terra’s gravity. The room, the air, the noise—hushed—the background beeping of machinery. This is the SGC, all right. The stone rests in his right hand. Rodney’s right hand.
Three million lightyears.
In a way, it’s anticlimactic. Except it’s kind of amusing how even the General flinches and one or two of the technicians (or whoever they are) take a step back when, suddenly, Meredith’s gone and there’s the Raven, stretching their wings. At least that worked out as it should have. Was predicted. And the wormhole is still open and their Bonds unbroken and John grips the stone harder, as if to an anchor, and breathes through his nose while everyone else is too preoccupied with staring at his Dæmon to notice the beginnings of his heartbeat deteriorating into a too-swift rhythm. His. Rodney’s. Theirs (both) from now on. It’s Rodney’s chest that’s aching, and John’s fist clenches around the Ancient stone as if, if he gripped it hard enough, it’d transport him right back to the City. Because the second the Gate shut down he’ll cease hearing Her, it’ll be a mere whisper, like before, when he was a kid, stuck on Earth with no way out and he’d heard Her singing in his dreams, lifetimes away. Lifetimes ago, it almost feels like.
Rodney—his own face—is stirring in Atlantis, looking at John’s hands and then poking at his cheek somewhat theatrically, grimacing. John hears, voices slightly distorted by radio transmissions, Dr Heightmeyer asking: “Dr McKay, is that you?”
An uneasy breath. Figuring out how it works. Then Rodney speaks—and, wow, hearing his own voice through a radio transmission is … unsettling.
“Yeah, it’s—ow, ow. I thought he was on pain medication?” Rodney complains, grasping at the injured leg. “Yeah, it’s me. All … Rodney McKay.” He looks toward the camera above the plasma screen.
Meeting his own eyes. Just as eerie as last time. A shiver thrills through him.
Elizabeth sounds conflicted; partly relieved; partly like facing an unknown enemy and not knowing how to negotiate. “Good to have you back, doctor.”
“Seriously. I thought you were on pain meds?” the Canadian repeats—and still keeping his accent, speaking with the wrong tongue—looking straight at the camera at John, who almost rolls his eyes. Still figuring out how to control his facial muscles to that degree of perfection. Then there’s a thinly-veiled muttered insult about his general intelligence and lack of self-care. Unsurprising. John wants to be able to pat his shoulder and tell him that he does try to look after himself really he does and he doesn’t need to worry;
“Yes, Rodney, he is, but not anything too strong,” Carson says patiently. “Perhaps it’s having a different effect—the differences in physiology and biochemistry between the two of you, making you unable to process his body’s signals the same way … All right, let’s get you to the infirmary.”
Weir looks from Rodney—from John’s body—and it’s clear she’s trying to deal with this, hide her bewilderment and doubt at this whole affair. It’s too late to change this, Rodney’s already here on Terra and they’ll see it through. John insisted. Rodney agreed. But Elizabeth is concerned. He can see it in the lines of her face and her crossed arms, knuckles whitening as she’s gripping her elbows. “If there’s any issue on our end, I’ll order the connection to be terminated immediately,” she says.
“Understandable, doctor,” General Landry says, nodding, faintly. John only listens with half an ear, occupied with watching Rodney (awkwardly; can’t use the crutches properly; Carson has to support him; talking vividly) moving out of the room and out of sight.
He can’t hear the City. It’s quiet. It doesn’t hurt, physically, because his body is the thing that is mostly tied down, his flesh so vulnerable and Rodney’s there and will look after it and, god, he’s here and it’s still such an alien concept all wrong—
He can’t hear the City: only an echo: only an echo, like he’s that child again, dreaming of a Dæmon who’s hiding in the clouds and he’s got to learn to fly to get to them;
The video connection is cut. John takes a breath, swallows back nausea.
The Stargate is shutting down. He can feel it: the second the event horizon folds in on itself and disappears, a weight settles on his chest, and there’s this emptiness; just a lingering echo. Like last time when Rodney was on Earth and he couldn’t feel him properly. A piece of his mind missing. Now it’s twice that weight pulling him down, because the City has been reduced to an echo too, and he struggles to grasp it. Much worse than being offworld entirely. And maybe, since this is what it feels like, maybe he could’ve gone in person and guilt etches a scar into the hollow of his ribcage, suddenly. He could’ve gone in person instead of like this, instead of forcing Rodney to endure this.
Could he have? He’s not collapsing, caught by seizure, gasping. He’s not collapsing. He’s not—
[We’re here.] Shy whispers, just as shocked and disorientated but pridefully not showing it, and that’s the only real thing they know they can cling to: each other.
To his side, General Landry clears his throat. “Colonel Sheppard, I’m going to assume that’s you.”
“Yes, sir. That’s me,” John says, and he stands up. Has to use the armrests of the chair to steady himself. Wow. Weird. A few minutes ago he couldn’t support his own weight and now there are no scars, nothing. Nothing. Rodney’s never been injured like that (and John wants it to remain so forever) and his knees don’t buckle.
The contrast to Atlantis couldn’t be sharper. He’s surrounded by strangers. Their faces are unfamiliar, and their Dæmons stare at the Raven distrustfully. The civilian docs—he thinks that the slightly burly man in the glasses has to be Dr Lee, whose general intellect Rodney has insulted more than once—a couple of medical personnel, just in case. And he’s not unaware of the men at arms by the doors, two of them, sentries. And he wonders briefly if they’d expected an enemy to arrive, or for him to lose the concept of self and time. Rodney’s body isn’t armed, dressed so casually in a pair of gray slacks and jumper and t-shirt, like any civilian. Old clothes. Don’t fit as well as when he left for the City; he’s gained a bit of muscle since. It’s like walking beside himself, in a dream perhaps, everything distant and the light casting shadows at the wrong angles.
No doubt at this moment Rodney’s being escorted to the infirmary to be put under the scanner. Carson will probably keep him there for a while. Worried. A thirty-minute test is one thing, but this switch across galaxies—another. And last time he … John’s throat tightens, and he forces his feet to keep moving. He’s not going to have a panic attack. Not surrounded by these strangers and under the General’s scrutinizing gaze.
He looks up, straightens his back, and stands at attention, snaps a salute recalling to do so in the last second because this is Earth, and General Landry is his superior officer. The gesture is returned albeit after a moment of halting hesitation—barely perceptible—and no doubt it’s because John is acting like a soldier in a civilian body, and no one at the SGC can probably imagine Rodney ever behaving like that.
Protocol in Atlantis is different. More relaxed. Or, perhaps that’s the wrong word to use to describe it because people aren’t slack. They’re simply … at ease, comfortably familiar with each other and aware of their own vulnerability and how few they are and the vastness of space, and the City is like the pinnacle of a snow globe surrounded by glass, so small and fragile and the shield so thin. And in an environment like that they have to be more than loyal. They must trust each other implicitly and always and know when the time is right to prioritize, and, well, John’s not that much of a fan of certain parts of protocol anyway. Always acutely aware that he’s not the ideal superior officer to oversee the City’s military contingent.
General Landry leads the way, and John follows. The wobble disappears after two or three steps.
Thankfully, by some grace, the people of Stargate Command are pretty used to strange impossible occurrences. Body-snatching, or the closest equivalent thereof, it’s new but not terrifyingly so and they’ll get used to it. The General isn’t looking at him like at an alien. Though the techs still are. [They’re being ridiculous], Shy muses, would have laughed. The room is kind of cramped. So are the corridors. They opt for settling on his shoulder, and that’s probably for the better anyway, so that no one accidentally touches them, or (worse) tries to stun them with a zat.
“The Prometheus is waiting in orbit,” the General says, leading them out of there, outlining the situation: the missing marine, the NID agent out of contact. The IOA debating. Security risks. The stabbing. “Mr Sheppard has been taken into medical care there.” Out of the way. Unbothered by whatever is going on at the Mountain, whose infirmary is meant for SGC personnel and SG-teams. Safe from whatever threat they’ve implied Earth could pose to him right now, and all these questions without answers make John uneasy. No one’s told him exactly what’s happened, and maybe they don’t know yet.
The corridors are stale and bare and just as boring as he could remember them. People at work—marines, airmen, civilians—most of them pause to stare as they pass. Even with a warning broadcast beforehand, seeing the Raven in person … John had anticipated that kind of reaction. Thought that it would be worse. Prepared to hear the whispers behind their backs.
“What about the IOA, sir?” They were the ones demanding he come here like this in the first place, before his father was injured.
Landry clearly isn’t fond of them. Scowls. “They can wait.”
“Sir, requesting permission to talk with my marines once I’m back.”
“Granted,” the General says, and John’s finding it much easier to like this guy than any of the IOA. “Word spreads fast around here, Colonel. There are a few people waiting for you.”
Five minutes later, Colonel Pendergast says they’re ready to ring them up. John is kind of curious because he’s read and heard about the tech—used actively by the Goa’uld; that’s how the SGC encountered the ring transporter system. A lot of Goa’uld ships are equipped with them, and thus was the Prometheus retrofitted with a set of its own before the Asgard handed over some of their own inventions. One day the Prometheus might be updated; the Asgard transporter is less bulky and generally faster to use. For now, the rings will do. Though built by the Goa’uld, the design is clearly an imprint of the Ancient Stargates.
The feeling of displacement is dizzying. Must be the thing with being in the wrong body and all. Beaming or using the Gate hasn’t felt this disorientating since his first time walking through the event horizon two years ago;
They appear on the Bridge. Looks a bit like the Daedalus. Tiny details which are different, but largely the same. Space is quiet. A glimpse of the moon rising above the horizon and, faintly, the debris field of human-made satellites scattered in various orbits around the globe. The configuration of stars is eerily wrong to his eyes after becoming so familiar with the skies of Pegasus; he knows what the stars look like from various planets that they visit more regularly. Has the fields memorized.
John hasn’t seen the Terran moon for well over a year.
Strange. It doesn’t hurt to look at it now. He hasn’t missed the moon. He hasn’t missed Terra, even if the planet is undeniably beautiful from up here.
The Prometheus is, at least on the outside, very much like the Daedalus, except it doesn’t have the Asgard transport beams; this is the original model of Terran Warship, and it’s integrated other kinds of systems. Including transport rings, Goa’uld in design—or, they could be Ancient, an old precursor to the transports in Atlantis and on the Aurora. The aesthetic design is after all close to that of the Stargate, and the Goa’uld had been scavenging and stealing for thousands of years after the Ancients had gone and before the Tau’ri rose into space.
The vessel’s current commander, Colonel Lionel Pendergast, is immensely proud of his ship and rightly so; any Air Force officer would be. Right now, the ship is riding in a slow arc around the planet, and some of the technicians are using the sensors to scan for the missing marine’s subcutaneous transmitter. But scanning even a limited portion of a so densely populated planet is slow, cumbersome work, and it’ll take hours or even days to get a complete picture. Not to mention that all SGC-personnel are equipped with sub-q:s, so sorting all those out to find just one—well, it’s like looking for a particular needle in a needlestack.
John and Colonel Carter, who’d followed them up to aid with the scanning—she knows the ship’s systems better than anyone—materialize outside of the cargo hold, where the rings are located. Carter isn’t that freaked out about the Raven or the stones or anything. Fascinated. Asks a few questions, professional but bubbling with enthusiasm under the surface, and John can, for a second, maybe imagine why Rodney had a crush on her. She’s smart and blonde—for some reason Rodney had something for sexy blondes, though John can’t, personally, really see it. (Aesthetically, yeah. But, no.)
Which is kind of weirdly hilarious when he thinks about it because a lot of people in the City think John Sheppard is some kind of Kirk, flirting his way through the universe—hell, Rodney thought that. Vehemently. It’d taken a while to explain and to make him believe that, sure, he knows how to use charm, both on—and offworld, but he’s not sleeping around, and he’s never wanted to. There might be a word for that, he thinks, maybe. That with not being able to do sex without emotion, and not doing emotion easily, so it’s kind of a bind. Anyway, it’s not important right now. He follows the Colonel to the Bridge where the technicians are at work and the ship’s commander is waiting.
Colonel Pendergast takes it all in surprised stride. Blinks at the Raven on John’s—Rodney’s—shoulder. Had heard the rumors because everyone has heard them but few believe. Then he offers his hand to shake, and John figures the man must be rattled by the sight of a civilian with the Wrong Name aboard his ship. Maybe they’ve met before, he and Rodney; Rodney’s never told, but there are things they haven’t remembered or wanted to share yet, and Rodney tends to forget the names of people he doesn’t care much for.
“Colonel Sheppard, I presume?”
“Yeah, sir, that’s me, even if I don’t look it.” Like the General, the Colonel in front of him is of higher rank, and somehow slipping into the old routine of greeting is easier than he’d thought it be, even though Rodney’s arm doesn’t quite obey as smoothly as his own would’ve. Colonel Pendergast returns the salute with the same halting hesitance that the General did. Probably feels weird about saluting what looks to be Dr Rodney McKay, PhD, PhD. Out of his depth—oh, hell, they all are, at this point. Rodney’s body language is all off. Something trapped in-between alien and familiar. “Pleasure to meet you, Colonel.”
“Ancient communication stones, huh?”
“Yeah. Don’t ask me how it works, sir, I haven’t a clue.”
Pendergast nods in that way which means he has no idea what this means either, and at this point he frankly doesn’t care about the technicalities. He must be used to so much shit doing down around him and learned that sometimes he’s better off Not Knowing. Carter greets Pendergast with familiarity, using first names, a nod.
Then she turns to John, beckoning him to follow out of the Bridge. “Mr Sheppard was taken onboard two hours ago. The doctors tell me he’s out of immediate danger,” she says as they walk.
“Thank you,” John says, suddenly realizing that he hasn’t said those words and he should have, to General Landry for having him notified and for offering his father medical care and a safe place to linger for a while. He can’t imagine the brass actually liking him enough to pull such favors. Like missing pieces. Something he’s got to examine later on, when there’s time. “For—all this.”
Carter’s sternness melts somewhat. “We realize that the chances of this being a coincidence are very slim. With the SGC, there’s no such thing.”
The gray walls encompassing, they go up one level, fifty meters aft; there’s the infirmary. People are moving to and fro, technicians and scientists and marines, pilots still in gear unwinding from their last mission which they came back from less than twelve hours ago. Since all they see is Rodney’s body, no one snaps a smart salute, and for that John doesn’t mind—protocol in Atlantis is relaxed, and he prefers it that way, also here—but they’re staring at the Raven. Even Colonel Carter is glancing at them from time to time albeit in a nicely discrete way and there are no questions. She must have read the reports and seen them across a video link, three million lightyears apart—but this, this reality is startling. Only aliens have Dæmons deviating from the human norm, even across galaxies.
(She and the rest of them don’t know how the half of it.)
“In here,” Carter gestures as the automatic doors slide open. The sick bay isn’t overly crowded, and whoever was injured on the Prometheus’ mission have been taken down to the SGC or elsewhere on Terra for treatment. There’s just one patient in there now. But up here is safe, and whatever happened—for it to warrant such special treatment—it frankly makes John very nervous, and confounded. He doesn’t have a lot of friends around here willing to stick their neck out for him, and no one at the SGC owes him favors, not big enough anyway to warrant his father being taken aboard a Tau’ri Warship for security.
No, whatever is going on, this is much bigger than that.
“You only have a few minutes, Colonel,” Carter says, distractedly. “We’re needed for a briefing in the Mountain at 14:00 hours.”
“Understood.”
She takes her leave, heading toward (what John assumes to be) the Bridge, and John lingers on the threshold, breath abated and—shit. Shit. His father is in there, confused and not knowing what the hell is going on and barely having grasped the concept of aliens yet—how’s he going to explain this? the stones, being in Rodney’s flesh? his Dæmon’s existence? Patrick Sheppard received his letter—John got confirmation back from Carter about that; took it surprisingly well, considering—but still. Shit.
He takes a breath. In, out. Then John steps inside, and blinks. There’s Patrick Sheppard on a bed, hooked up to monitors and his heartbeats are faintly echoed by the beeping machinery. Appears asleep under the pristine white sheets. But sitting on a chair next to the bed is his brother. And John is so surprised—no one mentioned that he was going to be here—that he can’t stop himself from blurting out:
“Dave?”
His brother’s Dæmon, once so small and lively (the memory clear: they were dancing in the library) lies slack across his brother’s knees, as if in shock.
[What are they doing here?]
There’s a woman, too, dark hair and dark eyes; a complete stranger but obviously not to Dave, from the way they sit close together, murmuring, hands clasped. Their Dæmons almost touching. Close—girlfriend? wife?
Oh. The thought hadn’t even crossed his mind. His brother has got a whole other life. They haven’t spoken for years. He could be married, could even be a father, and John has no idea, no idea, no idea.
Dave turns his head to look at him when hearing him enter the room, the shadows cast upon the artificial walls. His face is pale and knotted in a frown and, man, he’s got to be so damn confused. “Uh, hello—can I help you?”
Right. “Hi. It’s, it’s me. Your brother. John.”
“I don’t think so,” Dave says. Eyes wide. Looking at the Raven.
“Dave,” murmurs the woman. “I thought your brother … ? They said you’d be able to talk.”
“You’re not my brother,” Dave says.
“I’m using an Ancient communication device,” John tries to explain. Dave’s here so he must’ve signed a nondisclosure-agreement, but how much has he been read in on? Does he know about the Gates? About the Ancients? About Atlantis? How much have they bothered to tell them other than sparse, theatrical, superficial stories? How many details? “This is the body of Dr Rodney McKay, but it’s really me speaking, Dave. This is my Dæmon —”
“John doesn’t have a Dæmon,” Dave protests. By his side, the woman’s eyes widen at this proclamation, and John hides a wince. Not the kind of revelation he’d hoped for.
“Well, no, not ‘til recently I didn’t. But I do now. They Emerged about a hundred and fifty days ago.”
“I still don’t believe it’s you. How can —”
“It’s your brother,” John says. “How do I prove …? Look, it’s me. You’re Dave and Nina, you used to play in the library. When we were kids. Remember? You mocked me for wanting to become a pilot. You kept listening to that awful mixtape on your Walkman and was pissed off when I (accidentally) broke it. You had a crush on that girl, Kate or Claire or something, in fifth grade and wouldn’t shut up about her. Remember? I stole your bike when you were thirteen and I was eleven and tried to run away, only ending up crashing in a ditch two miles from the house and nearly getting run over by a car. Mom died when you were seventeen and I was fifteen; there was a drunk lorry driver —”
The silence is so fragile it could be shattered with a whisper.
“Oh my god. Johnny?”
Something in his chest hurts, physically, in remembrance as Dave looks at him and it’s still his brother’s eyes even though his face is that of an adult and they hadn’t exchanged photographs or cards for years, there’s been no phonecalls but John hasn’t forgotten, and—shit. Years and years and no talking and now they’re face to face aboard a Warship in orbit around Terra, of all places of all times in the universe;
Not wanting to believe, Dave just nods. Looks overwhelmed. “Okay. It’s, it’s you. Did you say some kind of … Ancient … device? Does that mean alien? Oh my god.” Then his brother sighs, overwhelmed, and buries his face in his hands. A moment of silence. The woman’s looking between them, and John’s got to place these minutes in the Top Three most awkward conversations he’s ever had. His brother finally looks back up at him, too pale. “Oh god. This is such a messed up day.”
Yeah. “You tell me. When did you get here?”
“A few hours ago. There, there was a phone call, I find out dad’s been stabbed in New York and then two Air Force Colonels—Carter? and Mitchell?—they’re appearing and telling me it’s not safe and they’re taking us into protective custody and I have to sign up for nondisclosure and, and, and I have no idea what the hell is going on, and I would very much like to know!”
It ends in half a shout, weary and panicked.
“I’m sorry,” John says, helplessly. “I didn’t mean for you to be dragged into this. Any of you.” Then he turns to the woman and offers his hand. “Sorry, we haven’t met. I’m John.”
Feels almost ridiculous, repeating that after all those words, but the woman returns the greeting, rising from the plastic chair where she’d been sitting by Dave’s side. She looks tired. No surprises. John heard—briefly, from Carter—how they were called here, from New York of all places, and there are still details missing which he needs to hear. “Laura Shannon. Pleased to meet you.” If the Raven or the earlier words have rattled her, she’s good at hiding it. Her hand is smooth and the grip firm, strong.
“My fiancée,” Dave clarifies, and now John can see the ring, the glimmer of a precious stone on her hand. It’s beautiful.
When did they meet? How long ago? It’s not outright curiosity. It’s … John can’t put his finger on it. The Boy Who Was His Brother is a stranger now who’s become a man, a stranger like the rest of them, no longer the gangly teenage boy with whom he’d grown up. Parted ways with when their worldviews and careers and dreams carried them away in wholly different directions.
Dave was the crowd-pleaser, after all, and the guy who their father truly trusted and who he wanted to take over the family company, the family legacy. Dave didn’t have any big fallouts or grievances with their parents. Dave was doted on unconditionally by their grandparents on those few occasions they visited, his personhood never coming into question because he was a normal boy with a normal Dæmon and normal behavior. Dave applied for the university Patrick wanted him to with grace and didn’t argue about it. Dave was the normal child, with normal dreams and a normal Dæmon; one that was actually there and not flown away; it existed; their mother never wept over his cradle in despair;
The noise is abruptly cut into when Patrick Sheppard blearily opens his eyes. Recognizing the voices, or at least two of them. “… David?”
John holds his breath; Dave visibly tries to calm down, control his voice. “Yeah, dad, I’m here.”
Rising from a sedated sleep, Patrick is struggling to move and all of him has to be sore. John has been in the same situation enough times himself to know: that kind of sleep doesn’t leave you feeling rested and relaxed. More like weighed down by lead and throat dry from disuse, and both man and Dæmon shift slowly, with great effort. John was told the damage like an impersonal report, insisted on knowing: a single stab-wound. Clean but deep and it nicked his liver and he’s had two surgeries, one in New York and a second one aboard the Prometheus once he was ringed over here, four hours ago. But he made it, he’s alive.
John moves forward to get a better look and he has to bite his tongue. Recalling how frightening he found Irene to be when he was a child, this looming shadow and stern gleaming eyes and her claws and how his Father was never pleased, never fully happy and he never found out why. Now, though, the Dæmon doesn’t look that frightening. Not as big as he remembered. Graying. A slow decay. His father also looks older, much more worn, than in any of his memories.
“Uh, dad, this—this is —” Dave clearly doesn’t know how to explain this and retain his sanity.
“It’s me. John,” he says. Unsure, should he offer a hand? Not like Patrick is in a state to return the gesture or shake it. Shouldn’t disturb the injury. “But I don’t look like me because I’m using an Ancient communication device, it … it sort of swaps consciousnesses. This is the body of Dr Rodney McKay.”
He attached a photograph with that letter. A photo of himself and the Raven, and Rodney and Meredith, together—that was a calm and peaceful mission, gathering supplies on Te’reem and there had been no Wraith or casualties that day. Ford had taken the picture. The Lieutenant does that from time to time, and John knows that he’s making an album, and if the Program is ever declassified then Ford is going to want to show it all—at least the less gruesome bits—to his family on Earth, the grandparents. Not the only person in the City hoping to do that.
Did Patrick read that letter? did he see it? does he remember? John, for a moment, can’t raise his voice to speak. Acutely aware that he’s wrong, doesn’t fit into this particular picture, in Rodney’s flesh and with Shy so close, their wings pressed to their sides as if to make themself appear smaller, less frightening.
For a moment, Patrick doesn’t say anything at all. Then he glances at Dave, though his Dæmon doesn’t take her eyes off John. The stare is cold and full of distrust and confusion. “What happened?”
“You were stabbed,” Dave says, voice uncertain. “In New York. You were taken to hospital and—and now we’re at, uhm …”
“We’re aboard the Prometheus, one of the ships the SGC has got,” John says, regaining control of Rodney’s voice. “It’s … Did you read that letter? From, uh, John Sheppard?”
“The letter … Yes. I did,” his father says, his voice weak. He’s not entirely out of harm yet. But the docs have done a good job, and John can guess that some unofficial alien medical devices may have been involved too once he was taken onto the ship.
Irene is still looking at him. Sharply. Unsettling. Her eyes slightly dim, as if by weariness, or confusion. John wants to crawl back and shiver, uncontrollably, recalling being a child and finding Irene a terrifying creature;
“It’s a spaceship,” Shannon says, in a matter which means she doesn’t believe it, won’t ever believe it.
“We’re in orbit around Te—Earth,” John says, nearly slipping up. Doesn’t want to start speaking Ancient in front of them because they’re already too overwhelmed. Stands there, back ramrod straight and hands clasped behind his back, as if standing at attention before his peers, some grim General. Doesn’t even realize until afterward that he’s doing it. But he hasn’t seen his father for years and years and years, and has no idea how to act around him unless he’s to become that little boy again. He’s not a little boy anymore. “We’re still working on identifying who did this.”
“The newspaper,” Patrick says, drowsily. “On the train.”
“Yes?” Dave prods, far more gently than John could have managed. Dave isn’t a stranger, and talks to their father gently and calmly. “What about it, dad?”
“… asked to read …”
Then he falls asleep. The monitors don’t squeak in alarm, so John knows it’s okay, for now. He’s just drained. Needs to rest. But if he could have just finished that sentence …
John can’t stick around. The IOA are waiting. And he’s got to see to his marines—and is that betrayal? feeling more comfortable and confident speaking with his marines than his own brother and father?
God. They don’t know about Icarus. About … He’s got to tell them, one day. It will confirm what Patrick must have suspected for a long, long time. He can even have Carson send over the DNA analysis, an encrypted file, if proof is demanded to be seen. He could—
“Are you staying?” Dave asks once their father has settled back into the pillows.
“I’ve got things to do back at the Mountain. You guys will be safe up here,” he says, awkwardly. “I’ll see when I can come back.” Looks at Shannon. “I was nice to meet you, Ms Shannon. Wish it’d been under better circumstances.”
She’s looking at his Raven, distracted. Refocuses. “It’s Laura. Please. We’re practically family,” she says. “Dave speaks well about you.”
John can’t believe this for a second, but nods anyway. Doesn’t need to start a feud.
“Why is …” Dave asks before he’s out of the door: “Why is your Dæmon like—like that?”
“That’s a long story,” John says, tries not to take offence. “I’ll tell you all about it later. But they’re—they’re a normal Dæmon,” he has to add, clarify somehow because he doesn’t want them to look at him like that, not understanding, maybe even afraid. Strangeling, the word lies on his tongue, resting; Yeah, I’m a Strangeling, he almost says, but still human, still human enough. “Just with wings.”
It’s a story he wants to his father to be awake to hear, he realizes. The lies of childhood and the questions he wants answered. Icarus. All of the details. Icarus. All of the details.
He’s ringed back down to the Mountain in a daze. Forces his feet to keep moving. He’s got to keep moving, and not think about the City or the silence in his head or how much of a bad idea this was. There’s a job to be done. A marine to find.
Two of Atlantis’ teams are there, waiting. AR-9, while not supervised as suspects, are still unable to leave Cheyenne—a demand from the IOA, probably, ill at ease because of so many uncertainties. Lieutenant Drew is, understandably, deeply pissed off. She wants to be able to go out there and find her missing teammate. Gamble and Herschel share this sentiment loudly.
AR-4 are present too. By chance they’d all been stuck in the area for the past week, not yet split up. Maybe finding it as hard as John would have. A team is close. Like family. Leaving, even temporarily, can be a harsh and difficult thing, and they’re postponing it. They won’t return to Pegasus for well over a month, after all. There’s time.
(Time which John dreads.)
So, like an unspoken signal, word passes through the Mountain reaching the right ears, and twenty-one minutes after returning from the Prometheus, John finds the seven of them and their Dæmons waiting in one of the crew quarters. DeSalle is bunking here with Kemp at the moment. It’s a perfectly neat, unimaginative room, with gray walls and a flat ceiling without decoration; no posters. Room hasn’t been lived in. Both of the beds are made, and there are two more pushed against the walls, empty.
They snap into attention as he crosses the threshold and closes the door. This body isn’t his own, but there’s no mistaking the Raven.
“Colonel!” Corporal MacGrimmon sounds a mixture of relieved and befuddled. “Anything new on Snow?”
“No, not yet. There’s a meeting at 14:00.”
The Prometheus is still scanning.
Lance Corporal Gladys is fiddling with a datapad, most likely checking the servers for updates or the like. But this isn’t Atlantis. There isn’t the same structure with an intranet with a certain safety of discussion and contact being able to take place, and news aren’t shared the same way here as there.
Herschel swears on her breath in German.
“He’s not dead, he can’t be,” Gamble says. “He’s too stubborn for that. But he could be in trouble, real trouble.”
And this is the SGC, this is Pega… No, John corrects himself before the thought is finished. But things happen here that won’t happen elsewhere. They overcome the impossible. Snow’s missing but that doesn’t mean he’s dead. No one’s going to accept that until—unless—bodies are found.
“What do they going to do?”
“At this point, I don’t know,” John says. “The IOA are debating.”
“That damned committee never gets anything done before it’s too late,” Drew remarks, arms crossed. “We should be out there, getting the job done—”
“Tanya, we don’t even know what the job is, at this point,” Herschel says, tersely.
“So.” Kemp stands up from where he’d been lounging on one of the beds, approaches with open palms: “What do we know?”
“A whole bunch of nothing,” DeSalle sighs.
“Lieutenant, shut your hole and think,” MacGrimmon cuts in, sharply.
It’s all sharp. They’re threading on a lawn made of knives, searching. Searching. The IOA aren’t letting them do anything. One of their own is missing, and the Prometheus has done another sweep—Colonel Pendergast had reported personally, said: Still nothing—and the SGC are all thinking it: Snow is dead, just as the missing agent, who also had a sub-q implanted before going on his mission. The relation unclear, but without doubt there. There is no other reason for Snow to take off without warning.
His team keeps insisting that they had no idea Snow knew the NID agent and they have no reason to lie.
No reason.
John is ready to start tearing at his hair.
(None of them wants to be here.)
“Look, what’s the last thing he said, or texted any of you?”
Gamble consults his phone—IOA had confiscated it earlier, but they’ve got it back. There logically shouldn’t be a signal down here, this deep down under rock and forest and concrete and steel, but SGC has installed a few relays in the last year, not wanting to be wholly dependent on landlines. That’s meant heightening communication security, of course, because the last thing the SGC needs is an outsider finding a way into the Mountain (physically or otherwise) by jumping onto a stray signal. John’s not sure if that truly works, but, well, he’s not a technician. Wouldn’t care except it’s relevant now. A text message Snow received started all this, or at least brought it to light to the SGC.
(Also a sign of their level of paranoia. The phone was private, not something loaned via the Program, and yet the SGC had it tagged, listened in on Snow and his team. Do they do that to everyone? Every SG-team and personnel, or just the Lanteans, those they trust even less? The thought makes John wince, suddenly a lot more concerned about his and Rodney’s own emails during the time they were separated—they’d always encrypted their messages, and double-encrypted their secret videos but what if they don’t stay secret much longer? Someone digging them up and unfolding them, one by one? The techs working at the SGC are good. They’re all geniuses, even if they’re nowhere near as clever as Rodney. Combined forces can be a dangerous thing.)
The Lieutenant clears his throat, reading: “‘Will sleep it off. See you guys later.’ That was two days before yesterday. Said he was down with something.”
“The General actually tried to call him,” Herschel remembers. “He wouldn’t answer.”
“Honestly? I think either he was sick and asleep when the General called; or he’d gone out to have some fun without us and didn’t want to tell and, y’know, scored it with a hot girl,” Gamble adds. Shrugs. “I mean. That’d make more sense than … whatever they think’s happening. What do they think is happening?”
That Snow has run off to meet an undercover agent whose cover has blown, and has possibly leaked secrets, John thinks, mulling over the Lieutenant’s words. He sounds like he believes what he’s saying. Trusts his teammate, and doesn’t think he’d lie to them without good cause. That he’s a traitor.
John doesn’t want to believe it either.
“He left the Mountain in a hurry,” Herschel says.
“Yeah,” Drew agrees. “Ran into him when he packed his stuff, ‘cause I was headed from the gym and he was headed to the men’s lockers to grab his bag. I think he said something ’bout visiting his old folks or the family or something. He’s from D.C..”
“Even got an apartment there,” Gamble says, nodding as if making a plan in his mind, drawing a map. “You know, this quite nice bachelor’s pad. He would never shut up about it. He had this aquarium there? Like this collection. I don’t know, it’s such a nerdy thing, but, anyway, I know because he was sad about leaving behind his precious fish when we shipped out to Atlantis.”
“So maybe he was going to his apartment,” John says. Washington D.C.—there’s a lot of stuff there. Not just the obvious things, like the Pentagon and the White House. It’s more, because General Landry had, in their brief conversation earlier, hinted that that’s where the missing NID agent was last spotted or heard from. Can’t be a coincidence.
“Maybe he really really missed his fish,” Gladys remarks humorlessly.
Gamble shrugs. “Nah. I think he sold it all or something before we left Earth.”
“So—visiting the family?” Kemp suggests, hopefully.
No one wants to say it: He lied to cover up something not-so-innocent.
And that minute, the conversation is cut short. The meeting isn’t scheduled for another half hour, but the marine sent knocking on the door words the call urgently. General Landry wants them—or at least Colonel Sheppard—in the Conference Room right away. And John goes, wondering if they’ve found out more about Snow or the missing NID agent—what else could it be?
(If it’s a sudden alien invasion, John is going to shoot something.)
Another urgent call, demanding attention. The last few days have been full of those, and none of those messages have been good. This one is no exception.
“Someone hacked into our servers at 12:00 hours—less than half an hour ago,” Colonel Carter says. She’s standing in front of a screen, entirely at ease in her surroundings, Dæmon relaxed. Meanwhile, John suppresses the urge to shiver and run away. “It was very well done. Whoever did it was obviously familiar with our encryptions and manner of storing data.”
Others at the table: Colonel Mitchell, whom John’s never before met in person—they shook hands on the threshold. He’s been in there in the background of a few databursts, video calls over three million lightyears; he was there when the whole thing with Icarus and the Goa’uld in Caldwell’s head was explained. He seems like a nice enough guy but the Colonel hadn’t been able to hide how unsettled the Raven makes him. How it affects them all. There are no spoken words or even questions—at this point, everyone knows the story—but, still. John notices.
There’s the General, too, and Mr Woolsey. “What did they steal?” asks Mr Woolsey, frowning.
“That’s the thing. Nothing was copied with one single exception—this was clearly a planned attack, they knew exactly what they were looking for. It was one of the databursts from Atlantis, concerning the mission to M31-927,” Carter says. “Our security systems detected them but not until six and a half minutes into the attack, so they managed to copy every file from that databurst. It’s quite a lot of data because of the compression algorithm, and we don’t know if they have the ability or computer power to extract that data, but we have to assume that they do.”
Including the not-quite-true report on the communication stones, John thinks darkly. Fingernails digging into his palms, trying to ground himself. Coincidence? Can’t be. What else was in there?
Deserum, the stones … And all the other teams’ offworld activity that week; three other missions. Plus whatever the science departments added and the personal letters alongside.
“They didn’t delete anything,” Carter continues, “or alter any data. But the way they worked … It was very swift and precise. They knew a lot of the algorithms very familiarly.”
“A leak,” says Mitchell, leaning forward, frowning.
“Yeah, that’s what I’m thinking.”
“That doesn’t sound good,” John remarks dryly. He sits, arms crossed, in the most dreary conference room he’s ever seen. Wasn’t really up here last time—first time—he was at the SGC. Then he’d spent time with Rodney in the labs, watching him work, enjoying pulling his figurative pigtails. No idea what the hell could happen in the year to come. A cup of smoking hot coffee rests in front of him, but he’s only sipped at it. Something odd about his taste buds. Can’t really appreciate the drink like he used to. It’s probably the neural link, somehow. This isn’t his body. It doesn’t work like his own, all those details. He hasn’t eaten since leaving the City. “Do we know who ‘they’ are, exactly?”
“They have to be linked to the Trust,” Mr Woolsey says, frowning. “We think our undercover NID agent was trying to send us a warning.”
“Via Lance Corporal Snow?” That … doesn’t make sense. There’s a piece missing.
“Well, uh, it turns out that the agent and Snow are half-brothers. Same mother, different fathers,” Carter says, and John just blinks. Okay.
“So, a family secret kind of thing.”
Far too familiar with those, he almost laughs.
Colonel Mitchell makes a contemplative noise. “Maybe the agent felt it was safer to confine in Snow? Less suspicious.”
And then a thought strikes him; a hacker. A lot of people in the City are polishing various skills, and the SGC always encourage further education; marines are given a chance to get a degree (or more, if they fancy it). Easier on Terra, of course. But in Atlantis there’s a plethora of scientist glad to share in knowledge and it gets hands-on and Snow, John vaguely recalls, wasn’t he doing this computational engineering thing? An asset to the Expedition in more ways than one, as it’s with a lot of people in the City. If that’s a motive;
John takes a breath and means to say this, but then Chief Master Sergeant Harriman, the primary Gate technician in the Mountain, walks into the conference room, hassled and obviously stressed.
“Chief, this had better be good,” General Landry barks.
“Sir, sorry for interrupting,” Harriman says genuinely apologetically, “but we were scanning national servers for activity as instructed and, well, there’s been a development. Someone else is also trying to find Lance Corporal Snow.”
“Who?”
The Chief consults his datapad, brows furrowing. “Uh, NCIS, sir. They made a search inquiry this morning to get information on his service record.” A record which will contain a lot of blurred out parts. “We only just noticed because one of their agents has been placing a number of calls, and got through to NORAD. Apparently they’re trying to get in contact with Colonel Sheppard, sir.”
John stiffens. And alarm bells are starting to go off in his mind: NCIS. What’s that again? … Naval Criminal Investigative Service, he thinks, memory rising, yeah. Knows about it only vaguely, in the sense that he’s aware of other acronyms but little about they’re actually all about. They have nothing to do with the Air Force—the NCIS has to do with the Navy and the Corps; the work they do is mirrored in part by the AFOSI. It would only make sense if … Snow. Snow’s a marine, and if NCIS is searching his name, then that means he’s been found (how? a victim? dead?) and they’d find, of course, a mention of his secret posting and the name of his CO somewhere or other.
“That’s our cue,” General Landry says. “I have a phonecall to make.”
John stands up as the General does. “Sir, I could—”
“No, Colonel,” the General doesn’t let him complete that sentence. “I’m not having you chatting with the feds. I’ll handle this.”
“Sir,” Colonel Carter says unexpectedly. “The IP address located the hacker less than a block from the apartment currently registered as Lance Corporal Snow’s residence. That can’t be a coincidence.”
The General considers this. And then he nods. “Colonel Sheppard, take one of your teams and check out the apartment. The Prometheus will ring you there. Carter, you and Colonel Mitchell will look into the hacker. I’ll deal with these pesky federal agents.”
“Yes, sir.”
Finally: something to be done. A mission to fulfill.
He heads out of the Conference Room and to DeSalle and Kemp’s quarters to see if they’re still there—it’s empty, but they’re still in the Mountain; none of them has passed by the check-point. Passes by one of the armories to gear up. He’s already carrying a handgun and rechecks the ammo, then grabs some extra, plus two knives. Never know when they come in handy. The Quartermaster looks faintly bemused about that last request. The scientists around here don’t tend to walk around armed like that. Well, maybe with the exception of Dr Jackson when SG-1 is about to head out.
He grabs a set of earpieces too, but decides against a TAC vest. Too conspicuous. They could run across civilians, after all, or need to cross a street in broad daylight—it’s not in the plan, but it could occur. Should be prepared to make excuses. The radios will have a direct link to the Prometheus so they can be ringed back up in case things go awry, or if they need to escape the public eye. The last thing they want is to cross paths with authorities or police who know nothing of the SGC. Would be a bit difficult then to explain what’s going on.
Lastly he asks the Quartermaster for a spare uniform, the type which SG-teams wear, and the design is only subtly different from the ones in the City. Insignia displaying the point of origin for Terra rather than a Pegasus lifting its wings. There are some spares, and eventually John find some that fit. But if they’re going to battle then he’s got to be dressed for it. Luckily, Rodney took his military issue boots with him, well-worn and walked into. John manages to find a lone corner to change in. Doesn’t think Rodney would appreciate it if he used the men’s lockers just like that. They hadn’t talked about such boundaries, hadn’t had enough time to think about it, but John knows that, as a civilian, Rodney just isn’t as used to the whole no-privacy mentality which marines and also airmen are more or less used to, sharing gyms and locker rooms and bunks. Once he’s in a BDU he feels a bit more like himself, actually. It helps, a grounding thing, like wearing armor. Once he’s geared up—swiftly—he goes in search for AR-4.
Corporal MacGrimmon is in the mess hall, eating Jell-O alongside the rest of his team without much enthusiasm. Picking at it. A normal day in the City, Kemp’s arms would be waving around vividly as he tells a joke, or they’d play a game of cards. There’d be laughter. Now they are all morosely subdued, even Kemp who’s usually a very laidback guy, and they speak in carefully lowered voices with the other marines present. Whether it’s a conscious act or not the City’s marines have bunched together, formed a group of their own, sitting apart from the rest of the Mountain’s marines and airmen.
MacGrimmon looks up as John approaches, steadily and at a determined pace which can only mean one thing. The marine doesn’t seem upset about this break in time off. No: he looks relieved.
“There’s a lead on Snow?”
“Maybe,” John ventures. “We’re going to D.C. to check something out, but I’m only authorized to bring AR-4 with me. The Prometheus will ring us out.”
“Still got us tied up here? Verdammt.” Herschel shakes her head in dismay.
“Yeah, I’m afraid so, Private. The General and the IOA aren’t too inclined to listen at the moment.”
“They can’t keep us here forever, sir,” Drew says. Turns to the members of AR-4 and commands strictly: “You drag Snow’s ass back here before I do.”
Kemp chuckles, but without heart. MacGrimmon nods: “We’ll do that, Lieutenant.”
John hands out the earpieces and explains the orders. For a moment it’s almost like being back in the City and they’re preparing for a mission; just like any other day in outer space.
Colonel Pendergast has been notified, and the Prometheus rings them up from the Conference Room in a hurry.
They’re just here to turn around. One of the technicians aboard is already punching in the coordinates. AR-4 wait, patiently, weapons loaded. They also bring a couple of zat’nik’tels—one shot stuns. Just in case they run into some less than savory guys who they could need to interrogate. Once the coordinates have been confirmed, they gather on the platform, AR-4 standing shoulder-to-shoulder in a circle, protectively familiar, their Dæmons used to be near each other; and John standing aside but not apart.
Then the rings rise and the light carries them away.
Chapter 15: in the flesh, part two
Summary:
there’s no such thing as a coincidence.
Notes:
(2018-04-07) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
xv.
in the flesh
part two
there’s no such thing as a coincidence;
NCIS Headquarters · Washington D.C. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 16, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 142 days after the Uprising
The man sitting inside Interrogation One is impeccably calm. If he’s nervous or agitated, he isn’t showing it. If nothing else, he looks bored—cut-and-dry utterly completely bored. Leaning back in his chair, arms loosely crossed, posture certain and relaxed. Rolls his shoulder or head once or twice, fiddling his thumbs. Then he looks right at the one-way mirror, at where he must guess at least one agent is standing, listening;
“Hey, is this show going to get on the road or what? Getting kind of restless in here.”
They’ve looked him up to little avail, because half of his file is deeply classified, parts of it blocked out and censored. They couldn’t even access the second half, not high enough clearance. And it pisses Gibbs off, because his clearance should get him through this: his clearance should get him through anything.
Got a name, though, and a profession, and the man is no marine or military at all, but civilian through and through (though there seems to be some liaisons with people of the military as of late). Doctor Rodney McKay, Canadian astrophysicist born in 1968; graduated prestigiously summa cum lade from MIT after first starting to study there at the mere age of fifteen; two PhDs—and Agent McGee had exclaimed half-aloud that he’s heard about this guy before: their fields of expertise don’t intermingle much, but Dr McKay is apparently utterly brilliant. Astrophysicist. Caught the eye of the CIA in sixth grade for building the model of an a-bomb in his parents’ garage for a school project, and was interrogated for half a day and an expert called in only to announce the model was, well, just a model and not about to explode. For a while surveyed by the FBI, but they’ve dropped any suspicions or accusations long ago, it seems. A proper genius. Now roped into working with the American government but when, where, and under what organization’s acronym—it’s all blurred out. Anyone’s guess. All they can tell is that it’s important for somebody: someone high-up. Whatever corporations may be involved, even the government itself; the man has got contacts.
Someone’s covering for him.
Looking at him, he doesn’t seem that assuming. Not that tall, rather squarish face, averagely blue eyes, mouth a hint of lopsided. His clothes aren’t worn or tattered: not that typical sleazy geek—instead he’s dressed like the marine, in nondescript cammies and it’s just not right. Complete with heavy black combat boots (and they appear to be the real deal, military issue). Found wearing a fancy digital watch, but no phone, no other markers, no ID card or wallet. Dr McKay is just sitting there, bored, and after a moment he stretches and yawns, scratches at the right-hand side of his neck idly.
They’d found him armed: a handgun, two knives. More armed than they’d expect a guy like him to be, and the weapons seemed military issued. Standardized. But people could far too easily get their hands on those elsewhere. Hasn’t got a warrant.
His Dæmon’s got to be small enough to hide in his pocket, scurrying to take cover when they searched him. No sign of it, but it’s got to be there; of course it’s got to be there, and the guy had made annoyed face but hadn’t complained as the agents patted him down and walked him through the metal detector downstairs. The jacket has got enough room to hide something tiny. A rodent, maybe. Somehow—it doesn’t seem to suit his character. First brief impression. Small Dæmons are spun for small and humble souls.
And something—Gibbs can’t quite pinpoint it, but something about this guy is silently screaming wrong wrong wrong and he is inclined to trust his gut instincts.
They’ve split up the doc and the other suspect—because at the moment suspects are what they are. The other, the marine following the doc around like a Personal Security Detail—he’s not talking either. Corporal Jimmy MacGrimmon, USMC. His file, too, is full of secrets, things out of reach. It’s infuriating, that’s what it is, and also too much of a coincidence in Agent DiNozzo’s mind. It’s a connection, not a coincidence.
“Look, I’m a busy guy, and I bet so are you. So why don’t we get this over with?”
Something about the way he talks. As if his words don’t truly fit perfectly in his mouth. Something off with the accent: he doesn’t sound that very Canadian; there’s something about the syntax and the accent. Can’t quite place it. Maybe he’s been around Americans too long, mimicking it. They managed to pull a photo to ID him, but found no picture of his Dæmon yet, and it’s not obligatory for a person to reveal their Dæmon’s Shape in written documents with federal access. You can’t order people to bare their souls. There’s no name. No clues. And Dr McKay doesn’t seem inclined to share anything. Can’t even repeat his name and ID number like an interrogation by the enemy, like a marine could do if taken prisoner. And he’s not demanding a lawyer. Just sitting there, waiting.
This guy isn’t a marine.
“It doesn’t make sense,” Kate mutters, arms crossed, surveying the man through the mirror. She’s good at reading people, but there’s something off about this guy.
“A lot of stuff doesn’t make sense,” DiNozzo agrees. “Like why some people have pineapple pizza—”
“Tony, please. Focus.”
“Oh, wow. You said please. It always pleases me to hear you say that to me, Kate.”
She sighs, too used to her teammate’s attitudes than what’s probably healthy and sometimes she has a very strong urge to kick him, because he truly lacks a sense of tact and, really, has no idea how sexist he is half of the time. Like an overgrown child brought up surrounded by tiringly bad influences, and she’s stopped trying to change him because it would just drain her dry. “Very mature.”
“Honestly, though. The sting is just … Okay, right. Forget about the pizzas. What’s a Canadian science guy doing at a dead LC’s apartment?”
Gibbs enters the room: sternly quiet, like usual. Doesn’t say a word. Places a closed folder on the table, takes seat. Dr McKay sighs dramatically. “Finally! I’ve been waiting ages. Special Agent … Gibbs, wasn’t it?” He squints at the agent, uncrosses his arms and leans over the table a bit. “You’ve got questions. Ask away. Though, got to warn you: I can’t tell you nada, really, honestly. Nothing personal, agent. I’m sure you’re a swell guy.”
When Gibbs doesn’t say anything at first, just stares, the usual cold glare which would make normal people cower and stutter, the man has the gall to grin lopsidedly. “Oh, I see. Bad cop thing going on, huh? Trust me, I’ve seen far worse. That glare isn’t going to work with me.”
“Talks a lot,” DiNozzo remarks from behind the one-way mirror where they can’t be seen or heard. “Doesn’t he.” He can’t quite believe that the doc is sitting there calling Gibbs of all people a swell guy. Of all things. Jeez. “And to Gibbs’ face, no less. That takes balls.”
Agent Todd merely glances at him, shakes her head in silent disapproval, and doesn’t comment.
“All right, Dr McKay,” says Gibbs pleasantly and opens the folder. “Tell me about today.”
“Which part? Got to be a bit more specific.”
“At one fifteen a.m. today you were apprehended for unlawfully entering a downtown apartment belonging to Lance Corporal Mitchell Snow, United States Marine Corps. What were you doing there?”
“Classified.”
“Who are you working for?”
“Classified.”
“Anything you do that isn’t classified, Doctor?”
A smile, sharp and humored and his expression is difficult to read. “There are a couple of papers on the mechanics of flight, but I’m not sure you’d grasp what it’s all about, Agent Gibbs. No offense.”
Gibbs isn’t happy. Pissed off, in fact. This guy is just wasting time—“How do you know Lance Corporal Snow?”
Abruptly—no: a slow change—McKay’s expression melts into something harder, something stern and not quite detached. No, there’s an undercurrent of anger and frustration, for the first time, and it’s intriguing. And still something off, as if the man isn’t entirely comfortable in his own skin. Is it the room? This setting—the unforgiving walls of the interrogation room—would make anyone nervous.
“Classified. Well … I could tell you; then I’d have to find a good place to dump a body, and frankly it’d be a huge waste of my time.”
So he knew Snow personally. Interesting. “That a threat, Doctor?”
“That’s a fact.”
A pause. Gibbs opens the folder, pulls out the mugshot of Snow’s dead face on the slab: cold, like the metal beneath, the hint of the Y-incision blow his collar bones. The scientist doesn’t flinch, but there’s a hint of an angry frown, just a minute detail. He doesn’t begin to sweat; he doesn’t curse; he doesn’t avert his eyes. The gore, apparently, doesn’t bother him. Or he pretends that it doesn’t.
This guy is an actor. To what extent?
“Take a good look at that,” Gibbs urges. “And tell me why I shouldn’t believe you’re the one who put him there.”
Resignation. The guy’s thinking about choices, about benefits and losses no doubt, and he’s speaking like a tactician rather than a scientist. Like—yes, now it makes sense: this man doesn’t hold himself like a scientist. Nor wholly like a soldier, but there’s much more of the soldier in there nonetheless. The certainty of his well-guarded, well-controlled facial expressions; the lack of movement of hands; like preserving energy. This guy, Gibbs thinks, this guy has been trained to withstand interrogation and that doesn’t make sense. A civilian wouldn’t have reason to be trained for that.
“Our goals aren’t dissimilar, Gibbs,” he says at last and meets his gaze head-on. “We want to know who killed Snow, just like you.”
“Who’s we?”
“That’s classified. Unless I receive authorization to bring you in on this, anything I tell you would lead to a very swift termination, or a jail cell without a trial. Either way, it won’t be pleasant.”
“Authorization from whom?”
“Classified.”
That’s enough. Gibbs doesn’t have the patience for this.
Leaving the doc alone to simmer for a while, Gibbs walks over to Interrogation Two where the marine is waiting under the careful watch of Agent McGee. Corporal MacGrimmon is less talkative, but no more agitated or nervous. In a determined manner staring at the table, hands knotted in his lab. His back is straight. Unlike the civilian, he’s in combat uniform, minus the vest. They’ve confiscated his 9mil handgun and his Swiss army knife.
He repeats his name and service number and that damned, unwelcome word: classified.
It’s all classified. Gibbs is quite ready to rips heads off if someone says that word one more time. Perhaps even call Fornell—but no. They’ve evened out their favors, and it’s too early. The FBI have nothing to do with this case. This belongs to NCIS and Gibbs is going to keep it that way.
“I’m not here to play games,” Gibbs growls. Getting damned tired of this. “You’re stationed at the same place as Snow, under the same CO—that correct, Corporal?”
Corporal MacGrimmon squares his shoulders. “Yes, sir.”
“Where, exactly?”
“I can’t tell you that, sir. That’s—”
“Classified?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You and Snow were close?”
“We’re buddies. Same base.” MacGrimmon looks at him, decisively. Must be unnerved and anxious, but pretty good at hiding it. “I saved his ass, he saved mine, more than one time, sir.”
“This.” From the folder, he pulls out a transcript. A text conversation, and he points at the names: the mysterious (abbreviation?) AR9, the piece of code that they haven’t managed to unveil yet. The conversation itself makes little sense, context missing. Stray names mentioned within the texts: Drew; Herschel; Gam; Mitch—that is clearly the victim, Mitchell Snow. … Pegasus—a codeword? base? operation? … Colorado. A location and unfortunately it lies beyond the range of NCIS’ normal operations, but Gibbs is damned if he isn’t going to find a loophole to get the answers. They’ve got people analyzing the conversation, but it’s slow work, slower than what Gibbs prefers. He gives the Corporal a moment to look at the plain print;
“This mean anything to you, Corporal?”
MacGrimmon tries not to let it show, but Gibbs is a seasoned agent and he knows, he knows when there’s a flicker of recognition and that’s definitely it, even though he cannot say to what exactly: the texts’ contents or the mentioned names, or the part AR9 itself.
But MacGrimmon stubbornly refuses to answer.
“Covert op?”
“Can’t say, sir.”
Everything is damned classified.
He looks closely at the Corporal for several long moments, but he has evidently clammed up. Keeps repeating that damned word.
Maybe the doc in the neighboring room has thought through his options and realized that giving his cooperation is his best option.
Another photo is tossed at him. A close-up of Snow’s ruined face;
“You’re not going to make me talk,” Dr McKay says. “Try as hard as you like.”
The nerve of the guy. Gibbs steels his voice. “And what would make you talk, doc?”
“A phone call. I suggest you try General Jack O’Neill—that’s two l:s,” the man says, quirks a grin. Looks up from the photos which he had considered unflinchingly, but with a momentarily darkened expression—something very personal about it. Yes, Gibbs is certain, Dr McKay knew Snow. He keeps talking, relentlessly and too brightly: “Try the Pentagon. I mean, I might not be much of an office guy personally, but that’s a pretty nice place he’s at. I especially like the choice of rug. You know, very chic. And if he’s not there, well, he’s probably in the Oval Office drinking coffee and having a chat.”
This General is in regular contact with the President? Then that means …
“Very high up. SecNav, or one of those guys?” DiNozzo guesses from behind the one-way mirror, unheard and unseen by the two inside Interrogation. Todd nods.
“That would make sense,” she says, “with his cockiness and everything.” Even if the thinly-veiled threats are nothing more than empty words; it doesn’t seem to her that the words are fueled by nervousness or anxiety. Though she’s got plenty of profiling training, Todd can’t quite pin this guy down. There are contradictions to the way he acts.
Except it doesn’t make sense, doesn’t at all.
“So: why would a Canadian astrophysicist, who’s friends with a high-up American General, be snooping around a dead US marine’s apartment with another very live marine as his PSD?” DiNozzo ponders.
Someone opens the door without knocking. They shouldn’t be. Gibbs never wants interruptions during interrogations, and the whole building knows that, and DiNozzo turns toward the door to shoo them off—but it’s not a stray agent or janitor or technical assistant. DiNozzo nearly makes a double-take; and then he realizes they’ve got no choice, and he shares a look with Todd, who shakes her head very pointedly—you deal with this, she means.
Oh, crap.
“Uh, Boss …” DiNozzo awkwardly clears his throat over the intercom, and briefly thinks about the horrid way he’s going to die because no one, no one ever interrupts Gibbs’ interrogations without being the recipient of bodily harm.
But the Director is standing right there, her arms sternly crossed, and demanding to see Gibbs right now.
There’s been a call—not even SecNav, but from Homeland Security, and they only poke their noses into NCIS business when it’s truly serious and they think NCIS too incompetent and not cleared enough to solve it, and it pisses Gibbs off.
“They can’t take this investigation—” he growls, but Director Sheppard shakes her head:
“I’m not sure how word reached them but they know about our dead marine. In fact, a team is on its way right now to ID the body. If the dead man is who they’re looking for, they’ll retrieve all evidence and we are to close this investigation without ado. And they want Dr McKay and Corporal MacGrimmon released immediately.”
“What’s their excuse?”
“They claim this lies outside of our jurisdiction; however, I won’t let this go so easily,” the Director says. Her voice is smooth and controlled: “They’ll be here in fifteen minutes.”
DiNozzo and Todd are waiting by the plaza, while McGee lingers to keep an eye on the two suspects. Who, Gibbs says furious and disbelieving, are meant to be freed of all charges and collected by someone sent by Homeland Security, and NCIS is meant to Not Ask Questions about the whole thing. Gibbs isn’t going to back down, though. Not without a fight.
Dr McKay and Corporal MacGrimmon are far more than they seem. Gibbs isn’t going to let this go without a fight, whyfor he’s ordered McGee to stand watch over the two, and not surrender them to anyone outside of NCIS until this is sorted. Because he will not, whoever the orders come from, let someone take this case from them, especially not now when they’re slowly, finally, starting to make headway.
They know the drill. Hell, it’s not the first time another agency has meddled and demanded to take over a case; so DiNozzo rang down to Abby’s lab, and the technician is copying valuable data onto one of her computers, a backup drive somewhere, hidden from view. That way, even if they must hand over the hard evidence, they’ll still have access to a copy. Dr Mallard, too, has been warned. If these people—whoever they are—can identify the remains then they’ll definitely take over. But the chances of that … The marine’s face is gone, and his Dæmon is unique yet generic.
Less than a quarter of an hour after Gibbs was interrupted by the Director, the elevator pings and the doors slide open.
It’s not an FBI agent wearing a black strict tie and immaculate polished shoes and unbearable haughtiness who enters the room, wearing a visitor badge and escorted by one of the door guards who makes sure no unauthorized people can enter HQ. It’s not even a marine. It’s an Air Force General. His hair was once some shade of brown, though it’s mostly gray now, and just a touch too long for Gibbs’ comfort: a marine certainly wouldn’t be allowed to have it that way, even a General. His dress blues are tidy and he carries his cover under his right arm, posture quite relaxed despite the hints of annoyed darkness in his expression. That’s quite a lot of medals on his chest. Whoever this guy is, he carries a heavy weight.
DiNozzo tries not to stare as Gibbs and the Director descend the stairs from the Director’s office to meet with the General. Hands are shaken, but DiNozzo knows both his bosses well enough to tell that neither wants to extend any courtesies.
The stranger has got a few minions with him, and they’re clad in standardized battle-dress uniforms—dark grays and black, sturdy boots, and there’s something suggesting that even though the clothes are clean and boots polished they may be battleworn. Same stock as what the two suspects are wearing, same colorings, and their shoulder patches, too, have been covered up though the shape is somewhat different—Dr McKay’s had been round, but these are more of a triangle shape. But the three marines are not full gear and their thigh holsters are empty. Weapons confiscated at the gate, no doubt. Covers off.
Two women (one dark; one redhead; both quiet and difficult to read, and they’re tense as if this a fight they’re walking into, a hornet’s nest) and one man (square shoulders, dark hair, a conflicted expression). The three linger in the background without saying a word to either the General or among themselves. The way they move … as if they’re a team, part of the same squad; Gibbs is familiar with that. Checking the perimeter; and this is enemy territory.
“Director Sheppard, I presume?”
“Yes,” the Director answers. She can’t recognize the man right away—not the voice who had interrupted her lunch with her PA—but then it clicks. There are a lot of big folk on the move in D.C. in general and at the Pentagon in particular, and the city is thick with agencies; but she’s seen this guy, all right, if only from a distance. “General Jonathan O’Neill, am I right?”
The General breaks into a smile, as if this isn’t a day out of the ordinary after all. “So you’ve heard of me; likewise. Thought it’s ‘Jack’—Major General Jack O’Neill. Hear you’re doing some great work here after your predecessor, Director. All good things. Now, I’ve got three marines here,” the General says, indicating slightly with his head, “with business here while I need to have a chat with you, Director.”
“Is that so,” the Director says, coldly. “I understand that Homeland Security sent you.”
“Technically, yes,” the General says. “Though you could say I’m here on behalf of a friend. Major General Hank Landry, Air Force—old buddy of mine, and let’s say I owed him a favor.”
No one moves. The junior agents barely dare to breathe. Though the words are pleasant and not at all aggressive, and their tones guarded, the air is thick enough to be cut with a knife. DiNozzo discretely checks his phone; Abby was going to let him know when the copying was done, but no word yet. The marines are still quiet and waiting, it seems, for directions. The moment lasts only for a few seconds; Gibbs is staring the General down; the General blinks, briefly, as if only vaguely impressed.
“If,” the Director says, “we hand the reigns of this case to you, what will you do, General?”
“Get to the bottom of this and find the sonofabitch who killed our marine,” says the General, with this heat implying more than he says, though careful, and the Director notes with interest the use of pronouns. This General is Air Force. There are no marines, as such, working directly with or under him; surely. Surely. “Let me ask a question, ma’am. You’re a Sheppard, yeah? Any relation to a Mr Patrick Sheppard, utilities mogul?”
Both are quite common names, and there are probably many living with the combination. But the Director halts, hiding a double-take, face guarded; the conversation is veering into a direction unexpected, and the name does ring a bell. “I can’t see how that’s relevant, General.”
“If I said this case involves both this Mr Sheppard and one of your cousins—a son of said man—rather directly, would you be interested in a compromise? That way, my people—” (which can mean anything) “—will get their answers, and you people will have a chance to continue their investigation. I’ve heard you NCIS people are rather good at what you do, and so are we. A combination of efforts, really. Your agents and yourself would be required to sign a nondisclosure agreement first, of course.”
Wait, her cousin? The agents, including Gibbs, notes the word. The Director never speaks of family, and for this General to know and use it like this; if this is related to the Director, however distantly …
The Zoomie, Gibbs thinks then, hiding whatever shock the realization causes. Snow’s CO. Sheppard.
(There’s no such thing as a coincidence.)
The Director looks at the General sharply. “How directly involved?”
She doesn’t prod about nondisclosure agreements, not yet, far too familiar with those. Most agents sign half their life and their firstborn away before the consequences truly occur, and silence threatens to envelope them. She is willing to sign them, to get answers. Gibbs, perhaps, too. She’s not as certain about the rest of Gibbs’ team. They’ll want questions answered, and no answer can be given beforehand.
“If our theories are right—and I trust that they usually are,” the General adds wryly, “then very directly.” Not a real answer. The General, despite his clever dress blues and neat words, appears almost casually relaxed as if this is nothing new to be shocked or especially concerned over. “As in we have a clue someone might want to get their hands on him; someone other than the usuals.”
How very reassuring, DiNozzo thinks wryly, holding back an irritated noise at the General’s general vagueness.
The Director nods. “If this is done, my team will be granted full access, retain control of the direction of this investigation, and your people will be let in on anything necessary to assist.”
“Hmm. Well, that’s workable. Let’s talk this through with the General,” General O’Neill says (which other General? what?), and faces Gibbs having steadfastly ignored him until now despite the silent glaring. “Agent …?”
“Gibbs,” he says, grating and harsh. He doesn’t trust this guy. His instincts are telling him that General O’Neill, for all his medals and manners, is hiding something huge from them all. And Gibbs isn’t fond of secrets because they too often end in pain and threats of death. “Senior Special Agent Jethro Gibbs.”
“Well, Senior Agent Gibbs, would you mind having one of your junior agents escorting our marines to the morgue,” says the General, despite the wording of a question more of an order, and suddenly he appears not at all amused and his Dæmon is now tenser, a bit slouched as if by weariness and age and burden of command.
He turns to one of the yet anonymous uniforms. Gibbs has glanced at their name tags, though, and notices that there are also flag patches on their shoulders—two American, one German—which isn’t covered up, unlike on the other side; perhaps that contains some classified information, or a codename which the General doesn’t want to reveal yet, something that could tie them to a Secret Project.
The one named Drew is addressed: “Lieutenant, let me know what you find.”
“Yes, sir.”
“The Director and I have a call to make,” General O’Neill goes on. “You have some fancy telephone hub around here, don’t you? Oh,” he adds, struck by a thought: “Dr McKay and the other marine you’ve got in your custody—would you be so kind as to unlock them from your interrogation rooms, Agent Gibbs?”
“Maybe you had orders to bring them out, General, but they’re still suspects at a possible crime scene,” Gibbs says calmly, not backing down. “Suspects under NCIS jurisdiction.”
“Not anymore. We sent them to Lance Corporal Snow’s apartment where you found them. Any complaints about that you’ll have to route through me. Now let them out of there. I need Dr McKay to partake in this chat,” says the General smoothly. The hint of a smile again; only vaguely. “If your people hadn’t only turned up ten minutes later, we could have avoided this whole mess.”
Agent McGee is tired of waiting.
Sure, he knows he’s the most junior agent of his team; the Probie; the one who has to deal with the most menial tasks while also enduring the sometimes-merciless teasing of DiNozzo and, on occasion, Todd. Doesn’t mean he has to like it. Plus, things have gotten better of the past year; he’s proven himself in the field. Shown Gibbs that he’s not just a computer nerd.
And now he’s been put on guard duty. There was a call, so much he’s gathered; the Director had calmly walked into Interrogation One to grab Gibbs, and it sounded urgent. DiNozzo and Todd are now at the plaza, waiting for someone to show up—to take the case. McGee understands how livid Gibbs has got to be.
They’ve moved the two suspects to the same room, and McGee sits behind the one-way mirror, observing. They’re still recording, in case one or two of them lets slip something. Refused to the last to answer questions, stubbornly. Without direct supervision that might change.
When McGee had escorted the Corporal to where the doc was sitting, the two had exchanged a greeting glance and a nod. Then, as he’d left the room, the marine had asked:
“They asked you too, sir, about Mitchell?”
And Dr McKay had said, voice grimly tight and arms crossed: “Yeah. Showed a picture. It … it didn’t look good.”
“I can’t believe it,” Corporal MacGrimmon had muttered, hands knotted atop of the table and for a moment he’d lowered his head as if in grief. “Shit. Shit.”
“It could be someone else,” Dr McKay had said then; refusing to believe. And something like hope had risen in the Corporal’s eyes, and the doc had gone on, carefully, aware that they’re being listened to: “Couldn’t tell who.”
“So he could be …” the Corporal had trailed off and silenced, and the two hadn’t spoken any more.
Eventually—just a few minutes later—his phone buzzes, and McGee fumbles to pick up. “Agent McGee here.”
“You’ve got to release the prisoners, Probie,” says DiNozzo without preamble on the other side. “Orders from the Boss.”
“Right. Okay. So they’re not involved in this?” McGee wonders, confounded and confused. They caught these guys breaking and entering, fair and square.
“I didn’t say that,” the other agent answers. “But we’ve got orders from some hotshot General from the Pentagon. Looks like the doc and his bodyguard have got friends in high places. Get them some visitor badges. Gibbs will still want to talk with them.”
The call ends without a goodbye, and McGee nods at the technician in the corner to cease recording. When he enters the Interrogation room, the doc looks at him, saying—voice light and casual and he’s slouching back, just like before: “Got more questions for us, huh?”
“Not quite,” McGee says reluctantly. “You’re being freed from all charges. Come with me.”
As the two are uncuffed and allowed to stand, Dr McKay gives the Corporal an inexplicable glance.
“See, it worked out like I said it would, Corporal.”
“Only with your—people involved, sir,” says MacGrimmon, as if halting over a word, making a last-minute repair of choice. “Crap like this doesn’t happen to mine.”
The three marines are led down to Autopsy by the two agents, and Todd and DiNozzo watch them carefully. Curious: no introductions were given, as such, but these people must have known Snow well. Their faces are tense, and shoulders drawn back and heavy, and they sometimes exchange quiet glances as the elevator carries them down. Clearly familiar with one another. Their Dæmons stick pretty close. They have fought side-by-side; that much is clear. They don’t speak.
The coroner is waiting. The marine’s Dæmon has been put back in the freezer, and the dead man covered up under a sheet. Dr Mallard nods a quiet hello to the agents, beckoning them over; they’d called to give warning, and give the doc a moment to make the room more presentable, though he’s still outfitted with blood splattered on his clothes and gloves. He takes these off, now, throws them in the bin by the door, before donning a clean pair and leading them to the freezer. Opens number four and pulls the drawer out.
Dr Mallard has done a good job, cleaning out the blood. Fixing up the ruined throat and the damage to the Dæmon’s muzzle even if it’s not (will never be) completely what it was. A difficult task. The coroner has touched more Dæmons in his life than most people would ever have nightmares about, albeit dead ones, and his hands gloved—gruesome and unforgiving, and, most people think, a wrong thing to do. But sometimes it has to be done.
The three marines look at the Dæmon, quietly. Their breathing is sharp, and DiNozzo and Todd think that it’s shock and grief—and then one of them, the dark-haired woman, says:
“No. That’s … that’s not her.”
The marine whose nametag calls her Drew—a Lieutenant, by her colors—raises her gaze to look the agents in the eye. The name immediately rings warning bells: the same name was mentioned in that text conversation. The fact that she’s a marine, that they’re all marines interconnected, that reveals that these people and Snow know each other well enough to be part of the same platoon or squadron. Perhaps closer. Question is: is AR9 the name of that squadron or their op?
Now Drew stares, face tightening, at the unmoving Dæmon laid out on the table and everything is so quiet they can hear the soft murmur of the vents and the agents expect grief, they expect to see stoic shock at the revelation of the dead marine. But now Drew says:
“No. That’s not Mitchell’s Dæmon.”
“You sure, Lieutenant?” DiNozzo checks; this is unexpected. They were pretty sure of the person’s ID, with the digital facial reconstruction recognized by Mrs Snow and all. This definitely complicates things.
“A hundred percent,” agrees one of the other marines, the guy. Private Gamble. “Mitch’s was similar, sure, but their fur was much more red, and there was this white mark on the—Yeah, that’s not her.”
“Could we see the body?” asks the third, the redhead. Private Herschel. She sounds weary, albeit her words are steady. The lilt to her voice suggests that she’s German. “Agents, please,” she adds, an afterthought. “Snow’s part of our team. If it’s—if he’s dead … We need to know.”
Todd glances at Dr Mallard.
“I’m afraid he’s not in a very good shape, my dear,” says Dr Mallard gently. “I fear identifying his face would be impossible.”
“I see,” says the first Lieutenant, drawing a sharp breath. Clearly disturbed at the notion, and somehow understanding—realizing—what the doctor’s statement could imply. “I don’t know who exactly you’ve got here, but that’s not Mitchell’s Dæmon.”
DiNozzo is already crossing the room for the desk by the door, and grabs the landline phone; there’s no cellphone reception down here. The doc would probably remove the landline phone too if he could, not so very fond of it. Gibbs’ number is on speed dial.
He picks up after three long, slow rings.
Behind him DiNozzo hears Todd continue to question the marines, and they keep insisting: No, no, this Dæmon is that of a stranger, and they have worked side-by-side with Snow for over two years. They know him. They know his Dæmon. Might even have spoken with them though they don’t tell, and that only happens when people are very, very, very close. When he glances over his shoulder, DiNozzo sees their frowns and clenched, trembling fists, as if the marines are unsure whether to be relieved or angry, or if they should (could be able to) grieve. The fact that they’re here means that they are missing Snow, and the big General upstairs knew it too, and they showed up thinking they were going to find his body.
“What?”
Gibbs sounds annoyed and tired and generally, really, as himself—in the middle of a discussion with the Director and the strange General, up in SatCom, possibly, or the Director’s office. Voices in the background. Disagreement. Can’t pick out the exact words.
“Boss, the dead Dæmon isn’t the LC’s,” DiNozzo says, lowering his voice a bit. “We might have a John Doe on our hands.” And he thinks of the digital photo which Abby managed to match against records; their face cannot have been too different from the marine’s. “They could be related to the LC somehow, close enough to be mistaken for him.”
Gibbs doesn’t answer, only hangs up after a second of silence. But DiNozzo has worked with him long enough not to take it personally. Or try to, anyhow. Anyway, he understands what it means. He looks at Todd, nodding.
“Let’s get up there.” Turns to the marines. “You’d better come with us.”
The marines are visibly more relaxed than before. As if vague hope has been kindled, and the one with the German accent exhales as they enter the elevator again, and there’s a murmur right before the doors close: He could be all right.
And the other marine answers in a similar soft tone as if only daring to hope: Maybe.
Chapter 16: do not go gentle, part one
Summary:
death can also lie.
Notes:
(2017-03-13) Hello everybody! Thank you everyone who's read this far, left comments and/or left kudos. It's been a while since I wrote anything in this 'verse; been busy with studies and such, and another fic because of my habit of working on half a dozen fic projects at once. But here we are! I recently got back to rewatching Stargate again, and think I've found my way back to this story and these characters. Please enjoy!
(2018-04-07) Chapter updated/revised.
Chapter Text
xvi.
do not go gentle
part one
death can also lie.
A headache is slowly growing behind his eyelids, but John grits his teeth and refuses to let it show.
They’d planned to disconnect tonight—Terran time, that is—in a few hours. It’s already been far longer than their first and only previous test with the stones. Once they get their things back (minus the guns), handed to them by the agent introducing himself as McGee, John glances at the digital watch on Rodney’s wrist; well past two in the afternoon.
On Atlantis it ought to be late morning. Wonder what Rodney’s up to. There’s been no databurst so the people in the City—Elizabeth and everyone else—they have no idea about what’s been happening here. This detachment makes him uncomfortable. If Atlantis was nearby, if this was Pegasus, he could’ve trusted his team to be ready to jump into action or had the surety of the Aurora being able to fly them away and out of harm, of backup being only a Stargate trip away; here, now, none of that’s going to happen.
He reckons, though, as the SGC are keeping their eyes on NCIS at this very moment. They may not have been able to find Snow’s sub-q, but they are well-aware of Rodney’s and MacGrimmon’s respectively.
They were stuck in the interrogation room for quite a while and John had grinned and borne it. Took some grim pleasure in watching the old stern agent’s glare flare and falter—Agent Gibbs hadn’t been pleased. But John hadn’t lied. He couldn’t tell him anything.
The sudden release was unexpected and yet not at all. It doesn’t take long to figure out that someone must’ve guessed they were in trouble; monitoring from the Prometheus, scanning for their subcutaneous transmitters. Colonel Pendergast’s technicians would’ve noticed how he and MacGrimmon moved too quickly from Snow’s apartment here, to NCIS Headquarters, to have been on foot. And John’s order to ring the rest of AR-4 back up would’ve been a big giveaway that something was up. MacGrimmon should’ve been ringed up too, but the marine hadn’t moved into the circle quickly enough. Something that could’ve been interpreted as disobeying orders, but John’s not planning on causing any repercussions for that, regardless if the marine’s move was deliberate.
So they’d been stuck for an uncertain amount of time, unable to tell the truth and unable to prove themselves innocent, and when Agent Gibbs had thrown those grim photographs on the table John had swallowed back nausea and anger. It burned hot in his chest. Because if that’s Snow—no words are enough; no words; no words. Even as Gibbs demanded answers, and asked so bluntly if he or perhaps MacGrimmon were the ones responsible for killing the Lance Corporal—John had wanted to shout, say, show him: no. no way in hell. And he hadn’t wanted to truly believe it.
He’s seen a lot of people die in hideous ways, but this, this was new and rough and shocking, and the memory of that photograph—the man without a face, everything stripped off and seared and ruined—is going to remain at the back of his mind for a long time, perhaps forever. He’d though of Snow, last time he saw the man, with his team being waved off from the City; glimpses at the farewell party sharing Athosian hot cider; the mission to Deserum. Snow is (was) (was) a pleasant kind of guy, the sense of humor most people got along with. Little rough around the edges maybe. His team missing him fiercely, wondering what’s going on and the SGC so interested and the strange coded texts—
And then he wonders what the hell he’s going to tell Snow’s team, and he watches Gibbs’ back as the man turns and sharply walks out of the room upon the demand of a woman over the intercom; Gibbs’ face had remained stony but his eyes a storm upon the interruption. And John’s mind had been only in part of the recent conversation—he’s faced far worse interrogations in the past—and he could think only of Snow’s team, still waiting for their teammate to return, still hoping; and no one has wanted to believe the man to be dead. Run away, perhaps. A traitor, even. John was preparing himself to handle that, to face that unfair truth—but this? this?
MacGrimmon had been questioned too. Asked first thing when they were brought to the same cell about whether he as well was questioned about Snow, and the Corporal’s so usually steady shoulders had hunched slightly and he’d briefly closed his eyes, reality sinking in;
This is Earth. (Most) people who die on Earth stay dead.
And then the door had opened and they’d been let out. Agent McGee has him and MacGrimmon equipped with plastic badges proclaiming them now to the visitors rather than suspects, and they’re led through the dull corridors to a plaza full of people at work.
There are corners divided, and a multitude of desks and computers, and could almost be mistaken for any other ordinary office if not for the row of boards at one wall listing the top ten most wanted terrorists and criminals on NCIS’ list. John can recognize quite a few of the names even if some pictures are grainy and foggy; been on the news, or whispered about, or openly hunted for when he was still on Earth. Some are unknown, deep secrets. Not quite like the secrets of the SGC.
Corporal MacGrimmon is real quiet for a while. Hadn’t wanted to believe; their brief earlier conversation hasn’t soothed his fears even if he seemed a little bit relieved when John said he couldn’t identify the dead man’s photograph. Had understood, though he didn’t put it to words, that the man was beyond recognition; implying so much more than a mugging gone wrong, a case of mistaken identity.
Agent McGee’s desk contains two computers, of the old bulky kind, and it’s kind of strange to see so many stationaries; John has become used to the ways of Atlantis, the sleek consoles and plasma screens, the Ancient holographic displays, and the laptops they’d brought with them, the PDAs littering the hallways.
The guy powers one computer up and tells them to wait for his boss—Gibbs—to return. The man’s Dæmon is a ferrety thing which peers at them curiously, quietly. Looks kind of daunted and a bit confounded.
Speaking of which. John glances around. There are many windows, but he can’t see an opening mechanism to them right away. Besides, even if he got them open, it’s not like they could fly in here without causing a minor riot, and he’s just in no mood to deal with that. They’ve got a view from the outside. Keeping up with the car, earlier, as the agents had taken them from Snow’s apartment, had been a bit difficult but the city traffic has a lot of slowing twists and turns and holdups, and the Raven would always catch up at the traffic lights. And it had been strange, and John had sat in the car eyes half-lidded, watching, watching the Terran city sweeping by below, all of these humans, all of these people everywhere—
He’d almost forgotten. The noise, the smell of a city so crowded. Atlantis doesn’t have cars or trains or movement of the same kind. There are no Starbucks or busy cafés, no wafting scents of food at odd places, no shopping malls. There are no busy businessmen stressedly crossing the street. Cars. Highways and people minding their own lives, unaware of the vastness of the sky;
Earth … is noisy. Oh, Earth is so loud. And the wind had tasted strange, not as clean as the air on New Lantea, tainted by CO2, and it had taken a good deal of effort and concentration to remain on course and not fly higher, seeking altitude among the clouds, far from the noise and pollution.
The city is full of birds. Took advantage of that. No one pays heed to another raven in the sky. Near NCIS Headquarters a pack of crows nearly collided with them, and Shy had joined them, foreign; a bit difficult to navigate amongst and through them, but it’s easier to blend in. Then they had passed, and the Raven had settled atop of a lamppost (the sensation of Terran steel so strange so strange) from where they can peer right into the agents’ office. Now John glances sideways and sees, for the first time in too long, that they’re truly all right, even if he always can feel it, and see what they see if he wants to.
The wind is slightly cold, and it had rained until just a little while ago. Their feathers feel a bit heavy, and they ruffle them, trying to get some of the water out. They observe, somewhat bemused, the world around them. The Dæmon has never before seen Earth, like this, truly: only though his memories. They can see him now, too, and he feels them relax a bit—you’re all right; we’re all right. No one pays heed.
But if an agent were to look out the window this moment, they might’ve noticed the glimmering green eyes staring unblinkingly back, far too intelligent to belong to a natural animal.
Agent McGee clears his throat. “Uh, would you like some coffee or anything?”
John glances at MacGrimmon. “No, sir. I’m good, thanks,” says the Corporal. And John shakes his head. Everything tastes bland anyway, and he doubts it’d help his headache.
The agent doesn’t leave them be. No doubt because he doesn’t trust them. To be honest, this guy appears more of a geek than a soldier; some kind of hacker, maybe? More Spock than Kirk, anyway. Nowadays such skills are just as valuable for intelligence (if not more) as old fashioned guns-out-blazing soldiering. Agent Gibbs had seemed shrewd, but also more of the latter kind, and John thinks the guy must’ve been a marine before he became an NCIS Agent. It would explain why he seems to be taking Snow’s death not only seriously but personally.
Snow’s death. No. John doesn’t want to be certain of that. There is a body, yes; but no more than that. Yet. No dog tags or other clear marks of ownership, and—no mention of the man’s Dæmon. Do they autopsy those? John’s pretty sure normal cops wouldn’t; hell, normally a proper deep autopsy isn’t the norm if the cause of death is clear enough—but federal agencies are another thing.
Is the dead man’s Dæmon lying somewhere between these four walls, hidden in an icy drawer, cut open with a coroner weighing its insides?
John forces back a shudder and tries not to think of it.
He turns to the agent. “How come you’ve suddenly exchanged our cuffs for guest badges?” John asks.
Agent McGee answers in a tone of voice suggesting he’s not certain just how much he should, or is allowed, to tell. “There was a call from a General. You seem to have some important friends, Dr McKay.”
Being addressed like that never ceases being weird and he tries not to let it show; tries to react appropriately and at once, and not at all like the name isn’t his own. Each time, the delay is a little shorter.
“Yeah, well, I guess we’re more popular than we thought,” he says, and from the corner of his eye notices MacGrimmon’s mouth twitching in a faint smile.
Then McGee tries talking with them. Or him, specifically. Something about MIT and publications and the like, and John attempts to roll with it. So McGee is a geek, it seems, graduated from MIT (with very high scores no doubt) with a focus on computer sciences, and he’s heard of McKay even if they work in different fields. Maybe even read one or two of his papers before the man disappeared from the face of the Earth (literally; not that McGee knows that), and when McGee asks if he’s published anything lately, John shrugs, says something along the lines of not having the time and it’s classified; the good old excuse.
Even as he repeats the same lie for the fifth time, John is a little bit smug that he can still follow McGee’s conversation, at least when it veers into areas of mathematics common to both computers and theoretical astrophysics. After all, much of one depends on the other. Equations are needed to build simulations. He guesses McKay would love to butt heads with this guy. Of course the debate would end, eventually, with McKay declaring the agent to lack in intelligence, but still.
And as they talk, he hopes to lower the agent’s guard bit by bit. Wheedle out some information about the case, or about the agents themselves.
“Your boss seems the grouchy type.”
The agent looks around for a moment as if fearing that said man would suddenly appear. “Uh, he, he can be,” McGee admits, “but he’s a really good agent. Solves every case.”
“Every one?”
“Yeah! Yeah.”
“Huh. Is he ex-military or something? Seems the type.”
McGee nods. “He was a marine before joining NCIS,” he says. And then he stiffens a bit, catching on that he’s the one being asked the questions when, just a minute ago, it was the other way around, and his expression turns slightly pinched and suspicious.
John makes an ahuh-noise at the back of his throat. Ruse’s up. The agent’s going to avoid further questions in that direction. He lets his gaze sweep over the plaza. There’s a digital billboard nestled between two desks, a wide plasma screen, and there are lists of suspects and notes about evidence and drawn red lines and question marks.
John can see names there; Snow’s, of course, but also his own, as the CO. There’s a phone number attached and an angry string of words muttering unreachable, try later, and he bites back a wry grin. Good luck with that.
As soon as they’re out of the elevator, DiNozzo heads for SatCom, and Todd leads the marines back to their pen, where McGee is sitting by a computer, typing; it’s hard to tell whether he’s actually working or only putting on a guise while often glancing upward and sideways at the marine and civilian man also standing there. Neither has sat down, even though being offered a chair.
They’d almost forgotten all about the two previous suspects. They’re now out of Interrogation, and McGee seems to have supplied them with visitor badges. At the sight of them, standing casually relaxed in the plaza—at least Dr McKay seems relaxed; the dark marine is still stiff and seems kind of pissed off—the three marines stop short.
“Colonel!” Lieutenant Drew, stepping forth and, funnily enough, it seems like her hand is itching to rise in a salute, though she stills the action before it begins. Todd still takes note of it, because it’s such an odd thing to do; Dr McKay, whom she’s turning to, is a civilian.
“Nah. It’s the doc for now,” says Dr McKay in greeting. Words strange. The Lieutenant appears briefly confounded, before she and the others nod, as if an agreement has passed. “Good to see you, Lieutenant.”
“Sir—doc.” Drew’s voice is tight but hopeful. “Snow might be alive.”
Corporal MacGrimmon, silent until now, stares wide-eyed and there’s an unreadable expression in his eyes. “What?”
Dr McKay, also obviously shocked, doesn’t say anything at once. Looks the Lieutenant in the eye, and hope returns: “You sure?”
“Yeah. It’s not his Dæmon in the morgue.”
“Shit. Do we know …?” MacGrimmon leaves the sentence hanging, tersely.
“No,” Todd cuts in. “But if what you’re saying is true, then it is possible the body does not belong to Lance Corporal Snow. And that means this case is outside of the jurisdiction of whoever you’re working for.” She directs that last part sharply toward Dr McKay as well, who only shrugs, nonchalantly, as if this isn’t his problem.
McGee is standing. “Wait, does Gibbs know about this?”
“Yeah, Tony’s letting him know all about it now. Are they in SatCom?” Todd asks.
“Yeah, with the Director and the Air Force General,” McGee nods, a bit nervously, because Gibbs and the Director had both seemed a lot angrier and more annoyed than usual; as if the General had come to spit at their feet and insult all of NCIS in the process.
Truth to be told, McGee isn’t too happy either, and not just because his bosses are on the edge. No. Something about all this is giving him a bad feeling; like that creeping sensation up the spine giving you misgivings about what you’re actually experiencing, what’s truly real. He doesn’t like it at all.
Then there’s Dr McKay and Corporal MacGrimmon. The two certainly hadn’t bowed during interrogation, and he heard from Tony that the doctor even called Gibbs ‘a swell guy’ to his face without blinking. Looking at him down, it doesn’t seem likely. There’s a certain cockiness in the man’s body language, and that’s another thing that’s bothering him. The man looks far too at home in the black battle dress uniform than a civilian ought. McGee isn’t a marine by any means, but he’s been around long enough to pick up on things. It’s like the guy’s face isn’t matching the rest of him; or perhaps his voice, his words themselves.
Once he’d taken them out of the cuffs and away from the harsh lights of the interrogation rooms, they’d both seemed friendly enough. Corporal MacGrimmon hadn’t said much, though he said thanks when McGee got their stuff back from Abby’s lab, minus their still-confiscated weapons—those they’ll only get back once they leave HQ altogether.
It doesn’t sit well with him to just let the two go, like that, at the snap of a finger when just an hour ago they were suspects at a possible crime scene. But Gibbs couldn’t disobey the General without good cause, and so far they haven’t been any clues that these two men are murderers. As for their real reason for being at Snow’s apartment …
And now Snow isn’t the victim?
Possibly, he mentally adds, because a Dæmon only tells half a story. Snow could be dead, his Dæmon dumped elsewhere, and that would mean the guy in the morgue is indeed him, but the dead Dæmon belongs to someone, too; either possibility means that someone else other than Snow is dead. The victim of homicide.
And the fact that the Dæmon is such a lookalike to Snow’s. And Snow himself. The digital facial reconstruction isn’t a hundred percent, of course, but the likeness was enough to fool even Snow’s mother, and—McGee frowns. There are too many missing pieces to draw the proper conclusions. Are they dealing with two dead, not one?
While Tony and Kate had been takin the marines to Dr Mallard, and Gibbs and Director Sheppard busied themselves with the General, McGee was left alone with Dr McKay and MacGrimmon. Not suspects anymore. Guests. Got them badges to show just this.
At first, he’d attempted discourse. McGee studies different—vastly different, at times—sciences at MIT than what Dr McKay has got his degrees in, but he thought, maybe, he could glean a thing or two from him in some innocent geeky talk (as Tony would sneeringly call it). Yet the doc hadn’t seemed very interested in that. In fact he’d seemed pretty uncomfortable when addressed—particularly, McGee had noticed, when using the agent spoke to him using the proper epithet of ‘Doctor’—as if McKay didn’t feel deserving of it.
In vain, he had tried to grasp for common ground. Asked if the doc had read this or that recent paper and found that, no, no he hadn’t. Dr McKay said some frail excuse about being offshore for a long time. Odd choice of words, though McGee couldn’t immediately realize why or how. Said he hadn’t published for the same reasons. Classified work; can’t explain unless the whole thing it’s connected to is declassified. That McGee can believe, since the doc’s signed up to work with the government, whichever branch it might be, and they’re sticklers to rules, regs, and classifications.
Anyway, Kate’s back now, and the dynamic of the room changes the moment the elevator slides open. The three marines are joined by MacGrimmon, and the doctor, seemingly comfortingly at ease (recognizing them all; knows the name; they must’ve worked together) stayed with them. Maybe not in the group yet not apart. Now they’re speaking in low voices as if the agents aren’t there to listen.
“You know if my team’s all right?” Corporal MacGrimmon is asking Lieutenant Drew, who nods.
“Yeah. Colonel Pendergast explained they were collected,” she says. “They’re waiting there.”
MacGrimmon nods, visibly relieved to hear this.
“Hey, for a second there you got us worried, man,” says Gamble. “What happened?”
Dr McKay has got his arms crossed, wryly amused. “Got ourselves arrested by a pair of curious agents. We’d barely just arrived, and couldn’t really get a good look around. No sign of a struggle, though.”
“What about, uh—I mean, are they around? Your, uh—they?” Drew asks suddenly, as if struck by a thought and can’t word it properly. The question is so vague. Or, or there’s something that can’t be said, and now she has to code the message. An agreed upon secret, and that’s both interesting and disconcerting, and just the sort of thing which agents are taught to look for. The Lieutenant sounds genuinely concerned. “If you were are the apartment, and the agents saw—”
Dr McKay must’ve caught on, because he shakes his head to that statement. “No. Though, kind of tricky to keep up with the car. I don’t think anyone noticed.”
“Well,” says MacGrimmon, at length, “the city’s full of birds.”
“Yeah,” Dr McKay chuckles. “Doesn’t seem like these windows can be opened, though.”
“Isn’t that … strange?” says Herschel. “Is it a problem, sir?”
“No. Take a look, if you like.”
McGee tries to follow their gazes, past the agents at work and the busy desk, toward the windows lining the opposite wall. The day outside is still cloudy, though it’s ceased raining a little while ago, and maybe the sun will come out for a little while before the day is over.
There, there’s a glimpse of streets, cars moving to and fro, the cityscape never-ending; a line of lampposts, dark, and flashing signs at a distance, and a couple of trees swaying in the light wind. People. McGee thinks he sees a flock of birds pass by—a pack of dark crows, though one of them is a pretty big one; maybe it’s not a crow, he’s not sure of what’s what, to be honest. Not a bird person. It stops briefly on the nearest lamppost, as if to rest. Ruffles its feathers, unblinking. Some passers-by cross the sidewalk below, a few still clutching umbrellas since the sky is still threateningly heavy.
There’s nothing strange about the sight, just a normal day for the people outside HQ, and yet the marines all seem calmed a bit by looking out; it’s only a moment, one second, and then it’s gone.
Then the moment is forgotten and McGee doesn’t remember it for a long while afterward, because Gibbs reappears, DiNozzo in tow, and there’s also the Air Force General. The Director is not with them.
“Dr McKay.” Gibbs’ voice is unmistakable. It’s not quite a command or an angry bark, nor a question. Sharp.
“Hello again, Agent Gibbs,” Dr McKay smiles pleasantly. Turns toward the General—evidently they’re not strangers. No lies. Dr McKay’s stance shifts, hands momentarily clasped behind his back. “General. How was the talk?”
“Well, there was talking, and talking, and talking—the Director is still doing that with Hank,” the General says, tone implying he’d rather be sipping coffee in his office, or possibly be working off steam in a shooting range. “So apparently our victim is not Lance Corporal Snow.” Sends a glance at the three marines.
“No, sir,” reports Lieutenant Drew dutifully, backed up by the other marines. “At least it’s not his Dæmon.”
“We still can’t find his sub-q,” the General says. Looks at Dr McKay. “You’re lucky you got picked up by NCIS, by the way. Just imagining having to meddle with another agency makes me shudder. Two birds with one stone, really. Now, we’re still trying to work out the details here,” he says, giving Gibbs a sidelong glance, “and both Agent Gibbs and Director Sheppard—” (something significant about the name; the marines all react to it, in various degrees; McGee thinks he’s missed something here, something that could end up being important) “—are quite insistent that you and the LC are to be kept here. I have to disagree. Anyhow, we’ve had a pleasant chat with Hank about this though the matter isn’t settled. Good thing is,” he says, turning to Dr McKay and MacGrimmon, “you’re both free from all charges.”
“Thank you, sir,” Dr McKay says graciously. It doesn’t quite match his face.
“Don’t thank me,” the General shakes his head. “I think you’d better have a private talk with the Director, doctor. She insists on not signing the confidentiality agreement right just yet. Apparently, we’re not ‘trustworthy’.” This seems to amuse him, like an old joke.
“Surprise, surprise,” mutters Private Gamble dryly, and Private Hershel hushes him with a sharp familiar look.
“So you still want to take this case, even though evidently the body in the morgue is not yours to lay claim to,” says Gibbs, and stares down the General; could keep it up all day, no doubt, even without coffee.
Awesome.
“This doesn’t entirely exclude involvement on our … behalf,” the General says, and McGee thinks this is the time to start backing away slowly. Doesn’t want to get caught in a pissing match between Gibbs and an unknown factor. Even Tony seems wary, though this kind of thing might’ve amused him. “I can’t tell you more than that.”
“You still won’t tell us who you work for, not even an acronym—I don’t believe that bullshit about this being Homeland Security.”
The General doesn’t seem to be offended. Instead he regards Gibbs carefully, closely, almost as if weighing him. Then, without taking his eyes off of him, he addresses Dr McKay. “Do you suppose you could talk some sense into the Director?”
“Uh, maybe, sir. Yes, sir. Depends on how far I’m allowed to go in the talking,” Dr McKay corrects himself, and then it strikes McGee what other thing that was all wrong with this guy: he doesn’t sound like a Canadian, nor like a civilian. He sounds like American military. It’s right there in front of them, clear as day, so suddenly—
This guy isn’t Dr McKay, regardless what his photo claims. This guy … is some kind of usurper.
Gibbs seems to have realized this too.
“Who the hell are you?”
The General smiles, teeth glinting white. “Oh, you wouldn’t believe half of it, agent. Now, we’ve got to be off. McKay—have a chat with your cousin. She’s in her office. Up that way.”
“Sir.” The doc nods, like a marine would at an order.
“And we’ve got the nondisclosure agreements on standby,” adds the General, “so, if push comes to shove, talk away.”
‘Cousin’? O-kay. Huh. But the doc’s Canadian …? Obviously, they need to go back and study his family tree, and see wherever it conjoins with the Director’s. And see what kind of relevance that could have with the case.
Baffled, McGee watches them go. The General takes the marines with him; though they all offer to stay with the doc, for some reason, as some personal security escort, and MacGrimmon says before the elevator reaches them: “Sir, I’m going to stick around, ‘cause we all know the trouble the—the doc gets into.”
Dr McKay doesn’t react, as if he didn’t hear, not even rolling his eyes. He’s already only his way toward the Director’s office. Whatever the General answers, swayed or orders disobeyed, the LC does indeed stay, getting a clap on the back from the one named Gamble before he hurries after Dr McKay.
“Corporal, I didn’t give the order,” Dr McKay starts, sounding just slight exasperated, as MacGrimmon bounds up the stairs two at a time, coming to the doc’s side.
“Well, then I’m making my own, sir. City Veteran Privilege.”
“Fine. Don’t think I didn’t hear that, though.”
From this angle McGee can’t see the marine’s face, only hear the vague response: “Yes, sir, sorry, sir.”
And then the two have ascended to the top floor and entered the corridor leading to the Director’s office. And if the agent had taken the time to look out the window, he would have seen the same raven, previously perched quietly atop a lamppost, take flight, as if ascending with them; but Agent McGee and his colleagues don’t look out and don’t see this happening.
Instead they wait until the General and his minions have left through the elevator, and then Gibbs turns to them, gathering them around, and from his expression McGee can tell that this is far from over.
Cynthia Summer’s day has been wearisome and worrisome, and there’s been some strange things in it. The phonecalls interrupting, and the Director’s face falling into shadow. Yet, for all the ways that it’s bothersome and dreary, it’s not extraordinary, and no cause for true alarm. Not for her. When the Air Force General had appeared and spoken, at length, with the Director in her office, along with Agent Gibbs, Cynthia hadn’t been privy to details. At the end of the day she’s probably better off not knowing. After some time, the General and Gibbs had both left, and the Director had said she didn’t want to be disturbed. A call she has to make on her own. Even now Cynthia can hear her voice, distantly, filtering through the door. She’ll get her some coffee later, and see if there’s still some of that cake left in the fridge.
She’d sorted paperwork and rang some necessary calls to make the rest of the afternoon run more smoothly, and then, at 14:18, the phone rings again. There’s something vaguely familiar about the number. Cynthia adopts her usual pleasant tone as she answers.
“NCIS, Director’s office. … Hello. How can I help you, Ms Mayfield?” And she remembers suddenly where she last heard that name, and she doesn’t know why, but something strikes her as odd about this conversation. The VP of that company. She doesn’t repeat the name this time, as if that’s not of importance. “One moment. The Director is in an urgent meeting, but—Yes. Yes. I see. … With whom is she…? No, I am not able to divulge that information. If I can take a message, or arrange a meeting … Today? I’m afraid that will not be possible, ma’am. But tomorrow; twelve o’clock? … That’s the best that can be arranged—” The woman on the other side is clearly aggravated but smoothing it out. Another stressed secretary, Cynthia would just reckon. “I understand, Ms Mayfield, but the Director isn’t available for the rest of today—”
Someone knocks at the door. Cynthia reaches for the button on the side of her desk, to change the lamp-lit sign hanging by the door from the green available to the red busy. They just have to wait for a moment. Cynthia’s desk is placed in a room adjacent to the Director’s, and one has to walk through it to reach the other. It’s a sensible arrangement, being her PA and all, but it has the unfortunate side-effect of some people thinking they can just walk through as they will without bothering. This time, at least, whoever’s on the other side of the door gets the message, stopping to knock, either walking away or waiting.
She refocuses on the conversation. Ms Mayfield’s voice is like honey, smooth and silken and well-practiced, as she repeats that this is an urgent matter that must be discussed with the Director as soon as possible, without explaining what the urgent matter actually is. Nothing usual. Cynthia has spoken with too many people like that in her career. Typical federal attitude, to reveal nothing, and either Ms Mayfield or her employer carry some classified information. And they wouldn’t have gotten this number by looking it up in a catalogue. It clearly is important.
“I understand, ma’am, but Director Sheppard is truly quite busy,” Cynthia says, again. “I can’t say when she’ll be available today. Let me take a message to pass on. … Yes, in the building.” Grabbing a pencil, she scribbles in her dependable notebook. “Yes. Yes. Thank you. I’ll let the Director know. … Have a nice day.”
She places the phone back in the cradle, and exhales, studying the message. Brief and not telling anything. Then she glances toward the Director’s office. The door remains closed, and she can vaguely Director Sheppard within arguing at level tones. She isn’t agreeing with whoever is on the other side.
It’s still quite cold in here, that stray draft refusing to cease. Yeah, she’ll talk with a janitor … when she finds the time. Whenever she finds the time.
Then she switches the sign from busy to available, and, after a few seconds, two people enter. And Cynthia saw—just a glimpse but enough to be sure—those two in Interrogation earlier, when the Director had marched down to interrupt Agent Gibbs’ work. But now the two are wearing visitor’s badges. One of them—tall, dark and handsome—is obviously a marine. The other—white, slightly soft around the middle, receding hairline—clears his throat and smiles in an off-guard manner Cynthia guesses is meant to be charming, though there’s a peculiar tilt to his lips as if he’s not that sure about using them to smile.
“Hi. Is this Director Sheppard’s office?”
“Yes,” Cynthia says. “But she’s busy at the moment with an important call.”
“General Hank Landry,” guesses the man, and Cynthia frowns: that was the exact name the Director used before she locked the door. The man in charge of these other people’s affairs, which are shrouded in mystery; and the Director isn’t fond of mysteries.
“I’m sorry, sirs, but you just have to wait.”
“That’s fine,” says the man. “Thanks.”
There’s a soft, short sofa along the opposite wall, between a plotted plant and the window, but neither man sits down. They seem far too tense. Cynthia readies herself for bothersome questions or, worse, long hard looks and poor attempts at flirtation, but this doesn’t occur. Instead the marine and the civilian—she supposes—draw close together, backs half-turned to her desk.
“Suppose they’ll listen, sir?” says the marine quietly.
“Honestly I’ve got no idea,” shrugs the other.
And they don’t really speak anymore until, a few minutes later, the Director’s call is ended and Cynthia announces that she’s got two visitors on the intercom. The Director doesn’t sigh, but her voice is strained, and she doesn’t sound surprised.
“Send them in.”
Director Sheppard has had enough.
This murder is unlike any other case. Oh, they’ve had similar ones. Dark and messy ones. They’ve investigated marines, civilians, even their own agents. These people, they’re different. If she had the choice of any words she wanted, she’d say they’ve lost a piece of their minds somewhere along the line.
General O’Neill has reached the peak of his career, now a desk-bound pilot but the Jenny thinks she can still see some energy in him. He speaks in a very laid-back manner, but evidently knows the works. He’s in the Pentagon, after all. They don’t let just anyone in. Jenny has her assistant, Cynthia, find O’Neill’s record. It’ll make interesting reading and perhaps tell her something the man won’t.
It’s all so secretive. And she’s the Director and doesn’t usually get directly involved in cases—but the General had looked her in the eye and mentioned her long-lost cousin, and, despite herself, Jenny is intrigued. She hasn’t heard from that cousin since childhood, years and years and years ago. From old Christmas cards and vague family gatherings, she’d summarized that there’d been a falling out, discourse, disquiet, after her aunt-in-law died. Car accident, she thinks it was. She’d phone sometimes, a few times a year, to talk with her uncle; Patrick is getting old. There was a letter a few weeks ago, from her other cousin, Dave; a wedding invitation. Jenny’s still deliberating whether she’ll have the time to go.
Dr McKay isn’t smiling. The greetings had been flat and empty and stilted. So the General’s so desperate he sends me a theoretical physicist to talk me into signing a nondisclosure agreement.
“I know it sounds—out there,” the doc makes a vague gesture with his hand. “Hell, I didn’t buy it at first, either. But trust me, signing it is worth it. Because if you don’t, within a few minutes, we’ll probably take the body and all anyway and solve this on our own, and I’ve got a feeling you won’t like that.”
“You’re right, I won’t,” she responds. “Let me ask: what’s a Canadian physicist doing in concord with the Air Force?”
“Bit of this, bit of that. It’s not just Air Force,” Dr McKay reveals after a moment of deliberation. “This … this is huge. It’s bigger than the planet.”
Odd choice of words.
“Okay, okay,” says the doc, finally. “You don’t believe me. I get it. I wouldn’t either. Story of my life,” he drawls, dryly, and his accent sounds nothing Canadian at all, despite the words on paper. Gibbs had voiced similar concerns: impostor. This guy is a liar, and so is the General and the rest of them.
So are we, Jenny reminds herself. There are many things the NCIS never tells the public. Why would this other Program—still refusing to reveal their true identity—be any different?
“I don’t know why the General thought I could convince you,” sighs the doc, rubbing at his temples, the most vivid gesture so far. He looks bleak all of a sudden, tired, worn.
He’d entered her officer alone, leaving the marine—Corporal MacGrimmon—by the door. Her insistence. These words are for them alone. Jenny feels her Dæmon restlessly against her leg, trying to keep still.
“Here’s the deal. You sign this,” he holds up the pile of paper, so innocently, TOP SECRET stamped at the top. “And we’ll let you know who we really are, and we catch a murderer, and there’s your happy ending.” He says it as if he doesn’t believe in those at all, but Jenny doesn’t either, and doesn’t comment on it. “Or you don’t sign it and you’ll never know the truth. Your choice.”
“I—” she starts.
And then there’s a strange whining noise, and a retaliating voice shouting, and Dr McKay is on his feet almost as if his nerves are as honed as her own. She reaches for her gun resting on her hip. She rarely gets to use it anymore—not since she was an active agent herself.
The voice isn’t shouting in English, some foreign language she’s never before heard, harsh and unforgiving. And every one of her instincts scream at her: there’s someone in the building. Intruders. But how? To have gotten past security, all the agents—there’s no way that—
She’s by the door, and Dr McKay, though unarmed, takes point on the other side as if realizing what she’s about to do. Exchanges a look. Inhaling, exhaling, Jenny nods, and the doc grabs the handle, swinging the door open, and Jenny takes point, gun aimed;
The room should be empty but for Cynthia and the marine. The marine is lying on the floor, out cold, Dæmon sprawled next to him, and Cynthia is crouched behind her desk. A red light is blinking. Means that the rest of the building’s been alerted. Good. No sight or smell of blood. But they’re not alone.
Somehow, somehow, somehow these people have made it past the locked doors. And Jenny’s first thought is this can’t be fucking right, because there are three men in the strangest getup she’s ever seen, some kind of golden armor; escapees from the museum’s Ancient Egyptian exhibit. There are marks on their foreheads. The fourth man is clad in a black BDU—basic standard—no insignia, and his eyes are cold like ice, and his Dæmon is the shape of a gray wolf. She can’t see any others. All this is registered in the flash of a second.
She pulls the trigger. The bullet makes a dent in the chest plating of one of the first three, and the guy stumbles back but doesn’t fall. They’re holding a tall staff, and aims it at them like a weapon—
“Crap!” gasps McKay, and Jenny is tugged back by the elbow. A blast of heat and light and noise from the staff—what the fucking hell—sears into the wall behind where she’d just been standing. McKay doesn’t even blink. He slams the doors shut.
“I need a weapon!”
She doesn’t have spares. Shakes her head.
A second blast tears though the door handle. Forced open. They stream in. A rain of fire. She returns it.
What the hell’s going on?!
Pain. It blazes across her torso, burns through her shoulder. She falls back, grunting. When she removes her hand, she finds traces of blood on it but adrenaline makes the pain dull and faraway. Dr McKay, unarmed, grabs for anything to use, and he doesn’t move like a terrified civilian. He isn’t shrieking or pleading or weeping. He grabs a pen from the desk like it were a knife and collides with one of the armored men. Pierces his right eye with it. The man howls and falls, and blood spurts darkly on the floor.
In a haze, Jenny tries to pull out her cell. Dial Gibbs. Anyone. They must have heard the gunshots. They must be on their way—
“Hold it right there!” barks the man with the wolf. There is no infliction to his words: no pain, no anger, no particular heat. The words simply are, and Jenny feels a chill running down her spine.
She’s faced down all sorts of people. Been part of dark secret ops and special extractions and shoot-outs. She’s interrogated and done things to be less proud of. But she’s never seen eyes like that, or a Dæmon so utterly still, as if it were a shell, tired and to be disposed of.
And Dr McKay stares, shocked;
“Colonel Everett.”
This isn’t possible.
John has read the reports; he’s seen grim pixelated images, shaky video feeds. He’s read the reports. The markings on their foreheads, their staffs. These are Jaffa in service of some Goa’uld—and they can only have gotten in here by ship. Ringed. There’s a ship. Where? Is it cloaked, hidden? Circling above D.C. right at this moment?
This isn’t possible.
He sees the Director go down, the blast hitting her shoulder. Staff weapon. The damage is like a burn, but it bleeds too, and John has never seen those staffs in action before and feels helpless not knowing what the damage could be. By comparison, Wraith weapons are so simple—they don’t make you bleed. And the bolts of energy released by the staff aren’t like bullets either. It burns as well as pierces.
They need backup. Assistance. This building is full of agents and surely surely surely someone’s on their way?
This is fucked up, he thinks, and reacts, grabbing a pen to wield as a knife and it’s almost ridiculous in its irony but he isn’t laughing. That’s the pen Jenny would have used to sign the nondisclosure agreement if they’d managed to get that far. Instead, instead NCIS HQ is being attacked from within by Goa’uld.
And the mastermind—he knows that silhouette. He knows.
“Colonel Everett,” slips out of him, the pure shock for a second. Everett is not a Colonel anymore. He’d walked away from the Corps, after—No, not willingly. And now John grows cold; this is the reason. Everett didn’t leave the Corps willingly. They must’ve gotten a Snake in his head to pull the shots, it’s the only thing that makes sense because Everett had been far too proud to just walk away unhindered. The wolf is still like a statue, unnaturally so, especially since there’s a firefight raging around them. As the man turns, zat’nik’tel in hand, John is certain without a doubt. “Stand down!”
In return, Everett doesn’t speak. Takes aim. John ducks to the side, a flare of electrified air sweeping past him, over his head. The man—the Goa’uld—fires again. Counting the milliseconds, waiting.
Jenny is clutching her injury with her right hand. And John seeks her gaze. She nods, shakily. She lifts her gun.
A bullet hits right where he wanted it to, tearing through Everett’s wrist, forcing him to drop the zat. The man does so involuntarily, flinching, but he doesn’t stagger or drop down or cry out in pain. The stilted expression on his face is entirely inhuman. Unnatural. Wrong.
John manages to take one step forward, manages to just grab the zat, before a cold muzzle is pressed against his neck. The grip is steady and unwavering. The two Jaffa still standing, one of them with a deep dent in its armor above where a human has their heart, point their staff weapons at him and Jenny.
He stills.
“Drop the weapon.”
He hesitates.
“Drop it.”
Ah, fuck. He can’t fight like this. Rodney’s body doesn’t know how to. And he doesn’t want Rodney to get hurt. He obeys, safety on, and kicks the zat in Everett’s direction when prompted to.
“You’re going to call the Raven to you, or I will kill your companion and then put a bullet in your spine.”
Jenny is held down by one of the Jaffa. Willing herself to remain conscious. She’s pale, breaths harsh. She doesn’t move, and neither does her Dæmon and at least, at least no one’s touching them but John knows that they will if he fights them. If any of them struggle. Can’t let that happen. John dares to glance sideways somewhat, but can’t see the speaker yet, but it’s a woman’s voice, dangerously soft. Another Snake?
Has to be. No one in their right mind would be serving a Snake willingly, and it’s not the desperate voice of someone moving under coercion.
“Fine,” he grinds out, reluctantly. Shy whispers, [We’ll be fine. Been in worse spots.] and he says: “Got to open a window.”
One of the Jaffa does when commanded to: a blast from the staff weapon breaks the glass. A breeze, slightly moist with dark rain, sweeps through the room. It is so silent now, too silent. But John can hear voices and moving feet. The agents must’ve figured what’s up, amassed forces, and now they’re trying to get through the door. But he doubts that they’ll still be here when they do.
The Raven sweeps down from the lamppost where they’d waited, partly hidden in the gloom, watching out of sight; Jenny wasn’t meant to know; no one was meant to know or be given a chance to react. They land on his right shoulder, a familiar weight, a wing nearly touching the gun and they could have tried attacking. Could have swept down and hacked out the Snake’s eyes and snatched the gun out of their hands—but the Jaffa have got Jenny and her Dæmon, and, shit, John can’t let them die because of this, because of him.
He can’t see if MacGrimmon is still alive. The marine is lying unmoving, but hopefully, hopefully, he’s just been stunned by the zat. That was the noise, earlier. Discharge.
He grins bleakly, and tries to sound cheerfully optimistic. “Where do you want us next, huh?”
The muzzle is moved from his neck. A woman steps into view, a stranger. Maybe she’s the Snake in charge, not Everett. She’s dressed like going to the office, blonde hair pulled back, and he supposes that this is the kind of woman McKay could’ve drooled over. Her face is dangerous. She makes a gesture, and the Jaffa pull Jenny closer and force her Dæmon to comply. And John figures that means they’re about to get out of here, and not through any door.
The last thing he sees is the bright light of the transporter rings folding over them, and then the room dissolves, bearing them up through the atmosphere.
Chapter 17: one small step
Summary:
this can’t be real: this cannot possibly be real.
Notes:
(2018-04-07) Chapter updated/revised.
(2023-02-15) A small detail corrected for continuity.
Chapter Text
xvii.
one small step
this can’t be real: this cannot possibly be real.
Corporal J.J. MacGrimmon comes to with a headache and to a medic shining a bright white light in his eyes. He swats them away. Swaying, his Dæmon tries to get dizzily to her feet, but they both are too unstable for the moment. J.J. feels groggy, disorientated. Like … like he’s been clipped by a Wraith stunner, though the aftertaste is a bit different. More bitter. Tangible.
Hang on. Stunned.
The Jaffa—shit, there’d been Jaffa, they’d ringed down—
“Take it easy, kid,” says General O’Neill, swimming into vision, and the marine realizes he’s lying atop the sofa in the waiting room outside of the Director’s office. The Director of NCIS. Yeah, that’s why they’re here, they got taken here by those agents, he and the Colonel, first interrogated and then there was a meeting, and AR-9 had been to the morgue and not found Snow frozen in death (relief relief relief). Then the Colonel—
Shit.
“Sir,” he gasps, “there’s Jaffa and—”
“Yeah, we know. There’s security footage.” The General doesn’t sound happy at all. He nods at the marine, and walks past him, toward where several NCIS agents are waiting. J.J. follows the movement with his gaze and tries to sit up.
A firm hand pushes him back down.
“Hey, J.J. Lie the fuck back down. Trust me, I know these things. Your pupil response is good so you didn’t hit your head, for once.”
The voice belongs to none other than Lieutenant DeSalle, his teammate, friend, and AR-4:s official medic. He’s in full BDU, TAC vest and all, with a freshly loaded P-90 slung over his shoulder; in a way which a Corpsman on Earth wouldn’t always be, most of them being non-combatants but with the SGC things are different. In a surreal way it is such a comfort to see him like that: it’s the Natural State of Things, and it’s almost like they could be back in Pegasus, on a mission. Any mission. And there’s Gladys and Kemp too, so familiar, on the lookout: Kemp has got an extra P-90 and TAC vest in a hand, waiting, and Gladys stands by the door as if guarding it, and J.J. exhales, relief mixing in with his worry and the general soreness of his body. Feels like he took a hit in the chest, threatening to cave in. Dazedly his Dæmon crawls to her feet.
Zats sure do sting.
“What happened?” he groans.
“A bunch of Snakes ringed into the building,” Gladys reports matter-of-factly; as much fact as they’ve got this far anyway. Which isn’t a lot. “They grabbed the Old Man, and someone else too. Someone important by the looks of it. We were called in just a few minutes ago; Colonel Pendergast transported us here.”
J.J. pulls himself up slowly, and for a moment he isn’t on Earth, he’s in Atlantis and they’re under attack and he struggles to get his bearings. “Casualties?”
“You and the PA over there got hit, but she’s going to be okay, got away with a few bruises. You’re hella lucky. Two shots from the zat kills, y’know,” DeSalle point out.
He knows. He’s been with the SGC long enough to know. Seen the action. Tasted it.
His team and the General aren’t the only ones there. There’s plenty of activity. Agent Gibbs and his team of feds, and they’re arguing, gathering evidence in disbelief at the same time. He wonders if they’ve been briefed. If they know about the Snakes yet. Evidently, if they have, they don’t truly grasp what it means, and if they haven’t—well, they will, soon enough. If their Director was taken, they will have to be briefed. They won’t back down, and they’ll have to sign those agreements of silence, and they’ll probably not believe a word of the SGC’s cover story about Deep Space Radar Telemetry. Who would?
And what was that about their Director being a Sheppard? Didn’t the General mention they’re cousins? Sure makes the world seem a lot smaller beneath the scope of the universe. J.J. shakes his head (and regrets it at once as he is hit by a wave of nausea), and decides to catalogue that fact along with the hundred thousand other things under the list of Shit I Don’t Want to Know.
Maybe trouble runs in the family, his Dæmon can’t help but think. J.J. doesn’t laugh. He’ll wait until they get the Old Man back.
Once he’s on his feet, Kemp hands him the spare vest and weapon, and J.J. takes it, checks the ammo on automatic. Like gearing up for a mission. This is an element of comfort and familiarity, and the marine slides into it like a hand in a glove. J.J. fastens the vest and smooths out the edges. Clicks the P-90 in place. There’s a slight crick in the neck from the awkward angle he’d been lying in on the floor, plus his shoulder feels like he landed on it harshly, but it’ll be fine in a little while, DeSalle assures him, though the medic would’ve liked to get him under a scanner like the one they’ve got in the City. But they haven’t got one, so this has to do until they get back to the Mountain. J.J.’s sure DeSalle will want to have the docs there run a full exam on him later.
The General is arguing with Agent Gibbs. Low, burning words. No outright shouting. J.J. supposes that’s a good thing.
One of the other agents, the guy in his mid-thirties with dark brown hair, is taking photographs, moving around with gloved hands and processing the room like this is a crime scene. Which, in a sense, it is. There are scorch marks on the floor from the blast of a staff weapon, and the PA’s desk is a mess, things overturned. So is the Director’s office. Stains of blood on the floor;
The female agent—J.J. can’t recall any of their names right now and blames it on the zat—is taking notes on a PDA. An elderly guy with a British accent is checking on the assistant, who’s awake and seems fine but for a bruise on her cheek. Probably hit her desk when she fell.
No one’s dead. One good thing, at least. Either the Snake didn’t want to kill anyone or (more likely) they didn’t have time to. Ringed in, grabbed their hostages, fled the scene. If people were dead, the Snakes would’ve left the bodies .
Jeez, AR-4:s missions usually don’t turn out like this. Figures that when he’s accompanying someone from the Frontier team, this happens. But J.J. is too emotionally drained to be angry or even annoyed. Snow’s still missing and could be dead, for the lack of a body, and there’s still the unknown dead guy in the morgue, and now the Colonel’s missing. In Dr McKay’s body, the Ancient communication stone still active, hidden in the bowels of the Mountain, powered thanks to that terminal thing in Atlantis—J.J. isn’t sure of the details. Makes him a bit dizzy to think about it all.
And he was meant to take this week off. Visit the family, see if he could pop in on any old friends, lie in the sofa and lazily watch some TV, catch up on the news and the politics, call people and tell them he’s still kickin’ …
There’s no truly free time with the SGC.
“… know what the hell’s going on! Your people showing up is not a coincidence,” finishes Gibbs in a growl. J.J. can’t blame him. Some alien wierdos in high-tech mock-up ancient Egyptian getup just broke into a highly secure building full of specially trained federal agents and kidnapped their Director and nearly killed said Director’s assistant. J.J. knows he’d be pissed. Is.
At least J.J.’s pretty sure that the Colonel isn’t dead yet. Goa’uld wouldn’t bother to bring dead bodies with them; they’d leave them behind. No, the Colonel’s alive, and is probably going to be tortured for whatever reason. Questioned for information. And they’ve got to do now is find him, break him out, and there’ll be choirs of hallelujah.
Kemp more or less says this out loud, and Gladys glares at him. “As if it’d be that easy,” she says.
“Never said it’d be easy,” Kemp retorts.
“Shut it, Lieutenant,” J.J. orders and subtly listens in on the General, who is unsuccessfully trying to soothe the agents with non-information. So they haven’t signed the agreements, after all. Figures.
“And you will find out, in a sec. Guess we’re doing this the flashy way,” the General says to the agent, fiddling with his phone. Puts it to his ear. “Hi, Hank. We’ll need that lift in a minute. Yeah, it didn’t go so well. They won’t sign those damn agreements, so … You owe me for this!” The call is ended with a click, and the General sighs, long-sufferingly. “Today was going to my day off. Just me, my pond, and the fish …”
J.J. has heard rumors that that pond is completely void of fish. He doesn’t say it. He waits for the Prometheus to pick them up.
This smells of something foul.
A trick. Foul play. Gibbs is far too familiar with such things. And, sure, it seems pretty vividly genuine, their concerns: the marines hovering around their own fallen; the brisk report, the avid questions. It seems pretty genuine. Their reactions of shock, surprise, even anger. But he’s seen this kind of thing before, and what if this is one of those? A ruse, make-believe, and they want him and his team to sign those damned nondisclosure agreements before they can reveal anything. Before they can help.
These people have a clue who attacked the building. Somehow, they got into the building without ever breaching the doors. One in the row of tall windows is broken outward as if by an explosive force. But this is several floors up and it’s broad daylight. No one—not a whole group of people—could’ve scaled the building and not been seen. Not been heard.
General O’Neill has brought more of his people. Oh, they’re not Air Force: they’re marines. But they’re with the same Program, and Gibbs has had enough.
He needs to know what’s going on here. This is more than a single murder case.
“If we sign this, then my whole team will be let in on this, including my chief medical examiner and forensic technician. I need to know what the hell’s going on. Your people showing up is not a coincidence.”
General O’Neill unpockets a cellphone and doesn’t argue anymore, because they’ve been arguing for the past half hour. The past half hour in which Director Sheppard and Dr McKay has gone missing, and either both are victims or the doc had something to do with this.
A ruse.
To what end?
This is exactly why Gibbs doesn’t tend to play nice with other agencies.
“And you will find out,” the General says at last. “I can’t promise your forensics will make the cut, though.”
There’s security footage, and they’ve watched it in disbelief. The flash of light and what looked like rings appearing out of thin air and suddenly six people are standing in the room; the marine in the corner is given no chance to move. Some weapon, a discharge of energy, no bullets. Experimental? The marine had been knocked out cold but not killed. No injury. No burns. Nothing but a bad headache according to the medic, who acted like this is something he’s seen before, unblinking.
Ducky has checked out Summer, Jenny’s PA, but she’s fine. Some kind of weapon was used to subdue her and the marine. Similar to tasers and yet completely utterly different.
They need to know what the hell is going on.
They sign the agreements. Gibbs does it first. Reluctantly but urgently. Reads, tries to do it carefully but in the end, he realizes, in the end it doesn’t matter if the agreement isn’t just silence for eternity but his soul to the devil. He needs answers. DiNozzo, Todd, and McGee are already present, and they too sign their names, some more grudgingly than others.
General O’Neill makes a call to General Hank Landry, and Gibbs watches, listens closely. When the General returns to them he’s smiling wryly, as if there’s a joke going on here that never gets old.
“The Program,” he says, “is really short for the SGC, which in turn is short for the Stargate Program.”
“Stargate? Interesting codename,” Todd remarks.
And then the General says, with a hint of a mysterious smile: “It isn’t a codename.” Speaks into his phone: “Prometheus, we’re ready.”
No. No, this can’t be real. This cannot possibly be real.
No.
No way.
Agent Todd can’t make a noise. In one minute, they’re at HQ inside the Director’s office, and they’re ordered to stand in groups and keep their Dæmons close. She clutches her own in her arms, and McGee and DiNozzo do the same. For transport, the General says, and it makes no sense, and the man gives a surreal order through the phone: Ring ‘em up.
And then they’re … here.
Wherever here is.
The walls are gray, like those of a cell. She can’t see any windows. Artificial lights. Plenty of people milling around, giving them a wide berth. Their uniforms are particular, mixtures of dark blue. It reminds her of an aircraft carrier, those silent mazes with an underground feel to them, cramped quarters. The air is fresher though, not as dank. She can’t smell any masculine sweat or oil or grease, and there is no roar of any engines or jets, only a quiet constant hum, a vibration.
“What—what was that?” gasps McGee, out of breath with shock.
“That,” says a new voice, “was the transporter rings.” A middle-aged man in dark green approaches them. Looks like a technician of some kind. Air Force, according to the insignia on his breast.
“A what?” DiNozzo says, blinking like an owl, swiveling his head to look this way and that.
The corridor is busy. People moving to and fro. Some are geared for war. An echo of a carrier, yes. Some look like technicians, bearing PDAs. They are clad in grays and greens, and there is efficiency to each movement. No one in the background is panicking or distressed by the utter impossibility of what just happened, matter coming to life with a beam of light.
“You are read-in on this, right?” the technician asks, suddenly dubious. “Okay, step away from the platform please. We’ve got another transport incoming.”
They do, in a daze, unwilling to move. Their weapons aren’t confiscated. In fact the people around them seem generally ignorant of them—aware, but not curious. Busy. There are a few marines present, armed, on the move or guarding thresholds. There are airmen with sidearms and technicians without. Todd takes note of them, even as her heart thunders and her mind tries to think of a single logical reason for this to be happening.
She can’t find one.
She stands to the side with DiNozzo and McGee, wondering if she’s entered a wonderland, a dream, fallen into it like Alice.
There is a flare of shimmering light, and those rings again rising from the floor impossibly, and then Gibbs is standing there alongside the General. The latter is entirely unperturbed and steps off the platform without hindrance or prompting, but the NCIS agent remains frozen in disbelief.
“It’s a transporter,” McGee says, weakly. “Oh my god. It’s a transporter.”
“You mean, like …” DiNozzo wets his lips, trying to find the words: “’Beam me up, Scotty’?”
“Yup,” says the General with a grin, appearing before them. “Well, sort of, and you’ll have to ask Carter about how it works. Welcome aboard the Prometheus, our very first interstellar vessel. Been in service for a few years now, the old gal.” He knocks at the side of a gray steel-plated wall with fondness. A place of recognition.
“It’s true—the conspiracy theories! It’s all on the web, and, and I can’t believe it. We’ve got a spaceship!” exclaims DiNozzo suddenly, regaining his breath. Agent Gibbs sends him a sharp look but he cannot silence. He almost feels responsible to channel his inner Abby Sciuto since she and Ducky hadn’t been allowed to sign those nondisclosure agreements just yet (which had pissed Gibbs off for five seconds until even he became distracted by the whole No Longer in Kansas thing). “What’s this? NASA? This is one hell of a secret.”
“Not quite NASA,” says the General. “Our modus operandi is kind of different. Though the SGC deals with them from time to time, helps out with developing satellites and whatnot. Hitched a ride with one of their shuttles in ‘99.” The man smiles for a moment, amused by some fond memory. Then he turns to greet the person who must be in charge. “Ah. Colonel. Nice day.”
“General,” nods another man crossing the threshold of the corridor; he too in blue, like the technician, but with a clear Air Force badge on his chest proclaiming his rank and name: Colonel L. Pendergast. “Welcome aboard. I’m Colonel Lionel Pendergast, the commander of this vessel.”
“We’re in space,” Gibbs says, flatly, disbelieving: a tone he doesn’t often employ, but this is causing a violently sudden crack in his otherwise solid view of the world.
Todd grasps helplessly for a hint of reality. Can’t find it. Blinks a couple of times, but the images refuse to go away: they are aboard this … vessel. It thrums with energy beneath her feet, and the people around them are frighteningly real and solid.
“Uh, why aren’t we weightless?” McGee points out, while, in the background the marines who’d been ringed up with them
“Artificial gravity,” Colonel Pendergast explains simply.
“One more group to beam up,” General O’Neill says, and they move to make room. A few moments later, Corporal MacGrimmon and the three marines join them—and this explains now how those three got to HQ so quickly after the alarm blared. None of them appear the least bit taken aback by the unorthodox (impossible impossible impossible) means of travel.
One of them is chewing on a gum, and one of them mutters: Haven’t I fucking told you not to do that? Heimlich maneuver, ringing any bells? and the marine retorts: Can’t smoke, can’t drink on duty, can’t chew gum. What the hell am I going to do against the stress, man? and the first one retorts: Could try meditation with Emmagan, heard she’s been giving lessons lately, causing the woman marine with them to snort and shake her head as if this is an argument witnessed time and time again.
They are led from the immediate area through a gray corridor. Not as cramped as an aircraft carrier, and Todd glances from left to right continually, trying orient herself in this foreign place and then they make a left turn, across a threshold. There are no knee-knockers, and the place is, despite being built from encompassing steel, oddly spacious, and the air smells fresh and not of sweat. There is an artificial breeze passing over their heads. They could be underground, but they enter what could only be described as the Bridge of a ship. And there’s a window, wide and flawless and beneath—above?—there’s, there’s—
Oh my god. Todd stares. It’s the Earth, making a slow turn, or it’s the ship that is turning and they along with it. For a moment she cannot properly breathe, has to fight nausea and dizziness. Every instinct tells her that this is wrong: the Earth is meant to be beneath her feet, not beyond them like this. She’s seen a lot of things in her career, both in the Secret Service and at NCIS, but this …
Todd has never believed in those conspiracy theories about the moon landing being faked or the Earth being flat or NASA making lies to fool the public to believe, but she’s never before truly considered space to be a thing, either, and why would she have? The Earth is enough of a playground, and she knows nothing of the movement of the stars, isn’t an astronomer.
Earth is terrifying and beautiful, and they’re in space.
They’re …
“We’re in space. We’re really in space!” gasps McGee, his Dæmon making a noise of delight and confusion like a dream coming true, and they crowd by the window, as close as they dare to move without touching anything or disturbing the technicians and airmen at work.
“What about Colonel Sheppard?” Colonel Pendergast asks then, looking at the General, who shakes his head.
“No. We’ve got a problem.”
They’re in space.
The ship’s nerve-center of command faces a window: wide, and below them there’s Earth, lazily spinning, the atmosphere glimmering with the rising sun and millions of stars beyond which cannot be seen from the planet’s surface, and they’re in space. They’re aboard a spaceship. It’s an impossible, improbable thing: this level of technology isn’t meant to exist. Can’t. Area 51 is a coverup for building weapons and missiles and there aren’t meant to be aliens there, and NASA hasn’t sent a man to the moon for decades. This is not meant to be possible.
Gibbs has seen a lot of strange things in his life. This, though. This outranks all those moments steeply.
And DiNozzo has the nerve to look out at the vastness, and then smirk a little: “Hey, I told you there was a conspiracy.”
“Tony, shut up,” groans Todd, regaining her bearings. Attempting to. Making it seem like she’s all right after all despite being just as out of her depth as the rest of her team.
Gibbs couldn’t agree more.
DiNozzo is going to be insufferable for weeks.
“He’s been what?!”
It is really weird, J.J. thinks, watching the Old Man’s face scrunched up in a dark frown and arms waving vividly, and knowing that it’s not really him talking. He wouldn’t move like that. Wouldn’t use that tone of voice either. Talks the wrong way. Words not fitting that mouth. Dr McKay is very frank, very upset, and probably angry—for good reason; his teammate’s been kidnapped by a bunch of Snakes. No one who’s been part of a Gate team would show full restraint in the face of that.
They’ve explained to the NCIS agents and all, the vague details: that, yeah, that guy? is not Colonel Sheppard but rather Dr Rodney McKay communicating through his body via a pair of alien stones; and the guy who just got kidnapped? yeah, that’s Colonel Sheppard in McKay’s body. They’ve explained that and the other things: Stargates, artificial wormholes, space travel. The high-speed, compressed version. Isn’t sure how much they actually comprehend or buy, though. Most people would think this is an extremely elaborate, well-paid joke. One with a poor punchline.
“We’re trying to track them, but his sub-q has been disabled,” Colonel Carter says. She is, by comparison, quite calm. They all are. They know that panic doesn’t help.
“Which means that they knew that he had one and they had to destroy it,” Colonel Mitchell adds.
“You mean to say ‘cut it out of him’,” grumbles McKay and visibly shudders.
Yeah, very weird. J.J. knows about the stones thing, instant communication, but has no idea how it works. Now it would really really help if they could trace that connection. But they’ve got nothing. No coordinates, no location. It’s possible that Colonel Sheppard is still on Earth; it’s also (even more) possible that he’s onboard a Goa’uld ship, lightyears away, in hyperspace, out of their grasp. Even if the Prometheus could probably catch up, they’ve nowhere to go, to start. Space is really fucking big, and many Goa’uld craft have cloaking capabilities.
It’s been over two hours, and they’ve got nothing. J.J. has only listened in a little bit to the NCIS agents’ subduedly vivid discussions about possibilities. They may be good at their job, but he’s not sure how they could help right now. Solve a murder? Yeah, fine. Find an intergalactic kidnapper on another planet? Not so much. But they’re here.
J.J. is part of the meeting only because he’s a key witness. Sort of. Not that he saw more than those Jaffa and the business ends of their weapons. And he’d volunteered to stick with the Colonel, watch his back, and he’d failed that task. The sourness in his chest won’t go away. He is aware that the others aren’t going to hold it against him—J.J. had tried to fight, but the feds had taken away his weapons and there’d been three or four Jaffa ringing in so suddenly. He’s lucky not to have been hit by a staff blast in the jugular and killed instantly. Still. It doesn’t sit well with him that those Snakes got past his watch.
“Rodney,” says Weir on the other side, in the City, the voice of calming reason: “we’ll find them.”
“They could be anywhere by now! Don’t tell me to calm down.” It’s practically a snarl.
“We detected an energy signature consistent with the trail of a Goa’uld ship’s sublight engines two hours ago,” Carter reveals. “That matches the timeline for the kidnapping.”
“Is it possible for us to track it?” asks General Landry.
“Not exactly. We’re working on plotting courses along the trajectory detected by the Prometheus’ sensors, but it’ll be guesswork at best. The ship is probably cloaked. We haven’t sensed any hyperspace windows leaving the system yet, but we’re on the lookout.”
“So you’ve got nothing,” retorts McKay, and there’s something terrifyingly sharp, seeing him like this. Or hearing him. At least his Dæmon is the same. Small comforts.
J.J. realizes he’s never seen the doc this upset. Okay, maybe, when the Hives were bearing down on the City and they didn’t have the means to fight back, or that time in the Chair Room, with the lightshow. Had been pretty upset then, yeah.
There’s been no sight of the Raven, so they’re all supposing—all hoping—that it’s with the Colonel in McKay’s body. J.J. really hopes so. He’s heard whispers that they can handle pretty huge distances between each other, but no one, not even the Colonel and his Dæmon, should be able to live through being separated by planets and hyperspace. Yeah, they both made it, they’re both alive. That’s the assumption they’ve got to work with.
The fact is, this is bigger than that. There’s still the question of who hacked the SGC, and why. Well, they might know why. To get to the Colonel. Somehow. It’s a puzzle, and the pieces are slowly meshing together and coming to light.
“I wouldn’t say that. Now we know that whoever’s behind this wanted to get their hands on Colonel Sheppard, and possibly Director Sheppard too,” says Carter.
“They targeted family,” adds Mitchell. “Maybe they’ll use her as leverage.”
This is connected to Snow’s disappearance, somehow, somehow. J.J. can’t follow the lines. Not yet, but he’s working on it.
On the other side of the large conference table, Agent Gibbs looks drawn back, stern, quiet. They’ve been read in—quickly and in broad strokes—on the Program now. They’re still trying to deal with the shock of it, he guesses. The guy named DiNozzo keeps glancing at the Stargate below the bulletproof glass as if it’s a mirage about to fade. Next to him, Agents Todd and McGee take notes on small PDAs, simpler than the ones J.J. is used to seeing in Atlantis.
At least they can talk without codewords now. Spill secrets.
General O’Neill is here despite wanting to go fishing: this is serious. General Landry, too, and Dr Jackson. J.J.’s not clear what task could be handed to the archaeologist in times like these, but he’s a cornerstone of the SGC. Maybe they’ll find some obscure reference or something for him to translate. Intercept a message in Goa’uld.
“I can’t believe this,” grouses McKay. “We let him out of our sight for a few hours and he gets himself kidnapped?!”
On the other side of the open wormhole, the City lies in darkness, the sunrise far away. They’re in Weir’s office: McKay and his Dæmon, Dr Weir, Teyla Emmagan, Lieutenant Ford, and Ronon. The ex-Runner is standing by the door, leaning against the frame in a way J.J. has learned to recognize: it looks relaxed, but the guy’s ready to pounce in a heartbeat. His Dæmon’s long teeth are bared like glints of steel: similar to the long-since-dead saber-toothed cats of Earth.
“I don’t think it’s on purpose, doc,” says Ford wryly.
This is personal. This is a team being attacked and splintered, and J.J. understands deeply.
“Not my point! Okay, okay,” says McKay, backtracking, thinking. “Obviously, the Trust’s involved.”
“Who or what exactly is the Trust?” asks Special Agent Gibbs. Right, they never got that far in the SGC 101 briefing.
“They’re an offshoot of the NID, an organization meant to help with the defense of Earth against alien invasion. Some rouge NID agents began to gather more than intel: they collected weapons and technology to use to their own ends,” Carter says. “They formed the Trust, and, recently, we got a hint that the Goa’uld had infiltrated the highest ranks.”
“And the Goa’uld are these … snakelike parasite things that takes over people’s bodies,” says DiNozzo, blankly, as if reading from a book. He glances at the Generals and the others, and shudders visibly. Well, that’s a normal reaction. The kind of reaction J.J. himself ceased having well over a year ago when he realized that this is his life now and there’s no getting around it, and shock and disbelief is only so useful in the long run. “Like in Body Snatchers but without the pods. Or, or Turnabout Intruder except … worse. And they’ve attacked Earth. Before.”
The guy must also be having a bad day. He and his whole team of feds: to find out so suddenly that there are spaceships and Stargates and aliens—J.J. had a hard time himself when he first was let in on the secret three years ago. And he’d just been a marine being stationed at a new strange place to do his job, and he’d eventually gotten used to it and he has seen so many things now: Atlantis’ skyline with its rising towers; worlds with purple plants or perpetual snows or dense jungles untouched by human hands; so many foreign sunrises and sunsets; and that’s not even mentioning the aliens.
These people are trying to solve a murder. Aliens never came to mind.
“God,” whispers Todd quietly, encompassing this is so fucked up and strange and I’m not certain I believe it into a single syllable. She’s cradling her Dæmon in her lap like a lifeline.
“We won those battles. The Trust is much more devious than your average Goa’uld System Lords. We’re uncertain of their exact numbers. They probably have access to at least one ship—a cargo vessel would be my guess,” Colonel Mitchell says. “Those have got cloaks.”
“Which renders them invisible both to the naked eye and to radar and our scanners,” Carter clarifies at the feds’ questioning looks.
O’Neill takes over. “We’ve got one guy on the inside of the Trust. Or we had: we lost contact some time ago. And now Corporal Snow has gone missing. Right before that, we intercepted a message from our man to Snow.”
“That’s too much of a coincidence,” Gibbs says, and it shows now that he’s a seasoned agent. His eyes are sharp and intent. “What kind of message?”
Carter nods. “It was a code. But we managed to decrypt it—actually, it was fairly easy: he used regular ANSII.”
“That’s not very safe. Or clever,” McGee comments, and then flushes a bit, flustered at the sudden attention on him. Still trying to swallow the whole fact about Stargates and wormholes and other planets being inhabited by aliens. “Using ANSII in regular text? Anyone who knows how to Google can figure that out.”
“We realized that. It’s possible that he ran out of time and couldn’t think of a better way to send a message,” Carter says. “But that it was Snow he contacted has an explanation. The two are half-brothers, and both are linked with the Program, but it’s still less conspicuous than him contacting someone else in at the SGC such as myself or General O’Neill. It is possible that his contact was betrayed, and Snow was, well, his best shot at the time.”
“Or it wasn’t sent by your agent,” Todd muses half-aloud, “just meant to look like it was.”
A trap? For Snow? To J.J., this doesn’t make a lot of sense. But, granted, this whole day hasn’t made a lot of sense.
If there’s the slimmest chance of Snow still being alive, J.J. wants to be part of the rescue op.
“What about your inside man?” asks Gibbs.
“NID Agent Bradley White,” Dr Jackson says. There’s a file spread out in front of him but he doesn’t read from it, and his voice works a hundred miles a minute. “Mission’s codename Specter. He had an alternate identity forged for him as a Mr James Eddington, posing as a businessman with international relations and widespread interests. The idea was to wheedle out the major players of the Trust and find the main Goa’uld behind all this by making business deals with the corporations we believe to be involved in this. The NID had managed to put together quite a paper trail. The Goa’uld are megalomaniacs not very fond of sharing power, so it would make more sense that there’s a big Snake to take care of first. Cut off that head, and the rest would follow. A few months ago, one of our own, Colonel Caldwell, was taken by the Trust and implanted by a Goa’uld. Unfortunately, we didn’t notice until it was almost too late.”
“‘Didn’t notice’? That a guy has got an alien parasite in his head?” DiNozzo echoes, dubiously.
General Landry sighs heavily. “We are not, unfortunately, perfect or unflawed. Security is tight but wasn’t tight enough.”
“Yeah, we’ve started scanning people’s brains every time they enter the Mountain now,” remarks Mitchell wryly. The NCIS agents hadn’t been exempted from this rule: applying to every marine, every scientist, every pilot, every technician. No one escapes from Dr Frasier and her team of medics.
J.J. and his team had had to visit the infirmary when they’d first gotten here from Atlantis. Doesn’t matter if they come by ship or by Gate. For a while, even Dr Weir considered it for City security. After Caldwell … They don’t want it to happen again. Can’t let it happen again.
“The Trust did their homework, and the Snake in Caldwell had a very clear objective. He did not conduct any other sabotage than the one thing he’d been sent to do; it was careful job,” finishes Landry.
“And what was that objective?” asks Gibbs.
The door opens, and another man enters the room. He looks average, nondescript, black tie.
“To destroy Atlantis,” he declares.
“Ah, Agent Barrett. Have a seat,” Carter greets the man with a smile, seemingly at ease. J.J. has never seen this guy before, and his hand had automatically gone for his 9mil. He tries to relax as the NID agent is introduced to everyone and finds a chair to sit in.
“And Atlantis is, what? a base?” asks Agent Todd.
“It’s where we are,” says Dr McKay in the Old Man’s body from the other side, arms crossed. The lack of immediate insult is kind of suspicious. J.J. has seen the doc reduce the biggest and dangerous of marines to the brink of a breakdown. Hm, maybe he’s extra grumpy because of the pain. Broken leg and all. Or it’s the stones. There’s no point in trying to figure out the reasons behind the doc’s mood; they’ve got a bigger fish to fry. “Ancient Cityship three million lightyears from Earth. But if you want to simplify, yes: it’s a base. But it’s much more than that. It’s an intergalactic vessel containing an archive of immense knowledge and technological advancements lightyears ahead of anything else we’ve found so far. The power of its weapons alone can potentially outmatch anything on Earth.”
Agent McGee opens his mouth as if to say something, but closes it again with a quiet strangled noise.
“That time,” adds Carter, “another alien saved the day, one of a species we call Ancients or Alterans—and he also removed the Goa’uld, saving Caldwell’s life. Don’t worry, he is fully free from the Goa’uld’s influence now. He did remember some important details which got this investigation going. The host generally remain aware of their time of possession.”
J.J. remembers that day. It had played out in a few hours, really. Seeing the Colonel lose control and then glowing eyes of Colonel Caldwell and—well, it had been a long, strange day. His boss suddenly showing telekinetic talents and throwing people and guns around like toys. But he’d saved the City and everyone in it and not killed Caldwell. J.J. is acutely aware that if Caldwell had died, the aftermath would’ve played out very differently.
Agent Todd considers what’s been said. Tries not to cry out in disbelief that none of this should be possible. Doesn’t comment that the last statement is creepy and otherworldly and frightening as hell. “Okay. What about the message, what did it say?”
“It’s brief and vague. Here.” Carter activates the plasma screen so that it shows a string of numbers, then translated into English words. Most words are abbreviated, shortened down to save time. But J.J. understands: nedsom1toTrust CityCOdngr dntreplyrisktrac waitfthrorders. White had meant to send Snow further instructions but never got the chance, or those messages were deleted.
City CO in danger. Something cold settles in J.J.’s chest. So this was a warning, and a trap: for the Old Man. Why? What for? Information about the City? Considering the stuff he’s heard, something about the Colonel being able to control the City or communicate with it or something like that … something with the ATA-gene or something, stronger than anyone’s, even the General. The guy makes a powerful asset. It makes sort of sense. Sort of sense.
And this was meant to be our day off, his Dæmon complains.
“It is also possible that the message was hijacked or even sent by the Trust in the first place,” Carter goes on.
“To lure him in,” says DiNozzo. “Okay. Why?”
“Good question,” says O’Neill breezily, leaning back in his chair. He exchanges a look with Colonel Carter, the way old friends can share entire conversations in an unspoken heartbeat. “Why’s LC Snow so special?”
“You said they’re half-brothers,” Todd points out.
“Yes. Same father, different mothers. That implies that White’s cover is definitely blown and he got caught, and the Trust wanted to exploit him. Threatening family definitely fits their MO, and White has no family apart from his mother and half-brother,” Agent Barrett says. “We still have found no sign of him. We can’t pinpoint his subcutaneous transmitter.”
Colonel Mitchell drums his fingers against the table. “And we’ve lost the Colonel’s as well, just as we lost Snow’s.”
J.J. feels like it needs to be said: “Doesn’t mean they’re dead, sir.”
Because it would be so wasteful that the Old Man’s got to go through all that’s happened, Wraith sieges and Genii incursions, all to die in the Milky Way because of some damned Snake. Besides, with the stones, what would happen to Dr McKay if the Old Man was to suddenly drop?
And Mitchell Snow … J.J. wants to hold out hope for Mitch. Needs to, to stay focused. Won’t believe until he’s found, and possibly not even then.
(To die on Earth is the worst kind of irony.)
Of course, at that statement, General O’Neill adds wryly: “Got a point, Corporal. It’s not like the Goa’uld to kill someone too fast.”
Knowing from personal experience—J.J. has read the reports. A few years ago, during the time when Dr Jackson was Not Dead But Ascended, the General was briefly a Tok’ra host and taken by a Snake—which one? J.J. scrambles to remember. It was before his time at the SGC. Something like … Ba’al. Yeah. That guy. Creepy shit.
(All Snakes are fucking creepy and disgusting, and part of J.J. had been relieved to leave them behind when he went to Pegasus.
Then they’d exchanged them for the Wraith, and some days he can’t be sure which is worse.)
Not kill someone too fast. Comforting euphemism for torture. In the corner of her eyes, his Dæmon lets them both see the NCIS agents exchange understanding, horrified looks. Or, well, Gibbs doesn’t appear very horrified: calm, comprehending. Guy has to have been a marine before joining NCIS, J.J. decides. Something about his air.
“Bottom line is: we have no idea where Colonel Sheppard or the Director could be right now,” Dr Jackson says, “and we won’t know until we find out where the Goa’uld is.”
General Landry nods solemnly. “Then we got to find that Snake.”
John has gotten himself kidnapped. Of course he has. Rodney would like to say he is extremely surprised, but he can’t. Ill luck follows them around to each planet they visit: of course it would haunt them on Earth too. Of course. Should’ve seen it coming.
And he’s stuck in the wrong body, and what if the connection with the stone fails? What then?
Then he’ll be the one stuck in whatever cell Sheppard’s been thrown in.
For a moment, Rodney actually considers it. Not that he wants to be stuck in a jail cell, mind, but at least he has a pretty good track record by now of breaking out of them. AR-1 gets in trouble far too often offworld, after all. How hard could it be? Hack a lock—he bets this is some high-tech stuff. On a ship. That’s a logical assumption. A Goa’uld ship, and Rodney knows quite a bit about their technology even if Ancient tech is his specialty. He could outwit the tech and break free from it.
Not so sure he could face down a Snake and survive it, but …
For a moment, Rodney actually considers it, and then he looks down at John’s body and John’s aching slowly healing leg, and back up again, at the others in the office. Weir sits in her chair, and Ford’s pacing. Ronon’s by the door, tense and ready to attack like some wild animal, and Teyla is a calm presence, and no one has the answers. No one has the answers. They’ve been in tight spots before as a team. Separated. They’ve been shot at, hunted, nearly fed upon. They’ve survived the Wraith, and now some Goa’uld is going to end them?
It’s not fair at all.
During the video call, there had been strangers there, briefly introduced: some federal agents, from whichever alphabet soup, unfamiliar enough with the SGC to ask blatantly obvious questions. Something about a body being the wrong one. Rodney hasn’t paid attention to the details, really, because he’d been too preoccupied with the fact that John has gotten himself kidnapped.
When this thing started, he’d planned to be in his lab. Do some research. Calculate. Polish that ZedPM equation and maybe have a brilliant insight before lunch. They’d use the stones for a couple of hours, then take a break, and then Rodney would be on Earth and could do some science there. Discuss things with Carter, maybe, and contact some lowlife scientists to argue with them, that kind of thing. Yeah, Rodney had some plans. And now he is utterly singularly focused, like a planet orbiting a single star: they’ve got to find a solution.
Out here, a galaxy away, they can’t hunt for Goa’uld. They can’t track whatever ship John’s on—if he is on a ship. Could be in a dark dank warehouse somewhere, a pit in the dirt, whatever. Another planet already. A Goa’uld vessel with an okay hyperdrive could make it to the nearest neighboring systems in the time that’s passed since It Happened.
The video link is shut down, the Gate darkening. Thirty-eight minutes have passed.
“I’m worried about the Colonel,” Ford admits to the silence which follows. “What do the Goa’uld want with him?”
Nothing good, Rodney doesn’t say. He crosses his arms. “Best case scenario is they need information.” About what, he’s not sure. Can’t be SGC security codes or secrets of the Mountain, because that’s not Sheppard’s forte. Sure, he knows some of those, but not much more than anyone of the SGC on Earth. He knows what he needs to know and no more in relation to that. But Atlantis: the City’s defenses, bits and pieces of its databases … There’s so much here that he knows.
“Which the Colonel’s got. Right.” Ford nods, distractedly. The young Lieutenant looks distraught and disturbed by the recent turn of events. Not the only one.
“Or,” Rodney continues, but Elizabeth has the same horrible realization and blanches: “they want him as a host. Or me, because that’s my body over there,” he adds, feeling a bit sick to the stomach.
And he’d reminded John sternly not to eat lemons. Lemons! That feels like a bad joke made ages ago, but that was just a few hours ago. Not even days yet.
Should’ve told him not to get into trouble with Goa’uld or kidnappers or the Trust or—
Not that Sheppard is good at following orders.
“What are we going to do?” Ford asks the air. The marine looks out of his element. He too can’t do anything. No Bad Guys for him to shoot.
“There must be something we can do to assist,” Teyla agrees. Her arms are loosely crossed over her chest, and her fair face marred by a frown.
“There’s little we can do,” Rodney cuts in before Elizabeth has a chance to say something falsely comforting. The truth of it all hurts and is damningly annoying and frustrating, and he bites back an angry sigh. He’d like someone incompetent to yell at. That always calms him down. “Look, we can’t investigate anything personally and we can’t make sensor sweeps for ships leaving Earth because we’re three million lightyears too far away. Right now … right now we’re simply in the wrong galaxy.”
Chapter 18: do not go gentle, part two
Summary:
time to start panicking a little.
Notes:
(2018-04-07) Chapter updated/revised.
TW: this chapter contains graphic descriptions of violence and physical torture of a character.
Chapter Text
xviii.
do not go gentle
part two
time to start panicking a little.
This … is not good.
This is not good.
John is pretty sure that he’s stuck aboard a ship of Goa’uld design. Not that he’s seen any in person before, but he’s looked at vague pictures from salvage sites, read the reports and listened to the tales told by the old-school SGC marines in the City who’d wanted to share. Some things are giveaways, like the trail of hieroglyphs on the yellow walls. And there’s something about the place that simply gives him the creeps, but not in the way a Hive would.
Hiveships stink of death and rotting flesh and the fading cries of the dying. This ship isn’t purgatory: it is relatively clean, and there are no humans stuck in cocoons waiting to be eaten, in such shock, past the point of weeping or pleading, staring blank-eyed at the walls. There are no Queens, no one who can delve into a person’s mind without touching them. Goa’uld aren’t telepathic. Are they? No. No. Doesn’t matter, because the Goa’uld can burrow into heads and strangle necks and take over bodies against a human’s will.
Fuck, he hates those things.
His wrists ache. Bound? Yeah. And his body is sore, and since so many minutes of memory are missing: he must’ve been stunned. Zat’nik’tel.
To his left, blinking his eyes blearily open, there is a glimpse of energy. No, not his left. All around. Confused, he realizes that the force field, caging them in, his not around his—around Rodney’s—body at all, but around the Raven. They can’t lift their wings and flee.
Trapped.
And to his right, slumped on the floor just as he, tied up and alone, is Jenny. The Director is half-conscious. Losing blood. She needs a medic. She needs help—they need help. Her Dæmon is quiet, not whimpering, too strong-willed to let their pain show. They could be dying. A staff weapon blast like that can be fatal.
This is not good.
“Colonel Sheppard,” a voice says. He lifts his gaze. “I’ve wanted to meet you for some time now.”
The guy is kind of tall; wiry, dark hair, an obnoxious goatee. He’s clad in Terran clothes, a dark striped business suit, all clever and fine, and he’s wearing a strict tie. He could have been walking down any street on Earth and no one would bat an eye. Just another businessman, another corporate mind. But his eyes are gleaming golden, and John recoils, instinctively, the shackles digging deeper.
He’s tied up, and they’ve got the Raven in a forcefield cage ten feet away. This feels like a ship. Engines roaring in the background, lurching them forward through space. This is a ship, and they’re trapped, and this guy is a Goa’uld.
The Goa’uld also knows who he is while looking at Rodney’s body. He knows about the stones. He knows.
What else does he know?
[We’re fucked.]
Not necessarily, he thinks. Tries to stay positive. Tries to stay positive.
“Oh yeah?” he says, puts on his trademark greeting-the-natives-smile. “I can’t say the feeling’s mutual. Who are you and what the hell do you want?”
“Very direct. I can understand that. I am Ba’al, the System Lord.”
Heard of him. Reports. He hasn’t spent a lot of time considering the Goa’uld System Lords because they’re meant to be defeated. But obviously they aren’t because the Goa’uld have been on Earth long enough to infiltrate the Trust and implant one of their own in Caldwell—and now, here’s the puppet master who’s been pulling the strings. John looks at him for a moment, silent.
He won’t answer any questions.
“Am I supposed to be impressed?” John quips.
Beside them, Jenny is shaking slightly in effort and pain, and staring in disbelief, and he can only guess what she’s thinking. He’d had one very bad day when taking his first steps in Pegasus and waking the Wraith—but this has got to be much much much worse. Kidnapped by aliens and not knowing about the SGC or Stargates or anything. She and her Dæmon must be on the verge but they’re also well-trained special agents, knows to keep her cool under pressure. Unnatural, unimaginable pressure.
There are Goa’uld vessels with cloaking technology. It could have hovered above Washington for days or weeks, unseen, unheard. Waiting. John considers the options. How long’s the Goa’uld been hiding their ship, and where? Have they been waiting … for this? Is it going to be an attempt at bribing the SGC, or are they simply going to torture them for information?
(What else could they be hiding? Are these people responsible for the missing agent? for Snow’s disappearance? for Patrick Sheppard being stabbed in New York? Too many coincidences which led him here.)
They must’ve taken off while he was unconscious. Pierced the atmosphere. Question is if they’re in hyperspace yet and, if so, how far they’ve gotten. How long have they been knocked out?
“You have kidnapped a federal agent and a civilian—” Jenny starts to say, voice miraculously stern and not trembling at all. Her hands are steady. No one has tended to her injury, and the shoulder of her shirt is soaked dark with wet blood. She needs a doctor. She needs a medic—
“Oh, I’m not that interested in you, Director,” the Snake cuts her off. “Though this is a nice bonus.”
Yeah; John figured. Now he can torture them both for the price of one. Awesome.
Ba’al smiles, steps closer. All of John’s instincts are screaming at him to stand and fight but the Jaffa guards are pointing their staffs at them, and their hands are bound—even if Jenny wasn’t injured, how would they win? The Goa’uld looks him up and down. The glow is fading, and his eyes turn a dull brown. Entirely human. Except not. There’s no hint of any Dæmon. If that body has been a host long enough, the empty shell has already died and turned to dust.
“Nice,” John says, lightly. “I like what you’ve done with the interior decorating. Personally, not my style, I’d’ve gone more for Starship Enterprise than a mummy’s tomb, but whatever floats your boat. Is this your ship or something you stole? Can’t see why you’d be loitering around on Earth with access to it.”
“Earth is a very resourceful place. Quite useful. It’s been easy to make myself known as a wealthy, influential businessman with very valuable connections. Knowledge of your governments’ secrets … People pay good money for that.” Ba’al pauses for a second. “Of course, it’s not the only thing they pay with.”
Awesome. Ba’al has got underlings, Snakes under his command on Earth. How many? And where? And to what end? (other than the obvious: to one day rule the world and ruin everything good the SGC has ever done.)
The Trust. John is suddenly pretty sure of it. With everything, it’d simply … fall into place. The Trust being infiltrated by the Goa’uld; implanting a Snake in Caldwell; and now another in Everett; it’s all led up to this point, and it’s been masterminded by Ba’al, the former System Lord who’s played god for a good long while and he’s hungry for power—for reasons ungraspable. The Trust. Whatever company or names Ba’al has used, they’re just façades and walls to hide behind while biding his time, planning … something. So what’s his end game?
If Ba’al wants secrets out of John, about the SGC or whatever, he’s going to have to cut them out with a knife.
“So how many are you? How many Snakes have you got?” John presses, suppressing a shiver of disgust at the thought of being at the hands of this master puppeteer. Goa’uld are in a way much worse than Wraith. Wraith feed, a biological imperative, a need for survival and they’re pretty sure they came out of some Ancient mistake, an experiment gone wrong, a single false step.
But Goa’uld, as far as John knows, were no lab rats who escaped their cage. They evolved much more naturally and began to take host thousands if not millions of years ago, and maybe for starters it’d been a symbiotic thing, two-sided and beneficial at both ends. If there ever was a such a time. With those—what were they called? Unas? Yeah, like that thing that kidnapped and nearly killed Dr Jackson on an archaeological dig someplace. Read the report. Unas didn’t have Dæmons but Jackson argued they were on the verge of becoming as sentient and aware as humans. With that raw strength and opposable thumbs, Unas made useful hosts, but once the Goa’uld stumbled on the Earth and its humans, after the Ancients had left the planet bare of real protection—they’d jumped at the chance and started building their empires. John’s not sure if the Snakes were all born megalomaniac and power-hungry, or if it incorporated slowly into their DNA, but at the end of the day it doesn’t matter.
He wants to tear the parasite out of this nameless man’s body. It’d probably kill him. Its Dæmon is dead, the soul departed. For all John knows, the host could’ve been dead for centuries, only the Goa’uld keeping it alive.
Ba’al smiles. “As many as I need. As you can see, grabbing hold of some more noticeable people of the SGC hasn’t been difficult.” He gestures toward Everett, who stands a couple of feet back, near the closed door, at rest like a foot soldier waiting for orders. The man’s eyes are blank. There’s no ice or fire. The wolf isn’t moving. “I almost had the idea to implant one in your—well, not quite your father, is he?—had he gone through with our business deal,” Ba’al says, and John’s breath catches in shock, in retaliation, in disgust all at once. “Then I realized: why waste a larva on a man you can simply kill? He wouldn’t be that useful to me. Thank you for taking the bait, by the way.”
“And if I hadn’t?” John asks coldly.
“Your cousin here is a good secondary alternative. And your brother: David Sheppard. My spies reported the SGC got to him first, which was a pity. But the plan to get you back to Earth worked as expected.” The Goa’uld sounds pleased with himself. Good for him.
“Like a charm,” John echoes. So that’s why Patrick Sheppard was stabbed in New York. All for attention. A trap.
Is that why Snow was killed, or at least meant to appear killed? a ruse? to lure him here, because at the SGC, in Atlantis, they leave no one behind—
At least Dave is safe aboard the Prometheus. Relatively safe.
“Aren’t you the least bit impressed by the corporate empire I’ve built?”
John broadens his smirk. “Not really. So, what’s the plan, huh? I mean, that’s what you Bad Guys do: keep us entertained with a monologue while the rescue catches up with us.”
“We’re going to Atlantis.”
A shiver. Not possible. The location on New Lantea—
But Ba’al has hacked into the SGC: he or someone working for him. He’s got Snakes in the Trust. Poisonous tendrils reaching in all directions. Of course he knows about Atlantis. He might even have been the one to order Caldwell—the Snake in Caldwell’s head—to blow the City up, overload the potentiae. What other information has he stolen?
He knows about Icarus, it dawns, dimly. Not quite your father, he’d said. He knows. How the hell? Only Carson and AR-1 are privy to that information; not even Elizabeth knows, and John hasn’t put up a sign declaring it.
DNA. It’s written in his DNA, and someone with enough time, contacts, and money could analyze that if they got their hands on it. All it takes is a single strand of hair, a single drop of blood. Wouldn’t put it past Ba’al. The guy has been busy. He hasn’t laid low on Earth but built an empire of names and dubious money and could probably have something to do with the Trust as well.
Atlantis is so very far away.
“Why? To destroy the City?”
Like last time, which they failed to do? It makes sense now: if this is the Snake that infiltrated the Trust, that got to Colonel Caldwell, that tried to make him rewrite the City’s operating system and overload the potentiae. The Goa’uld hadn’t counted on Icarus interfering.
This time, Icarus can’t do that. John highly doubts the Others will let him, even if he tries or cares or whatever—not that he thinks the Ancient would. Not about him, anyway. About Atlantis, certainly; anything to protect the City.
“Destroy it? No, it would be such a waste. I realized that after the first attempt failed. No, I’m going there to get a much better host,” Ba’al smiles. “I am quite fond of this one, true. But with an Ancient City under my command I will be more powerful than any of the System Lords, even Anubis, could ever have hoped to become.”
Oh, great. Melodramatic megalomaniac.
[So maybe we’re a little fucked], Shy whispers, a groan; they’re stuck in an unknown part of space in Avalon, three million lightyears from home, and this Snake wants to take over the City and, by the sounds of it, John’s body. He shivers.
But the City won’t let them get there. He’s sure. They’ve got shields, the Chair, the Aurora to guard them. Weaponry and a hundred faithful marines. They can blast this ship out of the New Lantean skies—if it ever reaches them. If they get that close.
He doesn’t let any doubts or fears show, and grins weakly at the Goa’uld like he would at a buddy sharing a bad joke over a pint. “Well, good luck with that.”
That’s a long journey. He’s not an expert on Goa’uld tech and there are differences between engines, but even if this ship was as fast as the Daedalus, it’ll still take them weeks to get there. Plenty of time to escape or sabotage, or for the SGC to catch up. Make plans. Defend the City.
Ba’al is far too smug and confident. He nods, and one of the Jaffa steps forward, brandishing a sharp gleaming knife. For a moment John fears the worst, not for himself but for Jenny who isn’t even supposed to be there and she’s silent, but still breathing and conscious and she is watching the events unfold in shocked disbelief.
The knife digs through his skin and into the muscle and finds the subcutaneous transmitter with ease. Knowing where exactly it was hidden. It’s yanked out and John doesn’t take his eyes off the Snake as the Jaffa does this, wordlessly handing over the small piece of tech which would let the SGC know where they are.
Ba’al takes it, considers it for a moment, before dropping it to the floor and crushing it under the hard sole of his polished shoes. The signal must have died right away, and John knows that if someone’s watching on a screen faraway, the small blip suddenly disappearing—they could think him dead, his body destroyed.
“There is no hope for your friends to find you now, Colonel Sheppard.”
Damn, they are over-the-top, these Goa’uld. Ba’al is no exception. Wraith aren’t usually: they don’t make a dramatic speech declaring their evil intensions; they go straight for your chest, the spot where your heart is, to suck the life out of you.
John rolls his eyes. “I’ve been in worse places,” he says. “And we always find a way out. You guys are really persistent bastards; you never really learn. You can’t win. You know that, right?”
“It’s quite simple,” Ba’al goes on as if he didn’t hear, doesn’t care. “This ship has been equipped with an external generator in addition to its original power source; something you call a Zero Point Module. And you are going to help us integrate it and modify the hyperdrive so that we can reach Pegasus before my patience runs out.”
A potentia? Where did they …?
The Ancients must’ve littered the vastness of Avalon with more of those things and other tech before they left it; more the SGC has had the time to find. The fact that Ba’al has found one is worrying, and the guy is hundreds of years old, or at least the Snake itself is even if the vessel might not be; Ba’al could’ve found it decades ago, long before the Program was established. Figured out slowly what it is, how it can be used, and waited for an opportunity. And John had thought that the Snake was dead along with the other System Lords. To know that, no, the bastard is not just alive, he’s been posing as some kind of overlord of a corporate business empire—
“Sorry. You’ve got the wrong guy.”
Wrong answer. The Goa’uld gives its human host unnatural strength, and dark spots dance in front of John’s eyes after the blow, and his jaw feels sore. Pretty sure his lip just got busted. He spits on the floor, and, yeah, that’s blood. Fuck. He doesn’t want Rodney to get hurt.
But he’s stubborn and he’s not going to help this Snake, not on his life—
“Can’t do. I don’t put out on the first date.”
“Don’t make this any harder than it needs to be, Colonel,” the Goa’uld advises, seemingly humored and not at all stressed. “I know you have retained the memories of the Ancient named Icarus. You modify the hyperdrive of this craft: I let your companion here live. Formerly a Special Agent and now Director of NCIS—very impressive record—one which I can instantly cut very short.”
John stills, and internally curses this false deity. Now would be a good time for the SGC to catch up and beam in a team of marines. Now. Now—but there is no flare of fire, or an Asgard beam, or an assault of F-302s. Only Ba’al smile that John wants to kick in.
“I’ll give you a minute to think about it. We’ll soon leave this system behind, and there’s no way for the SGC to track us out here.”
Then the Goa’uld is gone, the Jaffa following at an even march, and the doors slam shut. The whirring noise of a locking mechanism.
They’re alone.
[Well. Looks like we’re going to have to improv our way out of this one], the Raven remarks wryly, tries to remain positive and uplifting and not give up. If they could get free and if John could get his hands on a single gun, a single zat, he could take ‘em. Probably. Yeah. Just needs the opportunity.
John exhales.
“What the hell,” Jenny gasps, but not from pain anymore. The shock: she’d been this reserved, professional woman—no longer the girl from his vague childhood memories, when they’d met those rare times when the Sheppards deemed it safe and okay for their Strangeling child to be exposed to other people lest the secret got out. They’d played in the yard of the green lawn. Been there at his eighth birthday party and they’d pulled pranks on Uncle Ben and been carefree children unaware of the dangers of the world, lifetimes and lifetimes ago; before the fallouts; before.
Now, her eyes are wide, and her face pale, and she’s staring at him like at a ghost. She doesn’t recognize him. He is a prisoner in the wrong flesh. A bruise is starting to bloom on Rodney’s face. McKay’s not going to be happy about that.
“What the hell is going on?!” Her voice is hoarse.
John turns, awkwardly. The shackles won’t let him reach out. And what’s he meant to say? lie? Saying it’s going to be fine is for children.
He decides to be blunt and just get it over with. No time to wrap it up nicely in warm blankets. “We’re aboard a spaceship. A Goa’uld cargo vessel, is my guess. That was Ba’al and he’s a Goa’uld and, yeah, they’re aliens, a parasite that takes over human bodies and kills their Dæmon because they have no use for them. And—yeah. I’m not really Dr Rodney McKay. This is his body, but, there are these communication devices —”
“Stop. Just stop.” Now Jenny blinks several times and looks to be holding back tears or laughter of hysteria, incredible disbelief and John wishes, too, that this was some elaborate dream. But it isn’t. it isn’t.
It sucks.
“I don’t—”
“I know you don’t believe me, Jenny.” First time he addresses her by that name instead of by rank, properly. Makes her raise her gaze sharply. He holds it, calmly, and counts the seconds until their breaths even out. “I’m John Sheppard. There’s this device that lets me talk and essentially be here via Rodney’s body. Sort of, sort of like a Bond, if you will. Telepathically? He’s in mine, my body, back on Atlantis. It’s complicated but yeah.”
“… Atlantis?”
“It’s a City. Three … three million lightyears from Earth,” he adds, hesitating briefly around the number because it’s so ridiculous to an outsider and although thinking in terms of lightyears and parsecs is normal, now, to him, it’s not really. She’s never been to outer space before, and this isn’t exactly the warmest welcome mat.
Home, he doesn’t say. It’s home.
“Holy fuck,” she whispers at last, curling up closer to her Dæmon. “Holy … fuck.”
“Yeah.”
She’s probably the sanest and most grounded person on this ship right now, he reflects.
He just hopes that she’ll get off it in one piece.
The Snake returns a minute or two later, goons in tow. Not Colonel Everett this time, blank-eyed. It is a relief. To see the once proud marine like that, his Dæmon a shell, is creepy as fuck.
“What is your answer?”
And John has to relent. But he has a condition. He knows they’ll never let Jenny go, but at least they’ve got to give her some medical attention. They’ve got the technology aboard, he’s certain. Healing devices of some kind.
He really doesn’t want to see her laid to rest in a sarcophagus. He’s read reports: dangerous consequences, addiction. But she’s worse off than she shows. She’ll bleed out, eventually.
Ba’al smiles a little, amused; as if this is a game; this is a game, and he owns the board and all the pieces and the audience, staged so handsomely according to his designs. “Is that your only demand?”
“Yeah,” John grunts. “Heal her, make sure she lives—without putting a Snake in her—and I’ll fix your engines.”
However that’s going to happen, because the Snake’s under some illusion. Sure, he’s got a few of Icarus memories. Doesn’t mean he knows how to rewrite the operating system of a damn Goa’uld ship, or hotwire its hyperdrive, or anything else like that. He’s not some damned Space MacGyver. That’s Rodney’s job.
What we wouldn’t do for Rodney to be here and fix—
He ceases the thought.
And Ba’al barks an order in Goa’uld to his Jaffa, and they yank the Director’s chains free from the wall, and she doesn’t cry out or plead for help. She is stoically quiet in the way of a military officer or federal agent well-trained to withstand interrogation. She does glance at John briefly in that echo of shock, of disbelief, of this being a very vivid otherworldly dream, and he has no answers to give. Her arms tighten around her Dæmon. They do not touch them: small mercies: and the Jaffa drag her to her feet, forces her to walk. She refuses to fall.
She’ll be taken to the ship’s sarcophagus, John is certain, if there is one, or Ba’al might use a hand device to heal her. She’s no use to them dead;
He wishes he could be certain that they won’t transplant a Snake in her head out of gruesome spite.
Then Jenny and her Dæmon are out of view, half-conscious, and Ba’al blocks door, and the Goa’uld appears to be unarmed. If we were on his own without hostages to worry about, John would’ve chanced it. Thrown himself at him. Twisted his neck. Goa’uld are stronger than humans, but if he—
But he can’t.
(Time to start panicking a little.)
Rodney hasn’t slept for over twenty-four hours. He isn’t the only one. His head hurts, and Carson says he can’t take any more painkillers for the rest of the day without causing damage to his—to Sheppard’s—liver. Rodney had yelled at him for a bit, before Carson had pointed out that yelling didn’t make the pain go away or make him feel better. Morosely, he’d returned to his lab.
He is at least allowed coffee. Its bitter taste is different from when it’s on his own tongue, but Rodney needs it to focus.
Also, he’s back to yelling.
“If we trace the hacker’s trail to—”
“Tried, got nothing. Servers rerouted it a dozen times.”
“What if we use the—”
“Again, tried it: nothing. It’s not going to—”
Their voices are rising in pitch, angrily. The anger is just a byproduct of stress, of concern, and nothing personal and they are aware of it on a distant level. Rodney can’t help but be very annoyed all the same. Radek’s ideas are nothing noteworthy and their options right now are limited.
They’re in his lab, and he’d prefer to be standing but he’s confined to a chair in front of a plasma screen. A clean whiteboard has been moved over and now they are scattering ideas over it. Data has been transmitted by the SGC: what little they’ve got on that energy signature indicating a ship breaking orbit from Earth. Not a hyperspace jump, though. They’ve got possible trajectories and little else. There’s also the hacker to deal with. Carter and her team are on the other end trying to find out by whom and where that was made. All of it are pieces of the same puzzle.
One which Rodney has trouble unravelling and he blames the painkillers making his head all fuzzy and his muscles sore. Not his but for the moment they are. A corner of his mind remains unfocused on this room, this moment, and instead wonders if John is even breathing though he’s got to be. The stones’ connection is still going strong and they’ve theorized that if a person were to be fatally injured while using them, if they died, the connection would break, possibly ending them both—
But they’re not dead, Mer reminds him sharply. They can’t be. So they’re not.
They try to focus on that fact and draw some hope from it. It’s hard because Rodney is, on a good day, pessimistic at best, and this is not a good day.
“We simply do not have enough data,” Radek emphasizes. “Had we had access to—”
“Well we don’t,” Rodney cuts him off sharply.
This, as Sheppard would probably put it, sucks. No, maybe he wouldn’t put it like that. Rodney certainly wouldn’t. Rodney would use much harsher language than that to describe the situation and Sheppard would put holes in said situation with his gun. He’s not that fond of the military types’ single-mindedness of This Doesn’t Work So Let’s Blow Something Up, generally, but right now Rodney is willing to make exceptions. Only problem is they have nothing to blow up or shoot at because they have no target; a target needs to be visible, and—
!!!
Rodney freezes and exchanges a look with Mer. The thought passing between them is more than an emotion but cannot be translated into words.
The Czech still in the room clears his throat. “McKay? Share with class?”
Radek, having worked alongside Rodney McKay long enough now to recognize when he’s having an idea (and not merely an angry outburst is on its way), cocks his head curiously.
“McKay? Share with class?” he suggests.
“Shut up, I’m thinking,” Rodney snaps and grabs for the nearest computer. Just needs to check something, but—
The Czech silences and nods, and knows not to wake his wrath. He busies himself with thinking. He’s not going to get any of his usual work done today, or tomorrow, or until they’ve figured out how to return the Colonel to the City. Radek is certain. Recalibration of the City’s internal sensors and analyzing the interesting survey of atmospheric energy anomalies on P01-937 will have to wait.
He’s not part of a Recon Team the way Rodney is (which is better for him; he would rather not be Out There to be shot at), but Radek knows the loyalty of everyone in this place and this is more than personal for Rodney McKay. McKay, for all his social inaptness, his brashness, his arrogance, his inability to stop gloating about his superior intellect, is not a bad person. Not the best, maybe, but not as bad as people often make him out to be, and Radek knows well because he has listened to more complaints regarding McKay than a man ought in his lifetime. McKay, beneath that gruff insensitive exterior, cares about the people around him. Even his science department even if he loathes admitting it.
And he might not be the most socially adept person (though a thousand times more aware than McKay), but Radek isn’t unaware. Like a lot of people, he is willing to—what is the English term? Ah, yes: ‘turn a blind eye’. Necessary to do that for things to run smoothly in Atlantis. Radek doesn’t think that McKay knows that Radek once spotted Colonel Sheppard enter McKay’s quarters one evening and not emerge until morning, although the City’s lifesigns censors showed no irregularities, as if the man and his singular Dæmon were never there. Radek does not tell. If he is ready, then McKay will say something. If he will, Radek doesn’t know. If the Colonel were a civilian, things probably would be different. The Czech has worked with Americans long enough to know about a lot of issues they have, and it’s not like it’s the country is the only one on Earth with the same problems.
For a long while now McKay taps the keyboard, briefly at intervals pausing to think, muttering to himself. Is strange to see him like this, in Colonel Sheppard’s flesh, though his attitude and manner of speech alone betray who he really is; there is no need to look at his Dæmon, curled up on the desk impatiently, which is all McKay. Still, it is rather … unsettling. The wrong face. Radek would not have volunteered to use the Ancient communication stones. Given recent—recent enough—events, he is a bit surprised that the Colonel agreed to use them.
But the Colonel is a very loyal man, and, from what Radek has learned, his family on Earth is involved somehow, and the man cannot leave the City. The details about that Radek does not share either. But he has watched, understood, calculated. So have many others. The Colonel does not need to use lifesigns detectors in the City, and knows much more than he lets on about Atlantis at any given time. This Radek has noticed. He whispers to the City, and it answers. Radek finds it useful. Now if only he too could hear whenever a fuse blows in a tower on the South Pier or there’s a power fluctuation on level three or a door is forcibly opened, and a lot of Radek’s troubles would be solved. Atlantis is old and there are a lot of blown fuses.
Yes, there’s a lot that Radek knows and notices that he doesn’t tell anyone explicitly or (often enough) implicitly. He’s not the only one either. Dr Weir, certainly, keeps her eyes peeled. And there are others, among the scientists as well as the marines. Unspoken secrets agreed upon to be kept that way until the time’s ripe to share them.
Until now, McKay acted grumpy not just because of what’s happening but because of the pain the body is in. Now, though, that pain is forced away or forgotten in intense concentration. A lot of people think Rodney doesn’t know how to shut up. Oh, he talks a lot. At first, Radek found it annoying and grating. When he first met McKay in Siberia (the less told of that incident the better), he couldn’t wait to be away from the man and had a strong urge to sock him. Very uncharacteristic, such a violent thought. McKay had been so sharp and rough and there was no wonder the Air Force had sent him to Russia to that international research complex. No one else wanted to take him in.
Now Radek is used to it, the talking, and finds Rodney’s speech patterns a good indicator of his mood and health. (Has helped to avoid several catastrophes due to low food rations.) But when he is this deep in concentration, McKay falls very very silent. He is not even touching his offered coffee. If this was a normal (ha. normal. Radek does not laugh.) day, then Radek would start to become concerned at this silence, but he knows the reason today. Is best not to interrupt and agitate him further.
A little more than half an hour passes until he moves from his office chair, and he marches out of the lab, heading for the nearest transporter. Tries to march, anyway, visibly struggling with the Colonel’s injured leg, with the crutches. Radek, curling a PDA under his arm, follows, prepared to step in and support the man if he slips, knowing that Rodney will vehemently deny the aid until the last possible moment. Rodney doesn’t like pain or being injured, sure, but he hates leaning on a colleague’s shoulder even more. Though they are not merely colleagues anymore: Radek would call Rodney his friend, and, in extremely emotionally draining situations, McKay would admit the same.
They step into the transporter and McKay presses the area representing the Control Room on the map. He leans against the wall, breathing heavily.
“Well?” Radek asks finally.
“I’ve got an idea how to find that ship.”
twenty hours earlier:
It’s cold and the light is dim. Yellow. Lamps? There aren’t any windows, and the door is barred shut, tightly, and he comes to suddenly, blinking, dazed; his head hurts, pounding something awful. Not like after a good night out, or even after a bad fight. For a moment he can’t recall how he could’ve ended up here—nothing makes sense.
Then he starts remembering. The texts. The texts. He’d answered … worried. Honestly concerned, because they wouldn’t just contact him like that out of the blue without a cause. Getting his number so fast and everything …
The text. That message. What had it meant?
He scrambles into a sitting position, and realizes that this smell, this—this stench, is smells like the underground, moist and dank and unmoving. The lack of light. Yeah—this could be underground. Cellar? But how did …?
The text. Bradley. Bradley! Shit, the van, the van and the strange men and the knife—
Racing to his feet, heart suddenly pounding so loud he thinks that it has to be the echoing reverberations in his skull, Mitchell grasps for the door. The room is pretty large for an underground cell and if this had been offworld, he’d be waiting for his team to show, or maybe even one of the Frontiers, the full cavalry. Guns blazing heroically and all that. Leave no one behind, that’s the motto they live by. Isn’t it? But this is Earth, not—
Earth.
Which means his team isn’t coming because they think he’s ill, that’s why he wouldn’t hang out with them to share beer and laughter and for a moment forget the terrors of Pegasus. And, shit, isn’t this the most cruel irony? Survive Wraith and ambushes and alien planets, and now he’s stuck someplace on Earth because Bradley White wouldn’t—
He lays his palms against the door and closes his eyes. The thought of the guy with his arms tied behind his back comes to mind, and as he stands there, leaning against the door and breathing heavily, his memory rekindles. The recalls the van and the men and the knife, and the prisoner, their bound hands. Their Dæmon … so familiar, so familiar; that had been his half-brother, he’s certain, even thought it was years since the last time they saw each other face-to-face.
There’d been blood, and a vague scream, and a light that didn’t fit in—but his memory is fuzzy. Takes a moment to recall.
The flash of the zat’nik’tel. Been so long since last he saw one of those things, because they brought none of them with them to Pegasus. Pity, really. Handy in a tight spot. If he’d had one himself … But he didn’t, and darkness had taken them;
He opens his eyes again, and realizes why he’s so cold. His feet are bare. Someone’s taken his boots and BDUs, and he’s in nothing more than boxers and a tank, and, jeez, he’s probably going to freeze to death. Trapped in a cell on Earth—but where? Is this still D.C.? Elsewhere? He has no concept of time or how long he was out. They could’ve keep hitting him with the zat every time he woke up, until …
And he shudders. Unconscious. They both were. That means they must’ve touched … Is that, too, why he feels so cold? Someone put their dirty hands on his Dæmon and carried them away;
The door is solid. Steel? His hands are free, and there are no chains, and his Dæmon isn’t forced into a cage. They both pound and claw at the heavy door. It doesn’t rattle or move. He throws himself, using his left shoulder, as a weight upon it. Nothing happens.
“Hey! Let us out!” he shouts. “Hey!?”
Already his hands and arms start feeling a bit sore, and he realizes that he’s bleeding. A smear on the steel. He reaches out to touch it, and then the corresponding spot on his arm, above the elbow. The subcutaneous tracker is gone.
“Anybody there?!”
How long have they been down here? And what’s the rate for hypothermia, when does it strike, when does it become deadly? He thinks he can hear the wet noise of water dripping somewhere slowly, and shudders again.
“Fuck,” he whispers to himself.
Maybe Drew will come save us after all, his Dæmon tries to think for them upliftingly. Realize something’s wrong and save the day.
Maybe. And she’d never let him forget it, either. If she could.
Heavy footsteps.
It doesn’t sound like a rescue team. They wouldn’t be that obviously loud, and he draws back, to the left hand side of the door so that when it opens, he could take the shot. Pounce. His limbs are so heavy.
It’s not a Gate team, not a marine. It’s a Jaffa, and his jaw tightens in angry shock and this doesn’t make sense. He tries to fight, but the Jaffa just threatens to shoot his Dæmon with their staff weapon.
“What do you want?!”
These, these are the people who took Bradley and maybe he could be dead, that’s why he’s in this cell alone;
Someone else enters the cell. Not a Jaffa. Her forehead is smooth and holds no such marks, and she’s beautiful, kind of hot and with icy blonde hair and she’s in a business suit, skirt all strict and it doesn’t make a lick of sense.
“You’re going to give up your security codes so that we can access the SGC:s database,” she says, her voice pleasant and business-like. As if this is a meeting at a bank and she’s making a withdrawal.
He’s standing in front of his Dæmon now so that the first shot can’t hit her, but it’s meagre protection and they both know it. He can spot a couple more Jaffa beyond, in the corridor. Dank, darkly lit, electrical lamps. Earth. This is Earth, still. Not an alien ship. And there’s no way they could’ve travelled through the Gate to another world.
At least that’s something.
“Look, lady,” he says, “I don’t know what the hell you want, but—”
The woman doesn’t say anything. Nods at one of the Jaffa and, instead of firing, it strikes him across the face with the staff. He falls down, searing with dizziness and his eyes blacken for a second, nothing to be seen. His jaw is sore and cheekbone maybe broken.
Futz.
“The security access codes,” the woman repeats like she’s bored and stern and could do this all day. Her nails are painted a deep red, red like blood. It’s the only color in the room. Her Dæmon is an odd shadow that doesn’t move.
C’mon, Drew, he thinks, hopes: figure it out. Come get us. Don’t need to send a Frontier Team all fancy. I’d settle for any armed marine right about now. Any heavily armed marine.
He’s not going to betray the SGC, his team. He can’t. Not to these Snakes.
“No.”
Another strike.
Okay, bad idea.
She’s probably ready to do this all day. She steps closer, not afraid to get blood on her pristine clothes or her unmarked hands, and her eyes glow golden.
Fuck, he hates Snakes.
Gasping for breath, he glances upward. “If I did, what would you do? Who the hell are you anyway?!”
“Give us the security access codes,” she says, voice like dark honey, smooth and frighteningly warm, and for a second he thinks that she’d have better success with this plan if they’d tried seducing him or something. Guess that’s too cliché.
Maybe just tricking himself because, yeah, he’s sure that his cheek is broken, and if he doesn’t comply more bones will follow.
C’mon, Drew. Anytime now …
But no one’s coming for him and he knows it, deep down, he knows it. He lied to his team about where he was going and didn’t tell them and this is how he’ll pay for it.
His team has gotten into trouble before, offworld. Not like the Frontiers but almost. Chased down by Wraith. Captured once by angry locals and they’d been pretty beat up but those folks had thought they were Wraith Worshippers and it had taken Weir a day to negotiate them out of there. Now he’s got no such luck.
And he thinks about his team: can’t betray them. He has no idea who this woman is or why she wants those access codes but he can guess, and in any scenario the outcome won’t be good.
“The access codes. Then the pain will go away.”
Probably via a headshot. Not looking forward to that.
He bites his tongue, doesn’t answer. He looks at the woman and thinks, fiercely, even if she and the others can’t hear it: Go to hell, lady.
This time, the Jaffa doesn’t strike. Aims for a kneecap and fires.
The scream tears out of his throat.
Chapter 19: one giant leap
Summary:
they're missing a Dæmon.
Notes:
(2017-06-27) Hi! Sorry, it's been awhile. I've been unable to write for some time. But here's another chapter for you. // One of you pointed out a big error in this fic and it's that I've been using transporter rings without reading up on them. In SG-1 canon the rings punch holes through solid matter unless using the proper landing platforms (which they've got aboard the Prometheus and Goa'uld ships). In this fic, well, I forgot, honestly, all about that and didn't do my research properly. Also I am very lazy (and tired). So, in this fic's verse, a small bit of matter - say, a ceiling/roof - doesn't need to be punched through for the transporter rings to work (does that make sense?). Maybe later I'll go back and revise and create a better solution, but for now I ask you to simply accept that change as part of this AU. // Thank you everybody who has read and left kudos and/or comments! You spur me on. Hope you'll like this chapter. My goal is to get this fic back on track and maybe finished one day ...
Chapter Text
xix.
one giant leap
they’re missing a Dæmon.
They take him to the engine room. His Dæmon is left behind in the cage, the forcefield encompassing, and they don’t wish each other good luck. Every minute he wastes, the closer Jenny’s going to draw to death. And he has no idea what the fuck he’s even doing. The Goa’uld is out of its mind. He could stall them, he could, make up lies, but he has no idea where on the ship exactly Jenny is and they’ll kill her if he doesn’t cooperate.
There’s a potentia. Its glow is dull, weak. Half-power. But enough. Could be enough to carry them all the way to Atlantis, where his body is waiting.
Icarus has knowledge of the Goa’uld, met them after evacuating to Terra ten millennia ago and he spoke their harsh tongue.
“Y’know,” he remarks idly, “I’m not sure I can actually do any of what you want me to do.”
He’s not McKay. And he hasn’t summoned up any of Icarus’ memories out of the blue, at a whim. True, he hasn’t tried. Still. It’s not like flipping a switch.
The Snake is clearly out of its twisted mind thinking that this can be done.
“I’m just saying that if this doesn’t work, it’s not my fault.”
“I could always kill Jenny Sheppard right away,” Ba’al says without infliction. “She is of little use to me.”
John shuts up. He lets them lead him to the consoles, to the crystal panels open in the walls and he looks at the trays of crystals and wonders how the hell this is going to work. He needs it to work, because if he doesn’t do what Ba’al wants then Jenny will die. And she’s innocent in all of this and doesn’t deserve such an end. There are wires on the floor waiting to be used, and a Terran computer hooked up to the machinery. There are some complicated equations there, half-finished, the slow movement of planets and galaxies needing to be ironed out because some of the data is missing.
They need him to plot the course, he realizes then: they don’t have New Lantea’s exact coordinates, Atlantis’ exact coordinates. John has no choice but to give it to them.
And there’s a potentia, dull as it’s not yet connected to the system. The Ancients never meant for their technology to be used this way, in conjunction with Goa’uld tech—or, for that matter, Terran or Asgard or Wraith. But they made those other combinations work, didn’t they?
This is going to take a while.
“I was right. There is a conspiracy.”
“You can shut up about it now, Tony,” Todd sighs, rubbing at her brows briefly with a hand. It’s been a long very strange day, and there are things to do. “You’ve only pointed it out fifteen times in the past hour.”
At least now they—sort of—know what they’re dealing with. Scratched the surface. There are still huge chunks missing, things that have to be pulled out of the dark and illuminated.
They’re back at HQ, and they’re going to do what they do best: investigate. Now given full clearance and access to what they couldn’t reach before, they get to work. What they need to do is find that Goa’uld … or its host.
Host. Dr Jackson, the archaeologist (whose reputation has been ridiculed for years and years now for his outlandish theories about the Egyptian pyramids being the basis of spaceships) had explained: the Goa’uld are parasites and they take host, and the Dæmon of that host slowly or rapidly dies, fades away to dust and empty shells and none of the agents wants to continue that horrible, soul-wrenching thought. These Goa’uld can walk around emptily for months to trick people into believing that everything is okay.
It’s the stuff out of a B-grade sci-fi/horror movie. The kind which DiNozzo usually would relish with glee, but now—now—now, fuck, how’s he ever going to look at any movie with spaceships and aliens the same way again?
They don’t have any names yet, but many of those System Lords (calling themselves gods once upon a time) are gone now. Overthrown or dead. Several thanks to the SGC, to Dr Jackson and General O’Neill and their old team, SG-1.
So much information has passed them by in the last couple of hours, astounding and terrifying, and it’s difficult to take in. Process. And there is (too) little time to do so because the Director’s gone, and they’ve got to find her. Pressing questions. The other agents at HQ, and the Director’s assistant, are concerned and they’ve got other agencies breathing down their necks and the Department of Defense frowning, and Gibbs cannot point to the usual suspects. For once he cannot be honest enough to hazard a guess and give the other agents a clue as to where to look. No, this case is something he and his team must figure out on their own.
Not entirely on their own. The SGC will of course help; this has to do with them, and one of their own has been murdered—or staged to look like a murder—and another has been taken too. They’ve sent information, and keep coordinating with their people. They’re also still searching for a murderer and the possibility of Corporal Snow still being alive. Elsewhere.
“So that wasn’t really Dr McKay,” says McGee after a pause. Sitting in front of his computer frantically typing, seeking paper trails. False identities.
From what they’ve managed to gather, the SGC thinks that the Trust-come-Goa’uld has lived in the shadow of Earth for months or years, probably as some kind of businessman. So they’ve got to match corporations. There are hints: Summer, the Director’s PA, has told them about two suspicious phonecalls; and there was another attack, to Patrick Sheppard, the Director’s uncle. Related somehow.
It’s a mess.
A huge intergalactic mess. Wow, that’s a word none of them ever thought they’d use in their line of work. Or ever.
“Apparently, yeah. That wasn’t McKay,” DiNozzo says.
Disbelieving. Can’t let it go. The video call: to another planet: to another galaxy, and there’s a City there and there was a guy whose face matched the photos of Snow’s CO. But he spoke oddly and waved his hands around a lot, and claimed to be Dr Rodney McKay. The one they’d meant to have in custody a moment ago along with Corporal MacGrimmon. Something about communication devices with telepathic links. Or something.
Some days DiNozzo wonders why he took Gibbs up on the offer of joining NCIS and leaving the life—sometimes dull, sometimes dangerous, sometimes thrilling—as a police officer in Baltimore behind. This is a day like that.
At least at the PD he wouldn’t have to worry about shit like this. Aliens storming HQ to perform a kidnapping. Alien ray guns. Alien spaceships.
Spaceships.
A conspiracy. A huge conspiracy at the heart of everything they know. They’ve been fed lies for years.
There was even a battle. No, battles, plural—battles for Earth: against some of those Goa’uld System Lords. Ships exploding in the sky. A dogfight above Antarctica less than three years ago, the kind which would be awesome and exciting on TV, but Colonel Mitchell had apparently been there in a fighter jet to fend off the attackers and been badly injured and he hadn’t made it sound like anything out of Star Wars at all.
And DiNozzo has watched Wormhole X-treme! and found it kind of hilarious in its B-graded grace, with special effects that could’ve been better but also could’ve been much worse. To then meet General O’Neill and Colonel Carter and Dr Jackson and realize that these are the real (weird) people doing real (unbelievable) work, and those Wormhole X-treme! characters were caricatures of them … based on them—they even said the creator of the show is an alien. An alien. Making TV about aliens. That’s some Men in Black-level of weirdness (and there’s yet another movie DiNozzo isn’t going to be able to watch for a long while without a meltdown).
Yeah. All of this—it would mess with anyone’s head.
And just as Dr McKay wasn’t really Dr McKay, the body in their morgue isn’t Lance Corporal Snow. Instead they’ve got a dead NID agent who according to records should have a Dæmon of different Shape than what’s in the freezing drawer; and Gibbs can draw two possible conclusions. One is that there’s yet another body out there to be found but it makes little sense, and in gut he’s just not feeling it. The second possibility is that the Dæmon is the one belonging to agent White, but the Shape has been—forcibly or otherwise—changed since the records were made.
A Dæmon finds a suitable Shape and Settles into it in late adolescence or adulthood. A mark of passage. Such is the nature of things. After that, changing is much harder; often seen as impossible. But they’ve got to question the impossible now. If properly motivated—by will, by circumstance, by enduring force—then a person could switch the Shape of their Dæmon. Theoretically, Dr Mallard agrees, it’s possible, but it doesn’t usually happen.
The SGC, Gibbs has come to understand, doesn’t deal with ‘usually’ or ‘impossible’. Hell, they’ve got the means to travel through space using Stargates like the normal guy would take the subway to work. That’s not normal or natural, and Gibbs wouldn’t touch a wormhole with a stick.
He has Abby run a DNA test, samples provided by the NID via the SGC. Of course, convincing Abby and Ducky to continue working the case without being able to share information pisses Gibbs off. He doesn’t like keeping these kinds of secrets. They should work as a team and a team doesn’t hold out on one another. But the two are still being vetted by the SGC. Hopefully, before the day is up, two more nondisclosure agreements will be delivered to HQ and Gibbs can bring them up to speed, and the SGC can provide both information and people to work with Abby and Ducky and the rest of his team. Once that’s done, they’ll find out the truth about who did this, and why, and how. And then Gibbs is going to book a long weekend in his basement with his boat.
The wood and dust will remind him that while there may be aliens, the rest of the world remains the same. Because if he starts thinking otherwise, Gibbs knows he’ll end up a paranoid bastard (more than he already is, anyway) for the rest of his life and never get a good night’s sleep.
Dr Mallard takes it in stride. Very talkative, taken-aback stride, yes, but in stride nonetheless. Sciuto, gasping in revelation, demands Dr Jackson, who is there when the agreements are signed two hours later, tell her everything about the Stargate and related to it, and she barely recalls how to breathe. Jackson can talk just as fast and Gibbs watches the discussion for a minute or so, and then barks at them to focus on the case.
Aliens or not, they’ll catch this killer. Questions about wormhole physics and the chemical residue of Goa’ulds or whatever else they’re blabbing about has to wait. Abby pouts, but obeys, and Dr Jackson relays all and any relevant information to her and Dr Mallard. The archaeologist—and now they know why an archaeologist has been hired by the USAF base without an airstrip as a ‘consultant’—has brought with him a computer and several files pertinent to the case. If he hadn’t, Gibbs would have had Abby and McGee hack the SGC, and General Landry had seemed aware of this fact. Perhaps heard not undue rumors from disgruntled feds about Gibbs’ habits and stubbornness.
The odd three walk together to Abby’s lab in Forensics, and before the elevator closes with a ping, Gibbs hears Abby ask Jackson: “But what chemical reaction causes the eyes to glow?” and decides he doesn’t want to know.
Later, in the bullpen, the NCIS team is gathered with everything they’ve managed to find. Possible suspects; new angles to look from has given them ideas and forced them to discard others. Abby’s still working in her lab but should return shortly.
Mallard’s run through the autopsy for a second time with new eyes. Now they know, for example, that the strange shallow cut in the vic’s arm had been made to remove a tracking device planted by the SGC: the only thing that makes sense.
The DNA match arrives at nightfall but none of them is thinking about turning in. The sample provided by the NID is positive: their victim is Agent Bradley White. DNA doesn’t lie. That’s White, and since he was running an op of such import to the SGC he’d been implanted with a tracking device. Subcutaneous transmitter, says Abby. Gibbs trusts her to understand what the hell that means. The SGC had been able to track White in real time, anywhere on the planet, up until shortly before the murder. It matches the timeline. That’s White.
His Dæmon is another story. The Shape of it is wrong. Agent Barrett, who coordinates with the NID, SGC, and now NCIS, confirms this. Barrett has worked with White before, and White’s Dæmon was roughly that size, yes, but it was definitely feline, and not of that color. But, digging through old photos, they find a match. Sort of.
“The missing marine, Snow, we see his Dæmon in this picture. High school reunion three years ago,” DiNozzo says, and a picture comes up on the plasma screen.
It depicts Snow alongside three other people, two men and one woman, of the same age, dressed in casual attire. The light is dim and the image is somewhat shaky, but good enough, and they can clearly see all the Dæmons as well. One of the people’s wearing a purple party hat, and there’s movement in the background and a flash of confetti, and their smiles are somewhat forced as tends to be the case then people who haven’t had contact with each other for years and secretly loathes one another come together to socialize.
Snow’s got an arm thrown around the woman in the picture, and he looks healthy enough. By his feet sits his Dæmon, close to the woman’s. She’s been identified as a girlfriend. Ex-girlfriend now, according to Snow’s team and friends, who apparently know everything about Snow. Lieutenant Drew, the leader of AR-9, had said during the interview that a team knows more about each other than most husbands know about their wives.
Gibbs was a marine once, and he knows that kind of life. Drew wasn’t lying.
“So. We’ve got a dead NID agent, no sign of his Dæmon, and a missing marine with his Dæmon in the morgue,” DiNozzo concludes, turning to the others. “We’re missing something here. We’re missing a Dæmon.”
McGee looks at the picture for a long moment, at the comparison of the Dæmon zoomed in next to the dead one. The blood’s been cleaned off the corpse. He’s silent in thought.
“You know, I read once, I can’t remember when exactly right now,” Dr Mallard who’s with them says. He has his tirades, but Gibbs doesn’t interrupt the old man. Yet, anyway. “Oh, yes! When I was studying in Oxford, I came across the notes of a very odd case. There was a mismatching Dæmon, I remember now. It was the case of two siblings involved in a robbery; one of them was found in a dumpster …”
“Ducky,” Gibbs cuts in. They’re wasting precious time.
“All right, all right,” says Ducky slightly grumpily but continues, understanding that Gibbs’ glare means Get To The Point. “At first, the coroner was confounded. The cause of death was clearly poisoning, at least for the human body, and the signs were clear as day and should’ve translated over to the Dæmon. Instead the Dæmon’s skull was clearly bashed in! Photographic IDs revealed that this Dæmon should’ve had the Shape of a white Felis catus, which are fairly common as a basic Shape, but instead next to the body in the dumpster there was a Felis margarita—”
“A sand dune cat,” translates Todd.
“Very good, Caitlin!” Ducky says, smiling. “Now, there’s a minor difference, and could’ve been attributed to an oversight with the registrar’s office. Two days later, the victim’s sister was found, very much alive, and her Dæmon looked exactly like the victim’s. The chances of such an occurrence is very slim, even in the family. In fact, in less than one part per million of the average population—” Catching Gibbs’ impatient look, Ducky clears his throat. “My point is, this very Dæmon had been reportedly seen at the scene of the crime, a robbery one week earlier. A Felis margarita is quite rare; especially one of this coloring. Yes, it was the black stripe across its back that did it. The dead woman had registered the Shape of her Dæmon as a white Felis catus. Her sister …”
“Shifted the Shape of her Dæmon before she was killed,” Gibbs concludes.
Ducky nods. “Yes, that’s what happened. That kind of thing happening in adulthood is highly unusual. No doubt it was done under coercion, the woman’s attempt to cover up and blame her sister for the crime. Back then, DNA forensics was still in its cradle, and if not for the precise memory of the bank teller, she’d have walked free.”
“That’s possible? I thought shifting Shape as an adult was a myth,” exclaims McGee, woken from his reprieve. Timothy’s Dæmon settled when they were seventeen and haven’t attempted moving into something else since, and they don’t have any plans to.
The notion of being forced to shift Shape into something else is shocking to the core. Then again, so is a lot of things he’s recently learned. He’d not heard about that exact case that Ducky’s talking about—that was way back in Britain in the sixties or something—but he’d read something like that on a forum on the internet once. He’d thought it was something he could use for one of his books one day, maybe. A good twist people wouldn’t expect. It’s the thing of fiction.
“Probie,” says DiNozzo, uncharacteristically serious, lowering his voice a bit so that other non-read-in agents can overhear them: “there are aliens.”
McGee blinks. “So? They don’t have Dæmons. And we’re talking about a human victim.” It’s weird, having to stress that.
“It’s possible,” Gibbs says. His tone is grave. He won’t speak more of it, about whether he knows from hearsay or from experience. “Rare, difficult, but possible.”
They’re not missing a Dæmon. They one they’ve got in the morgue is a copycat. The question is: where is the original?
Gibbs nods, mulling over what’s been said. “Kate, what’ve you got?”
The female agent steps forward. She’s been looking into the people who broke into HQ and kidnapped the Director. The oddly looking men she’d not been able to find; talking with the SGC liaison, she was told that those men probably are not from Earth. True aliens. Jaffa, foot soldiers for the Goa’uld, they’d have grown up on a completely different world without records or birth certificates and they’d have had their Dæmons cut off from them as they were implanted with larvae. The blonde woman, on the other hand, she’s managed to find a name to.
Todd clicks and the plasma screen flickers to show the image of a woman in her mid-thirties; next to that is a frozen frame of the security recordings taken from the Director’s office. The second picture is fuzzy even with enhancement; it had been difficult to find a clear shot of the woman’s face, and there’s something wrong with her eyes in the video. As if they were glowing.
“This is Charlotte Mayfield, VP of Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics. More than that, according to the intel provided by our new friends, it’s probable she’s got connection to the Trust. Today she placed two calls directly to the Director’s PA requesting a meeting with Director Sheppard.”
“Not a coincidence,” DiNozzo comments needlessly.
“The Bad Guys,” McGee says, for the lack of a better moniker; within the openness of the plaza at NCIS HQ, surrounded by other agents, they can’t speak unveiled words about what they’ve just learned; “they tend to like positions of power, and this is a major company with many contacts both in the US and abroad. Their biggest client is the Department of Defense.”
Huge warning signs right there. It’s a perfect cover to gather intel and conduct sabotage, all the while making big money.
“The interesting thing is,” Todd goes on, “that Mayfield got this position just a few months ago. The previous VP, Alex Jamesson, dropped off the map six weeks ago. A short time before that he began to behave strangely according to his wife who hired a private investigator, suspecting that he was having an affair with another woman.”
“And?” Gibbs presses.
“And nothing. Yet!” Todd adds hurriedly.
“If these … Snakes,” McGee hesitates over the word briefly, “got to him, it’s possible he’s literally off the map.”
“And they replaced him with Mayfield,” DiNozzo fills in. “Makes sense.”
Gibbs ponders it. Mayfield may be loyal to the Trust and therefore be more useful to them. The money alone flowing through that company is a good motivator. The pieces are slowly slotting together. “What about the CEO?”
“This guy,” Todd says. A new picture: a man in his mid-thirties or forties, difficult to determine; slightly dark skin, a neat trim of hair and a goatee, a hint of a relaxed self-reliant smirk. Outwardly he’s rather ordinary, kind of handsome. His Dæmon must be small enough to hide on his body or it’s simply outside of the camera’s narrow field of vision. The picture is taken at an angle: the screenshot from a conference or other. A swarm of men in black in the background, anonymous businessmen sitting around a table. Two large men stand to the side directly behind Human; bodyguards judging by their stance, radio wires, and sunglasses. For a businessman to have personal security is unusual but not unheard of.
“Eric Human, born January 17, 1969 in Bloemfontein, South Africa; only child, parents died—cause unknown—in 1987. He moved to the states the same year. Unmarried. He bought the company eighteen months ago and from what I can tell he has got funds both in the US and overseas in over a dozen accounts, most of which are linked to the company. We’ve managed to pull some paperwork on him. He’s clean but a bit fuzzy. The name pings me as falsified—the record is, well, too thorough but not enough in all the right places.” She’s a good profiler, and Gibbs trusts her judgment. If Kate’s certain that someone’s bogus then they probably are. “Civilian; no criminal record, not even a speeding ticket. I managed to find a couple of reviews on him, all very appreciative. Apparently he’s becoming a big deal in certain circles, he’s got contacts across the globe.”
“And then some,” DiNozzo mutters on his breath. “That is, if he’s involved in this Thing We Can’t Talk About.” He exhales shakily, murmurs to himself: “Got to come up with a good acronym that doesn’t violate that agreement.”
Todd can’t help but agree: with his first point, that is, not the acronym. “It’s suspicious, especially with a name like that.” Even if the name isn’t falsified and that is really what the man—the host?—is called, then ‘Eric Human’ a huge irony. From what she’s thus far learned about the Goa’uld, it’s that they, while able to be subtle, are big fans of dramatics, about making statements. The SGC said they pose as mythological figureheads and gods, after all. Todd thinks that, if this wasn’t so weird and out of their league, she’d find making a profile assessment kind of interesting. Now it’s simply deeply disturbing.
“No Dæmon in any picture we’ve found,” McGee remarks in a low voice, looking at Gibbs expectantly. “If these—Snakes—really don’t have them, then …” He trails off, looking pale and a bit sick at the thought.
“Doesn’t have to mean anything, not until we’ve got all the facts,” Gibbs says. “I want to talk with them both.”
“That’s the problem. We can’t get a hold of either Mayfield or Human. According to the assistant I spoke to on the phone, they’re on an extended business conference in Germany. Wouldn’t specify more than that. Left this morning, private flight, won’t be back for days,” says Todd wryly. The whole thing reeks with lies.
“Europe,” echoes DiNozzo, slightly dreamily. “Nice. I like Europe, especially the—” Sensing the glare from Gibbs and the threat of a slap to the head, he quickly shuts up.
“If they’re involved, it’s not Europe they’re going to.” Gibbs considers all the data in front of them for a moment. Then orders: “Fix me a warrant to search Human’s office at Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics, his home, the works.”
“Uh, Boss, for a search warrant we need a justifiable cause,” DiNozzo hedges, hesitating. McGee doesn’t point out that DiNozzo has on more than one occasion entered private property without warrant (though not wholly without cause), which, though it’d turned out all right in the end, hadn’t always sat nice with the court and jury. Gibbs only looks at him, and DiNozzo ceases voicing objections. Not the time. Not when the Director’s somewhere out there in need of help. “Right. Cause—on it.”
“Kate, contact our liaison,” Gibbs orders and she nods, reaching for her phone. Agent Barrett is standing by to help in whatever way he can. “Tell him we need to get to the Mountain.”
Their earlier visit to the Prometheus was brief, a turnaround so that they could get to Cheyenne Mountain. This time it is not so. The ship thrums and hums beneath their feet, and Kate has the reeling sensation of being stuck inside of a submarine, the air tight and difficult to breathe. They pass by a few windows, giving way to an incredible but at the same time terrifying view of the moon below.
Colonel Pendergast has the Prometheus orbiting Earth’s moon, hiding in its shadow, while they scan space hoping to get a glimpse of the ship they think fled the solar system earlier. So far no luck. That’s not why the NCIS agents are aboard, though.
The infirmary is a gray room without windows at the heart of the ship, well protected in case of battle. If the hull of the ship is hit then the infirmary, as well as some main engineering sections, would suffer the least. This is a place they could seal themselves in in if the ship begins to vent atmosphere.
Vent atmosphere—Kate can barely process that. When she’d been down in that submarine to solve a case of mistaken identity, her first year with NCIS, it’d taken awhile to get used to the idea of all crushing weight of water above them, knowing that no one would survive if the sub dropped down and filled with water. Now, she and Gibbs endure a quick security walkthrough with one of the airmen aboard, Captain Womack who’s a Bridge Technician. She tells them were to find the safe areas, how to close hatches, how to fasten an oxygen tank in less than ten seconds. Kate hadn’t taken note to it before, too shocked, but now she sees that the walls of the ship are the opposite of smooth: there are various instruments and data screens, and almost everywhere there are handrails jutting out at various levels from floor to ceiling, so that there’s something to hold onto in zero G or low pressure.
“A human can survive approximately fifteen to thirty seconds in vacuum before it kills,” Captain Womack says, lightly and yet seriously. She doesn’t seem weirded out at all. This is her job, simple as that. “If the general alarm sounds, get to a safe area. Lifepods are on level three, two corridors over.”
“You expect trouble?” Kate can’t help but ask. They’re here to interview a witness.
“No, but shit happens,” Komack says plainly. “Besides, the Colonel might order a drill. He’s fond of that.” The Captain pauses, as if trying to recall if there’s anything else they should immediately know. The woman hasn’t asked questions about who they are; Colonel Samantha Carter ringed up with them and said that they’re agents investigating current goings-on, and that seems to be enough.
The ship doesn’t have any truly restricted areas they’re told to avoid. The whole ship is a restricted area. After the instructions, Captain Komack leads them to the infirmary and leaves them there. A marine is watching the door. Gibbs and Kate flash their badges and watch the marine’s eyebrows rise, and then he shrugs and opens the door.
The room is well-lit, spacious and yet cramped. A number of beds and differing medical equipment line the walls. The beds are empty save for two; an old man is resting under the covers of one, attached to an IV line, and on the one next to it a woman is lying on her side, sleeping but not injured. A second man is snoozing in a chair in-between the beds, his neck at an angle that’ll soon be uncomfortable.
The old man isn’t asleep. He looks somewhat drained and pale, and in dull pain, and he’s wearing scrubs. He’s got a datapad of some sort in his lap and is reading when the two agents enter.
“Mr Patrick Sheppard?”
“That’s me,” the man sighs and squints at them. “You’re the NCIS agents? Colonel Carter told me you were coming. I’m afraid I don’t think I can tell you much.” He moves a hand vaguely. “The morphine isn’t good for my head.”
Gibbs smiles gently, a thing people generally don’t think he can do. He holds up his badge but the man only glances at it.
“I’m Agent Jethro Gibbs, this is Agent Caitlin Todd.”
Woken by the voices, the man and woman stir. They’re both somewhere in their mid-thirties and man is wearing a haphazard tie and mismatching socks, and the woman is without makeup. They look tired to the bone, and Kate guesses that they must be David Sheppard and his fiancée, Laura; civilians who have nothing to do with the SGC. Wouldn’t have if not for David’s brother and their father’s stabbing in NYC. Colonel Carter had told them what happened, but they haven’t had an official statement from Patrick Sheppard yet.
The woman on the bed sits up and yawns. “Hi, sorry. I thought it was another nurse. Should we leave?”
The two agents exchange a look. “We’d like to hear what you and your fiancé know, Miss Shannon,” Gibbs says, voice disarmingly charming.
David, who’d stood up to shake hands, sinks back in his chair. “I’m sorry but that’s not much. We, we got here—yesterday? It’s been several hours now, and I keep losing time aboard this,” the man hesitates, the world foreign now, “ship.” He waves a hand, lost, motions at the walls. “Colonel Carter and Mitchell told us about the SGC, or a bit about it, and got us here while my dad was still in surgery.”
Mr Sheppard looks wry and grim and says: “It was quite a shock to wake up here and being told that I’m aboard a spaceship. They had to wheel me to the—Bridge?—to prove …” He shakes his head and winces dizzily. “Okay, what do you want to know?”
“Start from the beginning,” Kate says.
The man lies there, breathing, thinking for a moment. “I’d gone to New York for a conference. Well, it was an informal meeting to be honest, with the board of another company mine has been having deals with for the last few months. Last month we were approached about an interesting offer, but they wanted to discuss the details in person.” He nods to himself, remembering. “The meeting went well, though there was something about the—well, at the time I thought I was being superstitious. Now I’m thinking …”
“Yes?” Gibbs says. Kate is taking notes, though Patrick Sheppard hasn’t gotten to the attack yet.
“I’ve been a businessman my whole life and I know the competition, how greasy and slippery it can get. The sums involved. I’ve taken the lobbyist route myself on occasion. But I swear I’ve never been in a room full of so many people who didn’t feel right. There was something that I didn’t like about the CEO or the board, though I can’t put my finger on it.” He sighs. “As I said, I thought that was superstition, but now apparently there are spaceships—so I might have to change my mind about that. Well. The meeting concluded around three o’clock, and I took the scenic route back to the hotel. Had a wonderful cup of coffee at 86 East 7th street, caught up on the news. I prefer to read the paper. Then I took the subway back to the hotel. It’s not the first time by far that I’ve been to New York, and I like the city, its people, and I’ve been staying at that hotel before, taken that route.” When prompted the reveals the address and hotel room number, which he’s still being billed for, and Gibbs makes a mental note to check it out later. “I was sitting by the window, reading the paper, and an older gentleman takes seat in front of me.”
“What did he look like?”
“To be honest, I was a bit reminded of you by him, sir,” he says to Gibbs. “White, somewhere in his mid-fifties to sixties, I think. His clothes were black? Yes, that’s it. I think he might have been military. Didn’t give a name, but we talked for a bit, and he asked about the paper I was reading. I gave it to him before I stepped off. He was rather tall, gray hair. His Dæmon was a wolf, a large gray wolf.”
“Anything particular about it?”
Sheppard is quiet for a heartbeat. “There was a scar on its neck, I’m sure of it,” he says at last. “And it was very still and quiet, so I guess the man himself was a very controlled person. I can’t remember our exact conversation, I’m afraid. Even if I weren’t being medicated right now, I’m getting old and my memory is no longer that sharp,” he says, sighing. “Colonel Pendergast was here earlier and explained what’s going on, at least some of it. Apparently I’m now under constant surveillance for my personal security.” He huffs in indignation.
“Why are Navy investigators involved in this?” David Sheppard asks. He looks confused and uncomfortable.
“Are you aware of your brother’s involvement in this case?”
Mr Sheppard senior nods tiredly. “Yes,” he says. “Johnny was here earlier, but I can’t remember all of it. I was still rather out of it.”
“Yeah, he was here,” David says and now look uncomfortable but in a new way, for other reasons. “I mean, he was here, but—wasn’t. It wasn’t his face.”
“Alien communication devices?” Kate says, hardly believing her own brain for forming words like that.
Laura says, sounding relieved: “So you know about that. We’re not—making this up. It’s actually happening.”
“It is. Have you been brought up to speed on what’s happening?”
“I don’t know. There was a mention of someone being grabbed, but we’ve been stuck up here,” David says, running a hand through his hair.
“Your brother and someone from NCIS have been kidnapped.”
Shannon’s eyes widen. “Kidnapped?”
“Yes,” Todd says, nodding. “That’s all the information we can disclose right now.”
Mr Sheppard’s expression is quite shrewd. “Because it’s all the information you’ve got, I gather.”
“As far as we know, your son is alive,” Gibbs says. “As is Jenny Sheppard—your niece, and our Director of NCIS.”
“Jenny works for NCIS? Her mother never told me that. Though I didn’t tell her about Johnny, so I think it’s only fair,” Patrick says tiredly. “Old feuds; you know how it is.”
“You cut your son out of your life, or was it the other way around?” Todd asks, and Gibbs lets her continue that line of inquiry for a moment longer. It might prove useful.
“Well, it was both ways. I’ve—” He halts, backtracks. “We’re both stubborn people, and Johnny was only fifteen when my wife died, leaving me devastated, and I didn’t notice how deeply it affected him until it was too late. I can’t claim to have been the model father. I wanted my sons to continue the company, so when John came to my office one day and said he’s going for the Air Force, that he’s already applied to the Academy … I was angry, disappointed. We argued. Nothing physical, I assure you, but—he left pretty quickly after that, as soon as he turned eighteen. He used the funds I’d saved for him. Finished university early, you know. He’s a lot like his mother, very intelligent.” Mr Sheppard looks old and weary and pained. “I haven’t seen him for over a decade. Then I got a letter.”
“When was this?”
“Fifteen … sixteen days ago? Yeah. It was so sudden. I was given clearance to know about this,” he waves a hand, vaguely. “The Stargate Program; though I didn’t really grasp it. There’s this photograph too … David, could you get me my portfolio? Hand me that envelope.”
A sleek, black, anonymous portfolio is lying on the bedside table. David opens it, retrieves a simple envelope without a stamp but there’s Patrick Sheppard’s name on it. Written, not stamped. Aged, blunt fingers open it and pulls out three sheets of paper. It’s a continuous hand-written letter, and with it is a small square photograph. “I didn’t recognize him,” Patrick remarks quietly, thumbing it before holding it up for the agents to see: Dr Rodney McKay and Colonel Sheppard and their Dæmons in a forest glade, the background a little blurry. They appear to be talking and smiles ghost on their faces. It could have been snapped any place on Earth, but Todd has a strange feeling that it probably taken lightyears from here.
“I was thinking about writing back and trying to mend old hurts when this all happened.”
It is a stark but personal letter, and Gibbs lets the words glide past in a hurry. A mention of the President giving Mr Sheppard permission to know about the SGC. A mention of—he pauses, reads the sentences again. A word repeated: Strangeling.
Ah. This explains a few things. Typical case of a younger son with daddy issues, especially after the death of the mother, and said son labeling himself a Strangeling—a curiously harsh, self-loathing sentiment—a falling out makes sense. Yet, it isn’t directly pertinent to the case. Gibbs hands the letter back and Mr Sheppard folds it once, almost carefully, and the agent thinks the man cares more than he lets on. For a man who has not spoken with his youngest son for years, he’s not that cold or indifferent.
“The man who stabbed me … Was it because of this?”
“It’s possible,” Gibbs says. Makes sense. Logical. “That’s what we’re going to find out. Anyone who’d like to see you hurt?”
“Oh,” the man chuckles dryly. “Someone of my profession gets involved in a few vendettas in his lifetime, Agent Gibbs.”
“So you’ve been threatened?” Todd asks.
“Occasionally, but nothing too bad—an angry letter; irate phonecalls; some protesters. No one’s attempted something physical before. Besides, this man, it was done without threats or anything. He never mentioned my company or anything else. He didn’t seem angry … He didn’t seem to feel anything much at all.” A shake of head. “Honestly? I don’t think it was personal, at least not against me.”
No, Gibbs thinks quietly. If this man wasn’t the father of John Sheppard, then he and David and his fiancée—and Jenny—none of them would have been in danger. Targeted. This wasn’t about what Patrick Sheppard once may have done or said; this is about family and bloodlines.
“You may be right, Mr Sheppard,” he says aloud. “Thanks for talking with us. If you remember anything else …” He hands over a card.
“I’ll call, if that’s possible from a spaceship,” Mr Sheppard says and his wrinkles deepens as he smiles sardonically: “I’m not certain there’s reception up here.”
“He’s telling the truth. I didn’t get any other vibes from him,” Todd says once they’re back in HQ courtesy of alien transporting technology which neither of them is really comfortable with thinking about yet. “So we got a vague description of a white male in his sixties, thereabouts, with a gray wolf Dæmon.”
Unique, no. Rare, yes. If it was possible they’d have a sketch artist sent up to Mr Sheppard, but the SGC hasn’t cleared anyone besides Gibbs’ immediate team, and refuse to do so. Regulations are already being broken or bent, Gibbs reckons. General Landry had seemed happy to hear the two NCIS agents were already on their way off the ship and headed for home. In the eyes of the General, they are civilian, outsiders, green and dangerous.
McGee is by his desk and looks up to greet them as they exit the elevator as if they’ve come from another floor and not from a different place altogether. His tone of voice is excited.
“Boss! So I did some digging and there’s been a number of odd-looking transactions between Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics and a couple of other companies.”
Gibbs rounds the corner into the plaza and more or less looms over the younger man’s desk, causing him to edge back slightly. “Define ‘odd-looking’.”
“Look.” He turns the monitor slightly so that Gibbs can see; curious, Todd joins them, and she looks at the figures and releases a low whistle.
“That’s a lot of money being shuffled around.”
“And,” McGee says, proud to have found it: “it looks like Mr Human was bribing someone.”
“Or paying them for a secret job,” Todd fills in. “Question is what they’re funding.”
Something is being built. A nagging sensation begins to form in Gibbs’ mind: something is being built. Something, somewhere, is being constructed out of that money which is great sums slipping away and seemingly disappearing off the grid.
“Whatever it is, this is phony enough for justifiable cause,” McGee says. “What do you say, Boss? Do we check it out?”
At that moment, a phone rings. Gibbs picks up after a beat and Sciuto’s voice greets him brimming with excitement. He listens, and nods, and says with a genuine smile: “Good work, Abs.” Then he hangs up without saying goodbye and Abby will be cross with him for that, but he’ll visit her lab later with a Caf-Pow to make up for it.
“What’s up, Boss?” McGee asks.
“Finally we’re getting somewhere. Abby’s got the analysis of the body’s clothes. Where’s Tony?”
“Down in Forensics.”
“Okay. Good,” Gibbs nods and crosses over to his desk, pulls out a pair of car keys, and tosses them to Todd who catches them deftly with her left hand.
“You two, pay a visit to the office. I’ve got a gut feeling that neither Human or Mayfield have gone to Europe.”
“Where’s my Caf-Pow?”
Abby crosses her arms sourly and pouts. Gibbs holds her stare until she sighs dramatically and wheels over from one computer monitor to another. DiNozzo badly hides a snicker behind a hand pretending to have a sudden coughing attack; when Gibbs turns to simply look at him unmovingly, the young agent stiffens and silences.
“You said you had something, Abs.”
“Yeah. There’s some traces of dirt in the lining of the clothes, like this body was dragged somewhere. Now, soil can be traced—the mixture of elements, the percentage of certain minerals, it’s all due to climate changes and organisms and stuff. Some places are more precise than others, but I’m pretty sure that this guy’s clothes got dirtied up someplace pretty far from D.C.. Like, very far. There’s a microorganism here that I can’t identify and I’ve used three different analyzing programs and half a dozen databases …”
“There’s databases for bugs? Ugh. That’s gross.”
“Microorganisms, Tony,” Abby says sweetly. “Big difference. I dated a guy at the WDCM once, and he had great hands. Very steady.” With a few clicks she brings up a picture on screen: a scan of a blob, small and imprecise around the edges. “Anyway. There’s an untold number of these little fellas on the victim and now knowing that there’s a Stargate they’ve come through, I think these are miniature aliens that hitched a ride. Hello, ET.”
“Whoa. Pretty cool—but, still, gross.” DiNozzo wrinkles his nose in distaste.
Gibbs is getting tired. “The point, Abby?”
“Nothing, I just thought it was cool. Cranky much, huh? Uh, sorry. Okay, this is what I’ve got: a set of fingerprints from the inside of the uniform collar. Thanks to files given to us by the SGC, I matched them with this guy.” A photograph comes up; a name.
DiNozzo looks at the data on the plasma. “The missing NID agent, Bradley White.”
“Not missing anymore,” Gibbs points out.
“Obviously no one thought we’d be lifting prints from the inside of the clothes,” Abby says. “When I was working the analysis, I started thinking. If this guy is the wrong one, and his Dæmon’s been forced to look like somebody else’s, that means they wanted us to think he’s LC Snow, right? So Snow was meant to be taken alive and for a purpose. I did some digging and Snow’s a programmer. Maybe not as good as myself or McGee, but the SGC person I was talking with—Carter—she said that shortly before we were let in on this, the SGC got hacked. I mean, it was a very specific attack, lasted only a couple of minutes and few files were copied. Nothing broken or altered. Everything stolen had to do with something called Atlantis? and Aurora. Carter said it was a ship. Look, I think it was Snow.”
“That’s speculation.”
“Not necessarily, Gibbs,” she protests. “Logical deductions, you know? Like Holmes would’ve done it. Snow is a marine with a master’s degree in computer science and an SGC veteran. He knows access codes and would be familiar with its systems and security. They kidnap him, tries to make the SGC think he’s dead, has him hack the SGC for them.”
And then he could be kept for further possible uses or quickly disposed of. Snow could be a slowly rotting corpse right now or thrown into a well, an ocean, buried beneath concrete in hopes he’ll never be found.
Gibbs considers it. Abby has a point, but they need solid proof. Speculation doesn’t hold up in court. Albeit he starts wondering how the hell this case is ever going to get to that point; he wants to give Snow and White’s families closure, but how can they do that when this is a highly classified mess with a deep conspiracy at the heart of it?
Life seems in retrospect suddenly so much easier before spaceships got involved.
Sciuto twirls her chair around to look at the old agent sternly. “So, where’s my Caf-Pow?”
“Get me a location and you’ll have one, Abs.”
It hurts to breathe.
It hurts to move, and his vision is blurry, and he knows it’s the mixture of blood loss and dehydration and he wonders if anything’s infected and that’s what’s raving through his body, hotly.
He’s certain that Bradley’s dead. Didn’t imagine the noise of the dying, lulled by the water by the pier. For a moment the memory is wholly distorted, because of that water. Water reminds him of Atlantis, and not that much of Earth. Earth is hard soil and a tattered sky and broken lines of cities and people and pollution, and for a moment he recalls seeing Bradley’s face twisting in confusion/horror/pain as they’d been forced to change Shape, a false mimicry, and then he hadn’t seen the rest because Bradley was going to play him, dead. He understood it then. From the moment he stepped out of that van, Bradley was a dead man walking. They both were.
They’d taken him away—here—where is here? It’s so dark. There’s no sunlight, and no sound of water or nothing. The lights are off, the lamps broken. They’ve gotten what they needed and left him here, and he wants to be angry but is too tired to be, too tired, and in so much pain and he’d given them the access codes and maybe someone’s figured out then, figured out that he’s missing. They wouldn’t use take those codes, they’d use them. Wouldn’t they?
They.
Who were they? The blonde woman with the cold smile, and the eyes—Goa’uld. Goa’uld have eyes like that, gleaming without an outward source. Goldenly pale. It’s fucked up, and she’d laughed grimly at his torture, demanding answers. Did he answer? His tongue is thick and heavy. He could have. Tried not to. Tried, but his fingers are broken and he can’t feel so much of his body and the parts that he can feel hurt too much to move. His thought process is fuzzy. So dark. He isn’t chained but it doesn’t matter; he’s too weak to stand, nevermind walk out of here, or fight. Even if the door was unlocked … but it isn’t. Tried. Rattled the handle but didn’t make a dent.
If there’s a guard out there, they’re ignoring him completely. Maybe there isn’t. Could be alone, left down here to suffocate or starve, whichever comes first.
He’s tried screaming for help but no one’s come so no one’s heard.
“Help!” he tries again. They’ve taken turns. When his voice is too hoarse from lack of air and water, his Dæmon takes over the cry.
Help!
Help us!
Down here!
We’re down here!
Help!
Help!
Chapter 20: into that good night, part one
Summary:
this is never going to work;
Chapter Text
xx.
into that good night
part one
this is never going to work;
“… and the stones are tied into a specific set of subspace frequencies to communicate with each other and their users,” McKay says. He has let go of the crutches in favor of leaning against the desk so that his hands are free. It’s not often he’s seen like this, without holding a computer or datapad. And his face is not his own, nor his voice, but the rate of words certainly is and that is already one comfortingly familiar thing in this chaos. “If we could target those frequencies we could locate the issuing point, the place in spacetime where the signal, for the lack of a better word, reflects off the user, we should be able to find Sheppard.”
With him is Zelenka, and the Czech takes notice to Elizabeth’s somewhat mollified expression of confusion. “It’s sort of like triangulating the position of—” Radek begins clarifying, and Rodney rolls his eyes dismissively and cuts in:
“It’s more complicated than that as more than three dimensions are involved, but, yes, in essence that’s what we can do. At any point we’ll be able to determine the direction, if not the range.” Rodney pauses briefly in his rapid speech to breathe and nods to himself. “It’ll require the use of the Prometheus and we’ll have to recalibrate their long-range sensors. By we I mean Sam and some of her people on Earth, of course. Some flying in search grids is probably going to be involved, but we should be able to put them within a few hundred thousand kilometers of the target.”
Which is, in astronomical terms, right atop of it.
Elizabeth takes all this in and nods. Some of the technobabble might be beyond her expertise, but she has learned to trust Rodney and Radek with these things. They’re good scientists and Zelenka tends to even out the worse of Rodney’s decisions; the Czech is humbler, aware of his own limits in a way the Canadian usually refuses to acknowledge in his obduracy.
“Okay. Sounds good. How much time would it take?”
“Calculating the frequencies is difficult (for most people, not me) and complex,” Rodney says. It’s eerie to hear words like those articulated in John Sheppard’s voice. The accent is slightly off, there’s emphasis in odd places, and he’s moving his hands and doing that thing with his mouth that is such a McKay gesture. It doesn’t belong and this duality is making Elizabeth’s head hurt. It causes unease in a lot of people, not just herself; she’s never going to get used to it.
“A few hours, maybe half a day,” Zelenka says.
“One hour, tops,” Rodney says simultaneously.
“We must take into account—”
“Yes, well, but the displacement isn’t the biggest issue,” McKay argues, crossing his arms, turning toward his fellow scientist who does not back down. Radek’s Dæmon is rather small and ferrety but they’ve worked together in Atlantis for a long while now, and they don’t flinch when Rodney has his outbursts of irritability or anger.
Zelenka shakes his head and adjusts is glasses. “Maybe, but the spread …”
“Yeah. Yeah, that’s right. So narrowing it down would require … Two hours.”
“All right. Go,” Elizabeth says. The two scientists are already out of her office, loudly arguing about how to solve the puzzle.
The prospect of waiting another two hours is daunting and also relieving, because at least they have something to go on now. Before they’d been treading water, worrying and debating and without leads, and a galaxy away from where the action is happening. Then, a few minutes ago, Rodney burst into her office, Radek hot on his heels, and said he knows how to track the ship.
This has already been going on for too long: several hours have passed since the kidnapping, and days since one of their own was found murdered on a pier in Washington D.C., and Elizabeth quietly rages that she hasn’t been given much in the way of pertinent information. The SGC are in liaison with NCIS on Earth, but out here, in the City, what can they do but think, and wait? There’s no telling what kind of condition Colonel Sheppard and the NCIS Director are in at this point. Goa’uld, possibly Trust, took them offworld, and Elizabeth has some experience with the Goa’uld from her brief stint of leading the SGC.
Before Atlantis, after General Hammond left for the White House and eventually retirement while O’Neill was still in stasis in Antarctica; she remembers all of the days spent arguing, phonecalls and video conferences with military and politicians and the President. Environmental activists who didn’t know about the Stargate or the Battle of Antarctica demanding to know about the rumors of the expansion of a research facility already hidden in the ice seeking to bury further down. Elizabeth had had them, and the military, and various scientific groups breathing down her back while she was still trying to grasp the fact that the Stargate exists and that her briefing with the President on that sunny afternoon wasn’t a surreal dream. Adjusting to being thrust into command of Cheyenne Mountain in the aftermath of the Battle hadn’t been easy, but she’d managed it. She’d managed.
Goa’uld, she had learned, stop at nothing to get what they want and they all seek power, to rule. Not that different from many humans, perhaps, but they play by wholly different rules. Right at this moment, Colonel Sheppard could be being tortured, or—
Elizabeth halts that train of thought sharply. She needs to focus.
The two scientists are already out of her office, loudly arguing about how to solve the puzzle. Elizabeth watches them walking away, crossing the balcony into the Control Room, down the stairs, heading for the transporter out of sight. Rodney visibly struggles with the crutches, John Sheppard’s body not as agile it used to be—should be.
No, she’s not going to get used it. She’d prefer that they disconnect the communication stones, but then they could risk not being able re-establish the connection and, right now, that fragile link is all they’ve got to go on. At least John has some experience in breaking out of prisons; she’s read his file, and she knows him. If there’s any solution to be found on Sheppard’s side, he’ll do everything he can to make it happen.
There had been a brief discussion about what could happen if Sheppard were to die while connected to the stones. What would happen to Rodney, to his consciousness, to John’s body? Would he remain stuck in the wrong flesh? Or would he fade away too? Elizabeth risks losing two people and possibly more if the Goa’uld have some more sinister plan in mind. They are a dramatic race, much for theatrics; but they also have weapons and technology at their disposal to make them a true threat, and the SGC lacks the proper intelligence yet on the particular Goa’uld behind this. No location, no name. Those things are what the SGC on Earth with the aid of NCIS are hoping to find. There is a murder to solve. People having gone missing. Many more questions to answer.
Tiredly sighing, Elizabeth leans back in her chair and momentarily closes her eyes. A dull headache is starting to grow behind her eyelids. To think she once believed that the long, drawn-out UN negotiations were bad, that the intricate politics were complicated and that this adventure would be easier. She’d been preparing herself for First Contact with alien cultures, friend or foe; for translating Ancient texts after studying the language with Dr Jackson’s help for months; for finding underwater Cities and unveiling great secrets about the stars. Not this. Not this.
But nothing is that easy, Simon quietly remarks.
Someone knocks on the door frame and steps into her office, and Elizabeth clears her eyes to greet them. It’s Amelia Banks, one of their newer Gate technicians.
“Dr Weir, we have an incoming wormhole,” she says.
Never a quiet moment.
“I’ll be right there.”
Banks nods and returns to her console. Elizabeth moves and her Dæmon with her: together they straighten and stand, and they exit the office and walks into the Control Room.
Chuck is sitting by the DHD controls, an open laptop to his right displaying a received IDC. The open wormhole casts a blue glow over their faces and seemingly drains all other color from the air. The protective iris is raised. Everything is still and calm, but there is an underlying current of perturbed energy not just in this room but in the whole City; the quiet is a façade.
“Dr Weir, we’re being hailed,” Banks says and puts the transmission on speaker. Audio-only.
“Atlantis, this is Major Lorne. Are you receiving?”
“Major, we weren’t expecting to hear from you so soon,” Elizabeth remarks. The Aurora is lightyears away, orbiting a brown dwarf; a team of astrophysicists, led by Dr Kusanagi, are studying the small star up close while Grodin is seeing to minor adjustments and repairs of the Ancient Warship. The work will never be complete. The vessel has been out there for days, and aren’t expected to return to the City for at least another two days—though Elizabeth could recall them right away, she has yet to make that decision. There is little the Aurora or her crew could do to help right now.
The Major is meant to be sitting in the Captain’s chair on the Aurora, not be standing in front of an open Stargate on an anonymous planet.
“Yes, ma’am, we’re aware, but there’s a situation developing you’ve got to be aware of. We took a Jumper from the Aurora to the nearest planet with a Gate—the Aurora’s hiding in the shadow of that star right now. We’ve got a Wraith Hiveship on our scopes. It’s not heading the city’s way, far as we can tell, but if the Aurora’s discovered …”
She resists the urge to groan. The timing couldn’t be worse. “Understood. Is the Aurora in the shape to engage?”
“Well, Dr Grodin reckons she is,” the Major says, sounding a bit unsure. “I’d gladly kick some Wraith ass, but we also don’t want any rumors that there’s an Ancient Warship up and running until we’re ready to take them on. What are your orders, doc?”
Elizabeth thinks for a moment; weighs the pros and cons. A destroyed Hiveship would cheer them all up, but, on the other hand, the Aurora is still not at a hundred percent. She doesn’t want to risk its crew—mostly civilian scientists at the moment—needlessly. They can’t hazard the City being discovered to be whole or its people much alive. It’s one thing for AR-teams to meet odd Wraith patrols on foreign soil; a few survivors could have escaped through the Gate before the City was laid to ruin. But a Warship?
Just because the Tau’ri are knee-deep in other issues doesn’t mean the Wraith are sleeping.
“Take caution for now,” she decides. “Withdraw and stay out of their path. Their long-range sensors aren’t as powerful as ours, so as long as you keep your distance you should be able to stay hidden. Engage only as a final measure. I’m sorry, but that means taking the long way back to the City.”
“Understandable, ma’am. Will do.” A momentary pause. Then: “How’s everything going on your end?”
She shakes her head though the Major cannot see it. “Nothing new. We’ll let you know as soon as we can, Major.”
“Copy that. We’re not going to use the subspace array on the Aurora to be safe, so we won’t be able to check in again until we find a Gate in range.”
“Understood. Take care, Major.”
“We’ll do our best. Lorne out.”
The main office housing Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics is a tall, gray, anonymous building, part of the striking cityscape blending into the background. The sign etched over the revolving door is simple, plain. If this is a disguise, it’s a good one, Agent Todd muses as she pulls the car up on the curb and silences the engine. Not many would look at this building and think something odd was going on, because not many would look at it in the first place.
Agent McGee and his Dæmon step out of the car alongside her. He doesn’t look forward to this much more than Todd does.
The rains of yesterday have cleared and the sky is full of sun. People are hurrying to and fro on the sidewalk, oblivious to anything greater going on, and Todd is momentarily side-tracked, struck by that thought: here they are, in the heart of D.C., and there’s a kid holding their parent’s hand while eating ice-cream and a woman talking loudly on the phone almost bumping into Todd, not looking where she’s going. There’s here, on this street, an average sunny day and just a few hours ago she was aboard a spaceship in orbit over this planet. Reality has never seemed both so mundane and so vividly colorful at the same time.
They step inside the building. Within it is cool and a bit dry, air-conditioning working overtime, and the receptionist is pleasant bordering on disturbing. His voice is smooth and he says: “Have you booked a meeting?” when they demand to see the boss.
They flash their NCIS badges. The man behind the desk frowns and looks at them closely, and says: “Well, I’m sorry, but Mr Human and Ms Mayfield aren’t in the office right now.”
“Any idea when they’ll be back?” Todd asks sweetly and smiles patiently.
“I’m not certain,” the receptionist says, and the slithery silkiness gives way to annoyance. “I’m not the PA.”
“All right, we’re just asking.”
“Standard procedure,” adds McGee.
“Again, I’m sorry but they’re not here. Try some other time. Or call the PA.”
They’ve already done that, and the receptionist either doesn’t know or doesn’t care. Not giving any such thoughts away, Todd nods. “We’ll do that. Thanks. Now, we’re going to take a look at Mr Human’s office.”
“You can’t do that! You’re not authorized,” the receptionist protests, sounding a little panicked.
In response McGee only holds up the search warrant. Todd is already moving past him, toward the elevators. “Which floor?”
“Uh, you can’t, uhm,” the receptionist tries, paling. He probably worries about being fired.
“Either you assist or we’ll charge you for obstruction of an ongoing criminal investigation,” McGee says. He has learned to keep his cool, now; a year or two ago, he’d be too nervous to interview witnesses properly, or deliver half-veiled threats. “Which floor is Mr Human’s office?”
The receptionist visibly gulps. “Seventh. You’re, uhm, going to need a key card …”
It doesn’t take much convincing after that to make him hand one over.
Gibbs had instructed them to be discrete, so they’d chosen to go just the two of them, without any forensic technicians to help them; and this case functions on a strict need-to-know basis, so this is safer. Todd had feared that searching the office on their own would take long, but Mr Human is very tidy, it seems. There are very few things of a personal nature.
The office is spacious, high ceiling, well-lit. There’s a painting on the left wall, impressionist, depicting a flowing river lined with graying autumn trees. On the opposite wall is a filing cabinet and at the center, in front of the window, there’s a wide desk.
The door had required the key card and a fingerprint to open, and the receptionist had called for Ms Mayfield’s PA who was in the building and she, apparently, was qualified to unlock the door. Todd makes certain to take a good look at the PA to remember her, though she’s not immediately tipped off in any particular way. The PA is a young black woman and her Dæmon is a panther, and she has an air of genuine concern about her but doesn’t ask questions. As soon as the door is open both the PA and the receptionist take their leave, though the latter much more reluctantly than the first.
The agents quickly set to work, donning white gloves. They lift the potted plants and the carpet to look for anything hidden there, and then move onto the more obvious sites. The file cabinet has a traditional keylock and Todd has it quickly worked open with a hairpin; a trick she learned from DiNozzo. She expects to find plenty of folders there, but there’s nothing. That is strange. Very strange, and suspicious. The CEO of a company as large as this should have plenty of files in storage of all business deals and the like, detailed documentary of each decision, every movement. Sure, a lot of that is digitized nowadays, but not all of it.
Something is definitely not right here. This office has been cleaned out. Todd doubts taking prints is useful, because it’s going to belong to Mr Human, Ms Mayfield, or possibly the PA, or the person who emptied the cabinet was careful enough to not leave prints or wipe them off before leaving.
The desk is neat. No decorations, no photographs. There’s a paperweight in the a bit unusual shape of a pyramid, but no letters. A computer and a monitor, both shut off; McGee presses the button to boot them up and while they wait for it to waken, they turn to the painting. Carefully they lift it down.
Buried in the wall behind it is a safe. It is rectangular, some two by four feet, gray, dull. There’s a white number pad lock with a small digital screen above it.
“Think you can crack it?” Todd asks McGee.
He looks at it doubtfully, but Todd can tell that he’s thinking hard. “Ten numbers—if this requires a standard four-digit code, then … that’s ten thousand possible combinations. We’ve got to narrow it down.”
They’d brought a bag with them with the basic tools necessary to secure a crime scene or search the premises, including the tools to find fingerprints. Todd turns off the lights while McGee surveys the pad with a blue UV fluorescent lamp. And, true enough, there are clear signs of someone pressing several of the small buttons multiple times. The order, however, is unclear; and Todd doesn’t think this made it any easier at all.
“A lot of codes are numbers easy to remember, like birth-years,” Todd says.
“Yeah, but we’ve got so many numbers that I don’t think it’s a four-digit PIN. Look, we’ve got so many numbers I think this is a far more complex combination. At least six: zero, one, two, three, eight, and nine. That’s … seven-hundred and twenty permutations. I wonder …” McGee trails off and reaches for his phone. “I remembered something. From that briefing.”
“Yeah? What?”
“The—uhm, the round big thing?” Todd’s eyebrows rise a bit at the vague description but nods in comprehension. “I talked with Colonel Carter a bit about how it worked, out of curiosity. It has symbols on it, denoting different constellations. Glyphs. Thirty-nine, if I remember right. We’ve got the numbers nine and three here, so what if there’s a combination involved? I think—I mean, it’s conjecture, but it could be a combination for the …”
“Big round thing,” Todd fills in.
“It makes sense,” McGee argues, “if a, uhm, Snake is involved. It’d be something a normal person wouldn’t know about.” He dials the number for the SGC liaison with his thumb and waits for the dialing tone to be replaced with a voice. And he says: “This is Agent McGee, NCIS. Could I talk with Dr Daniel Jackson? It’s important. … Thanks.” More waiting.
Todd has her arms crossed; she’s a bit doubtful about this theory of his, but they’ve got nothing else to go on. While McGee paces, Todd goes over to the desk and the computer there. The display glows with a standard welcoming screen and the request for a password.
“Yeah, hi, sorry to bother you, Dr Jackson. I was wondering about the Gate—yeah. What’s the combination of symbols for the place the, the Snakes come from? … Yeah, I think it’s relevant for the case which—okay. Uhuh. … Is there a particular order to …? Yeah, that’d be helpful. Thank you, doc.” Nodding and listening to the archaeologist’s explanation, he starts pushing the buttons. Todd watches: it’s not a four-digit PIN; it’s much longer. Twelve numbers segmented in twos. A Stargate address;
2-0-1-8-1-1-3-9-1-0-3-2
And, to her and McGee’s startled surprise, the lock clicks open.
“… the lock used the combination of the Stargate address to that planet? That’s almost evidence in of itself! Isn’t it?” Abby says excitedly. “That’s like a signature, signing ‘Hey Guess What, I’m an Alien’. Cool.”
“Not a lot of people would think of a combination like that,” McGee agrees, quite proud to have figured it out. He’s delivered the contents of the safe to Abby for analysis, and they’re down in Forensics with heavy metal tearing at the speakers. Kate’s on the phone with Gibbs to rely what they’ve found; neither Gibbs nor DiNozzo are at HQ. They’re still searching the large apartment owned in Eric Human’s name in the D.C. suburbs.
Inside of the safe they’d found a laptop. The computer at the office had been wiped, but they’d confiscated that one too. Now all they have to do is crack them open and maybe they’ll find something important inside. McGee and Abby start the laptop and plug in the chord to recharge it. Sciuto rubs her hands eagerly as the reboot screen lights up and then quickly summarizes: No data. Everything has been erased.
Abby isn’t deterred. “Team Sciuto is going to have this solved in no time!”
“I think it’s ‘Team McGee’. I found it,” McGee protests a little.
“Kate and you found it,” Abby corrects him with a grin. “And I’m going to hack it.”
It’s been hours, he thinks. Can’t be sure. There are no windows and no sun to measure. And his throat is dry and McKay’s body is cramping with hunger. He sure hopes that he’s not going to suddenly go into hypoglycemic shock; McKay might exaggerate about things, but his allergies are no lie, nor the risks of him developing diabetes. There was a mission once to a planet full of yellow plants and three moons where they were stuck in a pit and AR-1 had to wait for a backup team to get them out of there, and Rodney nearly lost consciousness because of low blood sugar. After that, they’d all, not just John, taken to carrying extra powerbars with them on every mission.
His captors had searched him to disarm him, but they hadn’t, thankfully, taken the epi-pen or that packet of glucose tablets Rodney keeps with him at all times. Not that he takes them; he prefers stealing food from his teammates. The thought of him causes John’s chest to tighten and pops a tablet into his mouth and swallows it as he forces himself to look at the machines. Focus on that. Focus. Focus.
He’s done what he can. His head hurts. Icarus’ memories were jumbled, vague, and he couldn’t actually access them vividly, because this is not his flesh and Ba’al thinks he’s lying, concealing things. The truth is simple. John can’t force himself to recall things he’s never seen or done or learned. It’s lucky he’s spent so much time around McKay. Seen him handling potentiae, repairing Jumpers, rebooting Ancient consoles. In combination with the scraps of memory he actually does manage to conjure up, he can do more than fiddle around with the control crystals in pretense.
There’s a chance that this will fail and it’ll never happen, or too soon, or too late. A chance that the engines will blow five seconds from now—but, if that happens, at least he’ll take the bastard with him.
Eventually, John withdraws from the engine. The Jaffa on guard by the door has his back half-turned and looks bored out his mind and hasn’t interfered, which is dammed lucky. The potentia glimmers like a miniature star trapped in a glass box.
When Ba’al returns, the Snake smiles down at him with sharp eyes. “Is it done?”
“As well as I could’ve,” John says. He moves slowly and carefully so that the Jaffa won’t think he’s trying to flee and shoot him. He stands, biting back a pained groan. His back is stiff and his limbs heavy. “Now I want to see Jenny.”
“All in good time, Colonel.” Ba’al inspects the open panel in the wall, the wires and crystals, the data on the screen. John holds his breath. Hopes. Hopes. A moment of silence. “Fascinating, that you can remember so much.”
Well, you dickhead, try having someone possessing you, John thinks at him sourly and does not punch him. Doesn’t think Rodney would be happy if he tried and got something broken. Instead, he reigns in the dry weary chuckle stuck in his throat. So this was just a test? To see if he could remember anything at all about Icarus? Great. Awesome. If Ba’al looks too closely …
According to the calculations, the journey will take six and a half days; not as fast as the Daedalus when powered by a potentia, but fast enough. Those are the numbers that Ba’al can see displayed, and it seems to please him. Six and a half days: enough time for the City to mount a defense, if only they could be warned. If only they could be warned. Hopefully the SGC can figure something out.
John isn’t planning on spending six days trapped aboard this ship. “Well,” he says mildly, “I watched McKay hotwire a thing or two.”
“Perhaps he would also be a useful host for one of my larvae,” Ba’al says, turning to face him.
Sharply John tenses but does not attack or move, and doesn’t swear over my dead body because the Goa’uld can see it in his harshly set face and in the line of his jaw. Ba’al doesn’t continue to mock him; walks past, toward the ship’s Bridge. Barks a harsh order at the guarding Jaffa and John picks up a few scattered words: they’re going to have him stay here for the moment. Maybe in case something goes wrong and the engines have to be manually shut down.
He’s not going to be allowed to see Jenny yet, or Shy, not for minutes or hours op maybe days. Rage seethes somewhere in his gut and spreads through his blood and he quietly breathes through his nose. Wouldn’t help. Wouldn’t help.
God. I hope I made the right decision, he thinks when the hyperdrive is engaged; I really hope; John feels the vibration of the floor change as the engine picks up pitch, and then a lurch—
This isn’t the Goa’uld ship: this is Atlantis. This flesh is his own and the air tastes not as stale and he’s in front of a whiteboard, sitting on a raised chair, and Radek is there hair askew he’s in the middle of speech and John blinks in bewilderment:
“… calculated trajectory yields too many results; to search them all would take week,” the Czech is saying, a hint of patient frenzy to his tone. “Rodney, I do not think—”
“Radek! Radek, it’s me, it’s Sheppard!” he shouts, regaining control and realizing that this is the one chance he’s going to get, and Radek startles—turns—stares —drops the whiteboard marker he’s been holding. Instead of Meredith curled up on the desk there’s a Raven. “We’re aboard a Goa’uld ship, we just jumped to hyperspace. It’s Ba’al who—”
Gone. The lab is replaced with the engine room.
One moment he’s arguing with Zelenka. They’re in his lab, and calculations are scattered on the whiteboards and on the tables and the floors. Rodney’s got a plan; Radek is trying to dispute it, give encouragement but sees flaws, pointing out risks. But Rodney is ready to take those risks. Arms crossed, Rodney is glaring at him with Radek tries to make an argument;
and then he’s on a ship.
Not Ancient; something else. Darker. Smaller. The hum of an engine at work is unmistakable and it clicks in a heartbeat: Goa’uld. He’s in an engine room sitting down and to his left, there’s an arch and there’s a Jaffa—armed with a staff—and in front of him there’s an open panel and wires and crystals half-pulled and at the center of it all is a ZedPM, hooked up Frankensteinishly to the machinery and he starts to realize: this is where John is, trapped, and there’s a schematic on the laptop screen on the floor next to the ZedPM, complex equations and a plotted subspace course on a map depicting star systems, a marked beginning and an end across a huge void;
And it’s difficult to breathe, he can’t see Mer anywhere no sign she’s too far away and he can’t breathe—
Atlantis returns.
“—nel? Colonel Sheppard?” Radek is repeating, having dropped the whiteboard marker onto the floor. It’s come to rest against the leg of the chair. Zelenka is staring at him concernedly. “McKay, is that you?”
“It’s, it’s me. It’s me,” Rodney says weakly, stumbling over the simple words. To breathe. Mer is there with him again, by his side. What just …? Oh, oh. He struggles to regain his bearings. The sudden rush of noise of the City and being displaced. Breathing. Breathe. And once a few seconds have passed and Rodney remains here, in this flesh and not his own, he looks at Radek:
“I—I think I know where Sheppard is.”
Five minutes later they’re in Elizabeth’s office. Ford has been called for, as have Teyla and Ronon. They’ll want to hear this; they’re team. They gather around him as Rodney props up the injured on a plush white chair, wincing but not only from physical pain.
Mer is settled across his good knee, and he idly strokes her back. Those three seconds of disconnect was one of the most terrible things they’ve ever experienced. Mer had woken suddenly out of the lab, trapped behind a forcefield within the bowels of a Goa’uld ship. They had both panicked. And then it was over, blessedly rapidly, but it was definite indicator what’s happened to Sheppard and his Dæmon. Rodney knows the two can handle being apart better than most, but still. He wants to find that Goa’uld responsible and hurt them and a very vivid thought flashes by in front of his eyes, and surprises he himself at the stark ferocity of it.
“What happened?” Elizabeth asks.
“The connection with the communication stones broke for a brief moment. I think it was the jump to hyperspace,” Rodney says, nodding to himself as he speaks. “It must’ve interrupted the link with the stones.”
“Yes,” Radek says. “Suddenly I was talking with Colonel Sheppard instead of Rodney.”
“What did he say?” Teyla asks concernedly.
“Not much. Mentioned a Goa’uld cargo vessel—and Ba’al.” Zelenka winces. He knows his SG-history, and he knows who that particular System Lord is. Elizabeth does too and blanches. “The connection was restored too quickly for questions.”
“Yeah, it’s a Goa’uld cargo vessel or possibly a larger transport,” Rodney agrees. “I was in the engine room and from what I saw, they’ve modified them. There was a starchart: they’re plotting a course right here.”
“Here?” repeats Ford, blinking. “To Atlantis?”
McKay glares at him wearily and almost calls him an imbecile out loud. “Yes, Lieutenant, that’s obviously what I meant by ‘here’.”
The Lieutenant, used to his teammate’s ways, shrugs self-consciously but doesn’t complain about being picked on. This isn’t their usual mission. Plus, it’s still hella weird that his Commanding Officer isn’t—well, isn’t in, and talking like McKay would. is.
“Okay,” says Elizabeth, trying to be calm but there is a note of thrilled anxiety to her voice. “But even if they know our location, it would take years for a ship like that to reach us. They don’t have Asgard technology.”
“No, but they’ve got a ZedPM hooked up to the engines.”
Which is bad for a number of reasons. One: they can make the jump here in a matter of days instead of decades or centuries. Two: with a ZedPM charged enough, they can withstand a defense sent by the City; raise shields, power weapons. True, one Goa’uld vessel is nothing against an armada of Hiveships. It’s still a problem. Especially since Sheppard is on that ship and no one wants to order Carson or some other person with the ATA-gene to sit in the Chair and fire drones on it while John is still a prisoner onboard.
Question is what John was even doing in the engine room. Rodney can’t imagine the Goa’uld or Trust operatives would just let him in there to have a curious look around.
He voices this, and Ronon remarks: “They could’ve broken out.”
“Yes,” agrees Teyla. “John would attempt that.”
“I wouldn’t be so sure,” Rodney sighs morosely, remembering the Jaffa guard who hadn’t even blinked; if John was really trying to escape, that Jaffa would either be lying on the ground or firing at him. Not standing guard. Plus, his Dæmon was behind bars someplace else, so why would John go to the engine room? “They’ve probably got that other person, that federal agent woman, hostage, remember? And Sheppard’s got a terrible hero complex.”
“You mean he’ll try to make sure they don’t hurt the other hostage,” Ford says. Not aloud but understood by them all: at his own expense. “Makes sense.”
“I can only think of one other possibility if he didn’t break out: their captors let him into the engine room on purpose. From what I remember, it was even like he’d been working on rewriting some of the ship’s command. Couldn’t get a very good look, some of the data was translated into English but not all of it.” He wishes he knew Goa’uld well enough to speak it. He knows some technical terms here and there, relevant when working with their tech which he did from time to time as an SGC consultant before Atlantis, but at this point he knows Ancient much better.
“Really?” Radek frowns.
“To what purpose?” Elizabeth asks.
“Probably to disable some failsafe mechanisms to allow the ZedPM to power the engines long enough for a jump to Pegasus. The power transfer will be enormous. It’d still take days—six or seven, minimum—but with the ZedPM they could get here.” Rodney wishes he could stand up and pace. Pacing always helps. Even strides like beats to invisible music. Andante, eighty-five beats per minute. He gestures instead with a free hand at nothing. There are no plasma screens full of data, no beautiful presentations, nothing certain, nothing absolute. No evidence but for that brief flash of memory and displacement. “Good thing is I think I pinpoint his current location. Not in full because we can’t track a ship through hyperspace, but I can make an educated guess—more accurate than our current calculations.”
“D’you know if he was hurt?” asks Ford, the young marine frowning.
“I felt like a giant bruise when I was there, and I’m—he’s probably dehydrated and I don’t even want to think about what he’s been eating. If he’s been eating,” Rodney says, “and they must’ve cut the subcutaneous transmitter out.” But, he privately adds, if John had been tortured like they’d all feared he’d have felt a hundred times worse. And he hates to think it but he’s pretty sure that if John were in his own flesh and if there was no hostage to worry about, he’d take anything they threw at him and go down fighting. Wouldn’t give in. “But otherwise he’s fine.”
Ford exhales, his Dæmon visibly relaxing where she’s seated on his shoulder, tail wrapped under his armpit. The others react similarly.
“We need to prepare a defense for Atlantis, just in case,” Rodney says. “The Trust tried to destroy the City before. Someone obviously changed their mind and now wants to take the City instead. It’s the only thing that makes sense.”
Not like the City would let the Goa’uld in knowingly, Rodney thinks, but then alters that thought. The City hadn’t noticed that Colonel Caldwell was possessed; the sensors hadn’t been enough, and the man hadn’t been under the medical scanner until after he’d been subdued and they already knew. Too late. And if the Goa’uld use John somehow—
“Agreed.” Weir taps her earpiece. “Sergeant Bates, please join me in my office. There’s been a development.”
Between Bates and Ford they can work out a functional military defense. Have the Chair ready to fire. They have the railguns given to them by the SGC during the Wraith siege, and Elizabeth has confidence in every marine in the City. Sheppard has trained pilots for the Jumpers—they’ll have ships in the air. She’d be more comfortable with the Aurora nearby but it’ll be hours or even days until the Warship is back in this system. Right now the vessel is zigzagging between stars in an unpredictable pattern to avoid detection by the Wraith. The last thing they need is a Hiveship above New Lantea. Major Lorne is out of contact and will remain so, as they can’t use the subspace comms for fear of being overheard. The Daedalus is headed for Earth and too far away, and the SGC cannot send help to Pegasus.
They’re on their own.
“Think the Goa’uld are planning an attack?” Ford says.
“We’ll kill ‘em before that happens,” Ronon says, swirling his particle magnum in his right hand nonchalantly. Rodney isn’t certain if that gun even has a safety setting, so it can’t be set off accidentally—the Satedan won’t let anyone near his gun long enough to examine how it actually works but Ronon does that thing all the time and hasn’t shot himself in the foot yet. For once Rodney finds the action more reassuring than annoying, and he guesses that tells everything about his current emotional state. The big guy’s Dæmon is prowling in tense tight circles around the room, clearly ready for battle at this very second.
“The City is well-protected, with two ZPMs powering the shields, and we have an iris on the Gate. If the City is their goal then we’re prepared to withstand them,” Elizabeth says. “We have a scheduled check-in with the SGC in three hours; I’ll prepare a report with this new information.” Unusual to dial so many times in one day, nevertheless one week, but this is a difficult situation. “Hopefully they’ve had some headway with the investigation on that end. I need to be able to send them some coordinates on the Goa’uld ship.”
“We’ll work the numbers as fast as we can,” Radek promises avidly.
Elizabeth nods. “Good. Rodney, if the connection breaks again I need to know.”
“Of course,” he grunts, glaring at her meaning for it to be sharp and generally insulting at the implication that he’d let her out of the loop, but he’s tired and weary and in pain, and it probably doesn’t come across as he intended.
“Perhaps we should disconnect the stones entirely,” Teyla suggests; she can see how much it drains the astrophysicist to use them.
“I’ve thought about that,” Rodney says. Wants to stand up. Walk. He remains seated and he’s come familiar with this body in the last few hours in a way he didn’t want to be; he wanted to get to know John from the outside. He feels like he’s broken into a house and thrown the occupant out and proceeded to rip apart the furniture, and he needs to get out. “If we make a switch, that means we might not be able to switch back again, and if Sheppard has got a plan we’d mess it up. But he probably doesn’t have a plan unless it involves explosions or something else typically violent like that.”
“Right now, violent is good,” Ronon says, quietly but with force, and Rodney glares at him but doesn’t disagree. The Satedan catches the look and shrugs as innocently as a man of his size and stature can make the gesture appear when he’s carrying a gun and his Dæmon’s dangerous teeth are showing, sharp white spikes.
Rodney doesn’t say it aloud, of course (he’s not that rash) but of what little he can sense of his and John’s freshly established Bond—a weak weak trail of golden light in the darkness—from that he can tell that John probably doesn’t to disconnect. For selfish reasons, maybe. Not yet. Not yet. Neither of them could get out of that Snake’s clutches on their own so easily. As a team there’d be a much higher chance of success. Of survival. But John is alone, a galaxy away. Rodney can’t feel if he’s in pain. He knows he’s got to be.
It’s not common for Rodney to feel such constant, pressuring fear for someone else. It pounds away steadily alongside his stolen heartbeats.
They’re going to be okay, Mer whispers. False promises for the both of them, and what else can they do until they find that ship? They can’t feel what John is thinking.
This is never going to work.
He could’ve gone for the easy way and not written a trigger into the program. He could’ve set it off at once, but that wouldn’t have been fair to Jenny, or Rodney. Rodney, or his team back in the City waiting for them to return.
John is back in the cell and at least they’re closer now; his Dæmon has unsuccessfully tried to find a way out of their cage, but the forcefield won’t yield. It stings. They’re only going to get one shot at this, once it happens and the power grid fails for—what’s it going to be? three seconds? less?—it’s not going to be no enough time.
Fuck.
[It’s going to have to be. It’ll work.]
At least someone believes in me, John considers wryly.
Shy has got their wings pressed tightly against their back to make themself as small as possible, and they blink at him once. [That’s a rather self-serving thought, isn’t it.]
We’re not going to argue. He glares at them. If the Raven could huff or roll their eyes they would’ve.
[Just saying.]
All they can do for now is wait. Wait. Six days, Ba’al thinks it’s going to be, and at least John’s been given some water and food now that they’re in hyperspace. Earth food, because before leaving the Goa’uld stocked up and it smells like Taco Bell. Which, among the weirdest meals he’s had aboard a spaceship. John doesn’t want to touch it, but he doesn’t want Rodney’s body to collapse on him either, so he forces himself to take a few bites. It isn’t poisoned or laden with sedatives. Who knows when the next meal is going to be served?
It seems the Goa’uld are bored of him for now, which is fine by John. Sooner or later Ba’al is going to return, to question or torture no doubt, leisurely. He’ll withstand it.
Once he’s eaten, he reviews everything in his head for the umpteenth time. The order and timing of events and the movements he’s going to make; and it’s like envisaging a flight simulation before the real show starts, imaginary stick in hand and the controls gleaming on the board. They’re both aware of the plan. There’s no way to give warnings to Jenny. She’s still in the sarcophagus.
They haven’t been allowed to see her. John refuses to accept the possibility she could be dead.
That’s the tricky bit. John found a blueprint with the layout of the ship in the computer when he was looking at power grid schematics, but the sarcophagus wasn’t marked out on it. So if she’s not healed enough soon to be brought back to the cell, he’s got to find her. Waste time. But they’ve gotten out of tighter spots before. Got to think positive.
John isn’t a pacer. Rodney is. Ford would try to make a plan impatiently. Ronon is the looming shadow always ready to pounce, and Teyla’s much calmer; she’d meditate and survey the situation from every angle before striking. He could have used her by his side. The Athosian, like the Satedan, would keep several weapons handily hidden. John hasn’t even got a knife. He hadn’t brought the beautiful dagger Teyla had given as a Christmas present—which he’s in hindsight glad of because he’d hate to lose it—and the Goa’uld have taken his other one, basic standard issue. He has no TAC vest, no gear, nothing. Just the clothes on his back and his wits.
There are five underlings including Everett, and of course there’s Ba’al to contend with. And John would like to save Everett somehow. If it’s possible. No one willingly has a Snake rammed down their throat and the guy, for his faults, doesn’t deserve this ending. But how? Last time … With Caldwell—Icarus had taken care of that. No such Ancient intervention this time. John is no neurosurgeon. And he’s got personal experience with having someone else calling the shots and being unable to do anything but watch and feel in horror as control is forced away. Retaking it is difficult if not impossible when Goa’uld are involved, the physical presence wrapped around the spine in a stranglehold.
If he could subdue Everett, give him a chance …
One thing at the time.
No one has taken his wristwatch and he throws a glance at the digital display. Eight hours. Eight hours since he woke up on the ship. He’d really like to sleep and this is the only time he could do it, so he stiffly tugs off his jacket and bundles it up into an uncomfortably lumpy makeshift pillow. There’s a cold draft circling the floor, coming from the left, a small vent—too small to escape through—and John turns his back to it, lying on his side, arms crossed and hands in his armpits to conserve warmth. He’s aching with exhaustion but doesn’t want to lose consciousness. Dream.
Wonder how his team’s doing. It’s early morning in Atlantis now. The sun rising.
Eventually he can’t fight it any longer. Is sleep even possible like this? the idle thought strikes him; with the stones. His vision—Rodney’s vision—blurs, muscles relaxing even though he strains against it. A soft sight. Between breaths, he begins to drift away, and there’s a whisper of [I’ll keep watch].
His Dæmon remains alert but they never feel safe. The Raven doesn’t sleep.
Agent Gibbs is not in a good mood. The thorough search of Eric Human’s apartment had yielded no results. The place had been emptied and scrubbed clean. He and DiNozzo return to HQ morosely—well, he is more morose than DiNozzo, who complains at how dangerously fast Gibbs is driving the car and the tightness of the turns, and clutches the seatbeat like a lifeline.
Once they get back to HQ, two hours after McGee and Todd got there, Abby calls him on the phone and says there’s a surprise waiting down in Forensics.
“You wanted good news? This hard drive contains a wealth of information which I managed to crack.” Abby is on her fifth Caf-Pow, tired but excited and nowhere near to giving up.
“Actually, I did a lot of the work,” McGee butts in sounding a bit affronted.
“Okay, so he helped a little bit. Anyway, what we found is this: it looks like they wiped the laptop but forgot how computers actually work. Whenever something’s written onto a hard drive, it physically alters the magnetics of that hard drive, so even if you delete a file the shadow of it is still there. So—voilà.”
Among the plethora of files, most of which detail transactions, are what at first looks like .jpeg-images, but McGee and Sciuto have pulled them apart. Hidden in the text files are messages: secret and in an alien language. Getting Dr Jackson to HQ is not possible as the Prometheus is nowhere near Earth, seeking the trail of the lost ship, so they’re communicating via phone.
“I’ve managed to roughly translate the first file you sent me,” Dr Jackson is saying. Abby has put him on speaker, and Gibbs, DiNozzo, Todd, and McGee are gathered in Forensics to listen. “It talks about an operation or, well, the word translates better to ‘stage of affairs’; doesn’t really have an English equivalent. Uh, so, it’s plans to upgrade an engine using Ancient technology and knowledge, though the details are vague here. It mentions ‘finding a superior host’, which doesn’t sound good for anyone involved.”
“Host? For a Snake?” asks DiNozzo curiously. Shakes his head a bit, murmuring: “Creepy. And disgusting.” The agent is a bit surprised that Kate doesn’t comment on him acting immature, but maybe she’s just as overwhelmed as the rest of them.
“Yeah, that’s what I think. And I recognize this mark. I’m pretty sure I know which Goa’uld we’re dealing with—an old System Lord named Ba’al. The last one, actually, as far as we’re aware.”
“And this helps us how?”
“Well, we know his MO. Ba’al likes to play with his food, as it were, which means that he wouldn’t just kill off a captive. He needs information, and if that’s Ancient tech then Colonel Sheppard would know it. A mention here—yeah, they meant to hack the SGC. Referenced as ‘the Mountain’.”
“Which is what happened,” Abby says smugly, almost adding an I Told You So.
“Anything else, doc?” Gibbs asks.
“I think it’s a set of coordinates.” A row of numbers are read, and McGee immediately pulls up an internet search window on a computer and starts typing. Shortly, a satellite image forms. It’s an address. And it’s not far. On the edge of D.C. itself.
“Looks like an old industrial site, Boss,” DiNozzo comments.
They’ve caught the scent.
The Prometheus drops out of hyperspace for the eighth time in the last five hours. Each jump, they linger for the quarter of an hour to scan the nearest few lightyears for any signs of a ship. So far they’ve encountered nothing but a faraway meteor storm. Colonel Pendergast is starting to doubt if this venture will yield results. He hasn’t had the pleasure—or luck, according to some—of meeting Dr McKay in person—his personality, at least—but the man is meant to be the Carter of Atlantis. And if Colonel Carter had been the one to give him the calculated search grid, Pendergast wouldn’t have questioned it.
Still. One of their own is out there in need of help.
Captain Womack is sitting by one of the consoles at the helm. After three minutes into the scanning cycle, a console bleeps suddenly. “Sir, we have a contact on long-range sensors.”
Colonel Pendergast leans forward. Seems like Dr McKay was right, after all. Well. “How far out?”
“Twelve point eight lightyears. It’s too far out for IFF, but there’s a shadow of an energy surge. It could mean something’s left hyperspace.”
“All right. Intercept course, take us right at it, maximum hyper.”
The technicians quickly have the ship prepared for another launch, and the navigator considers the numbers on the screen in front of her, giving an estimated time of arrival to target by the best calculated course. “Maximum hyper, yes sir. ETA eighty-seven minutes. Entering hyperspace.”
The window opens up again and the Prometheus is launched into it.
Chapter 21: into that good night, part two
Summary:
time to get off this boat;
Notes:
(2017-07-19) Hello and thanks for reading! The into that good night arc was originally going to be two chapters, but I think it's going to be more than that. I can't say exactly how long this fic is going to be when it ends, because it's run away from me and is basically writing itself. I wrote this chapter in chunks, some of it I think over a month ago, so it might be a bit irregular in writing style, but I hope you can enjoy it anyway. tw: this chapter contains several vivid descriptions of violence. If you're really worried now that you see the warnings and tags, there's a spoiler in the end notes.
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
xxi.
into that good night
part two
time to get off this boat;
John wakes up suddenly to the noise of something sliding open. Not the smoothness of Ancient doors, somewhat more grating, a low groan from below. The cell. It comes back to him now: the cell. The ship. His head aches, and his eyelids feel heavy, and he draws himself up stiffly. He could kill for a hot shower. A bath. A meal and a bed. In his own body, preferably. A glance at his wrist tells him he’s been sleeping for three and a half hours. Doesn’t feel like it.
Blinking sleep wearily from his eyes, he looks steadily at Ba’al who enters the cell. In his wake is Colonel Everett and the gray wolf is gone. John’s belly churns. He wants to be sick. He can figure out what happened, and does this mean the Colonel is beyond rescue now? No, no, he doesn’t want to believe that. One way or another. It’ll be fixed.
“Good morning,” he smiles at his captors brilliantly and stands up, doesn’t wobble despite Rodney’s limbs struggle to cooperate. Man, McKay’s going to chew his head off. Everything is stiff and painful, but nothing’s broken so there’s that. “If it’s morning,” he adds. Space is confusing.
“Your resilience is both amusing and grating,” Ba’al says. He’s not wearing the business suit any longer but a typical Goa’uld getup and, really, those things look even worse in person. And John has always thought the pictures—taken by SGC security cameras whenever Goa’uld were in the Mountain, uninvited or not—were gaudy. It’s even worse than the Wraith with their flashy black coats.
“I do my best.” He’s not chained up. He could try to … No. Not yet. It’s not time. “Where’s Director Sheppard?” Refuses to believe the possibility she could be dead.
“You’ll be glad to know she is recovering, Colonel. She’s lucky we had a sarcophagus onboard.”
“Yeah,” John mutters wryly. “Lucky.” He wonders if this is going to be like a scene from The Empire Strikes Back when Darth Vader tells Lando Calrissian to hope the deal hasn’t been altered any further, with Ba’al starring in the role as Vader and himself as Calrissian. Would that make Colonel Everett Boba Fett? A less cool, grumpier Boba Fett, if that is even possible. Or it’s going to be more like he’s Han Solo and Ba’al’s planning on some recreational torture without asking questions to pass the time and amuse himself or whatever—the cause doesn’t really matter. Either way, they’re stuck here. “You planning on making her into a Snake too?”
The unsettling smile. “It would be useful, I admit.”
“But you can’t,” John counters. “Because I bet your cover’s blown. There’s no way you can come back to Earth now, which means having the Director of a federal agency under your command would be kind of useless. The SGC is going to have figured you out by now and they’re coming after us as we speak. There’s no way you can win this.”
“They will not catch up,” Ba’al says, pacing slowly, crossing the space so that he’s between Rodney’s body and the cage with the Raven. If not for the forcefield they’d would be flinching back to escape being touched, but they hold their ground now. If the forcefield is lowered and they escape, their first action might be to hack this guy’s eyes out. A reflex. Payback. “Your ships don’t have a Zero Point Module or engines powerful enough to match our speed.”
Bleakly, for a moment, John considers the Daedalus. It’s on its way to Earth. In the void between galaxies. If they get close enough to the edge, maybe they could get reasonably close—within the few million kilometer range necessary for the Daedalus’ sensors to detect the Goa’uld vessel. Not that John expects such an easy and obvious way of escape. When the fuck does that ever happen, huh? This is the SGC, not … He can’t come up with a likeness or analogy, nothing works, and he stops thinking about the Daedalus. It’s possible that the vessel is in the void between galaxies right now and out of range of both the SGC on Earth and Atlantis, and unaware of all this going on, and Colonel Caldwell and the airmen and marines onboard aren’t going to suddenly appear in a fittingly heroic manner and save their asses.
“The Warship Aurora cannot make it here in time either,” Ba’al goes on, and John hides the lurch of surprise from showing on his face. The Snake wasn’t meant to know—Ah. Shit. That briefing, before he and AR-4 went to investigate Snow’s apartment—and subsequently getting caught by those pesky NCIS agents—John recalls: Colonel Carter had said something about a hacker getting into SGC’s main computers, downloading mission reports, logs. Copies sent from Atlantis. About the Aurora. So Ba’al’s interested in the Warship. To use it to take over a corner of the universe? It’s more mobile and nimble than the City; maybe he intends to take both. A potentia-powered Warship, with an arsenal full of drones, as well as the Last Ancient City in the hand of a Goa’uld—especially one as clever and dangerous as Ba’al …
Ba’al isn’t asking questions. So maybe he’s bored. Hell, John hopes he is bored and hasn’t found out about John’s latest move on the game board, or this will all be over very soon.
[We timed it right], Shy tries to assure him—assure them both. If the Snake hadn’t walked in, the Dæmon was going to wake him up somewhere around now. [Twenty … no, nineteen and a half minutes now.]
Sounds about right.
“Know about her, huh? Sweet ride. I’d show you around—especially the exhaust ports or maybe an airlock.”
It doesn’t look like Ba’al appreciated to hear that about airlocks or the implication of being thrown out of them. At a command of a sharp nod and a brief Goa’uld word, Colonel Everett steps forward, and his eyes are blank and his expression silent and he never says anything. His military boots are pristine and perfectly polished and the black uniform—did he steal it? did he unwillingly walk away from his career still in it?—immaculately spotless. He draws a knife in a well-trained motion. John stills. Crap.
“The thing is, Colonel, as clever as Dr McKay is I’m not that interested in him.”
“I’m pretty sure I can tell you it’s mutual on his behalf.”
“I’m aware it’s not a good idea to kill him. Not yet,” Ba’al says.
Yeah. The Goa’uld is bored, and John is going to be the plaything. Rodney is going to be. This body is going to bleed. Fuck. Fuck. It was a promise he’d meant to keep, to make sure no one else was hurt.
“Look, let’s talk this through …”
“Your loyalty to your people is typical Tau’ri,” Ba’al says, spitting at the word like something unpleasant. “You would rather take the blow than have it land on any of your friends, even people you barely know. I have read about your history, and your cousin is almost a stranger to you. And still you came to her rescue. You know, Colonel O’Neill was quite similar.”
O’Neill had been held captive by this bastard once, thought to be a Tok’ra host with information. How’d he gotten out of that one? Oh, yeah. Dr Jackson. Ascended at the time. John doesn’t have any Ascended buddies on his side now, because after all that happened with Icarus he doubts the guy’s going to be able to pinch in without pissing off the Others and getting himself banned or whatever, and it’s not like Icarus cares that much about him. About humans. It’s the City that matters. And the way Ba’al is talking, about how he knows things about John’s past and family, doesn’t exactly ease the mood or his nerves.
But he steels himself. “I think you’d benefit talking with a psychologist,” John says. His back to the wall. Hands seeking uselessly for a weapon to defend himself with. A shield. There’s nothing. Fuck, fuck, fuck. “You have a lot of issues. Shrinks love that kind of thing. Know what I think? You’re doing this to make up for something.”
And somehow the words come, creeping onto his tongue, and he imagines, tries to imagine what he has never wanted to remember. The uncomfortable cold and being unable to breathe and his flesh not his own, and it’s not that difficult, now, to draw himself back into that state, because this isn’t his flesh—and he imagines Icarus’ voice, reverberating like the echoes within a cathedral, and he had held down the Goa’uld in Caldwell’s spine and spoken to it: what had he said? he’d said—Your plan has failed, he’d said in the harsh grating language of the Goa’uld, a language which John has never been taught or even heard before that moment; and he says: “Or, what, you being the only System Lord left you’ve got to go big or you’re scared you’ll seem like hasshak?”
It definitely seems to strike a chord with the Goa’uld. Ba’al’s eyes flare golden like fire, and his mouth twists into a snarl. One doesn’t insult a System Lord lightly. They value their ego higher than any mountain. Possibly more than Rodney, even, and that’s saying something.
And John smirks. This is the easy part, somehow, suddenly; not the first alien he’s looked at and spat in the face—practically what he did with that Queen, after all (and then he’d speared her with a stunner and he wishes he could do the same now, with this creature, to set them free). “Mok mitka hasshak. Give me a sec and I’ll be more creative.”
“You seem to forget that I have hold of your Kalach,” Ba’al says coldly and not seeming to be disturbed at all. A cat toying with its food. “I don’t need to harm that body to harm you.”
And that’s what he wanted and it’s a relief, almost, when the knife is no longer held in his direction. They’ve just got to hold on. Eighteen, seventeen minutes. Hold on. When the forcefield is lowered, John doesn’t fight it. They don’t struggle, and Ba’al is pleased (but not as pleased as he would be if they’d screamed and writhed), and he braces himself, tries to brace himself for it. This body won’t be hurt. Rodney will be okay, and it’ll be okay it’ll be—
Everett’s fist closes around the back of Shy’s neck.
It’s so cold. So cold. John wants to writhe and scream. He’s on the floor. When did he fall? He can’t remember. The Raven thrashes. Instinctive motion. Can’t help it. John’s heartbeat is so rapid and not his own and it’s difficult to breathe to breathe to breathe (like the repetitive nightmares everything predictable and yet he can never learn to breathe) and he cannot overcome;
tries to breathe—
seventeen minutes. just seventeen minutes
that’s all they’ve got to last
They can’t move away from the knife.
“… take the south entry-point and Gibbs’ team the north. No lifesigns yet.”
The Prometheus isn’t here to help them but the SGC has other tools at their disposal, including scanners—Ancient devices, says Dr Jackson, who starts explaining how the machine works (according to some text he translated) over the phone until he’s patiently, familiarly interrupted by Colonel Carter. One of the small machines—reminds McGee of a thick, clumsy tablet, to be honest—rests in Lance Corporal Gladys’ hands. She has the specific gene in her DNA required to operate it. Which means she’s related to Ancients. Aliens. Okay.
“If we’d had a Jumper we’d be able to get a more accurate view from above,” mourns the Lieutenant next to her, Kemp. The two are part of the Gate team AR-4 and the NCIS agents are quite familiar now with their leader, Corporal MacGrimmon.
“Well, we don’t, Lieutenant,” orders MacGrimmon quietly without missing a beat or looking at him. “Focus.”
AR-4 along with AR-9 are part of the assist. But the charge will be led by Agent Gibbs, it’s been agreed. This is their case. Lieutenant DeSalle is a trained medic—which, weird, because as far as McGee knows that’s not something marines are—and is already decked out with a full field kit along with a loaded P-90. The other marines are similarly armed, and they’re all wearing radio headsets tuned to the same frequency. They’ve been over the plan once already.
Since the Prometheus is dozens of lightyears away on another hunt (McGee can’t quite grasp that, the truth of such an absurd thought: dozens of lightyears. lightyears) the marines came to HQ the old-fashioned way: by car. They were already in D.C. waiting for a development in the case, figuring that staying here was better than loitering around in depths of Cheyenne Mountain.
Now they are tense but brimming with unrelenting energy, ready. Waiting. Lieutenant DeSalle’s Dæmon is tense like it wants to prowl in circles, teeth showing (not the kind of person you’d want to piss off, McGee thinks), and Kemp shifts from foot to foot for half a minute before he settles into stoic, professional quietness. LC Gladys is harder to read. McGee isn’t a marine, has never been, and he’s still considered The Probie of the team and thus inexperienced. But there’s something about this woman reminding him of Gibbs: a stern quietness, a well of seriousness hiding behind a calm expression, small smiles. She doesn’t seem to be nervous.
McGee glances at his watch. It’s been thirty-one minutes since they figured out the coordinates, and the building ahead of them looks empty. They’re approaching from two directions; two agents with each a team of marines, and McGee and DiNozzo move closer to the warehouse along with AR-4, weapons poised.
“Sitrep,” Drew whispers on the comm.
“No contact,” Gladys reports. “We’re clear in a hundred yard radius.”
The door is unguarded. Appears to be unguarded, McGee quietly corrects himself: that Ancient tech might be able to distinguish lifesigns and tell them if anything’s approaching, but trusting Earth tech is one thing, but alien stuff?
At least DiNozzo has finally shut up about the alien government conspiracy theories.
“In position, Boss,” DiNozzo says.
Gibbs’ voice: “Move in.”
They strike.
The outer door slams open and MacGrimmon is inside first, and if they’d had any he’d preferred to have a stunner at hand. Just in case. Not that they expect to run into any friendlies except Snow—
God. Mitch has got to be alive. Fuck, Drew is going to be devastated if …
It’s then Gladys exclaims hoarsely: “Someone’s jamming us. Lost the lifesigns detector.”
Fuck. J.J. hits the button on his earpiece with his left hand, never ceasing looking around. The light is dim, nothing’s on. A few broken windows. There’s still daylight, clear and pale, and dust rises slowly. The warehouse is crumbling and a few wooden crates have been left behind; debris. It’s wholly different but he has a brief uncomfortable flashback to M31-927 and the walls disappearing and the groaning ground unsteady beneath their feet. “Delta to Beta. We’ve lost scanners—we’re being jammed.”
There is no answer from Agent Gibbs or anyone else from the second team. Agent DiNozzo, two steps behind J.J., stiffens. There’s static, hissing and spluttering. They’ve lost radio. Which means that either the Snakes are paranoid, or they know someone’s just entered their shabby house unannounced and without ringing the bell. J.J. holds up a hand, fist tightly closed, and they fall silent and freeze. He signals for Kemp and Gladys to move around to the other side of that steel column, the other side of a closed container left behind. Exchanges a look with Agents DiNozzo and McGee, who both nod. Ready.
Something moves in the shadows up ahead, forty meters off, near the wall. A glimmer of armor which J.J. knows too well for comfort.
They fire. The figure fires back and the blast of a staff weapon touches the concrete where McGee stood one second ago; DiNozzo grabs him, jerks him out of the line of fire. “Jaffa!” shouts Kemp, a warning.
There’s another one, emerging from a blue door, paint slowly disintegrating. There are only two of them and these things are much easier to kill than Wraith; J.J. lets that be a comfort as they surge forward. Bullets clatter against armor, sparks flying. Hard thumps of ammo being spent. One of the Jaffa stumbles back and falls. The agents are firing too, though they only have handguns.
The remaining three Jaffa shouts something incomprehensible to most people from Earth, but J.J. has faced off Snakes before: he knows a command when he hears one, and the three take off. The marines are faster. Gladys has one of them down, and J.J. gets a second. Agent DiNozzo clips the last one out with a bullet from his sidearm before a door slams heavily shut.
Just in case there’s a chance in a million of being heard, J.J. tries his radio again as the engagement is over, briefly, before they move on. “Got Jaffa down here. Four tango down. One got away, we’re in pursuit. Agent Gibbs, do you copy?”
“No use, sir; they can’t hear us,” Gladys says.
DeSalle helps Kemp to his feet. His boots smell burnt and a sizzling smoke has caught onto them. “You okay?”
“Yeah,” Kemp nods a little breathlessly. No sounds of pain. Good. Fire only touched on the edges and quickly released him, and his boots aren’t melted into a puddle. “Let’s go.”
If any more Jaffa are in the building they must’ve heard that firefight. J.J. can hear noises: a shout—Goa’uld language—running feet—weapons’ fire. P-90s and 9mils. Sounds like Agent Gibbs ran into some Snakes too but there’s a wall between them. The schematic didn’t show that. The jamming signal probably messed up the scans, so they can’t rely on them. Gladys has already stashed the lifesigns detector away in her TAC vest, realizing looking at it will be of little use.
Quickly they cross the empty space to the door at the back. They try the shut door without success: locked from the other side. A single round of fire takes care of that, the handle blown off. Kemp and Gladys stay on guard for half a minute after they’ve filed up, in twos, J.J. and DiNozzo in the lead and the corridor here is empty. They duck into a couple of side rooms—what once were storage space and offices: now cluttered with fallen dust, left-behind broken chairs, an old computer, a ragged notebook, old manifests no one’s cared to pick up.
“Clear!” Even as he says it, there’s a nagging sensation at the back of his mind: something’s not right. Something’s not right. They’ve missed something. This seems … too easy. Where the hell did that last Snake go? And J.J.’s gut tells there are others in hiding nearby.
“Clear!” DeSalle shouts from further down the hallway. “Nothing’s here.”
“I thought you said the other entry-point led to the same location,” DiNozzo says, frowning. Displeased. If this has been a waste of time …
“The scan wasn’t accurate enough. They were jamming us,” Gladys says.
“Which means there’s a device doing that somewhere. Think you can find it?” J.J. asks her. For once having a McKay on the team wouldn’t have been a bad idea. The actual destruction of such a device shouldn’t be as tricky as locating it: a well-placed charge of C4 should do the trick.
“Maybe,” Gladys affirms.
Then there’s another shout: Agent McGee. “Tony! Look.”
There, beneath a hastily removed cardboard box full of paper, is a hatch carved into the wooden floor. It looks thick and heavy and J.J. wants to glare it out of existence. It’s closed, no sign of a locking mechanism. Maybe there isn’t one; maybe the Goa’uld thought that no one would check an abandoned warehouse out anyway, or want to move a box of old newspapers out of the way in search of secret hatches.
Kemp, reaching them, glances at the hatch and then at J.J., raising an eyebrow. “Know what I’m thinking, Boss?”
Half his mind of M31-927, J.J. says: “Yeah. Déjà vu.”
J.J. flickers on the flashlight nestled against the barrel of the P-90. There’s wiring running along the floor in a single direction, no others to take, and they follow it. Kemp waits up top, and Gladys has gone with McGee is search of the jamming device, following an intermittent signal weakening one moment and strengthening the next. They’d debated briefly about splitting up, if it’s a good idea; it was never the plan. But the mission’s two-fold now: find Snow, and re-establish communications with the other team.
A pale circle of white light stretches to reach the far end of the corridor. It’s a narrow passage and the ladder down is rusty.
“Looks like a bend up ahead,” Agent DiNozzo murmurs. J.J. doesn’t think the guy’s ever been a marine, but sometime something shines through. But he’s a federal agent and that warrants some training.
True enough, there’s a crossroad: a passage to the left, and one to the right. Down here, they can’t hear the noise of gunfire from up top. Well-insulated. Isolated. The air is stale but cold and there’s this unpleasant wetness lingering and J.J’s Dæmon threads carefully, a paw at a time, resisting the urge to constantly glance downward.
Agent DiNozzo’s Dæmon moves close to the ground and briefly crouches for a closer look, sniffing the air, but the agent doesn’t look at it directly, eyes focused ahead. Unspoken between them, and then DiNozzo says aloud: “Blood.”
“Hopefully theirs, not our guy’s,” DeSalle says grimly.
“Theirs?” DiNozzo asks.
“The bad guys’.”
“Uhuh.”
J.J. looks toward the left, then the right. Neither direction offers any clue or hint as to what to find. Both lead to unguarded doors. Too easy. Too easy, Juno reminds him. Only two Jaffa to guard a Goa’uld hiding spot, potentially with a prisoner they’d obviously done a lot to kidnap and cover up the act? Doesn’t make sense. Unless their numbers were thin to begin with and the rest are aboard that ship. With the Colonel and the Director.
J.J. could bet half a month’s pay that the Bad Guy responsible is far, far away from Earth at this point.
Likely predicting what he’s thinking—they know each other too well by now—DeSalle gives his commanding officer a look. “Splitting up is a bad idea, Boss.”
He’s right. As usual. “DeSalle, cover us.”
“Got your six, Boss.” Unlike with Kemp, DeSalle doesn’t use irony, and in the beginning when they’d been strangers J.J. had wondered if the guy had any sense of humor whatsoever. Knows better now.
There’s a door at the end of the corridor leading left—east, J.J.’s pretty sure—fifty feet down. Gray, unassuming. Its hinges are rusty and there’s a lock, cast iron. DiNozzo fires a single shot at it; not the first door he’s broken past, then. And J.J. swings the heavy door open pushing with his shoulder and DiNozzo’s got his sidearm up and there are no lights within, no windows. The white flare from J.J.’s flashlight falls across the space within: narrow, and it smells overwhelmingly of sweat, blood, urine.
It’s not the only thing.
There’s a human body. It hangs limply from its arms and the eyes are upturned, whites showing, lids half-shut, and blood has coated a trail from a head wound. It’s dried. Nothing moves. The room was airtight enough to not even let in flies to devour the body. Like a piece of meat hung to dry. The stench makes J.J.’s belly twist and turn, and he prides himself in his ability not to throw up.
DeSalle glances over his shoulder. Cannot stop himself from exclaiming: “What the hell?”
“Okay,” DiNozzo says, breaking a slow second of dumbfounded silence. “That’s … not the guy we’re looking for.”
b r e a t h e
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If there’d been questions asked, it might’ve been easier. He’s got nothing to say. Nothing to reveal or hold back. He bites back the screams at first and can’t stand up. Lungs contracting not working properly. It doesn’t work. It
The knife has been recently sharpened and Ba’al says with a smile, after a minute—two? John’s losing track of time No one but Rodney’s touched his Dæmon before, it never hurt, it’s never hurt
Ba’al whispers that that’s the knife that killed his marine, and Patrick Sheppard on a sunny Wednesday afternoon in New York, and it’s going to be the one to kill him too eventually; no, no, not him; Rodney, and his team, and Weir, and the rest of them. His brother, and Jenny; they’ll all die the same way (at his hand)—Ba’al will take over his flesh and the others and kill them slowly with his hands that knife that
He can’t breathe. Everett holds the Raven like a hunter displaying his prize for the photograph emotionlessly. It’s stopped trashing. Each stroke: precise, unhurried, almost gentle. Measured. Are they going to be able to fly after this? they won’t oh god they won’t;
Three minutes five seven he doesn’t know he manages to crack an eye open to glare at the Goa’uld. “What—what do you want?” he wants to say, demand, “Why are you doing this?” but it’s a useless question and all that comes out is a wheeze of fragile air from strained lungs.
There wouldn’t be an answer.
Gibbs has got a bad feeling about this. It’s an exhausted cliché, but he’s not the guy watching all the movies so he doesn’t care.
They’d taken out the three Jaffa guarding the entrance easily enough. The metal plated armor wasn’t as tough as it looked and didn’t cover the neck or head, so Gibbs had one down in a heartbeat. Bullet through the left eye. Kate dealt with the second too, and the four marines spread out behind them like a living shield. They move with quiet efficiency and clearly, vividly, as a team: as one. They don’t speak aloud apart to communicate with the other team on radio, and therein lies the problem. Comms were just cut out. Static.
They’re being jammed. That usually means a trap lies ahead, but Gibbs isn’t planning on walking away. The warehouse is silent now but, as they were fighting, they’d heard dull noise and it wasn’t echoes. Another firefight. And the schematic made with the Ancient scanned was clearly wrong because there’s a wall separating them from the other team. The warehouse is now quiet and Gibbs leads them inside, past the fallen bodies.
A pang of noise so sharp they stumble back. Flashbang. In a second, as they’re blinded, Gibbs hears the smattering of fire from the P-90s, one or two of the marines having managed to cover their ears or eyes in time to now react, and something returning fire. Staff weapons, and something else. Electric.
A grunt. A thump. A cry:
“Drew!”
Gibbs draws back behind a container, and Private Herschel clearly wants to jump out and retrieve her fallen teammate who’s lying on the cold cement, unmoving. There’s no blood.
Those alien weapons make no sense.
“She’s stunned,” murmurs Private Gamble. “She’s going to be okay.”
“How many do you see?” Gibbs asks, glancing around with his sidearm tracking for targets. It’s dim and white spots are slowly clearing from his gaze, and his right ear is ringing. He loathes flashbangs.
“Four targets,” Gamble says, checking his ammo. “Two at two o’clock, the other two at ten.”
“Agent Todd and I’ll take those two.” He inclines his head toward the ten o’clock position.
The marine is all business, in his element. This is a battleground; Private Gamble knows how to deal with that. “Yes, sir.”
Two marines circle back to another container, aiming for what’s another of those Jaffa and alongside them is another—human? No, but the silhouette is different, and Gibbs is then busy in a firefight to analyze it further. If he had, he would’ve noticed, as the man stepped into the light with a zat’nik’tel in hand, that he wore a business suit and that his face was coldly smiling. He would have noticed that the man was familiar.
Kate reloads her handgun and takes aim again.
The Jaffa falls. The other one with it turns around and starts running, and they run after, leaving behind the staccato choir of P-90 bursts. Gibbs lets his Dæmon run ahead. They’re faster than them, and if they could fell that person, that thing;
Gibbs doesn’t finish the thought. A spark of energy hits him suddenly and it’s not like being shot by a bullet at all, no IED no shrapnel no sniper on a roof, and he falls down without seeing the face of the shooter.
Agent DiNozzo snaps a few photos of the body with his phone. There’s no time to collect evidence just yet. Mission to accomplish. Their radios are still dead, and there’s no reception so the agent pockets his phone after failing being able to call Gibbs. If there was time he’d have started searching the body for an ID. One thing is sure: this isn’t Lance Corporal Snow.
Tony recalls the last update the searches made. This guy is vaguely familiar. It could be that previous VP of the bogey company. Jamesson. Which explains what happened to him. Didn’t (necessarily) cheat on his wife; got himself murdered instead. No one does this to themselves. And he’s no coroner but he’s been in the business long enough, and this guy has been hanging here awhile. Disappeared six weeks ago but maybe not dead all at once … Nevermind. He can’t speculate right now. Speculation isn’t investigating.
Straightening, he looks at the two marines with him. Working with them is oddly fine. They’re not newbies even if they aren’t federal agents, and they don’t hurl at the sight of the decaying flesh.
Corporal MacGrimmon grimaces like he’s biting his tongue, but his voice is steady. “Civilian,” he notes, moving the flashlight down and up again. The dead guy is wearing gray slacks and a white shirt, which is torn at the edges, and ashen with dirt. A quick look around reveals the rest thrown into a corner: black dress shoes (a pretty expensive brand, too), nice watch, dress jacket, fancy tie. “What are we going to do with him?”
If he’s a civilian, it’s not strictly speaking with NCIS jurisdiction and so maybe they can’t take him to HQ. But Tony doesn’t think Gibbs, once he hears about this, will be happy to have the guy anywhere but on Ducky’s autopsy table.
“Boss, we should move,” Lieutenant DeSalle addresses MacGrimmon. “More Jaffa could be on their way even if we can’t hear them.”
“So that’s what those armed wierdos are called,” Tony remarks idly. “‘Jaffa’.”
“Yeah. I thought you were briefed, Agent DiNozzo,” MacGrimmon says quizzically.
“Yeah. Well, Corporal, I’m still wrapping my head around the whole alien wierdos are running amok on Earth-part. With, you know, aliens.”
MacGrimmon looks far too understanding when he says that. DeSalle only says, unsupportingly dryly: “Wait until you meet Wraith.”
This is just great. Just great. Come back to Earth for some R&R; an opportunity long-awaited to visit friends and family, to eat Earth food without it being canned and unfrozen, to prop their feet up and catch up on all the crap TV they’ve missed out on. Now they’re stuck in a crossfire on Earth, outside of Washington D.C., of all places. Herschel is going to write an angry letter. They deserve a raise. If they’d been part of an SG-team on Earth, sure, this would be fine. But this isn’t Atlantis, and this is her damned day off. A lot of angry letters.
But Mitch is stuck somewhere here. Verdamnt. He’s got to be, and he’s got to be alive, and when they find him Herschel is going to smack him silly for being so dumb as to get himself kidnapped.
There’s one Jaffa left, and a guy who isn’t one of those but he’s got to be Goa’uld; nothing else makes sense. Herschel aims for the Jaffa’s torso and it drops quickly. She wants to check on Drew, but Gam’s right, the zat only hit her once so she’s stunned but otherwise fine. Otherwise fine.
Together, she and Gam emerge from two different sides to take down the last guy. She can hear a sidearm go off behind them, form the direction the two agents went—hopefully they got to the two others.
“Stand down!” Gam shouts in the most commanding voice he can muster. His face is serious. “You’re surrounded.”
“So I am,” says the man: a voice of oil, of grime, if she had to describe it, icy over a coarse surface. Drolly unsurprised. His Dæmon … there’s no sign of it. Goa’uld. He’s a Snake. Only conclusion that’s logical. “Congratulations. You caught me. What do you win?”
She doesn’t lower her gun, nor does Gam. “Lower your weapon. Slowly. Kick it away from you. No sudden moves.”
The man drops the zat’nik’tel, kicks it in their direction so that Gamble can pick it up warily, and holds up his hands in a universal gesture of peace. Smiling a little. Herschel wants to kick that smile in. Gamble weighs the weapon in his palm.
“Where’s Mitchell Snow? Where have you taken him, bastard?!”
“You’ll find him in the basement,” says the man calmly. “He might be … a little worse for wear.”
It’s not like her to easily lose her temper, but he’s a guy more or less admitting to taking her teammate and friend prisoner. And she knows what’s being implied. “Arschgesicht! I’m going to gut you!” No one hurts her team and gets away with it.
Before she can take the shot with a bullet to the guy’s head, or at least somewhere painful but non-lethal (people are better at answering questions when they’re alive), Gam does. The zat discharges without kicking back and the guy crumples. He only fires once. Then he tries his radio.
“Gibbs—MacGrimmon? Got a prisoner over here, probably a Snake. Anyone? … Shit, comms are still down.” He lowers his arm and fastens the zat in his belt. “C’mon, Amanda, help me tie this guy up.”
They’re not too gentle about it. Improvising with some rope they find lying around, they make sure there’s no way the guy could break free, no matter if he’s a Goa’uld or only human, when he comes to. They also check him for other weapons and find nothing. No knives, no ordinary guns, no ammo, nothing. Only a guy in a business suit in a place he doesn’t fit in. Once he’s secure, they move on. First they check on Drew. She’s out cold, and she’ll have some bruises in the morning, but otherwise she’ll be fine.
“I’ll stay with her and guard that guy,” Gam offers. Turns his head slightly and adds, painfully softly: “Please find him.”
Herschel inhales. Exhales. Promises. “I will.”
Agents Gibbs and Todd had moved out of sight before pursuing a suspect. Around stacks of crates and an empty container, across the threshold into a corridor hidden around the corner. When Herschel catches up, the senior agent is slumped over and the younger one kneeling next to him, checking his pulse. Todd looks up sharply when the marine come into view.
“He got hit. One of those alien weapons,” she says, a bit breathlessly. Sounds uncertain as if unsure what those weapons actually do. Herschel can understand that feeling vividly.
“Just one shot?” Herschel asks. A nod. “Then he should be fine. It renders you unconscious. Drew’s the same. She’s with Gamble now, the way we came from. All targets gone.”
“Dead?” the agent asks sharply.
“No, one of them just gave himself up, and he’s not Jaffa. Could be a Snake. We’ve stunned him and secured him.” Herschel offers a hand, and together they help roll Agent Gibbs over. “He should come around soon. Looks like a pretty solid guy.”
“Ex-marine,” the agent says curtly, but it explains a lot. “Anything from the others?”
“Not yet, ma’am. We’ve tried to—”
At that moment, something buzzes in both their ears and the static gives way to voices.
“… Gibbs? Can you hear me? This is McGee. There’s a jamming device; LC Gladys and I managed to shut it down. Do you copy? Uh, over.”
“This is Todd,” the female agent says. “That’s good to hear. Any sign of Snow? Over.”
“Nope,” intones another voice: Agent DiNozzo. He’d (in that aggressive and annoying manner too many men do) tried to flirt with her in the elevator on the way out of NCIS HQ, so Herschel is not that partial to him personally. “But we got a body. We’re down in the basement—secret, hidden basement, by the way.”
“I see where you are,” Gladys says. “The lifesigns detector works now. We’re coming to you, Agent DiNozzo.”
“How come Gibbs is all quiet?” DiNozzo sounds puzzled.
“He’s been hit by one of those alien weapons, stunned. He’ll be fine,” Todd assures them. “Once he wakes up we’ll come to you. Gladys, can you guide us?”
“Yeah, no problem. Guys—I’m picking up two lifesigns one level down, east part of the building—close to you, MacGrimmon. I think … It could be Snow.”
Herschel governs her breaths steadily. Shouldn’t celebrate victories beforehand. But lifesigns. Signs of life. It’s the best news this whole week. She hears MacGrimmon say: “We’re on it. Meet you there.”
They nearly stumble over their feet in their rush. There’s the door. Right there: if they’d turned right instead of left in that juncture, they’d have already found them. Found them. Thank you, Mary and Joseph, J.J. mentally whispers as they get the lock broken and the door open. Just as heavy as the other one. No lights.
This man is not hanging from the ceiling. He’s slumped over and curled in on himself and breathing, and J.J. wants to draw him into a big hug. The Dæmon—recognizable, warmly familiar despite the dirt in its matted fur—lifts a lidded gaze toward them, and the man jerks as if violently woken from sleep. There’s a tang of blood in the air, and the relief is exchanged with acute concern.
DeSalle barges past both him and Agent DiNozzo in full medic mode.
“… J? ‘Salle?” the voice is weak and slurred. “Wow, I’m … really out it … if I’m ‘magining … you guys.”
“You’re not imagining anything, buddy,” J.J. says and crouches in front of him.
Snow looks at them almost disdainfully, as much as a man in his state can. His leg is obviously broken, knee twisted up in ways unnatural, and his face is gaunt and haunted.
“You’re right. I’d’ve … gone for Drew with a big … big gun.”
“Oh, she’s here, and Herschel and Gamble,” J.J. assures him. “They’re pretty pissed off and worried.”
And Snow smiles weakly. “’S not my fault.” Then his expression turns pained: “They—she killed him.”
He exhales through his nose. Doing the talking while DeSalle looks at the injury. DiNozzo’s calling for the others, giving sitrep, requesting immediate medical assistance. They’ll get him to a hospital and then back to the Mountain, and everything will be all right. J.J. tells him that, tells him his team is on its way and Snow’s going to be fine, and he doesn’t mention any other kidnappings or deaths. Snow’s been through enough already.
When the rest of the team finally finds the cell, Snow’s huddled up with his Dæmon in his lap, and J.J. is supporting his shoulder, DeSalle deeming his leg far too unstable to move without a stretcher so they’ve got to wait until the ambulance arrives. Drew has got dust on her nose and one side of her face, and she’s a bit dizzy, the aftertaste of a zat; Agent Gibbs is the same way. Gamble also looks dizzy but for different reasons, and he and Herschel and Drew swarm into the room. J.J. gives them the space and the moment. Walks out into the corridor where Gladys and Kemp are waiting, and he glances back at AR-9 and the knots inside his chest untangle.
“Danke Gott. You look terrible,” they hear Herschel say. A chuckle of relief.
“And you smell,” adds Gamble with a smile that can be heard. It sounds slightly strangled, as if he doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
“You timing … sucks,” Snow sighs, and then he relaxes and simply falls asleep in his team’s arms. First time he’s slept in days, J.J. guesses. It starts to sink in: a rock landing on the bottom of the sea, the weight finite and complete and it’s stopped sinking and they didn’t drown: Mitch is alive. Mitch is a l i v e.
There are far too damn few happy endings out there, too far in-between, but this time they managed to get lucky.
If this goes on for much longer he’s not going to be able to run. It’s not going to matter. They’ll be grounded forever. forever. forever. John has forgotten how to breathe or move, and lost track of time—he needs to keep track—needs to. He blinks the sweat out of his eyes and he’s lost his voice, hoarse from screaming. Rodney’s voice. It shouldn’t sound like that and they can’t move and he can’t tell any longer where he ends and the Raven begins. Everything is hazy pain.
And he’s unable to breathe and it’s been twelve fifteen seventeen minutes and he blearily tries to make sense of it when it catches up with him: it’s time, they timed it and the program should kick in now in six seconds five four three
Training kicks in: he’s spent so many countless hours in flight, and the key to fighting Gs straining against you is to breathe evenly, deeply, and he tenses up his lower body to keep the blood in his head—wait, he’s lying down, does that even matter?—he can’t fight the instinctive reaction, and
two
he looks up at Ba’al cold smile and Everett and the knife and musters a smirk which might have failed, and says: whispers hoarsely, tasting blood on his tongue: “Hey, Ugly. Guess what? I broke your ship.”
one.
and before Ba’al can question that, yell in anger, continue the torture, do anything at all, the whole ship trembles and groans as the drives shut down, the spark of an explosion, and they are torn from hyperspace. Violently, the window ending and their velocity is high and the inertial dampeners struggle to compensate. They are thrown down, even the Snake losing his balance. Everett tumbles, the knife falling from his hand and so does the Raven. For a long second John feels the press of a weight atop of his chest—Rodney’s chest—theirs—trying to overcome them all before the machine manages to catch up. It fades as rapidly as it began;
For a dizzying second, everything changes but this time John saw it coming. Closes his eyes. He is not lying down: he’s standing, leaning against a table, crutches put momentarily aside, and he’s holding a cup in one hand and he can’t keep the grip in the sudden transportation. His leg aches, his head aches, everything aches but there is no taste of blood, and the coffee spills over his wrist and shirt and he’s in the mess, there’s a scent of hot food and lowly speaking voices and Athosian spices and a lull of ocean splashing onto the piers (home home home) and a sharp inhale, someone calling his name (is that Teyla? Teyla’s voice. Teyla) worriedly, and a drop of blood clashing onto the Ancient floor—
A klaxon blares. Begins to turn. Overload imminent, and John really hopes he’s right about the calculations and that there’s no way to stop it.
Now that Everett is no longer touching them, the Raven is not in direct pain. It remains a sharp shadow but John can move, and he’s a fighter pilot, used to pulling G:s, and John gets to his feet quickly. And if he were a normal human, Ba’al would’ve dazedly stayed down a little longer, but he isn’t human. The Goa’uld gives the vessel—name long since forgotten—inhuman strength. The power grid and everything connected in the ship flickered for a brief second; the doors slide open. They need to get out of here. They all need to get out of here.
John grabs the zat, fallen from Ba’al’s hand onto the floor, and fires in Ba’al’s direction and doesn’t stop to check where it hit. There’s an angry cry cut off mid-noise, and they try to move together but their wings are broken—John has to kneel down to gather his Dæmon in an awkward cradle of his arm, too large for it to properly fit, and claws dig into skin. He points the zat at Everett and the man’s eyes blaze and he reaches for the knife.
John hesitates for a millisecond before he pulls the trigger. He can’t look at Everett’s face.
He heads for the now open door. A blast from a staff weapon: barely missing. The Jaffa beyond it falls back when the zat blast breaks through its throat and surrounds it with sparks of electricity. The body thumps to the floor. John leaps over it.
The ship trembles. The alarm is singing.
Time to get off this boat.
“Rodney, are you all right?”
“Teyla? I—I. Ow.”
“What happened?”
“The thing, the thing with the stones, the breaking connection. They must’ve dropped out of hyperspace! It’s the only thing that makes sense. Ugh, that hurt.”
“You are in pain?”
“Yeah. No. I mean, Sheppard—Sheppard’s in pain. I’m … fine. Not really, but, yeah.”
“We saw,” (softly), “Meredith was gone and Shy was here, and there was blood—”
“Yes. I know. I know.”
“Perhaps we should go to the infirmary.”
“Not me who needs it. And he’s in another galaxy. There’s no way they’ve reached even the edge of the Milky Way yet. Somehow … It must have been a malfunction of the drive, but I couldn’t really tell, wasn’t there long enough. Radio. Have you got a radio? I’ve got to talk with Weir. After I’ve changed out of this shirt, I’ve got coffee all over me. Where the hell’s Radek? We’ve got to rerun those calculations! Give me that datapad.”
“Rodney, we will find them.”
“If they dropped out because the drive malfunctioned or a catastrophic overload—there’s no way we’ll reach them in time.”
“We will find a way. I believe that. We must have hope. Are you certain you should not see Beckett?”
“I don’t have time.”
“Then let us go to your lab.”
half an hour earlier:
One moment Gibbs is running; the next he’s slumped over, face-first, and his Dæmon too: a brief flash of uneven light. Kate ducks behind a crate, holding back a noise of concern and surprise. She glances at Gibbs—from here she can only see his feet—is he breathing? Then she looks ahead: the shot came from there. A threshold into a dark room, beyond the warehouse’s main space. She can’t just rush over there without risking being hit by enemy fire. Like Gibbs.
“That wasn’t very clever, coming here,” says a voice drolly, a dark edge to it like it’s older than it should be. Todd struggles to put a name to it; she hasn’t heard it before. So it’s not Human’s PA or someone else they’ve encountered recently. But—wait. The security footage, the recording. Of the Director’s kidnapping. That’s … Yeah; that’s the voice of the woman who’d been there. Mayfield. Not in Europe, then. “But you just couldn’t keep away, could you? Oh, well, I’ll just dispose of you the same way as I did the other one.”
Other one. That’s got to mean the NID agent, Bradley White. At least now we know for certain, Kate’s Dæmon remarks in a shared whisper. They doubt Mayfield will offer such a succinct confession in court.
She sees her. Not her face clearly: but a pair of glowing eyes, and what the actual fuck and then Kate remembers the surreal briefing: the Snakes, the Goa’uld, the aliens possess people and alters their voice and eyes—
There’s no sign of a Dæmon. Normally, if this was any other suspect or witness or person crossing the street, Kate would just assume that their Dæmon is small enough to keep out of sight. Fit in a pocket. Now she knows it’s not the case, and she shivers.
Kate remembers the whine of the bullet cleaving the air, and how she’d dropped to the ground out of shock milliseconds before it would have hit. Not the first time she’d been shot at, far from it, but that moment had been the closest she’d come to dying. This is similar, too similar—the team being split apart, a shootout; except this is no terrorist, no sniper on a roof. This is a woman with glowing inhuman eyes. To think she’d gone from protecting the US President to this. Fighting aliens was not on her list when she decided, in that implausible moment, to join Gibbs and his people at NCIS, leaving the Secret Service behind.
There are few days when she misses the Service. It had been different, complex, each day new but there was also a simple rigidness at the heart of it all giving a sense of security. She knew who to turn to. it was both easier and harder than solving murders, and there were some days back then when she felt all of her training as a profiler didn’t seem to matter. Flying out of the window.
This is one of those days.
This time, no bullet whines past her: not a physical one. Instead a streak of pure energy sizzles past and Kate flinches; this is unreal. The noise isn’t like any noise she’d heard—apart from once: the recording of the Director’s kidnapping. Mayfield had been there and she’d fired just such a weapon. What did the SGC call it? Zat … zat’nik’tel. And what was the warning Colonel Carter had left about those things during that absurd meeting?
One shot stuns … two—kill. Three …?
“Give yourself up, Mayfield, and you’ll receive a fair trial.” Kate holds her voice steady. This isn’t the first murderer or creep she’s dealt with. So what if it it’s an alien? It will face justice. “You admit to killing a federal agent.”
Mayfield—is that its name? do aliens have names?—laughs grimly. “There’s plenty more where he came from. It’s better you give up now,” she says. “I don’t have a grudge against you but I’d gladly break every bone in your pathetic body if I have to. You know, shootouts are very boring. Feels like cheating.” A step forward. Mayfield is almost visible. Kate will have to take the shot.
Another shot of yellowish electric light flies past her, too close, too close. Kate crouches behind the crate and considers her options for half a second. If Mayfield had had a sidearm or a semi-automatic, the crate wouldn’t have held up long but the energy from the weapon doesn’t seem to penetrate it. As long as she doesn’t have a direct shot, Kate is safe. Relatively.
Backup isn’t on its way, they’ve got what they’ve got. Gibbs is down; the marines busy grappling with other assailants. She’s on her own with this one. Gibbs is slumped awkwardly where he fell and Kate can only pray at the moment that the injury is superficial, that he isn’t dying and the zat’nik’tel truly stuns with the first shot. She cannot rush over to check on him or his Dæmon without becoming target practice. She’s got to find the opportune moment and take this woman out. No other choice. Self-defense.
“You won’t escape this building alive unless you surrender!” Todd shouts. “We have you surrounded.” Faint white lies. Mayfield can probably see through it. There are no blinking lights or sirens. But Kate wants to stall, learn more information and, if the marines are given some time they could provide backup in a crossfire. Subduing Mayfield and take her to HQ for interrogation would be ideal.
Another horrible chuckle. “You are naïve. Come out now. I don’t have time for playing.”
Kate doesn’t take the bait. “So you and Human killed Agent White,” she says, calmly. Tracks Mayfield by the sound of her voice and movements. She’s in the doorway, entering the light. “What about Lance Corporal Snow?”
“He had his uses,” Mayfield says, equally as calm and there’s something terrifying about the smile hinted at in her tone. It makes Kate sick and furious. “Now he has none.”
“Where is he?” she presses, but there is no answer but another round of firing of the zat’nik’tel. Mayfield is getting closer and soon Kate will be down like Tony. She can’t let that happen.
She’s out of time.
Kate stands up and fires her handgun. The shot is loud and her aim certain, and the sound rattles the air but no one is listening for it. The blonde woman takes the bullet to the chest and it doesn’t pass through her: cracking through a rib, collapsing a lung. It should’ve caused her to drop, whimpering and gasping for breath. She shrieks in anger more than pain and jerks back, blood tainting the ground and the air, but she doesn’t drop dead. Injured but still kicking.
Her eyes gleam with more than wrath: they are pale and white. Kate keeps the grip on her sidearm steady and fires a second time, at the hand, forcing it to drop the zat’nik’tel.
When she speaks, Mayfield’s voice is not her own. It’s deep and reverberating and wrong. And there is no Dæmon; there is no Dæmon, Kate realizes, horrified. There’s not even an empty shell, a doll dangling from thin strings. There are no strings; they’ve been cut. This is a soulless marionette.
“You do not know who you’re dealing with. You’ll die at the hands of a goddess, little girl. Do you know how I am?”
“Don’t think so, sweetheart, and I wouldn’t care less what you think you are.” She reloads her handgun without taking her eyes off the target.
Mayfield leans the wounded hand against the nearest wall, moving closer, smearing the pristine white wallpaper will dark blood. She steps into the light and Kate gets a first proper look. Her once beautiful face is contorted in a snarl, angry and painful.
“Where’s Corporal Snow?” Kate repeats the demand. Aims at Mayfield’s head: this shot won’t miss.
“Dead,” says the woman simply. She sounds pleased and indifferent at the same time.
“Why did you take him?”
“Your race is too primitive to understand,” says the—no: not a woman: this is an alien. This is a Goa’uld, and no pictures or accounts or reports could ever hint at the horrifying reality of such a creature. Looking at it makes Kate’s skin crawl. “It’s too late.”
And the woman who should be dead launches herself at the agent. She kicks the weapon out of Todd’s hand, and Kate cries out hearing rather than feeling the crack of bone shattering and Mayfield’s grip is far too strong, far too strong, inhuman. They end up on the floor, Mayfield on trop, wrestling for control and hands seeking Kate’s throat.
Kate could take down half the agents in the office in less than a minute one-on-one, but this woman is unlike anyone she’s ever fought. The strength is too great for the untrained body. Eyes glowing again, a flare of wrath, Mayfield grabs the agent’s throat with one hand and her hair with the other, and bashes her head against the floor. Dark spots dance in front of Kate’s eyes. For two or three seconds, she’s sluggish, and she feels the warm blood dripping heavily from Mayfield’s body onto hers as well as a dark warmth blooming at the back of her skull, and she’s lucky she didn’t lose consciousness at once. The press of hands tightening around her throat is cold: inhuman;
inhuman;
alien ;
Those two seconds are all Mayfield needs. With one desperate hand she forces Kate’s jaws open holding it still and Kate cannot properly breathe and something dark and slimy crawls out of Mayfield’s mouth. Kate tries to scream, she cannot see it because Mayfield’s pressed their mouths together like a perverse kiss of death, and she feels it, a sharp jab of pain and a sudden presence as it slithers inside—
Mayfield collapses on top of the agent, who had tried to claw at Mayfield’s face with her fingernails in attempt to free herself from the bruising grip. Now the body is limply bleeding out. The woman is already dead, was dying long ago.
Kate feels herself staring at the ceiling.
She feels herself pushing the limp body off her with strength she didn’t know she had—shouldn’t have—and she feels herself stand, stiffly, as if this is the first time she’s moving and for a staggering moment must learn how to walk. And then she feels her face smile, muscles working, and there is horror and she cannot breathe, and she is awake and not awake all at once. The struggle is over and Mayfield’s body doesn’t move. Kate sees her Dæmon unable to call out to him and he writhes for a moment, struggling, defiantly seeking control and together they weep without words. She tries to call out his name. She tries. There’s pain unlike anything she’s ever felt, like someone—something—is severing their Bond bit by cruel bit with a dull chainsaw, a knife unseen. They can hear but not listen; they can move but not control;
If she could, Kate would be hyperventilating. But her body stands still, breaths evening out calmly, as she looks at the unmoving forms of Gibbs and his Dæmon, and she has an eerie feeling of seeing double, with two pair of eyes. Two consciousnesses wholly different in nature.
Something dark and oily whispers the knowledge to her, dully, to her mind, that They Are Power and nothing will stand in their way, and Kate gets the impression of time endless and memories far longer than the span of a normal human life, and a name; Athena, The Goddess of War; she was once worshiped by millions on planets unnamed; and the thing inside of her has trapped her and she can’t move can’t move can’t escape. She can’t escape. The Goa’uld has a purpose, a mission but more than that it won’t share and it’s suffocating her while also pulling and tugging at her mind, her self, her memories. It hurts. Her limbs are moving, and she steps across the still body of Mayfield and further, toward Gibbs and his Dæmon. Lying still. still. still.
Her eyes burn. She smiles. She hears her own voice speak, dulled by bones and flesh, marred by something new and frightening:
“This is much better.”
Notes:
Translations:
German
verdammt damn it
arschgesicht fuckface
danke Gott thank god
Goa'uld
hasshak weakling, fodder, fool
mok mitka hasshak You’re a weak/foolish asshole, lit. ‘Your identity [is an] ass [and a] weakling’
kalach soul; dæmon
* * *
SPOILER! Snow lives. I couldn’t bring myself to hurt him anymore. And John is going to be okay (eventually).
Chapter 22: into that good night, part three
Summary:
they’re missing something.
Chapter Text
xxii.
into that good night
part three
they’re missing something.
The Prometheus lands in a void on the edge of a solar system never before visited. This is within five hundred thousand kilometers of the source of that energy spike they detected less than forty minutes ago, and for a brief moment Colonel Pendergast and his crew have hope to find what they’re searching for. As soon as they break out of the confines of subspace, that hope is abruptly shattered.
There is no sign of any ship: only wreckage. Debris, scattered over so vast a distance and so fragmented it can barely be picked up by the sensors. The human eye cannot see it. The crew holds their breath as the scans are completed and the area surveyed several hundred thousand miles in each direction. The result is the same. Something has been destroyed, and there is precious little left to give answers.
The explosion occurred half an hour ago—a technician confirms that it matches the timeline they already have, something dropping out of hyperspace forty minutes ago; the explosion happened less than ten minutes after that, the second great energy surge recorded on their sensors, though tracking something in real spacetime while in hyperspace is extremely difficult. The heat levels confirms it. The debris is still cooling off, taken by the vacuum of space, slowly shedding heat but the momentum of the break continues to hurtle the small chunks further and further apart. In time, nothing will be left, the pieces of the starship caught by nearby wells of gravity, cast in different directions by nearby stars. There is no planet in the immediate vicinity. Only space. Only space.
Colonel Pendergast surveys the damage grimly. These were not the news he’d hoped to bring back to Command.
After a few minutes, one of the technicians says: “Sir, computer calculates the possibility of that being the remnants of a Goa’uld cargo vessel—what’s left of it—at over fifty percent. Estimated seventy percent of the vessel is just gone.”
The Goa’uld who kidnapped Colonel Sheppard and Director Sheppard, along with the two of them, must have been lost in the fire. There’s no other plausible possibility he can think of it. But this is Stargate Command: implausible they deal with every day.
“All right. Contact the SGC.”
“Yes, sir. What shall we tell them, sir?” the communications officer asks, preparing to relay the Colonel’s message, whatever it may be.
Colonel Pendergast stifles a weary sigh. Losing people is always tough, even when he doesn’t know them personally. “That there’s nothing left out here but we’ll keep looking. Lieutenant, start search pattern delta,” he says, even though he personally doesn’t think it will yield much. But this is the SGC. They don’t give up that easily, and they don’t leave people behind. General O’Neill will have his head and possibly his career rescinded if Pendergast simply had the Prometheus directly turned around. They’ll be out here some time yet.
“Yes, sir.”
The atmosphere is dull when the message reaches Atlantis.
It is early morning on New Lantea and a brisk wind caresses the piers, and many haven’t slept much or at all this night. The tension hasn’t been resolved. Elizabeth has spent most of the last few hours reviewing reports and waiting in her office around the clock, and occasionally Radek has radioed in. Rodney is too distracted to do so in person. It’s been eight hours since the connection with the stones broke, and the switch was sudden and intense and over in less than five seconds. Rodney hadn’t been able to determine much: only that Colonel Sheppard was in pain, and from the glimpse Teyla and others in the commissary got of the sudden appearance of the Raven, the harm has been made to the Dæmon directly. Carson is deeply worried about it. Hell, they all are, and Elizabeth lines up the reports and scraps of information they have thus have on the laptop screen, scattered words, and tries to make sense of them.
The ship must have dropped out of hyperspace again, which was confirmed by the Prometheus via General Landry on Earth. The Prometheus’ sensors indicated that approximately forty minutes away at top-speed, the same time as the connection broke, adding to the fact that it was a hyperspace window opening. But the transition wasn’t smooth. Rodney had vividly described immense pressure: the pull of Gs. And, merely ten minutes after the first surge, while they were still in hyperspace and their sensors focused on that area, the Prometheus picked up another surge much greater than the first. Then they found the debris. They lingered a couple of hours to scan it, but the results aren’t uplifting.
No survivors.
And on Earth, NCIS have the possible Goa’uld responsible being held behind locked doors for questioning, and the SGC has sent a jet to D.C. with Dr Jackson and Colonel Carter to assist. The Prometheus is hours away, and Atlantis has no direct help to send. Another suspect and a number of Jaffa are dead, as is one human body recovered where Lance Corporal Snow had been held. NID Agent White is confirmed dead and his family is being contacted.
One good thing, at least, Elizabeth thinks morosely. Snow has been found alive and is currently being treated at a hospital in D.C., and once the Prometheus is back they’ll ring him to Cheyenne to be treated there. The last report—sent by Lieutenant Drew via Cheyenne—listed his injuries as severe but not life-threatening. Dehydration, a broken leg. The shattered kneecap will take the marine hard and Elizabeth has been part of the SGC long enough to know that Snow will want to stick around, but to be part of an AR-team one must be physically fit, and the fracture was complicated. The first surgery was completed less than two hours ago, just in time for the latest databurst. She does not want to lose a good person who has been part of the Expedition since day one. Snow has a degree in computer sciences; maybe they could make that work. But it will not be the same as being part of a recon team.
God, she’s tired. She’s had three cups of coffee since midnight and it’s—she glances at the corner of the laptop—04:56 SAT. In Cheyenne it’s nearing noon, and D.C. somewhere around two in the afternoon. The last databurst had been a somber affair. General Landry had sent his condolences:
“No sign of anything but debris, nothing alive; we’re sorry, Dr Weir, but Colonel Sheppard and Director Sheppard must be assumed to have been killed in the explosion.”
When the verdict came, she hadn’t been alone in the Control Room; Ford, Teyla, and Ronon had been there in addition to the technicians and the odd off-duty marine, and their faces had been drawn. The young Lieutenant had been obviously horrified and trying to deal, and Ronon churned with low, seething rage, the despairing kind which can have disastrous results, his Dæmon baring her long teeth. It was almost lucky that Rodney hadn’t been there but still in his lab working inhumanly fast; Elizabeth knows this City and its people, and no one deserves to be given these kind of news.
But no. No, it cannot be, McKay had insisted later, because he’s here and is fine—relatively fine, anyway—and if they’d been killed then Rodney should have felt something at the destruction of his body. The theory of the stones is that the connection wasn’t meant to hold this long to start with and if broken like that, they’d both die. That’s the simple logical conclusion a scientist would make, and Elizabeth has learned to trust Rodney on these things. The connection with the stones remains intact and nothing with the control device indicates a problem. No. No.
If only she had never let them use the stones, let Dr McKay step through the Gate to Earth, for the Colonel to follow. If only. It’s easy to be wise in retrospect, and the guilt will last for a long time.
She looks at the computer and then stretches and sighs. Her neck and back are stiff from sitting down for so long staring at the screen. She needs a break. They need a break. She stands, rubs at her eyes, and then exits her office with Simon close to her heels. Often, they’ll chat softly and plan things together, but now they are silent. The silent won’t last forever. They have other issues: Snow is recovered, and NCIS have new things to investigate, and Atlantis is still preparing for an attack.
One might come, but not from the Goa’uld. It’s been well over fifteen hours since the last sitrep from Major Lorne. The Aurora is out of sight, albeit a little while ago Chuck reported there was a blip on the City’s long-range sensors. That blip was being followed, a few million miles away, by another one identified as a Hiveship.
Elizabeth crosses the bridge into the Control Room. Activity is constant. Machinery bleeping and blinking. Chuck’s not here, finally convinced to get some rest, and Banks and another technician have stepped into place. Amelia’s hair is neatly pinned up but there’s a hint of tiredness under her eyes.
“Anything new?”
“Not yet, ma’am.”
They’ll dial Earth again in five hours. The usual pace. Unless an emergency comes up. Which, given the time and place, is not unlikely. She has another headache starting to form.
“What’s the last known location on the Aurora?”
Banks brings the data up on the nearest Ancient screen, semi-transparent, hanging beautifully from the ceiling like a technological tapestry. It had taken the Expedition weeks figure out how to properly read the long-range sensors; they had come online when the first Zero Point Module was installed and brought to the foreground when Dr Zelenka noticed its function as a Dart was approaching; a precursor to the siege that followed. Now a particular area of the Pegasus galaxy is shown, a few systems with Stargates marked out with their address. Not all of them have been visited by an AR-team: far from it. “There,” Banks says, nodding toward a blip on the upper left part of the screen. “One hour and fourteen minutes ago we caught them in the ‘535-system. They only appeared for a few seconds, not enough for an accurate fix.”
“How long would it take them to get back to the City?”
“Depends on the route they take. Quickest is four hours,” Banks says. But it’s doubtful they’d take the direct route; Major Lorne is a careful man, and he’d do everything he can to keep the Wraith far away from the City. “The Hive dropped out of hyperspace on the edge of the same system half an hour ago—it’s possible they caught sight of them. They’re not heading toward the City.”
“Okay, good. Let me know if it changes, or if Major Lorne contacts us.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Elizabeth looks at her closely. “You should take a break, Amelia. I haven’t seen you leave the Control Room for hours.”
The other woman only smiles tightly and doesn’t budge. “I’ll be fine a little bit longer. Chuck will be back in a couple of hours to change shifts.”
If there’s one thing Atlantis has in abundance it is loyalty. To their own, to the City, to their safety. No argument will persuade them otherwise, and Elizabeth doesn’t make it an order. Not yet, anyway, though she’ll keep a close eye on Banks and the others who have been here all night, including the team of marines guarding the Gate. Though having the promise of an iris to keep foes out, they always keep a number of armed marines on the lower level to keep an eye on any incoming wormholes. It helps Sergeant Bates sleep better at night—when he’s sleeping, that is. The Sergeant is below right now.
Before, in the beginning of the Expedition, the Sergeant kept a certain distance to the other marines, taking his duties as Head of Security seriously and stressing the importance of rank, of order. Of course, those things are important. Elizabeth had found the rigidness of the military one of those difficult things to deal with at first, but now she’s used to it. In fact, she’s come to understand Bates’ point of view: the known order gives a sense of comfort.
Things have changed, and the Sergeant might have followed Colonel Sheppard’s hands-on approach. He doesn’t lead an AR-team or leave the City very often, but he does join the marines on the floor more often these days. He’s also been to the Alpha Site several times to set things up and run training sessions, brief wargames. It’s not all watched from afar.
Elizabeth descends the stairs to approach him. The Sergeant doesn’t look bored but he’s tense, and his Dæmon stoically sits there, immobile like a statue, awaiting the worst while the man holds a P-90 in a firm grip. The safety is on. He nods in greeting, only momentarily taking his eyes off the inactive Gate which casts a long shadow on the floor from the bright clear light from the morning sun breaking into a rainbow through the beautiful Ancient glass.
“Sergeant.”
“Ma’am. Have we heard anything new?”
“Still no word from the Aurora, I’m afraid,” she shakes her head.
Clearly the Sergeant likes it even less than she does, and he’s been trained as a tactician: he is planning possible outcomes, making contingency plans for various scenarios. The people of the City are well-aware of the constant risks and Elizabeth is ready to order an evacuation to the Alpha Site of all non-essential personnel if the Wraith do approach the City.
“And Earth?”
“McKay is working on the latest data. The Prometheus sent copies of their scans, and he’s sifting through them.”
“Doc, if Colonel Carter and the others didn’t find anything …” the Sergeant starts and Elizabeth hates that she must agree.
“I know, the chances are slim. But,” she says, arms crossed, and she looks from the man to the Stargate in its still glory and all of its implausible promises: “we have to hope.”
No.
Rodney just won’t listen the words when Elizabeth takes him aside to tell him the news.
No. First off, it doesn’t make sense. From what he’s learned about the communication stones, if either of them was killed, the other person connected would be too. However, no one else seems to truly grasp that. They’re now looking at Rodney—at Sheppard’s body—like at a ghost. Well, we’re not giving up, Mer says. She’s perched on the desk next to the monitor. Still running the numbers. They’ve been sent a data package from the Prometheus: scans taken at the site. Crude renderings of debris.
Second … If John’s alive, and that agent person, then they’ve escaped the ship—how? Pod. No, another ship. A Goa’uld vessel of that size would be equipped with Death Gliders, and John would attempt to fly one, of course he would. Even if he’s never seen one of them before in his life. The man doesn’t back down from anything. So: they escaped, in a Glider, and then … and then …
“Rodney,” Radek enters the lab and sighs when seeing him by the board scribbling furiously. “You need break.”
“No. Shut up, I’m thinking.”
“When was the last time you ate? Something more than a sandwich on your feet. Or slept?”
Rodney looks at the nearest screen. It’s connected to one of the computers, one of several running the same scenario. Atlantis is essentially a giant computer, superior to any yet built supercomputer on Earth, and now a portion of all that power is focused on trying to rebuild, backwards, the scans taken by the Prometheus. It’s not an easy task, especially since huge chunks of the original ship seems just gone, obliterated so small pieces that the scanners couldn’t pick them up. After all, even Asgard sensors (the ones they’ve been given, at least) aren’t that powerful. Can’t tell apart atoms.
It’s not that interesting to pick up on grains of sand: the only time they’d be able to pick up on something smaller than a thumb would be if it’s a beacon emitting on a subspace frequency of some sort, like the locators they use for the beaming tech on the Daedalus, or a radio signal that can be traced to a source, or a very powerful electromagnetic field. But small pieces of silent debris? No chance the Prometheus can pick that up, unless the sensors were to be seriously augmented and they had no on aboard with the skills to do that. Maybe Carter could’ve been able to, but she’s on Earth working with those feds. Busy. He impatiently taps at the plasma screen as if it would magically change readouts to give all the answers. It doesn’t, of course.
It would make sense if they tried to escape in a Death Glider. It’s the only way one can walk off a ship in space: in a smaller ship. John would try it, even if he has never seen a Glider with his own eyes in his life. If not for all the other dire ways he could die, Rodney would be worried he’d crash into a meteorite or something. There is no sign of any occupied Glider in the wreckage. In the time it took from the explosion to the Prometheus getting there, a Glider couldn’t have gone too far. The fighters aren’t meant to fly too far from a Mothership; they’re not equipped with hyperdrives, and their lifesupport is limited, and their sublights not nearly as fast as those of even an F-302. That’s assuming the Glider wasn’t damaged or impaired in some way, which is unlikely given the possible proximity to the explosion. It may not have made it out of the bay.
What are the specs again? shields? do they have shields? No. No shields. Rodney groans, physically in pain from all the useless thinking giving no results. Max speed: roughly twelve thousand kph; twelve thousand kph for half an hour would yield … His head hurts, it’s difficult to think. It shouldn’t be difficult to think. … would yield ideally six thousand kilometers; well within the range of the Prometheus’ scans … which way? there’s nothing to navigate by, it’s the middle of nowhere …
They should have seen it. If they escaped in a Glider, they should have seen it. But there is no trace. And Rodney is not dead, which means John is not dead. Then where are they?
He needs more coffee.
“Rodney,” Radek implores again, impatiently. He doesn’t answer.
The marker swirls across the whiteboard, trails of green. Numbers. So many possible trajectories and no obvious way to go, as it was the edge of a vastly empty system. Stars far away, no planet to be seen. And the Prometheus hadn’t been able to pick up anything with their long-range sensors. A Glider wouldn’t possibly have been out of sensor range no matter if it had escaped five minutes or five hours before the explosion.
“I will fetch Carson,” Radek threatens. “To check your head.”
“Hm-mm.” Rodney doesn’t look at him.
The Czech takes in the busy whiteboards and screens and probably knows that they’ll have to physically drag Rodney out of there in order for him to stop, and if Radek is honest Sheppard’s face looks like hell, especially since Rodney hasn’t had a cup of coffee in over three hours. “Have you got an idea?” he asks instead of further insisting that he get some rest.
And Rodney’s shoulders slump slightly. He hasn’t. They’re stumped. He and Mer can’t come up with anything that could’ve saved—that would have saved them—and yet. The data is inconsistent. The stones still work.
They’re missing something.
They’re missing something.
eight hours earlier:
The hallways are crawling with Jaffa.
He’d thought there’d be a mere handful of them; obviously that was wrong. Armed with only a zat and a briefly remembered map of the place, John heads for where he hopes the sarcophagus is placed. If she … She’s got to be alive. He’s not accepting any other alternative. The Jaffa are angry and confused. The first explosion wasn’t the main overload—if it’d been, they’d all be smithereens already—but it took out one of the drives and some other essential systems, crippled them and stranded them in the middle of nowhere. Dropped out of hyperspace too early. There’d been a risk the sheer stress of the action would tear them all apart and the ship scatter across half a galaxy, and John knows he got lucky.
He has no idea where they are. Frankly, he doesn’t care that much—well, he’ll care later, when he’s more coherent and blood not dripping all over the place and his head not swimming, and if they’ve made it off the ship; then he’ll care a fucking lot. Right now? He just wants to get off this damn boat.
Normally, Jaffa march in straight lines and follow orders. They’re running about now in an entropic cascade. Word has spread that their Big Guy in Charge is down and they’re scrambling to make up for it. The alarms sing harshly and John hears them first: heavy footfalls, raised voices. He meets three of them in a corridor on the second level and ne needs to get down to the first. The firefight eats away precious time and he’s nearly caught by the blast of a staff. Barely manages to kick some ass. He’s a mess, and he knows it, and man Rodney’s going to be pissed at the state his body’s in.
They’ve got ten minutes, maximum.
He’s got to finish this.
One of the Jaffa falls, the zat fire hitting its chest plate and dissipating. One he misses, and John figures, fuck, he can’t take them on all at once and in desperation he turns, runs. Tries to run. More like—stumbles and manages to dive out of the way from another staff blast hunting them. Fuck. Every bone every muscle every heartbeat protests painfully. He seals the corridor he’s in off by destroying the control pad next to the door and, shit, that was the fastest route and they’re cut off.
[This part of the plan isn’t going so well], Shy groans. They’re blinking rapidly trying not to lose consciousness, and if the Raven goes, so does John, and that’s goodnight for the both of them.
He leans against the engraved wall and takes a few deep breaths. Okay, so that way’s shut off. There’s … there’s another. To the left, fifty feet, turn ‘round, a stairwell. Probably going to be full of Jaffa too. Awesome.
He cradles the Raven in one arm. They’re no longer strong enough to clutch to his shoulder on their own. They’re both starting to get tunnel vision, narrowing by the minute and darkening blurrily around the edges almost like they’re running out of oxygen. He’s pretty sure a rib is cracked.
They’re very possibly fucked.
But we’ve made it off tighter spots. Got out of that cell in Iraq no problem—He runs, gasping for breath as they take the next bend and there’s no Jaffa (thank fuck) and he ruins that door’s control panel too. Buying time. Even if it might not matter.
Nine minutes.
Never should’ve come back to Earth. Worst idea. Fuck.
[Should use Rodney’s idea. Fire people.]
Close now. Down that hallway and the stairway shaft, completely vertical and John nearly falls into it. Struggles because he needs both hands free to climb without risking breaking his neck, and the ground is unsteady as another disturbance rocks the vessel. They’re trying to bring the engines online again without success. The Raven concentrates and digs their claws into skin and hold on, and he makes the descent.
And he’s just rounded the corner and there’s the door and one Jaffa’s guarding it, and he fires the zat, taking it by surprise, and it’s too easy; of course it’s too easy. He’s just about to crack open the final door when Everett appears.
The zat only nicked him earlier and he woke up quickly, maybe thanks to the faster healing powers caused by the Goa’uld. The man doesn’t look angry or upset or in pain or pleased at this chance of recapturing him. He doesn’t look … anything. The emotionlessness of his eyes is worse than any anger, and John wonders for a spaced second why the fuck the man hasn’t fired the handgun. It’s loaded and safety visibly off and he hasn’t shot once: the man has the chance: the Snake has the chance. If Everett’s come to, Ba’al probably has too, and—fuck. Should’ve shot at the guy twice. Or thrice. To make certain.
He aims the zat somewhat unsteadily at Everett. Something wet and a bit warm trickles over his lip, and it might be blood from his nose.
“Don’t make me shoot you, Colonel.”
Two Jaffa rush into view behind the Colonel. Staff weapons. Well. Fuck.
[… I could. Maybe.] a suggestion and he has a brief vision of a lot of blood and a startled scream as eyeballs are hacked out. Wow. Done that a lot recently. Those Wraith on M31-927 when they ran into Ronon—Ronon’s particle magnum—and they’ve done it a couple of times since on Wraith they’ve run into on other missions. Jaffa are closer to human and easier to kill.
If they don’t try something, they’re as good as dead anyway.
The Raven takes flight toward the Jaffa. There is no wolf to meet them. The flight isn’t agile and easy: each breath hurts, and they’d like to lie down and sleep sleep sleep and John fires the zat. Everett pulls the trigger, and John drops to one knee, and the bullet buries in the wall behind him. Shy ducks between raging fire from the staffs and they’re nearly hit and fuck it hurts.
“Colonel!” he shouts. “You’re still in there, you can stop this.”
“Dillion Everett is dead,” the Goa’uld says. Fires again. So capturing alive is no longer on the table. Ba’al must be really, really pissed off. Good.
It’s not the way anyone deserves to go: soul devoured and strangled by a Snake. John stops talking. It’s no use and his throat is parched and he’s too tired. With the last ounce of his strength, he launches himself at Everett. Not the best plan. A bullet grazes his side and John doesn’t stop and he aims the zat at Everett’s face, but the man is being controlled by a Goa’uld and not bleeding away, and his movements are sharp and swift, not sluggish like John’s. And that swiftness ends up saving them because the Raven has reached one of the Jaffa and the other tries to blow them away, and the dangerous dance causes them to fire their staff weapons in all vague directions and a stray blast tears through the air and into Everett’s back.
Everett shows, for the first time, emotion: surprise. Not pain as such, but pure disbelief at this turn of events, and John nearly collapses on the ground. He’s dizzy and possibly going to throw up, and they’re down to six minutes now. One of the Jaffa is howling and holding a hand to their bloodied face and the Raven spits the eye out onto the ground, and John tastes iron and copper on his tongue.
The Goa’uld stumbles. John fires the zat at the still injured Jaffa, and then at the other one, and then he drops the zat, his hands too tired to hold it and he need to lie down. He doesn’t. He stumbles, half-aware of the still screaming klaxons and the warnings shouted in Goa’uld, to Everett’s side where he’s fallen, and the man’s eyes are glazed with horrifying awareness.
“Colonel. Everett. Sir, sir, wake up,” John tries. has to try. has to. “Wake up, that’s an order.”
The eyes snap fully open and focus on him. The man lays a hand on his chest but that’s not where the injury is and John dimly realizes it’s possible the blast burned through flesh and muscle and sinew right onto bone and severed the spine.
“Major,” is a whisper then and, fuck, fuck the man’s aware of who he is and where and that might mean the Snake is dying. When Snakes die, they tend to release their poison to kill the host but not always. If it’s swift enough. Does it matter? Everett has lost his Dæmon. He’s not like John; he’s had his all of his life and doesn’t know how to properly breathe without them.
“Sir, you’re a marine, you’re a marine. Keep fighting.” John tries to make it an order, useless as it is. Everett’s eyes are bleak and starting to flutter wildly in search for something not there. The physical pain is merely an afterthought, and for a horrible second John recalls the crashed chopper and the dust and Lyle Holland crying out his Dæmon’s name.
Then, for a moment, focusing while John struggles to remain awake, Everett looks at him like at a ghost and his voice cracks. It shouldn’t. This isn’t the man John met and fought in Atlantis, those months ago: this isn’t the man, the marine so adamant and proud so strong and unhesitating, this isn’t the man. This isn’t the Colonel ordering his men to take the City, fearing the Goa’uld had overthrown it;
“… Sheppard. Tell—my wife. and children.” Blood ice cold: he hadn’t known the man had family; “the truth.”
“Sir,” he repeats. The feigned comfort for the dying. “Hang in there.”
“I,” Everett chokes, and blinks like he has forgotten how to cry and now suddenly the impulse is fleeing through his system, a final escape. He becomes a little bit more coherent. “I’m sorry. I killed your father. I killed Lance Corporal Snow. I killed—”
Snow might be dead, no way to know now, but—“Colonel, my father’s still alive, and you need to stay alive too. You’re innocent. What the Goa’uld did, that wasn’t you, and you’ve got to testify, to show ‘em. Colonel, get up.”
And Everett moves swiftly, like only a trained marine would and he’s grabbed the gun before John can stop him and he doesn’t yank it out of his hands, merely aims it upward and the safety’s off, he left it off in case there are more Snakes aboard the ship they haven’t seen and Everett uses his right thumb to pull the trigger. The bullet enters below his eye-socket and at this close range explodes on the other side and John can’t even shout.
“No! No—shit, shit, shit—” No one else was meant to die. The Snake was dead, they could’ve gotten Everett out of here—
But his Dæmon was gone. He was a ghost. He was a ghost.
The ship is groaning and tilting. Almost a flashback: on Deserum, there had been an explosion and the building had collapsed. This ship is about to collapse too, klaxons screaming and a monotone voice repeating in the language of the Goa’uld, warning, warning, warning—
No time to save the bodies, and there are no dog tags as there would be to fallen soldiers. The man stopped wearing dog tags a long time ago. When he stopped being Colonel Dillion Everett and became the host of a Goa’uld. John takes the wedding ring from the man’s finger, an impulse, and pockets it—an illogical action, maybe. Doesn’t matter. Then he grabs the gun, a fallen staff weapon, and trembling stands up. Everything hurts. Everything hurts.
Four minutes.
He hopes it’s not too late.
Jenny can’t recall the sarcophagus clearly.
Only this bright light and a cold embrace of foreign steel and stone, and a beam of energy traversing through her body, and searing pain as she blinked in and out of consciousness. If asked, she’d have no words to describe it without feeling sick.
When she returns to herself, her Dæmon is curled up on her chest and it doesn’t hurt anymore. She isn’t bleeding. The wound if gone without a trace, and when she checks it later there’s no scar. She wants to throw up. She doesn’t. The lid has been pushed open, split down the middle, and there’s Dr McKay—no. John. He claims to be her cousin, sprung into this other man’s flesh and using his voice, and it shouldn’t make sense, but Jenny has had a very long, bad day. He’s got a weapon in his hand like the ones those people—
aliens—
had used, tall spears that aren’t spears. They’d spat light and energy. He is stressed and pale with blood splattered on his face and clothes and he grasps her arm, and her training kicks in and she tries to lash out. He clumsily blocks the blow aimed for his diaphragm with his arm like the move is strange and foreign and yet he knew to do it.
“Jenny! It’s me, it’s Sheppard. Look, I can’t explain but we’ve got to get out of here.”
“What’s going on?”
She sees now that there are two bodies on the floor. Those people (aliens. aliens.) in the mock-up Ancient Egyptian getup. They’re sprawled face-first onto the floor unmoving and there’s no sign of any Dæmon, and Jenny hauls herself over the edge of the stone box—whatever the hell it is—they’d put her in. Everything resonates wrongly. She clearly remembers being shot and the burn and the sensation of falling as blood trickled out of her and she lost consciousness. And then …
“Come on!”
He doesn’t try to touch her again albeit he might want to, might want to grab her wrist and rush them out of here. There’s blood on his hands and face and a motley collection of bruises beneath the pallid skin. Jenny stumbles for a second, she and her Dæmon struggling to find balance. She swallows harshly to keep down the bile from her mouth and manages to say: “Weapon.”
“Here,” the man—McKay—John? says, throwing something—not an alien weapon; a 9mil, familiar. Two bullets left in the magazine.
“What now?”
“We haul ass.” He sounds pained and breathless. “There’s—a Hangar.”
A growing noise. He is already crossing the room and peering through the open door into the corridor both ways. A hand raised, making an all clear-gesture. Military. He knows the language. Dr McKay wouldn’t, shouldn’t, know it. Then he breaks into a run. His Dæmon—Jenny doesn’t think she’d come up with a raven on her own volition—is clutched to his chest in a solid embrace and its wings bloodied, and for a moment she doubts if any memory is real and if this is some mind-game. A dream. Jenny and her Dæmon follow them.
As they take a left turn she catches up and glimpses blood on his throat, faint splatters from faraway. She doesn’t ask questions about it. She doesn’t ask questions about the three bodies outside, two of those alien warriors and a man who could have been a human soldier—a marine, somewhat familiar but this isn’t the time to linger on it.
“Got to hurry,” McKay gasps. “Overload’s in three minutes.”
They don’t run into anything living or dead for over a minute. Just running. McKay—John?—seems to know where they’re going. The hallway opens up, and then there are a pair of wider doors, and he fiddles with the controls for a few seconds. Just as they slide open to reveal a wider, darker room beyond—walls gray and not golden—there’s a voice.
“Colonel Sheppard.”
The announcement comes from behind them, and a blast of energy tears through the air and misses by a hair’s width. Jenny’s breath catches and she throws herself sideways, and McKay to the other, and he kneels behind a tilted pillar decorated with engraved hieroglyphs. He looks close to passing out. A distant part of Jenny’s mind realizes that this place could be what the temples of old in Egypt might have looked like thousands of years ago when the Pharaohs ruled and clad the walls in gold. There are even glowing fires placed at even intervals along the long stretch of corridor, like this were such a temple, and this is the path to the great tomb or a priestess’ lair.
At the other end of the hall is the man who’d taken them. The one with glowing eyes. They are cold and white and he’s no longer in the business suit from earlier, but flowing robes of red and gold. Jenny aims her weapon at him, as does John. That’s the man who kidnapped them, the one who John called an alien.
We didn’t hallucinate that, she thinks, blinking.
“There’s no escape, so you’d better give up.” The voice is oil and smooth silk and ice churning.
“Sorry, but I’d rather not. Not that you haven’t been a good host,” Dr McKay’s voice retorts sharply. His grip of the staff weapon is steady. “Thanks for the meal. Could’ve used better seasoning. We’re off now.”
“I don’t think so,” the Thing says. Thing, because this is no man. This is no human. It can’t be. It is far too distant and cold and there’s no Dæmon.
McKay—John—smirks. “This is our stop.”
The Thing takes a step forward, and Jenny pulls the trigger on instinct. The backlash is familiar and the Thing staggers as the bullet hits its chest and she fires again, at its head. It falls back with a heavy thud barely heard over the cacophony of other noise she cannot fully recognize. Eerie and alien. She wants to go home.
An exhale. “Nice shot.”
And a new explosion rocks the ship and Jenny is thrown backward, losing her balance, and so does John. A weight pushes at her and it could be Gs—she’s flown in cramped craft before and landed on carriers, coming to a sudden halt, she knows the sensations well enough to realize that that’s what just happened: something tugged at this vessel violently enough. To a halt? Or slowing down? It doesn’t matter.
In the few seconds that they’ve been disorientated by it, McKay is already pulling at her. Speaking hurriedly. He blinks several times and his hands are visibly unsteady. “Can you walk?”
“Yeah,” she gasps, breathlessly, staggering back to her feet. “Yeah.”
There’s a body on the other end of the corridor and her Dæmon thinks that was too easy; but they’re running again, running into the open space beyond and there’s a row of smaller craft there, parked alongside one another, their curve alien but their shape almost like a bent fighter jet. The shaking is getting worse, and she realizes that alongside the rumbling noise there’s another, persistent and repeating: an alarm. warning, warning, it shrieks and cries out in a harsh unknown language and they don’t stop in order to listen to it.
Hangar—lifeboats? do spaceships have those?
Everything is shaking, and John bites his tongue to keep himself awake and not be sick. There’s no time to count the seconds remaining: a minute? two? does it even matter? he didn’t think to calculate the explosion’s range. the point wasn’t to escape but to prevent the bastard’s sick plan. survival came second, in the end. they run. he’s dizzy and they cannot fly anymore. they run they run they run. the Hangar isn’t that huge and there’s a row of empty Death Gliders and they rush toward the nearest one;
The Zero Point Module reaches its vast limits and the energy within it breaches the confines. Glass shatters and implodes, and the energy source draws in on itself: a miniature black hole. It takes only a few moments for the process to finish and the place where the Module used to be is gone.
The explosion tears the Goa’uld ship apart from within. Hot compressed air pushes through the corridors and the hull breaks. Remaining Jaffa scramble in vain to hold onto something as the entire ship, section by rapid section, loses pressure and integrity and they are thrown out into the dark vastness of space, taken by its cold embrace. Energy that could have powered an Ancient shield for thousands of years, lent power to a City to fly, is expulsed and exhausted in a matter of seconds. Had the Zero Point Module been at full power and not already nearing maximum entropy, the devastation could easily have put a not merely a planet but a solar system to waste; eaten away a corner of a galaxy. Ten minutes and twenty-one seconds after the initial power surge, the explosion occurs. In vacuum no sound is heard, but the aftershocks make a ripple large enough to be picked up by anyone who is listening. Disturbed radio signals.
This signal travels outward at the speed of light and is nearly at once picked up by the lone Tau’ri ship slowly searching space, quadrant by quadrant, a job for which they are severely ill-equipped. Spacetime is a construct of gravity and of forces beyond human senses, an everything happens all at once: time is an illusion: it is constraining. The Tau’ri chase the source: they will not reach it in time. It has already happened.
The System Lord’s body is trapped and cannot move; the flesh is beyond repair; the symbiote is dying. Yet it is not afraid. It has other means for its legacy to live on; the System Lord has ensured that.
The body is taken by the implosion.
Chapter 23: rage, part one
Summary:
trapped within and unable to be heard, Caitlin Todd is screaming.
Notes:
(2017-08-11) Just a small personal psa: I’m moving to a new town and it’s kind of chaotic, still working out living arrangements (it’s very very crammed right now; I’m writing literally surrounded by cardboard boxes and using a chair as a desk). I've decided to take a break from my studies because of mental health issues and managed to find a part-time job (which is kind of terrifying, the responsibilities of it all, and we'll see how it goes), so from now on I might not be able to write as much for a while. So, just so you know, updates will not be fast or regular (not that they've been). It’s been pretty stressful the last few weeks and if there are any errors in this chapter I apologize for that. Thank you for the consideration.
Chapter Text
xxiii.
rage
part one
trapped within and unable to be heard, Caitlin Todd is screaming.
NCIS Headquarters, Washington D.C. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 18, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 144 days after the Uprising
“Oh, hello, Jethro. I was just about to start cutting him open.”
Dr Mallard is outfitted with white surgical gloves and a plastic faceplate, and there are minute traces of blood and other bodily fluids on both. His tone is uncharacteristically subdued even if he tries to remain his normal uplifting self; but it is difficult in light of current events. The man on the slab is, technically, civilian, but they have been granted (after some argument with various other agencies and backed up by Homeworld Command a.k.a. Homeland Security) authority on this one to perform the autopsy; it’s connected to the current case, and everyone wants it solved as quickly as possible.
The Director’s disappearance has made everyone anxious. She has an important job to do and does not sit around her desk all day for nothing: she is meant to be there, in SatCom, leading ops, watching things over. Present. A constant, not unlike a law of nature. The gap left behind is huge and difficult to fill, and the other agents at HQ want answers and cannot be given the full truth as they aren’t read in on the SGC. Will not be. General Landry wants this contained, casualties limited. There’s already enough of a mess to clean up.
And Gibbs is not very fond of the guy who has temporarily stepped in in Jenny’s stead—Leon Vance is a good agent, sure, been with NCIS since before it was named that, and he is an all right Assistant Director but Gibbs doesn’t trust him the way he trusts Jenny. Vance is an unknown, albeit he has plenty of field experience, and knows to focus on both outside threats as well as looking inward. The Assistant Director has been brought up to speed by their SGC liaison and Gibbs had been there in the office, and heard the outrageous tone of voice when he asked is this a joke?—a lucid reaction to the ludicrous revelation of the Stargate Program.
But the shock, while not faded, has dulled, and they’re all at work trying to solve this case. Vance has been stuck in SatCom for hours, having satellite conferences with this agency and that, evading straight answers. Generals Landry and O’Neill have both joined in briefly to help; at least those two share little love with meddling agencies such as the FBI. Gibbs has an unanswered call from Tobias Fornell on his cell, probably wanting to get some answers from him, instead, this distrustful ally; it can wait.
Mr Alexander Jamesson’s cause of death appears, at first glance, quite obvious—but Gibbs doesn’t believe in the obvious. There’s no such thing.
A few days ago there were many things he’d dismiss out of hand as being too preposterous and obviously lies. He’d be mildly amused when DiNozzo joked about such things, made an annoying movie reference—there’s always one to make. DiNozzo hasn’t made a movie reference within Gibbs’ earshot for hours. Any other time Gibbs might’ve found that relieving. But there are spaceships built in the desert of Nevada and hidden by the government for years, and aliens, extraterrestrial life, and Gibbs is an agent, he’s seen his fair share of bullshit and lies being tactfully spewed left and right in the name of this country or that, and he’s a marine and stoically trudged through it. He’d be happy never finding out about Stargates. He’s not taking it very well, and it’s only partly because this whole mess has led to Jenny being kidnapped and possibly dead. Possibly dead.
The SGC has called the search off. Nothing left to search for, they’d said. Only empty wreckage, void of life; no bodies; nothing. That is enough to proclaim NCIS Director Jenny Sheppard and her cousin MIA, presumed KIA, and, if nothing new comes up, condolences are to be handed out to family and burials prepared for without caskets, and Gibbs’ blood burns. This cannot be true: it cannot be happening. Two days ago, this was just another case; then HQ was attacked, and he struggled watching the security tapes, disbelieving. Signed his name on the agreements, disbelieving. Captured an alien in the flesh of a man, disbelieving;
He’s lost people before. Agents, friends, fellow marines. Family.
Shannon.
Kelly.
He’s not sure he can stand losing Jenny too. It hasn’t sunk in yet. It will never sink in.
He doesn’t even want to imagine the storm coming: for NCIS to lose its Director, it’ll leave chaos in its wake; someone new will have to be reined in and appointed and read in on its secrets; cleared. A new boss. It’d been hard enough to deal when Jenny, only a few months ago, got the position. Though those reasons were for Gibbs personal and he’ll never forget Paris. To think she’s gone now; gone …
These thoughts pass him by as Gibbs enters Autopsy, clutching his fifth cup of coffee for today in his right hand. Ducky hasn’t called yet but he’s got a gut feeling and he needs a sitrep, and to get away from the plaza for a while. They have one man interrogation who has been identified as Eric Human, and the SGC have some of their people enroute to assist with the questioning, despite Gibbs ill feelings about that. No one interferes with his interrogations. This man, according to the SGC, is not a man but the host of a Goa’uld, one familiar to them. They have a name—Ba’al. A history. This alien has attempted to attack Earth. He’s a murderer and a warlord and Gibbs knows that’s only the tip of the iceberg; Dr Jackson spoke very, very quickly, an abbreviated version of basically all of SGC’s history—what’s relevant to the case, anyway—until General Landry cut him off and said he’d better get on a jet to D.C. instead of lingering in the Mountain. So more civilians are coming to HQ, and Gibbs doesn’t look forward to playing host.
As for the other SGC personnel they’ve already met, they’re watching over their fellow marine. Snow was taken to hospital and the two AR-teams went with him, and Gibbs never questioned that. Lieutenant Drew has his number and texted when the first surgery was over with, a couple of hours ago, and everything seemed to turn out well. A relief. The marine didn’t end up in the morgue, and when he wakes up he should be coherent enough to tell what happened; for now, he sleeps. Gibbs will send McGee or Kate to get a statement later.
That’s not the current focus. Gibbs knows the marines will keep watch on the hospital and Snow should be out of harm; he doubts they’ll let anything happen to their fellow marine or let him out of sight. No, the focus is now on the two new bodies in Autopsy and their suspect upstairs. Human’s assistant and possible partner in crime, Mayfield, is dead; Kate took the shot. Resisting arrest: the gray zones which court both hates and loves, but Gibbs doesn’t think this case will ever reach court in the traditional sense of the word. The SGC must remain a secret from the public and if the suspects are all alien … Does the SGC have a place for things like that? Penal colonies on other planets or a storage at Area 51?
Kate is handling it better than he’d expected, and only briefly expressed regret that Mayfield wasn’t detailed alive but not out of emotion but for practical reasons. Interrogating someone who’s dead is something only Mallard can do. Her reasoning had been logical and somewhat detached, and it might be another way of coping with which Gibbs is all too familiar. It’s how he coped after Desert Storm. It’s how a lot of marines cope; and in reality they don’t, and far too few actually care; most of the government certainly don’t.
“What can you tell me, Ducky?”
“Well, it’s not fully conclusive, but let me show you what I’ve got.” Ducky puts down the surgical scalpel back on the metal tray and waves him over to the X-rays lined up on the wall against a backdrop of white light. Palmer patiently waits for the continuation of the autopsy. Gibbs looks at the images. It’s not terribly gruesome. He’s seen much worse. In fact, when they’d found Snow, the LC had seemed to be in hell of a lot worse shape. “A couple of hairline fractures—to the clavicle and here to the ulna. It matches the quite severe bruising. There’s signs of stress to the joins of especially the arms, not surprising given the position he was found in—he could have been left hanging there for days, poor man. And of course the skull; some depression from blunt force trauma. However I don’t believe it is what caused his death. It would have given him a concussion, possibly rendering him unconscious for some time.”
“Then what did?”
“That I’m still unsure of. I have to finish first before I give that verdict, Jethro. Oh! We found some fibers and a single strand of hair which had stuck in the blood on the head before it dried. I sent them up to Abby.” Dr Mallard hums on his breath. “I can tell you something with certainty, Jethro. This man did not die pleasantly.”
He snorts dryly. “Few of them do, doc. Few of them do.”
Just as they were starting to make sense of the puzzle, a whole shitload of new pieces were dumped on them in disarray. Tony’s looked at everything twice. So, LC Mitchell Snow is alive: good. A sort of happy ending, for once, albeit his injuries have to heal and Tony suspects the marine’s active career as a combatant might be over. The first body has been positively identified now as NID Agent Bradley White, his Dæmon masquerading as someone else’s. The second body, Mr Jamesson, was reported missing six weeks ago and now he’s on a slab in Autopsy, and there is Ms Mayfield, and they’ve also got a lot of dead Jaffa.
The SGC had sent Homeland Security—Homeworld Command, actually, according to General O’Neill, its de facto boss—to collect those. Rest of NCIS aren’t in on this, after all. They can’t explain so many bodies wearing golden armor and with alien larvae in their guts.
Once this is over, Tony would like a closer look at the Stargate and at Area 51, because, well, it’s got to be around. Later. Still getting used to it. But he’s an agent, damn it. He’s going to get through this without breaking down in hysterics over the impossibilities. He’s also never going to be able to watch Alien with the same eyes again, or Wormhole X-treme! for that matter, and it makes him kind of nostalgically sad.
“Tony, are you going to stop sighing dramatically?” McGee grumbles. “Five times in the past half hour.”
“Nostalgically, Probie. It’s nostalgia for the innocent days … Which was just a day or so ago.” Huh. Two days ago, he didn’t know about aliens. Two days? Two days, two days since everything and nothing changed. His knowledge of the universe suddenly so much broader, yet the same kind of shit of everyday life going on. Same kind of people walking the street, only now he’s worried he’s got to watch out for parasitic aliens in their midst.
It’s too fucking much of a change, to be honest. Too violently much. Tony stretches his arms over his head and there’s a nice pop but the knot of tense muscle refuses to let go. They’ve been standing behind the one-way mirror for over an hour now, and Gibbs hasn’t gotten started yet. They’re letting Human simmer for a bit. Also, they’re waiting for the jet to land with SGC’s consultants or experts or whoever they are. Gibbs has gone down for a sitrep from Ducky and Abby, and Kate is—somewhere around. Excused herself to hit the head a little while ago, and she hadn’t insulted Tony’s mental age or intelligence when he’d poked fun at her as he usually does, which is a bit odd but Tony can’t quite put his finger on it.
She could be having an off day. They’re all having an off day, with aliens around, and Kate shot a suspect—in self-defense—a little less than eight hours ago. As far as Tony knows she didn’t go home to sleep. None of them did. They got some takeaway, and she barely touched it, but that’s kind of typical since she’s so concerned for her health and eating right and blah blah blah.
Eric Human—or System Lord Ba’al, the SGC calls the guy—sits there. He’s relaxed and smiling a little. It’s a disconcerting smile which Tony has seen displayed before both during his time as an agent and as a Baltimore cop. It’s the smile of the cold ones. The calm mass murderers proudly proclaiming their guilt. The ones who claim they’re innocent but definitely aren’t usually break down and cry a bit pathetically, and Tony hasn’t decided yet which kind is worse.
He hasn’t demanded a lawyer. He hadn’t asked about Mayfield or anyone else, no names. He’d met Gibbs stare when they’d brought him in, under guard and handcuffed, and only said: ‘I always liked a good murder mystery.’ Nice. Guy’s got a touch for theatrics. The SGC said that most Goa’uld do, but Tony has struggled to honestly believe anything said by them.
“And I didn’t know you’re counting,” Tony adds and McGee’s scowl deepens.
“No, I just—it’s irritating and you sound kind of moony.”
“‘Moony’?” Tony asks and chuckles, broad-mouthed. “As if.”
“You are, aren’t you? Actually, I don’t want to know,” McGee continues quickly. “That guy gives me the creeps.”
“Smooth change of subject and I’ll have you know if I was thinking of a woman I wouldn’t be sighing and be ‘moony’ because I’m a masculine guy who doesn’t moon.”
McGee bites back a weary groan.
“And yet you have to keep defending yourself,” Kate’s voice joins them as the door opens and she returns. She walks stiffly and her back is straight and her face serious, and the statement is said like the words don’t quite fit on her tongue. Looks kind of tired. “Where’s Gibbs?”
“Still downstairs,” McGee says. “Should be back any minute.”
“And, yeah, he gave clear orders no one’s to talk with Mr Not-So-Human until he’s back,” Tony adds. He rocks back and forth on his heels and glances at her. “Tried to fix your makeup? That’s what took so long? Think you missed a spot.”
There’s a lot more poison in that glare than usual, which says a lot. Sometimes Tony does step over the line. It’s hard to help, and he’s not aware of it until it’s too late. Kate sometimes seems like she likes him okay, and sometimes like she will fulfill her promise to set him literately on fire. But their banter’s part of the charm. Isn’t it? She’d stupidly lingered at his side when he was suffering from the plague, and she’d been healthy and shouldn’t have risked it. Then Tony thought that, yeah, they’re really, really friends. At the start he’d been into her too but Gibbs put those rules in place for a reason and Do Not Date a Co-worker is an important one.
So, yeah, that didn’t work out. Kate didn’t express that interest seriously anyway and a few weeks down the line it’d just be extremely awkward. Doesn’t mean the flame is completely dead or that he doesn’t care. He does. Maybe he’s bad at showing it. He’s a man, he’s been raised as a man and as a DiNozzo; can’t escape that. He’s not like McGeek who talks Feelings from time to time without laughing it off as a bad joke.
She doesn’t say anything. Just glares for a hot second and Tony could almost swear she was reaching for her sidearm. Then she ignores him completely and crosses the room to stand on the other side, next to McGee. Looks through the one-way mirror at the suspect.
“Had he said anything?” Kate’s question is directed at McGee.
Okay. Cold shoulder. Shouldn’t have said that. Right. He never truly learns. No wonder Gibbs keeps hitting him over the head constantly. Ugh.
McGee shakes his head. “Not since we brought him in.”
Mr Human’s description and photo matches: this is definitely the guy. The one the SGC has been looking for and everything. Tony had thought that a Goa’uld trying to escape on Earth would’ve ditched that host—despite it being handsome enough—for a new one as soon as possible, to avoid suspicion. And establishing oneself as a high-stakes businessman with indirect ties to the US government and military affairs—that’s risky and not at all covert. Takes a lot of planning and a lot of brains, which lets them know that this guy is dangerous, a lot more dangerous than he looks beneath that cold, charming smile.
“SGC’s liaisons sent an update, by the way. Jet lands at,” McGee pauses, glances at his wristwatch, “five-forty p.m.. Should be at HQ in a few hours.”
With Director Sheppard gone, and half-lies told about her absence, Assistant Director Leon Vance has been called in to lead NCIS in her stead. It’s rightfully a mess and the SGC thinks that she could be dead. Tony struggles with the notion. Some alien weirdos kidnap her and now she’s gone? forever? someplace out there in the void of space?
lost?
“Who did they send?” Kate asks.
“Dr Jackson and Colonel Carter,” McGee says. “They’re their foremost experts on Goa’uld.”
Inside this room, doors closed and all manner of recording deliberately turned off. Nothing of this case will be documented the usual way; it’s too full of secrets—they can speak freely without being overheard. It’s weird, all of those alien words out of McGee’s mouth. Makes it more real, somehow. And surreal. Sure, Tony read the stuff sent over, the brief Cliff’s notes, and he skimmed a couple of reports on the Goa’uld and the personnel files on the people at the center of this. Still. it’s never going to be real enough. After the briefings and the shoot-out in the warehouse; it’s not real; a vivid dreamscape, and they’re wandering through it slightly lost. It’s never real enough.
Kate’s expression is hard to read. Tony doesn’t think she’ll talk to him for at least half an hour—once she’s reached her limit, silence is the treatment he gets. Hopefully, Gibbs will be back soon and the order restored.
Order restored. As if. With the Director gone and aliens on the loose, what the hell does order even mean?
Just another day at NCIS, Tony’s Dæmon thinks wryly. She’s got that part right.
Just another day.
Gibbs returns before the thirty minutes are up and, as expected, Kate hasn’t spoken to him. Tony watches with interest as Gibbs calmly enters the room, door closing. Normally a lock would do. This suspect, however, is probably Goa’uld—if there’s still a symbiote in him, that’s why the SGC are coming, to find out. They’ll have more questions to ask, and then they’ll demand Human—or Ba’al, if that is truly his name—is to be taken to Cheyenne Mountain. Normally, Gibbs would protest vividly. Not now. They are not equipped to handle a suspect or prisoner like this. A Goa’uld is stronger than a human, and he is handcuffed and there are two armed agents guarding the door on the other side.
NCIS is still not a prison. HQ is secure, but not that secure.
There is no immediate question. Gibbs puts a folder on the table, sits down, opens it. His Dæmon moves slowly, deliberately, and there’s a glimpse of teeth. Normally, that would make guys quiver inside with fear. They’d start spilling. Human doesn’t look perturbed.
Mr Human says, wryly: “So, please, agent, tell me the charges.”
Gibbs pulls something out of the folder. This detachment, emotionless calculation, is that of a marine on a mission. Tony can’t see his face from here, but guesses the senior agent’s expression is fittingly cold. A number of photographs are lined up: of the two known dead, Alexander Jamesson and Bradley White. Mr Human sweeps a disinterested glance over them.
“Tell me how you killed these men.”
“Oh, I never touched them.” It’s a dismissive statement.
“Let me guess,” Gibbs says. “You didn’t want to get your hands dirty.”
“It can be such a messy thing,” Human says. He sounds amused. As if this is a game. “Death. You look like a military man: I think you’d know, wouldn’t you, agent?”
Gibbs is obviously impatient, but only to the ones who know him well. To others, to strangers, he must seem like an immovable rock that could go on sitting here waiting without fearing erosion for a hundred years. “Then tell me why you had them killed.”
“Motive? Oh, well. Simply put, they were in the way.”
“Jamesson was in charge of the company you were taking over,” Gibbs summarizes. “And Agent White?”
“Very good! Yes. He didn’t want to cooperate and I decided not to waste a larva on him. An unfortunate causality. That happens when you’re at war,” Human says with a twist of his lips, almost a smile. It’s sickening to look at. And the way he’s giving up information: it’s too easy, too easy. “And I am always at war. Your friends could tell you more about that—I recognized the soldiers with you. The cannon fodder sent by General O’Neill and his friends to be defeated by my kind. But you’re curious about this one.” He raises his cuffed hands to take the photo of Bradley Snow. The ruined face. “Agent White had been very naughty, trying to infiltrate my company and bring us down.”
“And the Trust.”
“You know about that? My, you are well-informed.” Human seems gleeful. It’s not right. “I might have some of them under my thumb. I tried to give them direction, purpose, solid leadership. Many of them are useful, but some are far too trigger-happy.”
“That’s funny,” Gibbs says humorlessly, “coming from someone like you.”
Human—no. he is not human, and his eyes flare golden: he knots his hands atop of the table and leans forward, and Gibbs, to his credit, doesn’t flinch when the eyes fucking glow and the voice drops an octave, and Tony hears McGee whisper whatthefuck, is that what Goa’uld actually sound like? Jesus. and Tony tries (and fails) to suppress a shiver, goosebumps rising.
“Blowing up the planet was never my original idea,” the Goa’uld says. “A waste of perfectly good resources.”
“Blowing up the planet?”
Without elaborating, Ba’al only says: “Yes.”
It had taken quite a bit of arguing with the nurses to allow them in. Family only—but team is family, and Tanya Drew is stubborn and headfast and she’s backed up by the others. Before the Expedition, when they’d been a team for a few months exploring the Milky Way, they’d decided that in case of something like this happening they’d be each other’s medical proxies. Easier that way. A team gets close quickly; much more quickly than any of them had anticipated. A phone call and a couple of emails later things were cleared up, and AR-9 hasn’t left Mitch alone since. Standing guard;
AR-4 will pop in to say hello once Mitch is awake from surgery but that’ll be at least a couple more hours, and the docs insist they mustn’t crowd him. The rule isn’t followed to the dot, the team hanging around, waiting, watching. They won’t leave him on his own. Belatedly, Drew thinks about how Mitch is going to be confused and annoyed when he’s coherent enough to realize he’s been taken to a normal Earth hospital. In the US, no less, though she’s certain that the SGC can clear things up if he hasn’t got the insurance to cover it. Hell, the team will step up and clear the bill, no problem. It’s not like they’ve spent last year’s pay on anything at all. Atlantis is a cheap place to live in terms of dollars or other Earth currency.
Another downside is of course the lack of Ancient scanners and other medical tech of alien origin the SGC has gotten their hands on or developed. There’ll be scarring that can’t be knitted together fully and made to disappear, and the last the doc said was the break wasn’t clean. His knee was shattered and the joint is to be replaced with a prosthesis, and the procedure is complicated and will take months with several surgeries to follow. Mitch isn’t going to be on his feet for a long time. He’ll recover, the docs promised, but at what cost? Will he be able to return to the City and the team on active duty?
There’ll be an angle they can make work, Drew hopes. Mitch is team and they can’t leave him behind. But he’s a marine and if it’s bad enough the injury is enough for a medical discharge. Honorable. If they can clear his name. There’s a whisper: the SGC thinks that Mitch was responsible for the hacking into the SGC’s mainframe, a serious offense, but it was done under coercion and Drew knows he’s innocent. There’s no way in this universe that Mitch is a mole, a liar. No.
Once he’s okay and cleared, and back in the City—they’ll make it work. Computer whiz, he could work in the Control Room. Maybe they could talk with Dr Weir and the Old Man about going on different ops, not just as a recon team but they could go on calmer, more peaceful missions. Visit allies and barter for food. Still be out there, but—easier, for Mitch’s sake, until he’s recovered. Reassignment for the team; they’re not just going to leave him behind and replace him.
They’ll make it work.
The beeps of the machines are a lull. He’s stuck in the ICU with tubes running down his throat supplying him with oxygen, and he’s sleeping off the sedatives. Other than the knee, there are lacerations and bruises and a busted clavicle and a couple of broken fingers, the start of hypothermia, and on top of that severe dehydration. He was stuck in a cell for—Tanya’s almost lost track of time; Gate lag, followed by these intense days—what’s it today? the eighteenth? That makes … four days. Four days since Mitch’s disappearance. Only four days? Shit. A few more hours and Mitch might not have made it.
He looks like shit. His Dæmon is only slighter better off: she’d been well enough to walk, albeit slowly, on her own between the surgery theater and the ICU, and no one’s allowed to touch her, not even team and definitely not some doctors or nurses. After all that’s happened, it’s doubtful Mitch and his Dæmon will let each other out of sight for years.
Gamble sits on the left side of the bed on one of those rickety plastic chairs threatening to fall apart beneath him, half-asleep. His hand is loosely touching Mitch’s near where an IV line breaks through skin carefully taped over, like he’s in the middle of checking for a pulse. He’s kicked off his boots.
They’d ditched their weapons and most of their gear at NCIS HQ. Don’t want to storm into hospital armed to the teeth—visibly, anyway. Drew has her handgun and a knife, and she knows without looking that Herschel is similarly armed. Someone hurt their teammate and if some sonofabitch returns to complete the job, they’ve got to come through AR-9 first.
Herschel has stopped pacing. She does that, when she’s stressed. She’d murmured a prayer in German when the surgery started and Mitch, fighting the sedatives, had blearily asked if she was cursing at him again. Called out their names as if to check they’re truly there, in the flesh. She’s leaning against the windowsill. It’s a private room, a relief and also making the security bit easier. Part of Drew can’t let it go: this is not a safe place, this is like stepping onto an alien world and they’ve got to set up a perimeter. They take turns resting.
MacGrimmon poked his head about an hour ago and asked if they wanted anything; he’s got Kemp and Gladys doing a food run because hospital food sucks, and take-away is hotter and greasier. At least since they’re on Earth they remembered to bring their wallets and not just their dog tags for ID—in Atlantis wallets have no purpose—and managed to scramble together enough cash to feed them all. Drew has gotten so used to Atlantis: the lack of cars, and the ease to just pop into the mess hall and take a bite from whatever’s being served that day, and the minimized amount of people you can run into. This part of Earth is full of strangers.
Mitch’s pulse is steady. His Dæmon snores softly: a sign that they’re relaxed and haven’t been so for days. Drew wishes Mitch was well enough to hug; if she did, she’d have trouble letting go. AR-9 have been a team since the start of the Expedition, met and trained beforehand and none of them new to the SGC. They’ve never been this close to breaking, to losing one another. She remembers in the beginning, the early days: they lost people. Marines against Wraith. Against nature itself, freak accidents, an earthquake, a torrent. Once in a horrible moment against other marines. Against Genii. When AR-3 was sundered during the Storm —at least the Old Man killed the bastards responsible, but the scar has never truly gone away, even if the new AR-3 works too; not the same, but they have moved on, no longer grieving angrily but remembering friends with warm fondness. But Tanya is still angry, a deep hum in her bones; she’s going to be until this is all sorted. Part of her is pissed that, after capturing the Snake, none of them could follow back to NCIS HQ; but they can’t leave Mitch, either, unwatched. Maybe later she’ll send Herschel or Gamble to check, ask questions, but they’ll have to reign in themselves too to not act irrationally, on impulse. If the guy they caught truly is a Snake—and Drew’s pretty sure he is—well, none of them would feel too bad about pulling the trigger on him. For the host, yeah, but there’d been no sign of a Dæmon. The man is a walking corpse already.
There’s a knock on the door before it opens, and Drew is on her feet and has her handgun drawn before the hinges have completely turned, and her Dæmon is ready to pounce at the attacker but then they spot familiar figures and halt the sharp movement.
“Just me, Tanya,” MacGrimmon says and if he could he would’ve held his hands up in a gesture of peace. However he’s busy clutching a box of pizzas. The rest of AR-4 are there too, each of them bearing gifts.
She relaxes and holsters the weapon. “Come on in.”
“Think the docs will kick us out,” Gladys says but steps over the threshold. Looks like she’s carrying Chinese, and there’s a box of Thai and some sushi and drinks for all. Looks like AR-4 decided to raid half of D.C.’s fast food and take-away places, unsure who’d like to eat what. In Atlantis, everyone gets pretty used to eating good, properly cooked food—a lot of it with alien ingredients, but far better than half-cold MREs. A perk of the job, which might have spoiled their taste buds a bit.
The food is distributed, and Gamble is shaken out of his reprieve at the warm smell. Drew can’t quite recall their last meal with clarity. At the SGC, in the shadow beneath the Mountain. Yesterday? before being ringed to D.C. by the Prometheus. Yeah. They’ve been so focused on finding Mitch that pausing to eat hasn’t had priority. She thinks she had a powerbar in the elevator at NCIS HQ before raiding that industrial site. They didn’t bring MREs.
“I’m starving!” Gamble cries, and Tanya hears the dramatic exclamation mark clear as a bell; he’s tired but acting like everything’s fine, and that’s how Gamble deals. They all have got their ways. Personally, Drew is more for taking out her anguish at a dummy in the gym, but nothing of the sort is available right now. “Is that—”
“Veggie, yeah,” Kemp says and hands over a pizza box. “And plenty of bananas.”
“You’re a sick, sick man,” Herschel says and wrinkles her nose in disgust. “Who puts banana on pizza? That is like heresy and should be punished.”
“Guys,” Drew says, and the discussion falls away, after a murmured Each to their own from Kemp, and a You are all so disgusting from Herschel.
MacGrimmon hadn’t gotten into the argument and only looks at Mitch silently, assessing the damage. He looks a little better but only a little: his face’s been cleaned up, and his face isn’t as pale, but man if he doesn’t look like a mess and there are sutures across the bridge of his nose and down his jaw. Drew has long admired Mitch’s ability to see things on the bright side despite his lack of smiles, this continuous optimism, and he’s probably going to stoically pretend the scars don’t matter. And they shouldn’t, it’s not his fault, but Drew can’t look at him without remembering and feeling a white-hot rage pulsing right beneath the surface.
She can’t believe that it’s nearly over. Mitch is here. He is alive, he’s safe; they’ll keep him safe. NCIS has a Snake in custody and SGC are on their way to deal with it, and once the Prometheus gets here they’ll return to the Mountain and things will be okay.
Persistent buzzing. Takes a second to remember it’s her phone. She pulls it out of her jacket pocket and glances at the number before answering. The teams are unusually quiet: there is no bickering, no talking about the latest City rumors. Just quiet. They’re listening.
“Tanya Drew. … Yeah, still here. No, not yet. Several hours, at least, from doc’s last sitrep … Yeah. We will.”
It is a brisk call and she hasn’t the energy to be irritated with the agent’s dismissive nature; she’s got a feeling it’s not stress, Gibbs is simply always like that and doesn’t know how to properly say goodbye over the phone. Doesn’t matter.
Herschel gives her an expectant look, and Drew says: “That was Agent Gibbs; they want to send someone over to interview Mitch.”
“Figures. Did they say a time?”
“No. We’ll have to see when he feels up to it,” Drew answers.
“Prometheus will be here soon,” MacGrimmon speaks up suddenly. “I got a call from the Mountain while we were out on the food run. Their ETA’s 20:00 hours local time.” There’s gravity to the words unexpected, and Drew suspects there’s a terrible reason for the ship’s quick return. Her belly feels like it starts sinking again just as it’d risen.
Fuck.
Kemp looks brightly hopeful. “So they found the Old Man and—”
And MacGrimmon shakes his head curtly. “No. They said there’s nothing left to look for. Something about an explosion destroying the ship. They stayed to scan the area for a few hours, but …”
Gladys’ expression is pinched. “That’s … Shit.”
“Yeah.”
Funny thing, Drew thinks suddenly: she’s never gotten attached to a CO. Felt any abundance of loyalty, more than command itself demands. Most of them were okay and a few had no clue what the fuck they were doing and that led to messed up ops, conflicting orders and a general clusterfuck. Not that Atlantis is a typical, normal base with a typical, normal working environment. Women marines take on roles within the SGC that wouldn’t work anywhere else, in the middle of combat, commanding posts which would ordinarily be given exclusively to men. It’s a harsh place, but more open, more inclusive than anyplace else she’s so far served, and the adventures in space are only part of the job. She, like everyone else, has been forced to learn and adapt to completely wrecked and unforeseen situations.
Hell, they’re trying to wage a war with a super-strong alien species who has over sixty ships in their quadrant of space alone versus their single City and, as of late, their single Warship, and they’re still trying. Trying. Trying. Leave no one behind is the mantra which the Colonel keeps insisting and they follow those words to the dot. There’s a horrible irony in it all, the guy ending up dying in the galaxy he left behind. Alone. Without his team or anything;
She’s been there from the start, they all have. When Colonel Sumner and Sergeant Bates got taken by the Wraith along with Teyla Emmagan and several Athosians—when they didn’t know what Wraith were; didn’t understand—Drew and her team hadn’t been part of the rescue operation. Back then, Colonel Sheppard was the Zoomie nobody wanted to be there, outside the chain of command and the outlier, unpredictable, unwanted, a wild card, and Colonel Sumner hated his guts and everyone knew it. It was no secret, and when Ford and Stackhouse and the others returned with the news of Sumner’s death—Drew didn’t know how to react. How does one react to news like that? They’d narrowly escaped death by drowning, found out about Wraith, and Sumner was dead. A new enemy and they’d lost their military commander; Dr Weir might be an okay leader but they didn’t know her yet either and she’s a civilian, not a trained CO.
Everything was unclear and dangerous, and the then-Major had stepped up and swallowed that bitter pill of leadership and responsibility; Weir’s request, and Drew had wondered for a brief second if there was some kind of conspiracy, since it was, according to rumor, Weir who wanted the Zoomie there in the first place. But things changed. They adapted. Sure, there’d been a lot of anger and unsoft words shared among all the marines and the Major must’ve heard most of it, directly or indirectly.
They got used to it, they all did. Ford vouched for him. To Drew, that was very important. Ford might be young but he’s a marine with good senses, good training, good instincts. They all joked about his hero-worship of everyone older than himself, which was easily ninety-nine percent of the base, but they took him seriously too. And when he said The Zoomie’s an okay CO; he’s good at leading the team, well, things fell into place. They were cut off from Earth and in no real position to argue, anyway. There was no other Major around even if a Major shouldn’t have been in charge of something so huge. Especially one without prior Gate experience: that’s simply asking for trouble. Drew had been startled when realization crept up on her that she was okay with having him as CO. Any dafter decisions were smoothed out with the help of Ford and Weir, when the civilian got involved: she’s their uppermost leader, after all, and cares about everyone, not just the civilians, the scientists.
Oh, some at the SGC will pretend to mourn but there won’t be any remorse or true bitterness. Not from the Generals and certainly not the IOA. They’ll be overjoyed to put someone they like better, someone more trustworthy, in charge. Oh, yeah. That’s a storm about to come, Drew’s sure, and shit will hit the fan. Things rearranged. People shipped out and in and who the fuck knows who the new CO will be? their ways? their loyalties? Not looking forward to that.
“Y’know,” Kemp goes on, carefully but still being optimistic: “the Frontiers always get in deep shit and crawl out fine. More or less fine. So. There’s a chance.”
“The Mountain and Prometheus don’t seem to think so,” MacGrimmon says and rubs at his brow as if trying to push the weariness away or physically battle a headache. “They called it off and were going to contact the City right about now.”
DeSalle frowns. “Hey. Those stones things they use—if the grouchy doc’s okay, wouldn’t that mean they’re both okay?” Thinks like that: rationally. Drew finds relief in having people like that around, grounded in reality, and putting to words the absurdness that is their daily life, spaceships and all. Stuff people shouldn’t have to deal with, think about. DeSalle asks those important, grounding questions, a sort of whatthefuck, this can’t be happening, got to find a way to deal.
“I didn’t hear anything about that,” the Corporal says somberly. “I’ll check in a couple of hours, after they’ve talked with Dr Weir. But—they called off the search. Y’all know what that means.”
They do. Drew sighs.
Once they’ve heard from the City they’ll know for sure. Then they’ll know for sure. Drew isn’t sure which would be worse: this lingering uncertainty or a full-fledged verdict. Even as they speak Dr McKay could be dead, and the Old Man, and then what? They’ll have to start over. Again. SGC is a lot about starting over, trying again; but in Atlantis, well, they’ve felt somewhat safe from that shit, cut off from the Earth and its chaos, a machine running on its own.
She glances at the occupied hospital bed. Peacefully, quietly, oblivious to all of this and feeling safe for the first time in days, Lance Corporal Mitchell Snow sleeps.
His pulse is steady.
“My son overheard one of your marines talking about the Prometheus returning. Please be frank with me, General.”
General Landry has delivered bad news before; comes with the job. As Churchill once said: we must do our duty, and right now his is not to speak with the President on the Red Phone about the possibilities of a disaster averted, or award soldiers with medals for their bravery even in death. Here is a father who has lost a son, and Landry is a father himself and doesn’t want to imagine the possibility of losing his daughter.
Patrick Sheppard is bouncing back, his vitals looking much better which the docs in the Mountain are pleased about. In a few days he’ll be out of this bed and on his way back home, but burdened with the shocking truth of the Stargate as well as this loss instead of a physical bleeding wound. He, his eldest son David and his fiancée have all stayed here, refusing to leave though they could be released to an ordinary hospital. No, they wished to stay, to be told truth and follow the investigation. They have been brought up to speed, at least the details they could stomach.
Landry had found it difficult to swallow when he first was introduced to the Stargate Program; and he’d had plenty of people around to tell him, people he trusted, of the same rank, some people he knew, and there’d been days of being given evidence. It wasn’t an immediate catastrophe or disaster which brought him here. It was a slower step—albeit a large leap.
“The ship we had been tracking seems to have self-destructed, leaving no survivors. The Prometheus stopped searching after two and a half hours. As far as we know, your son and niece were both aboard. The chances of them escaping were next to none,” he says.
From what he can tell, he doesn’t think Mr Sheppard would like too much adornment and softening of the edges; he isn’t that kind of man. In that regard, he has something in common with his son, but otherwise, Landry cannot honestly see many shared traits between the business mogul and the Lieutenant Colonel. If that’s differences in upbringing or personality or by design, from career choices perhaps, Landry cannot say.
He may not know the Colonel well, but he’s read his file and has never really warmed up to his position in Atlantis. Someone like Colonel Caldwell would be more reliable, in his opinion, much more steadfast with SGC regulations; but given what happened last time someone tried to step in, he isn’t eager to try again. That was a mess he doesn’t want to repeat. Thankfully Dr Weir’s negotiating skills smoothed out the aftermath considerably. He likes her. She’s got spunk and the guts to face the IOA without blinking. Bureaucrats.
Mr Sheppard takes the news with grace and, like most men of their generation, doesn’t really know how to shed tears unless in so extreme shock they cannot even speak. Landry’s wife never liked that about him. You bottle things up, she’d said, it’s not healthy. Afterward he wished he’d tried harder, but she might’ve done the right thing filing the divorce.
On the other side of the bed, David Sheppard clutches his fiancée’s hand tightly and doesn’t say anything. Their Dæmons sit tightly together, almost touching.
“My condolences.”
“Thank you, General,” Mr Sheppard says steadily but a little hoarsely. “For your honesty.”
“Blowing up the planet? What the heck does that mean?” Tony frowns. “Like the Death Star blowing up Alderaan?”
“Nothing could do that in reality,” McGee protests; ignores the reference of a, for once, good movie he too has seen. “This isn’t a movie, Tony.” But then he digresses. Like has become a sci-fi reel. He saw the pictures of the Stargate. Sure, those could be faked. He saw the security footage of Director Sheppard’s kidnapping: harder to fake. Then he found the safe in the office, and cracked the computers with Abby, and the data hadn’t lied. “It could be an empty threat, something to shake us up and distract us. For all we know he’s lying and toying with us,” he says. “We checked him before we took him to HQ, he wasn’t armed.”
“I don’t think the guns to do that would fit on a person,” Tony says. “It’d take something the size of a moon.”
No, McGee thinks. Not necessarily. Hadn’t the SGC mentioned something about an alien energy source so powerful it was like a miniature black hole stuck in a glass bottle? McGee’s not that kind of scientist, but a black hole could destroy the Earth for sure.
They’re waiting for the liaisons to get here. Updates on the phone; McGee keeps in contact with Dr Jackson. Stuck in traffic. The man had complained over the phone that ordinary jets are so slow and that if the Prometheus was here, this would’ve gone so much faster. A statement that shouldn’t have made sense, but did. The interstellar craft is still on its way back to Earth. Back to Earth. it had even sounded normal coming from Dr Jackson. Like he speaks like that all the time: ‘Oh, what have you been up to this weekend? Me? Nothing much, just took a spacewalk or two.’
Gibbs has sent Kate to get a statement from Snow. Got a text about twenty minutes ago from Lieutenant Drew who said he’d woken up and felt ready to answer some questions. That leaves him and Tony to greet the two travelers. Colorado Springs isn’t that far, especially after the revelation that those two have been to the other side of the Milky Way and back, but they’re probably just as knackered. McGee slept for less than two hours last night. They’ve been working practically non-stop since the kidnapping.
“I see them,” Tony says. “By the security check.”
It’s raining again, a heavy drizzle and McGee pulls his jacket closer around himself and peers out. A sleek black car, rental. Dr Jackson said it was easier than taking a cab or having NCIS pick them up. Without a driver from the outside they could talk freely. The car comes to a halt and the windows are pulled down, IDs showed, and the marines guarding the gate make sure the car isn’t hiding any unauthorized weapons or other dangers. After a little while they’re allowed to pull up onto the visitors’ car park, and two people step out. Dr Jackson is casual in jeans and a jacket, but Colonel Carter is in her dress blues. There’s a single small bag for both of them; obviously they travelled light.
They reach the stairs. Carter is tall and blonde and McGee tries not to look at her legs, because she reminds him a bit of Kate and Kate would kick his ass if he stared. They shake hands. They’d been introduced before, of course, in the Mountain, but she’d been in cammies then, and the agents had been trying to swallow the newfound truth about Stargates. Too distracted. Overwhelmed.
They step inside from the rain and go through a second security check, and the metal detector bleeps and Dr Jackson exclaims: “Sorry, that’s me.” He pulls out a 9mil which had been stuck in his belt and deposits it on an offered tray. “Force of habit. Jack practically drilled it in me not to go anywhere without it.” Which is a bit weird. McGee didn’t think the archaeologist would be armed.
Eventually, they’re inside, and they head straight for Interrogation One through the dimly lit corridor. Tony gives them a sitrep. They haven’t missed much, except the mention of blowing up the planet.
Carter seems a bit concerned but not unnerved. Faced this kind of thing before? Neither agent wants to imagine it, because it might mean the Earth’s been in danger and they’ve been wholly unaware. “We’ll have the Prometheus scan for weapons and energy build-ups as soon as they’re back. He didn’t mention anything more detailed about it?”
“Nope.”
“Seems a bit counteractive,” Jackson says. “I mean, from what we can tell, Ba’al likes Earth and wouldn’t gain anything from the destroying the planet. Think he means the Chair?”
“Uh, sorry, what chair?” McGee cuts in as they step into the elevator after a brief retinal scan. He presses the button.
“An Ancient weapons platform in Antarctica; we discovered it a couple of years ago,” Carter says, the doors closing and the elevator starting to move. “Its drones could cause massive damage and, theoretically I suppose, be enough do destroy a planet if the drones were in enough quantity. But we don’t have near enough that many drones—we’d be talking a massive amount, hundreds of thousands if not millions of them. And there is no Goa’uld weapon that we know of capable of such destruction. The only thing I can think of would a ZPM overload; we’ve seen them trying to use that trick before. Daniel’s right, though. Destroying Earth would be counterproductive as it stands. Sure, it’d destroy the SGC, but also the many possible hosts that could be for his benefit, and all the knowledge we’ve got in our databases and such.”
“Besides, a Goa’uld would rather enslave us all,” Jackson says. McGee can’t tell if he’s joking. Which is kind of terrifying. “Did he specify that it was Earth he meant?”
“Uh, no. Actually, no,” Tony says. “But what other planet could he mean?”
“Given the size of the universe, Agent DiNozzo,” Carter says mildly: “it could by anyone of millions. If it is indeed a threat at all. All Goa’uld are nefarious liars.”
Agent Todd steps out of the car and enters the hospital. The sun shines. It hasn’t rained at all today, and she passes by the people in the waiting room without looking at them. Her face is pleasantly placid and she greets the nurse behind the desk with a gentle, curt smile.
She had a lot of practice in Mayfield’s flesh. That woman had been weaker and resisted only momentarily before shuddering into sleep, and severing the Bond between human and Dæmon had been easy, the slice of a knife through thin thread.
This one, Athena feels, fights. Oh, she fights so sweetly, remaining aware of every thought and breath and false turn of lips. But, strong as she may be, she is not strong enough. No human is. They think they are, but they are not. Pathetic little things. Athena has moved from host to host many times. Some she liked better. Tall and beautiful, strong, already in positions of power; those were the things which drew the Goa’uld to them. She is only a minor piece now. She is not among the powerful System Lords, but the System Lords are dead: Ba’al is the only one left, and if they must serve him … It is not graceful; it is humiliating; but it must be done to survive. If she does not bow, Ba’al will destroy her;
She could of course let him rot. The SGC are here and she only managed to get away from NCIS HQ in time. She knows well of Colonel Carter’s past; she cannot risk meeting her, not until she has another solution. Agent Gibbs sent her to interview Snow. What an irony. Very fitting.
The end will be good.
Athena can access every scrap of memory and knowledge of her host. She has studied only that which is important: the people of NCIS, their names, skills, Caitlin Todd’s relationships with them. She’d deeply savor sweetly Todd’s horror if she killed them, one after the other. Todd knows so little about the SGC it’s laughable, and not very useful. Athena has learned more on her own, from slow research, from Ba’al, and from when the marine so kindly hacked into the main database for them, leading them straight to the information Ba’al needed for his plan. He did not tell her all the details, but she has figured it out. Oh, she has figured out much more than he thinks. He is too old and haughty in his brilliance, and that arrogance will be his downfall.
Ba’al truly is the last System Lord; she will be his right hand, and, eventually as he faces his demise, she will rise above. It works out perfectly. Perhaps she shall keep this host through it all. She rather likes it. Caitlin Todd constantly tries to scream for help, remaining aware for each shuddering second but refusing to give up, give in. Yes, it is sweet. Even among Goa’uld Athena has been seen as needlessly ruthless, which was why Ba’al approached her: they share like mind, and do not mind getting their hands dirty. Their hosts’ hands, as it were.
The receptionist is stressed and busy. Athena shows her Todd’s badge. Always the perks of possessing feds, police, and other such people: they have easy access, and people will not ask many unwanted questions, if any at all.
“Agent Todd, NCIS. I’m here to speak with Lance Corporal Mitchell Snow.”
“Let me check,” the receptionist says, cradling a phone under her ear and checking a file in a folder at the same time. It takes a moment. Athena looks around, bored, smiling blandly all the while: imagines idly the times when she would not have needed this subterfuge. She was a Goddess and she strode through the streets, towering over her subjects and they worshipped her and built monuments. Human memory still recalls her name, but only as a shadow, as a myth; it is abhorrent. She deserves more.
Then the receptionist turns back to Todd, completely unsuspecting of any ill thoughts. “Yes, he’s awake and ready to see you. They’ve moved him out of ICU. Corridor nine, room twelve.”
“Thank you.” The simple words brighten the nurse's face. Inwardly, Athena reels with disgust. All these humans, and hospitals are one of the worst places: full of them and their tainted broken bodies, the smell of antiseptic. A Goa’uld needs none of that if they have a sarcophagus. “Are the rest of his team here?” she asks pleasantly, pleasantly, in the same manner Todd has done countless of times during previous investigations.
“Yes, he has several visitors. His—team? yeah; a Lieutenant Drew is here, she introduced them to the doctor handling Lance Corporal Snow.”
This complicates things. But Athena is good at improvising. Thanking the receptionist once more, she glances at a map of the building displayed on the walls and locates the room, and she walks calmly in the right direction, Todd’s Dæmon obediently following on a leash. No one sees it: no one cares. They are too busy to care, to notice that anything might be amiss. A stairwell carries her to the second floor, and she turns right. Corridor nine is less crowded than the bottom floors. A few doctors and nurses rushing to and fro in a hurry; a patient in scrubs walking slowly, pushing a wheeled IV stand in front of them; a mother with a child worriedly waiting, sitting outside a closed door. The stench of humanity is immense, and she does not plan to linger longer than she must. She would like to get off this filthy rock as soon as possible.
The news reaching them from Cheyenne Mountain was a blow. Not completely, however; but a blow. It will put things on a slower track, but it is still doable. Some alterations must be made … and she must speak with Ba’al, sooner rather than later. Find the opportunity, which is difficult now that the SGC are at HQ. She mustn’t cross paths with Carter. She dearly would like to rid the universe of the members of SG-1, those who have caused the decline of her race and dominion—if she could, she would start with Carter. Then Jackson, the filth who’d caused her kind so much trouble and reduced them from the pinnacles of power they had always held; and O’Neill and the Traitor, who had started a revolution bringing down Ra’s ship and freeing slaves. So much to pay for.
Or … shall she? She considers it, the possibilities. Ba’al does not yet know that his plans have changed; as far as Athena is aware, Ba’al believes the ship with the Prime to on its way to the Pegasus galaxy, having evaded the SGC. She could work with this knowledge to her advantage. But if she leaves Ba’al in the hands of NCIS, then surely he will eventually tell them that Mayfield was a host, and he knows that she—like any Goa’uld—would do anything to survive. Including taking a new host.
First things first.
Eventually she finds the right room. Hears it, first. Several low voices, a heated discussion. Shadows through the clear glass reveal two full SG-teams—all, by the looks of it, marines; soldiers, not merely meek scientists with innocent hopeful gazes—and their faces, those within view, are somber. They speak in low voices. One of them is pacing, another fidgeting, a third rests his elbows on his knees leaning forward and staring at the floor heavily. Athena forces herself to be entirely calm. These people are in a hospital looking out for their own. If they are armed, it is not heavily. She has killed more than eight swifter than they could call for a ninth to help them. If she could, she would have gotten her hands on the zat’nik’tel: but the SGC took it, rather than letting it end up in NCIS’ evidence locker. Such a shame. This means she cannot use any of these as potential hosts. Not that they would be very useful, except as a means to escape through the Stargate. A back-up plan.
She knocks on the door frame, and the people within silence immediately. Tense: and she sees movement, the woman closest to the door reaching for a sidearm, no doubt, even as she turns, and her Dæmon bares its teeth despite being quite small, not at all appearing very dangerous.
But then they see Todd’s face and her badge, and relax. She knows their faces from Todd’s memory. One of the men, DeSalle, says: “We’ve been waiting for you, ma’am.” and lets her in.
The room is cramped with so many people in it. Some marines stand; some sit in plastic chairs. They have not changed out of military clothes, though one of the women has kicked off her boots. Lance Corporal Snow lies in the bed. He is pale and tubes supply him with extra oxygen, and he is tired and each bruise pronounced. He is sadly awake and alive. Athena greets him with a smile and introduces herself as Agent Todd, NCIS, here to take his statement, an account as full as he can make it of the last few days. Ask questions. Harmlessly.
Trapped within and unable to be heard,
Caitlin Todd is screaming.
“Ah. Colonel Carter, Doctor Jackson. Finally we meet face to face. I must say, I admire your work, Dr Jackson.”
Ba’al is sickeningly polite. He is not the image of a warmongering alien lusting for power. He smiles. His host does; but Gibbs has learned better, and to think there’s some creature, controlling the flesh … The lack of Dæmon is proof enough, to most people. Until the man—the alien—was sitting in their interrogation room, Gibbs didn’t really believe it. He has never looked at the sky and imagined the stars full of life. It’s simply a thought that’s never crossed his mind.
He’d normally not have non-agents on his side of the table. He understands why they ought to be here, though. The SGC’s expertise might be needed to explain some of Ba’al’s more cryptic statements, references none of the agents could understand without spending days or weeks or months reading and learning about the Program and the Stargate’s history. The alien is more talkative than Gibbs expected he would be. It is as if he has nothing to lose, and in this game, he’s smugly in control of most of the pieces; he does not seem to feel fear or anything. Not even anger. Merely this … calm. This sickening, smiling, polite calm. He could be reciting the weather report; he could be describing the explicit torture of an individual; he uses the same tone of voice. Somewhat inquisitive. Calm. calm. calm.
Gibbs can keep his cool. But he’s a marine, at heart, will always remain so, and this is the kind of guy he wants to send to a pit to never return. Makes his blood sing and his hands long for a sniper rifle and the pure unabashed simplicity of it;
“You know why you’re here, so we can skip the pleasantries,” Colonel Carter says. Her cover’s off and her blonde hair shines starkly under the white lights illuminating Interrogation One. She is strict, impeccable, and she looks brighter and more awake than any of the agents in the room; probably slept on the jet while the rest of them survived on caffeine or, in the case of Tony, took a nap under the desk. “Why did you have our people taken?”
“I thought you’d be more interested in what I’ve been doing on your puny little planet for the past few years,” Ba’al muses, not answering the question.
“What are you planning?”
“Plans can be changed; adapted. I have become very good at adapting.”
“To survive running away from the other System Lords after you failed to defeat them,” Jackson comments drolly.
For the first time, another emotion is evoked: anger: it is brief, but intense, a flash of lightning, and the alien’s eyes flare. Literately. “Do not insult me, Dr Jackson.”
“But you did run away after Anubis was defeated by Earth’s weapons,” the archaeologist goes on in a good tone, as if this is a conversation he’s had before. He even sounds a little bored. It is not the attitude Gibbs would expect from a guy making a living from digging in the dirt, when facing an alien; but Jackson is no usual archaeologist. “The same weapon you feared and wanted control of. Hot or cold?”
Ba’al’s eyes are back to normal. “Very warm.”
Why is he giving away information so freely, denying nothing? What could he possibly gain from that? Gibbs has never experienced an interrogation quite like this.
“You threatened to destroy a planet.”
“Oh,” the alien waves a hand. “You Tau’ri have a saying: ‘been there, done that’. Yes, we attempted to get rid of it, when I first heard about it. But then that pesky Ancient ruined the plans, and I had to think laterally.”
This means little to Gibbs—he’s missing something—but Jackson says, an exhale: “Atlantis,” as if it makes sense. It does, to them. “You had the Trust attempt to destroy it. Implanted a Goa’uld in Colonel Caldwell.”
The alien doesn’t deny it. Its cover is blown: it knows, they all know. It doesn’t plead for a defense, for alternatives. He claps his hands a few times, the audience appreciating the show. “Very good! Yes, that didn’t work out, unfortunately.”
“And this time?” says Gibbs, deciding to take over speaking; Colonel Carter and Dr Jackson may know what they’re doing with the SGC, know what they’re talking about, but they aren’t trained agents, haven’t been taught how to interrogate. Even if no one ever prepared Gibbs for this exact situation. “I’ve met plenty of scumbags who think they’ll change the world to fit them better with the help of a few murders, or a bomb, or whatever hell else they’re hiding. Someone of your stature, I’m guessing you’ve got something bigger up your sleeve. And for the love of God don’t tell me it’s the cliché of wanting to take over the planet.”
“This planet? Hm, not yet, I don’t think it’s … appropriate,” Ba’al says with a soft smile. “The likes of you meddle too much,” he adds, nodding in Colonel Carter’s direction.
“Then which one?”
“I could let you guess, Agent Gibbs.”
“I’m in no mood for games.”
“Pity,” says the alien nonchalantly. “Because I am.”
Seems like he’s starting to clam up. Gibbs exchanges a look with Colonel Carter. She says: “We have more direct ways of getting the information we want.”
“I’m sure,” Ba’al says. Not afraid, not bothered. Not anything but this trace of amusement never going away. He thinks he’s on top of this and will emerge victorious.
A lot of them think like that, those who Gibbs and his team have put behind bars successfully in the past. He’s not going to let this one get away. The agent calmly remains sitting and he draws out the photos from the folder: of the dead NID agent, and of the dead Mr Jamesson, their captured decay in plain photographs. “Tell us why and how you killed these men. You, or whoever you had do it for you.”
“Oh, I was never interested in the details. I’d love to, but,” a sweeping hand gesture; “I was quite busy at the time, with other things. With the work, the company.” Gibbs has got a feeling he isn’t at all talking about the somewhat legitimate business of Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics; but of the Trust; of this plot which they’re still scratching the surface of. This must’ve been going on for months. The transactions proved as much. The money might have been going to the high-ups of the Trust, and the henchmen doing some of the dirtier work. From what he can understand, the Trust comprises of several people with connections and money: rich white men, head of corporations, politicians, the corrupt seeking to gain more—more money, more power—through the use and development of alien tech, illegally obtained. Colonel Carter had mentioned that the SGC have clashed with the Trust many times and tried to wheedle them out, but never been truly successful: always someone slipping away, starting anew. “But I was assured it was done properly.”
“Not properly enough,” Gibbs remarks. “We found you.”
The alien smiles. “All right; yes, you did. You must feel proud of yourselves for that, I suppose. I ordered them to place the breadcrumbs so neatly.”
A trap? A trail for them to follow all along?
Yes. It makes sense. Gibbs thinks about it: the body, NCIS being called to the scene. The investigation leading to the SGC, eventually; a secret unnamed base, the CO unreachable, and after only a little while that CO’s father is nearly killed in an attempted murder, the CO is called here. Comes to NCIS, is kidnapped alongside the Director: a trap. A trap. It was a fucking trap all along, and Jenny got caught up with it, they all got caught up with it unknowing—
Gibbs wishes the Stargate had never been found. invented. whichever. If it hadn’t, Jenny would still be here. They’d be okay. Alive. She’d still be alive if not for the Stargate.
“Any more questions for me?” Ba’al asks pleasantly. Enjoying this;
No. Gibbs wants to let him simmer for a while. It might be hopeless, in the long run; but Gibbs needs to cool off, to not punch this guy’s sternum in on itself, and that’s a good excuse for leaving the room. He stands. “Nope.” Walks out, and Carter and Jackson follow after a hesitating second.
The door closes, and Jackson frowns. “We do have more questions; a lot more questions. Such as the names of the Trust.”
“Yeah,” Gibbs says. “Let’s give it a moment.”
“Okay,” Carter says. “Though I’m not sure he’ll open up any more or be less cryptic.”
To Gibbs’ ears, the alien hadn’t been very damn cryptic at all: open about his smugness and greed, and his certainty to survive unscathed. He’s come across a lot of creeps and douchebags and murderers and rapists, but—this one. God, this thing isn’t human. It isn’t. Will there be a trial, in the end? What do the SGC do to prisoners like these, once they take him to the Mountain when the Prometheus returns? Do they have a lunar colony somewhere? Gibbs doesn’t ask. Doesn’t want to know.
They got back to HQ several hours ago now, and he needs some more coffee. More than that, he needs sleep. Rest. No rest for the weary. He won’t sleep until he knows for certain what’s happened to Jenny. If she—if they … if. Then. First: an update from Abby and Ducky. Second: Starbucks run, during which he could talk with Carter and Jackson, discuss what they’ve interpreted from what Ba’al has said, from the case itself. Then he’ll be ready to face the alien again. In the meantime Ba’al can twiddle his thumbs or stare at the wall for all he cares. The room is guarded room the outside by two well-armed agents, no questions asked. Ba’al might not have made an escape attempt yet, but Gibbs has no doubt he can be violent if he wants to.
Trusting DiNozzo to keep an eye on the alien through the one-way mirror, Gibbs starts walking down the corridor in the direction of the elevator. Abby should have some results by now.
The music is so loud that the words sung almost can’t be heard. The forensic scientist leans over the machine and coos to it like it were a baby, or perhaps a well-loved pet. This way no one can see that her eyes are gleaming with tears as she tries to not to think about the possibility—the logical conclusion—that Jenny is dead.
She liked her. Jenny always treated her well. She liked—
No, no, she can’t think about it. not yet. not yet. (never?) not now; too much to do, too much to do, got to keep busy and stay positive. If there’s even the slightest chance that she’s still alive …
“You can do this. I believe in you. Yes, you can.”
“Uh.” Someone clears their throat awkwardly. “Are you talking to your mass spec again?”
Abby gently and very carefully, as to not disturb its work, pats the side of the mass spectrometer. She deliberately blinks a few times to clear her vision before turning to look at the intruder, and musters a smile, grave and bright all at once. “Sometimes it needs encouragement, McGee. Don’t upset it.”
He gives her an incredulous look. “It’s a machine; it can’t be upset.”
The mass spectrometer gives a bleep, and Abby gasps seeing the error message suddenly blinking on the display, and then glares at him. “See! Theory proven; exhibit A.” Uncrossing her arms, she murmurs to the spectrometer: “I still believe in you! Shh, don’t listen to him. He’s not nice. He ruins the vibe.”
McGee rolls his eyes and decides that it’s better not to comment or protest. “What are you working on, anyway? I thought the computer was top priority and you’d ran Ducky’s stuff.”
“It is, I was just running a sample taken from our guest upstairs. Second time now, actually,” Abby says, annoyance giving way to excitement. At least it gives her something else to think about. “He’s got high levels of something I can’t identify in his blood, and what could this substance be that I’ve never seen it before? That my computers don’t recognize? This is sooo weird. It’s dense enough to be a metal, but if it’s an alloy, well, it’s unlike anything I’ve seen—and I know the periodic table like the back of my hand; this shouldn’t be possible!”
“What you’ve found is called naquadah,” a new voice intones from the threshold.
Both turn around sharply. Abby’s confusion breaks into an enthusiastic smile.
“Oh! Are you the secret hush-hush people from the hush-hush place we’re not supposed to talk about?” She crosses the space and offers a hand to shake. Military working in a top secret underground silo with alien tech or not, from what she hears, Colonel Carter is awesome. Sciuto thinks she’s some kind of genius and much better looking than McGee, even if McGee too can be cute. Sometimes. When he isn’t irritating her, or disrupting her machines. Because: Air Force officer and astrophysicist who apparently has been to outer space? They need to be friends. “Hi! Abby Sciuto. Nice to meet you.”
“Colonel Samantha Carter, but call me Sam. And you already met Daniel,” the other woman introduces. She’s come down to the lab along with Dr Jackson and Gibbs.
“Wow, you’re muscle-y for an archaeologist. I never really saw it during the video calls. I guess you do a lot of digging, huh,” Abby says and the guy shrugs a little awkwardly. She resists the urge to poke at his pecs; it would be kind of rude. She has had too many Caf-Pows today, even for her tough stomach. Far too many. She will not sleep tonight. Honestly, it’s the only thing keeping her going: with the overhanging shadow of Jenny being …
Abby doesn’t like thinking about it. She’d like to talk about it, but they’re all too busy and distracted, and even Kate hasn’t dropped by to have a word. After a tough case they’d wind down together and sometimes exchange words which, honestly, no man would know how to do. But Kate hasn’t, so Abby has turned to drinking Caf-Pow and talking with the mass spec. It’s not a good trade-off, to be honest. Conversation is so one-sided.
“Now, what’s naquadah and what’s it doing in my blood sample?” She and Ducky had been briefed on the SGC earlier, but it’s a lot to take in, and they hadn’t been allowed on the Top Secret Hush-Hush Briefing which Tony told her about, wherein a lot of more details where shared and she was given data relevant to the case. There was an explanation of the word Stargate, but in very loose terms, and of Goa’uld similarly; there had been no mention of this naquadah thing, as far as she can recall.
“It’s a metal which can be found in Goa’uld larvae, and it transfers to their host and usually remains after possession,” Carter says, very matter-of-fact. “It’s part of their biological makeup, something from their evolution on their homeworld millions of years ago. Naquadah is quite rare on Earth nowadays, because the Ancients used so much of it in the past, mainly in construction of the Stargate system and much of their tech. It’s their primary building material.”
“Okay, I’m going to ignore how cool that is, because we don’t have time to delve into that right now but we will talk about it later, I have loads of questions. I was actually going to call you, Gibbs.”
“You found something?” Gibbs asks.
“If I did! It was hidden on the hard drive and he’d tried to erase it and caused some damage to the computer in the process, so I had to build a virtual hard drive to extract—”
“Abs.”
It requires no more coaxing or a promise of a Caf-Pow this time. She double-clicks open a file. “This. At first I thought it was list of coordinates, but given what we now know and the way McGee cracked that safe earlier …”
Colonel Carter and Dr Jackson lean closer to take in the list of numbers on the screen. Their length varies but consists at least of six digits; some twice as many. The two exchange a knowing look.
“It’s a list of Stargate addresses,” Carter says. “I don’t recognize most of these—that is, if they’re based on the Giza Gate.”
“That one,” Jackson says and points at the third one down. “That’s a known Goa’uld stronghold, one of Ba’al’s places. That’s where he held O’Neill captive a few years ago.”
“That’s right,” Carter agrees with a disconcerted look on his face, and Gibbs bites back his questions about O’Neill—the General, has got to be—having been held prisoner by the very same Goa’uld they’ve now got in Interrogation One. That makes little sense. Unless Ba’al got away that time, and has evaded the SGC ever since. If one of their top Bad Guys escaped after kidnapping one of their Generals, well, Gibbs’ opinion of the SGC’s skills drop a little. Then he considers the fact that these Gates must connect to hundreds of Gates, which gives them a galaxy to search and galaxies are impossibly huge. No one, even if they had an army of thousands, could search all the stars in the sky, and the SGC has no such army.
“We’ve got no way to determine which one is the most viable, but if Ba’al has a base or a lab at any of these planets …” Jackson says, and Carter fills in: “We’ve got to check it out.”
“I can tell you that this file was created exactly one year and fifteen days ago,” Abby says, “but the list itself doesn’t seem to be sorted. I mean, these numbers seem—random. No particular order to length, and they’re not in a numerical sequence. Very annoying and disorderly.”
“Maybe deliberately, just in case he got hacked and needed to cover his tracks,” Jackson muses.
Perhaps. Gibbs thinks it’s too easy. No perfect villain leaves this much evidence; but there is no such thing as a perfect villain, and he tries to let it lie though his gut feeling won’t go away. A lot of what they’ve got are scraps, circumstantial.
“They can’t find his primary hiding place just by guessing,” Jackson continues, and he really does talk very much and very fast; the man doesn’t seem to need breathing in-between sentences. “And if we know anything about him it’s that Ba’al tends to stash weapons and tech most places he goes. He’s sly and dangerous, and all the other System Lords combined couldn’t get to him. Remember when they came to negotiate the treaty, when Jack was frozen? What they really wanted was their hands on the weapon in Antarctica so they could fight back. The fact that the other System Lords feared Ba’al tells us a lot.”
Weapon in Antarctica? Gibbs thought no one was allowed to test weapons there, and for a bunch of aliens to covet it, it can’t be a simple missile launcher.
By God, he hates the SGC so much. Everything is too complicated and ridiculous now.
Colonel Carter turns to him. “How do you feel about taking a little trip, Agent Gibbs?”
Chapter 24: rage, part two
Summary:
time to return to Earth.
Notes:
(2017-11-04) It’s been a very long wait; sorry about that. I’ve had a lot to do at work and elsewhere, and then got immersed in another fic I’m writing in the Star Trek fandom once I finally had the time to write. I wish I had more energy to keep going, because I really want to complete this fic (and all my others) and keep writing. But I’m just so busy nowadays I can’t keep promises. Hope you’ll enjoy this chapter anyway!
(See the end of the chapter for more notes.)
Chapter Text
xxiv.
rage
part two
time to return to Earth.
It’s not just a matter of taking a jet (back, in Colonel Carter and Dr Jackson’s case) to Cheyenne Mountain Complex in Colorado. Things have to be planned and sorted out, and Gibbs doesn’t fancy the idea of leaving HQ in this state of unrest and with a suspect still in Interrogation. And he has yet to hear from Kate. Abby hasn’t found anything else—yet—but will keep digging, in-between running samples sent up from Ducky.
First, Vance must be fully briefed. More questions to be asked of Ba’al and it would be best if he’s taken to the SGC as soon as possible for containment. The easiest way to do that is using the Prometheus, which is still a few hours out. Normally, Gibbs wouldn’t want a suspect out of HQ until a jail cell has been secured somewhere, but he has to bow when Vance agrees with Colonel Carter and Dr Jackson, and calls are made to General Landry and General O’Neill in turn. They’ll coordinate with Colonel Pendergast onboard the Prometheus, which, as soon as it’s in range, will ring them up and down to the Mountain, bypassing the hassle of security checkpoints and the necessity of a secure enough vehicle to transport the suspect in.
Ba’al is not merely a suspect. He is a prisoner in all but name. Carter had confirmed that he is indeed a Goa’uld—something about sensing it, leading to the revelation to Gibbs’ team that the Colonel had once been the host to one of the Snakes. She had mentioned that in that case it had been an emergency situation involving not Goa’uld but Tok’ra: same species, different philosophies and values. The Tok’ra are allies with the SGC, the Earth. Tau’ri, they call themselves: people of Earth. Apparently. Makes sense, in a twisted sort of way. If humans exist on other planets too, when there’s a need for such a distinction, though Gibbs doesn’t understand where the hell a word like Tau’ri comes from.
Alien languages.
God, Gibbs needs more coffee. He chucks an empty paper cup into the trash bin and withholds a tired sigh. He’s getting too old for this shit. If this were a normal case, he could’ve taken a couple of hours off, worked on his boat, let the carpentering overtake his thoughts for a little while and it could have given him insight, new ideas.
It takes another wrangling hour of phonecalls to establish when and where the transportation will take place. Can’t be ringed out—that’s the term Colonel Carter uses—from the center of HQ in plain sight. Instead, Vance arranges a transfer of the suspect under the watchful eye of Gibbs’ team, and Ba’al doesn’t fight it or tries to escape as they walk him from Interrogation, to the elevator, bearing him down to the garage where two black anonymous cars await.
They drive from HQ as if with the intention of handing the suspect over to the local authorities; they head, instead, for an empty spot a couple of miles from the heart of D.C., a quiet and tense ride during which Ba’al smiles and doesn’t hesitate to meet eyes. They pull up as sunset paints the sky in a thousand colors under the shadow of a tree and step outside. DiNozzo and McGee will drive a car each back to HQ and continue work there with Abby and Ducky, while Gibbs tries to remain calm as the circle is drawn around him, Carter, and Jackson. Carter gives the order, and suddenly they aren’t in a glade on Earth but on the Prometheus.
They don’t linger there. They are immediately ringed down again, to Cheyenne. Deep within the Mountain an isolation chamber has been prepared and it is heavily guarded by dozens of marines, all armed with P-90:s, sidearms, and those alien weapons—zat’nik’tels. General Landry greets them as Ba’al is secured.
The next step isn’t to the Gate. First, Carter and Jackson give the General a briefing, succinct, in person about the latest developments. The list of planets they’ve got is six addresses long, and MALPs are prepared to be sent through. These machines, Gibbs is informed, will tell them if going to the planet is safe enough without extra gear or precautions. He is introduced to the Mountain’s Quartermaster and outfitted like any marine on a mission at the SGC, and shedding his civilian clothes for the uniform is like going back in time and retaking a familiar skin. His back straightens and he has the urge to find a razor to crop his hair to the standard millimeters. It’s not necessary. The SGC don’t care; he is not a marine, to them, but a civilian, this nosy NCIS agent who needs to be satisfied and swiftly sent on his way. He is an outsider and doesn’t fit into this puzzle, or at least they’d prefer if he didn’t; he’s in the way. In gnaws at him to be treated like that.
If he wasn’t well-aware that it’d be far out of line, childish even, inappropriate for a marine and a special agent, his Dæmon would’ve bared her teeth in a sign of irritation and frustration. Show, somehow, that he’s not a shiny, confused, easily rattled nineteen-year-old fresh-faced from boot camp.
The gear is good. Gibbs hasn’t used a P-90 in quite a while, but doesn’t need to be given a lecture as to its functions. He grabs as much extra ammo as he’s allowed. One never knows when it comes in handy. He quietly notes the marines’ actions: the team consist of four of them, three male and one female, plus Dr Jackson and Colonel Carter. One of them carries a sniper rifle and the woman arms herself not just with weapons but this small portable computer thing, which Gibbs has no idea what use it is or what it’s called; perhaps she’s the nerd of the team, there to be able to hack into computers or whatever else they may encounter on the way.
Colonel Carter attaches a 9mil to its holster on her thigh. Her Dæmon exudes quiet excitement, but in a quite calm manner: this isn’t her first day on the job. “Let’s go.”
Finally, as time in D.C. nears midnight, he is brought before the Stargate.
It rises, a steady thing yet it looks too small, too humble, at first glance, to be able to do all those things the SGC claims it does. The symbols on its surface remind Gibbs a bit of constellations drawn out, marked with thick lines, and a voice calls out from the command center: “First chevron encoding.” and the Stargate turns; he hadn’t expected it to actually move. It sounds like old machinery, well-oiled but used for tired decades, and steam is pumped out from below to cool it. It stops, a mechanism locking down onto a symbol and a light settling.
“First chevron locked.”
Carter, Jackson, and a team of marines are going to be part of the mission. To them, this is every-day. None of them looks at the Stargate like it’s an astonishingly impossible thing. Jackson is adjusting a strap to his backpack.
“It’s a pity Cam couldn’t come with us,” Carter says.
“Yeah,” agrees Dr Jackson, “but he couldn’t just leave the talks with the Free Jaffa Nation behind.”
“Ah, the vote on the new head of the High Council?”
“Yup.”
Cam?—Oh; got to be Colonel Cameron Mitchell. He, along with Carter and Jackson, form a team called SG-1; this is their day job, they get paid to do this. It’s insane. Gibbs feels like he is slowly falling down a slope, losing his grip of reality. There was a mention of a fourth member with a foreign name. Teal’c, but he’s apparently offworld on a different also important mission, and that’s the thing: this case may be important both to the SGC and to NCIS, but that doesn’t mean all other work can be halted. The SGC is doing many different things at once. They’ve got teams of marines and researches out there on half a dozen planets and scheduling this takeoff took some effort and planning on General Landry’s part. The power requirements for the Gate are enormous. The good thing about dialing out at midnight is that most people living in this state won’t notice their lightbulbs flickering just so slightly.
“Where to first?” Jackson asks cheerfully.
“M91-555,” Carter says.
“Chevron six locked,” declares the technician above, and a swirl of white and blue suddenly spreads outward toward them like a spear, and Gibbs has to strain himself not to flinch;
It falls back, forms a blue rippling puddle. It doesn’t look remotely safe at all. He hadn’t known it would be like that: a shining light from a moving sheet of blue, and Carter has said that it’s not going to hurt but might be a bit uncomfortable. Harmless. The MALP is sent through, steered remotely, and they wait for it to reach the other side.
Eventually, it does. “Receiving MALP telemetry.” Carter consults her datapad, which relays moving images from another planet; Gibbs can’t grasp that. He can’t. “No measurable toxins; oxygen 20 percent; Earthlike gravity. It’s viable.”
A mission, he tells himself quietly; this is a mission; you are a marine; you can do this.
“You have a go,” General Landry confirms via the comms system from the control room.
Gibbs eyes the Gate with doubt as one marine steps through, followed by another. Carter lowers her voice. “Just as long as you and your Dæmon go through together, it’ll be fine,” she says, and she and Jackson walk into the impossible without blinking. Their Dæmons don’t appear afraid of possibilities of eternal separation.
Oh, he isn’t going to be outdone by a damned linguist. Making sure they’re moving together step-by-step, he and his Dæmon step into the unknown;
M91-555 is a planet—a different planet, a different part of the Milky Way. That is all theory. It was laid out during the mission brief, where the objective to seek out any tech or lab or trace left by Ba’al was discussed; a world in another part of the galaxy, orbiting a foreign sun, and once they send the MALP they can accurately calculate where the wormhole ends. Eighty lightyears from Earth. It is all theory, words, and Gibbs can’t grasp it.
And then: no underground bunker; the SGC is gone, replaced. Daylight. Forest. He feels cold and deeply unsettled, and he’s breathing too fast. He can’t tell if a second or an hour has passed. He remembers to continue forward a few steps so that he won’t be in the way of the arriving marines, and he’s got the P-90 raised, a defensive position and it’s almost like he’s a Gunny again. And there—
He stops. Stares. There, above the canopy—trees that at first glance seem familiar; but a closer look reveals them as to be alien, and the ground is covered with a thin layer of frost. There is a sky. Late afternoon, maybe, and there is what he thinks is a moon. A large number of them, scattered vertically and then he realizes they aren’t moons.
Colonel Carter notices him staring. “Planetary rings,” she explains. “It’s quite something, isn’t it?”
He has to admit, despite his misgiving about the Stargate—which remain deeply set in his spine—“It is.”
The MALP sent out beforehand sits next to the dais onto which the Stargate is raised. From it they knew it was safe to step through. The basics: breathable atmosphere, gravity a steady 0.927 G, no dangerous amounts of solar or other radiation, no detectable toxins. They’ve still got portable breathing gear and masks in their bags, just in case, along with extra ammo, MREs, and tents. If the Gate malfunctions or somehow won’t send them home again, they’ve got to wait for the Prometheus to send back-up which would take hours or days given that M91-555 lies roughly eighty lightyears from Earth.
Eighty lightyears from home. It strikes him that they might die here. And this is only a fraction of what Jenny must’ve felt, taken aboard a spaceship; this exercise is a much gentler introduction to the universe, and, deep down, Gibbs is horrified and awestruck and terrified all at once. He doesn’t let this show. Within a few seconds, the whole team of marines has arrived, and the Gate shuts down. Carter doesn’t dial back but waits to send the MALP—they can use it to communicate in both audio and video with the SGC.
Carter disperses orders. “Sergeant,” she says to one of the marines, “stay here and guard the Gate. Use channel six.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
The rest of them move out, searching for any signs of life, civilization, technology. One of the marines, Lieutenant Lynn, is holding what Gibbs has now learned is called an Ancient lifesigns detector. It only works for people with a very specific gene in their DNA, and this marine is one of the lucky few. Gibbs had been relieved when the SGC tested him for the ATA-gene, by asking him to hold a similar device, and it failed to glow or make a sound; he’d rather stay human, without any bits and pieces of alien involved.
The trek is startlingly easy, and Gibbs is constantly on guard, suspecting a trap. Yet there is none thrown at them. The sky is clear, air a bit humid and something buzzes like bees albeit they can’t see any insects. The marines are all just as cautious as he, checking the perimeter and one of them clearly keeping the rear, while Carter leads and she sometimes has to direct a somewhat distracted Jackson onto the path. The planet is—well, pretty. It’s not an otherworldly apocalypse, as Gibbs had half-expected, nor something out of a Star Trek film set with purple plants, fake-looking trees, and hard dirt earth. It sounds, smells, feels real.
It’s incredibly disturbing.
Chatter is kept to a minimum. The marines are disciplined. Even Carter shows that she is no stranger to ops procedures, and Gibbs has never been fond of Air Force—to find out that Earth’s biggest secret is being run by airmen rather than marines remains hard to swallow. Sure, space is more their thing. Yet they bring marines for basically every mission, and Gibbs knows of few bases where the different branches mix so fluidly and well. Maybe General Landry does a good job. Right now, he doesn’t have enough knowledge to properly tell, and little time to dwell on the issue. He remains doubtful and refuses to be impressed. They’ve yet so see true action.
It’s also weird to have a woman in charge. Women in most military aren’t sent to any front lines. For them to rise in ranks is a slower, tougher process, and they’ve got more obstacles to overcome than their male counterparts. From what he’s read of Carter’s record, she’s a good pilot with a degree in astrophysics—not common brute material. The presence of a Colonel to lead this kind of mission is unusual; on Earth, it wouldn’t be done, someone of her rank to physically be there to hold the lines of a small squadron. She’d command from afar, sitting behind a desk a lot of the time. Yet none of the marines act like it’s odd that she or Lieutenant Lynn are there.
After a kilometer or so they cross a winding brook and the forest gives way to a rising hill which soon enough tumbles down again into a wide, flat valley. It resembles more of a plain, and the trees are sparse. It’s a hot day, they realize, somewhere around eighty-five degrees Gibbs thinks, starting to sweat. He runs a lot as an agent, but hasn’t been carrying this much gear since he was on active duty. It’s the only refreshingly comfortable thing about all this. He almost fails to respond when Carter addresses him as Agent instead of Gunny.
The valley is crisscrossed by a river. Once they reach its banks, they pause, and debate what to do next. If they had access to a ship they’d do an aerial survey, but sadly they have none to spare right now. They can’t detect any energy signatures and there are no ruins, no signs of civilization. The only signs of life is the occasional echo of a bird far-off; a rustle in the bushes from small wild rodents. There are no tracks, no roads, and no smoke.
Once a decision is made, they head upstream, in the direction of looming mountains. The sun has moved even further and there’s something odd about the light causing Gibbs to glance at its source several times through the sunglasses he’d been reminded to bring along—never know when you might need them.
Lieutenant Stan notices him doing it. “Problem, sir?”
“Do you feel there is something strange about the daylight here, Lieutenant?"
The guy also puts on a pair of sunglasses and shades his eyes with a hand. Then he lets out a low whistle. “Right. Two suns—must be why it feels so intense. Cool.” He does not seem particularly fazed.
Overhearing their conversation, Colonel Carter calls over her shoulder: “Binary stars are actually more common than lone stars such as our sun.”
Right. Twin suns. McGee would be delighted, sure. Not to mention DiNozzo. But Todd would probably behave more rationally and not express enthusiastic excitement: she would contain her reaction. Gibbs just wants this over and done with so that he can go home to the Earth he knows.
After some time, they reach the crest of a hill from where they have a look over a large, plentiful landscape. Afar, there is a glimpse of a huge body of water without limit, maybe an ocean. There’s no sign of civilization anywhere. Colonel Carter glances at her wristwatch and then at Lieutenant Lynn. “Anything?”
“No, ma’am. No energy signatures anywhere,” the Lieutenant reports. “I’ll try to widen the range.”
Carter nods, and while Lynn fiddles with the device in her hand, a concentrated look on her face, the Colonel turns to Jackson. “I’ve got a feeling we’re not going to find anything here.”
“There are five other plants on the lists,” Jackson says. “Wouldn’t it be more efficient if we continued to those and let the Prometheus swing by to scan M91-555 later?”
“I agree. It’d only take them a couple of hours to get here at maximum hyper,” Carter says. They cannot blindly search the whole planet on foot.
It’s decided.
The Stargate is right where it should be, but part of Gibbs can’t shake the feeling of unease, like he’d somehow expected the alien thing to vanish while they were gone and leave them stranded here. It’s not a comforting thought. They’re so far away from home, and he wants this over and done with.
“What’s next on the list?” he asks as the tall ring comes into view, the marines on automatic taking up defensive positions around it as their commanding officer along with the archaeologist and agent approach the DHD.
Dr Jackson starts dialing with one hand, not having to look at the symbols as he enters them, so utterly familiar with the way they’re laid out. He’s memorized the list, it seems like; Gibbs isn’t surprised. “PX6-209.”
“Great, is that a jungle or desert world?” murmurs one of the marines to another.
Lieutenant Stan nods. “As long as there ain’t no snow.”
“Or Snakes,” agrees Sergeant Merrick.
“Hey, what did we say about talking shit like that?”
“I’m not superstitious,” Merrick defends himself, as the Gate turns and a flare of blue light settles in its center. The marines don’t blink. Gibbs has a feeling that this is a conversation that has been played out numerous times before between these marines. “Can’t help that you think fortune cookies decide the outcome of your entire life, LT.”
“He’s the guy who buys PFM every time,” Lynn piques up. Gibbs holds back a knowing grin; the banter between a team of marines is something he can understand far too well. The fact they’re doing it with a CO right there shows how well at ease they are.
Merrick sighs. “Good point.”
They walk through the Stargate.
The MALP telemetry revealed a landscape of darkness. The Gate on PX6-209 must be placed on the side of the planet currently facing away from its sun, meaning it’s night, and without more data they can’t tell if nights there are brief or eternal. Colonel Carter lays it out so plainly and with such ease, but it still freaks Gibbs out a bit. How could they treat walking from planet to planet so normally?
They’d packed nightvision goggles, just in case, and the marines start to dig theirs out of their packs; Gibbs does the same. The layers of green, to represent the infrared spectrum, is familiar. He’s used goggles on mission in the past sometimes. He expects Dr Jackson to fumble with them, or walk awkwardly due to the sudden change, especially since the guy has to tuck away his glasses into a pocket, but the archaeologist doesn’t seem that bothered. Gibbs has to remind himself that Dr Jackson, as part of SG-1, has been going on offworld missions for years. He isn’t a rookie, and this isn’t a standard Corps operation on well-known soil.
They stick together. The air is cold, a shock to the system, starting to reach below zero. Colonel Carter takes the lead. The planet is duller than the last, and the wind sings sharply, and Gibbs wishes that he’d brought gloves. Not that he can’t handle some cold. It’s only a bit uncomfortable. Also a sign that he’s getting too damned old for this shit, even if he falls into step as a Gunny as easily as breathing. It feels natural and right. He’s been a marine for too long to be able to let it go. It’s in his blood.
This time, it doesn’t take long to find something.
“Colonel, I’m detecting an energy signature five or six klicks at our four o’clock,” Lieutenant Lynn says after less than half an hour. They can’t use terms like ‘north’ or ‘south’; it’s all relative. It doesn’t apply here.
The Colonel takes a look at the glowing screen. “Hm, I don’t recognize it, but it could indicate some kind of technologically advanced structure.”
It’s the best lead they’ve had yet. They don’t need more prompting.
Six klicks isn’t far. They start off quietly, as quietly as their heavy boots can manage. Around the Gate there’d been a sparse forest, but it gives way to a view of rocks and cliffs windingly tall enough to compete with the Grand Canyon. Some are sheer and steep, and they find a treacherous path which they thread carefully. It’s slower and tougher than a forest would be. Once, one of the marines almost slips and loses his traction, and is caught by the marine behind him just in time. They seek lower ground, but then the signal starts to fade, so the Colonel decides they have to remain as close to the air as possible. The path is often so thin they can only move in a single line.
A couple of klicks in, caught in the shadow and darkness of both night and the towering cliffs, it starts raining. It’s not a soft, gentle kind of rain. It stings, but it’s just water. Heavily.
In the beginning there’d been some light-hearted chatter, but commentary has mostly died down now, and they trudge onward sullenly. The goggles are getting blurry from the water and Gibbs rubs at them, never taking his eyes off the marine in front of him and the lights from the barrels of the P-90s. The flashlights are their only source to guide them.
“I hate planets like these,” murmurs a voice at the back of the row.
“Shut up, Merrick. Nobody’s shooting at us. Be happy.”
Ha. Just like bootcamp, Gibbs shares a dry thought with his Dæmon.
After some time, four or so klicks into the trek, the marine with the lifesigns detector or scanner or whatever it is halts, suddenly, frowning. They’re pretty high up now and the rain is still falling, and the ground is starting to become dangerously slippery, but nothing their boots can’t handle. At least the ground isn’t muddy. It’s all just cold, bare rock.
“Colonel, there’s something wrong about this energy signature. Just now it … jumped.”
“Jumped?” Carter asks, doubling back to Lynn, who walks in the middle of the row. The ledge is broad enough for three people to walk abreast. Were it daytime, Gibbs reckons, there’d be a pretty impressive view; he peers into the darkness, but gets only a vague impression of a horizon with jagged edges.
“Yes, ma’am. See, there it goes again.” Gibbs can’t see the screen in her hand other than as a sharp glow in the darkness, but from the marine’s tone of voice it doesn’t sound good. “Never seen it do that before.”
“Maybe it’s broken,” says Sergeant Merrick.
“Or your artificial gene is messing up with it,” adds Lieutenant Stan. “I heard that happens.”
“No, I don’t think so,” Carter says after a moment’s thought. She studies the device, then gestures in a direction which has no name on this planet, because there’s very little to guide them. The cloud cover is too heavy for any stars to be visible and, anyway, they would be alien and all wrong and useless to Gibbs’ mind. “Let’s head that way.”
They change direction and move onward. It’s easier said than done. First they’ve got to climb down the ledge, and that takes time and effort; Sergeant Stan digs some rope out of his pack, and they descend one by one.
After five or six hundred meters, the same thing happens. Gibbs wonders if not the alien machine isn’t broken after all, but Carter determinedly turns them around again, going in the opposite direction. After half an hour or so they’ve walked in an in hindsight well-thought out pattern, sometimes encountering the energy disturbance and sometimes not. Colonel Carter isn’t disappointed; she’s triumphant. “It’s as I thought,” she says. “There’s an area nearby here that’s shielded. That’s what’s causing the power fluctuations.”
“Shielded?” Gibbs asks, because that doesn’t sound good.
“A barrier so that scanners or radar can’t penetrate it—it’s not a natural phenomenon,” the Colonel clarifies. “But it shouldn’t be dangerous to us. After all, that would make whatever is hidden here inaccessible to the one who also put it here. Goa’uld aren’t immune to radiation.”
They climb back up the hill, to the starting point where they first registered the fluctuations. Carter studies the data recorded from the scanner for a few minutes, also discussing things with Jackson—something about Goa’uld hideaways and typical architectural layouts, occasionally glancing back at the device in Lynn’s hand.
If this planet contains a secret Goa’uld hideout, Gibbs supposes the planet fits. The storm doesn’t seem to be letting up anytime soon; in fact, it’s getting worse, the wind picking up speed.
It’s a sign that he’s been a special agent, with comforts within easy reach, for too long when he’s already craving coffee and a hot, dry blanket.
And then they find it. The ledge turns and there’s a cave, dark and ominous and it doesn’t glitter as they pour light into it. Like huge jaws it threatens to swallow them up.
“Signal’s a lot stronger,” Lynn says. “I think this is it, Colonel.”
The cave offers them respite from the rain. It slopes upward a bit, so the ground is nicely dry and not dangerously slippery, but the air remains cold and their breaths condense. Gibbs glances around, taking note of the natural look of the place. The walls are uneven and jagged. It doesn’t look like someone’s drilled here with tools and machines, it’s too imperfect. Or is this not a natural cave, only made to look that way?
They spread out and begin looking for clues. Lieutenant Lynn guides them, using the Ancient scanner to find the point of origin for the energy source, and there’s technobabble between her and Colonel Carter which Gibbs vaguely tries to follow but he gives up halfway. It’d be useful to have McGee or Abby around at this point.
“I think—here. Yeah,” Lynn says, crouching down in front a wall, moving the scanner in circling patterns until she stops, the bleeping noise from the machine incessant.
There are no markings, no straight lines. Nothing to indicate that this particular cave wall is special. Sergeant Stan shines his flashlight over it. “Doesn’t look like much,” he says.
”I wonder …” Jackson says, a thoughtful noise in his throat, and then he reaches out toward the wall. And his hand fucking disappears.
Gibbs can’t stop the flinch of his body, and the strike of the thought that that’s irrational and impossible and Jackson just put his hand through solid matter and that’s impossible, what the fuck.
Carved into the rock itself is a door. No, not carved: it literately appears solid but isn’t. Some kind of camouflage device? An optical illusion? How the hell …?
Fuck, these people have spaceships. Also having access to cloaking technology can’t be that improbable. Still, Gibbs’ stomach drops uncomfortably has he walks into what should be a solid rock wall but doesn’t hit anything. It’s air and then he is standing inside a cavern. It is dark, but definitely an open space, maybe a couple of meters high and twice as wide; like an open mouth, it continues inward, into the cliff, and twists out of sight. He can’t see the end. They all can fit into the cave with ease.
“Cool,” Merrick whistles.
Carter directs her flashlight into the cave. “Looks like it goes around a corner.”
Jackson is looking at the walls, searching. “I can’t see any carvings or inscriptions, but the walls are so smooth it looks manmade,” he says.
“Or made by machines,” says Carter, and she and Jackson share a meaningful look. So they’ve seen something similar before, then. “Well, I doubt if Ba’al was here he’d leave his name by the door.”
“True.”
Forward. The path turns left and they turn with it. It remains dark. This is a maze and they are the mice trapped in it, and Gibbs is uneasy. This simply screams trap to his aged, honed senses; he always suspects foul play. If that’s the marine or the agent in him talking, he can’t say for certain. Maybe it’s both.
However, no alarms go off, the floor doesn’t suddenly disappear beneath them. it remains dark, cold, quiet.
And then it doesn’t. A light: it’s not a reflection from one of their white flashlights. This light is warmer and more distant; a glow, like of embers. Not fire, because it remains steady, not a flickering flame.
“Signal’s getting stronger,” Lieutenant Lynn says, indicating the scanner in her hand; the screen appears immensely bright, and Gibbs’ eyes sting when he glances at it.
“I think that’s it,” Jackson says.
The light is closer, and when they turn again there is a room. It is far too regular to be a natural cavern. The source of light is a small, simple button. Its shape is alien, and it’s attached to a smooth wall. Colonel Carter inspects it.
It’s not a weapon. God, Gibbs hopes it’s not a weapon, some trigger device for an explosive. “Door knob,” she says, with a triumphant smile, and touches it. Gibbs half-expects a whoosh of hot compressed air and an impossibly loud noise. Nothing of that occurs. There is only a soft scraping sound, like rock on rock.
“Uh, Sam,” Jackson hedges: there, right behind the scientist, a piece of the wall just folded in on itself.
A brief, narrow corridor opens up into a another room carved right out of the harsh rock, with wires and cabling stretching nakedly along the floor, walls, and ceiling in a makeshift yet well-orderly manner. It doesn’t match any of the imagery Gibbs had gotten a glimpse of earlier of the typical Goa’uld style; according to Dr Jackson, most of it is pretty similar to Ancient Egyptian architecture, albeit with variations depending on the System Lord. Gibbs cannot recall those details right now. The room is surprisingly large, a rectangular space, its ceiling height varying from place to place. Lights automatically flicker online as they cross the threshold. Jackson and Carter take point, with Gibbs close behind, and one of the marines follows close at their heels, continuously looking back. They thread carefully.
No trapdoors appear, no alarms go off. It remains quiet. Only a soft lulling noise, the background buzz of machinery at work, the silence of computers on standby. One thing immediately catches their attention.
There’s a row of pods, standing, leaning against the wall. Maybe that isn’t the right word; Gibbs doesn’t have it; the detail isn’t that important. The pods are lit from within and above, and form a half-circle along the far wall of the laboratory. At least it might be a laboratory. There are tables, equipment he couldn’t ever name, nevertheless figure out the exact function of. A number of liquid-filled tanks and, in these, as if suspended, are a number of slimy creatures, like short snakes, and then it clicks. It’s got to be: Snakes: Goa’uld. That’s alarming but, worse, the pods along the wall aren’t unoccupied. There are human bodies—and they all look like Eric Human.
There are eight human bodies, at rest, perfect copies; they all look like the man carefully under guard at SGC, deep within the Mountain—lightyears away. Eight perfect copies.
“That’s not good,” Jackson says wryly.
“What the hell?” Gibbs blurts.
And Colonel Carter murmurs a soft curse, letting the sharp whites of the flashlight from the nozzle of her P-90 slide across the sleeping faces. “Those look a lot like stasis chambers. The design isn’t Ancient, but similar. Ba’al must’ve had a lot of resources to make these.”
“I think he meant the bodies,” Jackson says. Frowns. “They don’t look—well, that dead.”
“If they’re in stasis, they aren’t deceased,” Carter says, circling around, inspecting one of the pods closely but without touching it. One of the reinforced warnings before they’d stepped through the Stargate: Don’t Touch Anything. The glass lid shimmers slightly, their breaths condensing quickly on its surface in the chill temperature of the room, and the human trapped within it doesn’t stir. The body could be dead or merely asleep. The Colonel looks at a panel on the side of it, a jumble of blinking lights, knobbly buttons, something that looks like glass. “I need some time to figure out how this works. The configuration is similar to data we’ve received on Ancient stasis technology from Atlantis. This must be the control interface. Look, we’ve got to get some of this back to the SGC—I need my lab. But we also don’t want to bring anything that could cause potential harm to the base or its personnel.”
She turns and directs an order at one of the marines, who is standing back in the background, seemingly at ease in an alien environment but the soldier has his weapon at the ready and safety off. “Lieutenant, take Merrick with you and head back to the Gate. Tell General Landry we need a containment team, that we’ve found what appears to be a lab built by Ba’al.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Lieutenant Stan nods, turning on his heel. Gibbs hears him snap orders at some of the marines waiting outside of the building, their voices carrying through the rough corridors: “Merrick, with me back to the Gate. Got to tell the General that …” Then the sound of speech and footsteps carry out of range.
“What’s your thought on this, Gibbs?” asks Carter, returning him to the present.
He surveys the pods in grim astonishment. “Honestly? I have no idea what the hell I’m looking at, other than eight identical twins.” Which shouldn’t be possible; and one is on Earth and eight kept here? frozen? the fuck is up with that? Gibbs had hoped to unravel a strand or two by coming here, but they’ve just been handed a while new bundle of threads, all in a mess, where they can’t see where one ends and one begins.
“Octuplets,” Jackson supplies idly, not looking up from one of the consoles he’s inspecting, reading the hieroglyphics stamped onto the surface of its buttons. Gibbs sends him an irritated look, which the archaeologist and linguist doesn’t see. “I think I’ve found the on-button,” he goes on unhindered and presses something. Before there was nothing, air: now, suddenly, there is a hologram, a screen simply hanging there, shimmering, above the console. Gibbs blinks, and is glad McGee isn’t here to see this; the kid wouldn’t be able to shut up about it.
Both Carter and Jackson treat the impossible technology like it’s commonplace and, since they do it, so will Gibbs, and he hides his surprised reaction behind a mask of steel. The screen reveals vertical lines and lines of text in the form of more hieroglyphs, accompanied by one or two diagrams. It’s all gibberish.
Jackson makes a humming noise. “This is a lot—I can’t give an accurate translation off-hand, but some of the words are familiar. Here, this part.” He gestures at one section: “Something about … duality? No. Twosomeness—I’ve got it! Duplication. Something about duplication of … the self—the flesh.” He exchanges a dark, somewhat horrified yet fascinated, look with the Colonel.
“Copying. That makes sense,” Carter says, but she doesn’t look happy with this discovery.
“What does this mean?” Gibbs demands, sensing the two of them have just had a horrible realization. And he doubts he’ll like the answer.
“Clones, Agent Gibbs. These,” Carter says, sweeping a hand to highlight the bodies of man and Goa’uld; “these are all clones.”
“Thank you, Lance Corporal. We’ll put this information to good use,” she makes Agent Todd smile in a way which many men are fooled by.
This had been a waste of time; or perhaps not. While she’d had no choice but to conduct a typical interview of a witness or victim—thanks to Todd’s deeply ingrained knowledge of such things—Athena has learned other things than the obvious. This man does not understand fully why he was taken, which is just as well. However, he knows too much. He knows that Mayfield was a Goa’uld host, and yet the NCIS and SGC have to find this out. If they do and find no larva within the body, they’ll be onto her. She has to act quickly. The question is in what order. Get rid of these pesky soldiers first? Or return to HQ and conduct some sabotage of the evidence there?
She tires of dragging around this flesh’s Dæmon on a leash. The soon she gets the job done, the better, and then she can be free and leave this planet. There are other places she could be without needing to hide, or bow to one such as Ba’al. Ba’al: another great problem. If it suits him in any way, or amuses him, he will reveal Mayfield and thus her, and Athena will be vulnerable. He must also be dealt with.
Thanking the marine, she exits the small room, laden with the smell of medicine and humanity, walks down the corridor like a woman with a purpose. She cannot go right back in there without a plan. She must …
Athena pauses. The walls of the hospital are white, with doors and windows interrupting, and sometimes there are canvas of old, boring paintings no one wants or remembers. And, amongst them, there is a red little square, tucked away and yet visible so that people could find them in emergency; an idea begins to form. There are some items she must gather and assemble, first, but then she will have her chance.
Perfect.
They don’t bring the clones with them to the SGC, in the end. It’s deemed far too dangerous and risky. All it would take is for one single Snake to breach confinement and wake up and take someone over, and they’d have a second Ba’al on their hands. A Ba’al who’d know everything the other one knows, apparently, thanks to genetic memory. General Landry is obviously disturbed by the news. This laboratory and its contents cannot be allowed to remain. So a few hours of work begin: Carter leads a team of scientists to explore further, and to copy all data from the hard drives and consoles they can find. It involves a lot of technobabble which Gibbs admittedly cannot follow and filters out. Jackson helps them with translating bits and pieces on-site, and there are a few medics sent from the Mountain, including their chief medic, Dr Frasier, because she’s curious about the clones and she takes plenty of samples. Gibbs joins the marines in watching the perimeter and helping when and where he can and is needed.
Within two hours, they take their leave. But not before planting a lot of C4—an excessive amount, Gibbs thinks, but Carter dryly remarks that Goa’uld are tricky and tenacious, and they’d rather go overboard than miss a secret chamber buried in the rock full of more clones. It is a drastic measure. The kind of action most people wouldn’t sanction—after all, those are human bodies. Someone would say that they have rights. But the SGC says, again, that they are simply too dangerous to be left alive. Gibbs almost doubts it, but then he thinks of the bodies in the morgue at HQ, and he doesn’t argue with the General who gives the order. The C4 is placed evenly at every available surface and the whole place evacuated.
Then, they stand by the open Gate casting a blue glow on its surroundings, and Carter presses the remote. Two seconds pass. Then there is a low boom, a groan working its way from underground and, at a distance, Gibbs sees the hillside collapse, spewing out fire and dirt and rock at intervals as one block of C4 goes off after another. The Prometheus will swing by as soon as they can and scan the planet and, if necessary, fire at the place from orbit. Then this spot, only a few klicks off, would be far too close to be safe. That’ll take care of what’s left.
The explosion stirs the ground slightly, a tremor beneath their feet, and Gibbs hears the cry of wildlife—alien birds shrieking, foreign calls, at the disturbance, and a great flock rising to the skies and out of sight from the canopy of trees around them. Then the smoke settles, and it’s quiet.
Time to return to Earth.
General Landry waits for them in the Gate Room when they return.
So this is what it’s like. The SGC send people out there, through this horrible alien machine. Travelling and knowing that the distance is so unfathomably huge—crossing it in a heartbeat—is incredibly disconcerting, and Gibbs is privately very glad that it’s over. The report of success lightens the General’s severe expression. After unloading their gear, they gather in the Conference Room for a debrief. Coffee is served, and it’s not as strong as Gibbs likes it but it keeps him going. Atlantis is scheduled to dial in in less than an hour for an update. Time to tell them the good news, and the bad.
Before the meeting starts he’s given the opportunity to call NCIS. DiNozzo picks up after three rings. He, too, has some news, and he’d tried texting Gibbs but the message never reached him; he’d forgotten to unpocket his phone during the mission and PX6-209 is outside of the covered area.
“Jamesson died of a heart-attack, Boss. He was definitely tortured and went into cardiac arrest. Ducky’s also confirmed Mayfield’s cause of death as a single gunshot wound, but there’s no sign of a Dæmon—we’ve gone back and searched the site, but there’s nothing. Also, the injury was severe but it’s possible she could’ve survived—Ducky thinks she should have. There’s something not adding up.” DiNozzo sounds a bit worried and like he’s trying to hide it. “I asked Ducky to look for signs of a Snake.”
“When’s autopsy going to be finished?”
“Not another couple of hours.”
The gnawing gut feeling is back.
“I’ll be back at HQ end of today,” Gibbs says, “unless something else comes up. I need those reports by then.”
“Will do. We’ve made headway with looking into the shadier parts of Human’s finances, as well. McGee’s compiling evidence on that and following the paper trail. We’ve marked down a few companies in the US and abroad involved in this. Looks like it’s something big—could be the Trust we talked about.”
Good. If they could pin down their names and their base of operations, they could bust their asses. If he can’t tell the victims’ families the truth at least Gibbs could help in stopping something like this from happening again. “Is Kate back yet from the hospital?”
“Uh, no, haven’t seen her, Boss.”
The hell is taking her so long? It’s been over five hours since he left D.C. for Cheyenne. Gibbs feels himself bristling with annoyance, and doesn’t want to acknowledge the undercurrent of concern as being anything but unnecessary superstition. Right now, he can’t handle it. After losing Jenny to this mess—no. “Get her back to HQ! Call her.”
“Yes, Boss! Wait, did you find anything?”
“Yes. Trouble.” Then he snaps the phone shut, ignoring whatever reply might’ve been waiting on DiNozzo’s tongue. He stares into the half-empty coffee cup, its dark contents rippling, for a moment, silent. Then he downs it and returns to the center of the room, where around the long table the General and his minions are gathered, quietly discussing something while they’re waiting for the Gate to dial.
“General,” Gibbs says. “I have a request, sir. Can you track cellphones with any of the tech you’ve got?”
General Landry frowns. “We could if it’s in use, Agent Gibbs. What’s this about?”
“I need you to find someone for me.”
“Clones?” Elizabeth holds back a groan, facing the General and his people with a straight back and open eyes. She has slept very little tonight, and the night before, and the night before that. A certain silence has settled over the City. The silence might never go away. Even the lights seem subdued.
“Yes,” Carter confirms with a nod. “We found eight humans and eight Goa’uld, all modeled on Ba’al and his current host. We’re running DNA tests right now to confirm it. It is possible that the Ba’al we hold in custody is also another clone, and we’re looking into that now by measuring the length of the telomeres—if they’re shorter than they ought to be for a human of his physical age, that would confirm they were copied from an already adult cell.”
“The facility has been destroyed. We’re sending the Prometheus to make sure it remains that way,” General Landry clarifies, which was, partly, what Elizabeth wanted to know.
She is generally against the use of violence. She is a diplomat, a negotiator; she wishes to minimize violence, and yet she is in charge of an expedition containing a large military contingent. Sometimes, violence is inevitable, and so is also death. But in this one instance she can understand, if not fully agree with, the General’s course of action. Ba’al is a very dangerous individual, clever, resourceful. If there were eight or more clones of him out there … And they cannot be certain that there aren’t. If any others were woken earlier and escaped, or if he has similar laboratories on other worlds—tracking them all down would take a lot of time and a lot of resources, and the SGC have other issues, some more pressing. The past few months they have been very focused on Pegasus and making sure that Atlantis receives the help in needs in terms of personnel and supplies.
That costs a lot of money which has been taken from other areas of the SGC’s budget. Elizabeth is very aware: she ran the SGC for some time, after all, sat in that heavy chair with the load of command and responsibility on her shoulder, with the veterans of the Program carefully watching her, full of expectation, while the brass and the President breathed down her back. It wasn’t all pointing at people and telling them what to do. There were a lot of administrative duties which couldn’t be skipped over, so many phonecalls, and so many nights working late, thinking How the hell am I going to cover this incident up without alerting the public?
Several times in the first weeks she’d asked herself why she accepted the job, aside from the pressure of the President himself personally asking her to do it. In a way, handling Atlantis is so much easier. Yes, it is tough, especially when people are lost, and there are nights when she lie sleeplessly awake and terrified—but the benefits far outweigh that.
So she says: “That’s good to hear, General.”
“Unfortunately, that’s pretty much the only good news we’ve got,” Landry says, “if they are to be considered good news. We have Ba’al in custody here at the Mountain now. His fate remains to be seen. But if he made other clones earlier and any of those got away—well, I doubt we’ll see any of those for a long time. But NCIS have made headway with their investigation.”
Agent Gibbs—a gracefully aging handsome man with danger in his eyes—speaks up. Elizabeth has requested some information on the NCIS agents involved now, but has yet to receive more than very basic data. This is yet another unknown. “We’ve got three confirmed dead: NID Agent White, Mr Alex Jamesson, the former owner of the company which Ba’al has posed as the owner of, and Ms Mayfield, his assistant. We have causes of death for the first two, and my coroner is working on establishing the last, but we already know that she was killed by one of my agents in self-defense when we caught Ba’al and found LC Snow. We’ve found evidence of fraud and money-laundering on a massive scale connected to Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics, we’re setting up a paper trail. It’s possible that some of the money was being used to fund this … this cloning laboratory.” He doesn’t appear comfortable in saying that; but who would? “Raw materials, for example, must’ve gotten from somewhere. We’re still figuring out how all the pieces fit together.”
There is no mention of John Sheppard or the Director of NCIS. To the SGC, the two must already—with high probability—be dead.
But sometimes people come back. Jackson did, and if anyone else would be stubborn enough to do so, Elizabeth is quietly convinced, it would be Colonel Sheppard. And possibly Dr McKay, and the both of them are involved in this.
After the call, she goes to Rodney’s lab. As predicted, he hasn’t left it. He’s arguing with Radek in stern, intense tones and he’s angry and afraid, and Elizabeth can recognize the note of desperation even if it’s all wrong in Sheppard’s voice. Rodney’s Dæmon is pacing, not curled up on the nearest table like she usually would. They aren’t calm and they’re out of ideas.
Elizabeth knocks on the door frame to get their attention. Sheppard—Rodney—turns his head swiftly to look at her, an insult probably on the tip of his tongue, and then he sighs and rubs his eyes. “Oh, I thought you were … someone else,” he says lamely.
“I just spoke with the SGC,” she says. “It’s not good news, I’m afraid. Colonel Carter and her team have returned from their mission, and they found a laboratory with eight clones of Ba’al—both the Snake and his host.”
Zelenka’s eyes widen. “What? Do prdele! Clones, you said?”
“Yes,” Elizabeth confirms and now Rodney is staring too, wide-awake. “They were held in stasis. There’s a chance there could be more of them elsewhere, and the Prometheus is on its way to scout possible locations. But if they’re elsewhere …” Then they’re out of reach. “The facility has been destroyed now, though they downloaded some of the research and Colonel Carter is now looking through it. There could be some answers in there.” Such as: for how long has Ba’al been conducting these experiments? how many clones are there in total? are there any other labs? and what’s the endgame?
She can see similar questions mirrored on the two men’s faces. She has a feeling that the puzzle just got bigger and the new pieces have thrown them all off-kilter.
“Have they changed their minds about Sheppard?” Rodney asks abruptly.
Elizabeth shakes her head. “No.”
And she agrees, silently, with Rodney: it’s logical to presume John is still alive. Maybe it’s wishful thinking. She doesn’t want him to be dead; no one in the City does, and they don’t want to believe. Still. It makes sense. The scientists are trying to figure out alternatives. Rodney has tried to convince Landry to deploy the Prometheus to search again, using the same method as before, without success; and now the Prometheus is busy elsewhere and their only other ship with the same capacity is halfway between Pegasus and the Milky Way.
Speaking of which, she’d better contact Colonel Caldwell about the recent developments before the Daedalus is out of the City’s range.
“But I want you to keep working on it,” she says, and Rodney and Radek both nod vehemently.
The visit from Agent Todd was draining. Brief, but it took a lot of Snow’s energy to speak, and he’s dozed off again. Drew lets him sleep. They’ll wait by his side until he’s well enough to be transported to the SGC, where he can recover. Will recover. They’ve got to arrange a meeting with his family, too, let them know that he’s all right and alive. Drew swallows a yawn. She is more than tired: weary, like a lightbulb threatening to break. Gladys and Gamble have gone to fetch some coffee for them all, and something edible too if they can find it in the hospital’s cafeteria.
Drew’s almost nodding off in one of the plastic chairs—wow, her back is going to hate her after this—when something tickles her senses. Rather, her Dæmon’s senses; he’s always had an extremely keen sense of smell. There’s … something. Something. Wrong. She opens her eyes.
“You guys smell that?”
MacGrimmon stands up, stiffens. And then he realizes: “Shit.”
And then a blaring alarm goes off, on repeat. Fire, her brain supplies, old memories of Earth sounds. What the hell are the procedures during a fire at a hospital? Snow’s much more stable now, but he’s still connected to machinery, so they can’t simply take charge and wheel him out of here. Instead they’re forced to wait for a nurse to appear. They don’t open a door. They can already smell the smoke, so instead they shut tightly—it’s one of those heavy, fireproof things meant to be able to take a beating. Drew hopes they hold up to the specs. MacGrimmon, who’s placed himself closest to the door, places a hand on it and peers out of the slightly frosted window running alongside it.
“It’s not hot. Can’t see any fire, just lots of people moving,” he reports.
They can’t hear any sirens yet. What’s the response time here? Central D.C.—can’t be more than five or ten minutes. Things can go deeply south in less than five minutes, though. And fire cannot be fought with brute strength and handguns.
The alarm is loud, a thundering noise, and Snow stirs, confused. “Whaa…?”
“Take it easy," Herschel implores. “It’s okay, just the fire alarm.”
A pained groan: “My head.”
“Sorry, buddy,” Herschel says and pats his hand.
“Still can’t see anything,” MacGrimmon says grimly.
Kemp crosses his arms and peers out the window. They’re several floors up, and they’d all manage to climb out the fire escape except for Snow, and there’s no way in hell any of them are leaving him behind. “Maybe it’s a kid who pulled it as a prank or something.”
“I’ll whoop their smart little ass if that’s it,” DeSalle grumbles. He helps arranging Snow to lie more comfortably, pulling out a pair of headphones which he’d kept in his pocket and forgotten to leave at the Mountain. They’re not as good as proper earplugs but offer Snow and his pounding head some relief.
Kemp restlessly turns to MacGrimmon. “What do we do, chief?”
“Wait it out ‘til we know more. We can’t move him when he’s hooked up to all those monitors,” the Corporal answers without hesitation, nodding at Snow; unsaid, the agreement—they won’t leave him behind, not until they are sure it wouldn’t hurt him any worse or they had no other choice. And so, they wait. The door remains sealed and slows down the expansion of smoke considerably; it’s been built to be fireproof, to withstand heat and pressure to protect those on the other side.
The alarms keep blaring.
“I see fire trucks,” DeSalle reports after a couple of minutes, glancing out a window which they’ve tried to open only to find it won’t, the mechanism won’t allow it. The marine keeps trying to manhandle it open. He’s speculatively eyeing one of the plastic chairs as if to gauge its strength, how solid it’d be when smashing through glass, if it could break through. This building is triple-glazed, it looks like. Drew supposes they could fire a hole with a handgun to weaken it first.
“Good,” Drew says. She’d rather only climb put the window as a last resort. They can’t see any naked flames; not yet.
“Not good,” Herschel says from the other side of the room. She lays a hand against a nearby wall. “This feels warm—too warm.”
Shit.
Drew fishes up her phone from a pocket and she scrolls down the contacts until she finds the number to the Chief at the Mountain, who she thinks would be the best bet to pass a message on to whoever ought to hear it. She’ll request immediate transfer to the SGC if the Prometheus is still available—they’d deemed Snow too unstable before, but this could be an emergency. Her thumb hovers over the call-button—
The door shatters, is obliterated into a million tiny shards of wood and metal, the hinges on fire. Everything explodes outward. Drew feels herself being lifted and thrown into the air and into something—hard—a wall; sheer; and a blinding light; and plaster dust and great heaving noise, her ears ringing;
They’re both tired; this case has been tough. So many threads and so many questions cropping up.
McGee has spent time both within and outside of HQ—was sent by Vance earlier to tell the wife of one of the victims, Jamesson, and those kinds of news are never easy or forgiving to give or be given. He got back just in time to see Gibbs off—and the dazzling light of the transporter rings had been breathtaking, and part of him had wanted to come with them so badly. A Stargate! wormholes to other planets! of course he wanted to go;
DiNozzo has also had difficult duties. He’s basically managing the team while Gibbs is away, and McGee isn’t fond of the times when this happens. It’s like DiNozzo tries far too hard stepping into unfillable shoes and becomes a different person, emulating those traits of Gibbs which he looks up to but not always succeeding. They’re coordinating with Abby and Ducky, who are still running tests, but the autopsies have finished. Causes of death established, and family has been informed; Mrs Jamesson was the easiest one to get hold of. She’s been searching for her husband for some time now using a private investigator, fearing that he’d ran off with some stranger, a woman, a new life.
But Alex Jamesson hadn’t had any kind of happy ending. Neither had Agent White, whose family (no one but his half-brother is alive; father and mother dead, but an old friend was listed as Next of Kin) have been contacted with the help of the NID. McGee is relieved they took care of that bit. He doesn’t want to be faced with any more sobs and tearful eyes and questions that can’t be given clear answers to. Ms Mayfield didn’t seem to have much family—the papers said she’s an orphan, and grew up thrown in-between foster homes and there is not really anyone to tell what happened to her. It’s sad, really. Maybe she wasn’t a good person, but everyone ought to have someone, at least one single person, who’ll miss them after they’re gone.
McGee settles back at his desk. He’s been tracking down paper trails for the past hour in order to compile an extensive report for Gibbs. By the time he returns, he’ll have enough evidence of fraud to hopefully bring Fellow-Marshall Aeronautics and its CEO down. Using this data he might be able to pinpoint physical locations of interest as well, which they could investigate. Surely the SGC could help them with that. The Prometheus is equipped with scanners of various kinds; that could make this job a whole lot easier. He’s chewing on a sandwich, eyes starting to blur from all of the numbers, when one of the TVs constantly running in the background catches his eye.
He drops the sandwich onto the keyboard and turns around. “Tony! Tony, you’d better see this.”
A yawn from the nearby desk. “What is it, McGeek? Kind of busy here. Working.”
In response, he only turns up the volume of the TV. There is shaky footage: from above, a helicopter, circling over a building in central D.C.—the hospital where LC Snow is recovering; where Kate was last seen, and Tony is at once wide awake. They gather in front of the monitor, horrified. There is smoke welling out of the large complex’ windows and doors. A swarm of people and firetrucks on the ground around it, people evacuating. Chaos losing control;
A tinny voice reports: “… latest coming in: a fireball exploded on the third floor less than two minutes after the alarm went off. Washington D.C.’s fire department is now on site. The number of casualties is still unknown …”
“Holy shit,” DiNozzo breathes, staring.
McGee swallows harshly. “You don’t think that … that Kate was—”
“No. She’s all right. Of course she is, Probie,” DiNozzo says harshly. After a slow moment, he reaches for his phone. Dials the number without looking. It takes far too long, too many heartbeats for Gibbs to pick up, and when he does DiNozzo doesn’t say hello.
“Boss,” he says. “The hospital—there’s a fire. Turn on the news. It’s—We think. Last we heard, Kate was in there.”
Notes:
Czech translations:
do prdele fuck, shit
Chapter 25: grace, part one
Summary:
the thing about luck is that it rarely holds, and at the rate they’ve been at with the SGC in general and Atlantis in particular they’re bound to run out of it sooner rather than later.
Notes:
(2017-11-19) I considered for quite awhile if this chapter was going to be a separate fic, some kind of interlude. But then I decided to throw it in anyway. There’s a lot going on, many interconnected threads, and I want to use and resolve as many of them as possible within the same fic. So here we’ll hear some voices which I don’t think I’ve used much or at all in this story before. Please enjoy.
Chapter Text
xxv.
grace
part one
the thing about luck is that it rarely holds, and at the rate they’ve been at it
with the SGC in general and Atlantis in particular they’re bound to run out of it sooner rather than later.
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 20, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 146 days after the Uprising
They got the shooting range installed a few weeks ago in the basement of a tower on the North Pier. It’s quite small, has only got three targets, but the room’s been extra soundproofed and there aren’t many people around. Isolated from the inhabited parts of the City. Aiden hasn’t spent particularly much time here. Ammo is a valuable resource they’re not allowed to waste too much of, even blanks, by aiming at targets made out of paper and cardboard. Sergeant Bates had debated the issue with Weir for months before she relented; this is a military base, and, as such, it’s natural to have a gun range for testing weapons. Plus, with all the civilians around who now have realized they’ve got to learn how to aim and fire, it’s a better, safer place to do it than offworld.
Aiden remembers the first couple of months as AR-1 was coming together as team. They went to some planet, whatever the address, and then-Major Sheppard put them through some very basic drills. First time they were truly tested in a strict environment—or at least as strict and controlled a random uninhabited forest planet can be—so that he could properly gauge their skills, which is important to know when you’re a team. Aiden remembers well.
He’d been so laid-back, taking each day as it came in the lingering shock of First Contact with the Wraith and losing Colonel Sumner, and he was still believing those rumors from the Mountain about the Major. And he’d been fooled, thinking that it was going to be easy. It wasn’t exactly boot camp, but he got back to the City twelve hours later bone-tired and drained, and kind of taken aback because Aiden had wondered: this pilot, could he even do push-ups? He ate that up. Teyla did well, of course. That’s about the time she and Sheppard started training banto’a together.
The one who’d had trouble that day was McKay. The scientist couldn’t keep the pace as they ran, and his crouches were weak, and Aiden had thought: how the hell’s this going to work?—a part of him would rather be working with a team of marines, through-and-through, where there’d be no guesswork. But Sheppard had patiently waited for McKay to catch up, even as he shouted and bantered with the geek, but there weren’t any name-callings. He’d adjusted McKay’s stance and showed him how to load and pull the trigger of the handgun, and Aiden had ducked behind a tree sort of terrified that the guy was going to shoot himself or someone else by mistake. Sheppard hadn’t; he’d waited patiently, and eventually McKay managed to fire a couple of shots on target, or sort of on target, anyway, despite the recoil and being unable to catch it, and Sheppard had finally smiled a bit and called it a day.
McKay had been mighty grumpy. Oh boy. The harangue seemed to echo on for days; everything hurt: his feet, his back, his kidneys for some reason, his hands, and he was tired, this was a wasted day he could have spent Doing Science, blah blah blah. Aiden hadn’t felt too hot either, but at least he kept it quietly between himself and Adria. Sheppard hadn’t chewed the doc out. He wasn’t an angry Drill Sergeant. They’d just begun to get together as a team and, in retrospect, Aiden realized that the guy wanted to push them but not so hard it all fell apart.
The other civilians now get to use the range.
The thrum of the recoil is soothing. His aim’s gotten better. The head, the jugular. The targets don’t depict caricatures of Wraith, which is probably for the best; it wouldn’t be believable or funny. No. Aiden lowers the 9mil and holds back a sigh, and thinks about the people they’ve lost. No.
The clip is empty. He doesn’t reload. Instead he takes off the ear muffs and walks over to an empty table and starts to take the weapon apart to clean it. The procedure familiar and soothing. It’s why he’s here. To stop thinking for a while about how fucked up things are. In just a few days, everything’s gone to hell. All because of … who? what? The Goa’uld? There’s a Snake involved. Possibly more than one, though from what Aiden knows about those sick fuckers they’re not fond of teamwork. So. Snakes. And this started with Colonel Caldwell being possessed, or earlier. A plan. Some kind of plan, and Atlantis is unwillingly smack-bang in the middle of it. The point, Aiden can’t figure out. Do they want to take over the City or destroy it? If they blow up the City, the Wraith can’t get to Earth, at least not through the Gate.
Hell, he didn’t know the Snakes were still kicking. He thought they’d finished the System Lords off and there were only low-powered rejects left. What’s the SGC been doing in the Milky Way letting it come to their own people being tortured and kidnapped and held hostage?
That’s a selfish thought and he knows it. The SGC, SG-1 and General Landry and the rest, they’re trying to do their job. But Aiden is tired and angry wants to blame someone, and there’s no actual Snake around to shoot. And the Trust is this abstract thing to him, this organization of blank-faced anonymous people in suits, numbers on paper; to a Lieutenant guarding the Gate Room in the Mountain they’d never really mattered that much. He hadn’t realized they’d matter. He hasn’t been part of any operations dealing with them. He’s read and heard things: they’re a pain in the ass, but SG-1 dealt with them, cleaned out their nests. They’re meant to be gone. But they’ve risen from the shadows, and people are dead.
When they got the word that Snow was found alive—not sound, not safe, but alive—Ford almost whirled around the Control Room whooping with joy; he was so fucking relieved. Adria made a little victory dance. But, in the same breath, General Landry told them the search had been pulled off, and Colonel Sheppard might be dead.
Nothing against McKay, but the Lieutenant would rather have the real Colonel, not this mirage walking around in the wrong flesh. It’s just wrong. McKay can’t lead the team or make military strategies or nothing. Just for fucking once he’d like to have a day, a week, where weird stuff didn’t happen, when people don’t die, when—
Aiden leans against the tabletop. Breathes through his nose. This isn’t helping.
This all sucks, Adria agrees. Because, yeah. It does.
He puts the gun together again. Checks the ammo case which he just refilled; an automatic reaction. The only things which are secure in Atlantis are few: your loyalty, your gun, and your team. Everyone knows it; everyone expects it to be so. Experience with the SGC taught him that. Now his team is fractured. What’s next?
“Control Room to Lieutenant Ford.”
The voice belongs to Amelia Banks. Aiden likes her; she’s not military, instead a civilian technician and computer engineer. But she’s cool, and he’s seen her fighting on the mat once or twice in the open-for-all martial arts club, one of the many places where civilians and marines mingle in their off hours. Got a belt in kickboxing or something; her Dæmon is deceptively cute. Doesn’t hurt she’s hot, either. Maybe he should ask her out for lunch sometime.
Would keeping a romantic relationship going even be possible in this tightly knitted, busy place? In-between duties and the fact they’d be serving on the same base, constantly very close to one another and everybody else, and the risks of being attacked by Wraith—well. Aiden doesn’t really think so. Sure, there are couples in the City, beside all those who’ve got wives or husbands back on Earth, waiting for them. Wasn’t Olsen seeing some botanist? Mentioned that the other week in the gym. But Aiden isn’t sure how exactly it all works out. The details. The (inevitable) fallings-out.
And then there are those couples No One Talks About.
He pushes those thoughts aside for now and taps his earpiece to respond, professionally and without attempting to flirt. Some other time, maybe. “This is Ford.”
“Dr Weir wants you in the Control Room,” Banks says. “We’re about to contact the Daedalus.”
“Understood. I’ll be there in five. Ford out.”
He holsters his sidearm and leaves the range behind. The nearest transporter is a brisk walk away and he doesn’t jog the distance but almost, and there must’ve been a determined, dangerous expression on his face because people move out of the way. Normally people here can be too caught up in their conversations and datapads full of research to notice when a hurried marine barges past.
Aiden makes it to the Control Room in record time. Weir’s there, as always—does she ever sleep?—and he spots Kanaan by the banister and Ronon’s Dæmon beside him. He doesn’t know the name yet; the Satedan hasn’t shared. They’re a quiet pair. Lethal, but quiet.
He nods at Weir in acknowledgment. “Ma’am.”
“Just in time, Lieutenant,” Weir says. She doesn’t smile. She’s got this seriousness about her which, while sadly not uncommon, shows that she’s feeling like the rest of them: weary and wary and wanting this whole debacle to be over with. Done. Forgotten.
But there’s still a risk of a Goa’uld plot making its whole way to the City to do damage. And there’s the last report on the Aurora, too, and the Wraith not far behind.
Aiden wants to sleep. He’d tried to rest for a few hours earlier, but it hadn’t worked. There’s this pent-up energy inside of him he can’t get rid of—he’s just waiting, waiting. Sitting around.
Weir turns to Banks and Chuck by the controls. They’re contacting the Daedalus via subspace, and AR-2 is waiting in front of the Gate in full gear and with a box-like contraption carried between them. The best and safest way is to use a relay which one of the departments cobbled together, and to transmit a signal from Atlantis via the device on a planet closer to the Daedalus. Given the ship is in the void between galaxies right now, the closest planet is on the edge of the Pegasus, P92-001. Still several hundred lightyears away. But the risk of the signal being hijacked by enemies, such as the Wraith, grows incredibly slimmer by simply bypassing sending the message through most of the actual galaxy.
“Start the dialing sequence.”
The voyage from Atlantis in Pegasus to Earth in the Milky Way is calculated to take twenty-seven days and four hours. According to Hermiod, their resident Asgard, they’re well on schedule and the ship is performing at optimum. No issues with the engines or navigational systems or any computer. Caldwell is relieved and tired, and he’s looking forward to seeing home again with his own eyes.
He can’t deny that he’s having trouble sleeping. Ever since … ever since It took him over. God, the things he did. The things he could have done. He could’ve hurt his wife and kids and grandchildren—they visited that weekend—and he recalls the vicious cold emotion overcoming him even as he smiled and laughed as they drank the white wine. He almost took out a City and two hundred people with it. Jesus.
Steven Caldwell longs for home, but it’s going to take a long while, maybe forever, until he feels safe there. Which is a different feeling from anything he’s felt before. He’s been scared spitless—he’s been to war, and he was wary for so many years after the Cold War ended and he still was young and bound to his military service more than anything else. He’s commanded ships and squadrons for as long as he’s remembered.
When the SGC gave him the Daedalus and the course to another galaxy, he’d been excited, though he kept his outward cool, and he’s that pragmatic, calculating man who weighs the risks and not a hothead. That’s why they picked up for this job. It suits him. He’s used to being away for long stretches of time with only vague promises of return, and he’s seen amazing, wonderful things. Foreign stars, black holes. Spaceships—Hives.
The Wraith are no laughing matter; neither are the Goa’uld.
But this far the journey has been … quiet. Peaceful. No interruptions. He’s ran a few drills but not at the hectic kind of pace which he knows Lionel Pendergast and the first commander of the Prometheus, William Ronson, are both so fond of. He’s gotten more familiar with his crew, having been part of this for several months now, and he has taken to speaking with the Lanteans aboard.
And isn’t that strange? He’s calling them Lanteans, as if they’re not truly from Earth, a different breed of human. They wear the same Earth uniforms and speak the same Earth languages, but there’s something … different about them.
They’ve been travelling through hyperspace for roughly two weeks and recently crossed the intergalactic border, entering the enormous void between galaxies. At the rate the two galaxies are twisting and turning around their own orbits, the twenty-seven day journey will one day take a thousand years, the distance too great even with Asgard engines at their disposal. The thought to cross such a distance under a month would’ve been laughable just a couple of years ago. Hell, Steven can’t believe it sometimes either, even as he stands at the helm, staring through the windshield at the stars passing them by. He was awed when they shot the first rocked to the moon. Sat in front of the TV wide-eyed, disbelieving and so hopeful when Armstrong took that first great leap. To think they’re out here now;
He sips the coffee. It’s slightly cold but the technicians have fixed the filters of the machine now so the taste is better than expected. He’s opted to sit in the mess hall—his quarters, albeit bigger than most, are cramped and dark and the bed thin and hard. The light is better out here, though it is noisier. There’s nowhere on the ship that’s entirely free from the rumble of the engines, but the sleeping quarters are better insulated against it. Caldwell has a book in front of him; for once, it’s not a technical instruction manual or a datapad full of information needing to be reviewed. Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile doesn’t ask for any commentary in the margins to be presented to his superior officers, and in the end, he can be sure Poirot will have everything explained.
He has a couple of hours off—but a commander never truly has time off. Not as long as he’s aboard his own ship.
“Colonel Caldwell to the Bridge,” his Communications Officer’s voice sparkles to life on the intercom, just as he’s in the middle of a very revealing chapter. “There’s a subspace message from Atlantis.”
Steven closes the book, grabs his coffee, and heads for the Bridge on the fastest route. And we’d just started to figure out who the killer was, his Dæmon sighs in dismay.
“Gone?”
Dr Weir’s face is grave beyond the screen, and the image is uncertain and beginning to break up due to subspace interference; soon the City will be out of range altogether, and then they’ll need to route all messages via the Mountain. Her arms are crossed. In the space behind her, the Control Room dimly lit, Caldwell can make out several of AR-1: Lieutenant Ford, Teyla Emmagan, Ronon Dex; the Satedan’s large Dæmon is circling around him warily. There is no sign of Dr McKay in Colonel Sheppard’s flesh, however.
“Rodney is still working on a possible location, since the communication stones haven’t malfunctioned, but there’s no sign of that ship,” Weir says. “We just got the analysis from the SGC of the Prometheus’ scans; it was a ZPM overload.”
An overload. Like he’d meant to take the City out. How the Snake in his head had meant to—
Steven nods jerkily. But then he sees the dots connect, and, daringly, jumps to a conclusion: “The stones aren’t malfunctioning? I thought a connection like that implied that both sides have to be working.”
“We’re assuming that, too,” Weir says. “There is no reason to think otherwise.”
“They pulled the search off, sir,” Lieutenant Ford says at Caldwell’s unspoken question.
“There’s also the matter of Ba’al having been arrested on Earth, and an offworld lab discovered containing several clones of him and his host,” says Dr Weir, and Caldwell feels himself distantly growing cold. “NCIS has interrogated him and now he’s been taken to the Mountain for further questioning—there was a mention of destroying a planet, but he wouldn’t elaborate. Coupled with everything else we know, it is possible that Atlantis is—was—the target.”
God. Everything is so messed up.
“Acknowledged,” he replies, stilted: “There’s not much I can do from here. I could turn us around to assist, but we’d still be two weeks out. We’re pressing the engines hard enough as it is.”
“There is no need,” Weir says, to his personal relief. He selfishly doesn’t want to extend this journey further, and he’s got hundreds of people aboard who also need to get to Earth. Who deserve it. “The Aurora is on its way back from its mission, although it’s taking a detour.”
“For what purpose?”
“Last we knew, there’s at least one Hive following it,” Weir says. Damn, that’s not good news. “The scans are sporadic right now due to interference. Major Lorne is trying to shake them off—the last thing we need is a Hive on our doorstep.”
Not so soon after fooling the entire galaxy that the City blew up on Lantea. Caldwell can sympathize, and he understands that if the City is lost to the Wraith, Earth and the rest of humanity would very soon follow. Then the Warships and the Chair which Earth can offer as a defense wouldn’t last long at all. Billions would die. He suppresses a shiver.
“Understood. We’ll be in communications range for another day or so, so if you change your mind about that support, you’d better let us know before then.”
Even then, turning around at maximum speed, they wouldn’t get to Atlantis in time and they’re all aware. No one voices it.
Weir nods. “Hopefully that won’t be necessary, Colonel.”
a little while earlier:
Most planets in the ‘535-system failed. Well, didn’t fail per se, according to Dr Grodin; but the several large gas giants prevented the formation of what could have been larger rockier planets, and the dust got trapped and scattered, haunted by several large gravitational dips all at once. What they’ve got are a couple of small Mercury-like worlds near the binary sun and a scatter of asteroids between the inner planets and the outer gas giants. Their gravitational wells create an invisible labyrinth through which the Aurora carefully has to navigate. There is no planet similar to Earth, but one of the larger moons possesses a Stargate, placed there by the Ancients tens of thousands of years ago and they’d scheduled a visit there in a few weeks.
Most of the time, planets aren’t visited on a dime—there are procedures to follow, and schedules are made days or weeks or sometimes months in advance. The addresses have to be found, first of all, either in the City’s database or given by Teyla Emmagan or another of their allies familiar with the Pegasus Gate system. Then they scourge up all information they can about the planet before stepping through the Gate—granted, the majority of the Ancient database hasn’t been updated in ten millennia, but it gives them some clues (and it’s a treasure for the archaeologists). Lastly, a MALP is sent to determine viability, check that it’s safe enough to step through. Missions don’t usually happen without perimeters being set up and a team selected based on how they work, their professions and areas of expertise, their experience.
There are of course exceptions. Major Lorne has been considering having his own AR-team. He’s jumped in once or twice to pilot a Jumper, filling empty spots on demand. M22-535 was found in the database several weeks ago and there was a mention of a naquadah mine; with his degree in geology and previous experience, Lorne was selected by Weir to join the mission, the takeoff scheduled only three days from now.
They hadn’t planned on flying through the same system in an Ancient Warship.
M22-535 is one of several moons—and the roundest and biggest one—orbiting a Jupiter-like planet so immense in width that human senses can’t truly grasp it. Its thick atmosphere stretches on for miles and miles and miles, thicker than the whole size of the Earth, and at the heart they’ve gotten weak readings indicating a very small but dense core consisting mostly of iron and frozen nitrogen, hydrogen, and some heavier elements. Its atmosphere—a deadly mixture of hydrogen, helium, neon, and phosphorous—is a thick, choking soup which in combination with the strong magnetic field makes readings very difficult to get. Right now, that’s good.
The Aurora descended into the upper layer of cloud fifty-six minutes ago. Each layer of cloud moves at its own pace and sometimes in a different direction relative to the layer above or below, winds gusting at a raving two-hundred kilometers per hour on average. It’s straining the shields, but no more than enemy fire would. And they need the shields. Repairs are not yet complete: parts of the ship are completely exposed to space without the shield, hull missing, ripped away in battle ten thousand years ago. Hiding a smaller ship would’ve been easier—the Aurora is over three thousand feet in length. Storms rage continuously around them and, for now, the shields easily take the brunt of it. Looking out the windscreen is hopeless. They’re so deep down that the light from the system’s star already has problems reaching them and what little they can see reveals a swirling wall of gases, thickly orange and red with hints of a livid blue, so they’re entirely reliant on the ship’s instruments.
The air is highly charged and the docs are concerned that prolonged contact could cause an overload, like being blasted by Wraith fire continually for hours or days, which could cause shield failure and ship system collapse, which would lead to a loss of computers, navigational controls, atmosphere, gravity, the works. Without the steady one-G pressure aboard the Aurora, the density of the Jupiter would be starting to press the vessel together like an empty metal box being squeezed under a heavy boot. Losing lifesupport they could deal with, for a couple of hours. The ship is large and the crew relatively small, and it’d take a while before carbon dioxide levels rose from okay to dangerously life-threatening. They’ve got Jumpers and F-302:s; they can work around the problem, rotate crew in and out of them, and they’ve got a couple of spacesuits in case repairs are needed in unpressurized areas.
But if the shields go, they all go. If the nav computer goes, the ship will crash toward the Jupiter’s core, a slow but steady drifting fall. As it is, they’re making corrective burns once every sixteen minutes: a single short burst. The less they use the engines, the less likely the spark of heat and energy will be detected by the Wraith lurking nearby. The intervals give the Aurora the chance to shed some heat to the cold environment outside.
That’s the scientists’ job around here: they keep calculating the worst odds in order to avoid them.
“Any sign of that Hive?” Lorne asks. He’s stepped off the Captain’s chair and approaches one of the control consoles. The muddled up viewscreen is disconcerting. It’s weird to see anything but stars, a vast expanse.
“It keeps flickering in and out of sight,” says Sharpe, one of their mechanical engineers, sounding a bit frustrated. “The sensors are having a hard time in these conditions. But the data we’ve got so far indicates they’re moving away from us. They’re at one point seven million klicks, bearing one-two-five.”
The ranges in space have taken a lot to get used to. One point seven million kilometers sounds like hell of a lot, but Lorne has learned that it’s practically in their backyard. The Aurora could cross that distance in a few minutes using sublights.
“We might’ve lost them. Or, rather, they lost us,” Grodin says. “But it’s too early to know for certain.”
“Our ship status?”
“All systems optimal apart from scanners, both long and short range, because of the interference. Holding steady at thirty thousand meters inside the first cloud layer; current speed and course will have us finish first orbit in six hours, two minutes. Our shields are holding at ninety-six percent,” Sharpe says. “The power loss is pretty consistent; the longer we stay in this storm, the worse it gets, but we’re nowhere near any dangerous levels. We’ve got over twelve hours before we need to start worrying about that.”
Lorne relaxes a little, which is difficult in this situation. He, like the others, would like to get the hell out of dodge and return to Atlantis as quickly as possible. Being out of contact is grating but they can’t establish a subspace link without risking detection and thus revealing the City to the Wraith. Last thing they want. So he considers other options. They could be stuck here for an hour or ten, or even a day, though at that point their shields risk dropping from the strain of the storm. At least there are no or very few solid particles in the atmosphere that could cause damage to the Aurora’s hull.
He wonders how they’re doing back in the City. Back on Earth.
He’s been in the City for months now and, sure, he never was that close to Colonel Sheppard, but they’re both proper pilots and the guy didn’t kick him out of the City head-first when the Daedalus first dropped Lorne off to keep an eye out on Caldwell’s orders. He’s a bit unorthodox as a commanding officer, but Lorne’s gotten used to it. The possibility he could be dead is startlingly staggering—last they heard he’d been kidnapped along with some federal agent, and they’ve been out of contact with Atlantis and SGC for hours and stuff can change quickly. Not to mention Lorne’s still wrapping his head around the Ancient communication stones and the fact that Dr McKay’s mind, personality, and knowledge is stuck in the Colonel’s flesh. Could that be permanent? somehow?
Fuck, he really hopes not. Nothing personal against Dr McKay, but, yeah. He saw them once, briefly, during a sitrep when they were still in contact with Atlantis, in the background behind Weir, and Lorne had swallowed back a minor meltdown at the sight of Colonel Sheppard closely followed by McKay’s Dæmon. That just not natural.
“Major, we could take use of the Gate on M22-353 to contact Atlantis,” Grodin says suddenly; an idea. “We could send a cloaked Jumper. It would be a bumpy ride and we’d have to ascend the Aurora at least some thirteen kilometers to give them a chance to pierce the cloud, but it’s possible. Then we would be able to tell them what is going on and warn them about the Hiveship. If it continues on its current course, it will pass by New Lantea very closely.”
Lorne both likes and dislikes that plan all at once when he hears it. “What are the chances we’re going to be seen by the Wraith?”
“Minimal,” Grodin says confidently. “Remember, their sensors aren’t as powerful as ours, and as long as we remain within the gas giant itself we’re physically out of sight. Difficulties are the storms; there are several layers of cloud we need to penetrate. We need more time to analyze them to understand their patterns, and at times the atmosphere thins out and that’s when we risk detection. Give us half an hour and we can try to calculate the best window to send a Jumper.”
He considers this. Nods. “Okay, run the numbers. It would be nice to be able to give Weir a sitrep. How many people with the gene onboard?”
“Quite a lot, we need people with the ATA-gene to operate this ship and to effect repairs,” Sharpe says. “At least a dozen.” In fact, pretty much everyone on duty in the City with the gene had been sent aboard on Weir’s insistence, with the exception of Colonel Sheppard, Dr McKay, and Dr Beckett, key personnel who couldn’t leave the City all at once for security reasons lest there’s an emergency situation offworld demanding their attention.
“All right, I’ll need the names of everyone who’s had Jumper training,” Lorne decides. He could be the one to fly that Jumper, but if something goes wrong or it takes too long or they’re discovered, the Aurora would be left without a clearly chosen commander, and most of the crew are civilian technicians and astrophysicists. He’d rather not leave the Aurora if he could help it. “Have them report to the Bridge in thirty minutes.”
“On it.”
It’s not the comfortingly familiar yes, sir, but Lorne has been in the City long enough now to get used to it.
The thing about luck is that it rarely holds, and at the rate they’ve been at with the SGC in general and Atlantis in particular, they’re bound to run out of it sooner rather than later. They’ve had so many narrow escapes and no outright confrontation with the Wraith since the Siege, and Lorne wasn’t there that time. Sure, there have been ambushes. Recon teams facing a Dart or two or a small number of Wraith head-on. But they have a Hiveship close on their tail.
The ascent started twenty minutes ago. It’s slow and careful. It starts smoothly without issues or alarms, though the ride itself is a bit bumpy. As they climb from one cloud layer to the next of the Jupiter, storms lash at them from all directions: the first one carried a clockwise motion, a swirl so large it could encompass a small planet in terms of width. It is not as thick, though, and above it is another one moving differently at a slower rate. Visibility through the windshield is still near zero.
“Ascending through minus nine kilometers,” Sharpe says. That’s how they count, from the top to the bottom; easier than trying to measure the planet’s width from its core. Can’t get readings accurate enough until they’re farther away, which is kind of an irony. Want to take a closer look at the specs of this Jupiter monster? Better step back half a million klicks.
If they could afford it, Lorne’s sure the scientists would love to build some satellites and dump them at various points in the galaxy to get long-term readings and high-quality imagery. There are planets and moons but also gas formations and nebulae, all making the docs drool. But they don’t have those resources. NASA is busy keeping up with Earth’s demand for orbital satellites, exploration rovers, and other craft, and since they have the Gates, satellites aren’t high up the SGC’s priority list. However at this moment, Lorne would’ve liked a couple. A probe or something to send ahead to check if the coast is really clear. Signal is still being disturbed though not as much as before when they were hiding at twenty klicks below the gas giant’s surface.
Sure, McKay has designed some of those probes for the Daedalus to drop at various points in the galaxy, stripped-down satellites that they barely deserve the name, but they’ve only managed to place a handful of those and none in this system, and those probes are linked to a relay in Atlantis. Meant to give the City warning. McKay and his team wrote a security program so thick that no one should be able to hack into it, not even Grodin and the scientists aboard the Aurora—maybe if they had time and resources, but the ship is undermanned as it is, and Lorne can’t devote anyone or any hours to tracking down and hacking into the probe network with only a faint hope of succeeding.
“Starting burn phase three,” Grodin says. They pick up a bit of speed as the atmospheric pressure lessens by a few percent, the planet starting to lose its grip on the Aurora.
From the Captain’s chair, Lorne activates the intercom which is now linked to Jumper Eight, sitting in the Bay waiting to launch. Door are still closed, but they can open them at eight klicks. Shields will remain up as the Jumpers can pass through them.
“Jumper Eight, this is Lorne. Are you go?”
“Flight checks out, we have the course loaded in the computer. Uh, I mean, we are go, Major,” answers Dr Miko Kusanagi.
The astrophysicist is understandably a bit nervous. She’s got the ATA-gene, and she’s had a couple of flight lessons, but mostly in simulated conditions without actual Wraith hanging over them. She wasn’t prepared to do tricks and rolls. However, she’s got the most experience, as little as it is, of the people onboard—even Lorne is more used to an F-302 and other craft, though he is a real pilot and doesn’t think the Jumper would be too much of a problem. But he has to remain in command of the Aurora. People he would rather have flying Jumper Eight aren’t here or in the City: they’re either on Earth already or on their way there in the Daedalus, and that ship is now out of Pegasus’ range. Dr Kusanagi might know about the theory of Jumper flight, but the actual thing is a hell of a lot harder. Lorne knows.
“Copy that, Jumper Eight.” They’re actually doing this. Most commanders would think this is a sign Lorne is out of his mind. “Okay. How are we looking?” He directs the question at Grodin and Sharpe more than the rest of the Bridge crew: an assortment of technicians and engineers with various areas of expertise. None of them have been trained to operate aboard a starship. Somehow, it works. If they pull this off, Colonel Caldwell is going to be both impressed and horrified when he hears of it, Lorne thinks. Questioning of Lorne’s professional judgment. The Major rather likes Caldwell: he’s clever, pragmatic, has a dry sense of humor. Much like himself. Doesn’t tolerate bullshit. He’d feel like he’s about to shit his pants too if he were taking this risk. But they need to contact Atlantis.
Last data revealed that after passing through the ‘535-system the Wraith has a clear path right toward New Lantea’s star system, if they hold course. Even if the City can probably see it on their long-range sensors, Lorne would rather be certain they are given warning. Sensors can fail or trick the eyes. Most of the time they don’t scan the whole sky in all directions all the time: it would take too much energy, and Weir always works to conserve it. And if that Goa’uld plot they heard whispers of is true and an attack from the Milky Way is on its way, Atlantis will be busy on that front.
Their plan is to avoid the Wraith until the last possible moment and engage if they must. A diversion to get the Jumper on its way. The moon designated M22-535 is rocky, desolate, and has only minimal plantlife, according to the Ancient database when they planned the mission there weeks ago. They can’t get a more accurate reading right now. Just in case, Jumper Eight has both one spacesuit and three HAZMATs stored onboard. One for the doc, two for the marines Lorne is sending with her. The Jumper has its own DHD so they shouldn’t need to EVA, but Lorne is rather safe than sorry.
“Looking good, Major,” Grodin says. “Shields at ninety-two percent. We see the Hive at … seven-hundred thousand kilometers at bearing two-zero-five.”
“Ascending through minus eight kilometers,” Sharpe says, reading off the instrument board: they’re still completely reliant on them, without visual except for the swirling storms of gas and dust.
“Open the Bay doors,” Lorne commands.
“Bay doors open,” Sharpe confirms.
“Jumper Eight, you have a go for launch,” Lorne says. “Remember, radio silence unless there’s an emergency. Good luck.”
“Thank you, Major, we’ll do our best.”
Half a minute passes, then there’s a bleep from a console. “That’s confirmation,” one of the techs says. “Jumper Eight is away.”
“Okay, take us down again to ten klicks.” The deeper down they go, the easier they can hide; but they can’t dive too deeply, or they’ll lose sight of the Jumper and can’t retrieve them in case of an emergency. If all goes well they’ll get to M22-535, dial Atlantis, give a sitrep, and return to the Aurora, all within half an hour. Then they can jump from this system and try to lure the Wraith in the other direction, away from the New Lantean system. If all goes well.
Godspeed.
She is not a pilot. Her poor mother would have a heart attack if she saw her now.
Miko’s choice of a scientific field made her family proud. They were not the most traditional of people, and she had many friends of the same age who married young, had kids early on, and couldn’t develop as rich working careers. At first, she hadn’t aimed for the stars. She’d tried mathematics, the pure thing. But then she read a fantastical thesis in the field of astrophysics and saw an opportunity to explore more, and she dreamed. She switched tracks and studied and worked at the same time, and she diligently called her parents once a week to tell them everything was well. She’d moved to Tokyo to get her degree and then studied abroad in two different countries for her doctorate. Her final PhD thesis took four years to complete.
Her family came from a quiet village in the Japanese countryside, and Miko’s father would have liked her to continue living there and help with the farm, but fate had other plans for her. She was the brightest one, and her mother said she was wasted if she lingered too long at their homestead. The world could offer so much more.
But the promise of a scientific career path calmed her mother; it wouldn’t be dangerous, and she’d be giving to this and the next generation in terms of hope and knowledge. Yes, her mother preferred that much more over her brothers’ choices in life. Miko would study the stars and look at bright novas through telescopes; that was how much her mother grasped. She was more interested in history herself. She knew all the important names, events, the details of every era, and Miko knew the numbers.
Her mother would be so shocked. When Miko told her that she was partaking in a Joint International Expedition—focusing on the science and exploration bit, not the military presence—her mother had been happy for her but a bit anxious. Miko hadn’t been able to tell her any details, give a location. It’s classified. When she said she would no longer be able to call or even email, her mother and father had been crushed. They had never been so cut off from each other before. When Miko found herself stranded in an alien City, three million lightyears from home and with no promise to return, she’d been terrified.
The work was important. Atlantis was grand, beautiful, fascinating. The stars brilliant and new. The things they could do, find, explore—it was beyond her wildest dreams. Most people found their boss, Dr McKay, annoying and arrogant but she thought him oddly charming, and she got used to his rude and unique ways of pointing out people’s mistakes (and lack of intelligence). Dr Zelenka and the rest of the team is much more pleasant. They’re all scientist with common goals and similar worldviews. They come from different nations, different parents, different cultural backgrounds and religions, but fundamentally they all believe in the same set of ideas: that the world should be explored and explained with numbers and understood, not feared.
Miko’s deepest fear has, for most of her life, been rats. Big, gray, ugly rats. They’d be in the barn during hot, wet summers and she stumbled on one as a child and never really recovered from that. Their horrid, horrid long tails, the noise of their movements scattering in the dark. It might also have had to do with the fact that one particular boy who had bullied her as a child preferred that Shape for his Dæmon, and rats became synonymous with hurtful actions and words whose scars yet linger.
Right now, though, at this moment, her most immediate fear is that they’ll crash or be eaten by Wraith. Space makes one change priorities. Besides, Atlantis has no rats; thankfully, no one in the Expedition has a Dæmon of that Shape.
The stick is clutched tightly in her hands and she suppresses a tremble. It doesn’t work. Sergeant Dusty Mehra, sitting in the co-pilot seat, frowns.
“You okay, doc?” she asks.
She’s got the ATA-gene too but she’s one of the thirty-eight marines who came to the City just a couple of months ago, around the turn of Earth’s New Year, the first reinforcements the City’s received since the start of the Expedition and she has even less flight experience than Miko. Part of a recon team, she and the others are still being trained in Jumper flight and getting up to speed on other Atlantis-related mission issues, like interfacing with Ancient tech. That, too, requires training and time which they do not always have. Much here happens head-on with little to no preparation. Mehra is part of an all-female AR-team led by Captain Teldy. Miko thinks that’s got to be nice up to the point when everyone’s cycles line up; then it’s just going to be annoying as they’ll be suffering at the same time. Pros weigh up the cons, though.
“Uh, yes. I am fine. Just … nervous,” Miko says and swallows, tries to get rid of the lump in her throat. At least her voice doesn’t shake. Yet.
“That’s okay, doc. It’s normal to be nervous,” Lieutenant Laura Cadman says from behind them in the left-hand seat. She knows how to read the basic Ancient graphs and numbers, though she finds the language itself a crunch, and she couldn’t say hello in Ancient even if she wanted to. “Okay, we’re at six klicks. Should get a glimpse of the planet soon.”
The Aurora is behind them getting smaller and smaller as it disappears down again, but out of sight, the atmosphere too thick. But they still get a clear sensor reading off it. Not that far out yet.
Miko clears her throat. “It’s a moon.”
“Oh. Right.”
The cloud coverage soon breaks up. At two klicks they get a hint of space, and they pierce through it like an invisible arrow. As they breach the surface there’s a risk the trail is clear, a path cloven through the storm, but the movement of the clouds should ruin that trail within a few minutes. The storms are huge and appear slow on the outside, possibly having lasted for hundreds of years at a time, but the winds move at over a hundred kph. If not for the shield tightly surrounding the small Ancient craft, the remnant dust particles in those winds would shear through the hull like knives, and the drives work hard to keep them moving in the straight line Miko concentrates on. The stick fight her. She keeps glancing at the HUD and the data displayed there: the windscreen tells her nothing.
“There! A blip, it’s the moons. See all fourteen of them. Let’s see—where’s that little bastard?” murmurs Mehra.
Cadman bites back a chuckle. “Something I don’t want to know about, Sarge?”
“Nah, just this thing happened with the team once and there was this moon we had to navigate by—tell you another time, Lieutenant. There. At thirty-one point six by sixteen point five degrees: M22-535. It’s on the scopes,” Mehra says. The data is visible to them all on the HUD, but she keeps saying it out loud so that Miko can focus on flying. Miko does not understand why some people volunteer to do this. Fly. It really is not safe.
Something throws them to the right. It’s like a punch, and if not for the dampeners they’d been flattened against the wall. Now it rattles the Jumper and suddenly it doesn’t feel that safe. Miko has never had problems with being inside a Jumper before. Now she is all too aware that all separating them from a quick but painful death is a layer of hull and shielding less than two feet thick. It’s not a comforting thought.
“Whoa! The hell was that?” Cadman cries out, clutching the sides of her seat.
“Turbulence,” Mehra says stiffly. “Better strap in.”
They do. Mehra has to help Miko with her safety belt because she uses both hands for the ship’s controls and dares not let go for a millisecond. It takes a few very tense moments to correct the course. The vessel strains beneath her hands like it doesn’t want to go that way. She has to fire boosters briefly to correct their speed, too; they’re losing velocity. The Jupiter’s gravity tries to pull them back, and the scientist in her notes that its mass must be even greater than first readings indicated with heavy elements in the core.
“Bearing two-eight-five … surface one klick away, then we should get visual on the moon,” Mehra says. “Shields took a bit of a beating.”
“How much did we lose? And how much can this tin can take?” Cadman asks a bit concernedly.
“Lost about … eight percent. Thank fuck the Ancients used this many graphs or I’d never be able to tell you that, by the way,” Mehra says cheerfully. She’s quite new to the City, and to the SGC as a whole; sure, she’s been through a lot of the motions, but language lessons are more of a scientist thing, and few of the marines know to recognize Ancient aside from warning, collision alert, overload, danger—that kind of thing.
Miko thinks that is a flaw that must be corrected as soon as possible. Could arrange some courses with the Archeology department; most of them know Ancient as fluently as one possibly could an alien language no one has properly heard spoken aloud. The Gate matrix translates speech (most of the time), anyway, so that’s rarely an issue.
“If we go down to fifteen of total we must worry,” Miko says tightly. She stares ahead, and the skies are opening. Technically they’re not flying up, even though it feels like it. The dimensions of space cannot be truly grasped by human senses, fallible and weak and not meant for these distances and configurations. They’re moving away from the nearest, largest center of mass—the Jupiter—toward the next one so, technically, they’re more like falling.
“You’re doing great,” Cadman says encouragingly.
“Thank you for lying.”
“No problem. Hey, us women marines have got poker nights on Wednesdays. You should come join us. It’s about time we invited some civvies.”
It almost makes her smile. Honestly, military people have always intimidated her a bit, and she’s thought most of them are brutes with bad sense of humor. She’s never been part of an AR-team nor does she want to. The few offworld stints she had before the Aurora suited her just fine. She prefers the more stable environment of her lab. Far away from the immediate dangers of space. The City (when landed) cannot vent the atmosphere or lose pressure. The marines seemed, as far as she could tell, to like the opposite. They restlessly couldn’t wait to get offworld and she heard the most horrifying, thrilling stories at the lunch table sometimes. And so many macho men. Not that some of the scientists aren’t macho, but they’re a little subtler about it and Miko sometimes has enough of men. That makes the invitation sound nice.
“I’ll consider. Please, I must concentrate on not crashing now.”
“Sure thing, doc.”
“Major, the Hive is bearing down on us,” Sharpe warns. “Distance seventy … correction: sixty-eight thousand klicks. Closing fast. I think the game’s up.”
“They’ve spotted us,” Grodin confirms.
Damn. And this was going so well. Too well. Of course.
Lorne adjusts in his seat as the numbers are confirmed. The Wraith have changed their heading: they have seen the Aurora’s silhouette flickering in and out of sight of the Jupiter’s coverage. Their current depth into its surface is less than ten klicks. They lost sight of the Jumper two minutes ago and the trail is blurring; their current ETA is twenty-eight minutes. That’s twenty-eight minutes the Aurora has to hold out and also distract the Hiveship so the cloaked Jumper isn’t noticed.
That won’t will be hard up until they reach the moon’s Gate and start dialing. Lorne knows about the Wraith tactic to dial out to trap people, but since the moon is barren and uninhabited and the Aurora hundreds of times too large to travel through the Gate, he doesn’t think the Wraith will bother. It would require them to call for some other Hive nearer another Gate to dial this one. Still, a slim possibility.
The away-team has to reach ‘535 before that happens.
“Weapons’ status?”
“Our drones are loaded and we should have enough ammunition to take on a single Hiveship. But our shield capabilities are diminished at eighty-two percent: if they start shooting back, and they will, we’ll lose them fast under the strain of these storms,” Sharpe warns.
“Hiveship is taking on position behind us. They may intend to board once they reach us.”
Which, fuck. “Understood.” He clicks on the intercom. He does it physically: he can’t control the ship with a thought, not like how the Colonel supposedly does it. What a cheat. “Attention all personnel, this is Lorne. We may engage the Wraith in combat shortly. Please take up battle stations. All non-essential personnel go to your designated safety areas. Lorne out.”
He’s not a guy for inspirational speeches. Why he became a pilot and not a politician or whatnot. Man, if he’d just gone down the artist route and become a painter, life would’ve been so much less complicated. Easier. Sure, he’d probably be broke and his parents both admiring and despairing at the same time, but he wouldn’t be fighting aliens and trying to save mankind from doom without being to tell anyone about because it’s too damned classified.
“Grodin, I’m giving control of the Bridge to you. I’m headed to the Chair. My radio’s on, so keep talking to me.”
They all knew that was going to happen. Dr Grodin nods seriously. It’s not strictly necessary for a person with the gene to pilot the ship: they can access controls without the ATA-gene and do most of it remotely, like piecing together a puzzle from several angles at once, and the things they can’t control Lorne can from the Chair. It’s a little more complex, but it can be done.
The corridors are vast and mostly deserted. Those that aren’t are full of life. People jog or some even run to the places they’re meant to go. The marines take up points at places of obvious access: by large vents, the airlocks, around the Hangar. That’s where the Wraith will force entry if they get close enough. The shield prevents them from beaming in and out with their Darts. There are a couple of dozen civilian scientists and technicians aboard, and most of them have zero battle experience, having come to Pegasus recently and only worked with the SGC for a few months. Some longer than that, in the safety of Area 51.
There are a few, of course, like Grodin or Kusanagi, who are First Wavers. They lived through a year of hell and the Siege, and they know what to do; they don’t have orders to basically go to their quarters and sit and wait. Those scientists who can handle it are armed and know how to shoot at a stationary target, at least, though Lorne’s not fond of the idea. Their aim is probably horrible, and they won’t be able to handle the recoil, especially in the heat of battle. The adrenaline can help or ruin them, or they’ll be taken by panic.
(Time will tell the truth.)
He reaches the Chair after well over a minute. It’s a several hundred meter sprint and the Aurora has a lot of access shafts and stairwells, but no transporters. Wouldn’t work, he supposes: the Aurora is too small and mobile for that. If a kilometer-long vessel counts as small. Still not on par in size with a Wraith Hiveship, and that’s kind of freaky. While he runs he listens to the activity on the Bridge. The countdown. Velocities and distances.
“Shields at eighty-one point six percent. Check.”
“Drones online, check. We have eight hundred and two at our disposal.” Each one of those drones is valuable ammo, and they want to waste as few as possible. Still can’t properly manufacture them (not for the lack of trying). A single drone can do a lot of damage if well-aimed. Lorne hasn’t actively shot a lot of live drones before. So, his Dæmon thinks dryly for the both of them: the only way to go is up.
“Distance to Hive, twenty-one thousand klicks. They’re closing in fast. ETA—nine minutes. They’re aiming straight for us. Their course is lined up with ours.”
“Anything on the Jumper?” Lorne asks breathlessly as he takes seat. This Chair is much more comfortable than the one in the Bridge.
“Negative, nothing on the scopes, Major. Can’t detect any Gate being dialed either.”
Too early. Wouldn’t reach that moon for another—what? eight minutes? something like that, yeah. “Copy that.”
“Hive’s aligned and sped up. They’ve started entering the Jupiter.”
“Our current depth is ten klicks. This severely diminishes our capacity to navigate. If we rise to five klicks, we’ll move easier while still scrambling their sensors and putting less stress on our shields,” Sharpe advises.
He thinks it over for a few moments. “Do it,” he decides.
The Aurora begins to climb.
Space. She exhales heavily when they break free and see it. The stars are clearer out here than they ever are on Earth. No cities spewing out artificial light to pollute the skylines, albeit the gas giant reflects quite a bit of sunlight from the system’s binary pair. At this distance, the two suns are merely two slightly brighter pinpricks. Here, they can glimpse the uneven shape of Pegasus. Clutters of gas and stars still being born; distant supernovas dying; beautiful nebulae like someone’s spilled color on a dark canvas. Miko doesn’t really see any of it. She loves the stars: she loves living more.
The ‘535 moon is small and distant and dull. The rock it’s composed of reflects minimal amount of light. The closer they get, the more they see: a litter of craters, ranging in size from that of buildings to mountains. The moon is about twice the size of Earth’s, which means landing will be both easier and harder. A bit softer, not much of an impact. On the other hand that means there’s a risk the Jumper with bounce unless the dampeners and artificial gravity hold the right settings. Adjusting these while still keeping the course, one hand on the stick, takes effort. Miko decides she will not fly another Jumper if asked again. She is fine with looking on from the passenger seat.
“Coming in a little hot, doc,” Mehra warns.
“I know,” she says testily. “You try flying the spaceship!”
“I didn’t know you had that in you, never heard you raise your voice, doc,” Mehra remarks with a raised eyebrow. It is not funny. Miko is not violent, but the Sergeant is starting to grate a little on her nerves. Would not be if she wasn’t flying. “Sorry,” the Sergeant says after a second, seeing the expression on her tense face. “Distance: one klick. This place has an atmosphere but it’s thin, so I think we’ll be okay at this angle.”
“You mean not burn up on entry,” Cadman says.
“Yes. But there’ll still be friction, could make us seen even with cloak,” Miko says. English is her third language but when she’s under this much pressure the fluency slips, and as the Jumper starts skidding the moon’s atmosphere an upset mutter in Japanese escapes her. Oh, she is glad her mother will never know anything about this. “Angle?”
“Uh, thirty-one degrees.”
Thirty-five to forty-five would be better. The flatter angle means a longer, slower entry which taxes the shields even more. And it could create a burning trail for anyone to see—and follow. She takes them down. The surface is relatively flat. The Stargate is located on the other side, and she’ll have to fly half an orbit in-atmosphere once they’re in to get to it. This means they’ll be in the moon’s shadow relative to the gas giant, and the last readings had the Wraith on the other side, effectively hiding them. Perhaps the moon itself will make it hard for them to detect the wormhole when it opens. She could try dialing now with the Jumper’s DHD, but the range of them is great but not that great and she would rather be certain it works.
Things start shaking again. Miko is glad they strapped in earlier.
“Entering atmosphere,” she says.
“Hail Mary,” Mehra whispers. She isn’t Catholic herself, but Miko silently agrees: in science she trusts, but if Mehra is comforted by a quick prayer to take them to safety, she’ll take comfort in it too.
“Hive closing at one-hundred seventy-three degrees starboard, distance eight kilometers. We’ll be in weapons’ range in one minute,” Sharpe says. They’re almost fully outside of the gas giant now.
“Status on the Jumper?” Lorne asks.
“It’s out of sight,” Grodin says. “Dark side of the moon.”
Losing sight of it shouldn’t be a comfort: it is a warning of disaster, normally. But if the Ancient sensors are struggling to keep up with the cloaked Jumper, the Wraith shouldn’t be able to spot it.
“Forty seconds.”
Time to lose them. Move away from the Jumper, and lure the Wraith with them. Lorne concentrates and adjusts the course by a couple of degrees. He orders the crew to fire boosters to pick up speed: a risky maneuver. They have to try.
“Twenty seconds.”
The burn ceases, and the Hive is powering their engines behind them to keep up. They took the bait. Their shields are at max, though not a hundred percent, and the proximity sensors begin to blink and bleep in alarm. Lorne has closed his eyes. It goes against his piloting instincts to do that, and he’ll not be able to focus on flight corrections as well as weaponry at the same time without failing too much at both, so Grodin and Sharpe have the reigns in the Bridge. Instead he envisions the drones glowing, their power about to be unleashed, and tries to visualize them striking the Hiveship.
“Ten seconds … five … We’re weapons hot. In range, Major.”
Half a dozen drones are released from within the bowels of the ship and launched through the shield and the thick atmosphere, over and across and he tries to aim for the Hive’s Dart Bay. Secondary explosions would be good. At the same moment, a similar order is executed on the Hive, and the Aurora takes each bolt of energy from the enemy like a punch causing a great shudder. Dull, repetitive noise. But the shields are holding. The shields are holding. No hull breaches, no causalities. Lorne releases a second salvo. He won’t send out Jumpers or F-302:s to meet them; and as of yet the Hive fires at a distance without launching drones.
“Shields at sixty percent,” Sharpe warns.
Steering the drones in this soup-like atmo is different, very different, to doing it in simulations in deep space, and it’s weird to be so eerie aware of it, like part of his brain senses what the drones are moving through. Minute drag. A bit more sluggish than in vacuum. Lorne hasn’t often used the weapons. In a Jumper once or twice, as exercises, and the drones hadn’t been live. Simulations. His fists are clenched where they lie atop the armrests, and he doesn’t realize it at first, too deeply delved into the functions of the Chair and in guiding each drone to a target.
A dance of golden light pierces the Wraith ship from the side and forces its way into the nearest Dart Bay. A few of them overshoot and he scrambles to turn them around. Hit something else. An unknown, unspecified part of the vessel. The lightshow is spectacular, but none of the people aboard the Aurora can see it. It doesn’t disable the Hive entirely, though it’s taken severe damage. A spark: secondary explosions—still not enough.
“They’re increasing firing intensity!” a technician warns.
“Shields at fifty percent. We’re losing it too fast!”
Sharpe murmurs a muffled curse. “The storm, it’s got to be.”
“Major, we’re reading a massive explosion in one of the Dart Bays. Secondary explosions, too.”
“Shields at forty-two percent.”
The Aurora has shot fifty-one drones at the Hive when the Wraith decide to try another tactic.
“They’re picking up speed rapidly! Approaching directly at our stern.”
“They’ll try to board,” Grodin says worriedly. “Distance less than a kilometer.”
The comms are on constantly and Lorne is too busy to speak a lot, but he can hear every word. One of the engineers argues: “If we increase engine output, the heat and force of them could cause the Hive some serious damage.”
“No, their course is parallel at point seven kilometers, and they haven’t been in this storm as long as us. If the shields fail and they manage to overtake us from above …”
“Major, they’re launching Darts from another Bay!”
Shit. “How many?” Lorne demands to know.
“In the low hundreds,” Sharpe says grimly.
There’s no way he could pick off that many Darts, even if they had all the Jumpers in the air: they’ll be out of drones before that.
I think our luck just ran out.
Chapter 26: grace, part two
Summary:
burden of command: you can’t hesitate forever; you’ve got to pull the shots.
Notes:
(2017-11-26) This turned out to be a quite action-packed chapter and, wow, action is so difficult to write. So I hope this is okay. It became longer than I first meant to, too, as originally "grace" was going to be a single chapter and then we’d get back to the main plot, but it simply grew and this is what it became. There are quite a few characters involved here. Some are canon (but with modifications to fit this 'verse) and some are entirely of my own creation-
Chapter Text
xxvi.
grace
part two
burden of command: you can’t hesitate forever; you’ve got to pull the shots.
The Jumper doesn’t crash or fall apart. After a few seconds the trip smooths out. Her first entry into atmosphere. Miko has flown in atmo only once before, above Lantea before the Wraith besieged them. The early days when they were all still finding their feet. Stackhouse and Markham were with her and one other civilian with the ATA-gene to train. The other time they were in space and there were no moons to aim at or Wraith to dodge. Flying at that time had seemed almost fun and relaxing. Almost.
A crater, a wide regular basin cut a few hundred meters into the rock, comes into view. There at the center rises a Stargate, shimmering naquadah silver and blue, like a pinnacle. Scattered around it in the same crater—a couple of miles wide—are odd shapes, low and square, and a couple of taller ones that could be simple towers, not twisting and beautiful like the ones in Atlantis. Miko recalls that ‘535 was listed in the database as a naquadah mine. There’s no life here other than perhaps fungi and the odd plant slowly starving from lack of oxygen, but it never kicked off. Or, it’s possible, the atmosphere is thin now because it was artificial—the Ancients knew how to do that. When they left and shut down power, the atmosphere must’ve slowly evaporated, leaving behind only the trace amounts of gases that the moon could support with its quite weak gravity. Makes sense. Miko would like to look into it further.
“That’s no moon,” Mehra whispers dramatically: “It’s a space station.”
“That is not funny,” Miko says, gritting her teeth. Her glasses are starting to slip down her nose a couple of millimeters but she daren’t let go of the controls in order to adjust them.
“You heard her, Sarge. Shut up. Hey, doc,” Cadman says as they circle around, Miko seeking a good spot to land; “remind me to get you a beer later.”
“I prefer wine. Moscato.”
“I’ll see what I can do.”
Mehra rolls her eyes. “Can we dial the City now and celebrate later?”
“First I would like to land,” Miko says. “It would minimize risk of detection, and I’ve never tried flying in circles.”
“Okay, let’s not crash. Look, are those buildings?” Cadman leans closer, tries to peer through the windshield. It’s difficult to make anything out and Miko doesn’t dare turning on any of the Jumper’s outer headlights. “Could try to land in the shadow of one.”
Mehra nods. “Good idea.”
“I’m known to have them.”
The landing is, thankfully, smoother than the entry. Dust swirls upward and settles gently back on the moon surface. There is no soil and very little water, they cannot see much apart from what the scans tell them. But Miko focuses the sensors back into space, and tries to get a lock on the Aurora and the Hiveship while Mehra dials the City. The Stargate is around the corner and they can just barely see it, and it spins lazily. The puddle suddenly floods the area with cold, blue light.
Ordinary radio doesn’t carry that far that quickly. They opt to use it. They could have gone through the Gate, Jumper and all, with the risk of not being able to return, and they can’t just leave the Aurora and her crew behind. The ship might need their help; or, according to the marines, they may need Miko’s help. She’s spent so much time studying the workings of that ship she knows how to hotwire a thing or two, how to manually fire drones from a console rather than the Chair. Mehra and Cadman aren’t happy. They aren’t pilots and there isn’t much they can do in a space battle, unless it’s taking place inside of a ship—hopefully it won’t come to that.
“Atlantis, this is Dr Kusanagi aboard Jumper Eight. Do you copy?” She sends her IDC, fingers trembling a little as she presses the too-small buttons. She breathes deeply, tries to get her nerves under control.
“We hear you. IDC confirmed,” says the technician. Sounds like Amelia Banks. She’s sweet and has been teaching Miko some fighting moves at the gym. Now she is rigid professionalism. “Hang on, I’ll call for Dr Weir.”
“Understood. We’ll wait.”
After less than half a minute, Weir’s voice is there, an anchor. It’s a little out of breath. Miko hopes she wasn’t sleeping in her office or something like that; in times like these, times of stress and anxiety on the verge of constant fear, Weir doesn’t seem to leave the Control Room to rest or eat. Always there. Vigilant. In charge. She deserves a week (a month, a year) off.
“This is Weir. What’s the situation?”
Miko nods at Cadman to do the talking. She’s still trying to get over the flight, and mentally prepare for the flight back. Which means she has to not only escape atmosphere unseen, but also enter the gas giant and find the Aurora. Yes. No more piloting after this.
Cadman quickly gives a lay of the land. “Ma’am, this is Lieutenant Cadman. Dr Kusanagi, Sergeant Mehra and I are in Jumper Eight on M22-535. The Aurora’s hiding in the clouds of the gas giant the moon orbits, and we have the Wraith hot on our tail. It looks like it’s headed in your direction if it continues the same way it’s moved for the past couple of hours. You should be prepared in case of attack.”
“Understood. We’re ready for that eventuality. Will you come through the Gate?”
“No, ma’am, we’re headed back to the Aurora.”
“Has the Aurora engaged the Hive?”
“Unsure. Interference makes readings difficult, and we’re on the wrong side of the moon. By the time we know we won’t be able to contact you.”
There is no curse, only a brief pause indicating disappointment at the uncertainty. “All right; be careful out there. Be aware we have no aid to send except Jumpers, and against a Hive they can only do minimal damage.” Even as she says this, Miko thinks Dr Weir might be preparing a couple of teams anyway. The problem is most people with the ATA-gene are now aboard the Aurora or on Earth, not in the City, so they can’t send more than two or three Jumpers at most. Fewer if Dr McKay is unavailable.
“Doc, before we break off,” Cadman says, “do we know anything more about the situation on Earth? Major Lorne will want a sitrep.”
“There isn’t much to say yet. Once you’re back in the City you’ll all be brought up to speed,” Dr Weir says, and Miko has an odd feeling. As if Weir is hiding something. Weir is a diplomat and can be a good liar; but she tends to be truthful with her people. Yes, her people; they need to be able to trust each other, and honestly is a key component. So what cause would she have to lie? Unless—it is bad news, and she does not want them distracted from the current situation. That seems like a very likely scenario.
Miko is a scientist and she is good at thinking fast. She is paid for doing a lot of thinking, after all. This thought saddens her. She knows—they all know: rumor spreads faster than fire in the City—that there is an investigation on Earth ongoing, one of their marines missing. Mitchell Snow. They have never talked and she knows nothing about him except his name and that a friend of hers from the Anthropology department once confided in her about a crush on the man and gushed about the shape of his abs. Miko found this a bit absurd but was very supportive of her friend. Nevertheless, she does not like it when people die, and the marines are most likely to do so. The tragedy is worse if it has happened and on the very planet he’d returned to, to escape the dangers of Pegasus.
“We’ll try to get back in time for supper, Dr Weir,” Cadman says.
There are no shadows of doubt in her voice, but something in her face reveals that she is thinking similar things. And there was no mention of Colonel Sheppard, either. Miko much more prefers Dr McKay in his own body; the Ancient communication stones unnerve her deeply. Dr McKay’s body is trapped in the wrong galaxy and that can’t be good at all. She would like her people back in the places they belong.
“Jumper Eight out.”
“Good luck. Atlantis out.”
They let the Stargate shut down, and darkness falls again. It’s been thirteen minutes since they left the Aurora, and they need to return. Hopefully, taking off will be easier than landing.
A Hive can carry a hundred Darts easily within its huge belly. And like a beast opening its maws, it releases them all at once. Tiny blips on the radar and they’re swarming toward the Aurora at top speed. The first salvo of fire hits within twenty seconds—they’re not that far away, easily within range. Lorne tries to return fire, but they’ve got a limited amount drones and he can only control three or four of them at once and accurately seek out targets. If he were to fire more, at random, chances are the Darts would be able to dodge and the ammo would be wasted.
It’s a matter of seconds to make decisions that could kill them all if he does it wrong. Fuck, this is why he hates being in charge. A Major doesn’t usually command a spaceship full of people, does he? There’s been times he’s dreamed of command, of rising the ranks, even after seeing what it’s doing to people. The stress and the pressure and, sure, taking orders can be a bitch at times, if he disagrees with them, but then at least he has someone else pulling the shots. Saying: do this, do that, don’t worry about the rest.
He needs to get the Aurora and its people safe. Survive.
They’re far above the gas giant’s cloud coverage now, and the Hive’s course is parallel to theirs.
“Any sign of Jumper Eight yet?”
“Negative,” is the answer.
Fuck. Fuck. “Shields,” he says, doesn’t even bother making it a question, while he sits in the Chair, eyes closed, and imagines a drone tearing a Dart apart. Space is silent and there’s no aftershock to notice, but he’s pretty sure it’s a hit. There’s this connection, like a sharp burst of fire, a light, whenever a drone explodes.
“Twenty-one percent and falling.”
He weighs it: the Aurora and its crew, and the Jumper and the three people aboard it. Over seventy lives versus three. It stings. Fuck. He has to decide. If they increase speed, they could outrun the Hive. If they’re to jump to hyperspace, it’s got to be soon, before the shields are too weak. Without shields they can’t jump, there’d too much risk involved and they could end up scattered across a dozen star systems, the Aurora breaking apart at the seams.
Hopefully their message got through to Atlantis.
Hopefully.
Seventy lives versus three—
(risking the ship for that Jumper is something
the Colonel probably would’ve done)
we don’t leave people behind, drilled into his mind, this mentality shared by all Lanteans. And he’s meant to be one of them. Isn’t he? Not merely this watcher sent by the SGC. Fuck, Dr Weir and Colonel Sheppard and the Lanteans, they trust him. In his ability as an Air Force officer. In his loyalty.
Loyalty. Trust.
Fuck . Burden of command: you can’t hesitate forever; you’ve got to pull the shots.
They have seven more Jumpers aboard and eight F-302s loaded in the Bay, ready to go. Weir had ensured that there would be at least five pilots aboard for the Jumpers, untrained as they are, and the Daedalus left seven F-302 pilots behind, orders from the SGC, and they’re here. Most of the latter Lorne knows quite well from sharing time in the service together; they’re SGC veterans, fought above Antarctica. They can handle themselves against Snakes. Wraith Darts aren’t that different from Gliders when it boils down to it. Lorne can’t be two places at once, though he’d like to sit in the cockpit too, but …
“Get our fighters in the air!”
“Shields at nineteen percent,” Grodin warns.
Alarms are blaring, not just in the Bridge but everyone on the ship, and there’s controlled chaos: activity, people rushing to and fro, seeking designated safe areas or, in most cases, workstations where they can help out if they haven’t been given a specific task already. Pilots are running to the Bay to man the Jumpers and F-302s, and, within two minutes of the order being given, the Bay doors open.
“Fighters are away.”
They’re not much against a horde of drones. But it’s something. It’s something. Some of the Jumpers immediately go to stealth mode, but the Aurora can still track them, and Grodin catches a glimpse of one of the holographic displays: a few bright blue dots zigzagging through a maze of moving objects, changing course at random and seeking out weak spots before decloaking and firing. Got to find a way to fire and remain cloaked, Grodin thinks, bleakly, filing it away as one of the other hundred projects that he’d like to have done.
The Aurora trembles.
“Another hit on the bow!”
“Shields at eighteen percent!”
“Damn, we’re down to only a few dozen drones left. At this rate we’ll be out of them before this is over.”
Another hit, the strongest by far, rocks the ship and the inertial dampeners struggle to compensate. That wasn’t just weapons fire, Grodin realizes with growing horror.
“Major!“ he cries, a warning. “We have Darts doing kamikaze runs!”
“Copy,” Major Lorne answers, somehow managing to sound like he’s keeping his cool. He has to. He’s here to keep them safe; of course he has to. The man is busily trying to give commands and aim drones from the Chair at the same time. Everyone is multitasking.
“Shields at fifteen percent.”
Grodin’s hands fly across the console, seeking any place in the ship’s functions where he can drain power from nonessential system and strengthen the shields. Something. Anything. We won’t die out here like this, his Dæmon whispers furiously. I refuse to.
“Drop another two and we won’t be able to jump to hyperspace.”
“I’m aware of that, doc,” Major Lorne says dryly.
A new alarm in the choir. “Another Dart—they’re headed toward the Bridge!”
If the shield fails, the Dart will tear through the Bridge and breach it to space. Grodin’s heartbeat is fast but steady and he has to remind himself to keep breathing.
“Blue Five here,” a voice on the radio says: “I see it, trying to intercept.” A second, two, three pass—“Missile away.”—and there’s a brilliant flash of light, and Grodin shields his eyes on reflex.
The explosion peaks on the starboard side of the wide windows surrounding the Bridge, and thanks to the light reflected off the gas giant, it’s possible to see the swarm of Darts, flashes of blue, drones, and the occasional burst of fire being returned by their fighters. Then an F-302 whizzes past, and it’s a trick of the eyes, adrenaline so high, but Grodin almost could’ve sworn he could reach out and touch the tiny ship as it flies by. It is all a blur but he still images he could see the details of the fighter, the shape of the wings and the etchings on the side and the flag painted on the steel.
“Phew, that was close.”
“Yes, a little too close,” Grodin says: “Well done, Blue Five.”
He has no idea, at this point, who is piloting which ship, or whose idea it was to designate the Aurora’s meek gathering of F-302s the Blue Squadron. It’s not like the larger fighter wings the SGC has available on Earth, or even the Daedalus, with a few dozen of them. The pilots, new-come to Atlantis with the Daedalus and not part of any SG-teams as of yet, are mostly foreign to him. They seem to prefer keeping to themselves—after all, they’re not part of the Original Expedition, and they’re not out there visiting other planets on a daily basis, and they don’t have many other duties except flying when necessary.
This is their first real fight in Pegasus.
Grodin doesn’t want them to lose.
“Major, this is Blue Leader,” says another voice. “Darts are breaking formation. Looks like—they’re headed for you.”
“Jumper Three here, reporting the same. A couple of dozen—impact in twenty seconds!”
“Max those shields,” Lorne orders.
"We’re trying,” Grodin says. Seventeen seconds. sixteen.
“Boost the—”
“Done.”
fifteen.
“Shutting down auxiliaries on level eight.”
Grodin nods. “Shields at sixteen percent.”
eleven.
ten.
The F-302s and Jumpers are obviously trying to take out as many of the advancing Darts as they can, and Grodin can’t be distracted from his work anymore, can’t look up to witness the explosions which quickly fade in the cold of space. The alarms reach a crescendo and there’s nowhere to take cover. They can’t maneuver the Aurora out of the way swiftly enough, and using the engines for a more powerful burn would mean taxing power from the shields.
seven.
six.
Grodin sees that the number of approaching dots have been reduced from thirty to twelve or thirteen. It’s still too much.
four.
three.
“Brace for impact!”
two —
“Short, concentrated energy bursts,” Banks explains the readings, which have been transferred from an Ancient console into a modern computer. The data on the screen doesn’t lie. “The signal delay is about thirteen minutes, so this started less than fifteen minutes ago.”
The same time or not long after they received the message.
Elizabeth frowns, arms crossed. Her head’s pounding, the headache has been growing for hours and she’s been putting off both rest and food and a visit to Carson all since she woke up this morning after a fitful three hours of sleep. She’d had uneasy nightmares about the City being destroyed and both Hives and Goa’uld Motherships raining down fire from the sky, and she woke in a cold sweat, heart pumping harshly.
“Does that mean what I think it means?”
“Well, if you’re thinking it’s a battle—yes, ma’am.”
She considers the far-away dots, the intermittently updating streams of data. This far away, even with enhanced long-range sensors, what they get is mostly ghost imagery. No details, just the silhouette. But that’s definitely the Aurora and a Hiveship, and they’re in trouble.
God, she shouldn’t have let them go out there in the first place. Too late to change her mind now.
“How many Jumpers do we have, and how many people with the ATA-gene available?”
Banks can figure where she’s going and shakes her head. “Less than five who’re trained to fly—most are aboard the Aurora already, or returned to Earth for leave.”
Damn it. There goes that idea down the drain.
She makes a decision. He’s busy with other tasks and should really need to rest, to sleep for a day, but sadly she can’t let that happen yet.
“Rodney, please report to the Control Room.”
The reply is snappy and empty of energy. Colonel Sheppard has never, in her memory, used that kind of voice, but Rodney has on multiple occasions. Near enough, anyway. Though there’s a lack of power behind the words. As if Rodney is more than tired: he’s drained. “Can’t. Busy.”
“Rodney, the Aurora is in trouble,” Elizabeth says. “They’ve engaged a Hive in the M22-535 system and we don’t have enough Jumpers to send to assist them. I need you and your team to think of anything, anything at all, we can do to help them.” They can’t lose the Aurora and the people aboard. She cannot allow it, and yet there’s so damningly little she can do. She wants to tear at her hair. Scream, as if it’d make things better. A pressure’s growing inside of her chest and wants to be let out.
There’s a pause, several heartbeats of silence, and there’s only the noise of John Sheppard’s body breathing. Then Rodney says: “Fine. We’ll try.”
“Thank you,” Elizabeth says. She isn’t sure Rodney’s listening. But he needs to hear it.
Captain Anne Teldy of the United States Marine Corps could’ve sworn up and down she wasn’t going to be on this trip. They were rescheduled last minute, things shuffled around, and eventually she and her team ended up here anyway. They’re new to this galaxy and been put through tests almost like it’s boot camp all over again, and she’s not new to the SGC so it kind of took her by surprise at first.
But Atlantis is a different place. Living in a thousands of year old alien, apparently possibly sentient, City? Weird. Fighting against life-sucking aliens? Holy fuck. She’d expected the new pace and directives, some new CO who probably doesn’t know what they’re doing half the time and fucking up the other half—that’s usually how it goes—but the place is surprisingly efficient and well-ordered and yet so laid-back. Ordinary and extraordinary all at once. She’d expected having to bond with new people, both marines and civilians, and visiting new planets. That’s the exciting part, the allure. But babysitting a bunch of geeks aboard a spaceship?
It’s okay. Rather boring. Gives her time to read and actually sleep the full hours. The watch duty roster nothing new and it’s more like babysitting the geeks than actual guarding—the only thing to watch out for are Ancient old blown fuses and malfunctioning doors. That one to crew quarters on level five still sometimes refuses to open, some kind of glitch they’re still working on, minor maintenance not as important as engines or shields.
Babysitting until now, that is.
She’s in a corridor on level two along with Private Oakley from AR-3—learning to work together with non-team is part of the job—when it hits. It’s unlike any of the previous rounds of fire. No, this isn’t a blast of energy or pulse of plasma: this was a solid object, and it just sheared through the shields like the tip of a spear. Everything rocks sideways and she catches herself against the nearest wall. Oakley’s in the middle of a step and falls backward, narrowly missing hitting his head.
“The fuck was that?” he exclaims, pulling himself up with a groan.
Bad news, that’s what it is. Teldy taps her earpiece. “Command, this is Captain Teldy. What just happened?”
It’s not Major Lorne or Grodin, the appointed chief technician, who answers. Someone else. That tech—Sharpe? Sharpe, yeah. Teldy scrambles to remember. “Several Darts hit us,” Sharpe says. “There’s … there’s a breach on level two, starboard side, and on level five, near the Bay. I think—the internal scanners are a bit messed up from the impact, but—Wraith. There’s Wraith. And we’ve lost the third power node stabilizer,” the technician adds, stressed. “I can’t raise Major Lorne.”
Level two. Teldy exchanges a look and a nod with Oakley. “We’re on level two, doc. We’ll take care of the Wraith problem on our end.”
It’s such a vividly civilian response when Sharpe nervously audibly swallows and says: “Okay, good. I, I’m not sure what to do—Peter’s unconscious, his head hit the console—” Her voice hitches in distress.
“Keep trying to contact the Major and try to get a medic to the Bridge,” Teldy advises. “Stay on the Bridge. And scramble the marines at every point of entry. Got to stop the Suckers from getting further into the ship.”
How many Wraith are there aboard? They might need reinforcements but there are none coming.
They could be so seriously screwed.
”Okay. Good luck.”
“You too. Teldy out.” She looks at Oakley. His Dæmon isn’t big, only this red-tailed chipmunk, and hers isn’t either. Right now she wouldn’t have minded if they were something like, say, that Satedan guy’s—those teeth could rip through a Wraith’s throat easily. They’ve got to rely mostly on their P-90s, and she cocks the weapon; ammo’s fresh and fully loaded. “Let’s go.”
“On your six!”
“I see it, I see it.”
“Blue Five here. I’ve got you.”
“Nice shot! Thanks, buddy.”
“Anytime.”
“Blue Two to Blue Leader, I’m out of missiles and taken a hit to the port. Request permission to return to Bay.”
“Copy that, acknowledged, Blue Two. Blue Leader to Command, you’ve got a friendly fighter incoming, request you open the Bay. Command? Major Lorne, come in. Fuck, is anyone else getting contact with Command?”
“Blue Three. Negative on that.”
“Jumper Six, also no.”
“Blue Two, no contact with mothership.”
“Jumper Four, I’m reading multiple points of impact and possible Wraith activity aboard the Aurora. They’ve boarded!”
“Fuck.”
“I’ve got a Dart on my tail, can’t shake ‘em!”
“Blue Five, I’ve got your back. Hang on.”
“It’s catching up! I can’t—”
“Shit, I lost Blue Five on my scopes—anyone confirm?”
“Can’t see him either.”
“Squadron, this is Blue Leader. We’ve got Wraith on the Aurora, but we can’t help with that until we’ve taken out this Hive. Form up and concentrate all fire on the Bay. Jumpers, join in. Give it all you’ve got.”
Flares of fire from cannons, missiles, and drones all aimed for the Hiveship’s Dart Bay light up the darkness. Then there is a second flash, as a massive explosion is triggered: it doesn’t fully destroy the Hive, but weakens it, momentarily lulling the attack. The fighters then turn in well-practiced smooth moves, heading back for the Aurora, picking off targets at random. Slowly the immediate space is clearing up, but there are still many Darts about, and there are pieces of wreckage floating freely, already starting to cool down, taken by the cold of space’s vacuum.
In the chaos, it’s difficult to take note of another Jumper, cloaked, slowly approaching from the moon.
They run into the first Wraith trying to blast its way through a door. Bulkheads have been closing—not all of them, but some, over a foot thick and made of something other than steel, and they’d only open to someone with the Ancient gene. Unfortunately, neither Teldy nor Oakley possess that. They’ve already passed by several doors and been unable to enter, but there’d been no noise coming from within indicating that someone’s stuck and in a panic attempting to escape. This also means they can’t use scanners, so they’re essentially walking around blind.
Sometimes the lights flicker. Something wrong with the power grid. Didn’t Sharpe mention something about a broken power node?
If the power goes, they all go.
They round the bend of the corridor, and Teldy’s finger presses the trigger on automatic at the sight of the white skin and hideous mask. The Wraith staggers and cries out. Maybe it’s a seriously bad idea, firing a P-90 inside of a confined space on a ship surrounded by hard vacuum, but she’s got no other choice.
It goes down after fifteen bullets. She’s heard of Suckers lasting through much more than that. Something about the speed of healing having to do with how recently they’ve fed; this one must’ve been hungry. They don’t cheer; it’s not a victory.
“The Darts are one-man ships, right?” Teldy glances at Oakley to confirm.
“Yeah,” he nods. “But they could’ve beamed up, or down, more Suckers.”
If only one ship and its pilot made it, that’s enough. How many could the Wraith beam up, or down, at one time anyway? And does it matter?
“Section 2070 ahead,” Oakley murmurs, taking point this time, moving efficiently onto the next corridor to the left. They leave the Wraith’s body by the bulkhead leading to the right, which probably was the fastest route to the Bridge, the ship’s nerve center. If Teldy wanted to take over an enemy ship, she’d head for the important areas. Bridge. Engineering, too. Auxiliary Control Room. Chair Room. “Who named those sections anyway?”
Teldy shrugs. To her the numbers make sense. “Don’t know. Ancients, probably.”
The thing with Wraith is that they’ll most likely try to kill as few humans as possible. Makes sense: they’re the food, the lovely buffet, the entrée or just desserts; doesn’t matter which—they’ll take prisoners alive. Stun them. They’re not shooting to kill. But the marines definitely are.
As they’re moving down the corridor, she contacts the Bridge again. “Captain Teldy to Bridge, come in. We ran into one Wraith in 2066, but there could be more. What’s the situation up there?”
“We’re trying to get systems working again. Something’s still wrong with the radios—a dish was taken out by one of the impacts, and we’ve only got limited range to certain sections, including where you are. If you enter level three we’ll lose you,” Sharpe answers: her voice is tense, but also much more in control than before. Adrenaline and shit. Teldy completely understands. When there’s no other choice, someone’s got to take charge, and if both the Major and Dr Grodin are out of contact, that duty falls on whoever’s in the position to take it. She won’t argue orders coming from a civilian, not today. “I’ve sent people to check out the Chair Room.”
“Understood.”
“Uh, Captain, where did you say you are right now?”
These corridors are all alike. Only minute differences in the etchings on the walls, and Teldy’s been studying Ancient script as part of preparing for Atlantis. She can make out the individual letters and numbers, at least. “Coming up on 2070.”
“Okay. Then there’s something I need you two to do,” Sharpe says, and Teldy is immediately uneasy but doesn’t voice it. “Either of you know how to weld?”
“I do,” Oakley says. “What’s the job, doc?”
“There’s a storage compartment in 2071, you’ll find tools there. I need you to go to the third power node stabilizer—it’s in 3088. It reads as damaged and it’d explain why power’s fluctuating. I need you to check it out and fix it. If we lose power, we lose shields, engines, lifesupport.” And they slowly suffocate or are blown up by the Hive. “It shouldn’t be too difficult, it’s not a complex machine,” Sharpe says.
Not complex for an engineer, maybe. Teldy fears it’s going to be very fucking complex and difficult to fix, but they’ve got no other choice. If no one else is available, they’ll step up and do the job. Their lives may depend on it.
“We’re on it. Teldy out.”
“…jor Lorne, pl…ond…interm…adio disturb…repeat: does an…opy?…ajor Lorne or…ruor…been hit by—”
“—presence of…board…eport in, ca…yone hear th…a…”
“…an’t raise…th…pers returning to…”
“…ots of Wr…but…copy?…spond if…yone can…”
“This is Lorne. Does anyone read? This is Major Lorne. I didn’t copy that. There’s too much interference,” he says, trying again, but most of the sound from the earpiece is either broken up voices, static, or a high-pitched whining noise that makes him want to wince. Interference—from what? the Wraith sabotaging them with some signal or device? or something wrong with the internal comms of the ship, physical damage from fire? “I repeat: this is Lorne. Does anyone copy? … Ah, damn it.”
There’s another problem: when the Darts hit, he lost the Chair. There’s no response, even as it glows; no drones fire. It’s ceased. Must be a broken line, but now he can’t defend the ship anymore and he can’t talk with the Bridge. He’s tried raising anyone else on their frequencies and only gotten the same thing: static, indeterminable pieces of conversation, intermittent high-pitched whining.
He stands from the Chair and gathers his weapons. Those are the better choice now. Then he heads for the door.
He’s not even stepped five feet outside the Chair Room when he sees the Wraith, and it clicks: presence, board. They’d meant presence of Wraith aboard.
Those weren’t just kamikaze runs. The Aurora’s being boarded.
Oh, for fuck’s sake, his Dæmon groans for the both of them.
The Wraith—it’s hideous and it’s got fangs, and it raises a hand hungrily and jumps for him, and Lorne’s never seen one this up close, and, fuck, fuck, and he squeezes the trigger. The recoil hits his chest due to the awkward angle, he struggled to raise his weapon in time and it’s in such close quarters that he imagines a bullet could bounce on the walls and hit him. Three, five, ten shots bury in the Wraith’s chest and one in its arm and it doesn’t even slow down, what the fuck, and in desperation Lorne grabs for his knife just in time to bury it in the hand. Doesn’t leave it there, though. The Wraith growls and Lorne stabs at it again, this time through the throat. That works. There’s a spurt of dark blood. The Wraith falls onto its knees with a gurgling noise, choking on its own blood, and Lorne finishes it off with a headshot.
Then he wipes his sweaty forehead and blinks a couple of times and tries to slow down his pulse. God. Shit. That was—scary close.
Maybe he should scratch that about being part of a Recon team—they run into Wraith offworld far too often for his tastes. He’d better remain a pilot aboard the Aurora. Yeah.
“This is Lorne to anyone who can hear me. We’ve got Wraith, repeat: we’re got Wraith aboard. Anyone copy?”
No response. Static. Typical.
He’s got to get to the Bridge.
Lights are flashing. The alarms are never-ending. One of the newly repaired windows is threatening to crack, so she practically throws herself at the button to throw the emergency windscreen up. Half of the Bridge is immediately surrounded by thick steel; through the other half, she can glimpse explosions in the darkness.
The radios flicker. Interference—from the gas giant? No, that doesn’t make sense; they’re past the worst layers now—
The impact, she realizes, dimly. The whole ship had shook and Sharpe saw Grodin’s head hitting the console and there’s a cut there bleeding sluggishly. One of the assistant techs, Aston, has helped to lay Grodin out flat on his back, neck supported by a bunched up jacket, while they wait for medics to arrive. Sharpe doesn’t have the time to check on him. Half the people in the Bridge are bruised and battered and injured some way or another, and she’s one of the lucky ones to stay awake. The dampeners must’ve shorted out for a millisecond.
It’s been seven or eight minutes since she sent those marines to check on the power node stabilizer, and now they’re out of comms range. If it’s fixed, they could execute a jump to hyperspace and escape. It’s the only plan she can come up with and she can’t get hold of Major Lorne and she wishes Grodin was awake. No one’s let her make these kind of decisions before, and she knows how to run a lab and a science team; to suddenly command a whole ship is another thing.
She’s told Justin Berkley, one of the engineers who’d manned the comms station, to keep trying to contact Lorne and also try to reestablish a link with the Jumpers and F-302s they have out there. Their scanners are scrambled and they can’t get any accurate readings.
The Wraith Hiveship has mostly ceased firing. Each hit, while powerful, is weaker than before and sporadic and the shields are holding. Sort of holding. Exactly why there’s a lull in the attack, Sharpe isn’t sure; the conclusion she can make is that Lorne and the fighters managed to make a few good hits, taking out the enemy’s systems.
“Sharpe, there’s something,” Berkley says after a moment. “Weak, but—Yeah, I’ve got it. I’m bringing it on screen.”
The main viewing screen changes to show a battlefield. Some pieces are missing, it’s not a complete image, but it’s there: hundreds of Darts, scattered pieces and debris; lingering heat wells from blaster fire starting to cool. And there are Jumpers and F-302s highlighted in blue.
Fewer than there should be.
“Only reading six F-302s,” Berkley says, confused.
But Sharpe realizes in horror what that means. “Can we talk to them?”
“Hang on … Try it now.”
“This is Sharpe on the Aurora. Please respond.”
Staggering, interference causing a rising and falling buzz of noise in the background, difficult to hear, there’s a voice:
“Blue Leader, I copy—what’s…sitrep? Over.”
“We’ve been hit pretty bad and are effecting repairs so that we can execute a hyperspace jump,” Sharpe answers. Being around military types for so long has taught her a thing or two about the jargon. “All ships have to return to the Bay immediately.”
“You’re breaking up. Did y…perspace jump? …onfirm?”
“All fighters return to the Jumper Bay immediately,” she repeats. “Once repairs are made, we’re going to jump.”
“Think that’s it?”
There had been three Wraith between them and the stabilizer. Now that they’re here, Teldy stares at it for a moment in despair.
“Yeah.”
Oakley, armed with a bunch of various tools they’d grabbed, unsure of what they’d really need, kneels in front of the spluttering device, while Teldy covers his six. The power node stabilizer is half-way built into the wall, a mesh of steel and something like white plastic which the Ancients seemed to favor, and there’s a red light blinking probably meaning it wants maintenance. The lights in the corridor are flickering again. There are fragile wires of steel wrapped around it and some appear to be cracked.
“This is … kind of complex.”
“But can you fix it?” Teldy asks sternly. No time for bullshit or joking around. Dull thrums indicate that the firefight’s started up again and the shields are taking a beating, and she images the power going out and gravity losing its hold and a blast tearing the Aurora apart. The thought makes her angry and frightened, and she tightens the grip of her P-90.
“I hotwired a car once,” Oakley says, thinking aloud. “And I took a course in electrical engineering at university. But, uh, I don’t see anything like a circuit board … Give me a minute.”
They lost radio contact with the Bridge—with anyone—the moment they climbed up to level three, as predicted. So they can’t exactly call Sharpe for tech support.
“I’m giving as much time as I can,” Teldy says. She’s not sure how much time the Aurora has to spare, though. It seems like the Hive has momentarily ceased firing. Probably because the Wraith wants to capture them, not blow up the ship. “Just … work fast, yeah?”
The Aurora is surrounded by Darts. They can only witness the explosions from afar, and cold knots of dread form in Miko’s belly. Oh no. Oh no. She starts to steer back to the ship, but then hesitates, and she looks at the two marines with her. Their faces are pale with concern.
“What are we doing to do?” Miko says, helplessly. She wants to do something.
“We have standing orders to return through the Gate if it’s not safe enough to board, such as a firefight with Wraith,” Cadman points out. “Not for the lack of wanting to help—but those are orders.”
“I am not military,” Miko points out. Truthfully, the prospect of approaching the Aurora while attempting to dodge weapons’ blasts and Darts. If they go to Atlantis now, they can only tell them what’s going on. But Atlantis has no help to send. The Daedalus is not in Pegasus anymore, leaving the Aurora as their only ship: Colonel Caldwell wouldn’t be able to give them help in time. There’s no one else. Just them.
“I vote we wait and try to contact the Aurora before taking action,” Mehra says. “Caution before a wild shot. They don’t know which radio frequencies we use, right? So the Wraith will have a hard time locating us.”
That is good logic. Except, of course, for the flaws in it. “Yes,” Miko says, “but we might not be able to contact the Aurora because of the interference from the gas giant. What then?”
“We should still try.”
“Laura?” asks Miko, and the marine tightens her lips.
“We have orders,” Cadman repeats. She is still relatively new to Atlantis. She did not see how the rules were bent during the First Year. Granted, Miko is a civilian scientist, and she spent much of that time in one of the labs, away from much of the immediate action and decision making. She is not forced to adhere to all of the same regulations as the marines. So, technically, she could take charge of this decision completely and Cadman and Mehra would be blameless if anyone came to ask. But would they? Miko doubts it. No one in the City would, anyway; if that were the case, few of the marines and certainly not Colonel Sheppard would still be in Atlantis but rather facing a jury to decide their fate.
“Hey, what would the Frontiers have done?” Mehra asks lightly, and Cadman frowns.
“We’re not them for fuck’s sake, Sergeant. Doc, you did good getting us to the moon, but frankly I don’t think we can pull a return flight off with the Wraith that close.”
Miko is not affronted; that was not meant as insult of her skills. She agrees. Still. This means leaving the Aurora and her crew behind. But what can they do? A single Jumper cannot put that much of a dent in a Hive … A huge, huge Hive full of thousands of hungry Wraith. Indecision and frustration tears at her, and focus on flight begins to slip, her hand relaxing around the stick.
“Doc, what do you think?” Mehra says. “Let’s vote on it. Lieutenant?”
Cadman holds fast: “We obey orders. Egress through the Gate, call for back-up.”
“And I vote we try docking with the Aurora. It’s your vote, doc.”
She has no trouble taking charge in the lab. She knows the steps and what to do: science may be muddled at times, the answers had to get, but the path to get there is clear. This, this is not clear, and Miko tries to think of the way which will work without anyone being lost. She would like to help the Aurora but, realistically, they can’t. If they use their drones, despite being cloaked, the Wraith will be able to pinpoint their location, and she cannot fly through a hail of fire.
With a heavy heart, she decides: “We return to the Gate.”
Mehra frowns but doesn’t object vocally. It wouldn’t matter if she did: Miko controls the Jumper, and now she turns them slowly around, a wide arc.
And that is when the proximity alarm bleeps, and a dot appears on the horizon: a group of Darts.
Heading right for them.
“Well,” Mehra says: “fuck.”
Chapter 27: rage, part three
Summary:
for once, he wanted to be wrong.
Chapter Text
xxvii.
rage
part three
for once, he wanted to be wrong.
Washington D.C., U.S. · Earth · the Milky Way
February 20, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 146 days after the Uprising
Gibbs picks up on the third ring.
“Jethro,” Dr Mallard says, more gravely than usual, and there’s none of the normally so eager small talk, peppered with tidbits of trivia: “I’ve finished the autopsy. There’s no sign of a larva in Charlotte Mayfield’s body. And, believe me, I’ve checked very thoroughly.”
His heart sinks like a stone. “Thanks, Ducky.” He closes the phone and then his eyes. He really didn’t want it to come to this.
For once, he wanted to be wrong.
thirty minutes earlier:
“This doesn’t taste like coffee,” Gamble grumbles, taking a cautious sip and grimacing. But he presses the button anyway, drawing the credit card through the slot, and waits as the machine incredibly slowly hums to life again to deliver a half-cold mediocre drink. But, God, he needs the caffeine.
“Hospitals generally aren’t known for their fantastic cuisine,” Gladys says with a shrug, balancing two paper cups in each hand to later distribute among her team. “But I’m totally knackered, so I’ll take even this.”
“Wow. You sound so British when you say it like that.” She only glares at him; he winces away, anyway, and carefully moves out of immediate range in case she decides to step on his foot or something. “Sorry. You know, this kind of makes me miss the City,” he remarks, stretching and yawning, before picking up the last of the cups. “Just being able to pop into the mess hall to get the best—”
A red light turns above them, and a rattling noise starts wailing. Gladys puts down the coffees to free her hands, and Gamble looks around in confusion. “The fuck?” The alarm has woken others; nest to the coffee dispenser there’s a sofa and a very ugly painting, and people walking to and fro, nurses, patients pushing IV stands ahead of them. An old lady on the phone. A kid with their arm in a cast, a dozen messages written on the plaster in an array of colors and hands.
Suddenly a medic rushes out—greenish scrubs—from a side room, and says, quite loudly and firmly to get the attention of people in the corridor: “Everyone please remain calm and head for the nearest emergency exit in an orderly manner. That’s the fire alarm.”
And Gladys realizes that the smell isn’t from the bad coffee: it is a sour smell of smoke, burning through not wood but plastic and wires, and it’s heading this way. Or every way. Quickly. How? Through the vents? Shit. She and Gamble step forward, all ease forgotten and they’re once again marines on duty. “What can we do to help, ma’am? We’ve both had first-aid training.”
The nurse, stressedly yet calmly, looks at them, their BDUs still dusty. Nods to herself, deciding that they’re resources better to be put to use than wasted. “Fire department’s been notified,” she says. “We need to evacuate everyone stable enough out of the building until we’ve properly assessed the situation. Can you help clearing this floor? There’s an assembly point on the parking lot.”
“Yes, ma’am, we’ll do that,” Gladys says, sharing a look with Gamble; he nods, comprehending albeit silently dismayed. He wants to go check on Snow, but Snow is with the rest of the two teams, not alone. They can handle whatever’s thrown at them. For him to rush through the halls when he could do something right here, right now, to help people, would be a needless waste. Soldiers learn to prioritize.
Together, they set to work, guiding people out. The elderly lady has trouble walking and as the smoke far too rapidly thickens, pulses rising and voices crying out, Gamble slings her into his arms to carry her out, down the sets of stairs. Her Dæmon crawls slowly to catch up. The elevators have shut down. Not everyone’s going to be evacuated, unless nothing else can be done; there are some patients too badly off, too fragile to be moved. Operations still ongoing in theatres. There’s a flurry of activity and soon the two marines lose sight of each other, and they can’t afford to be worried, not yet.
Outside, early morning sun is shining, and by the time Gamble gets there one fire truck has appeared. Plenty of medics are on site and he gently puts the old woman down on a park bench lining the parking lot. Sirens wail and people in heavy, thick uniforms hurry out the truck, orders delegated, the hose reached for, and Gamble looks back toward the building. Seeks out faces in the crowd but can’t see Gladys or any of his team anywhere. Still inside. So he turns back.
Smoke’s spread so quickly, must’ve been through the ventilation system, with some kind of catalyst. Accident? Deliberate? Does it matter? People stumble, looks like a family with a carriage, and he shouts and waves an arm to direct them—“Come on, folks! this way! this way!”—and jogs to meet them, helping the stressed-out wide-eyed parent with the carriage. Eventually, the groups of people thin out. Minutes feel like they tick by but with adrenaline pumping Gamble is losing his grip of time; still no sign of his team. Which means they’ve decided Snow might not be in a good enough condition to be moved.
Fuck, he’s not leaving the team behind.
He rushes toward the stairs. Bounds up them two at a time. On the next floor the smoke is a lot thicker and he covers his mouth and nose with his sleeve, tries to find the way back. Never seemed hard before. Each step thundering. He thinks he’s nearing the right place, and sees someone up ahead, silhouetted against gray smoke and, that’s weird, they aren’t halting or stumbling or coughing. They walk straightly and he can’t make out their face.
“Hey, you! Are you okay?” he shouts. “We’ve got to get out of here!”
The person doesn’t react to the command. They lift their hand, something in it, a small dot of red light and a click,
and there’s a new noise:
a low boom, echoing dully through the building, and less than fifty yards ahead, right where the door to Snow’s recovery room is, there’s a brilliant flash of red and yellow fire:
Gamble falls back, stunned by the shockwave. His Dæmon is slammed into the wall and into unconsciousness.
the fuck was that. the fuck just. oww. oh, Scheiße.
Herschel struggles to open her eyes. They may be open, and something dances before her retinas, flashes of light. She’s been close to explosions time and time again, knows what they feel like and, fuck, that was—small, effective, custom ordnance. IED. Close range. One of her ears is ringing, a high-pitched noise, and in the other she can’t hear anything at all. She’d rolled over and covered her head on reflex.
Everything is a mess. The door is shattered: gone. The floor is covered with dust, bits of plaster, wood, plastic, wires. Dirt. Smoke is welling into the room and outward because the windows have shattered and she feels too hot. Unsteady. She’s lying on her side, and something is atop of her. Something? someone? a long line: the bed, it’s upturned and she tries to move, shudders in confusion. She blinks rapidly, tries to see something other than this weird darkness. Something wet trickles over her forehead, and also drops onto her neck Something’s jammed against her back. Her Dæmon struggles to move: they’re pinned down;
She tries to move and raise her voice—“Tanya. Tanya? Gam?” There’s no response. Herschel shifts, minutely, a miniature movement of her arm and a stabbing pain attacks her whole right side.
fuck. fuckfuckfuckfuck—
A groan, weak, pained. From—above? what? there’s nothing above her … Yes. There is. The—the blow, the explosion. Must’ve toppled everything over, and she was standing by the window next to Mitchell’s bed. Mitch. Scheiße. “Mitch? Mitch?!”
Last time he was anywhere near this close to an explosion, things went south on M01-302 and the Wraith encircled them, and they placed C4 all around the ridge and wrecked the ruins. The slide of dirt and soil nearly took them too, and Atlantis sent AR-2 as back-up. Lieutenant Olsen never quite let them forget about that.
Dazed, Gamble rolls over, tries to sense if his limbs are whole. His pulse is rapid, but not that rapid, and he doesn’t feel the urge to scream without control. The ceiling above is darker than it should be. In the wake of the explosion, the alarm is suddenly a lot more silent, no longer as oppressive;
This isn’t M01-302. This is Earth, the hospital. He never fully lost consciousness, which means that either he’s truly high on adrenaline and about to drop into shock any moment now, or he’s not that badly off. He can’t feel any puncture wounds or heavy trickle of blood, and he sits up, carefully. The smoke isn’t as thick here at floor-level, and he crawls over, tries to ignore his protesting sore limbs. He aims for the door. Moving slowly, inch by inch, building a pace.
The door is gone. He reaches it to find nothing but a hole, and he wonders, for a terrifying moment, if the floor and walls will cave in and bury them alive. any moment now. any moment now. His heartrate and breathing pick up, and he uses it as motivation to move faster. Shifting to his feet, using the singed threshold as support, he stumbles upward and glances inside. It’s a mess and he sees bodies and no no no no no he rushes forward, and the bed’s on its side tipped over, and the machinery shrieks warnings because the chords measuring heartbeats have been ripped out. And everyone’s lying down except for the figure at the center of the room, and they aren’t covered in dust. They don’t belong. Gamble blinks, his eyes are watering, a sting and there is a scent of fire in the air, lingering.
The person walks over to the bed and grabs it. They shouldn’t be strong enough to lift it on their own. They do. Rolling it over and there’s Snow, and he’s lying atop of someone else at a weird angle. Herschel, the usually neat knot of red hair coming undone, and Gamble takes a step forward. Tries to cry out—hey, what the fuck? what the fuck?!—but only coughs, and the person turns around as if first noticing them, and their Dæmon is all blank-eyed, and Gamble recognizes her as Agent Todd. She’s manhandling Snow like he’s a paper doll, and Snow stirs, groans painedly. She’s holding a knife.
“The fuck—stop!” Gamble tries to shout, but his throat is clogging up.
“Drop it,” demands a voice behind them. “Drop the knife.”
Agent Todd doesn’t speak, eyes darting between Gamble and whoever’s behind them and he recognizes the voice, and he drops to the floor, covering his head. He hears, faintly, the electric discharge of the shot. Then there’s a sharp thud and a cry, and sirens are wailing in the distance.
By the time the stranger has fled the room, Gamble has lost consciousness and his lungs are full of smoke.
The shot misses. But he ain’t going to let them hurt a fellow marine.
J.J. flings himself at the assailant and tries to grab the knife. She’s not that big and he should’ve been stronger than her, easily been able to disarm her. But like a vice her hand is around his neck and what the fuck it’s the agent and her eyes gleam—fuck, fuck, fuck, she’s a SNAKE—and he’s wrenched to the side, thrown to the floor, his head bouncing. His vision swims and everything is loud. He thinks he can hear someone shouting.
There’s a glimmer of steel.
Herschel rolls onto her side and draws herself up, and she sees J.J. fall to his knees clutching at his chest, and there’s red on the floor brilliantly.
She sees the silhouette and it’s familiar. “You—!”
The machines are freaking out, Snow’s been disconnected from it and now the computer thinks there’s no pulse. She might be seeing white and she reaches for the knife bound around her ankle. Gets it out, somehow, fluidly. She doesn’t ask questions but aims for the Snake, but they’re too fast and too strong and no longer pretending to be human.
The zat—J.J. dropped it as he fell, and Herschel dives for it. The Snake is turning away. She aims, and Gladys has dropped to her knees next to her and supports J.J.’s head; she fires. The shot disappears into a wall of smoke and, Scheiße, they’re so fucked.
“Don’t do this, don’t do this. You—don’t. Okay? Or I’ll, I’ll—”
Gladys presses her bloodied hands hard to J.J.’s chest and keeps them there, numbly, it’s difficult to breathe and her knees hurt, her shoulders hurt. The zat’nik’tel lies next to her uselessly. The knife was roughly pulled out of the flesh and she tries to keep pressure on it, jabbing a thumb into the wound to try to seal it, tries, tries, tries. It’s so hard to breathe and her eyes are stinging with tears. From the smoke, and from anger, and from the threat of grief. She’s not going to let this happen. She’s not going to let this happen.
“J.J., c’mon, c’mon—help me! In here! Anyone!”
It takes two minutes until the firefighters arrive.
“How is he?”
“Still in surgery.”
Snow is stable. Fine. Will be fine. And J.J. … will be fine. Will be. Gamble tries to tell himself this. His head aches and everything’s sore, but he refuses to leave. They’re at the Mountain as they should’ve always been and, shit, if they’d just sought the safety of the place first—none of it would’ve happened. A Snake wouldn’t have gotten this far. In Cheyenne they would’ve been safe. Now J.J. is laid up with a stab wound, and Snow almost got murdered for a second time.
When he and his fellow marines had told Agent Gibbs what happened, described the attacking Snake, the man had been grim but not exactly surprised or shocked.
“They’ve reported her as a wanted person,” Gladys says quietly. Her hands a clean now. Gamble hadn’t been awake to see them stained with blood. “The agent.”
He didn’t ask. He shudders and looks toward the closed doors, beyond which Dr Frasier and her team are at work. Snow is sleeping and Herschel is pacing. It’s almost déjà vu.
“He’ll be okay,” he says instead and looks at her: Gladys is tired and worn and there are bruises on her face from where she got hit, thrown around. He should really take a shower. Eat something. Rest. He can’t make his body move. It might be shock. There’s something about that in the survivor training courses: self-assessment and the taking of risks, and he’s seen shock before, waded through it. Guess the last few years fighting aliens makes this harder to grasp. Earth is meant to be safe. Earth is meant to be safe.
“Yeah,” Gladys says quietly, an exhale, meeting his eyes. He’s not going to ask, though sometimes he has speculated—happens among marines when men and women are put together, but he’s learned to not talk too loudly about it, at least not with the women in question in earshot. Right now it’s the wrong time altogether. Part of him still wonders. He’s not that tight with AR-4, not like he is with his own team; he knows none of the secrets, and they’re never at the heart of any gossip back in the City. That’s mostly the Frontiers. He doesn’t comment that her eyes are wet and dull. “Yeah.”
“Seems like the fire started a level below,” McGee says, “or rather was started.”
The photos reveal a mess. Some walls are blackened and floors charred and tiles cracked. Wood, plastic, wires twisted. It is clear that the fire didn’t just break out by accident. It’d be too coincidental, for one, and evidence points toward someone planting it deliberately with a goal in mind: to empty the building, and then enter and assassinate Lance Corporal Snow; possibly all of the marines. The witness accounts—certain unshaking words, but distracted—leave no doubts about that.
It’s good to be back in D.C., but it’s going to be a short visit. He’s got to brief his team and Vance, and then Gibbs has plans to return to Colorado. He needs to finish that conversation with Ba’al. Perhaps he ought to bring McGee or DiNozzo—someone should stay behind, hold the fort.
There’s also the issue about Todd. Gibbs hasn’t told the two junior agents about his suspicions yet. Ducky’s report was unsettling and his gut feeling hasn’t changed.
Kate missing. The fire.
It falls into place. Gibbs doesn’t know if he can show how angry he is, fucking pissed off; he’s got to keep his cool. Think. He’s got the SGC on his side, and General Landry is still working on his request. If Kate can be found …
Then what? She’d still have a goddamned alien controlling her, and Gibbs can fight—has fought—a lot of things, but is there any way to get rid of one of those safely? without hurting the human? is it possible to save her? At that meeting, the SGC had mentioned something about one of their own, some full bird, being held hostage like that. Got rid of the alien before the Dæmon completely withered away, and they recovered. But another alien helped out, a Benevolent Stranger, but Gibbs hasn’t got one at hand.
Yes, he’s got to return to the Mountain.
Gibbs turns toward the elevator.
“Uh, Boss, I wasn’t finished with the …” McGee says, startled and confused.
“Take what you need, grab your gun, and meet me in the garage,” Gibbs barks in return, while fishing up the phone from his pocket and dialing with his thumb. He’s just entered the elevator and the doors close with a soft ping when someone picks up, and he says: “Sir, it’s Agent Gibbs.”
It was too easy, and yet she failed. Those damned marines. She should’ve burned them all instead of attempting to cut their throats.
She cannot make a second attempt: she was seen and her host identified, and she can’t get a second chance, get that close. The SGC will have her before then. No, she’s got to get away.
Ba’al, despite his arrogance, is no fool. Athena is perfectly aware he’s got escape routes in case the SGC found out about him before he was ready to execute his plans; he’s planted hiding places all over this puny rock, and she knows of a place in California where he has buried a ship. The Al’kesh isn’t large or that fast but it has a cloaking device, a shield, and basic weaponry, and it’s been painstaking getting it there from offworld without gaining the attention from the SGC or some Earth-bound satellite. In her escape she needs to be crafty and clever and careful, but it can be done.
Scourging through her unwilling host’s array of memories, which have turned out to be vaster than expected, full of secrets and useful information, she finds that Caitlin Todd knows how to hotwire a car. So that’s what she does. She doesn’t press the gas harshly, no full throttle, never breaking any speeding laws. She keeps the driving pattern random and turns sometimes left, sometimes right. By the time she leaves D.C. behind, taillights fading, the sun has set and she has switched cars: this one is newer and the engine doesn’t cough. Oh, these Earth machines are so slow and the mechanics so pathetically primitive.
Once she has the Al’kesh she can deal with Ba’al. He must be neutralized before he gives up his secrets to the SGC. Oh, he doesn’t want to break but Athena is certain he will, sometime, soon. Ba’al is a conceited coward and was never a good warrior, letting others do the heavy lifting. She doesn’t have high hopes he’ll withstand even the mildest Terran forms of torture, which she wouldn’t be impressed by. Oh, Ba’al has wielded knives against enemies before—he successfully captured Jack O’Neill once, and it was almost a permanent victory, but then the human managed to—impossibly; not without outside help—escape. Athena would not have bothered with torture and questions. She would have executed the human at once. She should have done the same now; she should have succeeded.
But she didn’t. Next time, she cannot fail; there’s no room for that kind of error.
A ship. Off this dirty old rock. She will go to a world where her followers will greet her with awe, and she’ll gather all forces she can. She knows more of Ba’al’s secrets than the System Lord ever realized; that she can use against him and against the Tau’ri.
The car runs out of gas after less than two hours, and Athena deems the risk of stealing yet another of these rudimentary vehicles too high. She can be seen and thus her host identified as a thief, and she needs to pass by unnoticed. After her blunder of failing at the hospital, she is aware that her plan is not foolproof.
It is not an unmanned gas station. This forces her to go through the motions as a human would, and a bell softly pings above the door as she enters. The clerk is a young male with severe acne and a bored expression on his face, and there are a couple of other patrons there: a man looking at newspapers and a woman by the counter buying cigarettes.
There’s a television on in the background, volume low, and the woman is just about to put the credit card in the slot when Athena sees her host’s face on the screen. WANTED. DANGEROUS & POSSIBLY ARMED. APPROACH WITH CAUTION, it says, in stark letters rolling endlessly beneath the picture, and the reporter’s voice is a tired uncaring drone. The woman in the picture is smiling and does not look severe or threatening at all.
The man by the newspapers, having grabbed one and approaching the counter behind her, says: “Hey, lady, you look a lot like—”
Not giving the man time to answer, Athena pulls out her host’s sidearm and aims at the back of the woman’s head. The shot is clean and she collapses onto the floor. The clerk is given no chance to scream. The man with the newspaper, obviously in shock at the noise and the blood, gapes in horror and does not move to defend himself. Athena looks down at the bodies in distaste. Tau’ri weaponry is so messy and untasteful. No matter. The kills will be pinned on Agent Todd. She steps over the man, eyes unseeingly staring at the ceiling, and calmly walks across the asphalt, choosing one of the cars there.
The tank is full. Good; she needs it to get to California. Once Ba’al has been dealt with, she’ll leave Earth forever.
Rodney’s head is ringing.
Well, technically, that’s John’s, which, despite all the evidence at hand—he’s thinking; therefore he is here as Rodney McKay, Meredith by his side—he’s some doubtful trouble wrapping his mind around, that this connection works. His head hurts and he’s stared at the computer screen for the past hour and he can’t think. He wants coffee and sleep in whichever order, but he’s weirdly not craving food, which is surely a bad sign of his declining health and mental capabilities. Food usually solves a lot of his problems, but right now, at this moment, the thought of even a sandwich or blue Jell-O is enough to make his belly and tongue to burn sourly. Rodney swallows. He’s not going to be sick. Not in this flesh and not over his desk.
The computer is just one of several at work, displaying different data. Some contain text, briefly written notes, numbers. Others have ongoing or completed simulations on display. The majority of them he’s left as-is, crunching the possibilities of the unwilling passengers Goa’uld ship having escaped alive.
The one right in front of him shows the last data on the Aurora. Trajectory, speed. The last long-range scans came in eight minutes ago. Elizabeth asked—told; ordered—him to find some solution. But Rodney can’t think.
It’s not often he gets emotionally overwhelmed like this. Sure, he’s good at screaming and rambling and calling out for help. But this tightness in his chest is new and the burn of his eyes is ridiculous and close; why the hell does he want to lie down on the floor and cry? That is not a McKay thing to do. No, no, no; he should want to yell at some poor sods, Radek or whoever else, and make them cry—not him. Not him. And he tries to think but can’t even calculate the most basic of equations.
He stares at the screen without seeing. He’s so engrossed in not-thinking that he doesn’t notice he’s not alone until a soft, familiar voice says his name. One, two, three, four times.
Jaggedly he looks up. He probably looks like hell. John’s face must be like a ghost, torn up at the edges, and eyes red-rimmed and heavy. And he needs a shower and a year of sleep.
Teyla frowns, concernedly. “You should rest,” she says.
“No, I’m not finished with, with, with this thing,” he says. Can’t make it a proper sentence that makes sense. What was he meant to do again?
Memory lapses are probably a bad sign. Again. With a groan he holds his aching, thrumming head between his hands and briefly shuts his eyes.
He means to say: I need coffee. All that comes out, however, is: “Coffee?” with a lingering question mark.
“I do not think that is a good idea, Rodney,” Teyla says calmly, but with such disapproval Rodney for once doesn’t have the energy to start arguing about it. He shouldn’t. Normally, normally, normally he could debate about anything with anyone just like that! no need to hesitate or think or consider that he could be wrong, because he wouldn’t be, he knows his facts and his numbers—Oh, Teyla’s talking again. He missed when she started and only catches the tail of the sentence, broken pieces. “… down to Carson.”
There’s a high-pitched ringing noise. Noise. Wait, Carson? No. Yes. Yes? Good idea. He starts to nod and regrets that immediately. “Yes, but the Aurora,” he remembers, that’s the job he’s got, but he can’t think, he needs to be able to think. Maybe Carson can fix that. Give him some pill or a shot of stimulant, some adrenaline and—His head. The noise. It’s got to shut up.
Teyla’s hands are on his, on John’s, shoulders, guiding, and Rodney shudders.
The pain in the leg has been dull for hours. Abruptly he can feel it again and can’t stand up. He should be angry with that. Angry. He’s good at being angry usually, so why can’t be use that emotion right now to fuel himself and his starved cells? He groans and tries to say something, something like: This was a very bad idea, or: I’ve got to lie down, but he whispers: “Shut up, shut up, shut up,” at the noise.
He can’t properly perceive Teyla’s hardening frown of concern and confusion, though Mer can and she shares that thought. She too can hear the ringing noise. It’s very disturbing. Again he attempts to stand and the world swims and coils darkly at the edges.
Oh, Rodney thinks bleakly, I’m … going to throw up? oh crap. oh crap.
The ground rushes toward him.
Chapter 28: rage, part four
Summary:
he failed. by God, he failed, and he can only hope that he can be forgiven.
Chapter Text
xxviii.
rage
part four
he failed. by God, he failed, and he can only hope that he can be forgiven.
“I’m much better now, doctor. I’m sure I can take a stroll on my own without falling over.”
This is his fourth discussion with the doctor, whose expression is pinched, and Patrick Sheppard has, on occasion, been told he is an obnoxiously stubborn man who can be obstinately difficult to work with. Once he’s set his mind to something, he’s intent to see it through; may it be the goal of securing a good deal with another company, best last year’s sales records, or merely walking up and down a corridor unsupported by nurses or machines.
“Yes, I’m sure,” Dr Lam says, her tone of voice implying he is far from the first difficult patient she’s had to deal with; “but I must remind you that you were stabbed only a week ago and it punctured your left lung. The surgery went well but you’re not a hundred percent yet.”
He would’ve crossed his arms if not for the mess it’d make of the IV lines and whatever else they’ve connected to his body. Dr Lam has explained that they’re still monitoring him closely. Monitoring. Well, he’s grown tired of it. And having that armed marine waiting by the door twenty-four hours a day, well, that’s ridiculous and wasteful. Patrick is feeling a bit sorry for the man who must be, by now, very bored of his station.
“Maybe not a hundred percent, but I’m at least at eighty, which is not bad for a man of my age,” he argues.
Dr Lam smiles tightly. “Tomorrow, Mr Sheppard.”
“Dad, are you bothering the doctor again?”
His eldest son enters the sickbay carrying a tray and Patrick can smell the food from here. Stroganoff, he thinks, and his stomach feels a bit emptier. At least they allow him to have decent meals which actually taste something. Dave must have showered, because his hair is a little bit damp, and Patrick can’t see Shannon with him. Maybe she’s gone to sleep? Whatever time it is. All these electrical lights and no windows and there’s no clock in here, and they don’t let him use any of their fancy computers. They’re quarantined down here. For their safety, according to General Landry, who had them transported—and those rings are not something he wants to experience ever again—back to Earth, to the gray walls of Cheyenne Mountain, as the Prometheus was sent elsewhere on a mission which Colonel Pendergast wouldn’t tell the Sheppards about.
There’s a lack of communication, and it bothers the hell out of him. They’re just stuck. Oh, the doctors and the nurses are nice enough and the food is good. His son and to-be daughter-in-law are good company and they’ve spent hours talking, discussing what’s going on. But they can’t leave, go home, and can’t go to the bathroom without being escorted by one or two armed marines. He can’t even leave this damned bed.
With a sigh, he relents. He is old and tired. “Oh, all right. Tomorrow, Dr Lam.”
The doctor checks vitals once more before leaving the room, and Dave puts down the tray on the table in the corner. The gray room is largely empty and the other three beds unused. Machinery bleeping quietly in the background. Entertainment’s lacking, but they’ve rolled in a small TV with the news on a low volume and that talkative young lad, Dr Jackson, lent him some books. Patrick is halfway through one on the history of Mesopotamia. Fairly interesting, but he is more than ready to go home. And he wants some answers, damn it. It’s all so vague. Security this, security that. He’d like some fresh air.
They’ve told them about Stargates and Goa’uld and that one of those aliens was probably responsible for his almost-murder. Then Johnny visited, except it wasn’t Johnny? Patrick is still trying to wrap his head around it. It was the man from the picture his son had sent in the letter, and the Raven from the same. It’d been bigger than Patrick had imagined it to be. Then they’d said that Johnny had been taken—taken? what does that even mean?—and shortly afterward they’d been shuffled off the Prometheus and forced into this glum place. They’ve not even let him see the Stargate, the bloody thing that’s responsible for this mess.
Maybe it isn’t, but Patrick needs to lay blame on something concrete, and the Stargate will do.
“I thought you wanted something to eat,” Dave says, unaware of his father’s uneasy thoughts, and hands him a plate.
They’d said Johnny had been taken, but not specified how or by whom or what it means. Especially as he is not Truly Himself, but somehow trapped in the wrong flesh, something about communication stones?, alien technology—Patrick is certain that the man he met, even banged up and confused as he was on that ship, was Dr Rodney McKay, who’s mentioned in the letter.
He’d re-read the letter three times looking for clues. There’d been a passage about the City of Atlantis and how Johnny can hear it sing—it? no; he used the pronoun Her, amplified—and dangers of separation. So, those stones, they let him speak through Dr McKay? Like … possessing him or only channeling his voice and thought? There’s the Raven, and Patrick is pretty sure that the good doctor wouldn’t have that Dæmon naturally. He’s looked at the photo closely for over an hour, just looking; his son (even if he has his suspicions that that’s not entirely true, but he raised that boy) who is no boy anymore, the Raven, his smile directed toward Dr McKay.
But the photograph hadn’t moved.
“Where’s Shannon?” he asks distractedly, taking the plate. It smells good and he is hungry, but his appetite isn’t that big at the moment. There’s too much on his mind, and he’s had days to think about it, stuck in this bed. Trapped. Had he been more like Valerie, maybe he’d have let his Dæmon take a walk for him—she and Pete were special—but Irene refuses to leave his side.
“Still in the … mess hall? I think Lieutenant Kemp called it that, yes, the mess hall,” Dave says, nodding to himself. “She couldn’t decide between the Stroganoff and the vegetable stew. Apparently those carrot things aren’t carrots, but something alien?” It sounds like a question; his son so uncertain about what’s real and what’s a joke. “This seemed the safer bet.”
Abruptly, unasked for, Patrick wonders what Valerie would’ve thought of all this. A startled laugh: God, he can remember it so clearly, still, that pearl of sound; it was beautiful. It’s such a pity they started arguing so often. The disagreements. The little things. He wasn’t really ready to let go when she was so violently taken away. She’d be proud, surely, of her children, their achievements.
She’d be unhappy that he let Johnny go so easily without proper goodbyes. She’d questioned him about setting up such strict rules, planning out their sons’ futures down to the millimeter: excessive; what about the freedom of choice? Valerie had asked when Patrick did everything he could to persuade Dave to aim for the university and degree which Patrick had chosen for him.
Dave had been a boisterous, certain teenager, but he could be subdued at times and he grew up leaving the defiance behind, and he did what Patrick wanted because he understood the importance of the family business, the family name, carrying it onward. Johnny had always rebelled and asked those difficult questions. When he applied to the Air Force Academy, Patrick had been angry, and in hindsight he hadn’t even known why. Why had he been so disappointed that the boy was growing up and deciding for himself?
It took years to understand and accept, and then he couldn’t track the boy down anymore and, some cruel part of him thought: isn’t that good enough? Their paths have diverged and no one will ever know that Patrick Sheppard’s son is a Strangeling. That easy.
Until the letter arrived, Patrick had thought that Johnny was flying—something; helicopters or jets, he didn’t know. Was he fighting? Someplace? He didn’t know. He couldn’t imagine what he looked like or the shape of his uniform.
“… Dad?”
He’d zoning out again; realizes he hasn’t touched the food for several minutes, staring at the plate unseeingly. He knows Dave’s worried about dementia. Set in early with his grandfather. But this isn’t that. Patrick clears his throat. “I’m fine, son.”
Dave is only picking at his own meal. “What did the General say? Earlier, when you spoke to him?”
Oh, Valerie, Valerie had wanted them to get along and be happy. Travel often to France and visit her parents, see the countryside. It’s been so long since he took his family there. He should’ve tried harder. Made that call, written that letter. Should’ve! Patrick sighs.
He would’ve liked to have the chance to apologize to the boy—not a boy anymore: John Sheppard is a man, adult and with a Dæmon of his own now—set those wrong things right.
“Dad.” The tone is unusually forceful. Dave was the sweet and quiet type, even if there was a mean streak in him when he was a child, and Patrick never really chided him for that. When he taunted Johnny. Used the word Strangeling. Patrick was too tired to take that fight. “Tell me.”
He sets down the plate and looks at his oldest son’s concerned face. “Yes. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you earlier, but there’s … there’s so much to think about. The General said—he …” (after the funeral, Patrick had made the promise to the grave to do his best and take care of the boys. he failed. by God, he failed, and he can only hope that he can be forgiven) “David, I’m afraid Johnny is dead.”
“The seizure lasted nearly a full minute,” Carson says gravely. His arms are crossed tightly and he resist the urge to pace. He’s seen a lot of things in the past few years working with the SGC that could make anyone unsettled. But seeing friend suffer is always unfairly worse. “He’s lucky he didn’t make the Colonel’s leg worse. I’ve sedated him now and given him IV to get some fluids into him. Well, into Colonel Sheppard.”
And that darn connection with the Ancient stones; Carson does not like it. It’s deeply disturbing and he does not understand all that it does, how it functions. Now, he supposes wryly, is the time for him to study the phenomenon and make a detailed analysis. If he could just explain it … then he can understand it and understand the medical dangers involved.
If only he’d intervened, protested right away! But he’d trusted in Rodney’s judgment, and now Rodney’s lying in the infirmary bed quiet and unmoving, and Carson is ready to supply extra oxygen if need be, to bring forth the respirator. They have the technology to keep the body going if it can’t sustain itself, though it won’t last forever: only temporary solutions. Thankfully, it hasn’t come to that yet.
“And I’ve run a couple of scans.”
Rodney mightn’t be the most amicable of fellows, but Carson has known him for years and considers him a friend. Perhaps not in the sense most people would. Rodney can be so brash and seemingly cold and uncaring, walking right over people and not twice thinking about their feelings or point of view. Yet, they’ve somehow clicked, and, despite it all, Carson doesn’t want to lose him. God knows they’ve lost too many people out here already, and this would be a harsh blow. Especially if both he and the Colonel went. Rodney would be mourned, yes; Carson would be quite heartbroken, but miss him fondly. But if the Colonel dies, well, the whole City would react even more severely, possibly violently. The Colonel has become this cornerstone none of them predicted.
“And?” Elizabeth asks.
Doctor-patient confidentiality still applies out here, but some things Elizabeth must know. Rodney hasn’t woken up yet. His Dæmon is asleep, restlessly. “There’s no direct neural or cranial trauma. Most of the symptoms indicate extreme fatigue and stress; simply put, the body is exhausted. It could be the communication stones, but I simply don’t know enough yet to tell,” he says apologetically. “I’ll keep working on it.”
Elizabeth sighs but says: “I understand.”
“It’ll be a while before they wake up,” Carson says, and gives her a stern look: “I suggest you take that time to get some rest yourself.”
“I’d like to, believe me,” Elizabeth says with a dry huff, but not daring to fully laugh. Her gaze darts toward the bed, the machinery beeping and John Sheppard’s chest rising and falling, Rodney’s Dæmon alongside. Carson has only just begun getting used to that, even if he’s of the personal opinion that the pair are basically attached at the hip, observations made during the past year. “But with the Aurora still out there, I can’t. Let me know when they wake up.”
Ach. As he thought. “I’ll keep an eye on them,” he promises. “And you might not sleep, but take at least a ten minute nap, and eat proper. Doctor’s orders.”
Elizabeth smiles weakly. “Thank you, Carson. I’ll try.”
Carson watches her leave the infirmary, trying and failing to hide a headache and a slower than usual gait. Once this over, Carson silently decides, nodding to himself, he’ll issue a City-wide week-long obligatory rest; no exceptions. Not even Dr Weir could escape from that.
“The hell is taking so long?”
“Sorry, Boss,” DiNozzo answers too meekly. “Look, we’re trying—”
“Try harder!”
The SGC and NCIS both are searching, searching, searching. Gibbs is torn from place to place, his mind and heard wishing to seek different directions. In one hand, he needs to focus on their suspect—their prisoner—Ba’al in the cell, but for all Gibbs knows the bastard could rot in there forever. He and Agent Barrett of the NID work side-by-side, along with Dr Jackson, questioning him.
Not many answers. Vaguely.
Colonel Carter is busy studying and dissecting the data taken from the cloning planet. And Gibbs is searching. General Landry is trying to help; the Prometheus is a precious resource and it has powerful scanning instruments. They’re trying to device a way to find Goa’uld symbiotes. If it’s possible to detect from a distance—something about naquadah levels; Gibbs doesn’t understand the technobabble, doesn’t pretend to.
At NCIS, they’re using more traditional, well-founded methods but even then they’re turning up far short.
Kate has been missing for over twenty-four hours.
And Gibbs is furious, cold inside, and that’s when McGee rushes to get him.
“Boss! Boss! Got a hit!” McGee is out of breath. “There’s a hit-and-run in a gas stop, it’s on the news, they think it’s a mugging but I got them to send the security footage—it’s Kate.” His tone wobbles over the name. “She, I mean, that thing—it killed two civilians, less than ten hours ago.”
“Where?”
A scent.
(He’ll find her, Gibbs vows: he will, he won’t let her down. He’ll find a way to get her out of this mess. The Kate he knows is not a cold-blooded murderer.
He’ll get that Snake out of her, even if it kills him.)
Aiden hates this game of waiting. He’s tried working some of the excess energy off in the gym. It doesn’t work. He hangs around the Control Room, waiting, waiting for answers. And then he’s called to the infirmary by Teyla, and her voice is much more pressed than usual. It’s McKay, she says. He’s collapsed, some kind of seizure. Aiden’s running before he knows it. Gets there in record time.
Teyla’s already there, of course, and Ronon just barely beat his pace. Elizabeth is also in the corridor outside and the doc ushers them out. Carson needs some space to run a diagnostic he says, without anyone hovering nearby, and Adria gets a glimpse of the Colonel’s body, face pale and drawn yet oddly relaxed, and McKay’s Dæmon all limp, and Aiden’s blood turns to ice.
Shit, shit, shit—
That was eighteen minutes ago. The first person Carson let back in, to his dismay, was the team but Elizabeth. Once she’s gone, tiredly, Carson draws the curtains aside and says it’s okay for them to come in. They do. Even Ronon, whom Aiden’s not that sure likes McKay particularly—but they’re team, however unlikely. The Colonel’s not wearing an oxygen mask and there’s no respirator, so he can breathe on his own; that’s a good sign, right?
It’s got to be a good sign, Aiden thinks, and listens dimly as Carson lays out some uncertain facts. Needs some rest, the doc says. Gave them some sedatives, so all AR-1 can do is sit there and watch and wait.
Wait.
Aiden doesn’t return to the gym or the shooting range. He grabs a chair and pulls it up to the side of the bed, and Teyla and Ronon also linger, likewise. Ronon’s Dæmon prowls in a never-ending circle.
None of them will sleep tonight.
It takes far too long to lose them. She crosses the border into Nebraska after sixteen hours of mostly non-stop driving. She’s switched car twice since the gas stop and she’s certain they’re on her tail now. Her host has been reported as hostile and she’ll be treated as such. A couple of times a police car has driven up or down the same road, and Athena forces her host to slow down the vehicle to legal speeds and appear ordinary. The police had continued the other way, unaware. At least in the beginning.
The siren makes her grip the steering wheel harder. It’s too soon. She needs to get to that ship; but its location is still over twenty hours away.’
Athena glances back through the mirror; it’s gone from the darkness of night to the hues of dawn brightening, and, sure enough, there are two vehicles in pursuit, blue lights turning. The traffic isn’t that dense. She increases the throttle and begins zigzag through it. They’re on a highway with lanes interconnecting and she’ll get out of this; she can; she is a Goddess, a Goa’uld, and these puny humans do not have the means to stop her. She rams the car into one to the left, and tires shriek and the other car, a civilian who doesn’t grasp what’s going on, slams the brakes, skidding across the road and creating a blockage when coming to halt titled sideways. Other vehicles behind it are forced to an abrupt halt, smoke rising.
Athena continues onward. The intersection up ahead leads to Lincoln and in the city she can lose them. The sirens are fading.
“Boss, the car was reported stolen just four hours ago. It’s a match. It was spotted by police on the I-80 heading south-west, causing a collision and road-blockage,” DiNozzo says, despair wrecking him: that’s Kate.
He can’t, doesn’t want to understand how, but that’s Kate, and she’s on a spree hurting people, killing people. She’s got an alien in her head pulling the shots, and DiNozzo doesn’t know what to do. This isn’t some bad guy they can apprehend and get jailed. This is—Kate’s his friend, their friend—and Colonel Carter, she’d said something about Goa’uld, that when they take a host (possession: erasure) they can kill the Dæmon and leave behind an empty shell;
She could be dead already.
Oh, God. She could be …
At 19:02 local time, Gibbs can finally make the call.
“General, we have the coordinates—can you get us down there?”
General Landry answers: “We’ve got a security team already standing by. Prometheus will be ready to ring you out in ten minutes.”
She ditches the car close to the University, and in the crowds she can lose herself. To continue onward she needs a new disguise. This host has been useful, but she’s gathered most of her knowledge by now, storing it within her own; Athena gazes at the movement of students and teachers and all of these useless humans, and considers. Which one?
It must be a swift decision and the body must be somewhat useful. Blend in. Police are looking for Agent Todd. Decision made, Athena heads away from the University, toward one of the places where the buildings crowd tightly casting long shadows. The potential to be recognize by witnesses is huge, but her old host will be the only one having to worry about it.
Teyla has felt deeply torn several times in her life.
When her parents were dead and her people looked to her for guidance, she had prayed to the Ancestors and asked Charin for advice. She was young, and part of her had wanted to run away, slip free from all bonds and obligations. Afterward, she had understood the depth of her people’s loyalty and trust in her abilities: not all societies would accept the leadership of a woman so young. But they did. And they survived; they did not prosper like in the old tales, but almost. She ensured they had allies to trade for supplies and food they could not procure on Athos. She had shelters built and she learned to tell the liars apart from the others so that they would not be scammed by vicious merchants without care or empathy for others. She learned so many things, all for her people’s sake.
Then the Tau’ri came from the City of the Ancients, and she was torn: between her people and the Lanteans. The opportunity to help her people by fighting the Wraith was offered. And she could not refuse. In the end, she could not. Halling understood that. He is a good leader. And perhaps, one day, she shall return to New Athos, when the Wraith are all gone and they can build cities, no longer needing to move their hunting camps around out of fear. Return to her people, her family. Perhaps one day.
Their missions as AR-1 have helped her bond to a new kind of family. The people of Atlantis are close. There are times when she feels … outside of it. An Athosian surrounded by aliens. But they do try to make her feel included and welcome, especially Elizabeth and Carson and her team. Even Rodney, who had been rude to her in the beginning, their conversations stilted and awkward. In the beginning, Teyla had found the Tau’ri to be so strange, their Dæmons in unfamiliar Shapes and their customs outlandish—so advanced, and yet in some ways not at all. During her time here, she has had to come to terms with the fact that in some ways, the Tau’ri will never be familiar.
They think and say strange things. They honor their dead but are often angry, even as they grieve the beauty of a natural, aging death. They make songs about battle, elevating heroes, but rarely sing. They determine worth from the appearance of others, whether they are man or woman or neither, who they love, the color of their skin; and this happens on many worlds, yes, but Teyla had hoped that these Tau’ri, bringing hope to the galaxy, would be … better than that. Some of her hopes have been dulled and crushed.
For all their faults, these Earthlings are her friends now. And AR-1 is her new family. On Athos, family is a broad and cherished term, but on Earth it seems it is not so, not for everyone. They had acted shocked when Teyla let Kanaan speak for them to others without bonds of blood between them. The friendships she has forged with the rest of the team are strong. In a way, she feels deep kinship with Ronon, who too is an outsider. But for him it must be worse, because he is without another home; his people are gone; his planet is burned.
Aiden is pacing again. Restlessly. Ronon is sitting in a corner, waiting, almost as if on guard. Teyla has tried to soothe them, but ultimately she must first soothe herself. There are so many uncertainties and so little the three of them can do from here. As Rodney had said: they are in the wrong galaxy.
They have debated possibilities. John could still be alive. Could he not? Rodney’s explanations of how the communication stones function made sense. But now he has collapsed, and Teyla had not known what to do when John’s body convulsed—she had tried to make Rodney get some rest. He needed it. They all do. She is tired even if she has done nothing these past few days except waiting.
The machinery bleeps steadily: a pulse. Carson says he must sleep this off, but cannot specify what ‘this’ is, and Teyla is sure that the doctor is frustrated by that fact. Rodney is Carson’s friend.
Meredith is resting by John’s feet. She has not stirred since they collapsed.
Teyla is sitting on a chair by the edge of the bed. She would like to be here when they wake up. Surely they will wake up soon?
Surely they will wake up soon?
“Freeze!”
A dozen marines swarm out of the nearby buildings from every available direction, and their uniforms neatly place them not as SWAT teams but as SGC personnel. Their weapons are drawn and aimed and cocked. Athena stops walking, inwardly cursing, reaching for the zat’nik’tel beneath her host’s shirt.
“You’re surrounded! Hands in the air,” commands a human voice wishing to be powerful. Agent Gibbs steps into view. “Don’t move.”
With honed SGC personnel, there’d be no point in pretending, but she fakes a look of genuine surprise and shock and hurt, and she turns to the agent—friend, colleague, a trusted ally of Todd’s—and speaks shrilly, upset: “I, I don’t understand, what’s all this? Gibbs, what’s going on?”
But he doesn’t fall for it. His face is grim and he’s aiming a handgun at her vessel’s jugular. “Get the fuck out of her.”
Athena laughs, drops the pretense. Her voice deepens in pitch: “I like it in here. Kate Todd is your friend, and I could kill her Dæmon with the snap of my fingers. I know you won’t shoot.”
He doesn’t smile or laugh, and his tone is grim. And for the first time in a long time Athena feels something; it could be true fear;
“Do you?”
Agent Gibbs pulls the trigger.
Chapter Text
xxix.
interceptor
McKay is gone.
The Aurora · star system of M22-535 · Pegasus
February 20, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 146 days after the Uprising
Major Hudson of the United States Air Force was recruited for the SGC three months prior to the Battle of Antarctica as a test pilot. Well, that’s what was in the job description. It was vague, but he’s flown classified, experimental craft before, so that wasn’t new. Once he passed the interview and was taken not an airstrip but to the underground base hiding beneath NORAD; yeah, that was new. And the aliens. Took a while to get used to. F-302s, based on alien Death Gliders. Spaceships. He’d just barely begun to grasp the suddenly huge reality of it all when they were called to battle: Earth was under attack by the Goa’uld, the System Lord Anubis and his forces, and they had the Prometheus and a large squadron of F-302s. That was it. No secondary lines. If they didn’t make it, he’d been told, Earth would fall. That was their job: defend Earth. Straightforward. Not simple, but straightforward in its goals.
This isn’t exactly an alien invasion, but almost. No way they could defend a planet as well as their ship right now. The F-302 is good to fly. And they’re so thinly spread that they can’t spare more than one pilot per craft though he’d prefer to have a trusty co-pilot behind him; that’s how the F-302 was designed, an echo of the Death Gliders. There’s an alarm whining, but when the hell isn’t there? Hudson throws a glance at the gauges and the computer screens; mere milliseconds of attention can be spared for each one.
The sky is alight.
Frankly, he’d thought space would be emptier, darker, and not this … intense. Space vast and he’d, naively, thought that meant the chances of running into an enemy would be slim. That life would be sparse and beautiful, and the planets all different, most of them empty rocks or gas giants like in the spreads in the National Geographic space articles. But the Pegasus Galaxy is full humans, nearly on every second habitable planet, and it’s crawling with Wraith.
He came with the Daedalus and he’s never seen a Wraith for real. He’s quite content with the pictures and the grainy video footage and the written accounts.
The Darts, they’re sleek and fast and difficult to track. Like bees, they swarm around the Hive in tight, controlled formations. Hudson leads the Blue Squadron to smash right through those formations. Break ‘em and throw ‘em down, the Captain of the old squad had used to say when Hudson was a Lieutenant and graduated from the Academy just two years earlier. Close mid-air combat is difficult. In space, he needn’t worry about atmospheric edges. No, up here the set of rules are different. For one, flying out here is a lot harder. There’s no air, only vacuum. A burn of the engines must be controlled or he’ll just continue out into the darkness forever, carried onward by momentum, no drag, nothing. It’s so much easier to get lost and go unseen, and, God, he doesn’t want be left behind.
The words from the Aurora were intercepted and full of static, but he got the gist of it. The Aurora is planning a hyperspace jump and he’s got to get the Squadron aboard. The Hive will swallow them whole if they don’t.
The radio chatter is strict and somewhat frantic now. Whatever laid-back attitude people had assumed at the start of the mission, that’s gone now, grins wiped off their hopeful faces.
Hudson knows about tactics and military strategy, and he knows how valuable the Aurora is. Not just in terms of being an Ancient Warship, therefore important to the historians and archaeologist and the other geeks—a ship like this can turn the tides. Defend Atlantis and, if need be and if they could get it there, defend the Earth. Problem is, they’re still repairing her—she was very beat up when the ship was found—and they’re not ready for this kind of battle. A battle which they’re currently loosing.
When Captain Spencer’s F-302 drops off the screen, Hudson’s hope drops like a stone. Damn it. Damn it. Fuck. He tries to use that anger and the surge of grief for his lost fellow airman, and use it without losing focus. A loss concentration right now could mean a collision with a friend or foe, and there’s no way to survive that out here. He can’t pull the chute in space, though the F-302 is equipped with that and all kinds of emergency mechanisms. There’s no wind to catch him. All that’s protecting him from the ice of vacuum is a thin layer of plated hull and wires. He wonders if this is anything how the first astronauts felt, the men who went to the moon and back as the world watched and cheered. No people on Earth will cheer for Captain Hudson and his squad.
They’ve managed to light up the Dart Bay. Secondary explosions. It lulls the fight for a moment and gives the Aurora chance.
A chance.
“Blue Leader to squad. All craft withdraw to Aurora immediately,” he orders, repeating it twice. “We’re getting out of this hellhole.”
There are responses, intermittent:
“Blue Three. I copy.”
“Jumper Three. Rog.”
“Understood.”
“Jumper Six, copy."
“Blue Two—roger.”
“Blue Four copies and is headed for home."
Another explosion rocks the ship. The inertial dampeners absorb the worst of the blow, but she still feels the thrum in her bones. That didn’t sound good. Was that a blast of fire or another Dart impacting?
“Heard that?”
“Yes, and it won’t make me work any faster,” Oakley grouses, and right now she doesn’t need him to snap so she shuts her mouth before she can insult him or start bantering like they would otherwise. “Faceplate.”
She hands him it, and the gloves. He powers up the welding tool.
Basically, the power node stabilizer has been cracked by a power surge, and it’s got to be welded together again. It doesn’t seem that bad once they’d figured that out, even if the doc’s assessment of it being an uncomplicated machine was a complete and utter lie of the kind only a scientist would make. Teldy turns her back on him as he works to protect her eyes and to keep a look out. There’s still Wraith aboard. How many?
Should’ve asked Sharpe for a sitrep on lifesigns scans before they got into this cut-off section. The minutes trickle by too slowly. Too slowly.
In a pause between bursts of fire, Oakley says: “Nearly done. I think.”
Teldy’s been staring down this corridor for so long without daring to blink that the edges of her vision are starting to burn. It’s too quiet, and it’s unsettling as fuck.
Too slowly.
She’s aware of the welding tool starting up again, hotly, behind her, the noise is so loud that she can’t hear the footsteps approaching. But she sees the shadows up ahead—
“Wraith!”
Fuck. She starts firing before they’re properly visual, short intense bursts, and she has to cover Oakley while he works. The Wraith is one of those drone things—no, two, and they’re running toward them. Masked faces. A stun blast brushes past her shoulder.
Oakley swears.
“Keep working! I’ve got this!” Teldy shouts, though in the calamity she probably can’t be heard.
She keeps firing. The Wraith are closing, but she gets enough bullets in the one to the left: it stumbles, falls, and stills. Damn, these things are hard to kill. The remaining one shoots and shoots its stunner again. Teldy ducks, instinctively. The noise is so loud she can’t concentrate and she fires again—the last Wraith stops moving. Good.
Suddenly, it’s all silent behind her. She half-expects Oakley to say that it’s done, fixed. Except when she turns around, he’s unconscious. No blood, but—shit. Stunner must’ve got him. He’s still clutching the tool loosely and the faceplate’s been knocked sideways when he fell from the kneeling position he was in. Was lucky he didn’t cut himself up on the hot fire before it faded.
It’s not fixed yet.
Determinedly, Teldy grabs Oakley’s shoulders and drags him aside, into a corner from which he’s sort of clear of the corridor, in case some more Suckers show up. She makes sure he’s got his P-90 cradled in his arms. She doesn’t dare moving his Dæmon from where it’s fallen a couple of feet away. Then she takes the faceplate and the tools, and turns toward the half-completed node.
Yeah. She can do this.
She can do this.
“Oh, thank God,” Sharpe gasps when a familiar and desperately needed face, after what feels like half an eternity, appears on the Bridge. “Major! You’re all right!”
“At least in one piece,” he says, rushing toward the Captain’s chair and nearly falling into it. Sharpe realizes that the dark splatters on his uniform might be blood, and she is a bit sick to the stomach and takes a few deep breaths. They’ve made it this far; she can hold out; she can make it. They’ll make it. “How the ship?”
“Bad,” she says. “Shields at … sixteen percent, still, holding but—”
“Can be jump to hyperspace?”
“Yes, but only a short jump. Still waiting for confirmation of vital repairs on deck two, but it’ll be a temporary patch,” she nods, swallows hard. “It’ll be risky with the ship’s current integrity.”
“A risk we’ll have to take,” the Major says dryly. “Our fighters?”
“Approaching the Bay. We should have them all within three or four minutes. Major, we … we lost some of them out there.”
He nods quietly, a disturbed expression. “Understood.” Then, after a brief pause of breathing and holding back a sigh, the Major activates the intercoms. “Attention all personnel, this is Major Lorne.” There are no more words, no long or elaborate message or prayer for hope. Only: “Prepare for imminent hyperspace jump.”
“… Teldy, Oakley, do you read? This is Major Lorne.”
Comms kick back in and Captain Teldy swears. Relief or not, she’s not sure. That was the Major, and it’s great to hear he’s not died in an explosion or been eaten by the Wraith.
“Sir, this is Captain Teldy. The node on level two is fixed. I need a medic, Oakley’s been hit by a stunner. Doubling back to him now.”
Major Lorne looks at Sharpe for confirmation. “Are we go or no-go?”
“Engines are primed. Shields are up as strong as we’re able to get them. We’re go.”
“What about Jumper Eight?”
“We’ve tried but we can’t reach them,” Sharpe says worriedly. “There’s too much interference. I’ll try to bring them up on screen.”
Oh no. Oh no.
Five—no, seven—Darts are heading straight in their direction. Miko grips the controls tightly and almost forgets how to breathe. She can barely fly; she can’t fight! not in space! or at all! She can barely keep this thing in a straight line! Oh no, oh no. She struggles with the urge to shut her eyes tightly and hold her breathe.
“Doc, they can’t see us while we’re cloaked, right?” Cadman says softly.
It’s only a vague reassurance. “Y-yes. But they could still hit us. And if they’re close enough, they might not be able to need to see us on their scans to know we’re here,” Miko says. “We’re invisible to the eye and to scans and radar, but the Jumper’s outer hull is still warmer than the space around us by almost seventy Kelvin.”
“And that’s bad?” Mehra asks, frowning.
“Yes, they can see the shadow of us that way. If they’re close enough. I think …” Miko bites her lip, reads the incoming data: the Darts will reach them in half a minute. Twenty-seven seconds. “If we shut down engines, we’ll cool down enough not to be detected. I can’t outrun them.”
She expects protests or at least questions. Instead, Cadman nods. “Do what you need to do, doc.”
Taking a deep, shaking breath, Miko does. It’s easy: no flip of switch, no button; only a thought: shut down engines. (please, please, let this work.)
Jumper Eight begins to drift.
“I’ve got them,” Sharpe says. “Major, they’re not on the moon anymore, they’re less than a hundred thousand kilometers off our port side.”
Saying it all aloud is somewhat unnecessary, as the data is displayed as a holographic simulation projected above one of the main consoles in the Bridge. A mass of movement. The Major’s expression pinches.
The Jumper is not alone.
“The Aurora reads it as cloaked. Still can’t get a radio signal through. They’re not moving at max sublight speed, there’s no engine output for some reason.”
Lorne can figure two reasons that Jumper Eight has shut down its engines. One: it was a deliberate move, a tactic which he cannot know the details of. Two: they’re damaged, damaged and out of reach.
“Major,” another technician interrupts, bruises on his forehead; “we got word from the Bay. The F-302s and Jumpers are aboard.”
“Not all of them,” Sharpe whispers, and she turns to Major Lorne. She doesn’t want to leave Miko or the others there to their fate, but—“We can’t wait much longer to jump.”
“One minute,” Lorne decides, and it’s that kind of a decision a Lantean would make, Sharpe realizes. Not everyone at the SGC would, but someone from Atlantis would dare to: “We’ll give them a minute. Keep trying to contact them.”
Miko cannot win against the reflex to close her eyes tightly as the Darts get so close she could almost touch them, and she doesn’t look. There’s no sound in space, no whine as the Darts zip past. The Jumper’s proximity alarm bleeps.
Oh, Kami, we’ll get hit. We’ll get hit—
“Major, a bunch of Darts just broke off from the rest of the Hive!”
Lorne doesn’t like the sound of that. “Where to?”
Sharpe’s voice hitches. “Their trajectory takes them right toward Jumper Eight.”
Shit. “Think they’ve been seen? If their cloak malfunctions ..:”
“Or they’re outputting a radio signal that can’t reach us but the Wraith intercepted it,” Sharpe fills in. “They’ll intercept the Jumper in less than thirty seconds.”
They don’t get hit. Miko is surprised when she opens her eyes and the skies are clear.
Seven dots are moving toward the moon behind them. Away. Away.
“That was too close,” Mehra gasps. “The hell just happened?”
And Miko realizes. “They never were headed for us—they’re going to the moon.”
“Why, what for? There’s nothing there but dust and an old base that probably doesn’t work. There’s nothing alive there.”
“To cut us off. They can dial the Gate so we can’t use it for thirty-eight minutes,” Miko says, a stone sinking in her belly. “We’re trapped.”
“No,” Cadman says adamantly. “There’s still the Aurora. Think you can get us there?”
Miko readjusts her glasses and then her grip of the stick, and she coaxes the engines to come online again. A warm, soft hum fills the Jumper. They dare to breathe again. “I’ll try.”
“Shields are only at fifteen percent. Major, we’ve got the jump before the Hive starts firing again, or we’ll lose integrity forever!” Sharpe says, though she doesn’t want to. She knows the implications: Jumper Eight will be left behind and with those Darts headed for the moon, the Gate will be dialed, shutting them off. Miko, Mehra, and Cadman will be on their own.
But Major Lorne shakes his head. “Not yet. Twenty-five seconds.”
He doesn’t want to leave without that Jumper.
He’s got to give them a chance.
twenty seconds.
Miko turns the engines on with a thought and goes to max thrust at once, aiming for the Aurora. There is no pull of Gs, the inertial dampeners handle it without a problem, but she still imagines that she feels something pulling her back and into the seat and her Dæmon huddles under the control panel, by her feet. The Aurora looks so small and far away, with a swarm of Darts around it.
The Hive is firing at the ship. The shield is flickering blue as bursts of energy are forcefully dispersed. Miko can imagine the alarms going off in the Bridge, how close to failure they are, the systems about to crash.
“C’mon, doc, you can make it,” Cadman whispers. “You can do it.”
fifteen seconds.
“Almost …”
The Bay doors are closed and the shield is wrapped around the Aurora tightly. Readings indicate the drives are running hot and they’re about to open a window—
With horror, Miko realizes there’s no way she can hail the Aurora and ask them to open the Bay in time.
“Doc?” Cadman asks.
The Darts and the Hive are behind them. They can’t go that way. No.
She has an idea. It’s probably not a good one, but it might just work. She increases the throttle and heads for the Ancient Warship.
“Doc, the Bay doors are closed,” Mehra says.
ten seconds.
Miko isn’t aiming for the Bay.
“… and with this databurst we’re including an update on the latest discoveries in the City, including what appears to be a dome on the South-East Pier which could potentially be used by Botany. Dr Parrish is requesting an additional shipment of grains and seeds to be included in the Daedalus’ next run, the exact list of which is included in these files. At the time of this transmission,” Elizabeth says, and pauses: the Stargate is shut down, and there is no radio communication. They’ll open a wormhole to Earth in a couple of hours to relay yet another databurst to the SGC. “At the time of this transmission, Colonel Sheppard’s body with Dr McKay’s Dæmon still haven’t regained consciousness, but Dr Beckett reports their condition is stable. The Aurora is most probably engaged in battle with at least one Hiveship three parsecs from the City. We have little help to send, and interference from one of the planets in that system is making subspace communication difficult.”
She stops the audio recording and saves the file using the compression algorithm Rodney created over a year ago, storing it among dozens of reports and files made by others in the City.
This is the most difficult part of the job, and she knew that when she signed up for Atlantis. Elizabeth always knew she’d be the leader and remain behind a lot of the times when people went out there, using the Stargate. She’d be the one waiting. She knew, and yet, actually experiencing it like this—it’s quite different. She could use something to keep her mind off these matters, but how could she, in all fairness?
It’s a weight in her heart. Duty comes first, it must come first for the Expedition’s sake and safety, and she can’t relax while the fate of the Aurora remains so uncertain. When was the last time she had ten hours of deep, uninterrupted, unbothered rest? She struggles to remember.
With a small sigh, Elizabeth shuts the laptop and heads for the Control Room. She’s certainly seen it, and her office, much more than she’s seen her own quarters, the bed neatly made and the lights turned off. Chuck is back, and Banks has been persuaded to take a break.
“Anything yet?”
Chuck shakes his head. “It’s unchanged. The Aurora’s blipped in and out a couple of times, but their position’s basically the same, orbiting the gas giant M22-535 is connected to. The Hive’s following. No Gate activity.”
Dr Kusanagi and the two marines with her made contact from Jumper Eight roughly half an hour ago to inform them of the situation. While Weir can appreciate the decision, made by Major Lorne, to keep her in the loop, she’s aware that the plan must’ve involved risks and the Major must have known. Weighted options and made choices. Like she does, every day. Is the Aurora under attack because they decided to linger, send that Jumper, instead of seeking the safety of hyperspace again? Eventually the Wraith would’ve given up the chase.
Maybe she is already starting to forget the shadow of the Wraith, how heavy and oppressive it is, since it’s been so many months since the Siege, and she’s never seen a Wraith in person and had to fear for her life. The pictures are blurry. She’s not out there, facing them. Maybe she is starting to forget, willfully, the horrors and the terrors. Elizabeth hasn’t followed a team through the Gate to another world, benign or not; maybe she should. Standing on the balcony overlooking the Gate Room, arms crossed, she considers the silent Stargate: yeah, she probably should. Remind herself why they’re here. The people they’re trying to help. The war they’re trying to fight.
The Wraith must realize that the Aurora is manned by Lanteans. That Lanteans survived and whether or not the City survived—they now have a Warship. Hopefully, it will cast doubt among the Wraith, but Elizabeth has a gnawing feeling it will not inspire fear. Do Wraith even fear? Are they capable of such a feeling, being the apex predator of a whole galaxy? Do the Wraith have any reason to fear, now that the Ancients are gone and the Lanteans represent the mere fraction of a percent of the galaxy’s human population as a whole? One Warship—what difference does that really make in the long run?
“Dr Weir,” Chuck says, suddenly. “We’ve got an incoming subspace transmission. Audio only.”
She can’t describe the feeling, if it’s relief or something else, when she asks him to put the speakers on.
“We lost,” the Major says, and he sounds stricken and tired. “Not just the fight but … one F-302—Captain Spencer—and Jumper Eight with Dr Kusanagi, and Lieutenants Mehra and Cadman.”
Elizabeth briefly closes her eyes. This is what she had feared. “I understand. Any other casualties?”
“We’ve got several wounded onboard, two of them critical, and parts of the ship are—toast,” Lorne continues. “I mean, the docs could probably fix it given enough time, but some places we’d just fixed are smithereens. Our shields are only at seven percent. We’ve jumped to an adjacent system, less than two parsecs from the battle site, but the ship doesn’t have the integrity for another hyperspace jump. Look, our options are limited. We’re in orbit around a binary start and I’ve given the order to power down all non-essentials. There’s a Gate in this system. I suggest evacuating all non-essential personnel back to the City via Jumper.”
“Are the Wraith following?”
“No, ma’am,” is the answers but not a relief: “We’ve shaken them off. But if they find us again, I’m not sure what kind of a fight we’d be able to put up.”
“Understood. I agree with your recommendation, Major. How many people are necessary to stay aboard?”
“We’d do with a minimum of ten. Myself and any civilian techs who’re willing to stay as a repair crew,” the Major says. “At least until we can get proper backup by the Daedalus. We need a bunch of supplies to fix the damages. We can set the Aurora on a sublight course toward you now that we’re no longer followed, but I’d rather wait a while to be sure. Dr Sharpe said something about cloaking the ship like a Jumper, we’re looking into that.” Exploring avenues; Elizabeth is glad. She’d rather not lose the Warship so soon, but even more she doesn’t want to lose her people.
And ten people can be evacuated in a single Jumper, if need be.
“All right. Proceed.”
“Yes, ma’am. We’ll dial you in shortly with the first group.”
half an hour earlier:
Miko Kusanagi opens her eyes.
“We’re … not dead. We’re not dead? Oh my God. Doc, what the hell just happened?”
Cadman’s voice is out of breath. She, too, must’ve shut her eyes tightly. Miko cannot immediately answer; both mentally and physically she runs her hands over the console, checks the instruments and readings. Dutifully, sensor diagrams appear on the HUD. No anomalous readings. No blinking alarms. No warnings. Just … quiet.
The clamps latched on as she pleaded them to. The hull is gravitationally and magnetically sealed to the larger craft below—above?—them. They’re … they’re safe.
They’re surrounded by scattered blue light.
“We’re in hyperspace,” Miko says.
Mehra blinks. “Did we just pull a Millennium Falcon?”
“A what?” Cadman says blankly.
Miko has watched the movies on multiple occasions. Her old boyfriend had only one taste in films. It got boring after a while, though that was by far not the only reason why they broke up. “I managed to latch onto the hull of the Aurora in the last minute. Since the two ships are compatible, the Jumper was included under the shield and therefore also in the subspace field as we—they—jumped to hyper. I’m not sure they’re aware of us, though.”
“Does that mean we can get off this bucket?”
“No, we can’t man oeuvre within the field while in flight. We have to wait until we drop out of hyperspace,” Miko says, nodding to herself. “And I’m not sure how subspace or radio comms would work ship-to-ship under these conditions. It’s never been tested.”
Mehra simply breathes for a moment, exhale, inhale, exhale; then she stands, stretches, and heads for the back compartment. She begins digging around.
“Powerbar, anyone?”
Miko realizes her hands are trembling from prolonged effort and the aftershocks of fear. “Yes, please.”
One is thrown her way, and she fumbles to catch it.
“Laura?”
Cadman shakes her head.
Mehra grabs a powerbar for herself. “By the way, doc, that was good flying,” she says while tearing the wrapper open. “Also, I never want to be in a Jumper ever again. No offense. I’m a marine; I belong on the ground.”
“Thank you, Dusty. … What was that you said earlier, about poker nights?”
Major Lorne can’t quite believe his ears, or eyes, when Sharpe says that there’s something attached to the outside of the hull. A lump that is unmistakable, Ancient metal to metal. While in hyperspace they were too busy notice it. Shields about to fail; they had to drop out earlier than he’d like to, and he’s starting to coordinate the evac when Sharpe calls his name.
“It’s Jumper Eight! Reading six lifesigns.”
“Open a frequency,” he demands. They’re alive. They’re alive! Oh, thank fuck.
He’s not going to be fired, after all. He’s pretty sure the Colonel would have his head if the three had gotten killed, but now—yeah. They’ll be okay. They’ll be okay.
“Jumper Eight, this is Lorne, do you read?”
After one, two, three slow tantalizing horrible seconds, there’s a response. He recognizes the voice as Cadman’s:
“Loud and clear.”
They made it.
“Atlantis, this is Lorne. We just found Jumper Eight parked on the Aurora’s hull. They’re okay.”
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 21, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 147 days after the Uprising
Ronon is shaken from his light slumber. Hadn’t meant to fall asleep, and it wasn’t deep, but he still feels guilty. Something about infirmaries and hospitals—makes him … safe. He thinks about his sister; Ren would kid around with him, and he’d visit whenever he could, and she carried the same kind of scent that all hospitals do. It hadn’t unsettled him, still doesn’t. But it does make him feel grief, this dull pounding emotion in his gut.
Melena hadn’t fallen asleep and she’s the one to rouse him, a shared murmur. Something’s happening. He gets to his feet. Dr Beckett and Dr Mallory have both rushed into the room and they’re crowded around the bed that Sheppard’s in—the body is in; and Rodney’s Dæmon. Beckett urges them to step back; Teyla and Ford are there and none of them wants to leave.
The machine measuring Sheppard’s heartbeats beeps in a quickening, quickening rhythm.
“What’s happening?” Ford asks. “Doc?”
“Step back, please,” Beckett says. “Blood pressure’s rising—”
The lights are flickering, worrisomely, and Ronon glances at the lamp-infused pillars distrustfully. From what he understands, people with the ATA-gene can control the City’s various systems, including lights and power, but there’s only one guy he knows who can make them flicker like that. His senses cry danger! And his hand itches to reach for his particle magnum, but this is no enemy, no physical manifestation, no Wraith to be shot. The weapon wouldn’t do any good, and Ronon forcibly stills his hand as he watches the docs administer some kind of calming drug.
“Doc?” Ford repeats.
The heartbeat slows down.
McKay’s Dæmon—Ronon has learned its Shape is called ‘cat’—is gone. There’s a Raven instead, just like that, out of thin air, no noise—no warning—nothing.
McKay is gone.
Notes:
(2018-01-09) Thank you all for reading/commenting/leaving kudos!! I forgot to write a note on the last chapter. Happy New Year, people; hopefully 2018 will get at least a little better than 2017. This chapter pretty much wraps up the Aurora storyline/sideplot. Just wanted to say that updates will probably continue to be sporadic so nothing's changed there. I'm sort of stressed out because of unemployment issues and declining mental health - just a heads-up (again. ugh). Also, everything will be all right (minor spoiler?), our faves WILL survive, I promise!! The different threads of the plot will be connected and wrapped up in time, I'm planning on that. I can't say exactly how long this fic will be, there's a lot left to explore and explain - initially I planned around thirty-ish chapters, but I don't know anymore. We'll see. (I've already drafted the last chapter/epilogue which is a first for me, since usually the endings are what I'm worst at, lol.) Hope you enjoyed this chapter!
Chapter 30: astronauts, part one
Summary:
they are adrift:
Chapter Text
xxx.
astronauts
part one
they are adrift;
three days earlier:
Blood loss.
He hates it. Mostly because it’s happened to him more times in the past few years than a guy should have to endure in a lifetime, and he’s struggling to keep awake. They got knocked around pretty bad by the shockwave and something hit the side of the ship, clipped the Glider and short-circuited something. Seems like the reactor’s scrambled and shut down. (At least it didn’t implode.) They can’t navigate or engage weapons. Can’t get most systems online. They’ll run out of air in just a couple of hours instead of half a day. Which sucks.
Air’s going to get real thin. He’s soared on high altitudes completely reliant on lifesupport systems and been trapped in a spacesuit: knows the vulnerability, the surge of adrenaline at the realization that there’s nothing to catch them, no parachute to deploy.
Fuck. He deserves a raise. And he wants a hot bath and a bed and some very strong painkillers. no particular order. just: to breathe, unhindered by machinery and pain, and for there to be a sky, a limitless atmosphere, to breathe without his body being in agony for at least five fucking minutes but in this universe that’s probably too much to ask for, John thinks dryly and he would’ve laughed if he’d had the energy left over to do so.
He got shot. He does remember that. Something wet and hot taints his hands, and the stick is kind of slippery. He’s too tired to be disgusted. John glances over his shoulder, tries to get a glimpse of Jenny’s face. She is pale and drawn and looks like she wants to cry or shout or possibly pass out. If she does, and he does too (which is a rising possibility), they’d crash if there was anything to crash onto. But there isn’t. No nearby planets. No Stargate. They’re so far out on the edge of a system they can’t make out its central star. There’s not even a pretty nebula to look at.
Fitting, somehow. To die in space. The expanse embracing them slowly;
Fuck. He doesn’t want to die. He’s selfish. He wants to live. He made a promise. yeah. promise. not to get hurt, to return soon, and he got shot instead, and Rodney is going to scar forever. John tries not to think about him too much but it’s kind of hard when these hands are not his own. He closes his eyes. Briefly. briefly. a second. just. a second. of rest. would be nice. Everything still hurts. This isn’t the way he wants to go. It’s too slow. It’s too slow, and the stars are foreign. He wishes he could hear the sound of waves splashing against the Piers, and see the glimmering towers, and say hello to his team at least once more. Teyla. Ronon. Ford. Rodney. What happens if he dies now? Would Rodney go out too, returned to his flesh in the last moment only for his heartbeat to fail? Would Rodney …?
what if Rodney dies and not he? waking up in Atlantis, all right and unhurt and alone;
No. No, he’s got to stay awake and live. Can’t risk the possibility that they—no. no. no. He forcibly cracks his eyes open and tries to breathe. Is that a rib? bruised or busted? fuck. Beckett’s going to be so mad at him. and Rodney, and the team. like. could he have one single mission not going downhill? ever?
[Could be on the wish list], a shared whisper. John holds back a hoarse chuckle: laughing would make his ribs hurt worse.
They’re not going to run out of oxygen. That’s the thing. The oxygen will outlast them. It’s been half an hour since the explosion, at most, and they are alone and adrift. What’ll kill them is the cold and the build-up of carbon dioxide. It’ll seep like poison into their blood. There was a point, John remembers from training, a mention of steps to go through during an emergency, if you’ve got to abandon the craft mid-air and pull the chute and land somewhere desolate and got to wait for the other guys to rescue you. Something about assessing damage and body and psyche. Like … what? can’t gather food or start a fire or build shelter here; all they’ve got is the Glider. No supplies, no horrid MREs. Nothing. A handgun out of ammo so the easy way’s out the window, which is just as well and John doesn’t want to think about going down that depressing route.
Fuck, it’s cold. Already. Should they be leaking heat this fast?
Maybe it’s the blood loss. Yeah. Oh, yeah. That … makes sense. He breathes through his nose and presses an open palm against the entry wound. It’s bleeding slowly, sluggishly. Not so fast he’ll be ripped away in less than two minutes, but bad enough he’ll probably lose consciousness within the next hour or so.
John is quiet. Jenny hasn’t said more than a couple of words since it happened, and if he had the energy left over he’d tell a bland joke. And say: Hey, everything will be okay. This stuff happens like all the time. They’ll come for us. They’ll rescue us. Whoever ‘they’ would be. He doesn’t say that. There’s no point. Reassurances like that are for children.
Then Jenny asks, a soft suddenness to it: “Can we send an SOS?”
SOS.
Who would hear it? Doesn’t matter. Someone would. Eventually. Radio signals never die. They go on for miles and miles. If … subspace … No, it’s down. Array’s destroyed from the impact, if those readouts are right and they may not be, John’s a bit dizzy and can’t concentrate. He shakes his head tiredly and then remembers she probably can’t see him properly and, fuck, not a good idea. Head’s pounding.
“No.” He presses the hand more tightly against his side. Can’t feel an exit wound, but everything hazy. Maybe that’s good, yeah; no exit wound, means the bullet’s still lodged inside someplace, blocking the flow. It’s a flesh wound, he thinks, and muscle can heal much more easily than more vulnerable tissue like lungs. If it’d hit a major artery or a lung, he’d be dead already, having lost consciousness before they got to the Hangar. Probably. Adrenaline can do wonderful things, but the shock has settled and they have nowhere else to run. He would’ve liked to have a sky to fly in, one last time. Would be nice. A sunny blue day. The wind. the wind; the gleam of a cockpit, or merely freely, flight through their wings and the ruffle of feathers;
“I’m sorry,” he blurts. “That I led you into this.” The sentence tastes like lead.
He’d like to go to sleep.
Never before, during no slow case or undercover mission, has half an hour felt so eternal. She’s never before seen the vastness of space, and she decides now, overwhelmed by it, that she never ever wants to be an astronaut.
“I’m sorry. That I led you into this.”
Suddenly Jenny starts to laugh. The sound is false and weak and dry, and lasts only a few seconds. She tries to shake the shocks away and fails miserably. This wasn’t the end she envisioned at all: trapped in a spaceship, surrounded by cold darkness, alongside her cousin in the wrong body.
“Doubt you meant for it to happen. But I’m still angry with you,” she adds, and now John chuckles with another man’s voice. Now and again he fiddles with the control board, checks instrument readouts. It looks alien to her and she wonders how much of that he actually understands and how much is made up. She skimmed his file when Gibbs’ case caught her attention; a bit taken aback at the name. Hasn’t seen her cousin in years. The photograph wasn’t of a young, shy boy clutching a book under his arm, but of an adult with scars across his heartbeats and she saw the places listed and medals given in honor. Not the easiest life. She hadn’t known he was Air Force, and hadn’t known enough about him to predict it. He could just as well have grown up to be a librarian, or a mathematician, or an athlete. But that photo hadn’t been of this man. Or of a raven.
She’s a seasoned agent. She’s seen a lot of things but nothing like any of the past twenty-four hours. Or has it been more? How long have they been missing?
“I know. You’re free … to kick my ass whenever you want … once we get out of here,” John says solemnly, but at intervals in-between he breathes heavily and somewhat wetly, and she knows he’s got to be injured but she never got the chance to take a close look. Is there a medkit onboard these things? With something to work on humans? She doubts it. Even if there was, she can’t reach him to help, and selfishly she is deeply scared that she will be stranded here to die alone if he bleeds out. The combination with the cold starting to take over …
She looks out through the expanse, at the stars. They are bright and faraway, and there’s nothing out there. No Earth, no moon. Did Armstrong feel this alone when he took that giant leap? Did Gagarin realize how vast space is and how tiny they all are when he was taken above the atmosphere for the first time?
She shivers, cold. They’re running out of power and soon the engines will die like a flare claimed by nightfall, and no one’s near enough to hear their SOS even if they managed to send one. Can’t, John had described between heavy pained breaths: technobabble, something about a damaged subspace array. And radio waves travel fast but not fast enough and they can’t tell if anyone is out there: close enough. No one would hear them other than as old, dead echoes, and they don’t know which way is to Earth.
“‘Whenever’,” she echoes. “I’ll take you up on that.” She has to stop looking out the wide windows: she’s getting dizzy, distraughtly sick. “So this is what you do,” Jenny says then. “Space.”
“Yeah. It’s strange, but I like it,” John says and smiles. It’s sort of crookedly with that mouth, unfamiliar. It makes her a bit sick to the stomach, looking at him, that face, knowing someone else is pulling the shots. “It’s not only bad guys shooting at us all day, though it certainly seems that way now.”
“The Goa’uld?” The word tastes wrong in her mouth. John had named them. Named many things. The one who’d held them capture was named Ba’al and he’s gone now—he? it?—and the ship alongside, and they’re stranded in the void. Jenny hadn’t wanted her casket to be empty.
“Usually not my department. There are others …” His voice trails off. Maybe, she thinks for a moment, it’s because they’re running out of air, they’re going to suffocate or freeze to death, whichever comes first, and John’s realized that talking is going to make the oxygen disappear a lot faster. But then his tone changes. “There aren’t just bad guys. There are good guys too. The Athosians—Balkan and Te’reem … We’ve got allies. I’m … not certain about this galaxy, but … there were the Asgard. Though they’re mostly gone now. But the good guys, and the good places, they make it worth being out here.”
“So there’s life on other planets?” She’s not even going to touch that bit about this galaxy. Because—this galaxy? this one?
It’s not really struck her until now: there’s life on other planets. There are aliens. There is life. The truth and depth of that. Implications. The Goa’uld who put her in the sarcophagus—Ba’al—had spoken sickeningly sweetly and promised a slow death for her if John didn’t hold up his end of the bargain, and he’d said things that didn’t make sense. To hear the clear mentions now of other planets, of societies which John clearly views as Being Out There—she reels with dizziness.
“Yeah. Plenty. Mostly humans, ‘cause the Ancients … put them there—others too. Evolved. Life’s—everywhere.”
“How … How the hell do we get out there?” Jenny asks at last, the impossibilities gnawing at her as sharply as the hunger and the thirst. “By ship?”
“The Stargate,” an alien word. “It’s a device … makes wormholes. Step in one place, come out some other. … Wouldn’t be able to do it without them,” John says, glancing over his shoulder and the alien upholstery to look at her. His eyes shouldn’t be blue. What the hell is he meant to look like, anyway? The photograph was two-dimensional. Jenny associates the name John Sheppard with a ten-year-old boy with freckles on his nose and a whisper about a shy little Dæmon hiding out of sight, not—this. This man. This person. And this Raven, astoundingly beautiful and terrifying;
It’s so silent out here. Otherwise she mightn’t have been able to hear him speak. His face is alarmingly pale, and his breaths shallow and too swift.
“Rodney could tell you more about … about how that works, he’s the genius.” A fond little smile. “And we’ve got ships. And Atlantis—you’d see the City, especially at sunset when the light hits the towers just right. It’s,” and his voice halters, as if no words are enough to properly capture and describe such simplicity. No words. He smiles wistfully. “Remind me … to take you there sometime and show —”
And then something breaks the peaceful silence and hum of dying light. A button on the console bleeps and flashes a deep orange color, a warning repeating, and John straightens and cuts himself off to look at it. Heartrate spiking. The instruments are hard to read and he’s got tunnel vision, each second seeming to drag on for half a halting mile.
“Holy shit,” he gasps.
“What is it?”
“Something’s closing in … fast. Could be a ship. They’re trying to hail us, but we’ve—got no way to respond. Array’s down.” The warning: something approaching, slower than light but very, very fast. Faster than the Glider. It’s lining up with them. For a second, he has the hope that it’s their own people. After all, if they sent the Prometheus … if they figured out where to go … Their timing sucks. But John’s willing to forgive them. He almost forgets how to breathe as the thing moves closer and readings get better. A ship. Unknown configuration.
It’s too small to be the Prometheus. Far too small to be a Goa’uld Mothership. Then—what?
“They’re … repeating some kind of message,” he rasps, sensing Jenny restlessly leaning forward as if trying to catch a glimpse of the oncoming unknown, but space is dark—very dark, and they can barely make out the silhouette of something. They can’t respond. Can’t make themselves known, nor hide. Just sit here, waiting. That is worse than anything: any decision is simply out of their hands, and John’s heart sinks because he can’t make sense of the message, they can’t hear it as words. It’s a pattern of radio disturbance, almost like Morse Code, except it isn’t, and if the ship gets into range and decides to power weapons, there’s absolutely nothing John can do.
They’re defenseless.
“More aliens?” Jenny sounds like she’s shuddering.
Probably. Fuck, it’s probably non-Tau’ri. More Snakes? Shit. shit. shit. But … it’s still a chance. A chance.
It comes closer. And shapes are breaking free, blotting out the faraway stars. The ship isn’t a pyramid, and John exhales. As long as it isn’t Goa’uld. As long as it isn’t. This craft … it’s more sort of elongated. Sharp, angular corners; straight lines, not the organic jumble of a Hive. But if it was an Earth ship, they’d broadcast IFF on known frequencies; there’s nothing.
The larger vessel is settling above them, relatively speaking, and they glance up. Could be down. Nothing to really measure by. It’s dark but the ship is lined with spots of light, casting shadows on its silhouette, and the shape becomes clearer by the second, and John thinks their velocities are still great. They’re moving at thousands, tens of thousands, of miles per hour, the large vessel slowing down considerably to match the speed and drifting direction of the Glider’s free-fall. The ship’s metal edges are jagged. And as it comes up directly atop of them, less than a hundred meters in-between, it starts to open down the middle like a giant maw: But John knows, suddenly. A hangar. The ship’s not boarding them: it’s going to eat them whole.
He wishes they had more than a useless sidearm and a single zat’nik’tel between them. The Glider shudders and forcibly breaks its path. Pulled upward. Into the unknown.
“What’s happening?”
“Tractor beam.” His voice is hoarse. Fuck. fuck fuck fuck. “Could be anyone. Not SGC.” And he’d actually managed to string together some complete sentences a little while ago. He rests his head against the seat and keeps looking up as they move, move, relentlessly. Distance closing. Fifty feet. Forty. Thirty.
The hull consists of metal plates and, at some places, long narrow windows emitting pale, warming light. If something’s written on it he cannot tell, and from this angle they can’t see the engines. They cross the threshold and hover for a moment above floor-level, and John glances left and right.
A Hangar: no other craft, it’s just fifty by fifty feet, he thinks. Cramped. Boxes and crates are attached at various points to the walls and floors, and the doors begin to close. They’re going to be trapped. He shifts the zat and activates it, ready to fire; its version of safety off, and cradles the Raven close to his chest away from the worst of the injury.
The Glider trembles as the artificial gravity of the larger vessel takes over and deposits them onto the now closed floor. The movement hurts. Space is silent: there is a hissing noise as air is pushed rapidly into the chamber, and the Hangar repressurized. The Glider’s sensors can’t tell them anything. If the atmosphere outside is good for humans, if it’s poisoned. They have no idea what to expect.
It doesn’t look like a Goa’uld ship, or a Wraith Hive. It is a neat, orderly place, but also looks aged and well-used. Metal. Kind of … cyberpunk. Is that a thing? Nerds back in the City discussed it once, John overheard; possible aesthetics of possible space-faring civilizations they’d yet to run into. Yeah. It’s not all clean white lines. There’s a door at the far end of the Hangar, a bit rusted, and a gangway crossing above them of the same color. No signs of life. John is tense, exhales, inhales. Cranes his neck to look at Jenny, and holds up the zat enough for her to see. She nods, understanding passing between them.
He opens the canopy.
The air is okay. They don’t fall down. A bit stale, recycled. He aims the zat at the door. It takes a couple of second before it opens, and there’s a flicker of movement behind it. Whoever it is, they’re also cautious and duck out of the way.
“Lower your weapons, if you have them, and exit the craft,” commands a voice. In English. Okay. Maybe the Gate translation matrix still works? John is too tired to question it.
“First we want to know who you are,” he calls back. Ugh. Painful. Shouldn’t have done that. Lungs and ribs protesting wildly;
“You are aboard the Hebridan mapping vessel Explorer. You’re using a Goa’uld craft—are you one of them?”
He chances it. If this is some people the SGC has ran into … “No. Tau’ri.”
And it actually works. Wow. He could use some enemies like that: not shooting at them or trying to eat them first thing.
A hesitating, gravid moment goes by, and then someone steps into the doorway. They look … human. Huh. The woman is tall, pale, short blonde hair cut sideways and somewhat tousled. She’s in some kind of dark red flightsuit and there are grease-stains on the knees, and the utility belt is packed with various tool-like things. John can’t see any weapons. Which means this is a trap … or she truly is some type of pacifist space-traveler or explorer or something. Not Goa’uld. Which. Cool.
“We didn’t know people of Earth were out here,” she says. Earth. She knows about Earth; she knows; which means … which means: there’s hope. She pushes a button of something attached around her right wrist. Commlink or radio? “Warrick, they say they’re Tau’ri. You’d better come down here.” Then she steps a bit carefully closer—the Glider is still a couple of dozen feet away, and neither human has moved. “Exit the craft. I don’t mean to hurt you. We saw an explosion and came to investigate whether someone needed help, though we didn’t hear any distress call.”
“Didn’t send one. Comms are out,” John manages to say. He’s still holding the zat but has lowered it so it’s not pointed at the woman, and is kept somewhat out of sight. He tries to follow the woman with his eyes, but he’s getting dizzier and dizzier. He can taste blood on his tongue. He swallows thickly. “But—thanks.”
The woman looks at the Glider with some distaste. The hull is burned in some places, and clearly the thing is not suitable to fly in. “I can see that.”
“Please, help us,” Jenny says, and she sounds like the boss she’s got to be in her daily life at the office, leading an agency of feds. In control. Calm. She doesn’t sound afraid or shocked, not especially anyway: not extraordinary. She’d probably be good to have on an SG-team. “We were taken by force and we’re lost—”
If she says anything else after that, John doesn’t hear it. Word muddled, meaningless syllables, murmuring staggering noise like drumbeats. Darkness takes over his vision and for a moment he hears a rushing noise, like an alarm, or wind passing by at two hundred miles per hour, or the fire of Wraith Hives blasting everything they’ve got at the City’s shields, and he sighs and falls forward, face hitting the uneven console. His last thought is an abruptly staggering memory of his team dancing during the celebrations upon the Daedalus’ return and the Athosian drums (or maybe it is the world, his heart, Rodney’s heart failing. faltering), and so loudly overwhelmingly the drums are beating beating beating beating beating
They’re out of time.
The ship is like a living machine, bearing them upward. When John looks at her, such vivid desperate yet controlled determination in his expression, Jenny understands. This might not be a rescue. A chance in a million—to be seen: to be found: but an enemy could be waiting, and part of her expects to see—well, aliens, armed like those who had taken them in the first place. Abnormal bodies, gray or green or merely completely otherworldly. Instead there is a human woman. Apart from her clothes, she could’ve come from Earth, walked down any street. Maybe even with the clothes: a jumpsuit with a lot of pockets, comfortably worn-in and with stains on it like she’s worked within the bowels of a greasy engine just recently.
She even has a Dæmon. Its Shape is strange, new, not anything Jenny has seen before. It didn’t evolve on Earth. But—it is not the soulless presence of the Others from before, the Thing which Jenny had shot.
In which case—is she alien at all?
A human; and the ship, when it closes around them, has no windows. Looks almost like a cramped warehouse, gray, encompassing, with wires and tubes exposed along the walls and a few crates, marked with unfamiliar symbols, littering an offset area. The Death Glider sits in a large square, marked out on the floor by red and green tape; where the vessel had opened up. A loading bay? It doesn’t matter what it’s called.
She speaks a language Jenny understands. Later—once it’s all over—people from Stargate Command will explain that it’s the Stargate’s translation matrix, constantly at work, and one doesn’t necessarily need to pass through one of its artificial wormholes in order for the matrix to kick in, to work. But at the moment she doesn’t know any of this, and Jenny is taken aback at the lack of a language barrier but also severely relieved, because then John silences, and she sees his face hit the instrument board limply. She reacts and stands to see, and the alien woman also steps forward, albeit warily.
The seat is covered in bright red blood. Jenny knew he was injured, but never got the chance to see how severely. If he dies, she and her Dæmon will be alone—alone with strangers somewhere lost, lost in space, and how will they get home? The only way for them to get home is with his help.
The woman doesn’t appear to be armed, though Jenny doesn’t take her eyes completely off her as she awkwardly manages to navigate from the seat in the Glider the same way they’d boarded; there’d been a button, somewhere, to lower the mechanism to the floor and then up again. She has no idea how that works and there’s no manual. The canopy is open, so she manages to climb over the side of the seat so that she’s between the alien woman and the unconscious man. Swallows a curse: shouldn’t have worn heels to the office today. Yesterday. (How long have they been missing?)
This close up she sees his pallor’s even worse and his breaths quietly shallow, and one of his hands is coated well up to the sleeve in blood. “A medic; we need a medic,” she says, and looks toward the alien—the woman.
Is she an alien? Maybe she is; utterly different on the inside if not the outside; and the fear strikes that she is like the man who took them, and that suddenly her voice will change to a deeper chord and her eyes glow. But that doesn’t happen.
The woman touches something on her wrist again, says: “Warrick, hurry up, and get Rahda. One of the Tau’ri requires medical assistance.” Then she steps forward and Jenny reigns in the urge to back away, to seek cover and reach for a weapon to defend herself. She already has taken the zat, slipped from John’s limp hand, before realizing she’d completed the action. The woman, warily, stops from moving closer.
“Please, allow us to assist,” she says, showing her hands, revealing them to be empty. A universal gesture of peace. Her Dæmon looks genuine. Not a fake. Human. Human. Jenny has to remind herself of that. Time is swiftly running out. John must’ve lost too much blood already.
Jenny slowly, tensely, lowers the zat but doesn’t release it. “You’ll help us?” why? what’s their profit? Jenny might be jaded from too many secret ops and murder cases: she does not believe in Good Samaritans.
“If you really are from Earth, then your people and mine are friends and allies,” the woman says. Doesn’t sound like a liar. Actually, she sounds young: perhaps somewhere in her late twenties.
They have no other choice. Jenny makes the decision and tucks away the zat in the lining of her trousers, by her back, out of the way but within easy reach—just in case. Just in case.
The woman—she must have a name; surely, even if alien, such an advanced people must have names?—quickly retrieves a ladder hanging from a wall and leans it against the side of the Glider, ascending to have a look inside the cockpit, while Jenny pulls off her jacket in the lack of other supplies and presses it hard against John’s injury, easing him back in the seat away from the consoles. He doesn’t stir more than groan uneasily, without opening his eyes, which is worrying. It’s hard to tell, but Jenny is not unfamiliar with severe injuries, and he could’ve lost a whole pint of blood already while they were out there, watching the explosion. They need to get him out of here, lying flat, get him cleaned up and the injury stitched together.
The woman has just gotten into the cockpit and they’re started lifting him over the edge when someone else enters the hangar, and Jenny nearly loses her grip.
That is not a human. That’s—that’s—
oh, God, that is an …
Humanoid, yes. Tall like a human, four limbs. But its face … its skin … It’s of a grayish brown hue, layered scales, somewhat reptile-like with distinct ridges curled around cheeks and brow. Aside from that, it’s clad, like the woman, in a red jumpsuit. Jenny can’t decide whether this is worse than the other alien, the Thing which wasn’t human; that one she couldn’t see directly that it’s different, but … And she doesn’t expect it, but there’s a Dæmon, utterly alien—more alien than the woman’s—and Jenny can’t name the feelings beating in her chest, struggling with instincts of fight-or-flight.
aliens. alien life. a l i e n s.
The woman doesn’t blink. “Warrick!” she says sharply, taking command, the moment she sees the stranger. “We need a stretcher, something to carry them on. This human’s bleeding out. Where’s Rahda?”
“She is setting up in the medical room. I have reengaged the drive on our previous course,” the alien says. Its voice is surprisingly warm and pleasant, despite the urgency of the situation. If not for that eerily strange face, Jenny might almost have trusted that voice, believed in its sincerity. Now she barely dares to breathe, struggles to keep herself together. Her Dæmon struggles not to attack or flee together with her, to seek a single strain of false comfort that this is a complex ruse, a vivid dreamscape in which she’s falling and drowning. God, God, they want to go home;
Somehow—a struggle, in which the woman exchanges rapid words with the alien, coordinating rather than merely commanding coldly, the pair of them at complete ease with each other; she doesn’t flinch when the alien gets close enough to her Dæmon to touch—somehow, they get the cockpit lowered, the mechanism whirring. They get John laid out on a stretcher, the Raven tumbling out of his grasp and onto his legs, luckily without hitting the floor, remaining there unsteadily. No need to touch them, to move them with force. The barest of reliefs. Onward: across the hangar space, into a corridor (crammed, dark apart from evenly paced square spotlights in the ceiling), a turn into another room—smaller; clinical; wires yet exposed. Jenny follows in a daze, reluctant to let the only person she knows—however distantly—out of sight.
There’s another one. Alien. alien. alien. There had been a name, mentioned—what …? They’re not Dæmonless; they’re not, they’re not, she has to repeatedly mentally remind herself as alien hands gently have the stretcher lifted onto some kind of table, an operating table? or alien version of a bed? it doesn’t matter; John is laid flat, doesn’t stir still, doesn’t make a sound other than a confused groan of pain, head lolling, and Jenny keeps her hands steadily pressed onto the wound to stem the bleeding. Her skin is being soaked in red slowly, glaringly bright and too human and vulnerable and her head throbs: they might die out here, they might die, trapped aboard a spaceship;
“I’ve got it, I’ve got it,” says the other alien. Smaller, shorter, and there’s something softer about their face. “Here, let me,” and Jenny is urged away and she feels all warm, overheated, this is too much; they want to go home—she wants, needs, to go home. Where she knows how things work and why and there aren’t these questions about what is human and what isn’t. Reluctantly, she releases the grip, and realizes her hands are trembling. It’s hard to tell if it’s shock or fear. She hadn’t been this deeply unsettled—scared—for a long time. Not for herself. Since she was an agent out in the field, special assignments, done in silence, spying disconcertingly and pretending to be just a simple innocent girl: that façade can fool a lot of people. Gun always held close and enemies closer.
She isn’t sure if she can fool these people. These—these aliens.
The one called Warrick hurriedly grabs gear off an open shelf layered with unknown bits and pieces of technology and bottles. Something is held over the injury, and there are noises and Jenny would really like to sit down. Her hand edges toward the zat’nik’tel, this only security she’s got and there’s one door: she could, she could, if necessary. First the woman, who is closest, then the larger of the alien and then the last one, but she doesn’t want to, in her heart deep down: if she took that action she’ll never get away alive.
Even if she manages to defeat these strangers and get rid of the bodies, she’ll be on her own in this foreign place, and she cannot learn to control a spaceship in an afternoon. She has no water. Would there be any supplies, anything here she could consume without risking her life?
Cloth is cut open with scissor-like blades. And the machine makes a light and a hum, intense almost like pressure, over the left abdominal area of Dr McKay’s body. Yeah, that’s the name, Jenny recalls vaguely. There’s such a huge disconnect. Two names in one flesh, and right now, she doesn’t know who this man truly is.
“It’s working,” says the woman, and Jenny steps closer.
“What are you doing?” she demands to know. Tries to be authoritative but also careful.
“The device stitches together organic tissue,” says the smaller one of the aliens. The bleeding is stopping, and, in disbelief, Jenny watches as muscle and skin closes in on itself neatly, leaving behind a straight line. The skin looks hot and inflamed, and they shut down the machine and presses something else, a pad, a cold blue, against it. The body shudders as if trying to escape but unable to do so, and he doesn’t open his eyes. “There we go,” the alien says and for the first time looks directly at Jenny. Their eyes are warmly brown. “They’re out of harm’s way now.”
Jenny becomes aware of the blood on her hands. “Who—who are you?” She doesn’t know who she’s truly directing the question toward.
Maybe it doesn’t matter.
“I am Captain La’el Montrose,” says the woman. “And this is Warrick, my co-pilot, and Rahda, our all-around mechanic and also onboard medic when the need calls for it. I’m curious about you two: you do look like people from Earth I’ve seen before.”
“Yes,” agrees Warrick. “We didn’t receive a message that Tau’ri would be in our quadrant.”
“It’s—I.” Jenny takes a deep breath. “My name is Jenny Sheppard. The two of us were taken by a … someone, something, called Ba’al, I think. John told me, but.” Her voice is dripping away from her, along with her confidence and control, and she is so tired, exhausted to the bone. “He’s John. Sheppard.”
Evidently, something about shared last names is universal—which is astounding and a touch of normalcy at the same time—because Warrick asks: “You are family?”
“Cousins. We’re—I don’t know where we are. We didn’t mean to be here,” Jenny manages to say and her knees wobble. God. God, she needs to go home: close her eyes: get rid of all this, all this. “I don’t know where we are.” Just as she starts to sink to the floor, La’el catches her arm. Steadying. The touch makes her flinch but it’s not painful or cold—just a human hand.
“Rahda, could you get some water from the dispenser? Thanks,” La’el says and helps Jenny sit down. She doesn’t protest or fight. She can’t. She feels sick, and has to hold herself, head between knees, and breathe, breathe, breathe in order to not throw up. A pattering of feet, and then a metal bottle is offered. Cold. It doesn’t smell strange. The paranoid part of her doesn’t want to take it, but she practically inhales it. The water tastes like water and nothing at all. Not of any detectable toxins or poisons, and she hears voices softly murmuring but can’t make out the words. The empty bottle clatters to the grated metal floor.
“… Thank you,” she breathes, shakily. For what—the water? the rescue? is this a rescue or a ruse? She can’t stand up yet and clutches her Dæmon close to her, an embrace, and the alien named Rahda kneels by her side patiently.
“Take it easy. Looks like you’ve had a rough time of it.”
“How. How did you find us?” Jenny manages to rasp.
“Our long-range scanners detected a massive explosion. We thought it didn’t look like a natural phenomenon, given no stars nearby were of the right size or place in their lifecycle to go nova, so we came to take a look,” La’el explains and from the corner of her eye Jenny sees a gentle expression that might’ve been a smile. “Looks like we arrived just in time, too.”
“Are you all right?” Rahda looks so earnest and genuine it’s scary, and Jenny doesn’t know how to react. to anything. of this. anything. her breaths are shortening. shortening. She’s been trained to deal with so many different things and this has never been included on any list.
No. no, no. She is not all right.
She is not going to be all right.
She’s not going to be all right.
“Breathe with me. In and out. In … and out. That’s it.”
Last time she had a panic attack, Jenny was twenty-two years old and that semester at university was one painful memory after the other, and her mother’s funeral had been eight days earlier and she’d thought alcohol would numb the pain; she’d gone on that party and hadn’t even met the guy before, and then his hand was in her skirt and she was sick and crying; she still can’t recall clearly how she got back to the dorm, only how she was standing in the shower for forty minutes rocking back and forth—
When she can see again, Jenny is sitting on the floor and the alien, Radha, is kneeling front of her. If they were human she’d say their expression was sincerely concerned, as if caring for a stranger’s well-being. Now she doesn’t know. She doesn’t know. She shivers.
“You’re safe here,” the alien promises. “Just take a moment, yeah?” Then the alien looks at the blonde woman: “Can you stay with her, Captain? I need to check on the other one.”
“Of course,” the Captain answers, nodding, and Radha returns to John’s side, and there’s blood on Jenny’s hands hotly. memories. of being prisoners aboard a ship and now they’re trapped on another one. and maybe it’s a ruse or a dream and John is already dead and she’s alone? in space? suffocating?
The Captain—what’s her name? didn’t she say a name, earlier?—offers a hand to help her stand up. She feels a little bit more steady now; not by much, but at least she’s not going to be sick. Jenny takes the hand—it’s human. By God, it’s human; she’s human and yet an alien on a spaceship.
“Welcome aboard.”
Chapter 31: astronauts, part two
Summary:
they’re going home:
Chapter Text
xxxi.
astronauts
part two
they’re going home.
He doesn’t expect to wake up so soon.
The ceiling is gray and unfamiliar, lower than it should be and with wiring and tubes mixed with flat metal panels, rough grating, and lighting fixtures. Blinded for a moment, John blinks, once, twice. The scene doesn’t change. His body aches, a deep soreness, but —
He sits up suddenly. There are no bindings or chains constraining him. The first thing he notices. The second is, the both of them moving and the Raving stretching their wings, is the lack of a cage or forcefield. The air is … different. A certain kind of staleness to it, despite the continuous soft breeze overhead. Air vents. Circulation—recycling system. It doesn’t taste like the cleanliness of Atlantis or like the pollution of Earth, or like it was on Ba’al’s ship.
And with that thought it all comes back in a blur and he looks down at himself: no, not himself. This flesh is not his own. Rodney’s hands aren’t shaking anymore and he doesn’t feel as cold from within, though the draft is uncomfortable and—oh.
No shirt on. Huh, that’s weird. Didn’t remember taking off Rodney’s clo—
Shot. He got shot; Everett, Everett took the shot and then at himself. John’s tongue feels heavy in his mouth and he searches in vain for an open, bleeding wound. Instead he finds unmarred skin, the scatter of body hair still intact on Rodney’s soft abdomen, and a flat, two-inch scar running straight down on the left side of Rodney’s body. Shouldn’t be there. Shouldn’t. But it is.
The shot, and then … the Glider, he’d gone to the Glider with Jenny, they’d escaped from Ba’al’s ship, the explosion—
He tries to stand up. The bed is hard, a single lining of mattress and some kind of pillow and the lights are all wrong and it’s too too too silent. The City isn’t singing; this isn’t the infirmary; this isn’t the City. They’re still too far away, too far, and everything is wrong and he can’t find anything to defend himself with. Rodney’s flesh screams in protest. he feels bruised and manhandled and hungry and thirsty, and uncomfortably exposed. Wildly looking around: the room is unevenly rectangular, no secret corners, and the door’s closed and there’s someone else there. It’s not Jenny and their Dæmon is strange. The alien has greenish skin, scales gleaming under the sharp lights and they hurriedly come to his side.
“You shouldn’t try to move yet,” they say. They have a Dæmon, or at least John assumes it’s one rather than a pet from the way it moves so confidently freely, and it’s beautifully purple and has got three pair of legs, almost like a lizard except nothing like it at all. This is not a human.
“Who—what …?” the heck is going on? and where’s Jenny?
He tries, tries, tries to recall. The Glider. The explosion; drifting. Then. Sudden noise. Something … something appearing and swallowing them up … (a new kind of darkness.)
“You’re safe,” says the alien. “You’ve lost blood but we took a sample and we’re running the tissue synthesizer now to replace it; it will be ready in a little while. Just take it easy.”
“Jenny?” he blurts. The alien doesn’t look like a Goa’uld. Can Goa’uld take other host? Other than humans? Weren’t there those … what’re they called—Unas? But they’re not that advanced. Unas don’t have spaceships. He’s pushed back into a lying position, albeit the hand isn’t forceful in a painful way. Assertive, a bit like Carson or one of the nurses when they’re annoyed. The thought causes a pang of longing in his chest, and all of John aches. He isn’t sure if it’s relief.
“I’ll call for her,” the alien promises, tapping something on their wrist. Commlink? “Hey, Warrick, it’s Rahda. Our second guest is awake. Could you get …? Yeah, thanks.” Then they—Rahda? that a name or a title or a designation?—turns back to him, smiles gently. “I’m Rahda, the medic while we’ve got a patient. Do you remember what happened?”
“Uh. Sort of,” he says, head starting to clear.
“You’re aboard the Hebridan research vessel the Explorer,” the alien says. “I’ll let La’el—that’s the Captain—I’ll let her tell you how we found you. Your companion is probably in the Longue with Warrick. I asked him to bring her here. She’s okay; had a panic attack earlier but no physical injuries. The Captain will want to talk with the both of you.”
Yeah. If he were leading an expedition into deep space and suddenly stumbled on a couple of humans; aliens from these people’s point of view; well, he’d have wanted to know what the heck they were doing out there, stuck aboard a sinking ship running out of air. There’s a lot of explaining to do and he doesn’t know how much he can reveal to these people. Earth. Wait. He’d mentioned they’re Tau’ri … on a dime—yeah, he had. A gamble. Out here, who’s heard of Earth? Such a generic name for a planet. Not the most unique of markers. And—there’d been a woman. Blonde. Yes, he’s starting to remember now. She’d said—Tau’ri. Tau’ri. She knows about Terra. Knows. Which means … the SGC has encountered them, sometime, somewhere. And since they rescued them and didn’t put them in a brig, that means they’re hopefully hopefully hopefully one of the Good Guys. An ally. An old friend.
Air leaves his lungs heavily, a sigh. Thank fuck.
They’re not out of the woods yet, though. Just because there isn’t an obvious cage it doesn’t mean these people are a hundred percent friendly. Yet. John thinks maybe some people would’ve felt relief and gratitude solely, but he’s a military man and too jaded to have a too optimistic outlook on life. Things that seem too good to be true often are too good to be true and tend to come back to bite their asses.
The medic, Rahda, insists he lies there, and he doesn’t fight the command. There is no point. He could attempt to fight and flee, and there are various medical instruments within reach, some sharp enough to act as knives or heavy enough to deal a dangerous blow: but such an action would ruin what little trust, what little goodwill that’s been established with these people. And John doesn’t want to be the Bad Guy. He watches quietly as Rahda goes to fetch some water from a tap—it sparkles so invitingly, and John’s mouth is all dry, and he accepts the metal bottle offered once it’s full. The taste is odd, recycled like aboard the giant the tanks of the Aurora and the City, he reckons, but its source is alien, from a planet unknown. It tastes clean and refreshing enough.
“Thanks,” he says once he’s emptied it. “I needed that.”
He wonders, suddenly, what happened exactly and if Jenny—how did she react? to this? meeting aliens? At least John has had practice, but to Jenny this is all unknown, she’s been thrown into the deep end without a manual or any kind of guidance, and he’d passed out on her just as introductions were underway. Some alien customs are similar to various human customs, but then again, there’s no such thing as one human nature. There are millions of cultures out there, each with their own quirks, and navigating them all can be a mess. He really could’ve used Teyla’s help on this one. Or Elizabeth’s.
“Uh, where are we?”
“On the way out of the Llurnar 5-0-1 system,” the alien says; the words mean nothing to John. Alien designations. “We found you on the edge of it.”
“Oh. Right. I—have no idea where that is,” he admits. It’s easier to speak now that he isn’t bleeding out, albeit he still feels a bit lightheaded, and he’s worried about how Rodney’s heart is coping with all of this. Rodney’s blood pressure has always been a bit high. When John had left for Earth, hoping the visit would be short, the concern had been of an allergic reaction; a bee sting; accidentally eating lemons—getting shot was never on the list.
Rodney. How long has it been? Do they even know they’re still alive? If the SGC picked up on the explosion … and now they’re not there anymore. They’re not there. Hitchhikers adrift, and he has only moderately more knowledge to cope with the situation than Arthur Dent.
Frankly, he has no idea what the fuck to do. He needs to get back to Earth and to Atlantis. To do that—could this ship get there? Has it got hyperdrives powerful enough, fast enough? Or it could take them to a planet with a Gate … That is, if these people truly are friendly, knowing about Earth. Allies. If they’re not …
They did patch him up. Saved his life, Rodney’s life, most probably. But he needs to see in person that Jenny is safe and whole and not under alien influences, and talk with the ship’s Captain. Make a deal. There’ll be questions asked, and John lies there in bed under a white cover as the alien bustles around with medical instruments—one is thumping softly, a pulse: Rodney’s heart’s pulse—checking readings. He thinks. He could be honest as ever, tell them about Ba’al and the kidnapping and maybe they’ll take pity on the two wayward humans. Give them a chance to go home. The other option is to lie, and to do that he needs to talk with Jenny first to make sure it’s consistent, and, well, if these people are friendlies, lies might ruin that chance.
Yeah, he really could’ve used Teyla or Elizabeth to help out.
After a couple of minutes, Jenny appears. She and her Dæmon don’t look physically hurt. But she does look unsettled, shaken; not the solid rock she’d appeared as when they’d met in her office—when was that, anyway? yesterday? the day before? John has lost track of the hours. And with them—there’s another alien. This one is taller, broader, harsher around the face, and John wonders if this one’s male and the first, Rahda, is female, or if that’s just his biased human gaze making assumptions. Rahda looks up and greets them pleasantly.
“Where’s La’el?”
“In the Bridge,” says the other one. “The autopilot disconnected again. She thinks of the circuits needs replacing.”
“Again? Ugh, I hate solar storms, they keep messing things up. All right, I’ll have a look at it later,” promises Rahda. So that’s what they meant when they said they’re the medic at this particular moment. The go-around do-it-all, medic and technician or engineer. The kind of person the SGC would love to recruit. Multitasking galore.
Jenny steps over the threshold and to the bed. John sits up, feels he has to retain some kind of dignity, despite the body’s protests. “Hi,” he says. “You okay?”
She looks like she doesn’t want to say yes, rather maybe: I don’t know, but Jenny answers: “I guess.” She clears her throat and carefully gestures at the alien. “John, this is Warrick.”
And the taller alien offers a hand with a smile: a very Earth gesture. The first alien hadn’t done it. Does that mean this one has met Tau’ri before? “Hello,” Warrick says, and John is startled when they actually shake his hand, like a textbook example of Western Earth courtesy. Who taught them that? Someone from the SGC? God, he hopes so. He hopes. “Hello. I’m Warrick of Hebridan, the co-pilot of this ship, the Explorer. La’el, our Captain, is busy at the moment steering the craft but I’ll relieve her. I have no doubt she’d like to talk with you. Jenny has told me you come from planet Earth.”
“Yeah. That’s right.”
“Am I right to guess you are part of Stargate Command? Might I ask if you’re familiar with a Colonel Samantha Carter?”
Oh, thank fuck. “Oh, yeah. She’s my boss, sort of, anyway,” John says. “Or, we share the same boss. Work’s kind of different. But, yeah, I’m with the SGC. Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard, US Air Force.”
“This would explain a few things,” Warrick says, now sounding much more at ease than before, and their voice is smooth and warm. “A friend of Sam is a friend of mine, and she’s told me that Tau’ri are adventurous folk.”
It comes creeping on him, recognition. Hebridan. Carter. These aliens: the SGC encountered them a few years ago, he’s skimmed through the reports. A crashed transport ship and something with SG-1 getting trussed up in trouble (as usual), eventually making an alliance with the people of Hebridan. Planet inhabited by both humans and these aliens. S-something. … Serrakin? Yeah. They’d buried their Gate or something and forgotten about it, long ago, much like on Earth after the revolt against Ra. Developed space travel; an advanced society. Something about ion engines being the key part of the SGC’s interest in them. Their knowledge maybe even impacting the design of the BC-ships. And then something about a Competition, a Race, a Loop—later—and Carter had been part of it.
What are the odds they’d run into an alien who is also a friend of the Colonel? Nigh impossible, in John’s book. And the SGC deals with impossible every day, and albeit he’s not completely at ease, this is a lot better than being stuck aboard Ba’al’s ship.
(even if the Snake survived the bullet, he’ll never have survived the explosion.
John has to think that.)
If Colonel Carter is a friend of Warrick, then John has to place some trust in her judgment. This alien shouldn’t want to hurt them. Shouldn’t. At once. He remains slightly wary, as he always will be; it won’t be shaken off until he’s home. In the City. Safe.
For now, this will have to do.
The Explorer is, as it is aptly named, a state-of-the-art exploratory science vessel, sent out by their planet, Hebridan, on a mission to map this section of space and scout for mining sites or the like for a company on their homeworld who’d sponsored the expedition. It is merely a small slice of this galaxy, an insignificant part of the universe: but important nonetheless. The crew was chosen by La’el Montrose and the Captain herself won the honor of commanding this ship for a three-year mission into the large unknown, she explains, during the very race Colonel Carter helped Warrick with almost two Earth years ago.
Since, things have changed. The Hebridan did not use a Stargate until very recently. They had buried it and forgotten about it in ages past, eventually evolving into a dual society: humans on one side, Serrakin on the other, and they’d almost completely erased the history of the Goa’uld because who wishes to recall lifetimes of enslavement? With the SGC’s help, they’d unearthed the Ancient device. Now they also use that for interplanetary relations, trade, even what La’el describes as tourism. Hebridan is an advanced world. With their ion engines, they have got spaceships that, while unable to travel through hyperspace, still has a Faster Than Light-drive as a means of propulsion. Not in a manner that relativity becomes an issue, though, which is good news.
John has to remind himself that the two Serrakin aren’t Wraith even if their leathery skin sometimes remind him of them. They do not have any slits on their hands or fangs or long drape of white hair. They have Dæmons; Wraith don’t have Dæmons;
It takes some time to explain themselves. Who the hell they are, these two humans adrift in space, and John, once he’s feeling a bit better and allowed by the medic to leave the bed, tells the Captain about Ba’al and the kidnapping and the whole thing. An abbreviated version. He skips most of the gore and doesn’t mention most things Jenny wasn’t there to remember, sleeping in the sarcophagus. The most important bits: being prisoners of the Goa’uld; setting the engines to overload; escaping in the Glider. Once the tale is finished, John is winded. The wound’s been stitched together but there’s a general soreness to his body and he’s wary of the food offered. Preserved rations in tin cans, vacuum to ensure it stays fresh. He isn’t sure he can eat. They want to go home.
La’el and her crew are curious. The questions are lengthy and several and not just about Ba’al, the Goa’uld, the ship. It’s about who they are, their relation to the SGC—at least John had enough information to prove that (or that he’s a good infiltrator, since there’s little physical evidence to back claims up)—and they’re also disturbingly fascinated by Shy. On Hebridan there are no Dæmons like that. John already knew the chances were low—only people he knows about having winged Dæmons are Ancients, and the Ancients are dead. But it’s still a little saddening, staggeringly disappointing to hear. There is a shadow of overhanging doubt as to their realism, glances.
It’s not the immediate issue, though.
“We were told the Goa’uld were a dying breed,” Captain La’el remarks, expression darkening.
They’re sitting in what’s called the Longue, which reminds John of the internals of the Millennium Falcon: hey, put a dejarik table there in that corner and it’d be pretty much the same. Exposed controls and quietly blinking lights, this isn’t the cleanliness of an Ancient outpost, no severe white lines uninterrupted. Not exactly like the gray dryness of the Daedalus or Prometheus either.
“Yeah, well, a few stubborn bastards are still kicking, unfortunately,” John sighs and scratches at his cheek. “Look, thanks for helping us out. We owe you. Have you got any long-range transmitter we could borrow to send a message to Earth? We’ve got people probably looking for us and we’ve got to tell them we’re okay.”
Warrick shakes his head. “We don’t have the capability to contact Earth from this distance. The array wasn’t designed to communicate that far.”
“We’re on our way back home to refuel and resupply,” La’el says after a thoughtful, silent moment. “A solar storm we encountered five rotations ago caused some damage to our ship and we decided it’s best to make repairs on Hebridan. It’s the only planet I’m comfortable landing on. This ship was designed to survey from geosynchronous orbit rather than touching down, using scanners to collect data. Besides, I believe that’s the closest Stargate. Outputting the engines to max, we’d get there in four, perhaps four and a half rotations.”
John has no idea what length those rotations—probably their word for days; sounds like it—could have, but it’s still a relief hearing her use that particular measurement rather than months, or worse.
“I think Rahda could help us squeeze out a bit more out of the engines,” Warrick says upliftingly.
“Never been to any planet this side of the galaxy,” John says. “If you’re willing to put up with us …”
“We are,” La’el says: warmly but with a hardness to it too, a certain kind of wariness. They’ve reached out a hand to help them but that doesn’t mean the Hebridan find the Tau’ri completely trustworthy. Right now, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. They’re both careful of each other. “We’re no friends of the Goa’uld, and the Tau’ri are friends of ours, even if this is the first time I’m meeting them. I’d like to visit Earth myself someday if given the chance. Tell me about it.” It sounds more of a demand than a question; and if that’s the payment needed, John’s got no problem with that. If other compensation’s required later, the SGC could help them fix that. He tries to remain positive, think brightly.
He grins. The action sits wrongly in Rodney’s mouth. On and off he keeps forgetting where he is and that this is the wrong flesh, and he’s gotten frighteningly familiar with the ever-silence, the Bond with the City quiet, no conduit to bear it through. He wants to go home. He wants.
“Well. Sure. Thanks for letting us stay, Captain.”
And, like that, they find themselves not prisoners but guests aboard a spaceship. And they’re going to Earth; they’ll get back to Atlantis, one way or another. They’re going home.
They’re going home.
The Explorer isn’t a huge ship. There are the standard spaces: a Bridge; a loading bay; a rec room for the crew to wind and share meals in. They have four separate quarters. The vessel was designed so support a crew of a maximum ten people; the lifesupport systems can keep up with their extra passengers for now, and they have enough supplies to go around. Water isn’t a problem thanks to recycling.
This means that not only can they drink however much they like: there are showers, proper water showers unlike the chemical mists aboard the Aurora, and the metal room, albeit cramped, is well-lit and the small round window in the corner of it is a familiar detail. The stars blur by. It doesn’t scare him: it is a relief, true evidence that they are moving.
Water’s a little cold. There’s even soap. Thank fuck. Not as good as a hot bath but almost. John lingers under the stream of water but not for too long: he can tell Jenny is more than uncomfortable being on a spaceship and he doesn’t want to leave her to roam the ship alone for too long. Despite everything and the Hebridans’ kindness, he can’t escape that he’s been trained to be suspicious and after the bad day they’ve had, well, who could blame them?
After cleaning himself up a bit and relieving himself (which was a somewhat surreal experience and not how he’d usually like to end up hands full of Rodney’s dick), John returns to the Lounge—sort of a mix of kitchenette, dining room, and rec room—to find Jenny there. She’s sitting on a couch built into the ship’s wall, knees drawn up, shoulders a bit hunched. Her clothes are singed and torn from the blast but the skin beneath is fully healed. She’s staring at nothing.
In the Lounge’s ceiling there are rows of lights which change to mimic sun—or moonlight depending on the time, adapted to the Hebridan rotation on its axis and around its sun. To help the body’s natural rhythm; a reminder of an alien home, but it is no comfort to them. At the moment it shows a pink and green gloom, a hint of sunrise. It’s not like the one on New Lantea, and John tries to not think of its tall towers and glimmering waters, the sound of it. He has been homesick before but never like this. Never like this.
Unfortunately, the narrow corridors and rooms of the ship means there’s no way they can fly in here, apart from in the loading bay which Captain Montrose declares off-limits for safety reasons. Apparently since the troublesome solar storm they ran into a few days ago, several systems have acted up, including the bay doors. Just last rotation, Rahda cheerfully tells them, she almost got sucked out into space when a circuit malfunction caused the bay doors to open while the Serrakin was inspecting some of the cargo. Today—or tonight, or whatever time it is—was the first time since they’d used the bay, to scoop up the Goa’uld vessel. Now it sits there in silence.
The Hebridan vessel doesn’t have shields in the sense of the word John has gotten used to. There is no energy field, only what’s built into the hull itself, thick plates of metal to fight radiation. That is kind of disconcerting to hear. If there’s a breach, they can’t seal it off with a shimmering field: so every deck, every room, is stacked with equipment necessary to seal off a breach in a hurry. Welding tools. Spare metal sheets. There are plenty of bulkheads, hinted at on every threshold, thick knee-knockers like in a carrier.
It’s nothing like the Aurora. It’s not light and airy, and messier than the Daedalus. But it’s still a spaceship, and John is, at heart, a bit of a kid, overwhelmed and delighted at the possibilities. And once the pain fades—he can move around now without issue, the blood transfusion having gone down without a hitch—they go exploring. Warrick gives them a tour; Jenny follows, without saying much. A bit of a daze. It’s a brief tour. Ship’s not so big and Warrick has got other duties. Rahda is fixing the engines, and La’el is manually in control in the Bridge. Something about a malfunctioning autopilot. This means, after a while, Warrick leaves them on their own.
Their hosts—no: John can’t think in those terms without shuddering—the Hebridans see the Tau’ri as guests, not prisoners. What they say, anyway. John doesn’t know if that should make him suspicious or think that the Hebridans simply are a bit naïve. He can’t see any weapons on their persons nor have they been mentioned. There could of course be a security surveillance system, cameras always looking, to be sure, making a person constantly being there on watch unnecessary and a waste of resources.
Before Warrick and his Dæmon leave, though, they’re shown how the food dispenser works. Reminds John of a Star Trek replicator thingy, though this device only stores food actually loaded into it and doesn’t assemble things from scratch one atom at a time. Most of it is unknown. There is no coffee, and Rodney’s body craves it. John has at least the experience of having dined alien stuff before; a lot of greeting ceremonies offworld demand that guests eat with the natives. He’s still got the epi-pen, just in case. Before they eat, John shows it to Jenny and tells her to use it if he suddenly has a reaction—a year ago, he had no idea what all those symptoms could be, but after having Rodney on his team for so long, he’s learned. They’ve all learned. Jenny only nods numbly.
She doesn’t touch the food though she’s got to be starving. He too is careful but can’t smell anything like lemons, and doesn’t throw up after the first bite which is a good sign.
There is a window, across from the table, showing a long stripe of space. Foreign stars. Jenny avoids looking at it, clutching a bowl of soup, its scent filling. John sits down next to her but not too close, the only truly familiar thing in all of this the weight of the Raven on his shoulder.
Shy isn’t flying. The scars from the knife are going to last, and John’s not sure how long. After the wolf bit them, during the final stand-off against Everett and his men when they tried to seize the City, it took a few weeks for their wing to be strong enough to support their weight again. It’s all repeats of events, looping, the déjà vu leaving behind a foul aftertaste. John vividly remembers Everett’s last pleading words and, for those seconds, self-control returning with such regret, and John wishes he could’ve saved him somehow. But the Dæmon was gone, and that’s a death sentence. Everyone knows it. To Ghost is to be dying.
“Hey. How’re you doing?”
A second of silence. Then she says: “I don’t know.”
“Bathroom’s okay, if you need it,” John says for lack of anything else. “There’s even water. Not all ships have got that.”
She nods.
“… What happened to me?” she asks then and looks at him directly. Her gaze is steel. He wonders if that’s more what she looks like as the Director of NCIS. Got to have the guts for that kind of job, and the patience, the ability to keep cool under immense pressure. Command isn’t easy. “The injury. It’s gone.”
“They took you to a sarcophagus,” he explains. “I’m not sure how it works, but it can heal people, fix the body.” He doesn’t mention that it could also make you addicted to it, because it’s not what she needs to know right now. And using it just once is okay, right? Dr Jackson did without being worse for wear, way back during the earliest days of Stargate Command, when Apophis launched that attack.
“I see. Could’ve used something like that in the past.”
“Know the feeling,” John agrees. Now that he’s sitting down without being behind bars, directly threatened, beaten, or chained up, weariness threatens to crash over him like a huge wave and drown him.
He knows how damn lucky they were. Being found. And by old friends of Colonel Carter’s, no less. He recalls reading the reports on that space race and dreaming a bit about it because it sounded very, very cool. SG-1 had encountered Warrick and some of his people after their prisoner ship crashed, and helped them out. Their planet and culture, John knows little to nothing about, though. They’re obviously an advanced species who broke free from Goa’uld oppression ages ago. Another time maybe he’d have wondered what their planet looks like, their cities, their skies. Now John just wants to sleep. He leans back against the couch. Comfy. Soft. God, when’s the last time he laid down in a bed? A real bed.
It’s become a blur and it takes a moment to sort it out. SGC contacted Atlantis … yesterday? He came to Earth—a little over twenty-four hours ago. Thirty, maybe. No more than forty. Right? Or was it more? Could have been more. It’s all fuzzy and vague. He’s not sure how long he was unconscious.
It feels like a lifetime.
“… I read your file,” Jenny says suddenly. “I’m sorry about what happened in Afghanistan and Iraq.”
Jeez, is that what they’re going to talk about? He shrugs self-consciously. “Well, it’s in the past now.”
“Just. I don’t want to think about the fact that we’re … we’re in outer space,” Jenny says, clearly uncomfortable. She looks a bit green.
John looks around for anything like a bottle or a tap or water source. Eventually he sees a very sink-like device attached to a wall, next to a cupboard. Warrick, noticing him rummaging around, walks over and helps him find a couple of jugs and fills them with water which he assures is safe to drink. Proper Hebridan water. It’s cool and soft, and John offers some to Jenny. She takes the mug silently and just holds it. Looks at her weak reflection in its surface beneath the sharp lamplights in the convoluted ceiling.
He doesn’t sit right away. There’s a narrow window, a two-meter strip gouged into the hull, across from the round table by the couch, and stars are flashing by. They’re not in hyperspace but moving much more slowly than light. Faster than any Earth rocket, probably, but still. There was something in Colonel Carter’s report about ion engines. Efficient, green, zero dangerous emissions. Hebridan has got to be an advanced world, rich in technology and peaceful in a way Earth isn’t. Hasn’t been for a long, long time. John’s chest clenches horribly. The stars are new and strange. He’s never seen so much of the Milky Way and felt so out of home.
“I didn’t know you worked with NCIS,” he says. “Director—that’s got to have been a very intense career.”
“Yeah, so I thought. Sometimes just being an agent was easier, but I like it. It’s a good challenge.” He hears her take a hesitant sip of water. This silence, this lull, is a shock in of itself after the explosion. “I’ve been an agent for a decade. Sometimes I am drawn back to the field …”
“Command can be sweet but sometimes flying is sweeter,” John agrees.
“Yes. Exactly.”
“Why’d you become an agent?”
“It’s not how it started,” she says after a pause. “I didn’t want to end up like the stereotype army brat—my father the Captain, my mother the Colonel … She’s the reason our parents fell out, wasn’t it? My mother and your father.”
“Oh, yeah. I remember that,” John says. This conversation is surreal.
He’d been, what, nine? ten?, when he’d been told that there’d be no more letters from his only cousin his own age, no more visits. Not that there were many visits—but still. His already isolated childhood grew even quieter, and the reason was his dad’s problem with his sister, John’s aunt, being part of the Army. She’d been for years but it was this constant, grating issue. Mother had never approved. Of the fighting. She thought family was everything and family meant being close, and she’d never truly liked the idea of having her youngest son growing up behind shuttered windows and seeing the grandparents only every third year on hasty afternoons. She wouldn’t have approved of John’s fight with the family, either. Slamming doors shut. She’d be so disappointed, and John doesn’t like thinking about her, doesn’t do it often, and hastily finds another sentence to complete.
“It was too much with the fighting, but, but I think I kind of understand, now. He—he didn’t want to see her hurt. You know? Thought being a businessman or a lawyer would be safer.” And look at him now: laid up in a hospital bed for a stab wound. There are marines and sailors who never get to face the business end of a gun in their life, who don’t step onto the front lines. Safety might never have been the issue. It’s a whole lot more complicated than just about safety or loyalty to family traditions or to blood, or if it was old-fashioned sexism, disapproval; but John is far too tired to contemplate it.
“I don’t know. Maybe it’s the only child in me talking,” she says with a dry chuckle. “But I was determined not to be like her.” Not like John: he’d assimilated all of his mother that he could. Was always closer to her than to his father. “I regretted it later.”
“What happened?” He has spent a decade and a half out of the loop.
“She died.”
He looks at her. He never knew. He must’ve been abroad when it happened, because if he’d still been a kid then he’d have heard about it. Despite everything he thinks Father, or at least Mother, would’ve insisted going to the funeral, and now he wishes he’d been able to be there to show Jenny some kind of support.
Jenny and her family hadn’t been there at Valerie Sheppard’s funeral either.
“I’m sorry.”
“They ruled it an accident,” she says. “I don’t think I’ll ever be sure.” Another thing they share. Absent parents and career choices unapproved. Wow, they could write a book together. John’s sure he could fill chapters with issues with command and obedience and people could make conclusions that it stems from having a distant relationship with his father or some shit. “At fifteen, I was sure going to be a dentist. I applied for it at college, but then I remembered how much I hated going to the dentist, so I reconsidered everything and chose to study biochemistry. The path to NCIS was long and winding. The first days in the field … Being a woman’s not that easy, and being a female agent constantly mistaken for the secretary—well. Made me a good unseen spy, but people wouldn’t take me seriously.”
“That’s got to suck.” The City is full of civilians but most of the marines there are male. Elizabeth’s been working on evening out the numbers, and John can see her point.
“Now I’m the boss.”
He grins. “I remember you were always in charge when we were kids. Being the boss suits you.”
That makes her smile and some tension drain away. “Tell me about Atlantis.”
Now she wants reminders of outer space? Perhaps not this space, but another, so far away it might as well be a fairytale, a good warming story. John nods, suddenly understanding. The escape.
“There’s not enough words,” he says, “but I’ll try.” There’s not enough words to explain; he doesn’t think he can put everything, the love he feels for the City and its people, the loyalty, he can’t put it words in any language. “It’s a City about the size of Manhattan, all that space crammed into huge towers on the Piers, right in the middle of a vast ocean. It’s shaped like this perfect six-point snowflake, and the towers are made of steel and glass … But, uhm, that’s not what’s unique about the City. I can’t describe it, really—She’s a living thing. I know that sounds weird, but it’s true. The City sort of …communicates, like an AI. Artificial Intelligence. Millions of years old.” Older than all of known history of mankind sprung together, and it’s still dizzying to think about. “It’s an amazing place. And people are great. Got a couple of hundred people there now—marines, scientists—and we find new things constantly, even after living there for over a year. Year and a half, I think? I lose count. Different length of days, you know. It’s not like on Earth at all. We go on missions through the Stargate, to other planets. I’ve got my Recon team …”
The cot is hard. The Explorer doesn’t offer much space, but Rahda fixed a place for them to sleep in a storage compartment, digging up a couple of thin mattresses; more like sleeping mats, really—the floor is too cold and uncomfortable to sleep on directly. Jenny fell into a restless dream a few hours ago. Sometimes her Dæmon twitches underneath the blanket, quietly.
John can’t sleep. There’s a small, square window: he can see the hyperspace field, wrapped around the vessel, streaks of blue. Familiar. It’s an odd kind of comfort. Despite the ship being different in origin and tech, the basic subspace bubble they’re emerged in is the same. Speed similar, though not as fast as the Ancient or Asgard hyperdrives. The thrum of the ship—warmth. He’s gotten so used to the noise of ships. Even Atlantis has that, a low-pitched hum of machinery at work, so different from any Terran City—no vehicles thundering down any roads, but voices and currents, power flowing through the City’s veins constantly being drawn from the potentiae, the thrill of a wormhole establishing. Those are the noises he’s used to. Returning to Earth had been such a shock.
And he’s not on Earth anymore. He’s not sure where he is. Looking at the starchart Captain La’el had shown hadn’t really done much—he knows so little of the Milky Way. And that’s probably a bit weird, that he’s much more familiar with the constellations of Pegasus than the ones he was born into. But it’s the truth.
John lies on his side, staring at that tiny window without reflections. It’s too silent here, too silent without the City. Without the team. Without them. How is he meant to last another two or three days in this silence?
Rodney’s body is drained and desperately seeking sleep, it almost hurts, but no matter how he twists and turns and counts he can’t fall asleep. He doesn’t want to dream. His eyelids want to fall shut and he shivers. Resolutely, he wraps his arms around himself—Rodney’s body is sensitive to cold; for all his complaints, Rodney never lies—and breathes through his nose and he looks out that window. Fights the urge to close his eyes.
What if he doesn’t wake up? Or what if Rodney wakes up, confused and probably frightened and angry and cold in this place, on an alien ship? Jenny probably doesn’t fully believe that he is John Sheppard in Rodney’s flesh, and if Rodney—hell, they’ve never met. He’d yell, and yell some more at the Hebridans. It’s better if he stays here, and then … then, they’ll get to Earth through the Gate, and Rodney will fly back to Atlantis on the Daedalus, and they’ll be back together, could pretend none of this ever happened. Piece of cake. Yeah.
Wonder what he’s doing. Now. He and Mer. What time is it in the City? God, he doesn’t know. He doesn’t know. Day or night. Is he hurting? Probably. Drinking too much coffee and forgetting to sleep.
Another shiver.
Fuck, he’s such a huge sap. Really. Distance makes the heart fonder and shit. Seeing Rodney’s bruised face in the mirror earlier hadn’t helped. Looking into Rodney’s eyes. They’d kissed in his quarters before he walked through the Gate, and Rodney had reminded him not to eat lemons.
[We didn’t], Shy points out, trying to be positive.
Yeah. Instead we got kidnapped and shot and beat-up.
This isn’t working. He throws off the blanket and sits up, Rodney’s back protesting and his bones stiff. There’s a headache working its way through his skull, dully pounding, and this ship isn’t Atlantis; it doesn’t read his intentions or mood, and the lights don’t dim on automatic, and it’s too silent. He’s been away from the City so many days now the silence is becoming frighteningly familiar; he doesn’t want it. He wants to go home.
He stands up and heads for the door. Jenny will be okay. This isn’t a Hive or a Goa’uld ship. If the Hebridans wanted us dead we’d already be dead, John decides, too tired to keep being suspicious of them. She’s an adult and he can’t linger on the edges every hour for the next couple of days, until they reach Hebrida and its Stargate. He wishes they were there
He heads for the Lounge, steps slow. Holds Shy up; without flight. Yawns a couple of times behind a hand, and decisively wrestles with the thought of Atlantis’ corridors and taking the transporter to the mess hall and its lights and sounds and smells, so comforting. But he can’t help but imagine the quiet sparkling water in the warmly lit fountains and pillars, and that table in the mess hall his team likes to use on warm days, on the balcony in the breeze, and he remembers they sat there just a little while ago, AR-1, whole and unaware of the storm coming; Ford making a jab at Rodney, and Teyla explaining some Terran reference to Ronon, they’d kidded around and Rodney had snuck food off John’s plate; and John’s heart pounds harshly, the memory too vivid for comfort.
How’d we get into this mess?
It’d be nice to have something, someone, singular, to blame. But deep down John knows this is much more complex than that. Though the bastard Ba’al is at the heart, that’s for certain: but at least the creep is dead now, churned to dust by the explosion. Won’t touch them anymore. The knife is gone.
We’re okay, John wants to convince themselves: we’re going to be okay.
He wonders what Rodney and the others are doing.
Did they figure out how to track Ba’al’s ship?
Did they notice the explosion?
The thought makes him pause in the middle of a step. Shit. If … The SGC have got the Prometheus and various allies with spacecraft, and if they spotted Ba’al’s ship on their radar and then suddenly saw it destroyed—if they did; do they think he’s dead? Jenny and he? And when the connection broke that time, John tried to tell Dr Zelenka that they’d been taken by Ba’al—did that message ever reach the SGC?
If they think they were killed by the overload … But Rodney’s got to figure out that it’s not the case. Right? The stones are still online, so. Yeah. Rodney will figure it out. And they’ll be on Hebrida soon and dial Terra and home. Soon. Just a little while more.
If he still had access to the stone, John could have deactivated it from this end, but they’d left it at the SGC, and the control interface is in Atlantis. Besides, if he cut the connection, Rodney would simply end up stranded here—confused, alone, and probably upset. Angry. John would be. Rodney hates being confused, not having the answers. Mer would make fuming noises—
Fuck, he’s thinking about them again. It’s not helping.
The Lounge is empty when he gets there. He heads for the couch. From there he’s got a view of the window and space passing by.
Maybe it’s that familiarity—he’s been in space so much, it’s … routine, but still kind of awesome. Comforting. Like the sky, space is full of possibilities and there’s no edge, no hard sand, no wall of dust and concrete. He dreamt of flying as a kid and it was in space he found his Dæmon and he found the City. It’s in space he realized he’s in love, and it’s in space he found his team. It’s in space he found that freedom. It’s in space he found out the truth and also realized that there’s more to family than bloodlines. It’s full of weird shit and it isn’t safe, but space is home.
He curls up on the couch and looks at the stars.
Chapter 32: astronauts, part three
Summary:
they keep waiting:
Notes:
(2018-04-15) Finally, finally, here’s an update! I’ve been chewing on this chapter so long, and I can tell you the first draft looked very different from this. For the first time in this 'verse I’m telling the same scene from two different points of view back-to-back (I’ve retold scenes in different fics for this verse before, though), so that’s kind of new. We’re starting to reach the conclusion of this story - of course there’s still a lot going on and needing to be resolved (for don’t worry, there’s lots more to come!), but I’m going to try my best to keep to the threads of the plot already in motion and not create any more. I estimate the fic will end up around 40-45 chapters in total. Please enjoy!
Chapter Text
xxxii.
astronauts
part three
they keep waiting:
(he can’t breathe)
it starts the same the same the same: he can’t breathe. and the face in the mirror is his, and his eyes are glowing, and he’s speaking Ancient. no, not Ancient, it’s Goa’uld, it’s human; it’s all blended into a terrifying mesh. and the face smirks and he’s holding the gun and the City is burning with fallen bodies. and the face in the mirror. it. (it controls everything) it’s impossible to breathe and the knife through their wings, cutting so sharply, and “I won,” he says, the voice coming from his mouth belongs to the System Lord; the Gate Room empty but for the bodies, “I won.”
and among the faces of the dead he sees Kanaan limply and Adria screaming just like when the energy creature nearly killed them during the first year, and Simon and Elizabeth are old and gnarled and disappointed, trapped in a stasis chamber. He can’t see the Raven anywhere and the City’s stopped Singing. he (it. the Thing wrapped around his spine) says: “I won. I’ve taken Atlantis,” the Goa’uld smiles, and he can’t see Meredith or Rodney anywhere and the City is silent; and he can’t breathe and the face declares (proudly)—(laughing)—
“I won (what are you going to do? they’re dead. you failed them (you keep failing) you failed they’re dead). I won. I won. I won. I w
A sharp breath. John is awake, cold all over, ice in his lungs and his heartbeats, Rodney’s heartbeats, are swift, too fast, harshly. He breathes in, out. in, out.
He can breathe. (in)
He can breathe. (out)
Dream. It’s a dream. Just … a dream.
Shakily, he rubs a hand over his face. He’s cold but drenched in sweat, and he realizes he’s lying on his side on the couch—can’t recall falling asleep. The stars are still moving and the ship thrums, and they’re alone. There is no Goa’uld, no enemy. They’re on their way back home. They’re … they’re (going to be) okay.
A dream.
A dream.
A dream.
Forcefully he draws himself up. He’s still in the Lounge and the couch doesn’t make a good bed. Tentatively stretches. His side doesn’t hurt other than being uncomfortably sore, and he hasn’t been able to make himself look at the scar. A scar he’s inflicted on Rodney, and—fuck, he’d thought their separation would be brief, and Rodney had warned him not to eat lemons or anything else he’s allergic to; no mention had been made of bullets or knives. No such things. Rodney is going to have to carry these marks for the rest of his life, because of John. Because of his mistakes. Because of him.
Seems he’s pretty good at screwing things up. Black marks. Waking the Wraith. Killing Colonel Sumner. Getting Jenny kidnapped. Having Shy tortured. Getting Rodney shot.
The gulf of guilt threatens to destroy him. In this silence, there is no Song to comfort them, Atlantis the weakest of echoes at the back of his mind, and the distant stars are too cold and foreign.
(maybe all of this is a dream. illusionary. maybe he’s dying
in the Glider and dreaming away, or in a coma in the City, and he’ll wake up in the infirmary or his quarters to Rodney’s face and his
team waiting, and it’s all just a dream.)
They can’t sleep any more.
After a while, Jenny wakes up and joins him in the Lounge for breakfast. The food is strange but welcomingly hot, and she’s mostly quiet. John tries not to press her into talking, into asking anything. Doesn’t seem as deeply shaken as earlier—a little better—but still not feeling certain or safe with the situation. Hell, he isn’t either. He won’t be until he walks through the Gate. Until he’s back in the City.
For now, all they can do is wait. Captain La’el is staying true to her promise to make it to Hebridan in haste, pushing the Explorer’s engines as far as she dares to. John realizes it was basically dumb luck he and Jenny are alive; the Hebridan vessel picking them up on the scopes in the aftermath of the explosion; hitchhiking isn’t something he thought was even possible in space. In real life, anyway. It’s just too vast and empty and dangerous.
They’re allowed to roam freely. At first, the Captain makes sure that either Serrakin stays within sight—Rahda says she wants to make sure they’re okay, physically, mentally, whichever, but John’s sure she’s been given orders. Just in case it turns out John and Jenny aren’t who they say they are; spies, thieves, liars, perhaps sent by the Goa’uld or whoever. There’s little hard evidence they can present to show for real that they’re from Terra. Jenny had emptied her pockets, showed them her NCIS badge and cellphone, which Warrick had been kind of intrigued by but really it proves nothing. Captain La’el takes their word for it.
John’s ability to recount quite a lot of facts and stories from the SGC helps—he might not know Colonel Carter that well, but he knows of her and her team. He’s read most of SG-1’s reports cover to cover, both in the days before leaving the Mountain and after reestablishing contact with Terra after the Wraith attack on the City. He spends a while with the Captain simply talking: describing the situation in more detail, and providing intel about Goa’uld when the Captain asks about it.
Hebridan is a relatively protected world, equipped with ships and advanced weapons, but the Goa’uld once posed a great threat. That’s why the people there buried their Stargate hundreds or thousands of years ago. To hear that at least one System Lord had survived until shot by Jenny—it’s disheartening, worrisome. There could be others out there;
The rest of the time is spent waiting, resting, waiting, checking out the ship (Rahda quite eagerly explains the function of the ion engines), and waiting waiting waiting;
John’s not sure if it’d be worse or better had he been stuck out here alone. Jenny’s bewilderment has faded into a dull yet ever-present current, like the overhang of clouds on a gray day, and he feels he has the duty to make sure she’s okay. She’s not had a good introduction to Extraterrestrials, worse than John had; at least he’d had the chance of walking through the Gate and finding the City and Teyla explaining things before the Wraith tried to eat him. They talk: about the stars, about Pegasus, about Avalon, about Terra. John’s kind of curios, too. He hasn’t met her since they were just innocent-eyed kids, and there’s so much he doesn’t know and would like to know.
Jenny told him yesterday her mother died. Never said how or why or how long ago; John never received an invitation to aunt Patricia’s funeral. John can’t remember much about Patricia, or Jenny’s dad, for that matter, other than as vague shadows, Adult Persons Who Can’t Know He’s a Strangeling, from childhood. (His parents never were comfortable with John socializing too much with other family, and in hindsight, John had realized they didn’t want him or them to become too attached.) A few visits. The occasional birthday card (John kind of recalls being nine and insisting on making his own card for Jenny’s eighth and gluing stickers of airplanes all over the paper). But he remembers Jenny and her not-yet-Settled Dæmon clearly, vividly, because they were the same age and got along well; she never pushed him around like Dave and Nina did.
Patricia is one of many deaths that’s made scars between them. John’s mother liked her, always supportive, and as a kid John hadn’t understood how tough it was for his aunt to aim for a military career, and he hadn’t understood the squabbles or the falling out. He hadn’t understood the reasons, but he’d thought he understood why Patrick and Patricia Sheppard cut ties. All John knew as a little boy was his father and Irene were cold and distant figures, arguing with mom and arguing with his sister and arguing with people over the phone; it seemed like the natural order of things.
Jenny’s childhood wasn’t like his. She was an Army Brat, her parents moving from base to base; for a while they settled, both of them at Quantico, so she’d have at least a few years attending the same school There she grew up in a nicely modern house in the suburbs and got to play in the yard, in the street, with the other kids and their Dæmons. There were no questions, no worried glances, no secrets to hide. It was normal, normal enough. She was lucky. Her dad went overseas but always came back, never pronounced missing or KIA.
From the way she speaks about it, John thinks they must’ve loved her deeply and unhindered, dared to love her in a manner his parents tried (fought) not to with him. That child wasn’t a Strangeling.
At lunch (boring and dry; Warrick explains they’re a bit low on supplies, especially with two extra passengers onboard), John finds himself talking relationships and marriage, of all things, because Jenny looks wistfully away at the nearest star-filled window, and she’s probably thinking about someone when she says there’s no one, after John asks if she’s seeing anyone. They’re both at that age people expect them to be engaged or married with kids and the house picket-fenced all nice, and John understands her hesitance to admit she’s alone. The need to follow the norm. There was someone, once, she explains, but they broke it off because of work and regulations. She doesn’t mention names. Another agent, then, John figures, because they have probably rules much like the military does about that kind of thing. Fraternization.
He can’t tell her about Rodney, of course. She’s still not quite grasped that he’s in another’s flesh and they don’t discuss it, because it obviously makes her uncomfortable and John’s not actually gotten around to mentioning to the Hebridans—not sure how they’d react. So he’ll wait. They’ll be on Earth soon enough.
He can tell her about Nancy, about the Marriage That Never Was, and the bittersweet calm parting. They’d ended it in a friendship which faded, John being overseas, secret ops, and Nancy working for the government (Homeland Security, last he heard, but hundreds of people work there and John’s pretty sure not all them are aware of Stargates. The chance of Nancy knowing about the SGC is remote). They stopped calling and sending Christmas cards long ago.
Jenny doesn’t recognize the name Nancy Dyer from anywhere, haven’t mingled, but tons of people work for the government; John’s not surprised. He wonders what she’s doing now—Nancy; if she’s doing okay; if she’s met someone unexpectedly just as he has; if she’s alone; if she’s happy. He should’ve tried harder, checked up on her while still on Earth; it’s too easy to realize that after the fact. He should’ve tried harder.
They talk: the subject veers from one kind of relationship to another. Jenny’s mother—his aunt—who’d basically disappeared from the map of John’s life after his father cut her out and the scar of her sudden death; Jenny’s father dying in illness not long after; Jenny had grown up lonely. An only child whose wishes couldn’t all be fulfilled. She asks about his father; Jenny hasn’t had much contact with him, and only spoken minimally with Dave the last few years. Exchanged cards during the holidays but no more.
“Just before this mess, I met my dad and brother,” John finds himself explaining. “And Dave’s fiancée. Laura? Didn’t know he was going to get married.”
“I got an invitation,” Jenny says, and John sort of expects to feel a sharp sting of—something. jealousy? disappointment? anger at the exclusion?—but there’s nothing like that, heated and raw; only acceptance. They cut the ties, got on with their lives. Dave has no reason to invite his estranged brother to his wedding; before this mess started, John didn’t consider one day telling Dave or his father about Rodney either. He hadn’t told them about Nancy. “Still haven’t decided …” Jenny says, pauses. “I think I’ll go. After this. Yeah. I haven’t seen him for years, and I could use some time off.”
“If it helps, he’s been read in on the Stargate Program,” John says, “so you can tell him the truth. Him, Patrick, and Laura Shannon.”
“Really? All three of them?”
“Yeah. My dad got clearance a few weeks ago. He’s the reason I got called back to Terra, Earth, in the first place. He’d been stabbed in New York, and the SGC was working together the pieces … the stabbing, and a marine going missing—LC Snow. All that shit.” John sighs. Snow could be dead, for all he knows, and by now Dave, his dad, his team—they all could be given the word, the belief, that John’s also dead. The Goa’uld ship went up in smoke with presumably everyone onboard. But Rodney should be able to work out the truth, since the stones are still in effect. “It didn’t make sense until …”
Jenny nods distractedly. “I was pretty out of it, but I remember, when we first were taken to that—ship. Goa’uld? He said—it was all bait.”
“Yeah.” Thank fuck the Snake is gone. Even if Jenny’s bullet might not have ultimately killed him, the explosion must have. Nothing, not even a Goa’uld, could have survived it. “I think he wanted to take me host, my real body back in the City.”
Jenny frowns. “So how does LC Snow fit into this?”
Finally: something they can focus on, (pretend to) work with, and John wishes they’d both been more involved with the case which NCIS no doubt had started. They found the body on the pier in D.C., while the SGC was still struggling to find Snow. If the corpse is him. The ruined face: John recalls the photos, stomach turning with disgust. Agent Gibbs had seemed cold, detached, in that interrogation room but John knows the guy must’ve internally seethed with anger, and at that moment Gibbs thought John (or, rather, Rodney McKay) and Corporal MacGrimmon were involved. Possible murderers. It’d all be so much easier if the truth could be shared at once.
“I’m not sure,” John confesses. “He’s one of the marines working in the City, but there are others who’d make more sense to kill in order to lure me to Earth. His and a few other teams went on leave, but … well, my XO didn’t, who’d be my first bet.” His expression darkens, and the Raven ruffles their feathers in a display of displeasure at the thought. Ford is team and if he got hurt or kidnapped or killed, John would be out for blood. No hesitation, no doubts. “Could be it was a convenient target … Snow’s a member of the SGC, has intel. Maybe that’s it. Intel. Ba’al and the Trust, they needed my location, and other knowledge about the SGC. Right before I went to Snow’s apartment to check it out, the base got hacked. They stole a databurst from Atlantis, one concerning a Warship we’ve got, our mission to find it.”
The timeline is making more and more sense, now that he considers the facts. Slotting into place.
“Snow’s got a degree in computer engineering or something like that, if I remember right,” John says slowly, working it out as he’s saying it: “And being SGC personnel he’d know about IP addresses, encryptions, security measures …”
“The body might’ve been to lure you in,” Jenny agrees, “and they chose the victim so that you’d personally be involved, but also one from the same base. It makes sense. Was he part of that mission? The Warship?”
John shakes his head. “No. But he, like everyone in the City, knows about it.” (Knew. Knew.) “It’s a pretty big dealt. Ba’al told me pretty explicitly he planned on using the ship and its weapons to—well, to rule, I guess. The whole galaxy. Both of them, if he could.”
“The Milky Way and … Pegasus? that’s where you said Atlantis is?”
“Yeah, that’s the place. We call the planet New Lantea.” There’s so much he hasn’t told her yet: too little time to. And he’s tried to share the wonderful, uplifting, beautiful things. He hasn’t delved into the Wraith, or the Siege, or fleeing from Lantea. He hasn’t explained all the reasons why he’s the CO of a base three million lightyears from Terra; he hasn’t told her how Colonel Sumner died. What he’s told her aren’t the terrifying details but the happier facts, about the City and his team and the good things the SGC does. Focused on that.
Jenny exhales slowly, loudly, struggles to grasp her head around the prospect. The (im)possibility. The scale.
There’s still a lot John doesn’t get about this case, Ba’al’s plans and his missing marine, but maybe people on Terra or his team has made headway. Found out what exactly has happened to Snow, who the corpse is, how it all fits together so neatly, and by the time they get back to Earth they can do a nice little PowerPoint presentation and wrap it all up.
When they get back. Once they get back.
Then, from Terra, home: to Pegasus. The Daedalus should be landing soon, and they’ll linger only briefly on Terra before turning around again. John wants, needs, Rodney and Mer on that ship to carry them home;
they keep waiting:
all they can do is keep waiting.
It takes roughly three days to reach the Hebridan system, but John’s started losing track of time, acutely aware of each second, each hour, but there are no sunsets to measure. He sleeps a little, when he can, but mostly fails. Eats the food served and he spends hours talking with Jenny. Screw any nondisclosure agreements: he tells her about Stargates, how they work, tries to answer her questions about the SGC. About spaceships. The City. His team, and all the other recon teams out there. After the shock of the first day, she’s a little less wide-eyed the morning (night?) after, when she wakes up.
Once they pass by a purplish gas giant on the edge, Captain La’el reduces the speed; given the Hebridan level of technology, the space around their planet is unusually busy. They’ve got ships going in and out. Hell, according to the Captain, their major cities have spaceports. Real, actual spaceports. Their cities are large, densely populated by both humans and Serrakin.
But John isn’t looking forward to seeing it. Maybe he could’ve if this was a mission with his team, a moment of First Contact. If his team was there, yeah. He’d have enjoyed it with childish curiously and glee. He would have. But he misses Atlantis and his team and home far too starkly, this gaping emptiness in his soul, and he doesn’t want to give Hebrida more than a passing glance; he wants to go home; he needs to go home.
“We’ll be there in a couple of hours,” Captain La’el says. “I’ve sent a transmission ahead, asking to use the Stargate. It’s not usually done. It’s deemed a risk because of the Goa’uld, and as a people we’re more comfortable travelling by ship.”
“But I’m sure the Senate will agree,” Warrick says, giving hope. “The Tau’ri are allies.”
Two hours. It’s a minor eternity. John would’ve started packing if he had anything to pack. He’s looking forward to a change of clothes—no amount of showers will make him feel truly clean—and a warm bed—and Atlantis. Rodney. The team. Home. Once they’ve dialed Terra, he’ll talk with General Landry and have them break the stones’ connection. All that’s happened is a good strong argument to Never Use Them Again, to have them locked up or (preferably) destroyed; even the obstinate IOA has got to realize that.
And he’s planned out a mantra in his head, this speech asking forgiveness—for being kidnapped; for being shot at; all of it, for Rodney. He hadn’t meant for any of this to happen—does that even matter? All he’d come to Terra to do was find their missing marine—and John hasn’t solved that. Pretty certain Ba’al is, was, behind it, but Lance Corporal Snow could be dead, lying in an alleyway or sunk in the sea, and he might never find out the full truth. He doubts Ba’al would spill even if he’d somehow managed to take the bastard capture and interrogated him.
He’s already written too many letters of goodbye to the families of the dead. Lyle. Sumner. Miller. Jenkins. All of the others lost to the Wraith in the seemingly hopeless fight. John doesn’t want to write any more.
The headache has grown stronger and stronger by the minute for the last hour, and now there’s a high-pitched ringing noise in John’s ears, and he’d like to sit down. Migraine. He hates those, and he’s not sure if it’s exhaustion or sign of something else, of it’s the stress of the last few days catching up with him, or of it’s something with Rodney’s body. Something wrong. Maybe it’s the Ancient communication stones, malfunctioning;
They’re in the Bridge, invited to get their first (only) view of Hebridan. It’s cramped compared to the ones on the Aurora and the Daedalus, but airier than the cockpit of a Puddlejumper. John’s too tired and uncomfortable to care looking closer at the layout and machines and dials—the pilot in him is curios, but this headache’s making him wanting to be sick. Must be exhaustion. Stars streak past, vividly; then the windscreen fills with light, and it stabilizes into an almost frozen picture.
“We’re coming up on Hebridan. Dropping out of FTL,” Captain La’el announces. The dampeners swallow the lurch of gravity as they drop to sublight speeds.
The planet is Earthlike, with water and forests and white clouds, accompanied by a moon or two, and it’s all blurry. All too blurry, and they begin to descend through the atmosphere. The Explorer rattles a little, and he vaguely hears Warrick say This happens all the time, nothing to worry about—when Jenny expresses concern about the shaking, while the Captain is calling someone on the planet by radio, making contact. John can’t hear the exact words.
He’s not feeling too hot. He catches himself against the wall, and Shy flaps their good wing uselessly trying to steady themself so they don’t fall off his shoulder. Barely. Woah. Dizzy spell? That’s probably not a good sign. If it’s Rodney’s body or his mind that’s in danger, John has no idea, and he’s still trying to figure out how it works. Obvious the stones are still in use or he wouldn’t be here. Right?
“What is it?” Jenny asks, noticing. “John?”
John tries to shrug and say that it’s fine, it’s nothing, he’s fine, but nothing comes out. Rahda really must be a medic, not a technician, deep down because she walks over from her console as if to check his pulse or something. John would rather she didn’t, didn’t touch him (he tries to shake her off to no avail), didn’t;
He feels sick and has to lean against the wall heavily. It’s cold. The feeling creeping up on him isn’t unlike the press of Gs when the craft tilts too steeply and the engine’s out of control, he can’t reduce the throttle or find the chute, and he’s probably about to pass out, vision swimming a little and dimming around the edges.
Ah, crap.
And then the Explorer disappears entirely.
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 21, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 147 days after the Uprising
The lights flicker; Sheppard’s body is straining, and without a whisper suddenly Rodney’s Dæmon is out of sight and a Raven is lying across the bed, wings splayed wide almost hurtfully. Carson takes a startled step back.
Rodney is gone.
“Oh dear,” Carson murmurs. Dr Janet Mallory, next to him, gasps, wide-eyed.
And then it clicks: the stones. The connection must have been severed, and the Colonel’s returned. Carson quickly glances at the monitors: the vitals have calmed, the heartbeat reclaimed at a normal pace, and the breathing isn’t shallow. The Colonel groans quietly and slowly blinks, opening his eyes bit by heavy bit, blurrily. Carson fishes out a small flashlight out of his coat and shines it brightly into his eyes—there’s a pupil response. Sheppard tries and fails to weakly lift his hand as if wishing to swat him away, and the Raven’s wing shudders.
The team is crowded around the bed, all of them trying to see, to hear, to confirm. Teyla’s hands are loosely clasped and Aiden is worrying on his lip.
“Doc?” the Lieutenant asks.
“Cortical response,” Carson murmurs, an exhale. “Oh, thank God. Colonel Sheppard, is that you? Can you hear me?”
Sheppard shuts his eyes again, tightly, scrunching up his face a bit like the lights or the noise hurts and his head’s ringing. Eventually, he makes a noise that could be an answer, though it’s not much of a proper word. Carson calls for a nurse to fetch a bucket, in case he gets sick.
“Doc, is he—back? Is the Colonel back?” Aiden demands to know.
“Aye, it seems so. Janet, dear, help me get him under the scanner again,” Carson says.
“Then where is Rodney?” Teyla says, and they all pause;
If this is John Sheppard, then Rodney McKay is—should be—wherever the stones sent him, Carson thinks. When he went through the Stargate to find that missing marine but got kidnapped; but the ship was destroyed. The ship was destroyed but Radek told him, a brief encounter in the mess hall, that Rodney theorized that Sheppard got off the ship; escaped, perhaps in a Death Glider. Some way. Some way.
Carson doesn’t want to think otherwise. Rodney can be a pain in the arse, but he’s his friend. He doesn’t deserve such an ending.
“Hopefully, Colonel Sheppard will be able to tell us,” Carson says, a poor attempt at comforting the team. With the help of Janet and Ford he gets the bed and the equipment rolled into an adjacent room where the Ancestral medical scanner is. Sheppard grunts once or twice, indicating consciousness, but he does not speak or indicate that he’s fully lucid. It’s probably for the best. He seems to be in pain.
It takes a couple of minutes to get the images, sharp and clear, and he studies then with Janet closely. The team hovers nearby, refusing to leave, and he can’t order them to, not now. From the corner of his vision Carson notices Aiden checking the Colonel’s pulse by the wrist as if distrustful of the machines beeping in the background in time with the man’s heartbeats. He studies the diagrams and rows of data automatically uploaded onto one of the large plasma screens connected to the medical scanner.
“Neural activity looks normal,” he notes. There are no highlights jumping at them, no worrisome clusters of darkness or brightness. This is the brain scan of a healthy human. Relatively healthy and relatively human, anyway. (Carson has been reading up, since they got contact with Earth again, on the latest medical discoveries. A lot of interesting research and theories, and it’s not just in genetics albeit that is his professional field. He would like to inform Elizabeth, one day, if the Colonel gave permission, of Sheppard’s unique genetic profile. Study it further. He has some theories; has noted only mild differences from the average Tau’ri; but he can’t study it without assistance and he has sworn silence. This is not the time.)
“Colonel, sir?” Aiden asks, carefully. “Sheppard?”
Unclear noise of pain, displeasure, confusion. “… hn.”
Carson lowers the intensity of the room’s lights a bit. “Give him a moment,” he says. “They’ve been through a lot.”
“John?” Teyla says softly.
Eyes cracking open again. Clearer now, pupils focusing. Teyla is standing closest, the first face Sheppard properly sees. “… Teyla …?”
She smiles. “Yes. You are in Atlantis again, in the infirmary.”
“ … hey,” a hoarse whisper: “We’re … we’re back? in the City?”
“Yeah,” Aiden says.
“How are you feeling, Colonel?” Carson asks, and takes out his stethoscope to check his pulse, just in case, to reassure himself and the others. Everything looks okay and the computers monitoring the Colonel’s condition are quiet.
“A bit like hell, doc.” He blinks, vision sharpening and his voice clearing up. “Ugh. That was … weird.”
“John, can you tell us where you were?” Teyla asks.
“The Hebridan ship …” The tone is confused for a second. “I was on the ship, Jenny and I, and then I was—here. Rodney’s—ah, shit.”
Hebridan ship …? He has never heard of such a thing, and from the looks on the team’s faces, neither have they.
Carson taps his earpiece. “Dr Weir, please come to the infirmary immediately.”
John hurts.
Déjà vu.
It takes a minute to figure out that it’s not the phantom pain of Rodney’s body, an illusion of taste. The air’s all different and Shy’s not where they were a second ago, on his shoulder struggling not to fall down; not they’re lying down, all confused. He’s confused. The hell just happened? Why’s he lying down? Why does his body hurt so weirdly?
His body. His body. This isn’t—
[hello, John.]
—the ship is gone; replaced; this is the City. He’s back. Atlantis. He’s back. They’re back. He realizes he’s lying down, they both are and something thick and soft and heavy is covering him, a bunch of blankets?, and though his eyes are closed the lights are too bright and his head aches like hell;
“Colonel, sir? Sheppard?” someone’s saying, hang on, that’s Ford’s voice, and then there’s Teyla: “John?” and it registers properly: he’s back in the City, and he’s himself again.
[you are safe now.]
Manages to crack his eyelids open. What he sees is wonderfully familiar. Faces. This isn’t the Hebridan ship. His throat’s a bit dry, but his leg doesn’t hurt specifically like it did before. It’s more like this dullness of hurts has settled through his whole body, like after fighting hand-to-hand for hours and losing terribly.
“… Teyla?”
She smiles. Tells him he’s safe and okay, back in the City’s infirmary, and Carson’s there worryingly and now he sees that gathered around the bed are Ford and Adria and Ronon and his Dæmon. They’re all here, and Carson checks his pupil response and pulse even if the machines hooked up to him with electrodes can gives those answers.
Teyla asks where he’s been. If he can remember enough to tell them.
With sudden stricken shock, John blurts out: “The Hebridan ship.” Fuck, Jenny’s still stuck there, and now Rodney is, without a clue how or why or who he’s surrounded by; if he can trust them; if he’s safe. He and Mer and on their own and—shit, shit, shit. “I was on the ship, Jenny and I, and then I was—here. Rodney’s—ah, shit.”
Understanding the urgency, Carson radios for Elizabeth.
Chapter 33: landing, part one
Summary:
nowhere can be secure enough. not for a Thing that can take over people’s bodies, slithering from shape to shape, face to face, hiding;
Chapter Text
xxxiii.
landing
part one
nowhere can be secure enough. not for a Thing that can take over people’s bodies,
slithering from shape to shape, face to face, hiding;
Cheyenne Mountain Complex, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 21, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 147 days after the Uprising
One of his agents is an alien.
It’s inside of her, claimed her mind and body and holding her soul hostage. Agent Gibbs hadn’t aimed to kill with that shot, but a normal human would’ve been more badly wounded and expressed it. Deeply feared for the end to come. The Goa’uld hadn’t.
There was shock, yes: certain and tangible: the Snake didn’t expect him to pull the trigger on Caitlin Todd. (His agent, friend, ally: it thinks humans wouldn’t be able to pull it off.) The shock and the bullet piercing her arm gave enough time for a marine to take her (it?) down with a zat’nik’tel, subduing it fully; but the Snake can heal the host, slowly, but faster than a human would on its own. It’d already started doing it when the Prometheus ringed them back to the Mountain.
A part of Gibbs is cold and numb as Dr Frasier softly explains: the parasite is wrapped around the brain stem and the spine. A choking hold. Unrelenting. There are pictures from an MRI, and it’s not a huge thing, this alien, and it’s small and done so much damage. Could do more. Physically extracting it by scalpel would kill them both: and Snakes, Dr Frasier says, can release a deadly poison when they’re about to die in order to take the host with it.
To avoid that, they’re keeping Todd in a deep freeze. A stasis chamber, some kind of alien tech they dug out of Antarctica and it’s been lying around in the Mountain for the past six or so months, scientists running tests on it. It’s almost like sleep, the doc explains, but much deeper, the body’s functions literarily slowing down to near point zero. An artificial coma without the need of a respirator.
(Should be) safe. While in stasis, Todd can’t die, and the Goa’uld can’t kill her, and they can’t open the pod to cut the Snake out. It’s a tie.
Gibbs fears it’s checkmate.
But there is a shimmer of hope. They have no benevolent aliens to help them out, no allies to step in and free Todd, but Colonel Carter’s working on another solution. The Prometheus’ sister-ship, the Daedalus, is younger and more advanced. Onboard they have a piece of technology which can literarily beam people and things up and down, without the use of rings; it’s much more precise. If they can recalibrate the sensors, they could use it to extract the Snake without having to use a surgical knife.
But the Daedalus is travelling between galaxies. It won’t be here for another two weeks, at least, even if they press the engines. Todd and her Dæmon will have to sleep;
She won’t remember stasis. But she’ll remember the Snake.
The host can sometimes remember all of it, Dr Frasier had said. It varies from person to person, depending on a number of factors, such as the length of possession.
(If it goes on long enough, ties are cut. The Dæmon destroyed. Then there is no way for the host to survive; they would be a walking Ghost.)
He can’t promise to save her,
not yet.
The host of Ba’al is long since dead and unsalvageable. There’s no hope for return for him—a man who might’ve been chosen eons ago, on another world far from here. It makes Gibbs sick to think about. The bastard’s being kept in a cell in the bowels of the Mountain. Talks haven’t rendered much fruit.
If Ba’al had other facilities for experiments and cloning other than the one they found, he won’t tell. He laughs at them, smiles, patiently. Expecting to get out of this somehow, escape. Gibbs hates that kind. So smug and superior, and Ba’al is literally that: an alien, he thinks humans, Tau’ri, are worth little but as dust beneath his feet. Bugs to be crushed; means to an end. Nothing more.
The possibility of other outposts made by the Snake has General Landry worried. He’s sent out three separate SG-teams to search other addresses they found in that list. So far, they’ve got nothing. Once the Daedalus returns to Earth, they can use both it and the Prometheus to search worlds for traces of foul play. It’s immensely slow work, frustrating at best; space is vast, and they simply don’t have the resources for this. They would need a fleet of ship and an armada of SG-teams to cover enough ground. But it’s a start, and General Landry gives the orders.
The little Ba’al does say are taunting lies. Gibbs is certain of that. He, Carter, and NID agent Barrett have taken turns in the interrogation, using different approaches. End result is, so far, the same: a vague threat, the hint of a smirk. They haven’t let Ba’al know yet they’ve captured his associate.
Colonel Carter isn’t sure the other Snake is an ally of Ba’al’s. A reason many Goa’uld have died in the past is due to in-fighting. Struggles for power and dominion. The second Goa’uld, probably not one of the greater System Lords, might’ve been posing as an ally of Ba’al’s, playing the submissive and biding their time. They’re trying to trick Ba’al into mentioning them. Gibbs makes sure to mention that Mayfield, the second Snake’s previous host, is dead and his people are performing the autopsy. There was a slight reaction, miniscule; Ba’al fears they’ll find out he’s not acting alone. But if they pretend that the other Goa’uld is dead, Ba’al can no longer hope for a sudden rescue or that the other will use his capture for their own gains.
Since Todd is in stasis, they can’t get intel from her. They don’t know who the other Goa’uld is. If they had a name, Carter says, they could’ve gleaned something from history or mythology, or maybe their allies would have knowledge about them.
Ba’al is kept several levels down behind lock and key. Over a dozen marines are guarding him, both inside the cell itself and in the corridors outside it, and those marines know what the Snake is. Apparently, Ba’al has had this host for quite a while, and some of the marines recognize him by sight. And that’s what troubles Gibbs.
The guy’s been hiding on Earth as a businessman for months—years. And the SGC never noticed. If not for the murder of an NID agent, Ba’al could have gone on undetected for God knows how long.
Rightly, it’s a mess. A mess that can’t, in the end, be brought before a common jury and ordinary judge. No way in hell. Gibbs can only see this ending with Ba’al sent from Earth altogether, or held in some high-security facility somewhere—but nowhere can be secure enough. Not for a Thing that can take over people’s bodies, slithering from shape to shape, face to face, hiding; no. Area 51?
No. It won’t be secure enough. Not with an alien, a creature such as this. The SGC must realize that: no place on this planet will be secure enough. And Gibbs wants justice dealt swiftly, precisely. A trial might come, but it won’t be in an Earthly courthouse. This will end with Ba’al permanently taken away from Earth—alive or dead.
“Sam. I’ve got the test results you asked for.” Dr Janet Frasier hands over a datapad onto which she’s uploaded the information. “The telomers in his cells are roughly forty percent shorter than they should be for an adult man this age. Granted, being possessed by a Goa’uld has prolonged his lifespan beyond the normal human one—but that still wouldn’t explain the length of the telomers.”
Colonel Carter glances at the graphs on the datapad, then at the doctor. “He’s a clone.”
Dr Frasier nods. “I can’t test the larva, but I bet it’s the same. This host is a clone.”
“Made in the facility on PX6-209,” Carter says, nodding. “That makes sense. The question is, then: where is the original?”
“Incoming wormhole! General Landry to the Control Room.”
The active Gate alarm is by now practically part of the SGC’s genetic makeup. It is a part of the daily routine, to be heard whenever the Stargate opens, whether from this end or another. There’s a heavy clunk of metal as the iris seals shut nanometers from the surface of the wormhole, preventing anything or anyone from stepping through and into the Mountain.
General Landry’s already on his way, a cup of coffee in one hand and a designated frown on his face. He was headed toward the detention area where Ba’al currently is kept under very heavy guard; though he’s handed it to Agent Gibbs and Colonel Carter to mainly do the questioning, he’d like to be there.
He hasn’t had as many dealings with the Goa’uld as Generals Hammond and O’Neill, but neither can be here. Hammond is retired, and O’Neill had to return to the Pentagon on urgent business—he’s a popular guy, these days. Earth never stops being busy, even if things have, for the moment, lulled in the rest of this galaxy. Most of the Goa’uld are gone—Ba’al is one of the few left. The Free Jaffa movement has gained real momentum and more worlds are liberated each days. Most SG-teams’ mission reports lean toward exploration and First Contact with alien settlements, not conflict. It’s a good development, and one of the reasons why they’ve been able to direct so much attention and resources to Pegasus. Landry is well-aware that, had the threat level here been deemed greater, they would eventually have declared the Atlantis Expedition an unfortunate causality and never send Colonel Everett or the Daedalus to their aid.
“Who is it, Chief?”
“Receiving IDC, sir—it’s Atlantis,” Walter says. “Receiving transmission.”
The General’s frown deepens. “They’re early. Let’s hear it.”
The transmission is both video and audio. One of the plasma screens overhead clears up from dark static to the brightness of one of the beautiful Ancient rooms in Atlantis. Dr Weir’s office. For the past few days, she has exuded exhaustion, a tension around her shoulders and face. But now it’s been lifted. Not completely, maybe, but enough for General Landry to notice.
“Dr Weir,” he greets. “We weren’t expecting to hear from you so soon.”
“I know, but several things have happened you should be made aware of, General,” Dr Weir says. “I’m glad to say the crew of the Aurora has been recovered and the Wraith attack evaded with zero casualties, though a number of wounded and the Aurora damaged. Roughly half an hour ago, Colonel John Sheppard woke up—the link with the communication stones was severed and the device is not active, though not by our doing. It’s similar to how the stones previously glitched, but this time they haven’t switched back. We’re still working on figuring out why. After the Colonel woke, I asked Dr Zelenka to physically remove the stone from the interface device here in the City so that they would no longer switch.”
“I see,” Landry says, though he struggles to for a second. Awake? And whole? “That’s very good news.” They still have a stone here in the Mountain. They’d decided it was safer to keep it here than have Rodney McKay keep it on his person; as long as one stone is connected to the interface device, the neural link would hold. That is, at least, as much as they know about the technology. Personally, Landry thinks it was a hasty, half-assed order the IOA made about their use; there are still too many unknowns. Well. That’s something for the scientists to chew on. “And Colonel Sheppard is himself again?”
“Alive and well,” Dr Weir confirms with a nod. “Dr Beckett says he’s awake and responsive. I’m going to talk with him in a moment and see if I can get a full report. Hopefully we’ll know shortly where Dr McKay is.”
“Then he survived the ship’s explosion? How?”
“That is one of the questions I’m going to ask, General. But according to Dr Beckett he mentioned that Director Sheppard was with him aboard another ship—a Hebridan vessel. If I remember correctly, they’re one of our allies.”
Hebridan? Well, those aren’t Goa’uld at all. General Landry recalls the reports and the stories: it happened before his time at the SGC, when General Hammond was in charge. A downed prisoner ship … yes, and, later, a race through space where Carter gave her assistance; the Hebridans are allies, and shared knowledge about their ion engine technology has helped the SGC with the construction of their X-class ships.
“That they are. Thanks for the update, doctor,” the General answers.
“How is going on your end, General? Have you found the Goa’uld?”
Might as well tell her now instead of waiting another two hours for the officially scheduled databurst. “We have now two Goa’uld in custody; the second was apprehended by Agent Gibbs just a few hours ago. Unfortunately, that one is possessing an NCIS agent. But you’ll be happy to hear that Lance Corporal Snow and Corporal MacGrimmon are both recovering from their injuries.”
An exhale. “That’s very good news. I’m sure Sheppard will be glad to hear it. I’ll dial back once I’ve spoken with the Colonel.”
“Do that, doctor. SGC out.”
“Atlantis out.”
The connection is cut.
Well, it seems he has a father to talk to—and for once give happier news.
It’s a weird feeling—morphine. Snow has, after careful consideration, decided he doesn’t like it. Makes his Bond with his Dæmon feel all wobbly and wonky; they can’t think. The lines become uneven and shaky. It’s not a good feeling.
The team has been going in and out of the infirmary and never leaving him completely alone. Mostly, he’s slept. The first surgery went well, Dr Frasier says, but he should expect at least a second and possibly a third to correct his knee. He’s not out of the woods yet.
The news were sour. The cap is shattered and needed complete replacement. He’ll never regain the same range of motion. The thought of never being able to run again is haunting and painful and frightening: there’s a chance, a slim chance. Yes, he’ll walk. But he won’t be the same.
Having the team there helps a little. When he’s awake, they keep him busy telling silly stories, swapping experiences and jokes. They nearly get thrown out more than once because they’re too loud and disturbing the other patients: Snow isn’t alone in here. There’s MacGrimmon in the next bed over, a bit banged up still but on the road to recovery. He got stabbed—Snow doesn’t remember that. He was passed out when it happened, so far gone he couldn’t handle the pain.
The hospital remains a distant, foggy memory. He recalls surgery—stabilization—the sterile smell of antiseptics (not the cleanliness of the Atlantis infirmary)—his team’s presence: a mist of voices, someone holding his hand, murmured questions of concern and fear. Then … darkness, and smoke, and a heavy alarm blindingly, and the flash of an explosion;
At least the Snakes have been caught. Snow would’ve preferred to hear they’d been shot, killed on sight. But that’s not possible. Drew laid it out for him once he woke up in the Mountain (confused)—one Snake is Ba’al, the mastermind behind this plot. The other’s taken hold of an NCIS agent. The woman in the hospital. Been there when Snow gave his statement, and it makes him want to throw up just thinking about it—that Snake, that’s the one who had him tortured, and then it went into that hospital room wearing a new face and a bland smile and they fell for it so easy;
When he wakes up this time, the digital clock on the bedside says it’s late afternoon. Herschel’s on Guard Duty this time (that’s what he’s dubbed it in his head, their eternal vigil), leafing through a magazine. He can’t see the cover, what it’s about.
“… What day is it?”
She looks up and closes the magazine. “Hey, morning. Afternoon. It’s,” she glances at her watch, “12:19 hours, February twenty-second.”
It’s easy to forget about days here. The rotation of time: it’s not the same as in the City. The Mountain is always grey and lit by electric lamps: it’s not like the City, with the brilliant sunsets setting the ocean on fire. Snow has gotten used to twenty-six-hour days. He can’t remember how long he’s been gone, out of it, but—God, it’s been a long time.
It was February when he … when they killed Bradley. The fourteenth?
Eight days. He’s been gone eight days. It feels like a slice of eternity;
“How are you feeling?” Herschel asks softly.
“Better,” he says, smiling a little. He is. “A bit dopey.”
“I can see that,” Herschel says. “You were talking in your sleep.”
“Oh, shit.”
“Very interesting,” Herschel goes on, an evil glint in her eye. “You were going on all about Drew—I almost started thinking I had to worry about your dignity or honor and that shit. What is it you Americans say?” She shrugs, thinking for a moment. “I don’t know, but we Germans have a perfect word for it: liebeskrank.”
“It’s not like that! Jeez, Private.”
“Sure. We just happen to go to planets like P2X-028 where we always have to get ‘married’ in a ‘native bonding ceremony’ and you always volunteer and pick Drew every time …” Man, she’s practically laughing.
“It was one time!” He glares at her: at least he can do that much, even if he’s still tied to this damned bed. Can’t properly defend himself.
“Twice.”
“Okay. It was twice. So what.”
“I think it’s time to be honest,” Herschel says. “She might be the only woman in the City who likes you. Like, I tolerate you fine, you’re not the most annoying dude—”
“Herschel.”
“Just saying,” she says, throwing up her hands in a gesture of universal peace, “if you need advice, I’m here. I know what she likes.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
Before the teasing can escalate, there’s a cough from the neighboring bed. “Shove it, please, for the love of God. Trying to sleep here.”
“Sorry, J.J.,” Herschel says, in vain trying to wipe the smile off her face. Damn. Snow shakes his head, and then immediately regrets it—everything gets fuzzy; he and meds do not get along. Herschel is a menace, but she’s also team and a friend, and they’ve grown on each other the past year and a half they’ve been AR-9.
Yeah, his Dæmon agrees, grown like fungus.
God, don’t make me say that out loud.
Herschel leans in and whispers conspiratorially: “Seriously, though. You’ve got to tell her, or she’s going to move on to something better.”
“Such as?”
“I don’t know. A woman, maybe. We’re much more reliable, after all.”
Snow rolls his eyes. “Is this another German thing?”
“Guys,” he hears MacGrimmon’s long-suffering sigh, “I can still hear you. If I wanted to hear the shit you’re talking about, I’d ask for Kemp’s company.”
“Sorry, Corps,” Snow says. Softly: “Hey, Amanda?”
“Ja?”
“Mind getting me something to eat? If the mess is open. And … Thanks. For being here.”
She nods. Normally, she wouldn’t let herself be pushed around in any way outside the realm of orders—she’s only a Private, but stubborn as hell, and fighting twice as hard because she’s a woman marine and that takes a lot of will. But with a teammate down, she’s willing to make exceptions to the rule. She reaches for her radio, no doubt to call for either Drew or Gamble to relieve her post at his bedside.
Snow sinks back into the pillows and closes his eyes, lazily stroking his Dæmon’s back; she’s curled up neatly against his left side. Ribs there aren’t broken, only a bit bruised. Could nap (again. for the thousandth time or so) while waiting for room service.
“Incoming traveler,” a voice announces on the PA system, startling him awake. It sounds like the primary tech by the Earth Gate control, Chief Master Sergeant Harriman. “General Landry to the Control Room immediately.”
“Wonder who that is,” Snow murmurs.
Probably an SG-team returning. We should talk with some of them, find out what’s happened since we last were on Earth, his Dæmon suggests.
Yeah, Snow thinks in reply. He has a few buddies here in the Mountain: he was on a search-and-rescue backup team for a while, and guarded the Gate Room, too, before Atlantis. Before O’Neill became a General and Landry took over from Hammond. Frankly, Snow can’t tell if he likes the new General—sure, he seems to be doing an okay job, but he doesn’t exude any of that genuine concern and warmth that General Hammond that. Now that was a good guy, who cared about every person under his command. A good CO, even if he’s an airman.
But Snow’s gotten used to being bossed around by airmen. The Old Man’s okay—well, actually, more than okay—as the City’s CO; Atlantis is where he should be.
And that’s the Bad News he woke up to: once he was stable and coherent in the Mountain, surrounded by his team and AR-4, they gathered to tell him. Their CO is missing presumed dead, kidnapped, taken. And they’ve already started hearing whispers in the Mountain that this civilian committee, the IOA, are pressing for a replacement. Atlantis can’t stand without a military CO: Dr Weir can’t take care of it all.
Right now, it’s handled by Lieutenant Ford, Major Lorne, and Sergeant Bates—a burden unequally distributed according to their ranks. Ford is the XO. Still, he’s, to Snow, still a kid. Most marines have a few years on him; Sumner chose people with combat experience. All except for Ford, but he’s proven to be more than adequate.
(Snow has read a couple of AR-1’s reports, just to see what they’re up to. Most of the stuff is unreal. It’s like their magnets to trouble—then again, so is AR-9. Few missions happen without a hitch.)
They’ve only dared to speculate a little about who this replacement could be. It’d probably be an airman. An officer. A Lieutenant Colonel or higher. They can think of a few candidates offhand: and Snow thinks it’ll be a tie between one of the X-ship commanders.
Colonel Caldwell, maybe. Has a good record, lots of experience. But not with running a City. And Snow doesn’t want that guy, or any other person, stepping in to run the show. No. Not their City.
It’s kind of weird. How quickly, how easily they’ve come to accept that Colonel Sheppard—despite being strange: despite his winged Dæmon—is their CO and irreplaceable, and his team are still upset and angry and trying to hide it. The Old Man has escaped from death before. Snow thinks it might’ve been more fitting for the man’s Dæmon to have been a cat—nine lives and all that.
What was it Drew said? One time; yeah, a team night, they were playing Monopoly (Snow was losing horribly) and he can’t remember all they were talking about. But they ended up discussing the City, these whispers of Atlantis being sentient or aware; having a voice, a voice only the Old Man can hear.
There’s never been an announcement about it; just like with his winged Dæmon (and the terrifying lack of one Before), the Truth, or words acknowledged as truth, has slipped out bit by bit by bit. Something about the Colonel hearing the City, communicating with it, maybe even controlling it—and Snow hadn’t been totally freaked out. Because with all the facts at hand, all accounts—it made sense. Explained things. Seemed … natural, somehow. Like there are these slots, decided places, people have slipped into: Dr Weir’s the leader and the pointing hand, and Dr McKay undoubtedly the brain of the City. But the heart and soul? That’s Colonel Sheppard, right there. And you can transplant a heart but never a soul.
The question of what’s going to happen now? hangs over their heads like a heavy veil. The Daedalus is heading for Earth. Snow prays he’ll be allowed to return with it. Gamble’s told him Drew has sent emails through the Gate, to the City. Arguments for him to stay with the team.
Normally, a marine injured like this would receive a bleak thank you for your service and a honorable discharge on medical causes, a nice pension, and they’d hand in their uniforms for the final time. Snow doesn’t want it to come to that. Not that … not that he’d not make an okay life on Earth. He has a few friends, family. They’d help out. He wouldn’t (hopefully) end up a homeless veteran, overlooked and forgotten; but Earth isn’t home anymore. Not the way it was.
He’s gotten so close to his team, he’s not sure how well he’d function without them.
“Wakey, wakey.”
“Ugh.” He cracks open an eyelid—man, he almost fell asleep. Didn’t mean to. Only a nap.
It’s Gamble. “I come bearing gifts. The doc says it’s okay for you to eat this. Personally, I’m hesitant about this mush. Want some?”
“Yeah. Thanks.”
Gamble helps prop up some pillows for him to sit and hands him a tray of food still hot from the commissary. While Snow starts digging in, Gamble takes seat in the chair next to the bed and stretches out his legs.
“We’ve still got leave left,” Gamble says suddenly. “I’ve been thinking if to go someplace. Just … it’s weird. After everything. Did you have any plans?”
Snow chews and swallows. Drinks some water. “I don’t know. I thought about visiting my family—mom’s the only one still alive.” He looks away for a moment: Bradley is dead. They knew each other okay. They only met as adults, after Snow figured out that he had a half-brother; it was more chance than anything else they managed to find each other. But they immediately hit off. Their lives had led down different paths. His mom had never told him about Bradley until he confronted her about it; she was ashamed, embarrassed. Tried to forget.
“Yeah,” Gamble nods. “That NCIS person, Gibbs?, told us his people had talked with her, you know. Asked about you when they, when we thought you were …” The words fade. Gamble clears his throat.
Suddenly he’s forgotten all about the food. “Hang on. Has anyone told her I’m okay? That I’m alive?”
Gamble frowns. “I don’t know.”
“Have you got your phone?”
“Uh, yeah.” He reaches into a pocket. Technically, he’s off duty—they all are—and therefore allowed to keep it on his person. Snow takes the phone with uncertain hands and he struggles to breathe evenly. Shit, his mom. He completely forgot. So immersed in what’s happened and Bradley’s death and the attacks and Snakes and the Old Man missing—
“Can I have a sec?”
Gamble stands. “Sure. I’ll be just outside, give me a holler when you’re done.”
Snow dials with a trembling thumb. He remembers the number—he’s always been good at remembering things. The scientists of the Mountain have set up signal relays all over the place—there’s no way there’d be this good reception all this way down otherwise. The tone is clear and steady.
She picks up after four rings.
“Hello?”
“Uh, hi. Hi, mom. It’s Mitch.”
There’s a sharp gasp and the noise of something falling onto the floor. Not glass, something heavier. “Oh my god. Mitchell? But, but they said … Oh my god. You’re alive?”
“Yeah, it’s me, mom,” he says and tears spring to his eyes. “It’s, I’m … I’m okay. I’m alive. The agents, they found someone else they thought was me.” He takes a shuddering breath: recalls the knife, the glare of the zat’nik’tel, sharp pain as he hit the ground. “Bradley.”
He can’t put it all to words, not now, perhaps not ever: how they tortured Bradley, made him change the Shape of his Dæmon, a mockery of his brother’s. He can’t tell her, let it burden her like that. And there’s so much he can’t tell her—this case is going to remain classified. With the Snakes … She might never learn the full truth.
“Oh, lord. Oh my god … What … I, I think I must sit down. What’s going on? What’s happened? Where are you?”
“I’m on base in Colorado. My guys found me, got me out. I’m in the infirmary. I’m fine,” he hurries to add. “Just a … My knee’s busted up, but the docs say I’ll walk again. Not as sure about my career in the Corps, but … But I’m alive. And that’s what matters.” Drew said she’s figuring this out, she’s going to talk with General Landry and Sergeant Bates and whoever else is necessary to convince them to let AR-9 stay together. The team. He doesn’t want to leave the team or the City—maybe there’s something they could let him do in order to stay on duty. “They found the bad guys, so I’m safe, we’re safe.” It’s over.
It sucks that he can’t be fully honest, can’t tell her the details. But she’s also better off not knowing—the truth of the SGC would only freak her out. His chest aches when he thinks about it too much.
(Snow has seen the rise and fall of several discussions about the future for the past few years; in some, the SGC is forever a secret, and, in some, they come clean to the world and Earth ends up rioting out of fear.)
“I’m sorry, I can’t tell you more—some of the stuff is classified. That’s why they took me. Work-related. Thought they’d get intel out of me. It’s … But it’s over now.”
“I … I understand. I don’t know what to say. I’m so relieved. I, will you be returning to D.C.? Can I see you?”
“I don’t know, I’ll see when they release me from the infirmary,” Snow says. Doesn’t want to crush her hopes. He considers his options. “It I did … would you mind if I brought my team with me? They’re good people—they saved my life.”
“Of course,” she says: no hesitation. She might not understand what a team really is, certainly not an offworld recon team, but his dad was a marine too. She’s been down that road before. “Just tell me when. Or I can come to Colorado, take some time off work.”
“No, no. It’s fine. I’ll talk with my superiors, check that I can come to you. You shouldn’t be travelling long distances,” he says. Suddenly his eyes want to water and Snow blinks a couple of times to get rid of it. “Didn’t the doctor say that? Before I went? Got to take care of yourself, mom.”
“Yes, the doctor said that.” He can hear the faint, weak smile. “Okay then. Please come as soon as you can. I … I still need time to process this. I started planning … they … the Corps sent people, started talking arrangements and caskets—” God, she’s crying. He wishes he could jump through the line, like it were a Gate, and embrace her.
They spend another twenty, thirty minutes on the phone—he loses track of time, only stopping when Dr Frasier comes back and says he’s got to rest now. Take his meds. Snow promises to call back tomorrow.
Damn. His phone. Didn’t the Snakes take it, leaving it with the body like a clue for the SGC to find and follow? (It didn’t make sense then, but once Snow learned about the Old Man coming to Earth to investigate—then it made sense. It all made sense. It was all a trap, and Snow was among the first to fall into it.)
Oh, man, and the phone was new and all. Wonder if the warranty covers this?
Patrick Sheppard has been surrounded by question for years and years. Doubt. A cloud, and he’s tried to ignore it.
Questions: why did his wife die the way she did, so unfairly and suddenly, before they managed to work things out? Why did she have to die? Maybe, if she’d lived, maybe they’d grow and stop fighting.
What was it all about, anyway? It wasn’t money or status or respect; it wasn’t physical, and it wasn’t a lack of contact. It wasn’t even her drinking whenever she couldn’t fight the stress anymore, even if Patrick had mentioned it one time too many (arguments where they yelled at each other in the kitchen when the boys were upstairs and meant to be asleep, but probably hearing every hostile word).
But he knows the answer. Deep, deep down, Patrick knows it.
It was the boy. It always was. The son which Patrick knows (but he doesn’t ask aloud, doesn’t plan to consult doctors for tests to find out) isn’t his by blood. Valerie’s unfaithfulness burns like a knife and it was just the tipping point. At first he didn’t figure it out. Not until the boy grew from baby to infant, and Patrick took a good long look at him and saw. Truly saw and dared to think it. A stranger’s eyes, a shock of dark hair, no shadow of a Dæmon (no light, no hint, nothing). Oh, he knew. It was the boy—that’s why they fell out, even if they tried to hide it from Dave and Johnny who were only children, only children. They planned to go separate ways. Perhaps cease speaking altogether—it would be for the best.
(Valerie had said, once, quietly, that she’d take Johnny with her and Patrick wouldn’t have to concern himself about the boy ever again, and he’d been torn between lulling relief and staggering disappointment.)
Now, Johnny is (was) (was) the last of Valerie he has left. Now, confronted by this new reality—Patrick realizes he wants to, needs to, preserve it. Him. The memory. The boy isn’t a boy anymore. He’s (maybe) not a Strangeling anymore, either. He has a Dæmon. The photograph—the only photo Patrick has of him now, all grown up and steady and no longer alone, and now, now Johnny’s dead and there’s nothing of Valerie left.
Patrick is sitting in the commissary—that’s what the marines called it. Or mess hall. The food is surprisingly good. He half-expected it to be bland and dry and grey, like the walls around them, suppressing. He’s feeling better and the doctors have (finally!) allowed them out of bed—he walked here on his own two feet. Soon enough, he hopes, he can return home and …
Patrick heaves a sigh. And what? Forget? Not likely. He’s been fed with so many secrets and otherworldly facts and covered-up lies these last few days—and Johnny is gone, and Jenny is gone. Johnny is gone.
Even if he knew the dangers of the Air Force, he’d hoped (believed) he wouldn’t have to bury either of his sons. Either of Valerie’s children. Now he has to, and the casket will be empty.
His sister wouldn’t be happy with him right now. Or Valerie. (She’d be upset, and angry, and she’d drink red wine or maybe vodka be soothe the burn after turning her back.) He’s managed to disappoint them all, and his son and niece have ended up paying for it. Oh, he knows it’s not all his fault—the aliens, the spaceships, these Stargates. But maybe, if he’d acted differently from the start. If; perhaps; like the butterfly effect, the smallest notion can in the end have the greatest consequence.
“Mr Sheppard?”
Patrick lifts his head heavily. It’s the General, the one in charge of this place. He’d rather not speak with him, but he’s not going to be rude—it’s not only the General’s fault Johnny is gone, even if it would certainly help to have such an easy, concrete scapegoat.
“General Landry. How can I help you?”
Next to him, Dave is speaking quietly with Laura. They’re only picking at their food.
Patrick makes an effort to greet the General politely, to keep the sting hidden. The officer is just another reminder. Once he’s healed enough, he wants to get out of here, take the good memories with him and forget the rest.
The General takes seat in front of him. “Mr Sheppard, Ms Shannon,” he says, nodding in their direction. Then he focuses entirely on Patrick Sheppard. “I just received word from Dr Weir in Atlantis. The link with the Ancient communication stones was just shut off—it turns out your son is alive after all. He woke up in the City less than half an hour ago.”
Patrick nearly drops his fork. “Say again?”
The General smiles, like he recognizes both Patrick’s fears and worries and his sorrows and this startled surprise. “John Sheppard is alive. I’m expecting Dr Weir to dial back shortly, give us an update.”
Johnny is alive? Irene murmurs.
And Patrick exhales, a breath he hadn’t realized he was holding. Oh, oh, thank God. Thank God. Thank God—
Dave and Laura are focused now, staring at the General.
“He’s okay?” Dave asks, and the last time Patrick heard his voice like that, the boy was seventeen and disbelieving and his mother was just been killed in the accident.
General Landry nods. “As far as I’ve heard, yes. He’s on his way back home along with Jenny Sheppard. It may be some time until we’re given concrete proof, but—yes, they’re alive.”
Patrick slowly puts down the fork, meal forgotten. “If I may, I’d like to be there when they … dial in?” He’s unsure of the terminology, but has overheard the people here using it, marines and scientists in white coats. “If it’s possible.”
He wants to hear his son’s voice. Be assured.
“Of course,” General Landry says. “I’ll have someone escort you to the Control Room once we receive a signal.”
Chapter 34: landing, part two
Summary:
Sheppard really must have nine lives.
Notes:
(2018-05-15) Thank you everyone who's read this far! Now I am on a roll. Two chapters in less than a week - I haven't been writing this effectively for months! Also, I've outlined the rest of the fic now. It will be (unless things changes) 42 chapters.
Chapter Text
xxxiv.
landing
part two
Sheppard really must have nine lives.
Explorer, in atmo above Messta City · Hebridan · the Milky Way
February 21, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 147 days after the Uprising
Rodney finds himself abruptly snapped into full consciousness and standing upright.
The last thing he recalls is talking with Teyla, he was standing in his lab (whiteboard all blurry) and his head pounding, and—hang on, it’s no longer hurting. throbbing. dazzling. no. and there’s no sign of Teyla or Kanaan or his lab or Ancient machinery. and he doesn’t feel like a giant bruise on the inside and there’s no problem with his leg. That he can feel. Now. His hand is raised, pressed against cold steel. Leaning slightly against a wall. Everything is—well, not fine, not fine at all. It’s all wrong and why’s he standing up when he feels like he passed out, face-planted right there on the floor in front of Teyla five seconds ago? (or a day ago) (an eternity ago) (is he dreaming and trapped in a coma? is that what this is? is he hallucinating?)
His hand. His …?
He’s staring at several unfamiliar faces, one of which definitely isn’t human—but not Wraith either—and his body aches dully (God, what’s happened, what’s been done to him?), but he’s not dizzy like before or about to throw up (hopefully). He’s also not passed out cold, or dead. Which. Okay. Good, that’s … good. Doesn’t eliminate the (terrifying) possibilities of Deep Coma or Vivid Hallucinations or whatever else Rodney’s mind will be able to come up with once it catches up.
Where the heck is he and what the hell is going on?
Mer flicks her tail and stares around them in suspicion and fear, and it’s not the City; it’s not Earth, either, he’s pretty sure. Not the Mountain. Or a Goa’uld ship. But … a vessel? possibly?
“What … the hell?” he blurts because what the hell?
It takes a moment for time catch up with him. Unfamiliar. Faces. A hum, these vibrations … an engine—a starship? But not the Daedalus or the Prometheus; definitely not the Aurora; this is an alien place, and the brown-haired woman is gaping at him.
No, at Mer. Why?
Are we dreaming? hallucinating?
Probably not. If we are, we’re screwed.
And there’s a suggestion of horrible scenarios: alien invasion, dream technology, nanite machinery in his blood taking over his brain, a shared hallucination of impeccable detail. It doesn’t feel like a hallucination. Not that Rodney has enough experience to properly evaluate the current situation with a hundred percent accuracy.
Wait. The stones. The stones!
“John?” the woman asks, voice difficult to determine.
“No,” Rodney says. “What’s … where am I?”
“Oh, God,” the woman whispers to herself, disbelieving. “Your Dæmon just changed, it—you—who are you?”
“McKay. Dr Rodney McKay,” he clarifies, a moment of thought: oh, the stones, the communication stones’ connection must have broken. Viable explanation. Yeah. They’ve glitched before; both times, it was due to a hyperspace jump starting or ending. That’s how much they’ve managed to figure out in Atlantis, anyway. After the explosion the glitches stopped, but evidently John’s been on a ship, so—not in subspace. Travelling at sublight speeds, then? Or using another kind of drive for Faster Than Light-speeds? The stones’ connection remained stable; but out of reach, the SGC declared them lost, Missing In Action;
This is where John has been—this place; this ship? is where has been since the Goa’uld vessel blew up; he must’ve escaped—
John is alive.
John is alive.
Oh, oh, John is alive.
And Rodney is confused as fuck and kind of scared spitless confronted by these strangers in this strange place and for some reason his ribs and belly aches unfamiliarly, but the thought of closure, of John being alive, is like the crashing wave of peace upon a shore.
The non-human next to the woman—who the hell are these people? they don’t look like typical Goa’uld hosts—says: demands: “Explain. What’s going on?”
He’s suddenly aware that they’re standing in a space that looks suspiciously like the Bridge of a ship, and it thrums beneath his feet from not just an engine but atmospheric reentry. There’s a wide viewscreen where clouds are parting and there’s a glimpse of a world he’s never seen: woodlands, rivers, sprawling cities. Besides the alien and the woman, there are two more: another alien (what are they? He feels like he should recognize them), and another woman in a grease-stained jumpsuit. They’re at the moment seemingly too focused to notice any commotion going on behind them, backs turned, full concentration on the ship’s instruments.
Reentry? Are they landing? The angle of descent—yeah, this is not a takeoff.
“I’m …” Rodney takes a deep breath. His body hurts but not too badly. Not as much as he’d feared. Mer confirms: he’s not openly bleeding, though his face is kind of bruised, and his head is heavy like he’s not slept for a week or two. “I’m Dr Rodney McKay and I was using these—we were using a pair of communication stones to … swap bodies, yes, that’s the technical term. Switch. Something must’ve broken the connection, and we know a jump into or out of hyperspace can do that. This ship, it’s rapidly decelerating, isn’t it? It’s the only thing that makes sense—”
“So you are no longer John Sheppard,” says the alien. Interrupts.
“No, and I have no idea what’s going on or who you are or—”
“Jenny,” says the woman, a greeting or explanation or whatever: “I’m Jenny Sheppard.”
“Rahda.” (name? species? title? what?) “We’re on a Hebridan research ship heading home to let Jenny and John, I mean, you?, use the Stargate to dial Earth,” the alien next to Jenny Sheppard (Sheppard? John’s cousin, the NCIS person? must be; makes sense: they were kidnapped together; yeah, this has got to be her) says. “We just entered the atmosphere.”
Oh.
“Oh,” Rodney says, other words beyond him for a second because he’s struggling to grasp the reality of having travelled across the void of galaxies in a heartbeat, been returned to his own flesh, and John is alive and they’re stuck on a ship and probably in a ton of trouble.
Wait. Hang on. Hebridan? Where’s he heard that before? It rings a distant bell. Oh, the chances of John running into an old ally of the SGC is so potentially slim and yet, yet, it seems like that’s exactly what he’s done. Beaten the odds.
John’s cousin, whatever her name was (Jenny?), is staring at him. Rodney feels Mer draw closer to him self-consciously, uncomfortable.
The alien (Rahda?) says, concernedly: “Captain, there’s …”
The blonde woman who’s got to be said Captain shakes her head without looking over her shoulder. “Can it wait? I’m waiting for landing coordinates from the Comm Tower.”
“… it can wait,” Rodney says weakly. Because. Okay. Yeah. He was in Atlantis a minute ago and now he isn’t, surrounded by strangers in a strange place (ship? ship descending through atmosphere: about to land), and this is frankly both annoying and confusing. But John—John is alive, they’re alive; and they’re going home. To use the Gate. To find the Gate. Dial Earth.
Jesus. John hitched a ride on a passing-by spaceship. What are the hell are the odds?
Oh my god, Rodney thinks feverishly and stares out the windscreen as the clouds part and the planet below is new and alien. There are patches of fields, yellow and green, and the hint of mountains, but, mostly, there are cities, spread out beneath them glinting of metal. This vessel also isn’t the only one flying about, and the Captain, whoever she is, is talking into a radio. Coordinates. Confirmation for landing. This world isn’t ravaged by the Wraith, and it certainly isn’t Earth. We’re not dead. We’re not dead?!
Oh my god, Mer echoes through their Bond: Sheppard really must have nine lives.
“This is Captain La’el calling Messta City Space Flight Control. Hebridan research vessel Explorer requesting permission to land.”
“Permission granted. Lock onto homing signal on channel five. Use platform 4B. Do you require recharging?”
“Confirmed. No charge required. We’ll be unloading and resupplying, though.”
“Understood. How long will you require use of the pad?”
“Minimum of twelve hours. Oh, and I need to speak with the Senate once we’ve landed.”
“The Senate? Please say again, Explorer.”
“Yes. Request permission to use the Stargate, which can only be obtained from the Senate. I need a comm number to someone who can help us. Say … Senator Hera Casterra.” She’s one of the good ones who actually acts in accordance with the policies she advocates, and La’el voted for her last term. She’s let others through the Stargate before. Yeah, maybe she could help.
The flight controller sounds vaguely confused: “I’ll, uh, I’ll see if I can get you the contact information. Please stay available on this frequency. Control out.”
“Thank you. Explorer out,” Captain La’el says as they descend through one thousand feet, the land wide and broad and solid beneath them. The skies clear: the clouds disappear, and the city of Messta shines like a candle at a distance. It’s daytime; makes it easier to land. The Spaceport lies to the east, and the wind is moderate and easy to navigate. They touch down within a few minutes.
“Shutting down engines,” Captain La’el says, flipping a few switches. “Let’s give the core some time to cool down and we can do a maintenance check on it.” She starts to turn around and exits her seat by the main controls. “Hopefully, they’ll find a Senator willing to help us out, and—wait. What’s this?”
She stares in mistrust at her passenger’s changed Dæmon. The Shape is something altogether different from before. It doesn’t do that with adults. Shouldn’t. Can’t. And yet, here’s proof, right in front of her, of something impossible. She’d barely believed it before, seeing something with wings (nothing on Hebridan exists in such a form).
Instead of a bird—fanciful and dreadful—there’s a four-legged creature covered in fur, smaller than the bird and much more subtle and yet alien. It’s not a creature normally found on Hebridan.
“Apparently, this is no longer John Sheppard, but a man named … Rodney McKay, yes,” Rahda says plainly. She’s standing next to the two Tau’ri, both of which appear more shaken than they did a few hours ago. The woman, Jenny Sheppard, is frowning and pale.
“Ancient communication devices,” the man in question says. “And yes. It’s … it’s kind of a mess, but I’ll explain if you give me the chance. Easiest way to do that is finding a Stargate. You mentioned a Stargate so I really hope we can use it to get home.”
“And where then is John Sheppard?” La’el asks, not quite believing this, despite what her own eyes—and the eyes of her Dæmon—are seeing.
“Hopefully,” the man says, “he’s three million lightyears from here.”
“Captain La’el, please tell me again why you request to use the Stargate.”
The voice on the other side of the comm belongs to a woman, patiently explaining: “While enroute home, my crew and I found two Tau’ri adrift in space in a damaged craft. They had escaped from a Goa’uld vessel after being held captive there. We took them aboard, promising safe passage, since Earthlings are our allies. During their brief stay aboard my ship, they have proven to be friendly enough. They simply want to go home, and I told them I’d try. I’m a woman of my word, which I’m sure you can understand, Senator.”
Senator Hera Casterra of the Hebridan Democratic Council has been a politician for a long, long time. She’s seen her fair share of strange happenings and squabbles, uprising and upheavals, revolutionary movements and the changes—good or bad—they bring. The discovery of the Stargate was a major one; the Alliance wrought with Earth and its people, the Tau’ri, another. She’d been part of many, many meetings concerning the new laws and agreements which had to be made concerning the use of the Gate. Most had been dull and dragged out for too long. Some had been heated and exciting. Their meeting with the Tau’ri wasn’t their First Contact, but all those other times had been by ship, vessels sent into the deep to explore. The Stargate makes everything both harder and easier.
Primary, they’ve decided, the Stargate to be used for trade, commerce, political relations with other worlds they’ve become allied with, and peaceful scientific exploration—the Tau’ri have helped them with the latter. Given them safe addresses to start with. Warned them about unsafe places inhabited by the Goa’uld. In the last decade, that scourge upon the galaxy has begun to fade however.
Senator Casterra knows enough to connect the dots: the Tau’ri have eliminated much of the Goa’uld forces. Their strength is diminished. The Tau’ri are their most important ally, and it would be unwise to ignore Captain La’el’s request.
All use of the Stargate must be approved by the Senate, democratically elected, every matter voted upon. This to make sure everyone has the same chance to use the Gate without faulty exchanges of money being involved—the Chairman doesn’t take kindly to bribery. In the past year alone, three cases have come to light with Senators or others in the Great Committees being offered money, land, power or extravagant gifts in exchange for secret passage to other worlds. There are many who’d like to use the Gate for their own gains, to set up offworld bases and mine for resources at the expense of other peoples and ecosystems. That is a thing the Senate cannot allow.
This, however, should happen. The Captain’s mention of the Goa’uld—so brief it’s almost forgotten—is most troubling, however.
“I see. I can’t make promises, but I’ll convene the Senate for a meeting. I’ll call you back as soon as I can. I would like to meet with you and the Tau’ri and discuss this matter further.”
“Thank you, Senator. That’s all I ask. We’ve just landed at Messta Spaceport. We could be at the Senate Dome within a couple of hours, if need be. If we can get through customs quickly, that is.”
She thinks her schedule over. That meeting with the representative from the Builder’s Guild can be postponed. “How about I meet you outside the Dome at four o’clock, Captain?”
“That works. Thanks. The two Tau’ri don’t have any IDs or travel visas, so getting through customs may take a little while.”
“I understand. I shall see you then, Captain. Have a good day.”
“Likewise, Senator. Goodbye.”
The commlink is disconnected. Well, that’s one of the more interesting calls she’s gotten this cycle. She dials another number.
“This is Senator Hera Casterra of the Democratic Counsel. I require an immediate assembly; there. Yes, Mr Chairman. Yes, I believe it’s that important. I just received word that two Tau’ri have come to our world, requesting passage home through our Stargate …”
Captain La’el finishes her priority call. Then she orders them to stay at the ship along with Warrick (he’s not larger than a human man and Jenny thinks that, in a crisis, she can take him down. The 9mil still has one bullet left.). She and Rahda have to go through customs, and that’s another spanner thrown into the wheel. Since they’re hitchhikers, more or less, with nothing but the blood-stained clothes on their back, the Hebridans can’t just let them onto their soil. Captain La’el says she’ll do what she can.
They’ve run out of ship to pace. They find themselves back in the Longue. At first, Jenny avoids speaking with Dr Rodney McKay. It’s simply … too strange. How, in a matter of seconds, the man has changed from her cousin into a stranger.
“So, we’re just going to sit here and wait? I’m terrible at waiting,” Rodney says.
“Apparently,” Jenny says reluctantly, answering both sentences at once though the man doesn’t need to know it. It’s … bizarre. She’s just started getting used to the idea of spaceships and Stargates and of body-switching, and then John’s Dæmon (strange and winged) unexpectedly was gone. And the man’s personality completely changed. John was careful, quiet, laidback.
Dr Rodney McKay is … loud. He complains and asks questions.
He doesn’t seem to know how to shut up.
Captain La’el has told them to stay in the ship. She’s spoken via a commlink—it looked not unlike a phone—with someone she called Senator Hera Casterra, and Jenny prays that it’s good news. Then La’el sat down and talked with Dr McKay. Asked questions about who he really is, where he’s from, and she’d taken notes—she needs to convince the people in charge of security at the customs checkpoint to let them pass.
It took a moment for Jenny to realize that the man’s whole manner was changed. His body language. His speech patterns. Dr McKay is Canadian and outspoken and he can’t keep his hands and arms still. Waving them around. Taking up space. His Dæmon is a cat curled up around his feet and curiously looking this way and that; and, the man says, he’s an astrophysicist and genius and he’d like to look at the Hebridan ship. Captain La’el draws a line there: says she won’t have anyone, Tau’ri or no, poking around her ship’s systems. McKay’s expression had been severely disappointed.
Apparently, he doesn’t remember anything since John took possession of his body nearly seven days ago. He’s been someplace far, far away. Atlantis.
The name which John spoke with such reverence. Told her stories. Jenny hadn’t believed, not really. It was just a good way to think of something else than all this. Dr McKay insists it’s very, very real. Also very classified and he might be fired for telling her at all, and Jenny had said that John’s already told her about the City. McKay had frowned and muttered Of course he did, why not break nondisclosure agreements after being kidnapped—and then McKay started asking questions about John.
Was he okay? Unharmed? Safe? McKay had pressed: Please tell me he was sleeping and eating, or at least not passed out.
Jenny had looked at McKay differently then. The man seems to be a pain in the ass, overbearing and loud and with little social filters, but, obviously, he’s also John’s friend. A jerk, perhaps—Jenny’s met far too many men like McKay, who are self-righteous assholes claiming to be godsent geniuses, always right, always upholding the Truth—but he cares. So she told him as much as she could.
Which led to the revelation of what happened aboard the Goa’uld ship. The confrontation with Ba’al, their escape; how she’d come to in the sarcophagus with John tearing it open, standing above her with a gun in one hand and the other tenderly touching his bloodied side;
“John was shot?” Dr McKay demands to know. There’s heat, worry, concern, anger, confusion, all compressed into one.
They’re sitting in the Longue, still waiting for Captain La’el to tell them they can use the Stargate. Return to Earth. Go home.
“I was shot? Oh god.”
“They healed the injury,” Jenny says. “I saw it.”
“Oh my god,” McKay repeats. “I should never let him go anywhere. Should have the marines watching him always. A week without me and he gets shot?” Steel eyes zero in on her, oddly hard for a scientist and civilian. “Was it the Goa’uld?”
“I’m not sure. John never said. Besides, it’s dead now. I shot it, and then the ship was destroyed.”
“Yes, good riddance and good job. I’m wondering …” McKay trails off, looks away. “Before I woke here, I just heard from Weir—nevermind who that is—but there was something about Carter and that agent finding something on PX6-209, going on a mission through the Gate there …”
Agent? Urgently, she needs to know. “What agent, what’s their name?”
“Uh, something starting with … G, yes. Greg?”
Jethro. “Gibbs,” Jenny says, a sharp inhale. Suddenly, she’s full of dread again, and hope. Gibbs. He’s in on this, searching for her. He’s looking. Who else? The SGC—how many within NCIS have let it in on their secret? “He … he went with Colonel Carter to another planet?”
It’s one of the most ridiculous sentences she’s said in her life, yet not the worst one she’s spoken in the past few days. It kind of scares her that, to Dr McKay, it makes perfect sense.
“Yeah. They found some clones of Ba’al, but got rid of them. The security risk was too great, can’t take them to Earth. I never asked how they did it, but I assume a well-placed charge or perhaps orbital bombardment. Makes me wonder which one was, is?, the original Ba’al, the one found on Earth or—”
“Cloning,” Jenny interrupts, flatly.
“Yes, there’s technology for that. Hello? Spaceships, Stargates—of course there’s technology for cloning,” McKay says impatiently. “Try to keep up. Anyway, the facility’s destroyed now. Last I heard, anyway. I’ve been holed up in my lab so long and haven’t slept in over thirty-six hours, so, there’s that. I might’ve missed a few memos. Weir could’ve kept me out of the loop a little, or Zelenka got too scared to tell me what’s going on, just because I yelled at him that one time—”
“So …” Jenny says slowly. “While John was here, in your body, you were in … that Ancient City, in another galaxy. In John’s body.”
“Yes,” he says, like he’s severely implying she’s lacking in intelligence. Makes her want to hit him, but she holds back the urge. Mostly because she doesn’t think public displays of violence will do her any good while on another planet, still waiting for passage home. “Didn’t we go over this before with the Captain lady?”
“I’m still working on believing it,” Jenny says.
“Ah. Fair enough, I suppose. I admit I also had a hard time swallowing the truth pill when I was briefed about the Stargate Program,” the man says, and then he sighs wistfully. “Feels like a long time ago now.”
“And when was that?”
“Oh. ‘97. Late—December—I was called in to a meeting with the Air Force, General Hammond. I studied the theoretical aspects of the Gate for a couple of years before I had a chance to actually work with it in practice—someone got stuck in the buffer, and then SG-1 started hating me and I got sent to Siberia. I might have said and done some unfavorable things. Especially to Sam…antha, Colonel Samantha Carter. My problem, you know, it’s self-control. I couldn’t help it. I mean, I can, just not when it comes to hot blondes.”
Jenny holds back a groan. Men. They never change. They can be useful, but no relationship she’d had with them has ever worked out. Not even with Gibbs, but that’s … that’s more complicated than her usual dating life.
“Which changed when I met—uh, nevermind.” McKay cuts himself off and awkwardly stands up, his Dæmon rising with him in perfect sync. “Look, you’ve been aboard this ship longer than me. Is there a bathroom? Please tell me there’s a bathroom.”
“Yeah, down that corridor,” she points, “to the right.”
“Thanks,” Dr McKay says, slipping out of sight.
There’s water and he splashes some (cold but stale, recycled) into his face. Then he looks at himself in the grungy, tiny mirror mounted on the wall. He’s pale and gaunt and his eyes rimmed with sleepless nights and dark dreams. It’s more silent than it should be, and all of him is tense. Aching.
They’d so naively thought this would be like a mission, one of the easier ones. Quick. In and out. John would find the murderer of their marine all heroically, Rodney would have a genius idea in his lab, and a month or so later they’d reunite. Happy endings.
Rodney, lacking a towel, lifts the edge of his t-shirt to dry off his face, and he freezes in mid-motion. Sees it. The scar on his abdomen. It’s not huge or inflamed. It’s still a shock to the eye, and he stares at it. Carefully, he touches it. It doesn’t exactly hurt, but … Oh, God. John got shot. This looks like a bullet wound (and that’s horrifying, the way Rodney’s gotten familiar enough with injuries and different kinds of arms, able to identify them), not the burn from a staff blast.
John is alive, but not unhurt. (Like usual, then, Mer can’t help but wryly remark. There are always scars, even from the simplest briefest missions. And this wasn’t even meant to be one.)
Rodney can’t send him a message, even a hint—he’s tried. Concentrated, but he can’t reach out with his thoughts. Their Bond is muted, corralled in cold iron. There’s simply too much distance between them to be heard. Has John been trying, too? While trapped here; for days, just waiting, seeking contact?
He lowers the t-shirt and swallows. Suddenly he’s dizzy and he has to lean over the sink, gripping the edges tightly. John. Almost died. Out here, alone. Without his team, without the City, without anything. Alone. Rodney almost died too, and he didn’t even know it.
He’d be a liar if he said he wasn’t afraid to die. Hell, Rodney is terrified of death. He’s dreamt about it, nightmares—drowning; eaten alive by giant whale; a hand on his chest; the slow drowsy cold of blood loss; the instant ice of hard vacuum—but only in the last year or so he’s sometimes (but thankfully only on very rare, stressful occasions) dreamt about losing other people. About watching it happen. His nightmares have been given new fuel now. It could make him angry, but mostly it makes him … tired. Tired and scared and feeling older than he is. Should be.
When he set out to be an astrophysicist, a scientists, this wasn’t what he pictured.
Nothing turns out exactly as predicted, Mer reminds him.
Of course not, the answer lies sharp on his tongue. Chaos theory. The future can’t be predicted.
The future can’t be predicted.
If it could be, none of them would be here. Rodney would’ve made sure of it: he’d have planned everything out, if he could, to keep them safe. Himself and Mer, his team, John, Shy, Elizabeth, Carson, all of them. If he could’ve seen the Wraith hibernating in the shadows and warned the Expedition of impending doom; if he could’ve;
But the future can’t be predicted. Possible futures can be guessed at, like Schrödinger’s cat; but no one truly knows the truth of the reality they live in until they open the box to check if the cat is still alive or dead, and by then it’s already too late.
Shivering, Rodney pulls himself upright again.
This is a really bad place for a breakdown, he tries to convince himself. Looks into his own eyes in the mirror. They’re pale and washed-out and a little glazed. We can collapse once we’re on Earth and dialed Atlantis, sent them a message, sent John a message. How about that?
They have to wait another four antagonizing hours before they’re allowed through the Spaceport and out the other side. Stepping outside the craft, Rodney’s vision was jarred by the alien sunlight falling onto his face, soft and warming. His gaze hard darted left and right and he missed, severely, his team. Even Ronon’s presence would’ve helped. Being surrounded by so many strangers, staring at him and Director Sheppard in curiosity, having to walk through that sea when he’d rather lie down and maybe throw up a little—well. He’s been better.
Hebridan is an advanced world: Rodney would say they’re ahead of Earth by decades or hundreds of years, at least technologically speaking. He doesn’t know enough about them to say anything about their culture, their systems, their beliefs, their politics. Evidently it’s a democracy, uniting two peoples: humans and Serrakin. And in order to get this far, they need to have eliminated some things Earth is plagued by, surely. It’s something for the historians and sociologists at the SGC to chew on.
They’d gotten through customs eventually by arguing a lot, and La’el made another call to that Senator person to support their case. At least the X-ray they did vividly proved no one of them is a Goa’uld host or other alien in disguise.
The city—Warrick calls it Messta, the most important of all their cities, the capital of their government—reminds him a bit of New York: rising towers, a broken skyline in every direction. There’s a river winding through it and traffic in the air and on the ground. Their cars don’t have wheels, instead using an anti-gravity system which makes Rodney think of the Jumpers. Not as bulky though, and unarmed.
Warrick and Captain La’el escort him and Director Sheppard from the Spaceport, getting what Rodney assumes is some kind of taxi service—there’s an exchange of money, whatever currency these people use.
The city speeds by, and he can’t really focus on it. All that he can think of is the singular, singing thought of home. He’s headed back home. Finally, he’s coming home (one step at a time).
The Stargate is housed next-door to the Senate Dome, in a protected hangar, Captain La’el explains to them during the half-hour ride through busy traffic. The streets are full of people and white noise, and Rodney’s seen many planets but none in Pegasus is this densely populated. A world like this would be wiped out by the Wraith—too rich and peaceful and abundant.
(Makes him wonder: how many worlds have risen like this only to be destroyed? Using enhanced scans, the Anthropology Department built a partial digital reconstruction of Sateda, the immediate area around the Stargate. A city, not unlike this one. How many others? There were ruins on Athos; once upon a time, long ago, Athos might’ve been on the verge of this, cities of steel and glass. And then the Wraith woke up.)
The car comes to a halt. “We’re here,” La’el says and climbs out; Jenny follows, then Rodney. There’s a slight overcast, but it’s still bright, the middle of day.
The Senate Dome is a large, round building surrounded by trees, fountains, and a gently sloping stone ramp. There’s people moving to and fro, uncaring about these strangers in their midst; they get a few odd glances, and Rodney doesn’t know if that’s because of the Terran Shapes of their Dæmons, or the dust and blood on their clothes.
Near one of the enormous doors, there’s someone waiting. When she sees them, she raises a hand. “Greetings. Captain La’el?”
“That’s me.”
“Senator Hera Casterra,” the woman introduces herself. She’s Serrakin, like Warrick, with scattered markings on her face and throat. Her Dæmon is like a furred snake with stubby legs, slung across her shoulders, sharp eyes watching them. “I’ve been granted leave to use the Stargate to dial Earth.”
Oh, thank god.
“This is Jenny Sheppard, and Dr Rodney McKay,” Captain La’el introduces them in turn. Rodney waves a hand awkwardly. He’s not good at First Meetings, especially under circumstances like these. He probably looks pretty beat up, tired and worn and clothes bloodied—they have nothing new to change into.
“Hello. Earthlings shake hands, do you not?”
“Yeah,” Jenny says, taking the offered hand carefully like it might burn. It doesn’t. It’s just a handshake, but the Director is visibly relieved to let go. When it’s Rodney’s turn, he hesitates for a millisecond, but the hand doesn’t feel that alien. (It’s not the slit hand of a Wraith.)
“Welcome to Hebridan, Jenny Sheppard and Rodney McKay. Perhaps one day you could visit us for a longer time and see more of our world. This way, please,” Senator Casterra says. She guides them across a plaza covered in colorful brickwork, laid out to imitate a crown of flowers.
Rodney’s not into those soft sciences, but the sociologists would agree that artwork and architecture like this is a sign of a stable, peaceful society. If this world was in Pegasus, Weir would jump at the chance to become allies and trade with them.
They’re taken to the sizeable building next to the Dome. It’s flatter, square; there’s also a notable military presence. People in uniform guard the only entrance. There are no windows, and the walls look thick. Welded metal. In case of danger or invasion, Rodney figures. The guards check a card the Senator hands them, an ID of some kind, before letting them inside. They have to walk through two more guarded doors before they reach the Stargate.
It’s a single room, high ceiling. At the center there is a dais with a Stargate, and in front of it a DHD. Rodney glances around. There’s no natural light in here, only electrical lamps. The walls are grey and white, and something suspiciously similar to turrets are mounted all around them where the walls meet the ceiling.
“Here we are. Everything is already prepared. We understand a code is needed to send through the Stargate before it is safe for us to travel,” the Senator says. “When we became allies, the SGC gave us this device.” She holds up a small, familiar piece of tech: a GDO.
“Ah, yes. An IDC—we call it an IDC,” Rodney says.
“If I may? I know the address to Earth,” Warrick says.
“Please, go ahead,” the Senator says, and Warrick begins dialing. Rodney finds himself sweating a little—fear; excitement; relief; all at once, overwhelmingly sharp—as he watches the Serrakin punching in one symbol after the other. It’s right. It’s the address to Earth, completed with the Hebridan point of origin.
The wormhole flares to life. By his side, he senses Jenny stumbling backward, shocked. Oh, right—she isn’t properly read in on the SGC, hasn’t seen a Stargate, much less an active event horizon, until now. There’s a murmured Oh, that’s …
Senator Casterra holds up the GDO and carefully sends whatever code the SGC has provided them to prove that a Hebridan ally truly is the one contacting Earth. They wait a few moments before approaching the Stargate.
“The Senate has decided I shall walk through first. Warrick, Captain La’el, will you accompany me?” Senator Casterra asks.
Captain La’el shakes her head. “I admit I’m curious to see Earth, but perhaps another time. I really must get back to my ship. I left Rahda to oversee the loading of new supplies, and I promised I’d be back,” she says. “Goodbye, Jenny Sheppard, Dr McKay. I hope you’ll reach home safely.”
“Thank you,” Jenny says. “For everything—for getting us here.”
“Maybe we’ll meet again sometime,” the Captain says. “Who knows? Until then, goodbye.”
Then the two Serrakin step through the Stargate, and Rodney approaches it and Jenny follows. Before he can step through, she grabs his arm. “Wait. Does it—Am I going to feel anything?”
“Not really. You step through, get dematerialized, then materialize on the other side,” Rodney explains. “Look, we got to go before it shuts down. Just walk in step with your Dæmon.” He’s not good at reassurances, and he’s getting cranky and impatient—so close. So close to home.
Earth. Then Atlantis. Then Atlantis.
Jenny nods curtly, takes a deep breath. “All right,” she murmurs, probably to herself. “Just step through.”
She squares her shoulders and intently, not unlike a soldier, walks forward, step-in-step with her Dæmon, whose name Rodney hasn’t asked about. The event horizon ripples and takes them. Meredith leaps into Rodney’s arms, just to be certain not to be separated by the lightyears, and he walks through the Stargate.
Chapter 35: landing, part three
Summary:
“your turn. tell me what’s been going on while I’ve been gone.”
Chapter Text
xxxv.
landing
part three
“your turn. tell me what’s been going on while I’ve been gone.”
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 21, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 147 days after the Uprising
It takes a few minutes for Elizabeth to show up. She hadn’t waited in the infirmary like the others: she doesn’t have that luxury. Duties, things that must be done. She hasn’t been able to rest, though she forced herself to finish a meal in the mess hall just to get out of her office for half an hour. The Aurora has almost completed its evacuation, leaving behind a crew of only eleven people to oversee emergency repairs, led by Major Lorne.
Dr Sharpe has integrated a Puddlejumper’s cloaking device with the Warship’s shield, making it invisible to the Wraith. The City can still track its slow orbit around the binary pair of stars which the Aurora now has made into its temporary refuge, a mere ten lightyears away from New Lantea. There’s a Gate nearby they’re using to shuttle people from the ship to the City by Puddlejumper. Elizabeth has been coordinating the evacuation from this end, welcoming people back in the City. Injured had been sent to the infirmary at once and taken care of by Carson and Dr Mallory, momentarily tearing them from the side of John Sheppard’s unmoving body. He was being watched over by his team, so Elizabeth knew he wasn’t alone.
It’s a huge relief to hear he’s woken up. More than that, Rodney wasn’t the one to do so. Confirming: John Sheppard is alive.
But this poses a whole new set of problems and questions, the most frantic of which being: where is Rodney now?
“John woke up as himself; his Dæmon is back,” Carson explains to Elizabeth. “He’s more coherent now that we’ve gotten some fluids into him, and I sent a nurse to get him some proper food from the mess hall. Physically the Colonel is fine, or at least no worse off than before. However, his Dæmon is a wee bit roughed up. My guess is a knife caused those injuries. He hasn’t told us all that’s happened—he said he’d like you to be there as he reports.”
She nods. “I’m going to dial Earth and give them the news first. Is there anything else I should let the SGC know?”
“Well, he said something odd,” Carson says, confounded. “That Rodney is on a … Hebridan?, aye, Hebridan spaceship. The, uh, the Explorer, I think?—that’s the name Colonel Sheppard used. And he mentioned a Jenny, said she was okay. That’s pretty much all we’ve gotten out of him this far.”
“That’s the Director of NCIS, who was kidnapped with him,” Elizabeth says, and Simon sighs in relief: This will make things a lot easier. (Having a person in such a prominent position dying because of involvement, involuntary at that, dying would have been a political mess, and Elizabeth is too tired to partake in any more coverups.) “Thank you, Carson. I’ll return to the infirmary as soon as I’ve dialed Earth.”
The doctor nods. “I’ll keep an eye on him.”
“… and then I woke up here,” John finishes.
It’s an effort to talk this long. Elizabeth and the others had so many questions: he’s tried to answer them all. As much as he recalls. Some bits remain uncertain, clouded in pain.
He’s told them about the kidnapping at NCIS Headquarters, about the Goa’uld ship, about Ba’al, about the Explorer and their approach to Hebridan. In turn, Elizabeth tells him what they found in Avalon: a planet with a lab where Ba’al was cloning himself. That just spells trouble, and makes John uneasily wonder if the Snake he met was the original or just a copy. And if any single copy escaped; if there’s a lab someplace else …
A galaxy is a big, big place to search.
At least they have the Goa’uld—two of them—in custody on Earth now. Frankly, John thinks they need to be gotten rid of. There’s no place that’s secure enough to hold a Snake. But one of them has taken over an NCIS agent, and they’re trying to save her. Have to try.
On the bright side, Snow is alive. Hearing that lifts a stone from his chest. The marine they came to Earth to find in the first place is safe—currently undergoing medical treatment. The Snakes had him tortured. That’s enough for John to want to throw them out of an airlock into space, but he doubts General Landry will let that happen.
No, the General’s going to get every scrap of intel he can from them, and then he’ll transfer them to some high-security facility. Keep them alive. Assets. At least for the moment. John doubts the IOA will let the prisoners be executed, even if that’s what they deserve after all they’ve done. The NID agent and Colonel Everett can hardly be the first Tau’ri that Ba’al has killed—there must be dozens, perhaps hundreds, perhaps thousands. More, more if one takes into account the decades Ba’al has spent as a System Lord controlling several planets in Avalon, ordering his Jaffa to labor, mining for naquadah and building ships; System Lords aren’t interested in taking prisoners unless they’ve got value as potential hosts; Ba’al could have murdered a million people during his lifetime, and some within the SGC, within the IOA, might still considering him valuable enough to be kept alive. The thought makes rage rise like bile in John’s throat.
“They should’ve landed by now,” he says, returning to the talking. Easier that way: focus on this, now; the questions about the Goa’ulds’ fate can come later. Carson is keeping him stuck in this bed, but John would really like to stretch his legs. Take a walk. Breathe New Lantea’s air again and just let the waves of the City’s awareness wash over him, soothingly; but he can’t. Things are too busy. There’s still so much they haven’t told him: he’s been missing for days, and Pegasus offers no moments of idle rest.
He’s missed the City and his team more than anything.
“And they’ll use the Hebridan Gate?” Elizabeth asks.
“Yeah, that was the plan. Captain La’el mentioned something about having to get permission to use it from their government,” John says.
“Now that we know, we can ask General Landry to dial them,” Elizabeth says.
“Yeah.”
That sounds good. Really good. Having Rodney and Mer somewhere out there, in the depths of Avalon, unsafe—it doesn’t sit well with John. Not at all. (He won’t be truly happy until Rodney’s back in the City.)
“I’ll contact Earth again, let them know about this. Get some rest. It’s good to have you back, John.” Elizabeth gathers her datapad—she’s been taking a lot of notes—and leaves.
His team lingers. They’ve been here, listening. Now Teyla smiles. “Yes, it is good to have you back. How are you feeling now?”
“Better. You know, being back. That’s a lot better.”
“You sure McKay’s fine with those folks?” Ford asks. The kid might poke fun at Rodney, try limits, stretch them from time to time. But they’re still team. The Lieutenant—and Rodney; both—has grown since they first came to the City nearly two years ago. “The Hebridan?”
John shifts, tries to get comfortable. Infirmary beds are never like real beds. Too soft, and the noise of machinery disturbing. He wonders how long Carson’s going to keep him here—several days, probably, if the doc can have it his way. Testing, scanning, checking every hour, to ensure he’s well and truly back to himself. The doc’s already drawn what felt to John like a pint of blood.
“They’re not Wraith, if that’s what you mean,” he says. “But it’s not safer than that. I don’t know much about the Hebridan.”
“Yeah, what are they?” Ronon asks. “Human?”
“Well, they’re humanoid. Two species on one planet, I think? One human, one … not. Similar, kind of, but not completely human. But they’ve all got Dæmons and live together on their planet. SG-1 came in contact with them a few years ago,” John says. “A downed prison transport, or something like that. We started exchanging tech with them, ion engines, propulsion specs.”
“Yeah, I read those reports,” Ford nods. “Wasn’t there a race through space? Some kind of competition?”
Yeah. John had read those reports twice because, hey, space race? Too cool to pass up. Too bad it was before his time at the SGC and thus far no second chance has been forthcoming. “With Colonel Carter, yeah. Sounded like fun.”
“Or a good way to get killed,” the Lieutenant says wryly.
“That’s what a ground pounder would say. Only a real pilot can understand.”
Ford smirks. “If you say so, sir.”
“And the Hebridan people will allow Rodney and your cousin to use their Stargate to get home?” Teyla asks. Expectant.
“I think so. I hope so,” John amends because, in truth, he doesn’t know. And that scares the hell out of him. Rodney’s surrounded by strangers now and has got to explain the situation. Gain the Hebridans’ trust so they’ll help him. How’s Jenny going to react, the Raven gone and Mer in their place? What if Captain La’el turns to this stranger and decides to shuck them out of the nearest airlock?
John had thought he’d reach Earth before the connection with the Ancient communication stones broke and he’d never have to delve into that particular detail. It’d just be difficult and possibly messy and why would the Hebridans believe them? Not mentioning it was just the easier way out. He regrets it now. If he’d mentioned it …
John tries to relax into the mattress. A futile task. There’s a knot in his shoulders refusing to go away. A stray thought: at this distance, three million lightyears apart and no idea of the direction of which to send it, John’s sure Rodney will never hear it. But he thinks it anyway:
I hope you’re okay.
He looks at his team. “Your turn. Tell me what’s been going on while I’ve been gone.”
“… and the Aurora’s pretty beat up. I’ll forward Major Lorne’s reports,” Ford finishes off. It’s been a long talk, peppered with questions and occasional silences. Bad news and good news. A whole lot of shit can go down in a week.
The fight with the Wraith is bad news. In his heart John knew it was inevitable; one day, sooner or later, they’d run into them. The fact they’ve been able to keep the Aurora’s existence a secret this long from their enemies has been a bullet short of a miracle.
Weir has rotated new crew to the ship to help with repairs. Emergency only, for now. Once the Daedalus returns with more manpower and supplies they can pick up the pace. The Ancient Warship is holding orbit around a planet only a short jump from New Lantea—uninhabited and bare and Gateless. Hopefully the Wraith won’t pay that planet much attention. At least they’ve managed to fix the shields and integrated a Jumper’s cloaking mechanism into it, keeping the ship hidden for now. For now. The ace is no longer up their sleeve, but hopefully they can keep it in their palm for a few more weeks. Time enough to recover.
There were casualties. A few wounded. Three pilots down along with their F-302s, two marines down. It’s not as bad as it could have been but still a horrible blow, and John’s going to carry the guilt of not being there, of not being able to intervene, do something.
Weir has already written letters to the families; in his absence, Ford and Major Lorne signed them. John asks Ford to send him copies, and the Lieutenant doesn’t argue about even if John sees it in his face that he disagrees—Ford might question him sometimes, but he’s never disobeyed a direct order from his CO.
The good news come from Terra. Snow has been found—alive. The abbreviated version takes time to tell, and there’s still details needing to be ironed out. Ba’al’s capture; the revelation of a second Snake now possessing an NCIS agent now kept in stasis; the fire and bombing of the D.C. hospital, injuring Corporal MacGrimmon;
They’re recovering now. They’re all recovering, slowly. Ford explains he and Bates have gotten emails from Lieutenant Drew, already, requesting that once recovered Snow be returned to his team and active duty insofar the docs allow it. His injuries were bad but not untreatable. MacGrimmon is healing, and John wants both teams back in the City as soon as possible. They’re all good people and First Wavers, and that means a great deal. The City Herself trusts them.
He’s not sure how long they just sit there, AR-1, in a corner of the infirmary, and talk. Eventually his body protests—it’s been a long, long day. Teyla urges him to rest. Maybe he can’t, but he tries to sleep anyway, his team slipping out one by one until it’s just him and the Raven and the machines. The beeping of his heartbeats, slowing;
It starts the same. Without breath. A pressure on his chest and on his legs and he can’t move. They wailing, dying around him. Trapped. This time the City is burning, and Terra is burning, it’s all burning like stars, and he hears laughter darkly. He starts running, heavily, still seeking breath, but all he sees is fire and death, the faces of the dead: the ones he knows, Lyle and Dex and Jenkins and Miller and Spencer and then there’s those who Should Be Alive, Bates and Ford and Ronon and Teyla and Elizabeth and Jenny, they pile up, bodies, pale faces surrounded by fire, they keep piling up around him, a maze.
He’s running, searching, searching, he can’t see Rodney or Mer and the Raven’s held by an iron fist, out of reach, and their wings are broken. His back aches and he falls down, he tries to lift himself up again but can’t. He looks down, and he’s fallen not onto ground but onto a pile of ash, and it’s littered with bodies and blood, Things and People he’s killed; nameless Wraith numbering thousands (their ships raining down from the sky, Cruisers and Hives and Darts) and unknown shadows from dropped bombs on Terra long since churned to dust, and Colonel Everett choking Tell them the truth. please, tell them the truth, and all of the City, all of the City, Mer and Rodney and
[John, wake up.]
[John]
[it’s only a dream. wake up.]
He’s cold and sweating. He jerks into awareness painfully and inhales, inhales, inhales sharply and struggles to exhale. There’s light but—night. Yes. No sun. Closed walls. The lamps are dim and the moons nearing their full.
Shuddering, John closes his eyes again. Tries to force the images out of his mind. He listens to the beeping of the monitor. It speeds up, then slowly slowly slowly levels out again to a hundred, ninety, eighty beats per minute.
He looks at the ceiling, helplessly. Why don’t they stop?
[if you let us, we will stop the dreams for as long as you are here with us. but you must let us.]
The City is his lifeline, and he clings to it desperately.
He manages to fall asleep about an hour later.
He doesn’t dream.
“Doc, I’m fine. I’ve been stuck here all night. I’m good enough to leave. I need to be in the Control Room when we dial Earth.”
Carson gives him a warning look not to try anything—as if he would. Not on purpose, anyway. “All right. I want you back here for observation tonight, though.”
“Thanks, doc.” He grabs the crutches and it’s weird, it’s weird to be back in his own flesh. His leg hurts more than it did before. It feels like it, anyway. Must be his brain tricking itself. Fooled by the absence of pain there before—
(another kind of pain, instead. when he woke up, confused, John checked his torso for damage and there was no entry wound, no buried bullet, no scar.)
He makes his way out of the infirmary and heads for the nearest transporter.
The Gate Room looks the same, blessedly the same: it’s a bright morning. The windows are scorched with the pink and gold of dawn, backlighting the Stargate beautifully. The City is happy he’s back to himself, the lamps sharp and the air clean. It smells of home, and it sounds of home: the reassuring background noise of the Ancient walls humming and people pressing buttons in the Control Room and voices, footsteps.
The knife didn’t do as much damage as John had first feared. The two or three days he spent aboard the Explorer might’ve helped, too, given them some time to heal. Once they left the infirmary, Shy could stretch their wings and catch the air, and it holds them up. It only aches a little, and they won’t fly far or for too long.
They reach the Gate Room first and the voices in there halt: John senses it before he gets there. Shy is already finding a comfortable perch up in the rafters once he finally reaches the tall open doors.
Lieutenants Rutherford and Yamato from AR-7 are on guard duty this side of the Gate Room, flanking the doors and ready to spring into action should a wormhole form. They exchange a glance when John enters the spacious room. Then Yamato says, a hint of uncertainty and hope:
“Colonel Sheppard? Please tell me that’s you, sir.”
“The one and only, Lieutenant.”
There’s a small exhale. “Finally,” Yamato says. “Might warn you, sir, there’s been rumors going around that you’ve kicked the bucket.”
John grins, more bleakly than he’d like. “They exaggerated.”
“Sir, is it true Snakes are behind this?” Rutherford asks.
“Yeah.” He’s already thinking of a way to debrief all of the marines—both for his sake and theirs. A CO’s uncertain absence makes no soldier happy. And, given all that’s happened, he needs to do more than post a notice on the intranet. Summoning the City’s hundred-plus marines for a briefing is going to clash with schedules, but John can make it work. Once this has been resolved—yeah, once Rodney and Jenny are confirmed back on Terra and safe, and once the SGC has gotten their answers out of Ba’al. Then. “That’s all I can say for sure right now. We’re not out of this mess yet, Lieutenant.”
“Understood, sir. Just, uh—Lieutenant Snow? Heard something about Dr Weir, that she’s going to make an announcement …”
“Yeah,” John says; no point in denying it. In fact, he’s a little disappointed that word hasn’t gotten back to the City earlier. According to what they told him in the infirmary, Snow was found well over a day ago and has underwent a first surgery to correct his knee. “He’s alive and well at the SGC; AR-4 and his team found him. He went missing for a while, but he’s been brought back to the Mountain. He’s pulled out of surgery okay. You can let our guys know the good news.”
Rutherford’s face breaks into a broad smile. “That’s great news. Thanks, sir. Oh, the Doc’s in her office. Sergeant Bates is with her.”
On the way to there, John is stopped twice more, briefly. The Gate technician on duty, Chuck, says it’s good to have him back. An astrophysicist from Rodney’s department, Dr Biro, says hello and that Dr Zelenka would’ve been here but the guy’s been running himself ragged and finally got some rest. Apparently, he and Rodney had been trying to solve John’s disappearance without barely sleeping or eating, working nonstop for the whole week, handing over the regular duties of their department to other scientists.
They all deserve a break.
Heading for Weir’s office, John gets a pat on the back and a relieved welcome back, sir from half a dozen marines lounging in the Gate or Control Room. If they’re happening to hang around in proximity to their CO more than the previous norm, well, John’s not going to mention it in any report. There’s this sense of support, a web settled throughout the whole City and the people embody it: he’s stuck, suddenly, by the realization that this web is here to catch him should he fall or stumble. They’ll let him stumble, without blame, should he run out of strength or road;
Even if he had been pretty close to the guys in Afghanistan and, before, in Iraq and Kosovo and earlier (different constellations altogether)—they’d never been team like this. And people outside of that nearest circle certainly hadn’t cared to this depth. No more than they cared about other Captains and Lieutenants in the service. He hadn’t gotten close to a lot of people at the Academy save perhaps Holland, and then he lost him and Mitch and Dex in the wrecked chopper, and John hadn’t aimed to get close to anyone else in the service after that. (to anyone, really. thought it was proof when the thing with Nancy didn’t work out; he’s not a people person. it’s better he stopped trying.)
It’d just … it’s just make things too painful and complicated, because the darker part of John, that part which doesn’t want to trust anybody, is certain that people around him will be lost, and he isn’t ready to take the brunt of such a blow. Not again. So it’s easier, then, to simply—ignore people, and try to think of them as insubstantial and not get too close. Keep his distance and they’ll keep theirs;
His team had been an accident. How he refuses to let go of them. How protective he’s become, and they in turn. It wasn’t how he’d thought it be when he first asked Teyla, Rodney and Ford to become Atlantis Recon One with him.
Rutherford hadn’t mentioned the team, but John reaches the office to find half of AR-1 already present. Ford isn’t there; there are other duties to attend to which as XO he can’t ignore, especially since Carson hasn’t officially declared John back on active duty yet.
They’ve left one of the comfy white chairs empty, a wordless offer, and John gladly takes seat, getting some pressure off his leg. The painkillers help a little. The injury had started healing nicely when this mess began, and the ache is worse than it was a week ago: a shock to his whole system, being back in his own bruised flesh.
“Earth expects us to dial again in shortly,” Elizabeth says to explain why they’re all here, including Bates.
The Sergeant greets him with a nod. It’s curt but not cold; they’ve rubbed off each other the wrong way in the past, but John’s letting go of it now. Bates is a good Head of Security. “Sir.”
“What did they say last check-in?” John asks, directing the question to the whole room.
“They are still questioning Ba’al,” Weir says. “It turns out the one we apprehended is a clone.”
“Makes sense, since there was one aboard the ship I was taken to,” John says. “Kind of confused me when you said SGC had him in custody.”
“I still do not understand why they went through such a subterfuge,” Teyla says. “I know you have told me these Goa’uld are liars and murderers, but why did they take one of our marines and kill another man?”
“To them it’s all a game,” Bates says tightly, teeth gritted. “Who the hell knows what goes through the head of a Snake?”
But John thinks about it. “Ba’al got his hand on intel about Atlantis, about the Expedition. He even knew about the Aurora. Snow would have that intel or know how to access it.”
“You mentioned Ba’al sought a new host?” Elizabeth asks.
“Yeah. Either that, or he just wanted the City. I mean, Atlantis is more than a City, it’s a ship, is a weapon,” John says. “If you can control Her, at least.”
“Which is only possible for people with the ATA-gene,” Weir says.
“Yeah. So he needed someone with the ATA-gene to come to him first, lure them to Earth,” John says. “The way this is looking … The mole at the SGC; NID infiltrating the Trust and the Trust figuring it out … Ba’al must be controlling the Trust. My guess is they set this up a long time ago. They might’ve gotten a Snake into Everett around the same time they got one into Caldwell, planning to infiltrate the SGC and destroying Atlantis. Only it didn’t work out when Caldwell’s Snake failed its mission.”
“And we found out about the Ancient living in the City,” Teyla fills in, a light coming to her eyes. She’s starting to understand how the pieces fit together. “So the Goa’uld’s goal changed from destruction to conquest.”
“Yes,” Dr Weir says. “I think so, too. What worries me most is how easily Ba’al has managed to slip by unnoticed. NCIS dug into his past, that of his fake identity anyway, and his company—they uncovered the body of the former VP, Alex Jamesson, at the same time as they found Lieutenant Snow and apprehended Ba’al. He’d been dead for several days, possibly more. Ba’al has been de facto in charge of that company for months, using the same host as he did when SGC encountered him before.”
“Billions of people live on your planet,” Teyla says. “It is not easy to find a familiar face hiding among so many, especially as the Stargate is kept a secret on your world.”
“That’s true. But the company had dealings with several other major, publicly well-known companies. It was contracted by the Department of Defense itself.”
Oh, that only spells trouble. “How deep are we talking here?” John says.
“We don’t know. That’s what General O’Neill is looking into right now. He returned to the Pentagon as soon as he could, and General Landry assures me he’s being kept in the loop,” Elizabeth says.
John can guess that Carter and Jackson, what’s left of the original SG-1, would keep the General updated through private channels even if the rest of the SGC didn’t. It’s what a team would do.
“Ba’al got his hands on the Trust and got them fixed on his agenda,” Bates says, bitterly. “Seems like we can never wheedle them all out.”
Yeah, there’s a reason Snakes are hated by the people of the SGC in a different way from the Wraith. Wraith—they eat you, kill you, don’t ask too many questions. Go for the jugular. End it, painfully swiftly; a few of them toy with their food, but most simply don’t because it’s a waste of time and effort.
The Goa’uld—the Goa’uld imprison and torture and play games. They seek power; they don’t hunger for humans as food. They can play Cat and Mouse for half eternities for pure amusement, carve up your ribs and put you in a sarcophagus to heal, then start it over again, again, again. And the SGC has both used the Snakes’ ways for their own gain. Used it against them. Attempted to even out the ground by counteracting that kind of warfare with their own grey moral shades. Plenty of good people, innocent people, have died over the years because the Goa’ulds’ games, and it makes John’s blood boil coldly.
At least with Wraith there’s no ambiguity.
Personally, John thinks the SGC has done it fair share of mistakes with the Goa’uld. Tried to deal. Tried to make treaties. Hell, as if that’s even thinkable. That’s only worked when allies like the Asgard were on their side, and the Goa’uld still did all they could to screw up Earth and destroy them. Because why wouldn’t they? They sent an asteroid to ruin Earth and SG-1 barely averted in time; they’ve managed to get into the Mountain before, attempted sabotage.
Hell, they reached Atlantis. They got aboard the Daedalus. Into Caldwell. Into Everett. Who knows what kind of intel Ba’al and his minions have gotten their hands on? This is only the surface;
There’s still that second Goa’uld—they don’t know its name. Ba’al hasn’t said, refuses to speak of it. A convenient ally, John thinks. The System Lords always end up fighting each other. They can’t be cooperating forever. The second one is being kept in stasis with its unwilling host, Agent Caitlin Todd. Another innocent person dragged into this fuck of a mess.
“The thing is, the Trust has a lot of contacts. The NID, helped by the SGC, has been trying to clean up for a long time,” Weir says and sighs. “But corruption reaches a terribly long way. I can’t think of a single government on Earth that’s free from it. The truth is we don’t know how deep this goes. We’ve seen before how politicians and military have gotten involved with them and tried to change the SGC to suit their needs.”
“I would like to know more of this,” Teyla says.
“Before General Landry, there was another General, Hammond, in charge,” John explains. “I read some of the reports. Well, I read between the lines. They tried to make him resign once.”
“Yeah,” Bates says. “I heard about it. They probably threatened family—that’s the Trust’s MO. SG-1 solved that one and General Hammond returned. There was that senator, Kinsey. The Trust tried to frame O’Neill for attempted murder in order to get rid of him at the SGC. Frankly, it was a mess. They nearly succeeded.”
Kinsey is one of the typically shady guys and will probably end up hurting more people in the future. He’s still walking free, after all, despite his crimes. One of a hundred, a thousand men like him, and his involvement with the Trust doesn’t make it any better. John doesn’t like most politicians, never have. They’re always lying and hiding and doing things for their own gain. Power’s dangerous that way. There’s no good way to power. Same in the military and everywhere else where money’s involved, really.
He looks at Weir; she’s got the same expression in her eyes. Oh, she knows a lot about that. She’s a diplomat, and she’s been to war in ways John hasn’t. He’s been pulling triggers and dropping bombs, but most of the time he never got close to the people truly giving the orders. The people signing the papers and counting the votes. Those people who never held a gun themselves, who never killed someone, or, worse, those who had and still don’t give a damn because it’s all about money. (On Terra, it’s all about money.)
“Yes. We know they’re not afraid of taking huge risks like that. Ba’al has been making clones,” Elizabeth says. “We’re still not sure how many.”
“So,” John says, dryly, “there could be more of them. Great.”
“Then how shall we find them?” Teyla asks.
Elizabeth rubs at her brow tiredly. “I don’t know. We’ll need people on our side on Earth. I’m sure General O’Neill will do what he can to help us.”
The worst fear would be for the highest of the high-ups to be compromised. Chiefs of Staff. Ministers, Generals. Hell, even the VP or the President or other world leaders—the Trust could plant lurkers, seeds to grow slowly and turn Earth into a hellhole. It’s a disturbing thought, and John can’t be the only one in the room to think it.
Granted, Colonels Everett and Caldwell weren’t that high up the chain—but enough. They can have mingled with all sorts of people during their time as hosts, before discovery, and Caldwell doesn’t remember everything he did. Only snapshots. Flashes; imagery; noise, disjointed; a sparse few completed sentences before he was silenced and his Dæmon nearly strangled to death. Everett is dead; they can ask him no questions.
A heavy silence lingers in the office. The realization that this could just be the tip of a huge iceberg threatens to sink them. If they had a timemachine, John would use it to turn it all back, to ensure this mess never had happened; no recalls to Terra; no broken bodies and shattered recon teams. (But if he did, Ba’al would still be out there, uncaught. There’s a bitter aftertaste in his mouth. Is there no right way to do things? Why is the price always so high and the fears growing after the fact?)
Elizabeth breaks the silence, reaching for her earpiece. It’s time. “Banks, please dial Earth.”
It’s a live video feed from the Conference Room on Level 26. General Landry is there, sitting by the table, and Agent Gibbs, and Colonel Carter, gathered around a conference table. And—John’s throat tightens, but then he takes a deep breath, and relief shudders through him.
Jenny. Rodney. Meredith. They’re safe. They’re alive. They’re back on Terra (the first step home). They’re safe.
They’re safe.
They’re sitting there by the table, shadowed by a couple of marines; John recognizes them. That’s Gamble from AR-9 and Kemp from AR-4. Whether that’s by orders from the General or someone else, or an action of their own, John doesn’t know and at this moment he doesn’t care to ask. The important thing is that they’re at the SGC and no longer trapped in hyperspace or on a foreign planet.
The words of the debriefing are mostly spoken by Landry, Weir, and Special Agent Gibbs. Jenny is mostly quiet—the shock isn’t over. A wave uncrested, far from the shore. But the bruises she’d gained are faded now, and she’s alert, following conversation, eyes bright. She nods faintly in John’s direction through the lens. It’s good to see she’s better, at least on the outside.
John listens to what said distantly, like it’s an old recording losing focus. He seeks out Rodney’s gaze through the camera; it’s difficult, the plasma screen flat and cold.
But with the Stargate open, the distance between them is abruptly shortened from lightyears to yards, and John concentrates, tries to think: it’s good to see you/I’m so glad you’re okay/are you okay?, and Rodney doesn’t flinch but blinks a few times, and there isn’t exactly a concrete thought in reply, more of a touch, gentle and careful. Like trying to say: I can hear you/I’m here/we’re okay.
Makes him shiver.
“… and what’s left to deal with are the Snakes. We’ve gotten what answers we will from Ba’al,” General Landry is saying. “Once the Daedalus arrives, we’ll extract the second one from Agent Todd using the Asgard beaming technology. We’ve contacted Caldwell via substance, and he believes that it can be done with Hermiod’s help.”
Hermiod? Right, the resident Asgard aboard the Daedalus. John hasn’t been aboard the Daedalus properly, never met the guy. Frankly, the Asgard sort of creep him out. Not just the way they look, naked and grey, but the whole cloning thing, transferring their minds into new bodies once their old ones begin to decay—that kind of longevity isn’t normal. It reminds him too much of the Wraith, who refuse to die. And also of the Ancients, who clung to life—oh, humans do it too. John does: he wants to live. But he wouldn’t ever want to clone himself, make copies and copies and copies in order to survive. To live forever. The Ancients choose Ascension, but that also has a price.
“What about Ba’al?” Elizabeth asks.
“He’s tight-lipped,” Agent Gibbs says. “Hell, I think he’s toying with us, waiting for us to make a bad move and let him escape.”
“Dr Frasier confirms the one in custody with us is a clone,” Carter says. “That raises questions about where the original might be. Colonel Sheppard, you and Director Sheppard encountered another Ba’al aboard his ship, right?”
“Yes,” John says, clears his throat. “Yeah, there was one.” At that time, he didn’t know anything about cloning facilities. His concerns had been for Jenny, and for the City which could come under attack. He’s already told this story to Weir and the others, and she’s sent his statement to Earth in a databurst. He won’t tell it all again. He’s too tired, too drained inside to be able to bother. “But he’s dead. Director Sheppard shot him with a 9mil before we escaped in the Death Glider, and when the ship blew there’s no way he could’ve survived.”
“Scans taken by the Prometheus confirms that,” Carter agrees.
“Colonel, according to your report, former Colonel Dillion Everett was aboard that ship, possessed by a Goa’uld,” General Landry says.
And sharply, unwillingly, John recalls the weight of the zat in his hand, the sensation of Shy’s wing limping and the tremble of a power buildup in the corridors. The noise of the ship, the alarm, the Jaffa firing and the blast hitting Everett and his eyes glazing over. That final moment of clarity;
“Yes, sir,” he says stiffly.
He knew talking about it was inevitable, but having everyone expectantly looking at him, he’s unsure how much he’ll be able to put to words. He’d told his team and Weir the abbreviated version of events. He hadn’t explained in detail every little thing Ba’al said or made Everett do. The knife against Shy, tearing apart the feathers and the muscle beneath; the cold emptiness of Everett’s eyes, his lifeless Dæmon. He never told them the man shot himself. No. He was killed by the Jaffa staff weapon—that’s all they need to know. Everett was a good marine, and Ba’al was the one who turned him. Played on his fears. His family deserves to remember him as he was before, as a Colonel always loyal to the Corps.
If Rodney’s searched the pockets of his uniform, he must’ve found Everett’s wedding ring. Unless they were lost somewhere along the line. John wants the ring to be given to Everett’s family. To let them know he died a marine, remembering them. This might not be the time to make such a request, though. He’ll email Rodney with instructions to give the ring to General Landry; he can have it given to Everett’s family, his now widowed wife. John doesn’t even know her name.
(Wife. Children. Everett had gasped, choking on blood and despair, pleading for John to tell his family the truth.)
“The Jaffa killed him,” John says. “Staff blast. I never found out how long he’d been a host, but it must’ve been weeks.”
“We suspect he was taken shortly before his last hearing here on Earth,” General Landry says. “The way he resigned—well, it explains much in hindsight.”
“Sir, Everett recognized me. He was coherent for a minute or so before he died. He asked that his family be told the truth about what happened,” John says. “I think—he remembered what he’d done, but his Dæmon was already dead.” He’d asked for forgiveness. John had given it. It’s like with Colonel Sumner: he wishes there was something, something he could’ve done. A single choice. But it’s too late now.
“I’ll make sure his family is notified,” the General says. “That is all for now, Colonel. Unless you have something to add, Dr Weir?”
“No, General. We’ve included our latest reports in the databurst,” Elizabeth says. “Just one more question. What’s to become of Ba’al and the other Goa’uld once it’s extracted from Agent Todd?”
“That’s still being debated. The IOA have their notions, and I’m sure NCIS do too. I’m planning to have a meeting about that matter shortly,” the General says. “If you dial back in twenty-four hours, we hope to have some more answers.”
“All right. Thank you, General. Atlantis out.”
“SGC out.”
The Stargate is shut down.
And now Rodney is stuck on Earth. Three million lightyears away. They can’t speak, can’t share thoughts. Their Bond is muted. But at least he and Mer are safe there. Deep inside the Mountain, they’re out of (direct) harm.
But the two Goa’uld are there, too. John would like to solve it the quick and easy way: but that’s a morally grey decision and the IOA probably won’t make it so.
No. To the IOA, to some at the SGC and the Pentagon, Ba’al is an asset—for intelligence, knowledge, hell, even scientific experiments into Goa’uld physiology. John’s pessimistic enough to believe that the Trust has infiltrated deeply, laid down roots within one or more Terran governments and getting to them all is going to be next to impossible. At least while the SGC remains a classified secret.
Ba’al should be executed and the body burned, thrown out of an airlock, erased from existence. Maybe that’s thirst for revenge coursing through him, tainting him—anger: Ba’al has killed an NID agent and probably hundreds of other humans, Ba’al nearly killed one of his marines, Ba’al kidnapped Jenny and had her harmed, Ba’al killed Everett, Ba’al is why his father was stabbed in New York, Ba’al is why Rodney was shot and why they’re now galaxies apart;
Yeah, it’s personal. It’s damned personal and John wants that Snake torn out of its host, ripped from the spine.
(They can’t do that from here.)
The mess hall is full of people and doesn’t feel that much quieter than usual. Kind of the opposite. With the Aurora’s return came a lot of people, leaving only a skeleton crew behind to maintain its systems, waiting for support via the Daedalus. It’ll be at least a few days before Elizabeth sends more people to help with repairs. The Warship is hidden and not going anywhere. Some engineers and technicians have been away from the City for weeks to work aboard the Aurora, now reuniting with the rest of their people.
The doctors have finally released John from the infirmary, urging him to eat properly in the mess hall with everyone else before getting some sleep. John can bet Carson is going to call him back to the infirmary next morning for some tests and scans. At least his head’s not spinning or aching anymore.
They claim the team’s usual table out on the broad balcony: weather’s nice today, warm and sunny. It’s good, being back. Sitting here with the team. Together. Even if Rodney’s missing: this hole carved out cruelly, and they can’t do anything but wait until the wound mends itself.
He picks at the food, which is steaming hot. John couldn’t carry the tray himself because of the crutches, so he couldn’t intervene when Ronon grabbed a ton of it, overfilling the plate. Part of John is ravenous, but part of him can’t bother. He pushes the food around with his fork a little. The taste is sharp. Maybe it’s the transitioning: when he was on Terra and aboard the Explorer, in Rodney’s flesh, everything was dim and distant. Noise, sight, smell, taste—coffee had been little more than poorly flavored water. Simply eating this is somewhat overwhelming, and not just because Private Martin, in charge of the day’s meals, is overly enthusiastic about garlic.
“These are, uh, those beans from P3R…P2R…whichever?”
“Takara, yes,” Teyla says smoothly.
“It’s good,” Ronon says, grinning.
“You say everything’s good when it comes to food,” Ford points out.
Yeah. John figures that’s because Ronon’s been on the run from the Wraith for years and years, and there must’ve been days, weeks, when he hardly got anything to eat. Couldn’t visit too many populated planets; the Wraith would follow. Had to hunt. Ronon has been forced to take care of only himself and his Dæmon for so long, without luxuries or rest or comforts; he’s still adapting to the Lantean way of life.
Maybe sometimes the Lieutenant forgets that: that Ronon was a Runner. Thankfully, the Satedan doesn’t take ill to the comment. He only chews and swallows and says: “Why lie?”
It’s not every day, sitting here, his team feels the urge to talk. Sometimes it’s simply not necessary. But right now John wants to hear their voices, even if just discussing something as boring as food. Assure himself that, yeah—he’s back, they’re here, he’s not dreaming.
Maybe they’re healed enough now they could try to fly. Sweep across the ocean. Not far—not out of sight from the City. Circle the Towers and the Piers. John thinks about that, tests a wing experimentally lifting it to catch the air: they’re far enough up to feel the strong upwind. It’s a damn good temptation—too good to resist—and, despite a slight lingering ache, Shy takes the leap.
“You seem better,” Teyla says, Kanaan following the movement with his gaze.
“It’s good to be back,” John says softly.
They stay in the air.
Chapter 36: landing, part four
Summary:
the shit he’s been through, he’s allowed to be grouchy.
Notes:
(2018-06-25) Thank you everyone for reading and leaving feedback! I'm trying to return to writing more in-between job hunting, since I'm as of last week unemployed. This fic been quite a journey, and right now I'm at the point where I have gaps to fill, mainly to the next 2-3 chapters. The ending's actually kind of finished already (which almost never happens!), and I'm quite pleased how this fic turned out. This chapter is focused on Rodney and the SGC, and I know a lot of you are impatiently waiting for a reunion - it will come, I promise! Just hold on for a little longer ... I can tell you that there's going to be one more installment in the 'landing' sequence, and after it'll be all about Rodney and John catching up. Please enjoy!
Chapter Text
xxxvi.
landing
part four
the shit he’s been through, he’s allowed to be grouchy.
Cheyenne Mountain Complex, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 22, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 148 days after the Uprising
The marines guarding the Gate on Level 28 have orders to be at ease, and only raise their weapons if provoked. They’re expecting a guest and ally, not an enemy, and being surrounded by the muzzles of semiautomatics wouldn’t leave a very good impression.
General Landry awaits in the Gate Room to greet them, rather than up in the Control Room. Carter decided to be here, too; she’s met the Hebridans before, and is the one at the SGC with most experience with these people. Her presence might make all the difference, if the situation turns out less than ideal.
“Incoming wormhole! Receiving IDC,” Sergeant Harriman announces. “It’s the Hebridan homeworld. Opening the iris.”
The titanium and trinium iris is rolled back on itself, revealing the shimmering blue of the active Stargate. It’s a sight Landry will never get tired of, even if, at times, the vision is at the center of his nightmares. A few moments later, a striking figure walks through the puddle.
General Landry hasn’t had the pleasure of dealing much with the Hebridans before; most of what he knows comes from reading reports and old accounts rather than true meetings. This one isn’t human, and her accompanying Dæmon beautifully alien in Shape. If he had to categorize it, he’d said it’s some kind of lizard, with iridescent purple and green scales.
“Welcome to Earth. I’m General Hank Landry, commander of this facility.”
“Thank you, General. I am Senator Hera Casterra, representative of the United Hebridan Senate. I’m told Tau’ri shake hands in greeting?” She walks down the ramp and offers a hand, showing no distress at being surrounded by Tau’ri soldiers. She has a good, strong grip.
The General smiles. “Some of us, yes. I understand I have you to thank for getting our people home.”
“For that you really need to thank Captain La’el and her crew, one of which has chosen to come with me to Earth.”
Someone else exits the Stargate behind the Senator. Colonel Carter recognizes him at once. “Warrick!”
“Hello, Samantha Carter. It’s been too long.” They shake hands vigorously. “You look well.”
“Yeah. It’s good to see you.”
Lastly, the event horizon ripples a final time, and two humans, carrying their Dæmons in their arms, step through. One is wearing a standard issue BDU, and there’s blood on it, old and dark and dry, and a hint of dust, and a 9mil is strapped around his thigh. The woman’s white blouse is also stained and burned, torn open at the side and hastily mended with mismatching thread. The hint of flesh beneath, however, is pristine and unscarred. They look tired and worn, and, in General Landry’s opinion, like they’ve been through several levels of hell.
The medical standing by are immediately upon them. Landry would like to think they’re out of the woods, but there’s a chance they’re both infected by the Goa’uld. Same with their two Hebridan guests. Dr Frasier is going to take a good look at all of them, just in case. Also to find out what has happened. The details: a lot is still missing.
He can see that the man is Dr McKay, not John Sheppard—that Dæmon is much more natural. Director Jenny Sheppard matches the picture in her file, albeit also shaken, hair at slight disarray like she put into a hasty knot yesterday and can’t bother to fix it again. They both need to be okayed by the med team before being debriefed.
“Dr McKay, it’s good to have you back. Director Sheppard, welcome back to Earth and to Stargate Command.”
Her voice is more steady than he’d expect from someone who’s been through what she must’ve been, seen it, been exposed to Stargates in this violent manner. Then again, she’s in charge of NCIS. Used to be a Special Agent. “Thank you, General.”
“Hank Landry, US Air Force,” he clarifies. “This is Colonel Carter, and Dr Frasier.”
“Yes, I need a doctor,” McKay blurts loudly. “Also, food. I’m going into hypoglycemic shock here because Sheppard eats like a bird. And someone needs to contact the City. Wait, we can’t do that without the ZedPM which hasn’t arrived yet, has it? When’s the Daedalus due? What day is it?”
“All in good time, Dr McKay,” Landry says. “As for the day, it’s the twenty-second of February. Please follow Dr Frasier to the infirmary.”
The man makes a noise of protest when Dr Frasier takes him by the arm, but it’s a true sign of how worn out he is when he doesn’t break into a full-out tirade. Landry became a little more familiar with Dr McKay’s characteristics last time he was on Earth. This time, McKay follows Dr Frasier’s orders.
While the doctor and her team usher McKay and Director Sheppard onto a pair of gurneys—they may be strong enough to walk to the infirmary or they may not—the General gestures for the Senator and Warrick to follow.
“We’ll talk as soon as Dr Frasier has had a look,” he says. The Hebridans oblige. “This way.”
The briefing room on Level 27 is brightly lit and the dark table gleams. Normally, if an alien ambassador were coming and they had some more advanced warning, General Landry would try to show them something of Earth other than the grey walls of the Mountain. Something beautiful or pleasing. Normally, that’d be through food more exciting than the standard commissary fare, and Dr Jackson is usually more than happy give a presentation with vivid pictures on display. Not this time, though.
Senator Hera Casterra explains why she’s even here: why they didn’t simply let Dr McKay and Director Sheppard walk through the Gate on their own.
“My government is glad to help you, General, and get your people home. We are certain you would do the same for us. What we would like in exchange is some information. The Senate is worried, because we heard from Dr McKay and Director Sheppard that they were taken by the Goa’uld, a System Lord named Ba’al. To our knowledge, your people had defeated the Goa’uld. Now we fear this might represent a threat that could return. I have been sent to determine whether we should command raised alertness.”
“I see. Well, the situation is slightly complicated. Most of the Goa’uld are gone. However, the one called Ba’al has been hiding on Earth for several years, pretending to be one of us, keeping a low profile. This came to light only recently. We’re still investigating the matter,” General Landry says, “but we now have everyone involved in custody. We also know that the ship which took our people prisoner has been destroyed. We sent a ship of our own to investigate, but when it got there, there was no sign of any survivors.”
“Yes, they told us as much. Captain La’el and her ship, the Explorer, found them in a damaged Death Glider, surrounded by debris,” the Senator says, consulting notes from a small data device in front of her.
“Yes,” the Hebridan Warrick says. “We were probing a moon when we caught a massive explosion on our scanners, and quickly went to investigate. Scanning the Death Glider, we found four weak lifesigns and took them aboard.”
“Despite knowing it’s a Goa’uld ship?” Carter asks. “That’s quite a risk.”
“We had to. We’re curious, and we wanted to find out who they were. I also think the Captain said she had a hunch about the whole thing: someone out there needed our help. Turns out she was right,” Warrick says and smiles a little. “It was just in time, too. We got the Glider into our loading bay …”
“Well, you’re extremely lucky,” Dr Frasier says wryly. “A few inches to the left and you’d be dead. The bullet went straight through and barely missed the liver. I’m curious as to the technology that healed this. It looks like some kind of sealant or glue rather than stitches, covering the scar tissue.”
That’s nice. Apparently, he and Jenny Sheppard are also perfectly Goa’uld-free, which is always nice to hear.
“Don’t ask me,” Rodney says snidely; he’s cranky and can’t help it. He wants food (hot real proper food; he wasn’t lying when he said John eats like a bird: that is, too little), a nice long hot shower, and a bed. In that order. And he wants to go home, back to Atlantis. Home—that sounds great.
Part of him (he doesn’t say anything out loud) wants to march right to John’s quarters, or wherever else John might be at this moment, and just—hug him. Wrap his arms tight around him not say anything, not whisper nonsense, just … just hold him and feel his heartbeat against his own. But that’s too soft and sentimental and cliché for the Dr Rodney McKay the people around to know about, so he doesn’t voice any such thoughts. Keeps them locked in.
“Look, can I go now?”
“Oh, not a chance, doctor. I want to keep you here for observation overnight. You’re slightly anemic, your heartrate is elevated, blood pressure on the high side, blood sugar a little low. I’m prescribing some iron and vitamin supplements to boost your immune system. The injury needs time to heal properly.”
He waves a hand, tries to get rid of her. He’s not a big fan of medical doctors and their voodoo—Carson is tolerable, being a friend and colleague, but Dr Frasier he barely knows, and she’s poking and prodding far too much with those loathsome needles. What’s the point? He’s proved not to be possessed by a Goa’uld or other entity. He really, really needs to eat something. He knows the signs of incoming hypoglycemia all too well, and there’s no John or Ronon around to steal a powerbar from.
“Yes, yes, whatever. At least let me take a shower. And eat,” Rodney demands. “Real food.”
“All right. You can go to your quarters and get cleaned up. As soon as you’ve had a meal I want you back here.” Dr Frasier fixes him with a stern look. “Understood?”
He sighs and scowls. “Yes, yes. Be back as soon as possible. Got it.” So he can’t sleep in his own (borrowed) bed in a private room, but in the infirmary surrounded by beeping machines and annoying people. Great.
The doctor lets him slide off the infirmary bed, calling for one of the marines—ah, great. He’s proved Not To Be A Goa’uld, and they still assign him an escort. Rodney glares at them both. That might be petulant, but whatever. The shit he’s been through, he’s allowed to be grouchy. The marine isn’t fazed. It takes a moment to realize that he recognizes the guy’s face.
“Hi, doc,” the marine says. The name on his uniform reads Lieutenant Kemp. He’s an Atlantis marine; what’s he doing here? Rodney can’t really remember which recon team the guy is on, but, whatever. He shouldn’t, logically, be here. “I’m going to take you to your quarters at Level 25.”
“I know where they are,” Rodney snarks. “Why are you following me?”
“Doctor’s orders. You’re to have an escort until you’re better,” the marine says, shrugs dismissively in a manner he no doubt learned from John. He can be a terrible influence sometimes.
“I can’t believe this,” Rodney grouses, but walks out of the infirmary and heads for the elevator. The marine follows dutifully, easily keeping pace. “Fine. Did Sheppard put you up to this? He did, didn’t he.”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about, sir.”
“I will disable the hot water to your quarters in the City,” Rodney says, stabbing a finger at the elevator controls. The doors slide closed and the machine starts to life them upward. “I can figure out which room in the Citadel you’re using. I can figure out which room you’re using here in the Mountain too. Cut off power.”
The marine glances skyward and mutters something that sounds suspiciously like: ‘Oh, heck, why didn’t Gladys get this one?’. “Just doing what I’m told, sir,” the guy says pleasantly. Then he adds, after a moment’s pause: “Please don’t disable the hot water, doc.”
Rodney holds up a hand. “First, stop calling me ‘doc’. That’s ‘Dr McKay’ to you. Second, if you’re going to follow me around everywhere, you are going to tell me who gave you the order, Lieutenant.”
“I’ve already told you, Dr McKay. General Landry and Dr Frasier wants you to have an escort until you’re better.” Rodney keeps glaring. The marine yields, knowing it’s the better alternative. “There, uh, might’ve been a message from the City, sir. From Lieutenant Ford. To keep an eye on you.”
Lieutenant Kemp says it with an entirely straight face, but Rodney can guess how that email was worded. John wouldn’t dare to write such an email himself—he might not even be awake; Carson probably keeps him in the City’s infirmary under lock and key—but Ford would, and Rodney’s going to yell at him for that, and pull a (mostly) harmless prank as payback. (And then, if he forgives him for being so annoying and protective, he might thank him, if only to see Ford gape in shock.)
The elevator comes to a halt and the doors open. The corridor here is less busy, and Rodney starts walking. He tries to walk angrily but finds that hurts his side a bit and he has to slow down. The marine is half a step behind, matching the speed with ease.
He reaches the door to his quarters—VIP; only command staff and important SGC personnel have singles, and he fumbles for his keycard. And then he realizes, damn it, he doesn’t have it. He has no idea where John put it. Maybe he lost it aboard the ship.
“Need some help, Dr McKay?”
Rodney narrows his eyes at the Lieutenant, daring him to smirk or laugh. The man doesn’t. He only hands him a keycard, blank and without a name on it, stating only its security clearance. It’s high enough to enter every room on this level.
Rodney relents. A little. But only a little. He’s got a reputation to uphold. “Maybe you can be useful.”
The Lieutenant thankfully doesn’t follow him through the door. He stands guard outside while Rodney showers and finds some clean, fresh clothes to wear. He follows him to the mess hall, next, and doesn’t simply watch Rodney hoarding a portion but grabs something to eat, too. A Mountain marine mightn’t do that, but a Lantean would.
“So, which one are you?”
“Which team, you mean, sir? AR-4. That’s MacGrimmon’s team.”
“Ah, yes.” He has no idea who that is. By the look of Lieutenant Kemp’s face, the marine is all too aware.
“You called him ‘MacGyver’ once. Last year.”
“I did. Yes, so I did. Yeah, right, you’re the team who was there when the Ancient …” Rodney lets his voice fade. He doesn’t like thinking about that incident too much. In a way, that was a catalyst leading to this: finding the secret lab, meeting Icarus, the revelation of the Goa’uld in Caldwell, the attempted destruction of Atlantis. AR-4 had been there when Icarus tried—took John over, took control.
Kemp stiffens slightly. Doesn’t prefer to consider those times either, then. “Yeah, sir. We were there.”
Rodney struggles to let go of that train of thought. Resumes eating. Food is always a good distraction.
“Mm, this food is good. Really good. And for once no citrus. I don’t understand why some of you marines on KP duty only know how to pour salt, pepper, and lemon on everything. There are other spices. Lemon isn’t even a spice.”
“I wouldn’t know, sir.”
“Oh, please, all the City marines have been on KP duty at least once during the first year. Except Ford and Sergeant Bates. So we learned which ones of you should never be allowed in a kitchen again. Sheppard told me all about it and warned me which ones of you were the most likely to kill me by accidentally exposing me to lemon or something else I’m deathly allergic to.”
Kemp’s mouth twitches into a smile.
“Oh, wait.” Rodney narrows his eyes at the guy. “You’re the one who nearly set the place on fire.”
“I deny any such accusations, sir.”
Rodney bites back a groan. “Ford is doing this on purpose. He assigned you do this as punishment for something I’ve done. What the hell did I do? I haven’t upset him for weeks. We haven’t disagreed on a mission since … since … I don’t know. I can’t remember; therefore it can’t be important.”
“To be fair,” the Lieutenant admits, “MacGrimmon was going to do it, until he got stabbed. Kind of his idea and we ran with it.”
“Stabbed?” Rodney blurts. Sure, he’s not as in the loop about the marines as John is (would be), but he’d like to think someone would tell him these things as Chief Science Officer of the Expedition.
“You haven’t heard, sir?”
“No, I’ve been trapped aboard an alien ship and before that, I’ve been … busy. Tell me everything that’s happened here on Earth for the past, oh, three or four days. And, yes, that’s an order.”
“What my government is asking for are reassurances. The possibility of a System Lord being out there is not heartening,” Senator Casterra says. “We must do all we can to give our people answers. An emergency session was held before I left through the Stargate, where the Senate discussed the news given to us by Captain La’el and the Tau’ri. What do you know of this?”
“We can’t give a hundred percent guarantee,” Carter says, “since they may be one or two minor Goa’ulds still out there. But all of the major players are gone. The ones with fleets and power—Ba’al was the last one.”
“And he can’t reach Hebridan?”
“No,” General Landry promises. “You can tell your Senate that we’ve taken care of the problem, and it’s about time. Our people who were taken by him were targeted as a bigger plot, which we’ve managed to uncover. We’re grateful for your assistance in the matter, Senator, Mr Warrick.”
“The Senate will be relieved to hear that, General. I feel obligated to warn you, though, that by extending this help to you, my government might feel you owe us a favor of equal weight in the future. We may call for your help, should we ever need it.”
One thing General Landry has learned during his time at the SGC it’s to play diplomat. He doubts he’ll ever be as good at is as Dr Weir or even the IOA, who can wrap poison in sweet words and make even conspirators believe in it. But he’s passable, and a lot of the time that’s enough. “Understandable, Senator. If it’s anything similar to what’s happened here, we’ll do our best to assist if the time comes.”
The Senator stands. “Thank you, General. Then my work here is done. I have things I must do back home.”
“As have I,” Warrick says. “My ship is waiting for me—the Explorer should be recharged now.” He turns to Carter. “It’s been a great pleasure to see you again, Colonel Carter. Perhaps we’ll meet again in the near future.”
Carter smiles and offers her hand the Tau’ri way. “You too, Warrick. If you need to win another Loop of Kon Garat …”
The Hebridan gladly returns the gesture. “Then I know where to find my co-pilot.”
Chapter 37: landing, part five
Summary:
her face is relaxed. at rest. doesn’t look like she’s in pain. possessed. soul screaming. it’s silent:
Chapter Text
xxxvii.
landing
part five
her face is relaxed. at rest. doesn’t look like she’s in pain. possessed. soul screaming. it’s silent:
Cheyenne Mountain Complex, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 22, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 148 days after the Uprising
J.J. is shaken awake at the intrusive noise of the Gate alarm, tightly followed by a technician announcing: “Incoming traveler!” There’s no other warning, though, no thunder of boots on concrete, so he figures it’s the safe routine of an SG-team returning home, not an alien incursion.
“How are you feeling?” Gladys asks, sitting in the plastic chair on the bed’s left side. Looks like she’s been there for a while, and J.J.’s heart warms, touched. He’s not that bad off; there’s no absolute need for his teammates to keep vigil.
The chair is worn down from having been used so much by various marines over the years vising their sick or injured teammates, creaking slightly. An open book rests across the marine’s knees. She’s ditched most of her uniform, wearing a black t-shirt that’s almost casual, but Gladys would never fully let down her hair on base, even off-duty.
Not that often that Lanteans are here, but at least he’s not alone.
“Better,” J.J. says. The infirmary bed is soft and springy and he’d like to get out of it now. This was not how he’d planned to spend his two-week Earth leave. The docs have closed the wound up neatly, and the painkillers take care of the distant ache. Honestly, he’s more than ready to leave the Mountain. That is, if the General will allow it. AR-4 and AR-9 should be cleared: this whole debacle over. Almost over. Surgery went well, so that’s good. “What time is it?”
“Fourteen hundred hours,” DeSalle says, standing on the other side of the bed.
J.J. cranes his neck. His whole team isn’t here, and the only other people nearby are a nurse and Herschel by Snow’s side. The German is fiddling with a mobile phone, playing some kind of game which bleeps every now and then. Snow is asleep, snoring softly, the machinery keeping track of his heartbeats.
“Uh, where’s Kemp?”
“Hanging out with Dr McKay. No, really,” Gladys says, calmly meeting J.J.’s disbelieving look. “We drew straws. Yeah, the doc’s back, and we heard the Old Man’s back in the City.”
“Back to normal,” DeSalle says. “Whatever counts as normal.”
“Okay. Good. I think,” J.J. says, slowly. Considering. Yeah. That’s good to hear, after everything. But honestly—Kemp is watching over the doc? Of all people? Well, if the two end up in an escalating argument because of something Kemp does or the doc says, J.J. ain’t going to take blame.
“Don’t worry, we’ve agreed to take shifts with Recon nine,” Gladys says, as if reading his mind. “We’re going to report back to the LT next time Atlantis dials in.”
AR-9. “How’s Mitch doing?”
“Better,” DeSalle says, nodding, for once his face not fiercely grim and tense. He’s also taken off his uniform jacket, and he walks over to an empty infirmary bed to J.J.’s right, hopping up to sit on its edge. “He’s going to be okay. I think the medics will keep him here for a while longer—you too, Corps. Lieutenant Drew is writing an email to Sergeant Bates and the Colonel with a sitrep. I asked her to mention your recovery. Want to add anything?”
J.J. shakes his head and sinks deeper into the pillow. “Thanks. I’m sure she’s got it covered.”
“By the way,” Gladys says, “got the chance to call the family. I’m flying to London on Monday.”
Something, a twinge that could be disappointment, sinks in J.J.’s belly, but he can’t begrudge her or the rest of his team some true time off. Off Atlantis; off base. Away from the SGC, the Mountain. But it’s … strange. They’ve stuck together through the thick and thin for well over a year, the majority of that time cut off from Earth altogether without promises. They’ve become so tight, it’s weird imagining life without them. And that’s the weirdest bit of all—if someone’d walked up to Corporal MacGrimmon two or three years ago and said: yeah, you’re gonna get stuck in another galaxy with a Brit and two US marines, one’s a grouch and the other a clown, they’re gonna be your team, and you’re gonna lead them—J.J. would’ve laughed in their face. Asked what stuff they’re on.
He doesn’t laugh now. He just nods. Gladys mentioned, in the early days when they were still getting to know each other, she’s from the northern part of England, but he figures flying to London is easier. “Tell them where you’ve been?” he asks lightly but almost like it’s a serious question.
“Very funny, Corps,” she snorts. “Yeah, they think I’ve been in Antarctica. MacMurdo.”
“You know,” DeSalle says, “I’m kind of disappointed I was never there. See any bears?”
“That’s the Arctic,” Gladys says, sharing a long-suffering look with her team leader. “And I wasn’t to the Antarctic either, that’s just what I can tell the family. Explaining why I’d be in Colorado would be harder. Oh, but I can tell them I’m stuck with a bunch of annoying American men—”
“Hey,” J.J. says, but without much heat. Token protest.
“I mean it in the nicest way possible. Even you, DeSalle,” Gladys says. “You’re okay for a Rupert.”
The cover of the stasis pod is glazed like ice. It might be glass or something else, intangible: he doesn’t know and hasn’t bothered to ask. Colonel Carter said they lifted it from Antarctica less than a year ago for study.
Kate and her Dæmon are going to be stuck in there for at least two more weeks. That’s when the Daedalus, the only thing that could save them, is due to arrive. Gibbs and his team have been given permission to remain in Colorado until then. To wait. Gibbs agreed without thinking about for more than a moment: there are no other cases to solve, and everything else in D.C. can wait. It fades in comparison to this.
DiNozzo and McGee are on their way; the plane lands in a couple of hours. The whole team has been granted leave by Jenny.
They’ll leave for D.C. in a few hours; General Landry offers a marine escort, but the Director declines. Plans are made, a jet prepared, and Gibbs hears snatches of a quiet phonecall between Jenny and General Jack O’Neill.
Jenny hasn’t said much about what she felt or experienced. She reported to the SGC what she did and saw—like a good agent would; like a soldier would. No emotional responses, nor sharp denial. What happened, happened. She’s still processing it all, and Gibbs hopes she’ll be able to tell him something, some day; a sliver of the truth, at least. And even if she doesn’t speak about ever again, he’s ready to be there for her. Attempt to offer support, even if he doesn’t have the best track record. His trail of three broken marriages could tell anyone that.
Gibbs sighs and stares through the icy surface of the pod. Kate’s face is relaxed. At rest. Doesn’t look like she’s in pain. Possessed. Soul screaming. It’s silent. Just … silent.
“Ba’al is to be transported to a high security facility,” General Landry announces before a car is to carry them to the tarmac and away. The General’s office is relatively small, a bright red phone resting on the polished desk.
“And where’s that?” Gibbs asks wryly. “The dirt of this planet or somewhere else?”
The General’s face is grave. “I understand where you’re coming from, Agent Gibbs. Believe me, I sympathize. But the IOA has decided we can’t execute him or the other Goa’uld. Pentagon agreed, even if I know General O’Neill didn’t. Area 51 is preparing a holding cell.”
A cell. The bastard deserves a harsher sentence. Gibbs’ face doesn’t move. “All right. And my agent?”
“As soon as the Daedalus returns, the Goa’uld will be extracted, and she’ll be free to go. The SGC will assist if necessary to clean her record,” Landry says. “You have my word, Agent Gibbs.”
Kate was forced to kill, to murder coldly—Gibbs doesn’t know if she’ll remember. Part of him hopes she won’t. But he knows himself how haunting it is not to have the answers; if she doesn’t retain her memories of being a host, Kate will do everything to reclaim those moments. Relive them, even the horrors, for closure. He would, and she’s just as stubborn.
“When will that be?”
“Not for days. ETA is the fifteenth of March,” the General says. “We’ll contact you as soon as they’re in range.”
Gibbs’ chest itches. They need to return to D.C. with Jenny; there’s so much to do, to clean up. Reports to fill out. Then he needs to have a glass of his best whisky and try to work out this nightmare. Use his hands—continue building his boat; something distracting, keep his mind focused from all of this shit. He’s been through the Stargate once, and that’s enough.
Leaving his agent here, in the dreamless sleep of stasis, feels all kinds of wrong. But he can’t postpone it any longer. She’ll be safe here. Not feeling anything. Not knowing.
“Thank you, General.”
The Air Force gives them a ride in the same military jet they flew Colonel Carter and Dr Jackson to D.C. in. It’s noisy and cramped, but Gibbs doesn’t mind. Slept through worse before. Not that he finds much rest; there’s too much on his mind, and Jenny’s presence is like fire.
She sits across from him, looking out one of the small round windows. It’s dark outside. Cloudy. They don’t talk, but Gibbs lets his Dæmon keep an eye on her. She doesn’t move, but after a while her Dæmon twists its torso to meet the gaze steadily. No words, like the aftermath of Paris when they felt happy and warm and everything was, for a brief brief moment, only good.
It’s not like that now, and Gibbs is still trying to work out his frustration, his anger; the Air Force is taking care of Ba’al. No Earthly courthouse or jury; General Landry mentioned something about eventually transferring the Goa’uld to the safekeeping among the hands of one of their allies, the Tok’ra. Gibbs would rather just shoot the guy. Evidently, he’s dangerous enough. But it’s not his call. It’s out of NCIS’ hands now.
Physically, Jenny is okay. What the aliens did, putting her in what Jackson called a sarcophagus, healed her. Every bone, every sinew, every muscle. Restored her. No scars on the outside. Inside—hell, she’s probably a mess, and Gibbs knows she won’t talk, and he can’t make her.
But he’s willing to wait.
He remembers Paris, so vividly, so warmly, with fondness. Still, hesitantly, dreams about returning. But she’s his boss; it won’t work out. Rule Number Twelve: never date a co-worker, and she’s much more than that now. Gibbs’ heart would get involved far too deep, and what the hell would that make them, in the end? He’s a mess, she’s a mess, their pasts too complicated and their futures vaguely grey.
No; Gibbs is going to settle for himself and his boat, and maybe one day Jenny won’t be afraid to talk, trusting him enough—forgiving him for past mistakes—and he’ll try his best to give at least a sense of comfort. An echo.
They’ve flown over Kansas City—Gibbs never managed to fall asleep—when Jenny finally moves.
“Vance knows we’re coming,” she says.
“And my team,” Gibbs says. “Yeah.”
“Did anyone alert my secretary?”
“I told McGee to give her a heads-up.”
“Good.”
A pause.
“Jenny,” he begins, and she shakes her head.
“Not now, Jethro. I’m still—Not now.”
“Well,” he says slowly, “when you’re ready, then. I’ll be here.”
They speak no more the rest of the flight.
DiNozzo’s hair is messily standing on end and there’s a sleeping bag poking out underneath the desk, and empty take-out boxes strewn around. Gibbs is going to berate him for that, later. Later.
Half of the office is empty. Most lights are out. There’s a snore from another desk: McGee is bent over the keyboard, and he startles awake with a confused groan when DiNozzo jumps up.
“Boss! You’re back. They’re here! McGeek, wake up!”
“You’re back!” someone else cries. It’s Abby; she must’ve refused to go home like the two agents, but unlike them she hasn’t been asleep, no doubt keeping herself going on too much Caf-Pow. She pushes the laptop she’d been playing with aside, rushing up to meet them. She overtakes DiNozzo and throws her arms around Gibbs, and he lets her.
“Jenny! Thank God.”
“It’s alright if you want to hug me too, Abby,” Jenny concedes. No sooner has she said it than Abby has trapped her in a tight embrace.
“You were really abducted by aliens?”
Jenny doesn’t smile.
Abby finally lets her go. “I’m so glad you’re okay.”
DiNozzo’s halfway to the elevator, when he freezes in his tracks. “Where’s, where’s Kate?” The questions falls out of DiNozzo’s mouth before he can stop it. His Dæmon looks around—disappointed.
“Back in Colorado, kept on ice. She’ll be okay, Tony,” Gibbs says, softer than usual. “She’ll be there for a few more weeks.”
McGee, blinking awake, looks at Gibbs and then at Jenny. “Huh? Boss? Director! You’re back—you’re okay!”
“Yes, I’m back,” Jenny says with a nod.
“You can tell them the truth,” Gibbs says, “they signed the agreements.”
“Yeah, you got to tell us. Why didn’t you call?” DiNozzo asks. “What about the Snake? And why do we have to wait for weeks for Todd?”
“We’re waiting for one of the ships, the Daedalus,” Gibbs explains, and sinks into his chair. The computer is off and the compartments firmly closed; he opens the top drawer and puts his handgun back. Kept it all the way to Colorado and back, and he fired the bullet that pierced Kate: for a moment, he’s back there, in the alley, the barrel hot and the shape of the weapon precise in his hand;
“It’s got the tech to get the Snake out without hurting her, but it’s on its way from Pegasus.”
“Like the …” McGee says, stops himself, gaping. “Oh!” The kid’s eyes are bright: he’s trying to work it out, no doubt, how the hell a ship like that could work. Tries to use imagination when his technical and engineering skills fail him. Gibbs doesn’t know and doesn’t care to know. He’s not truly going to believe in this Colonel Stephen Caldwell or his ship until it’s here, on Earth; until Gibbs is aboard, and Kate is freed. Not until then.
“When?” Abby asks sharply.
“Fifteenth of March, according to General Landry,” Jenny says. “More of they push the engines. We’d better take this to my office.”
“Yeah,” Gibbs agrees. Though currently the pens around them are unoccupied, it’s nearly five in the morning, and soon enough people are going to start dropping in. Cleaning staff, security, other agents. He reaches for his phone. “Ducky in?”
“Not yet,” McGee says. “He went home around midnight to sleep.”
“We’ll debrief after breakfast,” Jenny says, not a suggestion but not as harsh an order as she usually makes it sound like. She’s tired. “I’ll call for Summer.”
Gibbs agrees: better have the whole extended team present for a long debrief. So they can talk freely, and begin the long, slow process of putting this behind them.
Of forgetting.
Colorado Springs Airport, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 27, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 153 days after the Uprising
to: Guy Kemp; Emmanuel DeSalle; James MacGrimmon
from: Nichole GladysHey guys. I’m at the airport now. Please give my best to Snow and Drew. J.J., don’t get yourself into trouble while I’m gone, yeah? Can’t coordinate a rescue from this side of the planet. DeSalle, have fun in Dallas or wherever else you’re going. Kemp, don’t be a numpty.
I’ll be back in time to return to the City. See you then. Cheers.
/Gladys
text sent: 2006-02-27 07:12 A.M. GMT-7
to: Nichole Gladys; Emmanuel DeSalle; James MacGrimmon
from: Guy Kempwtf is a numpty?
text received: 2006-02-27 07:30 A.M. GMT-7
to: Nichole Gladys; Guy Kemp; James MacGrimmon
from: Emmanuel DeSalleYou are.
text received: 2006-02-27 07:33 A.M. GMT-7
to: Nichole Gladys; Emmanuel DeSalle; James MacGrimmon
from: Guy Kempfuck off
text received: 2006-02-27 07:34 A.M. GMT-7
to: Guy Kemp; Nichole Gladys; Emmanuel DeSalle
from: James MacGrimmonKids, feel free to talk to each other but leave me out of it. You can always ask Dr Jackson for a dictionary, Guy.
Have fun over there, Gladys. Don’t be a stranger.
/J.J.
text received: 2006-02-27 07:37 A.M. GMT-7
to: Nichole Gladys
from: James MacGrimmonAnd don’t worry, I’m gonna take it easy. Plus I’m gonna stick to the mountain for a couple of more days. Doubt Doc Frasier will let me do otherwise. DeSalle is gonna keep an eye on me, he’s a fusspot and worries too much. And I’ll keep an eye on Guy. What goes around and all that.
See you on the Daedalus.
(Don’t tell DeSalle what I said.)
text received: 2006-02-27 07:38 A.M. GMT-7
to: James MacGrimmon
from: Nichole GladysDon’t worry, I won’t.
text sent: 2006-02-27 07:41 A.M. GMT-7
Chapter 38: the long way around
Summary:
“New Athos—like we said. Yeah?”
Notes:
(2018-06-28) Going through my drafts, I found I started writing this chapter sometime in November 2016. That’s quite a while ago. (I guess I had sort of a plan for this fic, after all. Back then I thought this fic would be shorter, smaller. I've thrown in so many ideas and subplots and characters since then.) Please enjoy!
Chapter Text
xxxviii.
the long way around
“New Athos—like we said. Yeah?”
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-02-28 13:38 GTM-7 (19:12 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: (no subject)(recording starts)
“Hi, Rodney.
So … this sucks.
The Daedalus won’t arrive on Terra for another two weeks and then we’ve got to wait for the new rotation crew and the supplies being loaded up before takeoff and people have got to have time off … that’ll be, what, three or four weeks minimum? Over a month. Probably longer. So, yeah—this sucks. You shouldn’t be stuck there. Again.
I’m sorry about getting shot. I never meant for that—I never meant for any of that to happen. Getting kidnapped by a power-mongering System Lord and everything. Shit, and when we started out we were worried about lemons and allergies, and—
I’m sorry.”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-02-28 13:55 GTM-7 (19:21 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: How are you holding up? (1 file attached)(recording starts)
“Hi, Jenny. It’s your cousin John. I wanted to check up on how you’re doing. I heard you’re back in D.C., and—Okay, maybe that’s the wrong end to start with because first of all I look all different from last time we spoke. I’m myself again. Those communication stones, we’ve stopped using them. For good, I hope. It feels damned good to be back, anyway, in my own body.
I don’t remember all that happened after we got off the Goa’uld ship, memory’s kind of blurry—blood loss and all—but I do remember promising you could kick my ass for getting you into this mess. I hold onto that.
I’m sorry—for getting you kidnapped—for everything.
I hope you’re doing okay. Let me know if there’s anything I can do.
Take care of yourself, yeah?”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-02-28 14:03 GTM-7 (19:29 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: An Apology (1 file attached)(recording starts)
“Hi. It’s me, John. Of course, you can see that.”
[gestures at self, self-consciously]
“It’s really me this time. I’m sorry I can’t contact you in real time or in person … in actual person. I know the whole thing with the Ancient communication stones is confusing. Heck, I still don’t really understand it. I don’t know if you remember, on the ship, Prometheus, I visited but I looked like Rodney—Dr Rodney McKay. I mentioned him in my letter. Yeah. He’s one of my team. But, yeah, that was me, and my Dæmon, Shy.”
[the Raven, sitting on the back of the chair behind him, flexes a wing]“We’re back now where we should be. Sort of, anyway. The link with the stones has been broken, but McKay is still in the Mountain, and my team’s sort of on hold. But, yeah. We’re all right now.
I know it’s confusing and I’m sorry. I’m sorry you and Dave got dragged into this mess, the attack in New York—I’m sorry. I’m far away but I’ll … I’m ready to do what I can to assist, to make it better. General Landry let me know the docs released you from the infirmary and you’re heading back home. If there’s anything you need, if you’ve got question, uhm, yeah, you can reach me at this email address. Just be careful not to mention anything classified since the servers are civilian and too easily hacked. Also it takes a while for anything to reach me because the databursts are only sent about every four or five days right now. And that could change, I suppose, because of energy requirements …
Uhm, yeah, that’s—shit, I don’t know what else to say, I didn’t think this through. We, I, the Program, we fucked up your life when you shouldn’t have to have anything to do with … with this. So I’m sorry. For fucking things up.”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-02-28 13:55 GTM-7 (19:29 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: Apology (1 file attached)(recording starts)
“Hi, Dave.
I’m sorry it’s taken a while to get back to you. And I know this is confusing. We met on the ship—can’t mention the details out loud because this is a private email that’s not safe—but that time when I looked like Rodney McKay. Met you and Ms Shannon. I should’ve apologized then, I can’t remember if I did—I’m sorry you and Shannon got dragged into this mess.
Speaking of, congrats on your engagement. I didn’t know. Of course I didn’t, but—I know we’re not close anymore, we’ve barely spoken in past decade, but I am happy for you. I’ve found people that I’m real close here on base so I, yeah, I hope you’re happy with her. I’m sure you’re going to do great.
I’m sorry for fucking your lives up. It’s not intentional but that doesn’t matter—it’s my fault dad got stabbed and you were dragged into it, and I’m sorry.
I understand if you want nothing more to do with me. But you can answer to this address and the message will reach me, though I can’t answer at once because the base is, uh, it’s so remote. You know what I mean. So it’s your choice.
Take care, Dave.”
(recording ends)
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
February 28, 2006, C.E. · 171 days after the Uprising
The briefing includes the usual, except it’s quiet without Rodney’s butt-ins and complaints, and John is never getting used to that.
AR-7’s mission to P81-332 went smoothly. The Gate is situated in the southern regions of the planet, in the valley of a glacier. Weir’s talked with the science departments, and Geology suggests setting up a research station there for a while, taking some samples. Could be useful in the work on global warming back on Terra.
John listens with half an ear and nods along. They discuss the pros and cons, and John gives his stamp of approval. They can spare a team of geologist and biologists to spend time on the planet—they’re not much use repairing the Aurora, and they could use a project of their own for once without the astrophysicists stealing the limelight.
Once the meeting wraps up and AR-7 seven take their leave, filing out of the Conference Room neatly, John stands up gingerly and reaches for the crutches leaning against the tabletop. Soon, he hopes, Carson will give him the all-clear. His leg’s getting better, slowly, and the pain’s faded. Been four weeks since Deserum now, and this morning Carson looked at the scans with a pleased expression. Hopefully he can get this annoying cast off within two weeks, and finally get back on the road of recovery. Start softly working out again and regain some lost muscle mass.
“Colonel, do you have a moment?”
Sergeant Bates is standing in the folding doorway, sunlight spilling onto the floors from the wide windows behind; a blue glimpse of the Stargate softly rising.
Shy stretches their wings. The wounds have healed now. There’s no sign of the knife that Ba’al wielded on them.
“Sure. What can I do for you, Sergeant?”
Weir nods at them both in answer to Bates’ greeting of Ma’am. “I’ll be in my office,” she says, leaving them to it. John sits down again, Bates grabbing the chair next to him.
“I’ve been going over the duty roster, and I’m thinking about AR-9,” Bates says, walking inside.
“Yeah, I heard Snow’s recovering well,” John says.
And it’s a relief. But they’re not sure of all the effects yet. There was something about knee surgery and permanent replacements, and they don’t know for certain how it will affect him in the long run. The injury was such that he might never be back a hundred percent. On Earth, they’d have him discharged with full honors on medical causes and that’d be that, he’d no longer be an active marine; but out here they got the chance to bend the rules. He could have other uses; he’s got a Bachelor’s in computer sciences, and that’s useful in the Control Room. Could mix that in with easier offworld activity to start with.
“Drew is adamant they stick together as a team,” Bates says. John nods. “So is Snow.”
“And I agree on that. I read the LT’s email.” A team is like glue. Tends to stick together hard and fast and they don’t want to be torn apart. They follow each other. “So, light duty? Easy ops to already established allies to start with? We could combine with guard duty in the Gate Room and small shifts in the Control Room, have him assigned to Banks or Chuck as a trainee Gate tech.”
“That’s what I was thinking, sir,” Bates says. “The Daedalus’ ETA is in six weeks, by which time we’ll know more of his condition. Same for MacGrimmon and AR-4, minus Stargate Operations.”
Corporal MacGrimmon’s stab wound was dangerous but he pulled out fine, blood transfusion went well. He’s already on his feet at the SGC and performing well on physical therapy. John received an email from him the last databurst, reporting that he’s ready to return to duty as usual once the docs give him the all-clear, which will take a couple of weeks, and John trusts in the guy’s ability to assess himself. Got to be as a team leader with responsibilities.
Okay, so, maybe John’s not good at assessing himself (which Rodney and Teyla like to remind him of often enough). Too stubborn. (It’s a work in progress.) But that’s what a team leader does. Makes sure the team is safe, and sometimes that means taking the bullet meant for someone else.
MacGrimmon threw himself in front of that knife to protect his team and AR-9 from a Goa’uld, and John’s thinking of promoting him. Not just for that, but for other good things he’s done during his time with the Expedition. He’s been with them since the start, got a good record. Yeah, John will do that once the Daedalus returns.
“So,” Bates says, “I need confirmation on the rest of this roster …”
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-03 03:12 GTM-7 (20:34 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: (no subject)(recording starts)
“John, you’re being a dork.
Of course it’s not your fault! I mean—technically—yes. It’s like a law of physics: you’re a trouble-magnet, it’s unavoidable and yes I have already yelled at the marines twice because they were meant to keep an eye on you—so, yeah, you got kidnapped and shot at and trapped aboard a ship and only got off alive thanks to sheer luck—that’s your fault. And Ba’al’s. And the IOA’s. And the SGC’s. They should be fired. All of them.
So—yeah. This sucks. As you can see, I’m pissed off, and bored because the lab they’ve given me to work in is too small and crowded with useless assistants so I threw them out. There was an explosion. Lee made a computer explode. He’s an ingrate and doesn’t deserve his doctorate—who gave it to him?! I’m going to find out who—no, no; if I do, then I’ll have to associate with more ingrates—nope.
Am I okay? What does it look like?? No, I’m not that happy about being stuck in the Mountain, unable to work because I keep getting interrupted by Lee and by the Gate alarm every ten minutes.
Speaking of work: Zelenka hasn’t messed anything up, has he? Remind him to stay out of my lab and not touch my equations.
…
So.
Yeah. This sucks.
At least we’ll have the ZedPM to power the Daedalus’ trip back this time. See you in six weeks.”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-03 13:55 GTM-7 (19:29 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: An ApologyDear John,
I’m not angry. Confused and shaken, yes, but it’s clear to me this whole ordeal was beyond your control. I’m glad to hear you are back as yourself. I’m recovering but Dr Frasier keeps me here in Cheyenne for a little while longer so she can monitor my condition. Dave and Laura have decided to stay with me. They’ve taken in at a local hotel in Colorado Springs. I’m taking some time off the company and I’m thinking about a proper vacation; it’s been a long time since I took a break from work. From what I hear, you and I are similar in that respect.
It’s strange, I admit, to see you and hear your voice as an adult. I was surprised to get a video and not a written letter. It’s so long since last we spoke, properly face-to-face, without arguing. You were still so young then and I was uncertain. I got your letter two weeks before this started and I’ve been thinking of how to reply appropriately.
It is my turn to apologize. When you were a child, I shouldn’t have driven you to such lengths of isolation. You mother was right. We both worried about you, and dealt in different ways. To finally see you with a Dæmon fills me with immense relief. I wish your mother could have seen it (her?).
I think I understand why you can’t come back. It’s difficult to grasp, but talking with Colonel Samantha Carter about the city, the Program, and the technology dealt with made things a little easier, as did it to read your letter to know you are not alone out there. I understand you are part of something groundbreaking and important, something far greater than I could truly perceive, but that it’s also dangerous. To be honest, I’m concerned, and I have been ever since you joined the Air Force. I wasn’t prepared for it at the time and feared for your safety. I still sometimes think of you as the boy who went to study mathematics at a university I didn’t want you to at the time.
I’ve moved on, and I am no longer angry or disappointed. I had no choice after losing your mother and realizing how disappointed she would have been in all of us for the arguments. I’m an old man. I realize now there is still a lot left to learn, and I’ve been stubbornly trying to put it off.
Now that I’ve been given clearance and know you can speak the truth, I’d like to hear all that you can tell me about the decade I’ve been missing. Not just your work, but whatever else you may tell me. There’s so much I don’t know about your life, and I would like to be part of it again. I’ve done a poor job being you father, but if there is still a chance to redeem myself, I will take it.
Best regards,
Dad
He misses running. The sensation. It had become a part of the routine; the steady pace, Ronon always two steps ahead because the guy’s stamina outlasts that of pretty much anyone else on base. All John can do is sit around, watch them in the gym. He’s allowed to lift but not much else until the cast is off.
He misses the noise. The City’s quiet without Rodney in it, his lab empty. John goes there at times anyway. To read the messages and listen to the videos and think. Not every day, of course. Too suspicious and not enough time.
He finds himself sleeping in a lot of the mornings. An extra half hour. Both he and Ford have taken on more paperwork now with lack of other more prudent things to do. They’ve collectively decided to pause AR-1’s offworld missions until Rodney gets back—Ford’s not comfortable going out there just three of them, and this gives Teyla and Ronon the chance to take time off, have fun, relax.
For Ronon that means challenging basically every marine in the City to one-on-one spars. For Teyla that means visiting old friends, the Athosian settlement; she’s going to be on New Athos for a couple of days, and John’s been thinking for days now how to approach her and tell her about his and Rodney’s plans. Once she gets back. Once Rodney’s back. Yeah. Make arrangements.
At the moment, John is in the Bay; more specifically, inside of Jumper Five. Last team who flew it reported a glitch in the mainframe, a delay to the left drive pod, the controls sluggish. He’s wasted half the morning staring at reports, words swimming in front of his eyes: John just needs something to do with his hands more than his brain, so he’d headed for the Jumper Bay before Zelenka could divert an engineer or technician there. Fixing Jumpers is something he’s taught himself how to do, after watching Rodney fiddling around. Plus the City’s giving a helping hand, explaining the blueprints, a slow expansion at the back of his mind, due to the lack of the physical thing to study.
They still haven’t found those in the database, either—what they know about the Jumpers’ functionality is the gathered data of trial-end-error, recordings of flights to be studied and analyzed later. The docs are annoyed that the Ancients didn’t leave the database as a neatly packaged, alphabetized, categorized, and easily searchable archive. John’s got a feeling the Ancients did it on purpose, as a safety measure so that not just anyone would be able to access their collective knowledge.
After all, if the Wraith or some other Bad Guys could get to it … Yeah, it’d be bad. Still, they didn’t erase the City’s million-year-old memory, faintly hoping they would one day return. Some of the Ancients had left the War still hoping for a brighter future, only to fade away on Terra. They must’ve given up, then. Died or Ascended. Faded away. Let the time come;
When the Expedition found Atlantis, they’d never seen tech like this, not really, and the Jumpers were new and strange and wonderful, and they hadn’t known shit about repairing them. They’d learned, slowly, bit by bit. Improvised. Still can’t manufacture more crystals but at least by now they’ve figured out most of the functions and configurations, and what can be swapped with what or worked around.
That … yeah. I think that’s it. John’s lying under the console, flashlight held between his teeth. Misaligned crystal and a frazzled wire. Easy to fix.
He gropes for the toolbox, momentarily using Shy’s eyes to be guided to the screwdriver. Gets the new wire in place before getting the panel back in place and reaching for the screwdriver. Like fixing a misfiring car, sort of, only with crystals instead of wires. The comfort is not unlike that he would get, in the past, from fiddling around with and fine-tuning choppers on Air Force bases on Terra when he still was stuck there. A pilot’s got to understand the mechanics of the craft they’re flying, and John’s always been a hands-on kind of guy.
Waiting the four days for the next databurst feels like an eternity. Last time, after the Siege and the Uprising, it had been bad enough. Knowing that the return will be swifter, the Daedalus armed with a potentia, doesn’t make John feel a lot better. Having to wait for every four days to communicate with Rodney is a pain in the ass. His reply had been pretty much as he’d predicted, especially that part with Rodney calling him a clod. Well, he’d thought the insult would be much fouler. But otherwise pretty much the same. John’s trying to piece together a reply in his head. He could record a message tomorrow morning, or maybe tonight, steal some time away from everyone else; an hour of solitude in Rodney’s lab.
But Patrick’s reply had startled him. Or, he’s not sure, well—should he call him by first name? Or call him ‘dad’, return to that worn word?
The wording had been just as John remembers him talking when he was a kid, stiff, but there’d been this undercurrent of … genuinely being earnest. Trying. His father—yes, because he’s much more of that than Icarus was, is, will ever be—he’s trying, he’s taken up the offer to start anew, and John thinks he’d like that. He’s grown up now, gotten on with his life. Made a life of his own, ungoverned, and it’d be kind of nice just to have that contact to Terra, even if it’ll just be in the form of email exchanges and Christmas cards. His father isn’t getting any younger. And John has this weird urge to be completely honest with him.
Not about Atlantis and the team and about crashing the chopper in Afghanistan or any of that; those things can be told now without breaching comicality agreements; but about himself, that he’s gay and in love with his best friend and planning on covertly marrying on New Athos;
Because that’d go down so well, he thinks wryly.
[Maybe it would], Shy says, daring to actually hope a little. [But it probably wouldn’t.]
Yeah.
(And he’s not been in contact with his dad for years, but once he tells him—or his dad figures out—about his past, well. He might be able to draw conclusions. His almost-marriage with Nancy; throwing himself into work, his career, the Air Force; no other relationships, no woman’s name on his lips before or after that failed attempt. Yeah. Maybe Patrick Sheppard will be able to understand and let it be unsaid until the time is right.)
With a small sigh, John fixes the last screw in place, keeping the panel tightly shut so the crystals within won’t be disturbed.
He hasn’t heard back from Dave yet.
Last memory he has of Dave, when they were still young, they’d fought, but John can’t remember what the hell the argument was about. Dave was daddy’s boy, the Good Son, he grew up after the Accident and got his shit together and never argued with dad again, and then—heck, Dave was what? twenty, twenty-one? sticking close to dad, coming back to the estate every summer between university terms—when John stormed out and joined the Air Force, all teenage anger and regret and inability to find himself, with the word Strangeling pounding in his chest like a drum.
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-03 16:59 GTM-7 (23:01 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: (no subject)(recording starts)
“Don’t worry, your lab is still in one piece. And don’t harass the marines. They’re just trying to do their jobs.
You’d better hurry up and get back here. The team’s having a break but Elizabeth wants us back out there as soon as we can. Ford says he can handle it, but I think he’s tiring of playing boss. And we don’t want to fill the blank spots with anybody else.
Weir’s still not letting me go on missions with the Aurora, by the way, even if I don’t need crutches anymore. Okay, so maybe not completely all the time but, honestly, I can sit in a damned chair and fly a spaceship, fucked up leg or not. The scar’s closed and the bone’s mostly healed, it’s just a matter of regaining some strength. Physiotherapy is going well so it’s going to be okay by the time you get back.
New Athos—like we said. Yeah?”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-08 12:09 GTM-7 (16:09 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: An ApologyJohn,
Thank you for contacting me. The last few weeks have been so turbulent. Our lives have turned upside-down. Laura and I are staying here in Colorado with dad for time being, while he’s recovering. General Landry has given us permission to stay in the higher levels of the base, and Dr Jackson has given us a tour. But I don’t know how to react, to be honest. We’re still processing this, what’s going on.
Dr Jackson also gave us DVDs to watch and things to read about the Program. That’s what I’ve been doing the past few days. Knowing what’s out there … Frankly, it scares the hell out of me. Knowing you’re part of it doesn’t make it easier.
It’s been a long time, but maybe we can make amends.
I realize you’re probably not going to be able to make it, but Laura and I are planning on marrying on July 5 this year. I never sent an invitation figuring you wouldn’t be interested, but things have changed. We’ve already bought a house in Omaha we’re in the middle of refurbishing. The service will be held in the city.
If you have the chance, please feel welcome to attend. I don’t know anything about you anymore; do you have a family there, a girlfriend? If you do, or have another friend, perhaps one of this team of yours, they’re welcome to come with you as your plus one. Please include an answer in your reply and I’ll send an official invitation.
Best regards,
Dave
Okay, so, that’s weird, and John has no idea how to respond at first. Got to sleep on it. Honestly, he wasn’t expecting such open responses from Dave and Patrick. Not that fast. They have all the rights to hate him for what happened, and he wouldn’t have held it against them.
A reply won’t reach Dave for days, so he doesn’t bother trying to stitch one together right away. Can wait until morning.
There are other messages in the inbox; a status update from Lieutenant Drew regarding her team and Snow; answers to the formal requests about those supply lists John emailed SGC last week. But there’s one he’s been waiting for more than any of the others.
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-05 23:47 GTM-7 (00:00 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: (no subject)(recording starts)
“Don’t run around with a broken leg! If you die in a battle with the Wraith because you couldn’t hold your horses and wait ‘till you’re cleared by Carson, I’ll—I’ll—implode a planet into a black hole, or, or something. All right?
I can’t believe you sometimes. You’re honestly such a five-year-old.
By the way, I ran into your dad. I mean—uh—Patrick Sheppard? Him. It was like an out-of-body experience. He wants to meet up for dinner tonight. Said (and I quote) he’s ‘been looking forward to meeting me’. Does he, uh—is he in on, uh, New Athos?”
(recording ends)
This email there’s a second attachment—it, too, hidden within layers of encryption, but it’s not a video file. Its filename is simple and abstract and gives nothing away, a string of numbers.
He’s already wearing headphones. Always does when watching Rodney’s messages. It’s like ... this is something private. Something to be kept close and secret, even if they, to be careful, never spell sensitive things out aloud. If, when, their state of Twosomeness is being mentioned, they both know better than to use such words, because even if the files are hidden and encrypted, SGC is full of geniuses. And one day someone might get a bit too curious, and John’s not ready to lose his career. Even if—if the choice ever comes, is forced upon them: he’d choose Rodney. Of course he’d choose Rodney.
New Athos, huh? Well ... it’s all right; it’s not like anyone else will understand what they really mean, and he realizes that Rodney isn’t asking about their promise but their whole relationship, all vague, undefined. What’s so special about New Athos? a stranger might wonder briefly and let it pass by.
He double-clicks the second file open, curiously.
No video: only audio. A moment of silence, a bit of shuffling, a chair being dragged over the floor or adjusted—someone clearing their throat. Then, softly, the strike of piano keys: a slow echoing chord, suddenly rapidly turning into a series of complicated movements.
John’s not much of a classical music guy. Johnny Cash is his thing. Though his mother had loved certain classical music and he’d heard, as a kid, in the living room—they’d kept a vinyl player there and Valerie listened to Bach and Mozart and the occasional Tchaikovsky. This isn’t that, he thinks, but isn’t quite sure.
Doesn’t know, and really, doesn’t care that much about the names—it’s beautiful. For a moment (a pang in his chest: sharp and unforgettable) he thinks about his mother—hasn’t done that in a while. Has gone for years without trying to linger on vague memories, but Icarus brought them back up, his mind full of questions and doubt. But this memory isn’t a bad one, or doubtful. He simply recalls sitting in the living room as a kid (sneaking books from the library) and his brother and Nina playing, like a dance, and—his mother, the door open to the kitchen, she would sway and hum to the music (her voice, what did his mother’s voice sound like? he can’t remember that anymore, or the exact shape of her smile; it’s been so long. it’s been so long).
(I was going to bring a piano, Rodney had said, trapped on Deserum under the dust and the dirt and the air running out.)
John can’t pinpoint the second when his eyes water, and he stubbornly blinks the sensation away. Leans against the desk on his elbows, and stares past the computer screen and through the window, outward at the night. Weather’s a bit misty, clouds heavily hanging over the City. The Piers are gleaming, miniature stars breaking through the fog.
Rodney’s a good player. Precise. Doesn’t hesitate. It’s nothing like Cash or the rest he usually listens to, and it’s nothing like his mother’s favorites either. Sometimes he imagines he can hear Rodney breathing, little details of this being a homemade recording (where? in secret? no way there’s a piano hidden away at the SGC. where did Rodney go to make this? or is this an old recording, from before his time in Atlantis, before the SGC even? childhood? He never said how old he was when he stopped taking lessons.)
Wishes he could return the gesture, which is so sappy and—god, he doesn’t want to let it go.
The music reaches its end.
There’s an iPod somewhere among his personal effects, buried in the closet or wherever, and he hasn’t used that for months—too busy and relishing the silence, though he brought it out from time to time to re-listen to his favorite Johnny Cash songs. Now he stands and (awkwardly: his leg starts to ache a little in protest) shuffles around until he finds it, bottom drawer, under a pair of socks, and quickly he transfers the file. Then he makes sure the save the last video on a flash drive (alongside each of the old messaged, compressed and encrypted), then removes the file from the computer and cleanses the memory cache and logs off the intranet’s email server. The procedure a habit.
He thinks about what could possibly be returned.
(he goes to sleep and actually manages to, for once, fall into it swiftly and painlessly. music set on repeat; he imagines Rodney’s hands, moving over the keys, like an artist creating a painting but in sounds, and those very nice hands which are familiar and safe; he doesn’t dream.)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-15 13:39 GTM-7 (19:22 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: (no subject) (1 file attached)(recording starts)
“My dad … did that?
Oh. I never thought he’d … Okay, he, he might’ve figured out about, uh, New Athos (seriously, that’s what we’re saying now?) … Since I sent the letter. There was a picture, from our first mission after the Uprising. I never mentioned New Athos, but he—maybe figured something out. Maybe the picture was a bad choice? I didn’t consider that bit, to be honest, at the time.
Okay, so there’s a time delay here in play, so—did you meet him? for real? This isn’t a bad joke, right?
Jesus. Sorry, Rodney. You don’t—didn’t—have to say yes to dinner. Seriously. Please tell me it didn’t end in a shouting match or something like that.
Oh, yeah—I finally got the cast off! Feels a bit weird, to be honest, to be rid of the weight but also great. I’m doing exercises to get my strength back and Carson’s keeping a close eye. My knee’s still kind of stiff. Can’t wait until I get to spar and go on a run again.
By the way, you play brilliantly. Anyone saying something else is just jealous.”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-15 22:00 GTM-7 (09:15 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: An ApologyHi,
I heard you met Dr McKay again. He mentioned it in an email. I hope he didn’t bother you too much. He can be kind of curt and it shouldn’t be taken personally—he got the job for his genius, not his social skills. The guy’s practically a genius. If he insulted any of you, I’m pretty sure it’s not on purpose.
We’re part of the same team and he’s saved my life more than once. I trust him and the rest of my team more than anyone. When we used those communication stones and I looked like him, he looked like me for a time, because it’s a two-way switch like that.
You said you wanted updates. I can’t spell it all out here, it’s not going to endure the Program’s censure, but here’s the gist. We’ve got a ship over here, but it’s more like the City in terms of technology. It was damaged in a battle recently and we’re working on repairs. I got injured in a mission a few weeks ago and Dr Weir, the boss around here, doesn’t allow me to go yet so I’m mostly doing paperwork. I’m hoping to go to the ship soon and have a look; I haven’t seen the damages for myself yet.
Otherwise not much is happening, with McKay in the wrong place and me off my feet, so we’re waiting to be back together before getting into the action again.
Hope you’re doing well.
Best regards,
John
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-19 00:01 GTM-7 (11:23 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: An ApologyDear John,
I understand Dr McKay is part of your team and your friend. I thought I should take a chance to meet him before I left Colorado, which should be tomorrow. I’m going back to the estate, and Dave and Laura will be leaving for Omaha. They’re busy and simply cannot take more time off from their jobs. I don’t know if Dave has told you, but Laura is a high school teacher, and Dave is helping me more and more as of late with the company.
Dr McKay seems to be an intelligent albeit brisk man. I got the impression he trusts you just as you described your trust in him. He told me the rest of your team are as loyal. I’m glad. I’m aware I can’t ask and expect an answer as to the exact nature of your relationship.
Whatever the answers, I still won’t be angry. At this point anger would serve no purpose. Times have changed and you have your own life; you’re no longer that little boy I worried for when you were young. Our arguments were wasteful, and I’m getting old. I’d rather not throw my last chances away. Please know that you have my support. Despite everything, you are my son, and I’d like you to be happy.
Take care,
Your father
(Something knots in his throat as he reads and re-reads the sentences of the email. He can’t quantify it, but … Patrick Sheppard calls himself his father. Maybe he knows the truth, maybe not; does it matter? They’d fought and argued and he’s a Strangeling and John reads between the lines; it’s highly possible Patrick has figured out he and Rodney are a thing, that his son is queer even if John’s still trying to work out the exact labels himself.
He might know and he still wrote: you have my support. you are my son.
No, he can’t quantify or properly name this feeling, this emotion, surging and shocking him. But … he’s missed it. He doesn’t think he’s felt it since he was a kid when his mother and Pete died, were violently taken away. He never expected it from Patrick Sheppard, the distant father with the stern Dæmon he was so nervous around as a kid, almost scared; the father who was disappointed and afraid of the child that wasn’t really his.
But it seems that’s not who Patrick Sheppard is anymore.)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-19 04:12 GTM-7 (19:09 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: ApologyDad,
Whatever you’re thinking about our relationship, I can’t say it out loud yet without risking my career, but maybe one day things will be better and the world will let me say it. And I can’t put definite labels to it all because I’m still trying to figure myself out and, in the end, the label’s not what’s the most important. You wanted the truth and there it is. It’s the most truth I can share right now, at least.
I can tell you that it’s one of the best things that’s happened in my life. I don’t have regrets about it.
I never expected your support, so hearing that from you means a lot. Probably more than I realize myself at this point.
Thank you,
John
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-19 04:19 GTM-7 (19:18 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: ApologyDave,
I think it’s time we put the past behind us and started getting to know each other again. I’d like to know what you’ve been up to the last ten or so years.
I’m sorry, but there’s a big complication that means I can’t leave the City just like that. Dad has a letter that explains everything, or at least the key bits.
I would have liked to come to the wedding otherwise.
Best regards, and wishing you and Laura the best,
John
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-19 19:20 GTM-7 (12:09 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: re: (no subject) (1 file attached)(recording starts)
“I always had the pieces perfectly memorized. Come think of it now, the professor was probably jealous. Always had this nervous twitch, with her hands, and she didn’t like it when I clearly had a better ear and understanding of what the composer wanted to express. This old Russian lady—I still remember, she’d insult me and didn’t think I understood when, in fact, context requires no translation. Had some frenzied arguments with her about Chopin versus Bach. Which are two very very different things, I’ll have you know. (You wouldn’t, with your Johnny Cash obsession.)
So, uh. [clearing of throat] Thank you. People tend to criticize me constantly instead of praising me when it comes to music, so. Thanks. I practiced a lot.
I managed to crack the encrypted file you sent, by the way—I really needed those notes and I forgot to pack them. Finally I can work on something interesting again! One day soon we’ll know how to build a ZedPM all for ourselves.
Carter could take a look. Would you mind if she did? She’s—very clever. And please don’t get jealous now? Because you know I totally had the hots for her before, and a guy could dream, and anyway that was before I was introduced to you and your ass is much hotter, so, yeah. And I’m sitting in a very soundproof lab so, don’t worry, no one heard me say that. Which is good because no one else should need to get too curious about your ass …
Where was I?
Uh, yeah. Your father. Dinner invitation. Unfortunately, I said yes before I got your email.
Your father is a terrifying individual, and not at all like my old piano teacher. We had dinner at this very posh restaurant and he ordered lobster and I drank the most expensive wine in my life. He’s recovered well, by the way, I thought you should know that he’s been released from the infirmary and everything. Thank the alien healing devices at the SGC.
Also, your brother was there. Dave? And some woman, uh, Laura, I think. Your brother’s fiancée? It was … uh, it was a very awkward family dinner.
Your dad, uh, asked about New Athos. Carefully! because, yeah, you’re right, he knows you can’t talk loudly about … New Athos … without breaking the rules.
I got brain fog. Literately. Might’ve been the wine, too. After desserts, he asked, in this, this roundabout way—have I mentioned this was a very very awkward thing?—if you ever planned on telling him about … New Athos. Because he figured we’re both … on New Athos … Uh. Yeah. I kind of said ‘maybe’?
I sort of feel that since I had to endure that, I should subject you to my sister sometime. To get even. Though I haven’t talked with her for years, since she married that English major …
You know. I got the feeling your dad does sort of care, you know. In a twisted sort of way. Didn’t seem that very disappointed or angry or, you know, that you’re—you’re on New Athos instead of on, uh, Earth.
…
I’ve just got back to Colorado, by the way. Had to get away for a while, and there was a conference in California. Mostly boring and erroneous, but I’m working on that paper again. Maybe you’d, uh, you’d like to have a look at these equations? I’m sending them, anyway.”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-23 13:39 GTM-7 (19:22 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: re: re: (no subject) (1 file attached)(recording starts)
“Uh, I got an email from my dad and, yeah, I got the vibe he’s, he knows about New Athos—by the way, it’s kind of a ridiculous euphemism. But, yeah. Sent him an email about it, and I hope that’s okay with you. He’s … weirdly kind of supportive? which is really strange to me. But also kind of nice, you know? But weird.
Also: I’m finally going on a mission! I think I’ve been driving everyone up the wall, even Teyla. You know how long her fuse is, and I accidentally set it off this morning—we ended up arguing about … something. The thing was unimportant. I’m going to make a peace offer with popcorn and, I don’t know, something else nice if I can figure it out. Hell, if I was allowed to spar I’d let her beat the crap out of me. Do you know how awkward and chilly it is when she’s pissed off? And Ford and Ronon are avoiding me because of this. And I ended up stressing the fuck out of a bunch of marines, after, because Elizabeth has me doing these fight-against-Wraith-tactic-seminars once a week. I just want to get off this planet for a few hours.
Please bring some extra popcorn. I’ll owe you.
Repairs of the Aurora are underway, but it seems like whenever we get her ready for combat she gets shot up. Hey, I’ve been thinking. The Aurora’s like our flagship, right? AR-1’s? Lorne’s gotten too comfortable commanding her, in my opinion. How about we officially declare the Aurora to belong to Recon One? Whenever she’s ready to fly again. Still hiding behind that star, cloaked most of the time. Given what happened last time, Elizabeth isn’t eager to send her into battle. Shame we only have one Warship—a dozen of those and we could give the Wraith a real fight.
Anyway, tomorrow we’re going to M4S-397 … or was it ‘379? … anyway, Elizabeth is sending a bunch of geologists and they needed a driver. Just some aerial survey things so I’m going to spend that whole time in Jumper Three, but I’ve been waiting for so, so long just to get moving again—I never want to sit in an office chair ever again. I’m so glad I chose a piloting career over business. Or law.
My leg’s a lot better. Physical therapy is a pain in the ass, but I jogged with Ronon and Ford this morning for the first time in ages. It’s great even if I got winded as hell because I’m out of shape. So, I’ll be perfectly fine, but Carson insists on coming aboard, and I think Elizabeth’s making him swear to keep an eye on me or something. It’s like Weir doesn’t trust me with my own health. (Ha.)
I can’t stand this much longer. Jesus. I to get back out there, with the team.
It’ll be good to be sitting in a pilot’s seat for once. Would be better if there were no seats involved, but at this point this is the highlight of my week and I’m willing to exchange this boring uncomfortable office chair with anything.
Oh, and I took a look at those numbers for you. Check out the second page.”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-29 08:12 GTM-7 (25:28 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: re: re: re: (no subject)(recording starts)
“You pissed off Teyla? What were you thinking?! Or rather not thinking! Make up before I get back, for the love of—just fix it. Nothing worse than a fighting team and Teyla’s wrath is terrifying.
And yes, all right, fine, I’ll bring popcorn.
Did flying the Aurora make you less cranky? And, you’re having seminars? Are there any videos?
…
The Daedalus will take off on the second of April, it’s been decided—ETA on the eight. So I’ll be able to receive only one more databurst before liftoff. Busy packing now. How’s your leg? And how’s the rest of you?”
(recording ends)
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-04-02 09:44 GTM-7 (04:19 Standard Atlantis Time)
subject: re: re: re: re: re: re: re: re: (no subject)(recording starts)
“Hah, very funny, McKay. Yes, John Sheppard can hold a seminar. Or two. Or five. You know how many weird questions I’ve had to research and generally just think about? Like, how bug-like Wraith actually are with their Queen hierarchy and Hives and stuff? Because it’s gross. Though it’s kind of amusing watching even the hardiest of marines squirm with nausea at the pictures. Carson has lent me a few from old autopsies he did the first year with stuff the teams brought back from offworld incursions along with his research into their evolution. There’s a lot of pictures. Also Venn diagrams, mostly because they’re pretty.
The mission was awesome. It was boring as fuck because nothing happened, but, god, I’ve never been so relieved to leave New Lantea before. My leg’s doing better; I can carry my weight on it and walk fine. Jogging’s more difficult but not actually painful, so I’m pleased. Rehabilitation is going well, and Carson says I’ll regain my full previous range of motion soon. If I pass my next physical, I’ll be back on active duty. I had the City record it when Weir said it in her office, so it’s a deal.
I think I’m being less cranky and more pleasant, because I haven’t pissed anyone off or made a marine cry in nearly a week now. So, yay.
…
You get yourself back here ASAP. Then we’re going to talk with the team about New Athos, yeah? I’m—I’m kind of … anxious, about that bit, to be honest. A little bit. Not Teyla or Ronon that much, anymore, but—well, Ford’s my subordinate. I’m wondering if that’d just put more pressure on him, to have him know stuff like that about his CO, having to keep it a secret …?
But … He already knows. And that’s, that’s the problem. By asking, by letting him in on … New Athos … I’m confirming it, and—Hell. I know he’s not going to pursue or harass anyone for this. Still. He’s a marine, and there’s loyalty and obligations. This thing, it’s something we haven’t really talked about, it just is, you know? So Ford could always deny it, because no one’s told him.
On the other hand I really want them to know, because we’re team and we’ve got to be honest with each other. Dare to be. Teyla’s already said she thinks Terran ways are primitive sometimes and this is one of those times, I think. And it’d be damned nice not having to hide it (too much) on offworld missions when no one else is around. Y’know?
So … Do we stage an intervention or something? Offworld? Or a movie night, once you’re back? What do you think?
…
I’m not sure what the comms situation will be like once the Daedalus is in hyperspace, so, uhm, bon voyage and all that, and bring the potentia and yourself back in one piece.
See you in six days.”
(recording ends)
Chapter 39: advent
Summary:
it grates on his soul;
Notes:
(2018-06-28) This chapter runs concurrent with the previous. Originally I wasn't even going to include it in this fic, maybe making it a separate thing or something, but finally decided to include it anyway. It's basically the last chapter, timeline-wise, from Rodney's point of view. Thank you everyone who has read, left comments and/or kudos! You keep me writing!
Chapter Text
xxxix.
advent
it grates on his soul;
Cheyenne Mountain Complex · Earth · The Milky Way
March 5, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 159 days after the Uprising
As the days pass by, and the long hours become a week (two; three; four), Rodney grows all the more impatient. A sizable portion of him wants to turn that irritation into anger, and he tries for a few days but that just drains him more and it doesn’t work out.
He throws himself into work. He’s given a desk in Lee’s lab (who is an ingrate and does not deserve his doctorate, and the staff is annoyingly in the way, and Rodney’s out of coffee again, damn it). Plugs in the computer he’d packed with him. Opens one of the many works in progress: while he’s here, he might as well take advantage of the situation. Time is on his hands and he can’t go offworld with some random SG-team; no, Landry and the rest want him firmly here in the Mountain for time being. (He’ll probably have to rush into the action sooner or later though, avert a disaster, an incoming wormhole: it’s inevitable.)
So he resumes writing on this paper he’s been working on, on and off for the past three years, and it contains details that can’t be verified to the general public yet. Once those nondisclosure agreements are null and void and the Program declassified, Rodney’s going to win himself a Nobel. He’s got access to the internet and all the scientific literature and articles he’s lacked in Atlantis; really, they need to update and expand the Library and their own intranet. Should fix that. Yeah.
(He writes it on a post-it note, reminding himself to download as much as he can. Also to grab a ton of extra hard drives. Just one more bullet point in the continuously growing list of Stuff They Need to Bring to Atlantis—Rodney’s gotten emails from Weir, forwarded from every department. Tools and things they need; Botany wants seeds for food so they can start cultivating themselves and become a little bit more independent; Sociology-Anthropology is requesting more needles and thread and tools to make more; the Med department wants medical machines and batches of medicine, antibiotics. The marines need more weapons and ammo; they tend to gather all the empty shells they can, to recycle them, but that’s not enough.
Idly, Rodney wonders why they didn’t prepare more the first time they went, truly thought things through—they were so hopeful and, honestly, naïve. Thought they’d meet Ancients and everything would sort itself out.)
There is a scar on his body that shouldn’t be there. A pink line. It doesn’t hurt, doesn’t itch like it did when he was thrown back into his flesh on the Hebridan ship. But it’s painful to look at. In the mirror before the morning showers, he looks at the scar on his belly and shivers—doesn’t know if he can call himself lucky he didn’t feel it. Wasn’t there to be shot. Wasn’t there.
John apologized for it so helplessly, as if he’d asked to be kidnapped and shot at and beaten up. Rodney had been angry and annoyed and wanted to pet his silly hair and told him to stop being such an ass. He’s still waiting for an answer to that email, and that’s the worst bit. The waiting.
Meredith is settled atop of one of the external hard drives, head resting on paws, letting it warm her body from below. They exchange a worried look.
Think they’re okay? No names need to be mentioned.
Probably not, Rodney answers, considering how they themselves are coping. Probably beating themselves up too much. John’s got bad habits like that.
He sips at the coffee. It’s wonderfully good and hot and the only thing he can be happy about right now. Got to bring with him loads of coffee to the City. And chocolate and other foods they’ve missed and the Daedalus failed to bring during the last milk run. Not to mention all the scientific equipment Rodney wants to get his hands on—he’s working on making deals, checking off one item at a time. His department had put their heads together and made a list like wishes for Christmas. Even with the Ancients machines, as fantastic as they are, the Earth stuff can be a comfort to have.
Also expensive, but General Landry has assured them that they can afford it (this time, at least)—mostly because the situation with the Goa’uld has lulled. The SGC is no longer openly at war with any Bad Guys, and thus can set aside some of their budget for research and science which before was used for ammo. Speaking of, John has emailed him a list of weaponry they urgently need—such as more P-90s—and some they’d really, really like. And a couple of years ago Rodney would’ve laughed, thought it ludicrous.
Who needs that many grenade launchers and air-to-air missiles? And Swiss army knives? And honest-to-god swords? (General Landry’s eyes had actually boggled a little at that one.) But now it makes sense; Darts can be brought down by launchers from the ground, and Ronon has started teaching the marines how to fight hand-to-hand and could probably give classes in sword-fighting. Could come in useful against the Wraith. Cut off hands before they reach chests;
And isn’t that terrifying and strange. How quickly thoughts like that have gone from ridiculous to realistic.
Derailed by his train of thought, Rodney looks blankly at the computer screen. Right. Writing—science. He clicks open the latest draft.
The cursor blinks in the middle of a half-finished sentence. Rodney had left off in the middle of the Siege, he thinks. When it began. So long ago. He can’t for his life remember what the hell he’d meant to say with that sentence; the paragraph is missing its conclusion. He stares at that cursor like it’s cursed, and reaches for the coffee cup again to find it empty.
Okay. He glances at the digital clock in the corner. 14:12. We need a break.
He’s still being shadowed by those pesky marines. Always Lantean. Today it’s not Kemp (who wouldn’t stop making bad jokes), but someone he vaguely recognizes from AR-9. The marine in question is mostly silent and out of the way, but he refuses to fetch him coffee or in some other way be useful. Rodney is going to send an email to Ford the next databurst and frankly tell him he needs to order the marines to stop doing what they’re doing—‘watching’ or ‘babysitting’ or ‘keeping an eye out’, or however else Ford originally worded it. It’s annoying. It needs to stop.
The Watch Dog (okay, so, the marine’s name is actually Lieutenant Gamble, Rodney knows that) follows. Of course. Bleak excuses. Yeah, Rodney has got to send that email to Ford, threaten to take all of his cookie rations or something equally effective to get his attention.
They’ve already had lunch (the marines on KP duty in Atlantis are slightly better than the ones in the Mountain, Rodney decides) and he’s not that hungry yet. the General, Jackson, Sam and that Colonel person, Mitchell, dragged him into their mission briefing this morning because Jackson think they’ve found some ruins that could be Ancient, though not as advanced as the City—more like something that’s millions of years old, rubble and rock, old inscriptions. Not much, but Rodney had looked at the footage and agreed with the assessment. But there was a lack of technology to work with and Rodney’s no archaeologist.
Truly, he’s bored.
He’s really, really bored.
With a sigh, he grabs the cup, and Mer leaps off the desk. Together they head out of the lab (ignoring Lee’s questions about where they’re going) toward the elevator. Could grab a snack in the mess hall while refilling the cup. Should have a coffee machine in the lab. Yeah.
And Lee would steal it all, Mer says dejectedly.
If he could make himself truly bother, he could order some parts online, boss around Lee and that assistant whose name escapes him and a few marines, and build one himself. Now there’s a thought. He could build a superior coffee machine, buy a ton of exquisite beans (storage? beam them onto a crystal to ensure freshness?), and bring it to his lab in Atlantis. Charge Zelenka and the others in chocolate rations to use it.
The path to the mess hall takes him past the infirmary. The door is open and as he passes by, someone halts him.
“Dr McKay?”
Holding back frustration (just barely), Rodney pivots on his heel. It better not be That Useless Lab Assistant.
“What?”
It’s an old man who doesn’t look SGC. There’s no standardized uniform and he doesn’t appear to be a scientist, though Rodney has by no means met everyone around here, at least if they’re not an astrophysicist. “I’m Patrick Sheppard. It is Dr Rodney McKay, right?”
A hand is offered, and Rodney awkwardly takes it.
Oh. They look nothing alike, Mer remarks, which they wouldn’t, given John’s actual heritage, but Rodney has no idea if this man knows about that. Has John told him? Has he figured it out on his own?
“Yes, that’s me. Yes,” Rodney says.
Oh, hell. He’d sort of hoped he’d never have to run into the man—he’s going to have to bite his tongue. Or he’ll end up saying all the wrong things. Reveal truths which John can’t let out yet. Plus, well—biological or not, this is John’s father, and Rodney doesn’t know much about him other than that, and he’s not a fan of the unknown.
“I just wanted to say hello. You’re one of the people who work with John in that Ancient City, right? He mentioned you,” Mr Sheppard says. “And we met, in a way, aboard the Prometheus. That’s how I recognized you.” Despite the situation, Mr Sheppard appears relatively collected. “I’ve been looking forward to meeting you in person, Dr McKay.”
“Right. The communication stones,” Rodney answers. “Yes, I work with him.”
Yes. Lots of work.
Shut up, Mer.
I’m serious. Thank god she didn’t say it out loud.
Not helping.
It’s definitely not helping that Mer can see Lieutenant Gamble, hovering five feet away, looking between Rodney and Mr Sheppard several times, eyebrows rising. At least the guy keeps his mouth shut.
“We’re on the same team, yeah. Obviously I’m the smartest one,” he blurts because he loses self-control when he’s nervous, and Rodney bites his tongue. “Not that I’m saying Jo… Colonel Sheppard isn’t smart, he is, surprisingly, for an airman that is, and. and. yes, we work together.”
“I’d like to know more about that. I’m still trying to take this all in,” Mr Sheppard says. “Space and Stargates … Colonel Carter have told me some, but far from all of it. And Dr Jackson’s DVD was informative, but I thought it’d be best to hear it from someone who actually knows my son. Maybe you could tell me about your missions?”
“Uh. Sure,” Rodney says, unsure as to what he’s agreeing to. Either John’s dad is going to turn out to be stone cold, or one of those parents who wants to show embarrassing baby photos to everyone; and this guy doesn’t look much like the latter.
“Excellent. Over dinner? I’ve already booked a reservation tonight, seven o’clock. My eldest and his fiancée will be there,” Mr Sheppard says. “They’d like to meet you.”
“… Sure,” Rodney says again, bleakly. He could refuse but, well, he’s learned a thing or two over the years and that’s that he’s not very good at declining offers without looking like an asshole. Wonder if John mentioned his and Mer’s lacking social skills?
(Wonder what else John has mentioned about the City and his team. Rodney never saw that letter; John only mentioned in passing that he was sending one to his father, trying to make amends after the revelations Icarus left in his wake.)
And, well, John’s said he had a falling out with his family, the little he’s talked about them, only recently reaching out again, and Rodney doesn’t want to appear too rude to this guy. Not yet, anyway—if it turns out he’s been a less than exemplary father (confirming some of Rodney’s fears), then he won’t mind being rude at all. But there’s also a chance of the man turning around—that’s why John sent that letter to him in the first place. And if it ever comes to it and John wants to come out to his dad, one day introducing Rodney as his Significant Other, he wants to leave an (at least) all right first impression.
He has a feeling that Mr Sheppard is a man used to getting things his way.
(Must’ve been a reason why he and John didn’t get along. John’s not good at following orders.)
“Excellent,” Mr Sheppard says.
Oh, crap, Meredith murmurs. Which, yes. Pretty much.
The man walks away, and Rodney, utterly derailed, stares after him. Lieutenant Gamble reaches his side. He’s forgotten what the hell he’s even doing, where he planned to go.
“Doc, I mean, Dr McKay,” the marine says, quickly correcting himself. “The mess hall is that way.”
Mess hall. Food. Eating. Right. Stiffly, Rodney starts to move again.
The marine follows.
“Was that Colonel Sheppard’s father? I didn’t know he was in the Mountain,” the Lieutenant says.
Oh, god, Rodney whispers to Mer in terror. That was John’s father. Oh, god, and we’re going to dinner with him?
The Lieutenant keeps marching beside him, a steady pace. “Dr McKay? You’re, uh, weirdly silent.”
“Look, can you go away?” Rodney barks. “That wasn’t a question.”
“Well, I sort of can’t, sir. I have orders from—”
“Yes, whatever. I’m ordering you to go away.” Rodney sighs. “And I’m not going to rat you out to Ford. Ford is being annoying and overusing his officer privileges. Go to the gym or something, whatever grunts like you do in their free time. And no one else is to take your place—that’s also an order.”
The marine pauses for a few seconds. Then he says: “Yes, sir. I’ll be available on the radio if you need anything, sir.”
If he needed anything? Well. Rodney feels like he might need his team. Backup, because he’s going to have to face John’s father, John’s brother, and John’s sister-in-law tonight at a (no doubt) fancy restaurant, and he’d rather face an alien ship or a damaged Jumper or a malfunctioning Ancient console. He knows what to do in those kinds of situations.
He might’ve gone a little bit overboard with researching in preparation for the Dinner With John’s Father. However, Rodney has learned through (sometimes bitter, painful) experience it’s better to be carefully well-prepared, and he must’ve spent too much time around the military because he’s thinking in terms of gathering intel and strengthening his defense. Within a few hours, he’s found out everything there’s to know, at least on the surface, about Mr Patrick Sheppard, industrial mogul.
Lots of money, of course, and connections to various places including the odd senator or ambassador. Typical conservative (even if he seems to have voted Democratic in the last few decades, so at least that’s something), two sons, married only once and widowed but never trying again.
(Rodney finds an old newspaper clip from 1985, scanned and added to a digital archive. There isn’t a picture, but once he connects the dots, the headline haunts him—Local Businessman’s Wife Killed in Accident—simple; plain. John’s only mentioned it once, briefly. His mother died in a car accident that year, in December. John was only fifteen and an outcast in his own family, and that’s what he said and Rodney’s read terrible things between the lines. It was in his family home John first, as a child, learned the word Strangeling and began applying it to himself.)
All in all, Patrick Sheppard couldn’t be more different from Rodney’s own parents. He’s struck by, when figuring out where that old house John grew up in is situated, how different their upbringings were.
Rodney’s mom worked two jobs and his dad was a high school teacher and burned out. They could never really satisfy their two genius children’s thirst for knowledge, for inspiration, for more. When the mess with the FBI and the Garage A-Bomb started, they were worried and angry, but in the end they tried to be supportive. Scraped together money for a chemistry set for Rodney’s eight birthday.
And books: books on physics, mathematics, electronics, whatever science interested him that week. They urged him to play the piano and keep it up until Rodney outright started hating the teacher, and, anyway, they couldn’t really afford to pay the fee. So he quit. He only got the chance to go to MIT because the FBI backed him up, helping out with the financial side of things—only thanks to that, and several research grants as an adult, has he now managed, against all odds, to become student loan debt free. At least he was never alone: Mer was always, will always, be there.
John never had to worry about money, about being able to pay rent, where his food was coming from, to be clothed. From what Rodney’s managed to glean, he grew up isolated and a lot of the time the windows were covered—he didn’t go to a proper school until he was ten or eleven or something like that. A chance to socialize. Before that, there’d been no one but his closest family.
(He was alone and Dæmonless, and that’s what drove such a rift between him and his dad. (Something about refusing to choose the right path which Patrick Sheppard had dug for him). That, and the Air Force. The Air Force became the home John craved—not unlike, Rodney muses, how astrophysics became his home. The certainty of it; the thrill of exploration; the thirst for knowledge. People around him might change and let him down, and he’ll screw things up, but science would always be there for him. And John would always have the sky.)
Rodney reaches the restaurant at the appointed time, armed with knowledge he doesn’t really want to possess and his steps are a little nervous. It’s like a bad version of Meeting The Parents, except he’s on his own without John or his team as backup—he’d settle for anyone, even Ford and his goofy grin. Or Ronon and his big gun. Too bad this is the wrong galaxy.
Hell, he’s been away so long, he’s almost forgotten how it works—Earth things. Compartmentalized it. The cab ride had been strange and, thankfully, the driver hadn’t spoken much, The music on the radio, playing in the background, was new and foreign to his ears; he hasn’t caught up on any of it. Dabbled a little in the news with horrified fascination back in the Mountain, watched the TV lazily.
(Part of him had realized nothing can change in a day or a year. Humanity’s going to be the same. But returning to this, everything seems so … so mundane and petty. Rodney can still feel the shadow of the Wraith like a shiver down his back.)
Rodney had fumbled with his credit card, struggling to recall the PIN. Mer remembered it, though, and whispered to him, and they stepped away from the curb and peered through the wide windows of the building.
It’s (as he feared) one of those posh places where the waiters’ uniforms are immaculate and everyone’s dressed up fancy, and he feels horribly out of place. He’d dug his best (and frankly only) suit out of his bag—it’s the same he wore during John’s promotion. Needs pressing. It isn’t on par with these people and their polished shoes.
Mr Sheppard, John’s brother Dave and his fiancée are waiting by a table by one of the windows. The table is candle-lit and presents more than one fork per person.
We could fake a heart attack to get out of here, Mer suggests. Or pretend we accidentally ate a lemon.
No.
Yes.
No. Better get this over and done with. Face the dragons and all that.
Worst case scenario, he’ll have made himself another enemy, but Rodney has got himself plenty of those. He can handle another without having a total breakdown. (Probably.)
Inhaling deeply, he steps through the revolving doors.
John sent a letter to his father to start over.
When the Siege was upon them, three minutes to midnight, Rodney made a recording and part of it he’d asked to be sent to his sister. If he died. But he survived, and no one sent that message.
The thought hits him like a spear when he’s sitting by the desk, typing equations from handwritten notes. He never sent the message to Jeannie. Once contact with Earth was established, he never tried to. He never emailed.
He pauses. The equation isn’t finished.
Maybe, Mer says carefully—she’s curled up on a stack of papers, next to a cup of coffee. Maybe we should try? Like John did.
Rodney hesitates. Maybe. Should he? Jeannie’s a stranger. They fell out harshly—not what their parents would’ve wanted. (They’re similar to John like that: dysfunctional family relationships, over-the-top bickering with siblings, outright fights, cold silences.) She’s his little sister and, god, how long’s it been since he saw her face? heard her voice? It’s been … five, six, seven years. She got married, he doesn’t even know the name, and got herself pregnant; he signed up for the SGC and Area 51 eventually got stuck in Siberia, and they stopped calling each other or sending Christmas cards.
He opens up a new tab on the computer. Starts searching the SGC’s database—the copy of all those recordings, sent in a compressed format, must be here somewhere.
He finds it after searching for over two hours (in the process uncovering sixteen damaged files, a whole bunch of mislabeled data, and making a note to himself to have a talk with Sam about the SGC’s filing system—it’s a mess). The uncut version which never reached anywhere—it’s still there.
He can’t stop himself from pressing play. The Rodney McKay on the other side is pale and distressed but not yet scarred, and babbling like usual. He’s … young, in a way he didn’t think he could consider himself this side of thirty—there’s still an ounce of hope in the darkness. He listens to the recording, smirking when he and Mer start arguing about not liking blondes anymore (which is only half a truth; Sam will never stop being hot). But eventually they reach the important bit.
“… My sister. Ford, if you cut everything else, just, keep this part, OK? Uhm—Jeannie? Hi, this is your brother, Rodney—obviously! … Just, I want to say … I want to say something … Family is important. I, I’ve come to realize this because the people here are sort of like a surrogate family. Now I know what you’re thinking: I’ve never really been the poster child for that kind of sentiment, but, uh, when … when one’s contemplating one’s own demise, one tends to see things more clearly. I really do wish you the best, you know, and I’m sorry we weren’t closer. Perhaps … if (by chance) we make it out of this, perhaps one day we can be, and I would like that.”
He downloads that part, cutting everything else out from the video file. The unnecessary bits. A quick internet search gives him Jeannie’s email address. Rodney stares at the screen for some time, trying to formulate at least a line or two. It’s difficult. More so than it should be. He’s sent thousands of emails in his lifetime: why’s this one so hard?
(He’s a stranger; she’s a stranger. This is no business deal, no scientific idea to be shared. Jeannie has a whole other life, a family, a husband, a kid Rodney has forgotten the name of. He shut her out: rightly, she should loathe him. Or at least want to ignore him.)
Taking a deep breath, squaring his shoulders—like this is a mission, just another planet, another Gate to walk through—Rodney types:
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-09 13:23 GTM-7
subject: I’m sorry (1 file attached)Jeannie,
Hello. I know this is a shock. You probably hate me. The thing is, things have happened lately which have made me grow as a person.
I was wrong about shutting you out because of you marrying an English major. There’s far worse things in the world, and our falling out would’ve made mom and dad so disappointed.
I’m sorry.
I’m attaching a video file with this message, which probably isn’t enough to make up for the past. But maybe it could be a start?
Hope you’re doing well,
Rodney
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-09 18:59 GTM-7
subject: re: I’m sorryFor a moment there I thought this must be a joke. “Who are you and what have you done with my brother?” Rodney McKay wouldn’t apologize for anything.
But I watched the video and I honestly don’t know what to say. What the hell have you gotten yourself involved with that could make you change like that?
It’s not a bad change. It’s just something that’s going to take time to get used to. But I’d like to try, too.
Also, his name is Kaleb. Is “English major” all you could remember about him? Seriously?
Madison is turning five this year. September 2nd. I expect you’ll send a present or at least a birthday card, or a call. I’d like to introduce her to her uncle.
Jeannie
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-09 20:22 GTM-7
subject: re: re: I’m sorryI have no idea what five-year-olds should be given, but I’ll do my best to send something appropriate. Does she like science?
I’m stationed in a remote location and can’t promise to be there. It’s also classified and I can’t tell you about it.
Thank you, Jeannie. For reconsidering.
Rodney
from: [email protected]
to: [email protected]
2006-03-10 16:14 GTM-7
subject: re: re: re: I’m sorryYou too, Rodney.
It would be nice to see you sometime, you know. I’d give you my phone number, but I figured you’ve already found it. And my address and where we do our shopping.
Kaleb says hello.
Take care.
And don’t be a stranger,
Jeannie
Cheyenne Mountain Complex, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
February 23, 2006, C.E. · 166 days after the Uprising
The Mountain is different from the City. Lively but in a stricter manner; more adherent to rules set down by the military and the IOA and everyone else involved. People here actually leave the base to go home to rest, take time off. Even Rodney, who’s not very good at all that, notices that the military regulations are held in … well, perhaps not a higher regard; they’re important in Atlantis too, the marines proud of them, never forgoing them completely. But the soldiers here aren’t as laidback; they don’t stretch the rules, relax; they don’t question things like the marines in Atlantis do. They don’t mingle with the civilians like the marines in the City.
The tables in the commissary are neatly divided: marines and airmen one side, civilian scientists on the other. From what Rodney’s learned, the SG-teams aren’t that mixed. Scientists tend to jump in when necessary rather than being permanently assigned to a single team. Well, that’s sometimes the case in Atlantis, too. Most scientist have gotten some offworld experience at least once by going with a recon team, and some are assigned to one on certain missions. Rodney is one of the few to always go with his team, though. Even on missions with a purely military premise—his technical expertise may always come in handy.
He’s sitting alone today. Like most days. The people who come to speak with him want help with this equation or that alien device or cipher, and Rodney can’t bother today; when a technician with a datapad approaches, Rodney waves them away with a sneer. He didn’t sleep well and he’s got a headache and they’re out of blue Jell-O.
At least he’s no longer shadowed by those marines. Not that it was all bad, but it was annoying after a while. Plus, he could tell the marines doing it were bored of the duty. They’ve left the Mountain now, healed and free of charges. They’ll be back, though, the one called MacGrimmon had taken the time to tell him. Why, Rodney’s not sure. Staying or leaving, the marines would let John know by email—there’s little point in informing the Chief Science Officer about it. Still. There’s probably something behind it, a meaning, and Rodney’s got to figure it out.
It’s odd; he likes the Mountain fine, but he misses Atlantis. Not just the tech, the brilliant beauty of the place, the delicate elegance of the Stargates—the Pegasus system is younger and (in Rodney’s humble opinion) much easier on the eyes. It’s the people. Elizabeth, his team, even Radek for all his faults. Radek is a much better lab assistant and colleague than Lee, who screws things up and Rodney’s thrown him out of his lab twice already this week.
Occasionally SG-1 pops in and out of the Mountain; Rodney listens in on the PA system whenever the Gate is activating, noting who’s coming and going. During the weeks he’s been here, no enemy has launched an attack, there have been no invasions or alien viruses or base shutdowns. Oddly calm, and for Rodney that’s only a sign of a storm coming—once it hits, he’d like to be back in the City and surrounded by its familiar noise.
Sam and Jackson go out on missions with Cameron Mitchell, sometimes joined by Teal’c. The new SG-1 was established very recently, and it’s not as solid a unit as it was before.
Rodney tries, struggles, to imagine AR-1 changing like that. John is their leader, and without him—no, that’d just be wrong. A faulty equation, uneven. No, there can’t be a team without him. So he can sympathize with Sam (who, honestly, is the only one of SG-1 he likes and she at least tolerates him these days). It must suck having General O’Neill stuck at the Pentagon. But the Air Force wouldn’t let a General go through the Gate without a damn good reason—some friendly visits and otherworldly exploration isn’t a good enough excuse.
Didn’t John mention once that the higher up the ranks he climbed, the worse it got? Sure, he’s getting more recognition and acknowledgement for his efforts, and it’s easier for him to do certain things as a Colonel than as a Major. But the paperwork, duties keeping him trapped at a desk—John doesn’t like that. He doesn’t complain a lot but when he does, it’s about the lack of flying. Especially now as he’s injured.
At least that’s getting better. John’s last email said he’s healing well and Carson’s going to have him out of the cast soon.
And the Daedalus is enroute, should be here in only a few days now. Then begins the journey home, but it’ll be fast. Rodney brought one of their two ZedPMs from the City here, and it’ll boost the engines considerably, shortening down the travel time from weeks to days. The only reason he’s not using it right now to power the Gate to walk to Atlantis in a few seconds is to not leave it behind—they need the ZedPM for the City’s defenses. Making the IOA agree to that took a great deal of argument on Weir’s part; they’d rather have the module here on Earth to power the Ancient Chair. The IOA still stubbornly refuse to see the threat of the Wraith. Things may appear calmer now, but it’s far from the end. They’re still out there.
That also worries him. He’s stuck here on Earth. Can travel, do some research, visit a scientific conference or two—but the knowledge hangs over him. The Wraith engaged the Aurora once, and in the weeks he’s been stuck here they’ve nearly run into them twice more. Atlantis hasn’t been discovered yet but it’s only a matter of time. A matter of time. Rodney would feel better if he was on the other side, able to help the City directly. Keep an eye on things.
Radek’s emails are long and detailed, containing reports on every scientific project in the City from basically every department. He’s doing an okay job at running things as Rodney’s second-in-command, as it were; not that Rodney’s very good at giving praise to people. This time Radek deserves it, though. They’re doing a good job over there. There have been no catastrophes or explosions. Last week they found yet another lab on the North Pier and started cataloging contents; Rodney’s still going through the logs and copied database entries. Seems like a biolab of some sort to study animal life, specifically a whale-like type of Lantean fish. Rodney is very, very glad they’re found no signs of such creatures inhabiting New Lantea. (He still, on occasion, has nightmares about being eaten whole by a whale.)
The active Gate alarm goes off. “Scheduled incoming wormhole. General Landry to the Control Room.”
The food is bland but hot, so he eats it. Rodney checks the time. Hang on—that must be Atlantis. He hurries to finish his meal, then grabs his datapad (always keeps it with him, never knowing when an idea might hit him) and half-jogs to the elevator.
When he reaches the Control Room, General Landry’s there and the wormhole is active, casting blue light across their faces. The monitors show Elizabeth in her office; another verbal debriefing. They’re sending a compressed databurst with the latest reports.
“… and repairs of the Aurora are ongoing,” Elizabeth is saying.
“Good,” General Landry says. “Dr McKay, you’re just in time.”
“Yes, yes. The Aurora?”
“We’re forwarding the latest updates to your email, Rodney,” Elizabeth says. “We’re keeping a skeleton crew aboard to maintain the primary systems. Truthfully we’ve done what we can until the Daedalus arrives with more tools and crew.”
Rodney nods swiftly. “Good, good.”
“We received an update via subspace from Colonel Caldwell yesterday,” General Landry says. “They’re on time, scheduled to arrive in two days. I suspect we’ll be working around the clock for the next few weeks to ger her ready for liftoff.”
“Yes, sir. Give Colonel Caldwell my regards.”
“Will do, Dr Weir. Dr McKay?”
His datapad beeps; he’s tied it into the Mountain’s network, and it alerts him he’s just has a dozen emails dumped into his folder. Good.
“I’ve received all the data,” he says, skimming the subject lines and addresses: status updates from Zelenka, one from Ford (the subject line mentions Teyla and Ronon, so he assumes it’s a message from all of them), various science departments—and John. (Really, they’ve got to find a better subject like, too many ‘re:s’ in there. Even if it is accurate—they have no singular subject as their main topic, and they’re encrypting their video files so that the messages can get past the SGC’s automatic censure. Still, even then, they’re careful what they say aloud. What they share, using half-lies and euphemisms.)
Part of him can’t help but be disappointed that only Weir is there to talk. She’s alone in her office. No sign of John. Or his team. Even Sergeant Bates, who tends to hang around in the shadows as the most paranoid person in Atlantis.
It’s kept short. Sure, they can keep the Gate active for thirty-eight minutes, and the City can handle it with the ZedPM plugged in. But it’s a waste of precious resources, and they all know it. Most databursts they keep the wormhole open only a few seconds: no need for any live video transmissions. Elizabeth is busy, anyway. Today she had the time, she explains, and she smiles through the lens in Rodney’s direction; says it’s good to see him again. Rodney believes her.
Before Atlantis, he wouldn’t have. People don’t tend to like him or miss him when he’s gone. With most people that feeling is mutual. Over the course of the time they’ve worked together, though, Elizabeth and he have gotten an understanding, mutual respect for each other. Their professions are broadly different, but that doesn’t matter. Rodney might even, tentatively, call it friendship.
“Next databurst is scheduled in six days,” Elizabeth says. “We’ll dial in then. Atlantis out.”
The wormhole shut down.
So, Rodney thinks, holding back a sigh. That’s that. No sign, no glimpse of John. He’s probably busy. He hasn’t seen him or heard his voice in real time for weeks, over a month. It grates on his soul. Still a month left until the Daedalus will return him to Atlantis.
Maybe he should take some time off. Get out of the Mountain. Yeah.
Sacramento, California, U.S. · Earth · The Milky Way
March 1, 2006, C.E. · 172 days after the Uprising
“Dr Rodney McKay! I had it on good authority that you were dead,” is the too-cheerful greeting when he enters the revolving doors.
Oh, no—he recognizes that face, and that beaver Dæmon. Far, far too well. Rodney’s hand itches: the urge, sudden, to punch the guy’s face. He reins himself in with a cool, schooled expression. Can’t let it get to him.
Now he remembers why he hates these people. But the premise of the conference—a series of guest presentations by leading experts in different branches of modern physics. Some big, big names even outsides would recognize. Rodney is starting to regret this—but he told himself he needed to get away from the SGC for a while.
The flight from Colorado to California had been long, boring, and surreally ordinary. It’s been years since he flew commercially, and there was a crying kid and the air was tight and the old guy seated next to him smelled of cheese. Rodney never thought he’d miss the Jumpers this much, and he hadn’t felt comfortable at all knowing some other pilot than John was at the controls. Getting through customs took half an eternity and the Starbucks coffee was bland and overpriced. Still. Rodney had packed his best shoes, even going so far as to buy a brand new suit for the occasion, black tie.
He’d feel better with someone at his side. Someone who’d make him ignore these annoying people and their annoying opinions. Someone who’d find the best hors d’oeuvres from the buffet to share. Also, wouldn’t it be nice to show up with a handsome man on his arm, show these fools what they could never have?
(Not that John would like being reduced to eye-candy.)
“Malcolm Tunney,” he says coldly. He’s not going to address the guy as ‘doctor’—Tunney probably bribed the examiners during his defense to gain his doctorate. Rodney’s tried his best to scrub that mug from his memory in the years since MIT. Unfortunately, he’s ran into him a few times in the last decade or so, during events such as these. He’s pretty sure Tunney’s here to steal other people’s ideas to make big money, the irritating bigot he is. “I’d say it’s nice to see you again, but then I’d be lying.”
“Seriously, McKay,” Tunney says, “what brings you here?”
Rodney wasn’t personally invited like some of these people, who probably flew in private jets spewing CO2 all over the place. And if he were judged merely by the merit of his scientific genius, Malcolm Tunney wouldn’t be either because there is no genius to speak of. But with the right contacts with the right money, a guy can get far. Very far. He works for big companies now, and could probably buy a small European country if he wanted to.
Rodney struggles to hold back a sneer. Must not punch, Mer says: cause a scene like that, Rodney will be immortalized in the scientific circles forever but not for the reasons he wants to. It wouldn’t look good having a criminal record (because Tunney would no doubt call the police for physical assault) should Rodney ever be up for the Nobel Prize.
To think he once upon a time wanted to become … that.
“I’m a scientist, Tunney. Though I very much doubt you’d understand what that means these days.”
Tunney chuckles. “Pleasant as always, I see. Well, I’ve got places to be.” He walks away without a proper goodbye, which is just as well. Rodney had a sudden, strong urge to imitate Ronon and sock him.
Good riddance, Mer mutters.
Rodney agrees. Let’s go find an interesting presentation to listen to.
In the break between two presentations (‘Exploration of Exoplanets: the New Telescope Technology’, which was mediocre in standard, presented by a team of astrophysics led by Dr Volker, and ‘Connectivity of Everything: a New Perspective on Relativity’ by Dr Rush, which was slightly more interesting and holding more merit, its mathematical proofs accurate enough), Rodney tries to avoid running into old adversaries and fails spectacularly. It doesn’t even take two minutes from walking out of the atrium.
Dr Spencer is only moderately more pleasant to deal with than Malcolm Tunney. As always, the conversation starts out veiled in contempt, all wrapped up nicely in polite words. No direct insults—to start with. The man has got his wife with him—elaborate hair, fancy red dress—and he’d introduced her cordially, smiling, and Rodney had felt a little sick shaking hands. Poor thing. She’s got to have very little brains, unable to figure out she’d be much better off without this guy.
“Been so long since I saw your name anywhere,” Spencer muses. “Started to wonder if you’d fallen off the track altogether.”
Rodney sips the cold champagne. “I work,” he says vaguely. “You know, important, highly classified work.”
The guy harrumphs. “I see. Well. You come here alone? Pity. But I understand. It must be hard for you to find a wife.”
Oh, God. Maybe he could punch him. No—that’s how Ronon or Ford or John would think, and Rodney—however much he’d like to—can’t deck the guy in public like this. Not unless the man tries something first.
Rodney clutches the glass harder, knuckles whitening, and says: “They couldn’t make it. We’re both very busy people.”
Spencer’s eyes widen, eyebrows rising to his hairline so abruptly it’s almost comical. “Oh, really.” His gaze darts toward Rodney’s hands, no doubt looking for proof. Of course, he’s wearing none, and there’s no way he could tell this guy the full truth. Not yet, anyway.
One day. Yes, one day, once the Program is declassified and the Americans have changed their old rules and regulations. Then Rodney will show him and the others how wrong they are.
For now, simply imagining socking the guy will have to do.
Wow, he’s been thinking too much like Ronon—ten years ago, Rodney wouldn’t be considering literally hitting a fellow scientist in the face. (Probably, Mer amends, because some people should never earn a doctorate.)
Thankfully, the next presentation is about to begin, giving him a good excuse to get away before Spencer can ask anything else.
That was a complete and utter waste of time. Mostly—apart from one and a half presentations, most of it was old news, bad spins or faulty science. Not to mention the people. Such a pity his work is classified, or he’d be able to explain, in depth, why Dr Warren’s theories on wormhole physics was utter bullshit. And all that stuff Tyson was rambling on about—all right, some of it had merit. A fraction. That guy has spent too much time making television to focus on astrophysics properly.
Rodney took some notes of the good bits. But he had withdrawn from that particular presentation before the last slide silenced and the lights came on because Tyson stole an idea from him five, six years ago, and they would argue about it forever if they crossed paths. Better to avoid him altogether. Rodney had reined himself in with amazing self-preservation (mentally raging) and stayed quiet through the presentation, and Tyson never noticed that Dr McKay was one of the hundred attendees.
Oh, well. Over now, Mer says.
Yeah, Rodney agrees. Thank god.
He loosens his tie and sits down on the hotel bed. It’s a nice size room with a good view; he hasn’t spent a penny of his salary for months. The nibbles were all right and the champagne nicely dry.
But it was a weirdly quiet day, even if Rodney had ended up in a loud argument with three different individuals (excluding Malcom Tunney, who doesn’t deserve his doctorate) on the matter of quantum mechanics.
Back in the hotel, he finds himself reaching for his phone. Only then does he remember that he doesn’t have John’s number, because John is on another planet where they don’t have phones. And he’s far, far, far out of radio range. With a suddenly angry groan he throws the useless thing on the mattress.
Email. He can write. Send it with the next databurst. And clean up his notes. Try to work on that paper—those fools were, admittedly, right. He’s been away from the game for so long; no wonder they think he’s dead. Nothing published and available outside of nondisclosure agreements since … what? 1999?
He sets up his laptop on the desk and opens his notebook.
There’s a list of Possible Destinations—Las Vegas, New York, Hawaii even if he can’t stand the sharp sun, Paris, London, wherever—and he can afford buying a ticket at random. Hell, he can afford to rent a luxurious penthouse with an awesome view, book the biggest suite in a Vegas hotel, buy a week at a cabin in the snows—but what’s the point when he’s alone?
So he books a ticket back to Colorado Springs that Saturday. With a few hours to kill before the plane leaves, and unable to write anything more, he takes a walk from the hotel down to the nearby beach and boulevard. The light glittering on the water and the palms reminds him of the beaches of M2X-091, except of course that planet was quieter and without roads, the people once inhabiting that planet having been destroyed by the Wraith eons ago, leaving only ruins and plantlife behind. It was a very still place, the sunsets rapid and full of color, and Rodney remembers how John and Ford had made plans to return here to surf. As if the waves back on New Lantea weren’t good enough.
It’s noisy here. Earth. All these people. Rodney considers renting a car (a nice one; if John was here, he could’ve found a vintage one which John surely would drool over), driving … someplace; wherever. To take a look. Roadside. But he can’t come up with a better place within driving distance, and, again: what’s the point? Maybe coming here was a mistake, a bad idea. The conference was dull and the people there annoying. Spiteful. Loathing and jealous.
He walks up and down the beach. Finds a vendor and gets himself an ice-cream to cool off. Looks around, at the buildings, the people: a woman in a sundress and a large hat; a kid on a bike almost running him over (Rodney shouts after them to be more careful, he could’ve been killed!); some shirtless guys and girls in bikini playing volleyball (hm, maybe he should take John back to M2X-091 anyway, for surfing, he’d look nice in only a wet pair of swim shorts); someone walking by carrying their Dæmon in their arms, a ridiculously tiny dog with ribbons in their fur (Mer sneers at them; she would never humiliate herself like that). They’re all strangers. Humans of Earth. The juxtaposition gives him a headache. He looks at the water again, and thinks of Atlantis.
The ocean on New Lantea is much better than this.
When he returns to the Mountain, activity is in full swing. The Daedalus is in distant orbit and the movement is constant. Things are labeled, catalogued, and beamed up in steady stream. Some personnel are taking leave while others are reassigned. There are plenty of unfamiliar faces surrounding him.
His lab has been left the same. Lee hasn’t touched his desk or any of his whiteboard equations, and Rodney tries to settle in. Again. Writes a few emails. One or two more paragraphs for his paper, here and there. Corrections. Reads and researches. Drinks coffee, yells at the lab assistants, and throws Lee out (again).
Rodney waits.
Waits.
Waits.
Waits.
The elevator doors open on Level 22 and Colonel Caldwell steps in. The doors close. The marine guarding the elevator, to make sure no authorized personnel gets below NORAD and into the secret belly of the SGC, asks which floor he’s headed to. Presses the buttons.
The Daedalus has been in orbit around Earth for weeks. Items being transported aboard, things ticked off lists. Caldwell and the crew are busy, both up there and down on the ground. Loading, packing, clearing, everything double-checked and triple-checked. The whole ship has been decontaminated, as well, its systems checked and software updated. They’ll bring extra F-302:s with them to drop off at the City and the Aurora, which John no doubt will be happy about. Rodney knows he really wants to fly those things; Rodney’s not keen on it, as a Jumper is much safer and much more practical. But, sometimes, a fighter is ideal. It
They’ve gotten that Snake out of the NCIS agent—Todd?—but the Goa’uld died in the process. Good riddance, Rodney thinks. As soon as that was done, NCIS cleared out and returned to Washington for good. They and the Pentagon have been busy covering things up in the typical American fashion. Rodney hasn’t involved himself in that, only asking a few questions so that he could forward updates to John, who wants to know. Closure.
Well, it’s over now. Patrick Sheppard and family have returned to home, and the Mountain is back to normal, the pace starting to grow itchingly familiar. Gate teams travelling in and out. The alarm turning in the background. Coffee running out in the lab. Yeah, it’s becoming a sort of normal Rodney doesn’t want. The mattress in his VIP guest quarters is too soft, not good on his back.
“Dr McKay,” Caldwell says in way of greeting.
Rodney hasn’t slept again, substitution a bed for coffee. He’s stuck on an equation, writing it over and over again in a notebook, different configurations but it never makes sense. And in Atlantis, if he’d been in his lab too long, there’d be a distraction. A mission with AR-1, an announcement, an emergency calling him to the Gate Room; and every once in a while, John would drop in, a habit. He’d sometimes come bearing coffee or news, and sometimes he’d annoy the hell out of him with questions, poking at stuff, or playing Minesweeper on Rodney’s computers. Sometimes he’d just sit there—talking a little, softly, or not at all—watching Rodney work.
No such distractions here.
“Colonel. Actually, I was wondering. Is it decided yet when we’re leaving for Pegasus?”
“I’m headed to the General now to discuss it,” Caldwell says.
“Good,” Rodney says. It is good to hear. Things moving forward. “I’ll join you.”
On the last day of March, Rodney goes on a shopping spree. He decides: what the hell, I won’t spend my salary for the next few months, maybe even years. He makes a list of things which wouldn’t be strictly necessary—thus not included in the official cargo aboard the Daedalus.
He’s aware he can’t bring too much, of course, in terms of weight or size. That gives him a brilliant idea: he can beam it up to the Daedalus but instead of materializing the cargo, he’ll just store the data in the Asgard transport system’s buffer. Then he’ll transfer that data to an Ancient crystal, where the memory will be preserved—he’s got a habit of always bringing spare crystals. Never know when they come in handy.
In fact, they could do that with all or most of the cargo, giving more space to the people aboard the ship, lessen the load. Rodney spends an afternoon aboard the Daedalus, which is silently orbiting the moon—out of sight of commercial and privately owned satellites—to discuss the matter with Hermiod. The Asgard agrees that it’s possible, checking the algorithms for long-term storage stability.
Then Rodney heads to the nearest sizeable mall. Gets some new clothes in the right size, a new pair of running shoes (which is, really, the first pair he willingly buys. Combat boots are comfortable enough but this will be better when John drags him out on those morning jogs which, every now and then, Rodney has no choice but to join). A few more flash drives (can never have too many). Some DVDs and CDs, a few books.
He wanders through the bookstore, browsing the covers, and considers getting something for the others. Teyla’s written English is getting better and she can read pretty well now, so he picks a couple of thought-provoking titles (scientifically accurate, of course). He grabs a Sudoku book before he can stop himself—could be for John’s birthday, yeah, should he need an excuse.
Since the data crystal can store more than clothes and knickknacks, he heads for IKEA. It’s a silly idea, Mer thinks, but Rodney goes anyway and then almost runs through the place because there are whining children and overfilled carts in the way. But, fine as the Ancient beds are, he’d like a better mattress that’s kinder to his back. Something … bigger. While he’s at it, he gets some new shelves (can never have too many of those, plus they need someplace to put all those new books).
The thought stops him in his tracks at the cutlery aisle. He’s thinking in terms of we and us, and the bigger bed—going to need bigger quarters for that. (He’s already found some good ones on the thirtieth floor of a tower next to the central spire; lofty, high ceiling, good view, plenty of space; more of an apartment than a single room, ensuite and all. Close to a transporter, too. Not that he could tell anyone, because Zelenka or Miko and some of the others would attempt to call dibs.) He’s, naively and hopefully, imagining a future with John, together and out of hiding. As if they could ever share quarters in the City. As if they could ever let people know. As if.
Even if … even if that doesn’t happen, even if Don’t Ask Don’t Tell is never repealed—they wouldn’t leave each other. They’d still have use for a bigger bed.
Before he can change his mind, he pushes ahead toward the checkouts, fumbling in his pocket for his credit card.
The final boarding of the Daedalus takes over four hours. Most stuff has already been neatly packed and marked and scanned into the computers. It’s the people and their personal luggage which takes the longest, and Rodney’s been awake for fourteen hours.
He clutches the travelling mug of coffee, sips at it occasionally, and looks over at the Gate Room: he’s not due to beam up for another half hour, at least. Probably more. Delays. It’s almost as bad as commercial flights when this many people are involved and the Daedalus can’t land. They don’t beam up more than four people at a time, in order to get people spread out evenly in the ship and their IDs properly checked for the umpteenth time.
Some newcomers are coming with. A couple of marines, eight new scientists—sadly none astrophysicist.
“Ready to go, Dr McKay?” General Landry asks. He’s come to the Control Room to watch the proceedings.
Rodney rolls his stiff shoulders. “Very much. I can’t see why we can’t do this more efficiently. Yeah, yeah, security first and all of that—I got the sales pitch from Colonel Caldwell.”
“Then you know how important that is,” the General says. “Besides, it’s his ship to run. Anxious to return to the City, doctor?”
More than the man could possibly understand. It’s not like General Landry had that kind of connection to the Mountain: it’s not interactive and beautiful, and there’s no team for him, nothing like that. Rodney just nods, stilted.
Finally, a marine with a notepad, a list in her hand, approaches. “Dr McKay? You’re up next for beaming. You can enter the embarkation area now.”
Oh, thank god. Readily, Rodney grabs his luggage in his left hand—just a simple bag, slightly heavier than when he arrived here; most items are already aboard the Daedalus, either as solid matter or as raw data stored on Ancient crystals.
In his other, he carries a case which on the outside looks simply like any other equipment case. But—after a lot of debate with Landry and Caldwell—he’s got responsibility for the ZedPM; it was disconnected from the Mountain’s power supply this morning. Well, technically it was barely past midnight. He doesn’t fully trust anyone else to take care of the Ancient battery. It’s his job to get it installed in the Daedalus’ engine room. The ZedPM will shorten the journey by several weeks.
The three other people in his beaming group are scientists. Two he recognize, Dr Grey from Anthropology and Dr Reeds from Botany; the third is new, evident by the way she stares wide-eyed at everything and asking the two others a lot of questions. Also a doctor, but MD, it sounds like from the way she talks—yeah, Carson asked for some more staff for the infirmary, now that some people are being rotated to the Aurora.
Bright light takes them.
As soon as he’s aboard, Rodney heads straight for Engineering, where Hermiod and that technician, Novak, are waiting.
“Hello, Dr McKay,” Novak says. “It’s all prepared for the Zero Point Module. Unless, uh, you’d like to make any alterations?”
“I’ll check,” he says, placing the case next to the open crystal tray in the wall. While he does that, Novak watches him rather nervously, as if expecting severe reprimand. Oh, goody, she’s heard only bad things about him. (Not that it’s all wrong.) “Well. It’s good,” Rodney decides. Everything has been calibrated, just as last time the Daedalus was powered by such a device—when coming to Atlantis’ rescue during the Wraith Siege. “Shall we?”
Plugging the ZedPM requires a little more than a push of a button. But it doesn’t take more than a couple of minutes. Once it senses the connection to the ship, the device begins to glow warmly. It’s a very good sight, an echo of home, and Rodney steps back, pleased. “There we go.” He activates his radio. “Colonel Caldwell, the ZedPM is online.”
“Understood,” Caldwell replies. “We’ll break orbit within the hour.”
“Copy that. McKay out.”
Finally, Mer shares the thought with him, openly and warmly:
We’re going home.
Chapter 40: (re)union, part one
Summary:
his brain keeps scrambling it all up, a mixture of fantasy and memory.
Notes:
(2018-08-19) I've been sitting on this chapter since early July, lost on inspiration and will to write. My mental health has been up and down for a while, and I hit a snag when summer started and I ran out of work. But (hopefully) things are turning around now. Anyway, I've managed to churn out this chapter, at last. Sort of. There's one scene I'm struggling with, and I've been fighting with it for weeks, so finally I decided to split this chapter in two though originally it was meant to be just one. Therefore the chapter ending is kind of ... jagged?, I don't know. (The next half is much more fun and actually fulfills its name.)
Thank you everyone who has read, left kudos and/or comments. You keep me going!! Please enjoy!!
Chapter Text
xxxx.
(re)union
part one
his brain keeps scrambling it all up, a mixture of fantasy and memory.
Atlantis · New Lantea · Pegasus
April 8, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 193 days after the Uprising
Saturday morning starts the same as yesterday and the day before and the day before that, with one exception. John had the cast removed eleven days ago, and man does that feel good; he finally could take a shower comfortably without having to bother with covering up in plastic and awkwardly leaning against the slippery wall to keep his balance. Carson insists he keeps up with physiotherapy, using machines in the gym to work on rebuilding lost muscle mass, and regularly getting scanned in the infirmary; so far so good.
Today is the first time he’s gone for a run since the mission to Deserum over two months ago. John’s lungs burn, and Ronon and Ford reach the end of the corridor long before John does. They hadn’t gone easy. Not that John wants to. According to the doc, his leg is healed, the bone effortlessly able to take his weight, and what he needs is to regain his strength. He needs to be in top condition to lead the team.
Ford, out of breath, comes to a halt a few seconds after Ronon. Drinks deeply from his water canteen. The two of them wait until John catches up, slowing down his pace to a jog before coming to a halt.
“Ugh. This your usual route?” Ford says.
“Yeah,” Ronon says. The big guy shines with sweat but he isn’t bent over like his two companions. Well, John mostly. Ford, despite his grumbles, is young and fit.
“I thought a marine like you wouldn’t complain,” John says. He can feel the onset of a burn in his body, welcome right now though he might regret it later. He stretches gently, taking deep breaths. He’s missed the runs, and he tries not to be disappointed at the loss in his speed and endurance. It’ll return—he just has to work for it. Got to be patient, that’s all.
“It’s not complaining, sir,” Ford quickly answers. “Just, uh. Wondering.”
“Sure,” Ronon says. If his Dæmon had the facial ability of a human, John’s pretty sure she’d be smirking. Adria sticks out her tongue in response from her perch on Ford’s back, claws digging into his t-shirt.
“Alright,” John says before the two can really start, rocking back and forth on his heels to keep his heartrate going: “Let’s head back.”
“Race you?” Ronon asks.
“Some other time,” John says, gesturing at his leg.
The Satedan shrugs. “Ford?”
“Kind of depends,” the Lieutenant says. “If I win, I get to try your ray gun.”
John rolls his eyes. Okay, fine—Ronon’s particle magnum is very cool, and John wouldn’t mind having one of his own. But, seriously? Challenging a former Runner with a bet like that? Ford is going to end up regretting it.
Ronon actually considers it. “If I win,” he says, “I get your desert rations for three weeks.”
Ford’s grin is wide, all teeth. “You’re on.”
Oh, this John has got to see. He might let the City do some spying for him, to keep watching the race after they’ve passed him by. His own pace back to the Citadel is going to be a bit more relaxed.
“Sir, you’re not saying no to this,” Ford says, looking at him as if partly expecting his CO to intervene, citing regulations about betting on base.
John shows his palms, a gesture of peace. “It’s off the records. Technically I’m not on duty yet. Go ahead. Break a leg.”
If McKay were here, he’d snort and cross his arms wryly and remark: Oh, that’s very mature, very funny, and John would grab at the given opportunity to flirt (in moderation).
Instead, Ronon quirks a silent grin and nods wordlessly at Ford. Then they’re off, feet thundering across the floor. Within a few seconds they’ve crossed the threshold into the nearby plaza and rounded a corner and disappeared out of human sight.
If they’d taken the outside route, Shy could’ve followed them, but it’s raining—a sluggish hail, thunder looming at the distance—so they stuck to the inside maze of the City, a flight of their own. That, too, can be a challenge. Finding a route which wouldn’t trip up any unsuspecting civilian isn’t too difficult; the City is large enough, and the Expedition’s size negligible in comparison to what Atlantis could house. Thousands of people could easily live here.
John starts jogging after the odd pair at a more leisurely pace. He’s approaching the western stairwell of this tower a few minutes later when the City gleefully informs him that Ronon is the winner of the race (no surprise), and Ford reached the informal finishing line swearing like a sailor (well, a marine).
Oh, well, that’ll make the Lieutenant think twice next time.
John heads for his quarters, takes a shower. Unhurried. Sun rose a couple of hours ago and nothing important is threatening with its immediate presence.
There’s a security briefing at 11:00, and AR-12 is due to return around 12:30 from P2X-188 (MALP detected signs of a pre-industrial civilization and it’s a routine mission: offering a trade agreement, getting some good will with the folks), and John promised Teyla they’d spar before lunch. Without any missions for AR-1 and no emergencies on the horizon, John’s found himself immersed in a slowed-down pace—the whole City has, at least for a little while. He’s ready for it to end, though. To get back out there. He and his team, exploring, flying Jumpers, discovering things—he’s sat still for too long.
He’s got the most horrible, sharp sensation of déjà vu—was it only, what, four months ago he was in almost the exact same position? Waiting for Rodney to return to the City;
That time he didn’t have the rest of his team at his side, though. Only Teyla, while Ford and Rodney were stuck on Earth and travelling slowly, slowly through the void; no potentia to help them boost the Daedalus’ engines. It had been an excruciating time and he and Rodney had only started to figure out, then, who they were in relation to one another. Their orbit. This time is different and yet, horribly enough, the same.
He lathers his hair, thoughts trapped in a loop. He hasn’t had any real-time contact with Rodney for weeks, and he hasn’t tried to contact him. Not on purpose anyway—there was a whisper, a flicker of consciousness along their Bond a couple of days ago. The Daedalus would’ve crossed the void between galaxies by then, crossing the edge of Pegasus.
Maybe Rodney had tried to tell him something.
Maybe he’d just dreamed.
John feels the sigh building in his chest and fights it. He rinses, and then simply stands there under the stream of water for a while. Breathes through his nose. He wonders what Rodney’s up to. In the heart of the Daedalus, keeping an eye on the engines? Wandering the tight grey corridors, pacing, working on an equation? Lying on cot, resting, nothing else to do? Would Rodney keep his habits of sleeping in only a t-shirt on the ship, and wake up in the middle of night sometimes to keep his brain busy?
The cot must be small and uncomfortable, and Rodney’s going to complain about it when he returns, and John too easily imagines how they’ll tumble through a transporter to his quarters, or Rodney’s, whichever—onto the bed before they’re out of their clothes. He bites his lip, anticipation rising in his belly, remembering the texture of Rodney’s kisses, his mouth hot, his hands demanding.
John leans back against the shower wall, his body burning for reasons other than the rising steam, and strokes himself slowly, already getting hard. Imagines Rodney’s mouth on his throat and collarbone, and those familiar hands on his own, stroking his cock. Imagines Rodney pressing into the curve of his back, encircling possessively, and John’s breath hitches—today, soon, soon, tonight, Rodney is coming home, he’s coming home and they’ll be reunited. They’ll touch without plans of letting go, and John’s whole body longs for him, it almost hurts;
He can—so easily, too easily—imagine: Rodney’s voice, his groans and that noise he makes when he’s close to coming, when John is making him come; John’s memorized it, sweetly. He thrusts his hips, imagining it’s Rodney’s hand around him, his arms, and a familiar body pressing against his, hotly, hard, and Rodney’s sounds next to his ear, heady, fixated on only this moment, a whisper of Oh yeah keep going, keep doing that, John—Rodney likes being bossy in bed; Rodney’s nice in bed, with those hands and oh his broad strong shoulders. It’s difficult to decide which position to imagine them in; in bed or elsewhere?—his brain keeps scrambling it all up, a mixture of fantasy and memory.
Speeding up, he strokes across his chest, brushing a hardened nipple. Muscles tightening, he nearly loses his balance and has to lean his forehead against the cool ceramic wall. Breathing. Breathing. Breathing. John groans, thighs trembling as he comes, eyes closed and heart thundering.
It takes a moment to regain control of his lungs. Then he grabs the dropped bar of soap—it nearly slips from his fingers—gets cleaned up, riding the pleasant aftershocks, body relaxed. It’s a nice start of the day, and for once he dares to hope that’ll only get better.
He’d left his radio on the drawer next to the bed. Now hears it, faintly. Well, Shy does, having waited perched on the sill of one of the open windows, doing some grooming of their wings.
“Colonel Sheppard, please respond.”
[That sounds important.]
He’d rather leave it be, if he could, but he’s supposed to be on duty and if there’s an emergency—John quickly stumbles out of the shower, turning off the fall of water with a thought. Shivering, confronted by the cold air. The City’s vents kindly kick in, blowing in some hotter air. Takes a couple of deep breaths to will his pulse down. He fits the radio in his ear with one hand, the other quickly toweling his hair and shoulders.
Finds his voice. It’s kind of hoarse, so he clears his throat. “Sheppard here. What’s the problem?”
“Colonel, this is Simpson. I’m on the South Pier with Dr Grodin. Colonel, do you have time to come down here for a moment? There’s a malfunctioning panel, and we’ve tried to shut it off but can’t.”
Right. Time to play the scientists’ Favorite Ancient Light Switch. It’s not very appealing—well, the only way it ever was appealing was when it was Rodney making the calls, and they’d bet on what this or that Ancient gadget was meant to do, and John could pester him with annoying questions and bad jokes, and Rodney stealing powerbars out of John’s TAC vest while he worked on some alien tech.
For once he doesn’t have a good excuse to get away. But it doesn’t sound like anything might explode, at least not within the hour, so he can grab a moment to shave before getting dressed.
“I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.”
Turns out the piece of Ancient equipment inside of the wall panel was damaged during the floods which occurred when the Expedition first found the City, and it’s been hanging by a thread for years, and now the damage has made itself known. A cracked crystal, some damaged circuitry, and Dr Grodin is worried about power output. They’ll have to route around it—some secondary systems use that panel and the people up in the Control Room had just noticed that some of said systems had become sluggish.
It takes John a couple of minutes of coaxing to get the thing shut off, and then the engineers start taking care of the rerouting.
[At least it wasn’t a disaster waiting to blow up], Shy says quietly. Worst thing could’ve happened was power loss, a blackout, not irreversible destruction.
The thought strikes him, watching Dr Grodin and Dr Simpson work—they’ve asked him to stick around, in case the Ancient tech gives them any more trouble. It trikes him: why the City didn’t tell him about the problem sooner?
Maybe She’s just … so old now, so old and there are a hundred tiny issues all over the place, and She doesn’t waste the energy of alerting him to them all unless they’re life-threatening. Sometimes, her AI can be … not erratic, exactly; She doesn’t stop remembering what She is, or who the inhabitants of the City are; but sometimes Her presence fades, like waves on the shore cresting and receding, present but not as palpable as it was moments before.
After all, the City was constructed millions of years ago. Initially, before any of the Ancients rose to Ascension and Merged with Her, the systems were meant to be automatic only a degree. Not a completely self-caring, self-repairing mechanism, dependent on Her creators to function properly. The Ancients stopped caring for Her a long, long time ago, and during those ten thousand years of silence, the City had no one to communicate with.
John realizes, standing in that corridor, that from the City’s point of view, the Expedition are like insects. Tiny and brief, and they got here two years ago—a blink of an eye, from the perspective of a City that’s endured for seven million years. Insignificant, in a way. Their lifespans will soon be over, but the City … She’ll endure. She’ll live beyond the Expedition (unless they themselves destroy Her, activating the bomb; but John can’t let that happen).
Of course She can’t alert him to each and every little problem, a malfunctioning light, a blown fuse, a glitching console. He’d never do anything else but relay Her words that way, all day long, and that’s not what either of them wants.
“That should do it,” Simpsons says, shaking John from his thoughts.
The hum of the City has reached a more pleased pitch, so he guesses the redirected systems work better already. “Nice work.” He glances at his wristwatch. “Unless there’s anything else …”
“No, that should be it. Thanks for the assistance, Colonel,” Grodin says, dusting off his pants at the knees. No one’s been in these corridors for a while. John nods, but before he can leave, Simpsons asks:
“Anything on the Daedalus yet?”
“They’re still too far out for our long-range sensors to detect,” John says. Due to the Daedalus’ currently extreme velocities, getting a fix in subspace is basically impossible until the vessel is in this solar system. “But they’re due around 15:00 hours. We’ll let you know when they land.”
He breakfasts with his team. They’re all in a good mood, even Ford despite losing his race and now watching, with some envy, Ronon practically devouring a slice of sponge cake. Why they would serve that for breakfast John has no idea, but maybe the Satedan convinced the marines on KP duty to deliver him some from the fridge out of spite. Or that piece was something Ford had saved for later, and now he had to give it up.
John had, as usual, filled his tray with too much food and a bowl of blue Jell-O, so used to sharing at least half of it with Rodney. Thankfully, Teyla has stopped making fun of him for that habit. (Ford only pointed it out once, and John had given the kid a Look, and it hasn’t been mentioned since).
“This is really good,” Ronon says, finishing the last of the sponge cake. “Really good. Mm-mm.”
“Stop it,” Ford groans, and mutters something intangible into his cereal.
Ronon only goes on: “Heard there’s chocolate pudding tomorrow …”
Adria, resting across the Lieutenant’s shoulders, is glaring at Ronon’s Dæmon, and said Dæmon meets the glare with an almost lazy gaze. John can foresee at least one prank within forty-eight hours. They’ve been on the same team for over three months now, and Ford might dare to take it pretty far. Not too far, though. John will keep clear of two for a while though, to stay out of the crossfire.
“Take it easy on him, Ronon,” John says, taking a bite of his sandwich. “No need to torment him.”
“He lost,” Ronon says, “and, like your people says, ‘fair and square’. Don’t know what squares have to do with it.”
“To be honest,” John says, “I don’t either.”
Teyla raises an eyebrow; almost disapproval. “Another bet?”
“Nah. Kind of. They raced across the Pier this morning during our run,” John says.
Teyla arches a graceful brow. “I see. Well, I will not be participating in any of that, at least not on the basis of winnings.”
“Not even sparring?” Ford asks. “You’d win, big time.” He thinks for a moment, then adds: “Against everyone but Ronon, maybe.”
“Oh?” Teyla says, sharing a glance with Ronon. “I am not so sure.”
“Sounds like a bet to me,” Ronon says, a smile tugging on his lips.
“Don’t you start,” John says, but will little heat.
(Also, Ford is totally wrong on this one. Sure, Ronon is bigger and stronger, but raw strength isn’t always everything. He would bet on Teyla if it really came down to it.)
Eleven hundred hours rolls around, and they part ways; Ford joins John for the security briefing, while Teyla says she’s going to meditate, and Ronon—well, he’s not sure where Ronon is heading. A lot of people think the big guy spends his time awake fighting, sparring, eating or (when possible) killing Wraith, but John knows he also spends quite a lot of time in the Library. He’s being coached by Dr Zelenka on some science subjects; same with Teyla, to get them familiarized with computers and the City’s systems, and able to solve basic problems on their own.
The briefing is pretty boring and contains little new. They’re testing a new schedule for City patrols—something that started when they first discovered Atlantis, but this is the first time they’ve made any changes to the routine. So far the results are promising. Sometimes, what’s needed for a boost in efficiency is a bit of change. Bates is in a pretty good mood today, reporting with a smile, and John figures the Sergeant, like everyone else in the City, is looking forward to the Daedalus’ landing.
As much as John personally might dislike this renewed contact with Terra, it is a morale booster for the Expedition; he can’t deny that. The ship is carrying letters from their second home.
“Good the patrols are working out,” John says. “Keep me appraised. What about that water filtering issue?”
“Sorry, sir, but I thought that was for the engineers, not the military contingent,” Major Lorne says. The Major usually keeps a low profile during these meetings. Though he’s been accepted as part of the Expedition now, the past lingers. Colonel Caldwell left him here at the end of the Uprising to keep an eye on the Expedition, and initially he was an outsider. But he’s proven himself a stable, useful member. And John isn’t being partial because the guy is Air Force and an excellent pilot.
“True, but a possible contamination of our water supply would be considered a security issue,” John explains. The division of labor isn’t exactly the same as in the Mountain or some other Earth base. “Ford, sitrep?”
“We’re on top of it. The Engineering Department has almost gotten rid of all the underwater fungus growth on the East Pier,” Ford says, wrinkling his nose. “At least I think it’s fungus. Anyway, it was clogging up some water intake pipes, but they’ve nearly cleared it, and Dr Beckett took a sample and said it isn’t harmful to humans. Uh, it never got past the filters, so clean water isn’t a problem. I asked Dr Garcia to notify me when it’s done, or if the situation changes.”
“Very good,” Bates says, and John ticks that item off the agenda.
“Alright, the new personnel files,” John says. “Two new marines will be joining us today, and they’ll need to be brought up to speed. Sanchez has already volunteered give them a tour of the City.”
“Which ones, exactly, sir?” Major Lorne asks.
“Technically not marines,” Bates says. “British SAS soldiers, Corporal Hobbs and Lieutenant Blake. Both of them have solid records. I’ve spoken with Ramirez about team assignments. I recommend they be on the same team to begin with. Recon Eight is spread thin until Private Wade recovers from the flu. AR-3 has agreed to take in either one of the new boys after that, and the other will stay with AR-8.”
“Sounds good,” John agrees, and decides to be frank: “Would they have an issue serving with Lieutenant Brittany and taking her orders?”
John knows from experience not all male soldiers can handle working alongside, or taking orders from, a woman, especially in the field. And out here in Pegasus it’s vital there’s no bullshit. John would rather not have to send anyone back to Terra because of harassment—it’s already happened once—quietly brushed over, and the guy in question will never get close to the Stargate again, if John has anything to say about it.
Bates checks the notes on his datapad, pulling on the two men’s files in question. “According to their previous COs, there have been no filed complaints or altercations. Nothing on the record, official or otherwise.”
“But we’ll keep an eye out, just the same, sir,” Ford adds, looking at his CO across the conference table.
“Good. Then there’s AR-9,” John says. “Snow’s recovery is going to take a few more weeks.”
“We’ve got a spot in the Control Room prepped and ready for him,” Bates says. “Chuck will give him the intro course. As it stands, we’ll monitor their missions and see which ones will be suitable for him to join until he’s back. It’ll be something like fifty/fifty, depending on Dr Beckett’s opinion on his physiotherapy. In the meantime, Dr Kranz and Sergeant Parker will rotate their shifts to join AR-9 when necessary.”
John taps the pen against the tabletop, thinking. “Kranz—that’s Anthropology. This her first field assignment?”
“Officially, yes, sir, but she’s been offworld before,” Bates says. “She helped with the negotiations on M20-999. The people we helped build that dam and create generators for. She’s passed the first aid course.”
“Also knows how to shoot,” Ford adds. “I assisted her once in the range. She’s okay with a 9mil.”
John nods. Good, that’ll make it easier on everyone involved. AR-9 wouldn’t appreciate a completely green face among them.
“Last item. AR-4 will be back on full capacity; Dr Lam gave MacGrimmon clearance before they left Earth. I’ve reviewed some records, and there are some promotions we need to take care of once they land,” John says. “Notably Corporal MacGrimmon and Captain Teldy.”
The latter is pretty new to Atlantis, though she’s been with the SGC for longer. However, she saved a lot of people during the Wraith attack of the Aurora, finishing some last-minute repairs while at the same time defending a downed marine from advancing Wraith drones which had boarded the ship, and her record says only good things. The timing for both promotions is right.
“Nice!” Ford grins, and hastily adds (he’s more adherent to protocol when Lorne or Bates are around), “Sir.”
“I agree, Colonel,” Bates says, a piece of wry humor spilling onto his expression at how poorly Ford can contain his enthusiasm. “Have they been notified?”
“I doubt they’ve gotten any updates to their email inboxes the last couple of days, being out of comm range, but yeah,” John says, “and I’ll have a chat with them once the Daedalus lands. We’ll sort out the details tomorrow.”
“Yes, sir.”
“That’s all for now,” John says, happy to adjourn this meeting. “Dismissed.”
Major Lorne and his Dæmon are out of the room first, followed by Bates, carrying a datapad and a stack of important papers. Sometimes, John wonders how the hell the Sergeant manages it—to stay in the City for most of his time, sorting out personnel and equipment issues, paperwork, and not being out there moving, fighting; his patience, coupled with that healthy dose of paranoia, is perfect in a Security Officer, but John wonders how he doesn’t go stir crazy. Though Bates is punctual about actually taking his off-days off (and he must be pleased that John has been on leave the last few weeks. Kind of. In a manner of speaking. Something about the CO reflecting the general health of the base.)
He loses the sparring match, of course. He has a suspicion Teyla’s going easy on him, to start with, softening it up. She’s a patient teacher. John likes to think he’s gotten better at this after having trained banto’a for two years, but he feels very rusty right now. The third time he hits the mat, Teyla smiles and declares the session to be over.
“Gloat all you like,” John says, “but next time …”
“Oh yes?” Teyla laughs. “We shall see, John Sheppard.”
“You won’t be laughing then.”
“By that, I assume you mean another few years.”
“Hilarious.”
Teyla only smiles, and draws him into the Athosian greeting, forehead to forehead. Always finish they sparring matches that way.
John grabs a towel from his gym bag. Time for another shower, and Elizabeth asked to see him before lunch. Not quite a formal meeting, but it could be about AR-12’s mission to P2X-188. They should’ve returned by now.
“Meet you in the mess hall, say, thirteen hundred hours?”
“I will see you there, John.”
Chapter 41: (re)union, part two
Summary:
yours or mine? | mine.
Notes:
(2018-09-10) Sorry about the delay. I said a day or so after updating the first part, didn't I? Well. That failed. But here it is. The next two chapters - the last ones of this fic - are pretty much completed already, and I'm going to update them shortly, as well. Then we'll see how long it will be until I return to this series. I love writing and world-building for it, so hopefully not too long. I've got other WIPs I should get onto before I add any new fics to this series (probably) ...
(Please excuse my poor attempts at smut. I tried.)
Chapter Text
xxxxi.
(re)union
part two
yours or mine? | mine.
The rest of the day drags on eternally.
John passes by the Control Room half a dozen times to have a look around and pretending to be busy. Greets incoming and outgoing teams. Mission debrief with AR-12 in the Conference Room when return from M91-002. Drops into Weir’s office for an unofficial chat. But it isn’t until seventeen hundred hours that he return for the time he’s truly been waiting for.
The Control Room is unusually packed with people, brimming with a vibrant kind of energy; people are waiting not only for Rodney and the various AR-teams’ return, but for materials and letters from home, packages from Terra, gifts from loved ones. Not to mention the supplies in weapons, food, and entertainment—yeah, Elizabeth actually managed to convince the IOA and the SGC to send them television sets and game consoles and various other things the share in communal areas. Something about the Expedition’s morale.
John, with nothing else to do—he’s finished signing his reports listened to the meetings, held his security briefings with Bates and the marines on patrol—finds himself leaning against one of the consoles. Attempting to (appear to) be casual, as if nothing’s causing his heart to beat faster.
He’d taken a very long shower after that run, just thinking, thoughts looping while he shampoos his hair. He hasn’t had any real-time contact with Rodney for weeks, and he hasn’t tried to contact him. Not on purpose anyway—there was a whisper, a flicker of consciousness along their Bond a couple of days ago. The Daedalus would’ve crossed the void between galaxies by then, entering Pegasus. Maybe Rodney had tried to tell him something. Maybe he’d just dreamed.
The ship’s journey is augmented and shortened thanks to the potentia onboard. John is looking forward to having it back and reinstalling it in the City; he knows he’s not the only one who’ll feel safer with it back to strengthen their systems and shields. The Wraith may think the City has been destroyed for now, but deep down John is sure it’s only a matter of time before they’re rediscovered. Not to mention the other bad Guys and Disasters which could strike unexpectedly. They need to be ready for that.
“Sir,” Chuck suddenly announces. “I’m reading a hyperspace window opening ten thousand kilometers above the planet. It’s the Daedalus.”
Okay, keep your cool. It’s just the Daedalus. Maybe McKay won’t even be on the Bridge, probably busy packing up the potentia. Yeah, there’s no reason for him to get his pulse and hopes up.
“Open a channel.”
Chuck presses a few buttons, then nods.
“Daedalus, this is Colonel Sheppard. Welcome to New Lantea.”
“Thank you, Colonel,” Colonel Caldwell answers. “It was a shorter trip that we’re used to, thanks to the ZPM. We’re beginning our final approach. We’ll begin beaming down personnel and supplies to designated areas as soon as we’re in range. I hear Dr Weir has a mission for us, so I’m not going to enter the atmosphere for a landing unless I have to.”
“Understood. We’ve prepared a cargo bay in a tower on the North Pier,” John says.
It’s not really a cargo bay; when they’d started working on clearing that space a week and a half ago to store equipment (Bates’ idea), the City had been humored, and would’ve smiled if She could. Originally, that room was a massive atrium mean for public announcements and meditation, that sort of thing. Could be used as a plaza as well—it’s the top floor of a tower; the roof retracts. But the room serves its purpose; it’s large enough hold the whole Expedition and more, and everything the Daedalus is bringing to the City will fit there.
“Relaying coordinates,” Chuck says, doing so with a keyboard smatter.
“Coordinates received. We’ll be in range within a minute. Caldwell out.”
The comm link is cut, and John exhales, keeps himself from shuddering. Shy stretches their wings and ruffles them. All of a sudden, they’re apprehensive, even nervous, which is completely irrational. What’s there to be anxious about? It’s just Rodney, coming home;
“I’ll be in the cargo bay,” John says to Chuck. “Get two teams there. We’ll be doing some lifting.” He taps his earpiece. “Dr Weir, the Daedalus is on approach and will start beaming shortly.”
“Understood. I’m already in the cargo bay myself,” Elizabeth’s voice filters through the radio. “See you there.”
People are sent down first. After all, that’s self-unloading cargo, able to get out of the way and help with sorting out all the equipment that’s going to come after—and there’s a lot.
John’s browsing through the list of approved, sent items a final time on his datapad while walking from the Control Room to the cargo bay. Takes the nearest transporter. He’s not the only person on his way there: people want to greet the returning marines and scientists, and even if they haven’t been called to duty they’re ready to help out with carrying stuff and unpacking boxes.
The manifest includes anything from first aid kits, needles and thread, and blankets, to food and tinned emergency supplies, ammunition and weaponry, personal packages, uniforms and other standardized clothing—the list goes on and on and on, every Department having made wishes of their own.
John had asked for launchers and a dozen more M3s, which he’s pleased they’ve been granted—with things calmer back in Avalon, the SGC has (grudgingly) allotted the Expedition a bigger budget. But he didn’t really expect General Landry to actually send any swords, so he’s not that surprised no blades (except for a box of Swiss army knives) are included. Pity, though. He’d been kind of looking forward to developing a sword training routine with Ronon, and the Satedan could’ve taught the marines. Long-range combat isn’t always the answer. Not when a Wraith’s aiming their hand at your heart.
White light floods the wide room. When it dissolves, there are a few dozen people there, weighed down by luggage: their old marines, the two new SAS soldiers, a few civilians. There’ll be an addition to their medical team, plus two engineers, one astrophysicist, and one archeologist. John’s gaze flickers over their faces, old and new, in desperate search;
Rodney’s back is turned to the door. A bag is slung over his shoulder and he’s holding a case in his left hand. The potentia—John is certain, can feel the tremendous power in sudden proximity, even if he can’t hear it the way he can most other Ancient tech. It’s a ghost scratching his mind.
Weir greets the newcomers—a brief welcoming speech—and Bates helps out by handing out datapads with information and a City map. As people begin to mingle—a clap on a shoulder, a word of welcome, a hug between old friends—John wheedles through the crowd. Tries to be casual. Relaxed.
Hey, it’s just Rodney. No big deal. No big.
Meredith spots him first. She blinks slowly, as if pleased, and her tail is curved right up: a sign of pleasant happiness and delight.
John aims for casual. “Nice trip?”
“Boring. But not too long, thanks to the ZedPM, so there’s that,” Rodney says, turning on his heel so they’re face to face. His face is the same, undamaged, mouth askew and uniform a little ruffled around the edges. Freshly shaved, no stubble. John is kind of disappointed that he got no chance to see Rodney in civilian clothes.
“Here, hold this,” Rodney says, without pause, and he hands over the silver case.
The potentia itself isn’t that heavy but it feels like a substantial weight, holding them down, like a grounding station and Rodney is the lightning. Rodney’s hand lingers on the handle for a second too long, the touch which could’ve been casual scorching John’s skin.
John clears his throat. “Want to install it?”
“Right now? Sure, why not. Hello, Elizabeth,” Rodney says, waving a hand at her when they pass her by, heading toward the transporter one corridor down. “We’re going to the Core with the ZedPM.”
“Good to have you back, Rodney,” Elizabeth says. “Please do. I’ll be here for the next hour or so. I must remind you that Dr Zelenka wants to go over the manifests and updates with you as soon as you can.”
“Right, right. I’ll radio him.”
“There’s a party tonight,” John adds jovially. “Halling’s visiting, bringing a casket of ruus wine. Got to welcome the new guys and all that.”
“Right,” Rodney says again, distracted. But Mer’s gaze is very, very focused. “ZedPM first.”
They reach the transporter, but have to wait in line for a moment, as people have started carrying smaller pieces of equipment from the cargo bay to wherever it’s needed. John leans a shoulder against the wall, watches Rodney’s profile. His hands are steady now, and his expression difficult to read. Rodney’s eyes meet his, and they don’t really say anything, nothing verbal, nothing complete and articulated. But heat pools in John’s belly, spreading upward his spine. Rodney’s mouth forms a tilted tiny smile.
The transporter door opens and they step inside, hurrying before anyone else can join them. A stolen moment.
“I brought some personal items from Earth,” Rodney says abruptly. “I had them beamed directly to my quarters.”
“Is that an invitation?”
“It could be.”
The doors open, and they’re in the lower corridors of the Central Tower. Path familiar. The security patrols include a constant presence in key areas, such as the Chair and Core Room, and two marines are guarding the doors. They straighten their backs and nod in John’s direction, letting them pass without question.
The Core glows, warmly and steadily, thanks to the one potentia already there. The two other slots are empty: one of the devices powers the Aurora and will remain on that ship for the foreseeable future.
“The marines were slouching,” Rodney comments, approaching the console in the center of the room. “Bad form.”
“It’s the end of the shift, but I’ll tell them,” John says. And it’s very boring standing guard in this uninhabited area, but that’s no reason to be a slouch. Not that John can claim to be the best example; he isn’t the cold, rigid, perfect soldier most marines are trained to believe is the most efficient form there is. “After all, when a civilian notices, we’re in trouble.”
“Oh, please.” Rodney rolls his eyes. “Also, they got it from you, Colonel Can’t-Sit-or-Stand-Properly. There, I’ve initialized the system. Go ahead and plug in the ZedPM.”
And John does.
The City’s Song rises in pitch.
They can’t, sadly, head for Rodney’s quarters right away.
There is some unpacking to do, and a meeting with all senior staff. McKay has a half-hour long talk with Zelenka about the City’s status and the list of items the Daedalus brought, double-checking everything. Then Halling and five Athosians arrive through the Gate as night’s starting to fall, and food is brought out and the music gets going—various members of the Expedition have banded together, combing their musical skills to create a motley orchestra. Dr Gregor is surprisingly good with the saxophone. John kind of wonders, for a second, why Rodney’s never joined, showing off his piano skills.
But Rodney’s always been uncertain about those. Showing them, publicly. People have been cruel in the past and that lingers, and it’s almost like a secret being kept close to heart. Intimate. And he sent him those recordings, and talked about getting a grand piano—the tips of John’s ears burn thinking about it. That’s … awfully romantic for a guy most people thinks is an asshole.
It takes another two or three hours before things wind down and they’re free to go. John had two glasses of ruus wine, which he will regret in the morning—that stuff has got one hell of a kick—but right now he doesn’t mind. It’s a struggle to keep his hands and eyes off Rodney.
They’ve hardly left each other’s side for the whole day, but people are used to that, and no one’s behaved oddly so John hasn’t tried to stray. Rodney’s stuck with John through the meetings and the eating and even when John talked with MacGrimmon and Teldy about their upcoming promotion ceremonies, scheduled to take place two days from now.
Finally, finally, the feasting is dying down and people are dispersing. And John looks at Rodney, sharing the simple thought: Mine or yours?
Mine, Rodney decides.
The door slides shut behind them as they stumble inside, pretty much draped over one another already. But John’s plans to make a beeline for the nearest available surface backfires, because Rodney’s quarters are a … different. A little bit, yeah. Same room, dimly lit; even more cramped than before, a half-open bag on the floor and cases stacked in one corner and the desk covered with boxes. But, most importantly, there’s a new centerpiece.
It doesn’t look very Ancient. John blinks. It’s still there. Huh.
“You … bought a new bed?”
Rodney’s shoulder presses against John’s as he guides him further into the room. “A bigger bed.” The emphasis is very, very important.
It is. It’s pretty much king sized, with a comfy-looking layer of mattresses and neat blankets and sheets with the corners tucked in with military precision. John wonders how the hell it got here because so far they haven’t found any bigger sturdier beds in Atlantis; then, oh right—Asgard transport beam. Rodney mentioned that earlier. John hadn’t thought that meant switching out his furniture, though. More like, maybe, science equipment, computers, machinery to build ray guns (a guy can dream).
“I can see that.”
“So,” Rodney says slowly, sitting down on the edge and patting the mattress invitingly, “left side or right side?”
“I didn’t think you wanted to go right to sleep, but okay,” John teases, pretending to seriously consider the thought before walking over to the bed.
Before Rodney has a chance to deflect him, he straddles his lap, and Rodney makes a happy surprised noise. It’s kind of like a purr. Or maybe it is, and he’s doing it together with Mer. It’s nice, low-pitch, and John grinds his hips slowly. Good thing he took his belt off earlier, left it with his trusty knife, usually hanging there, in his quarters; otherwise this would’ve been uncomfortable.
“Because I’m not that tired.”
“Uh-huh,” Rodney says, an exhale, “I … I can. I can work with that.”
They kiss, messily, wetly. Panting heavily like he’s running, fighting to keep up, Rodney shifts so that they’re moving tightly against each other, his hands digging into John’s hips. He’s deliciously hard, and John reaches down to open Rodney’s zipper. Teeth scrape against his neck, and then Rodney determinedly work on the same spot for a while, resolute to leave his mark. Turtleneck tomorrow, John thinks dimly. Unless it’s in the laundry basket.
“Would ‘top or bottom’ be a better question?” Rodney asks, mouth pressed to John’s collarbone.
Instead of answering, John kisses him again, stroking him firmly through his briefs. The tip of Rodney’s cock is wet with precum. He breathes heavily into John’s mouth, letting him pull him free. Rodney’s cock is heavy in his hand, and Rodney returns the gesture, and they rut against each other almost helplessly.
“Or …” Rodney takes a deep breath, almost like a drunk man trying to steady himself. His expression is mildly confused when John unstraddles him. “Or ‘versatile’? It’s not all binaries, that …”
John interrupts him by taking his cock in his mouth, and Rodney makes a delicious noise. Grabs John’s head, fingers burying in his hair, his hips stuttering, a reflex.
“John! Oh. god. fuck—” Rodney gasps and groans deliciously and then ceases talking altogether, mouth slack.
He keeps going for a while, focusing on relaxing his mouth and throat, taking Rodney as deep as he dares. Combines with stroking with his hands, teasingly. Rodney is visibly straining, trying to hold himself back, hips stuttering a little and he gasps oh, shit, sorry when he’s a bit too enthusiastic for John to handle. It’s okay, and Rodney’s fingers bury in John’s hair, and he lets John hold his hips down to keep him steady. He is also—groans and gasps notwithstanding—unusually silent, no running commentary, and John withdraws briefly with a grin.
“So that’s what it takes to shut you up.”
Rodney laughs breathlessly. “That’s cheating, you … you. And I’d have you like this. All of the time. If I could.”
“Oh yeah?” Perversely curious, John keeps stroking him, both hands now. “All the time, anywhere, and nothing else, huh?”
“For a guy who hadn’t sucked a cock until last year, you’re really good at it.”
“A compliment?” John raises an eyebrow. “No sarcasm? Wow.”
“No point in telling a lie. And stop it with the sarcasm—”
“Hush. Going to thank me later,” John smirks, and returns his focus to Rodney’s cock.
“Hang on. I want to touch you,” Rodney whines. “Jo-ohn.”
Getting there, shhh. Patience.
Now, Rodney demands, a reverberating thought, massive as a sun. Rodney’s hands move from the top of John’s head to his shoulders, sneaks under his arms, and, with a surprising amount of raw strength, attempts to haul him up. Rodney’s expression is so needy John takes pity and allows him. Crawls onto the bed, mouth weirdly empty. There’s a moment of confusion which way to turn atop of the mattress, limbs splaying as they roll around, and Rodney almost elbows him in the face—sorry, sorry!—and John’s laugh—it’s fine; no harm no foul—turns into a startled gasp when Rodney takes his cock in hand, steady firm strokes.
John buries his face against Rodney’s broad shoulder, breathing ragged. Didn’t think it’d feel like this. This important in its simplicity.
They’ve somehow ended up sideways across the bed, face to face, feet sticking out, and John curls his toes. Kind of cold. John wraps his arms around him, playfully bumps his nose against Rodney’s, and they go still. Quiet.
“Hey there.” John doesn’t spell out I missed you, but it’s hidden there underneath so obviously.
“Hey yourself.” A lazy smile;
The kiss is slow and saturated.
Rodney presses a leg between John’s, and John groans, grinds his hips, seeking delicious friction. The following minutes are quiet: they don’t speak, only move, synched and seeking closure, and the dim lights crest in intensity with their pleasure. It’s not a frantic haze. Everything is clear and slow. Together, they’ve got time. For the first time in a long time.
John comes with a whine at the back of his throat, and Rodney stutters a winding sentence—yes, yes, oh god yes—and follows.
Limbs heavy and sated, John doesn’t move. Neither does Rodney. Should get cleaned up, but he can’t bother. The air is too chilly. Rodney reaches out a hand, fumbling for the blanket which fell on the floor earlier.
It’s a minor struggle but eventually they’re huddled together beneath it, all entwined, and Mer leaps into the bed with them, curled up in the dip by their feet. Shy’s found a perch on the headboard, eyes blinking shut, and John’s just started drifting off when he feels Rodney mouthing something softly against his forehead. He’s too tired to open his eyes.
“… Mm-mm?”
A little bit louder this time. “New Athos.”
Oh. “Soon,” John promises. Yawns. “Got to … tell the team.”
“Tomorrow,” Rodney decides. John senses the shape of Rodney’s mouth, still lightly pressed to his skin, forming a content smile. “G’night, John.”
“Night.”
And John falls asleep.
Chapter 42: the journey home
Summary:
they’ve been free;
Chapter Text
xxxxi.
the journey home
they’ve been free;
NCIS Headquarters, Washington D.C. · Earth · The Milky Way
April 8, 2006, C.E. (Terran time)
They’ve been free for thirty days.
Kate had woken up inside walls of concrete and solid steel, and nameless marines had guarded the place like shadows. Confusion had rocked her core, and she’d clung to her Dæmon, cold and afraid, while General Landry and Gibbs and Colonel Carter explained what had happened. How they’d dug the Snake out of her using alien technology. And her mind was still haunted by things she remember seeing, feeling, doing, but she never chose to. The Thing inside of her did. The Goa’uld.
(She thought she was dying. Suffocating. Slowly.)
It had killed people with her hands. Cold and ruthless and uncaring. She’s still not feeling guiltless, even if the Director has vouched for her, and Gibbs, and she’d been freed of charges—being backed up by General O’Neill at the Pentagon had also helped. The General had released an official statement, explaining the situation with lies the public could swallow. Mistaken identities. Undercover work.
Afterward, the General had taken her aside and given her a list of numbers to people within the SGC to talk to. Doctors, friends. People with similar experiences; there’s a woman named Sarah Gardner, an old friend of Dr Jackson’s who not too long ago also spent time as an unwilling host but survived the experience after the extraction of the Goa’uld.
Kate can’t go to a regular psychologist for this.
There was something oddly familiar with the General’s statement of understanding: and Kate remembered, suddenly, that shooting of Senator Kinsey, years ago. Turned out O’Neill had been framed. What the public, or NCIS, hadn’t heard was that the Trust had used alien technology to do it, creating a false image of the General. It’s not like possession at all, but the General can sympathize with the guilt and confusion and the overhanging threat of crimes hanging over her head.
Director Sheppard had initially given her three weeks off. Kate had spent time in her apartment, curled up in bed with her Dæmon pressed to her chest and just breathing.
(They came so close. So close to being lost. He was almost completely severed from her: through the hours of possession, she’d felt the Bond weaken, a dull knife cutting an edge.
It’s the most terrible thing she’s ever felt.)
DiNozzo had dropped by seven, eight, nine times. At first, she’d left him knocking at the door and texted him: Tony, I’m fine. Drop it. I’m okay. Go away. But he’s persistent as hell, and she’d eventually opened the door, and concern painted his face. She hadn’t said anything, simply hugged him, and swallowed back angry tears.
Why did this happen to her? Why her? What’s she done to deserve this?
The day after that, after two weeks’ leave, Kate returned to the office. Persuaded the Director that she’s okay, well enough to resume her duties. Maybe Jenny wasn’t fully convinced, she too churning through traumas of her own, but she allowed it if Gibbs did. The team had greeted her with careful enthusiasm (from Tony and Tim), a tight hug (from Abby), and a gruff smile (from Gibbs)—and things continued onward. Time moves forward: that’s what it does.
Unlike most of her team, who keep having avid discussions about what they’ve learned, Kate tries to forget. About aliens, about Stargates. She and Jenny have met for dinner several times, and there’d been more talking than eating. It’s easier, somehow, to process with her. Jenny had shot one of the aliens—whether it was the original Ba’al or a clone copy, they don’t know—and also encountered possession of a different kind in her cousin taking the shape of another. Jenny, too, is trying to put things aside.
Forget;
It could be easier that way.
One day, things will return to normal. A different normal, yes, but this shadow might not be as invasive and severe. Easier to breathe. These days, Kate can’t let her Dæmon stray out of her range of touch: always brushing against her leg, her hand; her cheek when she’s sleeping. Not like before: before, they could survive without that perpetual reassurance of each other’s existence. Their Bond is full of embers glowing hotly and they can’t let that fire die.
They’ve been free for thirty days.
HQ is busy as usual, people in motion. Half-solved cases being argued and decisions being made from SatCom, and Kate is sitting at her desk. Typing a report of the last case, wrapped up a week ago: one of the weirder ones, where a recently dead marine had been found buried in a Civil War-era tomb in the archives of the Smithsonian. Kate had ended up uncovering several accomplices, and she thinks Gibbs is finally convinced she’d back in shape.
She’s in the middle of a sentence when Gibbs strides out of the elevator.
“Got a body,” he announces. “Marine gunned down on Route 249. DiNozzo, gas the truck.”
DiNozzo, who’d been slouching (as usual), feet on his desk, jumps up. “Yes, Boss!” He manages to catch the keys thrown his way.
“Kate,” Gibbs says, turning to her: “Gear up.”
Yes. Things will return to normal—one day.
Soon.
Chapter 43: there is no such thing as silence
Summary:
this is how it should be.
Notes:
(2018-06-27) For once I figured out the ending before I got there. I started writing this draft last year and I had a pretty good idea what I wanted it to be from the start. Kind of proud of that, actually. I can promise there will be more from this verse - I've got tons of ideas.
(2018-09-12) See, I was planning on finishing this in June or July. That didn't pan out, but finally, we're here. Don't worry, it's not the end of this verse - there's more to come! Thank you everyone who has read, left comments and kudos. You are awesome and without you this story would never have come to be. Thank you!! Please enjoy this (sickeningly fluffy and sappy; god, I think I've never written anything this sappy before???) concluding chapter.
Chapter Text
xxxxii.
there is no such thing as silence
epilogue
this is how it should be.
Athosian main settlement · New Athos · Pegasus
April 15, 2006, C.E. (Terran time) · 200 days after the Uprising
It’s late spring in this part of New Athos. The trees have shed their winter skin and the snows have melted. The hills are blooming; a scent of wildflowers in the air.
The settlement, expanding and growing since they began to build it a hundred days ago, lies a few klicks from the Gate, and the single sun warms it gently. Kids are playing on the dirt paths formed from hours and hours of threading, or up in the woods; they can hear, from a distance, kids shouting and laughing and the sound of water over stone. There’s a spot they like in particular, a swelling stream trickling away and above it, between two rising cliffs covered in moss, they have built a bridge of rope. The stream opens up to a small cove where they both find fish and like to play around, bathe in the water. The adults aren’t particularly worried leaving them unsupervised in the bright light of day.
Athosian children learn early to be independent, and to be equal parts adventurous and careful. Teyla was less than ten years old herself when she was put through the traditional trials: survive in the wild for ten days, with nothing but a knife and the clothes on her back and the aid of three children of the same age, playmates who had been raised in the same manner as her. She did it—they all did. She, like all Athosians, is a survivor. Tough. They will always strive to live and to continue living.
But despite the harshness of their reality and way of life, there is a softness over the camp. They have built a home here. They hunt and they have set aside an area of land for growing things, and earth is being upturned and tilled. Atlantis’ marines like it when they’re sent here for a week or two to help with the sowing of crops: because here, in the valley, it is green and beautiful and quiet, and the Wraith haven’t found this planet yet. It’s peaceful. A portion of the landscape has been tamed for the Athosians to live in but not violently. Trees are felled but only moderately, and only for fuel: not because they’re in the way. Instead such obstacles are built around. Smoke rises from small, warm fires and the smell of food is inviting. The sun is reaching its zenith.
Jumper One touches down on an outcrop near the village, and the hatch lowers. Halling and several Athosians, including his son Jinto, are waiting there. The whole rear compartment of the Jumper is full of supplies from Atlantis and from Earth. Some things have been requested weeks or months beforehand, and some are surprises, gifts from people in the City. Halling welcomes them with a smile and places his forehead against theirs, one at a time, starting with Teyla.
It’s been two months since the recall to Terra that started so much and almost ruined them. John’s been out of the cast for a few weeks now and, though still feeling a bit stiff, he’s no longer in pain and the bone is healed, he needs no extra supports to walk; the rehabilitation exercises have paid off, and the docs have finally given him the all-clear. Elizabeth won’t let him return to active duty just yet, though. Convincing her to let them come here had been surprisingly easy; Weir doesn’t know their true purpose, but a visit to the Athosian settlement must’ve sounded like the gentle start up the hill she wishes for.
Today, they aren’t outfitted in full BDUs, armed heavily—John has got a 9mil and a knife, and so do Ford and Rodney. Ronon has got his gun, as always, and probably tons of hidden knifes, and Teyla’s wearing traditional Athosian clothes and a long overcoat that looks very comfortable with no visible weaponry in sight though he’s pretty sure she’s armed with at least one knife. Precautions never let go of.
John had forgotten what time of year it was on New Athos, warm and nice, and how beautiful the planet is. They’d taken an extra spin in orbit just to show the planet off to Ronon, who’s never been here before, and appreciate the views, before landing.
“Halling! It has been too long,” Teyla smiles, accepting the forehead-to-forehead greeting while Kanaan says hello to Halling’s Dæmon; the two are old friends, Teyla having known Halling her whole life, and among Athosians for Dæmons to speak and touch more freely isn’t strange or rare or outrageous. It’d taken the Expedition some time to get used to that. “How do you fare, friend?”
“We are well. The first crops are growing well,” Halling says. Before that first crop gives a yield, they remain dependent on trading with other worlds for food. The Athosians haven’t lived on this planet very long, and they had to start from scratch, finding spots of soil that would be useful.
Halling greets John, Ford, Rodney, and lastly Ronon. This is the Satedan’s first meeting with the Athosian leader; he came to the City after they left to settle anew on another planet. There is a mark of respect there, as well of grief and understanding. Everyone knows—has heard—about Sateda and Ronon’s loss, his hardships. Such things can’t be kept a secret for too long.
Together they help to transport things to camp. Rodney grumbles a bit about the weight and his back and ends up carrying only a small bag of medical supplies, while Ronon and some of the Athosians lug the heavy stuff between them. Ford pokes a bit of fun at Rodney, as usual, but not overly much and as they enter the valley and near one of the storage barns, John hears the kid asking Rodney if he needs some water or something, with a genuine kind of concern which wouldn’t have been there in the earliest days. Things have changed. They’re better now. It makes John feel warm with fondness, and there is also another kind of emotion nestled in his chest today. Has been for days, weeks, a creeping kind of nervousness, maybe even anxiety; he can’t properly describe it, but he knows exactly why he’s feeling it.
Teyla walks ahead with Halling, speaking in soft tones. Ronon and one of the Athosians, a guy named Kiltur, lead the way with them, bearing crates and bags and boxes of foodstuffs, rope, medical kits—the list goes on. The Athosians are always happy when one of these supply drops come; they haven’t gotten started with trading as much as they’d like and they’re not fully independent yet. Halling hopes they will be soon enough, once the crops give a good yield and they’ve learned the hunting grounds.
Once, a few months ago, the Daedalus made a supply run and the Asgard beaming technology sure made it a lot easier. None of this lugging around. Already a droplet of sweat is pearling at the back of John’s neck, but it’s not truly from physical exertion. It’s not why his palms feel a bit clammy and he tries to breathe deeply, evenly, and focus on this moment and not stare too much at Rodney’s face.
Much more excited and less controlled than his father, Jinto insist on walking next to John. He asks about Atlantis and about Earth and anything else coming to mind: he’s curious and wants to know everything. The kid is getting older now and has entered a real growth spurt; John thinks he’ll probably end up six feet tall no problem.
As Halling’s son Jinto has taken on more and more responsibilities. He can’t go out playing in the woods and look at the stars however much he’d like. Besides play and work, he and the other children of the village are getting an education now, thanks to the people of the City.
They send people over every week, from various departments, to help with the already established learning system the Athosians use. It’s not quite a traditional Earth school. It’s a lot freer, the children remaining independent, and they’ve already learned a lot from their parents and community around them at a young ago. Atlantis supplies mathematicians, chemists, physicists, geologists, linguists, the works—whatever the Athosians request and whatever Elizabeth can spare. Most of the scientists find it quite fun and relaxing, something exciting away from the City yet under safe conditions. Sure, the overhanging threat of the Wraith never truly goes away. But here it feels less apparent.
Jinto feels like an adult now, he proclaims proudly: his Dæmon’s settled one cycle ago, and if it holds there’s going to be a celebration soon, a mark in his passage into adulthood. John can’t resist the urge to muzzle the kid’s hair, shifting the burden in his arms to free a hand. “Still seem like a kid to me,” he jokes, and Jinto sticks out his tongue.
“That’s because Sheppard has still to outgrow that stage of his mental development, and he’s projecting,” Rodney says from behind them.
Ford chuckles. A year ago, he wouldn’t have dared to, right in front of his CO, still too stiff and uncertain. John knows a remark is coming and rolls his eyes.
“Lieutenant, don’t,” he warns, but without much heat.
“I didn’t say anything! sir,” Ford says, grinning. Cheeky. John doesn’t reprimand him.
They enter the barn and get to unloading. John puts down the bag on the growing pile, as directed by Halling, with a small oof! because salt is damned heavy.
“As for that matter, he needs to grow a few more braincells.” Rodney shoots a look at Ford, placing the medkit atop of a small row of other similar bags. There’s antibiotics and basic vaccinations, both against Earth diseases so that the Expedition won’t risk the Athosians, and some against Pegasus ailments, vaccines developed by Carson and his team over the past year and a half.
“Hey!” Ford exclaims.
“Okay, kids, tone it down,” John says. Ford does, eventually, and Rodney rolls his eyes and mutters something about flyboys with messy hair and marines almost without hair at all; but he’s learned by now not to use the term ‘jarhead’.
Jinto obeys without complaint, almost like a marine coming to attention during morning inspection, but the kid does that with a lot of what John says because he’s still not stopped idolizing him like he did when first taken to Atlantis. (He’ll grow out of it in time.)
John led the rescue of Halling and Teyla, and Jinto sometimes still thanks him for saving his father, and John never really knows how to respond and has the urge to give the kid a hug. Jinto’s not that small anymore and he won’t get away with the hair-ruffling for much longer.
After unloading the Jumper, they gather in Halling’s tent for some tea and a light meal. His homestead is not grander than any of the others’: it’s small, modest. There’s the essentials that they need and no true luxuries. One of the things the civilians (and marines, sometimes, after the comforts of Atlantis) struggle to get used to when staying here for longer periods is the lack of running water. The Athosians have a naquadah generator and, attached to that, a single computer and a long-ranger subspace transmitter. That way, if the Gate was disabled and there’s an attack, they can contact Atlantis. Send an SOS. Thankfully they have never needed to use it.
The tea is hearty and strong. They exchange stories and news. The Athosian settlement has grown not only in terms of land but in people: there have been another birth since the Lanteans’ last visit, a healthy little baby and the mother’s there gladly showing them off.
Ford is a little nervous but happy when asked to hold the baby, but Rodney only refuses saying he’ll probably drop them on their head or something. John doesn’t think that’d really happen but lets it pass. The baby’s Dæmon is a tiny thing, an uncertain Shape of light that keeps changing constantly; they’re less than a week old, after all. The Naming will take place soon and Halling invites them all to be here, and John says they’ll try, if nothing else comes in-between. Knowing Pegasus, it probably might.
Conversation touches mostly on pleasant things. They don’t discuss Wraith or war or calamity; Halling says the day is far too fine for that, and today should be joyous. John can agree with that. The knot in his belly hasn’t gone away.
Visitors from Atlantis is always popular and, as they exit the tent about an hour later, a gaggle of kids gather round demanding to hear stories.
Ford launches himself into it with vigor. Chocolate is distributed, and John watches, from a distance, sitting atop of a crate, how Ford with the help of Ronon re-enacts one of AR-1’s more heroic missions—leaving out the gory, disturbing parts. The Lieutenant imitates the sound of a Jumper in flight in dogfight with a Dart, ignoring Rodney’s comments of That is not at all accurate; there is no sound in vacuum. Don’t you remember anything from high school?
Just like him, it seems Rodney’s trying to avoid looking too much at him. Which is both annoying and a relief. Briefly their gazes meet, and John’s heart thunders. Then the moment is broken as Ford asks Rodney to join in the storytelling—which is more of a drama performance at this point—playing the part of, well, himself, fixing some Ancient machine while swearing at it (the PG-rated version, anyway) and Rodney grumbles but actually does it, much to the kids’ delight.
This … this is nice. It strikes him, suddenly, the thought. This is his team. They’re at ease, with themselves and their surroundings, they’re smiling. Laughing. Happy. Even Ronon’s laughing, and that’s rare. This, this is how it should be. Them, together, this unit unbreakable. Family. This is right.
He and Teyla are soon enough roped in too, and as the story comes to an end, the children want another and another, and eventually parents and guardians appear. “That’s quite enough!” one of the Athosians says. “It is high time to eat.”
It takes a while for the group to scatter, kids disappointedly crying But we want to hear more! and Ford having to hand out a few more bars of chocolate (bribery always works), but eventually things are quiet again. Families regroup in tents or, as many do, outside, beneath the bare sun in the grass, sharing meals. AR-1 eat with Halling and his son and other close family, breaking bread.
(Family is a loose term on New Athos. Blood means, in the end, very little. So many children grow up without a related parent. So many parents lose a child before they can be Named.)
The food is hot and good, and they drink freshly opened bottles of cider and ale. Conversation flows freely. Soon enough, ranks are dropped, even between Ford and John; this is not a place where ranks and divisions are needed.
Yes. This is nice.
(If they ever had to leave Atlantis behind—he does not ever wish to, but if they had no other choice; if the City was utterly destroyed and the team managed to survive—John could almost be happy here. If he had his team with him, he could almost be happy here.)
They linger in the village until sundown begins to near. Pretty much everyone wants to say hello. They help to distribute some of the supplies they’d brought. There are fur blankets from Te’reem, grains from Balkan, spices from P91-860, a box of assorted mechanical toys from M02-773. AR-2 traded for those a few weeks ago, thinking they’d come in handing during Athosian birthdays which they’re always invited to, but they end up evenly handed out among the village children. It eats away most of the afternoon. Can’t be all fun; got to work a bit, too, John thinks with a smile. The team works like a well-oiled machine, a winded-up clock, but toward the evening they’re all getting tired. They decide—well, Ford decides—they should go down to the stream and cool off.
John had remembered to pack extra towels because he saw that one coming, and so did Teyla and Rodney. Rodney always packs everything he can think of; two computers plus an external hard drive in case his sudden ideas eat the memory storage up (which is excessive. John’s computer, same model, has tons of movies on it and there’s plenty of space left); extra-strong SPF 100 homemade sunscreen smelling very strongly of honey for some reason (“Do you have any idea how easily I burn?”; “Yeah, doc, you’ve told us like a million times.”; “Fine, Lieutenant, but the rest of you will regret not using any.”), a mishmash of other stuff and powerbars and, currently, a hardcover book on astrophysics, one of many he’d acquired on Earth.
While the rest of the team pull off their boots and head into the water (which is a bit cold but not too much so) Rodney settles down on the mossy slope with said book and munches on a snack. He looks completely absorbed and relaxed, and it’s the way John likes him. He isn’t fearful or jumpy: just—at ease. As it should be.
Somehow an improvised match of an Athosian game similar to water polo gets started, involving both human and Dæmon. John has a bit of a disadvantage because the Raven, while finding water calmingly beautiful to look at, isn’t that big a fan of it and spends the time watching from above, perched on a tall treetop. Teyla and Ronon team up against him and Ford, and the Athosian and Satedan win big time. Rodney’s only input is to warn them not to splash water at him and his new book because then he’ll make sure the lights malfunction in their quarters, or something, for the rest of forever.
Eventually, as the water gets too cold, they wade ashore again. Air’s a bit chilly now. After toweling dry, John digs out a sweater from the bottom of his pack, considering how comfortable they are, how simply they’ve fallen into this rhythm.
He’s become close to people before, or at least he considered it close: friendship. Old teams, squads in the Air Force, missions together. But he wouldn’t have spent an afternoon off joking around and bathing freely under an alien sky with any of them, not even Holland and Dex and Mitch, and not felt nervous or somewhat inadequately ashamed. This, on the other hand, hasn’t felt weird at all. He lives and serves with these people. He’s bled with them; for them. It’s not a base he goes to for two, three, four months, then flies back to the states and tries to forget about; he never wants to forget the team, Atlantis, the people, these stars.
He watches from the corner of his eye: Ronon’s Dæmon playfully engaging in a spirited chase with Kanaan around the immediate area while he chats with Ford; Teyla arranging her damp hair in a braid; Rodney packing up his book, Mer clinging to his shoulders. From the bookmark he’s pretty much finished it already, and along with it there’s a notebook, no doubt full of Rodney’s commentaries on errors he’s found.
They fall into step with each other back to camp.
“Anything interesting?” John asks.
“Some of it, yes,” Rodney says with a nod, and John sees that his fingertips are marked in red and blue ink. He starts outlying every factual error of the author, and John nods. By the time they reach the village, John’s hair is starting to dry and Rodney vividly argues about how the author got most points about quantum tunneling completely wrong.
Ford, beside them, tries to listen in for less than two minutes and looks horribly confused. “You get any of that?” he asks John.
“You people have really got inadequate education,” Rodney grumbles. “The basics of quantum theories should be taught everywhere. It’s essential knowledge to comprehend the way this universe works.”
“I find it quite fascinating,” Teyla says.
“I don’t get it,” Ronon says, mostly to rile Rodney up, John knows; Ronon knows a great deal, and understands a lot more than people think. He’s not merely a grunt.
The Canadian groans as if in pain. “I will not hold a lecture on basic quantum physics because none of you’d be able to follow it! and,” he points an accusing finger at the Satedan, “you stole my muffin yesterday at the morning meeting! Therefore, I’m not going to teach any of you anything.”
“Little harsh,” John points out.
The Satedan raises an eyebrow, like saying So?, and most people would find that kind of terrifying. Rodney doesn’t bat an eye. He’s gotten over any initial fear of Ronon, and is slowly ceasing to refer to him as caveman. An improvement from the beginning when John told him about the Satedan, and Rodney said they must not let him into the City ‘because, who knows, he could be a serial killer’.
“Here we go,” Ford says. “Ain’t going to forget that, doc?”
“It was my last muffin rationed this month!”
“To be fair, you keep taking everyone else’s,” John says. (And he might be giving Rodney his from time to time, but no one needs to know that.) “Hey, speaking of, anyone know if any of those cookies are left?”
“The strawberry ones? They were very good,” Teyla says, and frowns: “I believe we ran out.”
“Uh-uh,” Ford interjects with a secretive smile. “Guess what I got off Sanchez.”
“As CO, I know nothing about the illicit poker games,” John says, knowingly; the games wherein the City’s people trade goods and sometimes cleaning duties, preferably card games, have been around since Day One. However once contact with Earth was reestablished and the IOA heard of this, they’d immediately deemed them unlawful, claiming that monetary exchanges (or the equivalent) held no place on a strict military place.
The IOA seem to regularly forget that Atlantis is also a home. This means that John, Elizabeth, and other senior staff no longer are to actively participate in any of that, knowingly and on duty. ‘On duty’ is a loose term around here, as action can happen anytime. Wraith don’t discriminate Sundays. John is going to count this visit to New Athos as being an off-duty recreational event. So what if he’s not going to get paid for these hours by putting that on paper?
“Also, as CO, I demand some of those prize cookies.”
“Extortion is a sign of corrupt leadership,” Rodney says.
John holds back a laugh. “Whose side are you on?”
The settlement is coming into view; there is still activity going on, but it’s quieter. Most people are preparing to go to bed; here, people work and live with the rhythms of the sun, and they haven’t set up any artificial lights, denied the offer made by Weir. They’d rather not change their lifestyle and introduce more technology which could risk attracting the Wraith; sound reasoning. A few fires gleam, meant to guide far-off hunters back home. Some parties are out there for weeks, searching for game far into the hills. The sky is darkening: stars are appearing. One of the moons is entering a new phase, a sharp sliver of silver almost directly above them.
“His own,” Ronon says, his voice a low rumble. He’s got his gun within easy reach but still is more relaxed than John has almost ever seen him.
“Yes, I sense a scheme to claim those cookies for himself,” Teyla agrees but with a twinkle in her eye.
“Oh, yes.” Rodney rolls his eyes dramatically. “I admit it, I seek to become the Cookie Overlord of the Pegasus Galaxy. Not to worry, I treat all my subjects with equal disdain.” He glances at Ford worriedly. “Seriously, you brought them with you, right?”
They reach the Jumper. They hadn’t bothered to cloak the vessel; the Athosians had helped them shield it, temporarily, with some loose foliage instead, covering it up. The hatch clicks open as soon as they come in view, responding to his gene, and he feels the hum in his bones as the machinery starts to warm up, systems coming online. If Jumpers could be happy, he’s pretty sure this is what it’d feel like. They pack their things.
The plan had been laid out pretty straightforwardly. He and Rodney were going to take the Jumper to another part of the planet—Rodney had surveyed aerial scans taken with the Daedalus’ sensors months ago and pretty much already picked the spot, on the ridge of a mountain, and decided what time would be the best. They want the stars above them. Also, Rodney chose the island based on the logical assumption that no large land-crawling predators would be roaming on a limited area cut-off from the larger continents. John’s not so sure about that and, anyway, they’re armed. They’d go, and they weren’t sure if the rest of the team would like to follow.
By going with them, they’re basically complicit. They can lie, sure, deny, but Ford’s a marine and he knows the consequences should anyone back on Earth get wind of the goings-on, and John could be forced to wave goodbye to his career—to Atlantis—to the team—to Rodney. They hadn’t made any promises. But Teyla had helped arrange this, timing a visit to New Athos unsuspiciously, and Halling and the other Athosians have been told that AR-1, or part of AR-1 at least, have some survey thing to carry out with the Jumper for the next few hours and won’t be back to camp until morning.
But instead of taking their bags and heading to the village, Ford just smiles. “I’m not going to leave the team. Besides, I’m winning this bet.”
John frowns, fleetingly, and Rodney crosses his arms.
“Bet?” the astrophysicist asks flatly. “No. Wait. Don’t tell me.”
“It’s real careful!” the Lieutenant assures them. And it dawns on John and he struggles to bite back the heat rising through his body. A bet; he can figure out exactly what about and, God, he thought they’d been careful, quiet, discrete. “No one knows who shouldn’t. I wouldn’t let anyone talk about stuff like that, anything that could get to Earth, sir,” he says to John and looks genuinely apologetic.
“What bet?” asks Ronon curiously.
“About, you know,” Ford says awkwardly self-conscious. “Who Sheppard was seeing. And, uh, who McKay’s seeing …”
“How old are you—five? Marines,” Rodney grumbles.
“Hey, odds are in our favor,” Ford says. “Besides, it’s not me who started the pool. Won’t say names, though. All anonymous.”
“Ronon, tell me you didn’t,” John says.
The Satedan shrugs. Ah, damn it. He did.
Rodney squints at Ford, demanding to know: “What do you win?”, probably considering that if the prize is coffee he could make a deal with the marine to grab at least forty percent. Got to be pragmatic, after all.
“Rodney, don’t encourage them,” John says but with little heat.
“Chocolate rations for half a year,” Ford says.
Rodney makes an outraged noise. “What!”
And he might start demanding part of the profits, as it were, so John cuts in: “Okay, so we’re doing this. We can make chocolate contracts later (yes, Rodney, really). Hey, Teyla, did you—”
“I have not placed any bet,” she answers diplomatically, and Kanaan agrees: “We did not deem it appropriate.”
John graces them with a smile and seats himself by the controls, checking the instrument board. Ship’s warmed up and ready to fly. “Thank you. Got at least one sensible person on this team. Okay, sit down. Closing rear hatch.” He grips the stick and the Jumper rises softly.
Rodney sits on his right, looking at Ford. “You can’t have both the cookies and half-a-year’s ration of chocolate.”
“And you shouldn’t be in the same place beforehand. Bad luck, y’know, doc,” Ford counters.
“That’s superstition,” Rodney argues. “Also, you’re derailing from the subject and therefore making your argument redundant.”
“What exactly do you consider to be superstitious?” Teyla asks. She often wonders about Tau’ri superstitions: she will humor natives in worlds she visits with the team, but she’s long since lost whatever glamorous outlook she had of the Tau’ri, these Descendants of the Ancients, and finds some of their habits quite primitive and annoying.
“That seeing each other on the day of the marriage before it occurs causes bad luck,” Rodney harrumphs, and John’s heart jumps, he can’t stop it; hearing that simple word. From Rodney’s mouth. From Rodney.
This is actually, actually going to happen. Now. Soon. Tonight. What.
It feels like it was ages ago since they were trapped beneath the rubble and made promises, not knowing if they’d make it out of there at all. Now they’re here, and it’s happening, it’s actually happening. He can feel through their Bond a thrum of nervousness, from Rodney or himself or both, but on the outside Rodney appears so calm, so calm. But, then, he does that a lot: seems collected, orderly in the chaos, to hide any anxiety. If he talks a lot and real fast that means he’s excited; if he talks fast and with a heated, sharp tone, that means he’s worried, concerned, nervous, and trying to cover it up.
“As I said, superstition.”
Ronon, hanging back by the bulkhead door, leaning against it, shakes his head, causing his dreads to fly this way and that. “You people are strange.”
“And what sophisticated methods do you use?”
“A wedding feast on Sateda lasts for three nights and three days. There are six poems to be read—symbolizing the chevrons on the Stargate—and also a lot of dancing, and hot wine. Lots of food.”
“Sounds like a nice party,” Ford says.
“Sounds like a terrible way to get hungover,” Rodney says.
“Athosian Handfastings also include a feast of considerable length, with much dancing and singing. You do not do that on Earth?”
“Uh, no, not all the time? Like, I mean, yeah, sometimes,” Ford makes a thoughtful sound. “But there are like hundreds of peoples and cultures, so. My parents got married at the Mayor’s office, took like fifteen minutes; there, done. Cost a lot less than throwing a big party, buying all that food and booking places and stuff. I mean, there are some folks who go out there, renting manors and everything, buying expensive dresses.” He shrugs. “My folks couldn’t do that.”
Ronon doesn’t seem impressed. “Sounds boring. No disrespect to your parents.”
“I believe a wedding should be joyous and include all desired family and friends,” Teyla says. “The shape of the feasting is less important than the people present for the occasion.”
Isn’t that true. John clears his throat, and the sentences are slightly difficult to form. He’s not good at it. Talking emotion and putting things to words. Makes his throat and belly tighten inexplicably as he forms the words. “You guys are—y’know. As close as, as family I’ve … that we’ve got.”
Teyla smiles gently. “We are honored to be considered family, John.”
They breach the atmosphere. From low orbit, New Athos is a pretty, green planet, with scatters of mountains and rivers and many, many lakes. Far away there’s tundra giving way to ice; to the other way, a hint of desert storms. They’ve picked a spot somewhere in the middle, where the climate should be good enough, mild but not too hot, not too cold. A Goldilocks zone. John’s not that picky. Oh, if he could, if he could, he’d chose Atlantis, stand before the Gate and knotted hands; but they can’t have that.
Jumper One touches down in a clearing on the slope of a hill. It opens up upward so the top is completely free from trees and the grass is shorter than to their knees. Yellow light spills from the Jumper as the hatch opens, and a few small curious eyes gleam in the darkness before scurrying away. There is a hoot from an owl-like creature amongst the trees, and a soft breeze, but otherwise nothing: pure, uninterrupted silence. This part of the planet has never been inhabited by humans, never disturbed. Everything is natural, the rocks, the trees; there are no great scars to the earth, and the Jumper is the first thing the animals here have ever seen that doesn’t belong. They don’t plan on making any marks. It is so quiet, but not in a frightening way, and the air is clear and free from pollution.
John breathes deeply and looks up. On Earth, most people have no idea how beautiful the sky is. They can’t see the stars because of the disruption of continuous lights. He grew up mostly never seeing it himself. First time he saw the band of the Milky Way, he was taken aback, and he’d thought maybe that was how it felt to fall in love. The stars are different here, seeing Pegasus from a new angle; the galaxy is irregular, its shape more difficult to make sense of, not a neat spiral. But there are thicker blots here and there. The Athosians have begun naming some of these stars and made pictures of them to help them navigate while they’re out hunting.
Atlantis is not so far away they can’t hear each other, and he receives an impression of [we are here] and finds a faint dot, one among millions, and thinks that that, there, is home.
So near and yet so far away; and home isn’t just a place, isn’t just the City and the skies above. Home is where his team is.
The whole thing isn’t based on a single Earth ceremony. They’d decided not to tie it down like that to a specific point in spacetime: they’re not just Tau’ri westerners of a single belief. Neither of them is particularly religious, and there’s little to root John to Terra; Rodney hadn’t expressed a preference, except that it should be them and the team, if John wanted that.
(if they could have chosen, if freedom was complete, they would’ve done in before the Stargate in Atlantis, a military wedding with everyone present. not utterly low-key, but not too extravagant either—well, maybe; Rodney kind of likes the thought of going all-out, and possibly involving Pride Flags and glitter, mostly to rub it in people’s faces. And to be honest, John wouldn’t object.)
Rodney wanted Carson to be here, but they just hadn’t been able to get him to New Athos at this time. They couldn’t tell the Scot outright that, yeah, hey, the two of us are getting illicitly married offworld, would you like to be there?—same with Elizabeth, with other friends in the City. Maybe someday, later, if DADT is repealed and old ruinous laws cracked; but Carson has rarely been offworld, so even a visit to New Athos would raise eyebrows and they’d get unwanted attention—the Athosians usually come to the City for medical treatment. They’d talked a long while about that, discussed in secrecy how it’d be done, what they’ll write in the obligatory offworld reports.
In the end, Teyla had told John about Athosian Handfastings, and they’d borrowed a bit of that, too. Something in it appeals to John immensely. There’s something startlingly simple about it. There’s no swearing before a God or the Ancestors, and maybe some people would wonder what the point then is—but it’s a vow for themselves, to each other, and with the team bearing witness it is made real. And one day, maybe, there’ll be a chance they could proclaim it to the world and have the same rights as everyone else. Someday. John tries not to think about it too much, because it makes him so tired to consider it, the long uncertain wait. Better do it here, now, so that it’s done. At least once. Before they die.
The traditional Athosian thing is to use a ribbon braided of several strands, where each color represents something of its own. White for love, blue for loyalty; both incidentally similar to the colors of the Stargate. Red, like iron in hot sand, for trust beyond bonds of blood; a deep rich purple, an expensive pigment in most of the galaxy, for commitment. Athosians and Satedans don’t use rings. John hasn’t planned for any, either; Rodney hasn’t mentioned them; it’s the kind of symbol people in the City would far too easily recognize.
Teyla and Ronon had helped them get the materials for the ribbon, gathered it over the span of the last few weeks from markets and friends in the Athosian settlement. Teyla had explained that it’s the task of the two families to make the ribbon together for the couple, and they team is the only family Rodney and John have got around.
Teyla was decided—or has decided on her own, rather—to be the one to speak in the lack of an officiator. There is a depth, a clarity in her voice which they’re used to but in the night it’s incredibly radiant. Maybe John is just so hyperaware of his surroundings right now, the brush of wind and the rustle of leaves and the clear clean air;
“A Handfasting is a vow of commitment and love. It is a sign you have chosen one another in this way you are now, freely and out of your own will, and that you shall remain thus entwined through all hardships you may endure. It should be a bond of endurance and of freedom, and, should either of your chose, this bond can be broken at any time. John, Rodney, do you agree to begin this ceremony?”
“Yeah.”
“Yes, of course,” Rodney says at the same time, and they’re asked to join hands.
The grip is firm. Rodney’s palms feel warm and a little clammy against his own, and the dig of his nails into skin is a comfort, grounding, an anchor. He can sense Rodney’s pulse—quick but steady. John feels himself slowly starting to calm down again, and he blinks to keep his vision clear. There is only the stars, the moons, and the warm light from the Jumper below like a gentle spotlight, marking them.
There is no real division and all pairs of hands had helped braiding the fibers in preparation for this, and they work together now. Standing in the starlight, the three tie the ribbon around John and Rodney’s joined hands. They’d never rehearsed—John expects some fumbling, but it all goes smoothly, and he realizes that maybe the three of them had, after all, planned it out and practiced beforehand.
As the ribbons are threaded together, Ronon holds up the end of the blue ribbon and declares solidly: “The loyal soul does not leave the other standing alone.” Those are the Athosian words, and John kind of hadn’t expected them. But it’s nice.
Teyla does the same with the white end. “The loving soul does not leave the other standing alone.”
The final chord is tied together and knotted. Ford holds up the joined piece. “Two souls joined are stronger than one alone,” he says and sounds certain, as if he’s practiced it.
“And so you are husband and husband,” Teyla says. So simply, so simply;
And for a moment John could dream it’s always so simple: proclaim the words and they’re true forever, and no one can make them untrue. That there are no shields and no doors, and there is no such thing as silence.
“Until Death or Ascension,” the final vow, and the moment lasts forever.
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