Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Eighteen

Rodney lets the lifesigns detector guide him. He wouldn’t call the tunnel the bad-guy-turned-good-guy had told them to use as ‘the second’, he would call it ‘the first’, but there’s no accounting for a sense of direction with some people. The detectors’ showing him a handful of energy signatures sourcing from just before the end of the tunnel. About fifty yards ahead according to the detector’s map of the mountain. He leads the group up the tunnel with Teyla fast on his heels, followed by Kenmore and Daniel, and reared by Ronon with Sheppard only a step behind the Satedan. In no time at all Rodney can feel the floor of the tunnel starting to rise. Their elevation is increasing. That’s a good sign especially if they’re supposed to be heading towards dragons. From what he remembers of the myths about these things, dragons fly and thus, unless something really bizarre is going on in the Pegasus, which isn’t exactly out of the realm of possibility, it would mean that they need height, wouldn’t it? Granted not all birds nest at high altitudes, but a lot of them do, so he’s erring on the side of caution and precedence and taking increasing elevation as a good sign.

He continues leading their group uphill at a racing pace. Well, a racing pace for him. They haven’t seen any dragons so far and he’s never seen any in his life. Maybe the crazy, psycho, mad scientist sisters from Hell had the animals chained up here. Had taken them from villagers as a combative edge and, given their own genetically engineered flying monkey things, the advantage for the Fomorians. Turning the tide in their favor.

It’s up ahead. The end of the tunnel is a big gaping hole letting in bright light from God knows where because as far as Rodney can tell if the battle is still going on, then it sure as hell is still dark outside. And he doesn’t even want to think about the chance that it could possibly be over already…  He eases off the accelerator as he nears the opening. Then stops with the literal hole in the wall five feet away from him.

Once again they all look around themselves. Rodney cannot believe this. He cannot believe this. Doctor Rodney McKay extends his arms out on either side of himself and turns to scoff at Sheppard.

“Oh come on! Seriously?! I mean seriously?! Nothing! Again!”

Sheppard starts nodding, he agrees. His gray eyes analyze their surroundings as much as they can. Even though the opening to the outside is lit up by bright white light all around its round edging, the great outdoors it should have been showing is dark. That was to be expected, but it’s the fact that the great indoors is also so pitch black that it looks like nothing’s out there that wasn’t. The tunnel was so adequately lit, John had been expecting to find up here as nicely and well lit. But instead they’ve run into a familiar situation again and a not all that long ago a familiar situation at that. It’s dark as hell in here except, oddly, there is enough light to see each other as clear as day. Instinctively Sheppard’s eyes dart upward to try and detect any rippling indicating yet another energy creature looming over them and trying to pass itself off cunningly as the ceiling or the walls; John’s beginning to think that this might actually be the energy creatures’ home planet.

They hear rustling from off to the left. All their heads snap to the direction. Their eyes scanning the dark. At least there isn’t rippling. It also sounded too big to be a Fomorian or even a dozen of them. Slowly Sheppard raises his P-90 to his sightline, the others following suit. Except Kenmore. She seems frozen again and John blatantly recognizes that sort of frozen-in-time from back standing beside a glass coffin containing an Ancient version of Snow White only a lot less Snow, judging by the sheerness of the outfit, and a lot less White, judging by the occupation and the monster-making and monster-controlling.

“Kenmore,” he asks her name.

“They’re here,” she breathes.

“The dragons,” McKay suddenly hisses, ducking and taking a step closer over to his nearby alert petite Athosian cover.

Kenmore nods, still searching for the source of the rustling. Remaining totally still except for her chest rising and dropping rapidly with heavy breathing.

The black squished-in snout comes out of the shadows first. Followed by the equally black and manipulated-looking face.

“Kenmore, get back now,” Sheppard shouts.

She doesn’t answer, doesn’t do as ordered.

John wants to hiss, but thinks better of it when he sees the mouth crack open and the long purplish-black tongue come slipping out. If he makes a sound now, that damn genetically engineered flying monkey thing is going to eat her. John’s eyes widen, to his shock and fascination, Kenmore’s hand, gauntleted by the Silver Arm, begins to lift up. She’s reaching out to this thing the same way she had reached out to the Worm God in the hallway. He can’t help it anymore. He hisses at her. For shit’s sake you stupid brat, stop that right now!

“That’s an order Lieutenant!” He yells out loud despite himself.

It’s like neither Kenmore nor the creature can hear him.

“Lieutenant!” John starts forward

The creature licks the flexed palm of her outstretched hand. The power of the Silver Arm casts its magic spell again. Purple-black flees from the flaming power of the ruby tear, exposing healthy pink. The tongue yanks back from her. Back into its dark maw. The creature slowly leans closer to her… and touches its blunt nose against her still flexing palm. Ursula closes her eyes, bows her head, and lowers her fingers onto the slick black flesh.

The ruby cries golden lightning. The electric string surging over and coiling around the black form. Its power forcing the ebony away and revealing resplendent red like the color of a fresh, new fire engine. Dazzling. Layering rows upon layering rows of scales looking like hundreds of thousands of crescent moons lying on their rounded convex backsides.

The nose becomes angular, not sharply, but more blunted with ripples of scaled flesh that reminds Sheppard of the wrinkled, semi-smashed in nose of a bull mastiff, with large nostrils that seem to be permanently flaring. As more and more of the pitch skin recedes from the shore of smooth red scales, there’s revelations of a sharply angled jawline, an almost Cro-Magnon browline rising to a head with two cranial points reminiscent of horns that haven’t penetrated the skin over them, and a single-column ridge of dorsal cresting wave-shaped plates covered by red skin. As the revealing continues, deep lines of extremely ripped musculature as though the animal has been an intense bodybuilder all its life comes into view.

Some of them marvel at the short strong legs and their proportionately sized feet armed with two thick and mean looking claws for toes, all linked to a single footpad. Others marvel at the harshly bony knees of the two hind legs with similar two-clawed, one-padded feet with a third claw set about half a foot above the back feet’s heel. One of them can’t help but notice the tail that’s as long as Ronon Dex is tall and ends in a fleshy dart-shape so soft and fluid looking it’s like a fish fin. Another’s eyes are riveted by the exposing of the creature’s wings. They’re like a gargoyle’s. Spread and jointed like a bat’s, but with a toe-claw tip at the top of the main joint and steeply scalloped-bottom webbing in between the bones. The wings are also shorter than one might imagine when dreaming of coming face to face with a dragon; however, the sight of the wings are no less beautiful nor are they lacking in any way of giving the deep permeating sensation of being privileged enough to be in the presence of something far older than anything they’ve ever met so far and probably will ever meet again in their lives. More than a few of them fight the urge to bow to the ancient creature.

The lightning goes away. The glow dims. And the dragon opens its eyes.

Large, bulbously round, golden, multifaceted eyes stare at Ursula Kenmore. There’s a long silence. It slowly blinks with three eyelids, one transparent lid closing over the golden eye after the other than rising in some sort of strange choreographed fan dance of lizard-based anatomy. It is startling beautiful.

Ursula, riveted, keeps her hand out to the ancient beast. Sensing that the human Lieutenant isn’t going to make the first move, the red dragon turns its head to expose the side of its neck to her. She gapes at it. A small clump of the scales near the top of its neck are malformed. Instead of laying down crescent moons, they’re melding to form what looks like a hand severed at the wrist holding a short sword. The sign, the ‘birthmark’, is unmistakable to her… and Daniel.

“The Red Hand,” he breathes, “It’s Naill’s symbol. Your family’s symbol.

Teyla’s eyes quirk and she leans forward to see what the Lieutenant and Doctor Jackson are seeing, she takes a step forward. Immediately the animal’s turned head snaps straight to her. Suddenly the beautiful eyes taking on a dark hostile edge. Without hesitation, Kenmore puts herself in between Emmagan and the dragon.

“Don’t do that again,” she orders the Athosian, “They are extremely territorial.”

Teyla breathes heavily as she stares at the hundreds of gold facets focused so intently on her. She dares not even nod her head or speak acknowledgement of the Lieutenant’s warning.

Slowly the Lieutenant backs up to Emmagan, reaches behind her, and takes the Athosian leader’s hand. Then, just as slowly, Kenmore walks Emmagan forward. Ronon starts to move but Sheppard catches his eye and makes the most subtle of movements to not do anything. Dex stares at Sheppard, not believing what he’s seeing, what he’s being told to do. This is getting out of hand. Now Sheppard is letting this spoiled brat Lieutenant literally hand feed Teyla to a monster that only a few nights ago had tried to kill them, had killed dozens of innocent people in attacks on the village. Had probably brought down Lorne’s jumper last night. He has to put a stop to this and soon or else Sheppard’s, McKay’s, this whole stupid Expedition’s trusting nature is going to get them all killed courtesy of this, this… Lieutenant Kenmore.

Kenmore slips her hand underneath Teyla Emmagan’s so that their palms meet and they interlace their fingers to clasp their two hands together. It’s an unlikely show of women united. Kenmore stops, Teyla stops. Ursula lifts their unified hands towards the creature. It waits. Blinks. Blinks again. Then graciously leans its blunt nose forward and touches it against the back of Teyla Emmagan’s hand. Cautiously, and relieved, Teyla lets go of the breath she’d been holding. The dragon pulls away from her hand, indifferent to her in lieu of the Lieutenant. John had picked up on the fact that the dragon had approached Kenmore, sniffed the gauntlet obviously to check in its own way that the Lieutenant is of the right bloodline, and then trusted her to free it from whatever being covered in darkness meant.

The big red turns its head away again, further this time, and snorts. Kicking up a puff of dust. What John is considering to be an impolite yet polite sneeze in front of everybody, impolite because by human standards that was friggin’ huge and polite because again by human standards the thing had turned its head away from everybody in order to do it, turns out to be a call. Other of the flying mutant monkeys come out of the darkness behind it. Big red returns its head to face Kenmore again, the others behind it looking to her as well. She looks back at the other mission members, looking to them for guidance.

“I think they need your help too,” Daniel speaks up.

She figured that, Kenmore looks back at the creatures and does an unceremonious mental ‘Eeny, Meany, Miney, Moe’.

After ten minutes, they are surrounded by a colorful spread. Blue dragons. Green dragons. Brown dragons. Orange dragons. Purple dragons. Gold dragons. Bronze dragons. And a single red dragon. The hues are dazzling like a child’s primary school classroom. Kindergarten would have been so much more kick-ass if dragons had been there. There is Bahamian seas blue, Kelly green, milk chocolate, Christmas tree light orange, iridescent purple, crown gold, jewelry bronze. It’s all so spectacular. Sheppard kind of—well not kind of, he really, really wants to jump up and down and hoot and holler like a fool to be standing here.

His eyes slide over to Kenmore, using the Silver Arm doesn’t seem to be draining her any. Apparently whatever it takes out of her to use the thing, her Ancient DNA’s healing properties is compensating for now. Another thing that’s good to know for future endeavors. And yet another thing he hopes he won’t have to put to use.

“Okay, well now that we’ve done whatever it is that that thing,” McKay gestures at Kenmore’s Silver Arm—

“’We’,” Daniel Jackson interjects.

Rodney continues, “does, what do we do next?”

“Ride the dragons,” Kenmore answers simply. Again her tone is as though this is a ‘duh’ moment.

Sheppard’s team stare at her while Jackson looks over the crayon box of dragons surrounding them and tries to figure out which one he wants to ride out of here if it will let him.

“What,” Kenmore asks. God, why do these people always act like the simplest things are the craziest suggestions?

The red nudges her elbow, she ignores its bid for attention.

“Are you crazy,” Rodney exclaims.

Yep. ‘Always’ it’s gonna be.

“How do you expect us to ride these things? It’s not like with the horses,” the irate scientist abruptly turns to Ronon, “and I definitely don’t think you had dragons on Sateda.” Before Ronon can answer, McKay turns back to Kenmore, “It’s not like any of us know ho—,” he stops himself, stares at her, “You do, don’t you? You talked about there still being dragons on Earth. You’ve seen them before, haven’t you? You’ve ridden them.”

Sheppard and his team wait for the answer, looking expectantly. Daniel flits his eyes back and forth from one blue to another standing right next to it. He has always liked the color blue… his eyes are blue…

“Seen, yes. Ridden, no.”

…their eyes are green, he likes green too…

“What do you mean ‘seen’?”

“Exactly what it sounds like, Doc McKay. When I was in middle school and we were playing outdoor volleyball, I saw a shadow, a dragon shadow. At first I didn’t believe what I was seeing, but I tracked the shadow for a good ten seconds. I know that doesn’t sound like a lot of time, but it’s more than enough for you to realize that you’re not crazy and to get riled up about what you’re seeing. I couldn’t see the wings flapping, but the tail was snaking from side to side like an eel going through water. And like an idiot I looked straight up at nothing but clear blue skies when I should have—”

“Looked at the sun because the sun shining over the dragon was what was creating its shadow,” Sheppard finishes for her in the same tone of voice.

Kenmore nods with a tight smile that says he is dead on target on that one.

“Do you have anything else for us,” Rodney snaps.

“Yes,” the red nudges its head up underneath Kenmore’s hand, making the limb rest on top of its head in between its horns, “it’s a Weyr.”

“Wait. What,” Sheppard’s brain tries to process. Atlantis’ flagship team stares at her. A single desperate thought running through their heads: Elizabeth.

The Lieutenant frowns at him, at them, “Sounds the same, spelled different. It’s not W-E-I-R, it’s W-E-Y-R…or W-Y-Y-R…or W-H-E-R. Actually there’s quite a lot of ways to spell it now that I think about it.”…  And she really does start considering all the variations she hadn’t given a second thought to at the time. “Wow, there really is a lot of them. Huh.”

One of the golds shuffles, catching Daniel’s eye, by pawing the ground gently with the tips of its claws. He wonders at its slightly downturned golden-orange colored eyes; God, those are beautiful. A bronze shifts next with repositioning of its wings to a closer more comfortable position of the thin membrane against its thicker hide; its pale lavender eyes are absolutely stunning too. Daniel considers the bronze dragon heavily. It truly is a stunning being. Its coloring is so deeply richly autumnal that the light purple lends an air of a descending evening sky or a rising dawn sky presenting elegance. Sheer elegance. He’d love to see how it flies. To feel how it flies.

“And what do, do you know about these, um, these Weyr?” Sheppard has a hard time wrapping his mind around the name thing. It’s a hit far too close to home especially since after Elizabeth sacrificed herself to the Replicators in order to covers Atlantis’ ass, she became a disembodied life essence and roved the galaxy inhabiting technologies of all sorts, some organic, until she found herself back in Atlantis… and gave herself a Replicator body courtesy of Rodney’s Replicator-maker machine.

“A story my mother told me once about them,” Ursula looks down at the red beside her, “There was a girl, her village had been attacked and she hid in the Wyyr,” she looks up at the ceiling of their area.

Sheppard takes note that the name of the dragon’s den is also the same as the dragon breed itself.

“She hid in the Wyyr with a Weyr,” her eyes return to the red, Ursula’s face and demeanor softening.

Sheppard swallows hard, this is going to be a tough story to hear, isn’t it?

“Eventually she did have to leave it and she was captured, turned into a slave. But when she was sad and lonely, she would crawl back into the den and sleep with the Weyr that had protected her.

“The slavers kept the Weyr chained when they discovered them and they rode the larger dragons. You see, Weyr where we come from aren’t thought of as true dragons. They’re treated like lesser than because they aren’t as large are as aesthetically pleasing to look at as the bigger more ‘natural’ varieties of dragons. The Weyr are considered failed experiments, ugly, not of much use. Not pretty enough. But it was discovered that they are quick little buggers, so they were put to work like mules were in mines. Always kept in darkness, which suits their sensitivity to light well, but they weren’t kept in darkness out of any consideration for that.”

She kneels by the creature and goes on, a panged appearance creeping into her features as she continues gazing at the red. It turns its face to her and blinks its gold eyes slowly at her. She cups the creature’s cheek, rubbing softly like you would caress a beloved pet who somehow knows exactly what you’re feeling and is simply there for you, “One night when she was sleeping with the Weyr, a man came into the den. He was a Dragon Rider and had come to rescue the girl from the slavers, but like I said the Weyr are very territorial and they become very protective and adore their human companions greatly. The Weyr started to charge the Rider and the girl recognized him as a safe man and screamed for the Weyr to stop.”

A tear trickles out of Ursula’s eye, slips to the crest of her cheek, and falls from her face. John swallows hard again, remembering another Weir who had put herself in between the people she cared so incredibly deeply for and protected as fiercely even though there were many who considered her being a civilian and just a U.N. negotiator at that to be too weak, too lowly a global position to have any business being a leader. John fights back his own tears, swallowing hard again.

“The, the,” her voice falters, “he did stop himself like she asked. He turned quickly away from the Rider, but,” she loses it another moment then pushes on, “but he turned in the wrong direction… and accidentally snapped his own neck.”

Oh God, John bows his head amidst Teyla’s audible gasp. The deeply caring Athosian covers her gaped mouth and tears slip from her eyes as well, the handful of drips of salt water staining her tactical vest. Rodney looks down, sniffing, and Ronon’s gaze goes distant as his hands hold on to his belt, the same way they had when he watched the Replicator copy of Elizabeth Weir walk through the Stargate for the final time.

“The girl ran to him, cradled him in her arms. Heartbroken that she had… that she had told him to stop… and that his obeying her had killed him.

“There were other dragons with the Rider and they mourned with her. She asked the Rider why they were doing that and, um, and,” she bites her lower lip through the moment, “he told her that the dragons will honor who they will,” tears and so much more overwhelm her; she can’t see for a moment, her vision so water blurry, “That this Weyr…,” Ursula sniffs, “had shown himself to be… just as strong of heart and… courageous,” Teyla is sobbing so hard she squeaks, but Ursula keeps on going, having to get the story out the same way she had had to get out the story about her husband; it’s important, “as any of them. More so… because no one, not even the dragons expected much of him… and his kind… and yet this Weyr had shown that it too would make the ultimate sacrifice in defense… in defense of that which it loved most. They honor what deserves to be honored. They give credit where credit is due and honored the Weyr as they would one of their own.

“From that moment on, no one, man and dragon alike, ever belittled the Weyr. They had earned everyone’s respect. No one will ever take it from them again,” she finishes. Tears falling from her screwed-up face and desperately sniffing back the snot coming out of her nose onto her cupid’s bow. The Weyr curves its head into her hand and rubs its cheek gently against her palm, consoling her.

Teyla averts her eyes, sniffing wildly, and wiping her face and her own snotty nose with the sleeves of her jacket, fearing that if she’d gone for the small packet of tissue in her vest, the sound of the Velcro would set the dragons off.

John turns his face away too and discreetly wipes a tear trail on his cheek dry with the side of his index finger. He catches sight of Ronon as he does so.

The big Satedan’s staring distantly down at the dirt and stone ground. Ronon Dex remembers his medical bedside goodbye to Doctor Weir, he always called her Doctor Weir, even then. Never Doctor Elizabeth Weir or Elizabeth Weir or just Elizabeth, always Doctor Weir; he wonders why? Respect. On Sateda he was always taught that if you respected someone, then you used their title, you showed that respect with your words as much as your actions towards them, about them. He respected her, respects her so much. No one’s every going to take that away from him, away from her. He stood beside her bed and thanked her for giving him a new home. His mind jumps to when she’d taken on Oberoth alone in order to protect Sheppard and he, to protect all of them. And how Sheppard and he had had to leave her behind, leave her to her fate, in order to make good that sacrifice. Not many, especially the I.O.A., had thought very highly of her leading an Expedition that was becoming more and more militaristic, but in her final moments she had proven all of that wrong. She’d proven her meek self just as good if not better than all of them. His eyes come back to focus on the present and he looks up at Kenmore and the red Weyr. Maybe there is some merit to the Lieutenant. Ironically enough, it’s the good graces of the memory of a strong and courageous Doctor Elizabeth Weir that he’s extending to Lieutenant Kenmore here. He hopes that he isn’t being duped like Sheppard by her touching story. He hopes.

The red locks eyes with Ursula.

Go.

She blinks and tilts her head at the creature. Did she—

Go. The voice in her head repeats. She knew the creatures were telepathic, but to experience the communication between the dragon and the rider it chose to imprint upon itself… that is something incredibly different. It’s like the most calming, soothing vibe of a lullaby ever. Every muscle in her body relaxes, her mind didn’t clear, it eased. It’s a wonderful feeling. Ursula nods her head and the red turns its head towards the hole to the outdoors. They need to go to the village. Hurry.

Suddenly Ursula straightens up like a shot. Everyone’s eyes snap to her, but she isn’t looking at them, she’s looking at the dragons.

“Okay, pick one,” she orders loudly. Her voice echoing in the cavern.

Rodney’s about to say something when a handful of Weyrs start towards the mission members. Striking fear. Kenmore walks over to the nearest one, a blue that’s apparently chosen Daniel. She holds out her hand to her old friend, he obediently puts his hand in hers, and she presents the appendage to the dragon. It touches him. Ursula leaves Daniel to get better acquainted with his dragon cohort and moves on. Teyla uneasily stares eye to eye with the lavender-eyed bronze dragon. Again Kenmore repeats the hand to nose introduction then also abandons Teyla to her mythical companion. The Lieutenant repeats the process with Rodney and a gold dragon, Ronon, who actually doesn’t fight one bit her touching him or introducing him to the brown dragon with the pearl-like eyes that came forward to him, and Sheppard and the quintessential green dragon that is definitely the stuff a lot of the legends the Earth people have grown up with are made of. Then she returns to the red.

The dragon nonchalantly flattens its dorsal plates down against its back. Ursula gets on its back the same way she’d mount a horse. Not like the large draft horses here, but the smaller ones back on Earth. Thankfully the dragon is closer to the ground than an Earth horse, it’s the same ground to belly height as that of a small pony, so it doesn’t require any real effort to get up on. As soon as Ursula’s on the red dragon, a small section of four scales directly behind its head flip straight up and stay upright. Ursula stares at them, not entirely su—

Hold on to them. It is alright. It is part of how you will stay on.

Kenmore tilts her head while still staring down at her family’s dragon. But she slowly reaches out and put her hands on top of the line of scales. Their edges may have looked sharp, but they feel rounded beneath her palm. Handles, he’s given her handles. Unexpectedly the line of scales flattens down back into scales. Forming saucers nearly level with his back with the top half of her fingers pinned down by the upper edge created by the scales. Her jaw slackens and her head tilts even further to the left side; she works her mouth, not wanting to say anything actually, but in sheer wonderment at how handy that particular part of never before known dragon anatomy is. Wow. So that’s how it’s done, that’s how they did it. That’s, that’s, that’s really handy. Pretty…  Wow.

“Uh, Urs, what do we do?”

She looks at the other SGC members and Daniel returning her gaze back at her over the upper rim of his glasses. He raises his eyebrows at her, begging his question of her again.

“Oh, uh, buh-uh, you just get on and they seem to handle the rest for you. Just trust them,” Kenmore answers.

Daniel looks over at his self-appointed blue. It’—her. Daniel blinks. Her, it distinctly said ‘her’ to him. No, no, not to him, in his mind. The dragon said ‘her’ to him in his mind. And it has—she has a beautiful voice. Soft and angelic and for some strange reason he’s reminded of the slow, controlled, yet incredibly reassuring, whispery voice of Cate Blanchett when she played the mythical Elven Queen Galadriel in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, one of Teal’c’s favorite movie trilogies. The Jaffa watched it and both STAR WARS trilogies over and over and over, he’s worn through three sets of each trilogy. All of them, he, Jack, Cam, and Sam and Vala with his help, each bought Teal’c a whole new set of each the sets on blu-ray last Christmas. Ironically enough it was the happiest Christmas Daniel’d ever seen the Jaffa have in all his years with them.

So this is how Frodo felt when she first talked to him while the Fellowship was going through her forest. Daniel cautiously approaches the beast. Beautiful, she really is beautiful. She must have sensed him watching her and admiring her. Utterly gorgeous.

Get on, comes the demand, low and regal sounding.

“Oh, right. Yes. Of course,” he rushes to get on her. It really is as easy as Urs’d made it look. The scale row rose, Daniel took hold of it, and the scales flattened. They’re built-in reigns. He smiles, getting comfortable, and looks over at the rest of their troop, “Anyone else coming along?”

Right away Sheppard dives for his dragon’s side to climb up on him. There’s a split second second-guess that almost stops him from making such a sudden movement, but he’s pretty sure he definitely caught sight of a smile on his dragon’s face out of the corner of his eye. Who knew they smiled? Well now he does. Eagerly John Sheppard mounts the green, sees the scale row rise just beneath the back of his dragon’s head, grabs it, and lets the scales flatten down to form reigns pinning his half of his fingers beneath their upper edge. God this is cool! A kid with a candy store has nothing on this.

Yes, this is cool. I believe your God would approve. The deep gravelly voice speaks to him in his mind. The voice is oddly comforting to hear. It makes every muscle in John’s body suddenly lax, every tension die away. It’s a great feeling. Like when he was daydreaming about his nice, hot showers in Atlantis in the village.

“Thanks. Nice to know that,” John says out loud and looks up at the rest of his team, Ronon’s jaw was dropped at the sight of his team leader. John puts the concept of an ‘Oops’ moment out of his mind because what better reason is there than he’s on a freakin’ dragon! Seriously, Ronon, get over Kenmore, we get to ride dragons! John can’t stop grinning and he gets the mysterious suspicion that his dragon is too. Awesome.

In answer, the green dragon bobs his head.

John feels his giddiness boil and rise from his gut. John Sheppard is having a conversation with a dragon… telepathically!

Rodney McKay bolted for his mythical steed too at the same time Sheppard had. The gold beast was unruffled by his child-at-play behavior and, honestly, Rodney got on the creature with just as much expertise as either Sheppard or Daniel. He was a little hesitant at first to touch the upright scales, but nothing seemed to have happened when anybody else did it, so…  It’s a little frightening when the scales flatten to pin down the top half of his fingers to the dragon’s smooth, sturdy hide. However that seems to be what happened to everyone else who’s gotten on their dragon so he tries not to let it bug him… too much. Too too much.

It is only natural.

Rodney looks behind him.

It is only natural. The voice repeats.

Rodney’s eyes dart around while he keeps his head still. It’s, it is incredibly disturbing because the damn thing sounds exactly, exactly like the female voice of the computer in STAR TREK The Next Generation, STAR TREK Deep Space Nine, STAR TREK Voyager…Where the hell is it coming from? He highly doubts even if Teyla tried that she could sound like that and the same thoughts go for Lieutenant Kenmore too. He looks around, seriously where the hell did that come from?

Do not worry. This is how it is meant to be.

His looking becomes more frantic. Where the hell is the computer voice coming from?

“Relax, Rodney,” Sheppard’s irritated voice tells him, “The dragons are telepathic. He’s talking to you in your head.”

“She.”

“What?”

“She, this dragon is a ‘she’.”

Sheppard nods. Okay, cool.

The two men shrug it off and look at the other two members of their team. It’s hard to gauge which is the more stupefied expression greeting their faces: Teyla’s or Ronon’s. It isn’t hard though to figure out which one’s going to make the first move. Blatantly obvious.

Teyla hesitantly inches towards the bronze dragon in front of her. The creature turns its head towards her. The Athosian freezes. Their eyes lock… then the bronze head with pale-lavender multifaceted eyes tilts to the left. Teyla’s head tilts to her left in response. The dragon blinks.

You are unfamiliar with flying, child?

Teyla abruptly stiffens up. Her head still tilted. Had she actually—

Yes, the reply is female and sounds strikingly… like her mother. A soothing melodic voice that used to sing Athosian lullabies to help Teyla sleep, the same lullabies she now sings to Torren. After her father had been taken by the Wraith, she thought then, the Asgard she knows now, her mother Tagan would sing the sweet songs to her while holding Teyla in her arms and stroking her hair to help her try to sleep in safety and peace. Sometimes Teyla can still feel her mother’s petting touch as she drifts into sleep.

In those many weeks in which Kanaan was kept from Teyla and Torren, she would do the same thing for their son to try and get him to go to sleep. But Torren is extremely receptive to his parents’ feelings and had sleeping problems back then due to, Teyla believes, her own stress and anxiety about her partner. Teyla remembers visiting Jennifer Keller in the infirmary after walking many circuits of the city trying to get her son to sleep as a means to accompany her mother’s technique. When Teyla was alone in the outer parts of the city on those many, many circuits, she would sing those same lullabies as she bounced him in her arms. After Kanaan was returned to them, Teyla slyly convinced him that it was his anxieties that was preventing their son from going to sleep easily and not her own. In truth, it is both their anxieties. Poor child. Kanaan was so unfamiliar with Atlantis and the members of the Expedition then and she was, and still is, fighting her agitation over her choice to rejoin John’s team.

Do not fear. Everything will be alright, child, I will take care of you.

Teyla strains against the tears threatening her eyes once more. To hear her mother’s voice utter those words to her again is… silently Teyla nods with a heartwarmed smile then proceeds to the mighty beast’s side and mounts it. The female dragon lifts her scale row for the Athosian. Teyla puts her hands over the scales and they flatten to pin her fingers to its body. In truth she feels extraordinarily comfortable on this creature, far more than she had on the extremely large horse they had started their traveling to this mountain on. Yes, Teyla believes she will enjoy a flight upon this extraordinary traveling companion. She turns a beaming face to the others.

Ronon looks at each of them in turn. Starting with Rodney. Flatly refusing to look at Jackson or the brat. His black eyes go to Sheppard next. Finishing on Teyla. It’s hard not to feel a hint of betrayal or a while hell of a lot of it. Especially in regards to Teyla. In all of this he thought, really believed he could trust her to backup his hatred of the Lieutenant. After all it wasn’t Teyla who’s suddenly developed a friendship with Kenmore. That’s McKay and Sheppard. Ronon glowers at his team commander, but Sheppard isn’t looking at him. The Earthman is too busy looking really really eagerly at the hole out of this place. Figures, Ronon shrugs.

Yes it does.

Ronon’s first urge is to figure out what direction the voice is coming from and shoot, but Sheppard’d already said that these things talk to you in your head. So instead of shooting the brown animal he turns his glower towards it. Weirdly, he thinks it’s looking at him just as apprehensively as he is at it. His expression changes as the Satedan crosses his arms over his chest, taking on an ‘Oh really?’ attitude towards the animal. Daring it.

It shrugs. Are you coming or not?

The male voice is masculine and gruff and—Ronon’s dark eyebrows draw together.

“Are you telling me—”

That I do not have time for your ridiculous childish behavior, yes.

“But—”

People are hurt, my kind is hurt. You are being petty. Now get on my back, this not the time.

“But—”

This is not the time nor the place. I am telling you this one last time, get on my back or we will leave you here to sulk in darkness. What is your choice?

It isn’t even a heartbeat before Ronon uncrosses his arms from over his chest, walks over to the creature, gets on its back, and gets his fingers pinned underneath some of its scales. He looks over at the others. “Okay, so how do we get out of here?”

Teyla and Rodney exchange smiling looks between each other. Daniel smiles to himself and looks down at his dragon. Sheppard is still focused on the hole and eager to fly out through it, at least he hopes they’re going to fly out of it. He’s not sure he can do any trick flying maneuvers. He isn’t familiar enough with this sort of flying to feel confident enough to do anything like that.

“Lean down and tense your legs,” Kenmore orders, doing exactly as she’s told them to do.

They follow suit. The dragons start getting restless. John feels his giddiness lurch into his throat. This is it. He hasn’t felt like this since his first flight ever as a pilot. The sudden adrenaline releasing fear that doesn’t start in the pit of your stomach, it hollows out your entire body out of nowhere all at once. Your head feels light and flighty, but your attention is focused, zeroed in. Your entire body vibrates with the pounding rhythm of the machine around you gearing up its rotors. His grin now is just as big as it had been then even if there’s no machine around him but a creature under him and it’s not the pounding of winding up rotors but the animal’s powerful pulse thrumming against his inner legs.

Without further ceremony, the Naill red hunkers down, switching balance from foot to foot, shoulder to shoulder, then launching itself at the light surrounded hole. There’s the familiar, ghostly, windy sound of the forcefield of Atlantis’ brig shutting down as soon as the big red and Kenmore burst through the invisible but indicated barrier. Sheppard’s dragon immediately launches next. Rising with a lurching speed that makes him laugh, his first flight was never like this. Then Daniel’s, Teyla’s, Rodney’s, and Ronon’s. Along with all of the other dragons, riderless but no less eager to take flight.

John didn’t recall feeling anything other than exhilaration as he and his dragon broke through the barrier into the fresh open air. Perhaps that meant that Kenmore and the Silver Arm and her red had deactivated the forcefield, if there had been one there, for the rest of them by going first. Maybe, he doesn’t care. He’s flying. Not in a cockpit protected on all sides, no. He is genuinely flying. The cool night air tears at his already tousled hair. He’s probably going to look like he’d picked a fight with a lightning bolt and lost if he hadn’t looked like that before. His body, low and tight against the back of the green dragon, feels the air jet streaming over and around it. He raises himself up a little as the initial burst of barrier breaking speed fades taking on the graceful ease of gliding. The chill air ripples his hair. It’s crisp without being cold and invigorating. This is what it is to fly. The green dragon beneath him flaps his wings causing both of them to bob gently up and down in the air as they cruise on.

John inhales and is shocked to discover that the wind isn’t choking or stifling him the way it usually does when someone’s trying to fight their way against it like he’d experienced when he did his first parachute jump. The wind pulling at him, forcing his mouth open, and cramming its unadulterated power down his throat.

It is the effect of our wings and bodies. The flapping of our wings disrupts the air current slipstreaming over our bodies. This weakens the air flow substantially enough so as not to suffocate the rider.

“Cool,” John says.

The dragon nods, Yes, cool indeed.

John isn’t sure his grin is ever going to leave his face. And he doesn’t care one bit if it doesn’t, because he can always say that he got his even untidier hairstyle from riding a dragon.

Kenmore’s red dragon angles it head slightly to the side as though to look back at its comrades traveling single-file behind it and emits a series of three whistles that start out middle pitch and descend a few notes before it finishes, a call, that John and everybody else hears loudly and clearly then it turns its head to face back front again. The other dragons return their leader’s call with their each and individual series of hoots, clicks, or whistles and even out their flight pattern. Every single one of them forming a giant flying ‘V’ with Kenmore’s red in the lead, Sheppard’s green slipping into position as her left flank and Jackson’s blue gliding into her right flank position then Teyla’s bronze flanking John’s left side with Rodney’s gold flanking Daniel’s right side, and Ronon’s brown flanking Teyla’s left, and all the other dragons taking up the rest of the positions of the ‘V’.

Sheppard narrows his eyes at Kenmore, his brows knitting, did he—”Did they just talk…like dolphins?” And not the stupid sounding sound used for when Flipper did anything.

“Yes,” Kenmore yells back over the sound of the wind, “Dragons and dolphins go way back. They’re two of the oldest and wisest species on Earth. And it doesn’t hurt that they speak similar languages.” She turns her head to look over at him, “Haven’t you ever heard of other lizard species on Earth that talk like that?”

John thinks about it, but Jackson doesn’t have to for very long, “Geckos and chameleons.”

The dragons’ wings level out into a predominantly gliding posture, drafting off of the big red. Their wings straight out on either side of their bodies like the unbroken spread of a hang glider. When they feel the wind lessening, the beasts flap their wings to generate more air, get more pickup, and keep their flights as unfettered and elegant as it already is. Balance. This beautiful balance between air and life. Delicate, refined, age old skill.

Sheppard looks up at the sky. The stars are out, sharp pinpricks against the dark of night. He loves nightflying; whenever his flight commander told him that he would be on a nightflight, John kept his outward cool, while his insides went giddy, and he nodded at his CO. Sheppard looks back out ahead of their group. Despite how easy it is to see the mountain from the village, the lights of the village seem exactly like the stars above. Distant dots of light, actually a large cluster of yellow-orange dots of light. He can’t tell if there’s new smoke from anything. He can’t tell if there’s any further damage to the village. He knows it’s due to a combination of the night’s darkness and the distance thing, but that doesn’t stop him from wanting the new, good or bad, immediately. Movement catches his eye.

Kenmore is lifting herself up to sit up straighter on her dragon than John feels comfortable doing and looking back at their flight group. He’s close enough to her that he can see her eyes narrow as she views them; she’s analyzing them, perhaps gauging how they’re all handling the flight so far. Big red swings to the right then swings back to the left, casually drifting movements, nothing too elaborate. Each of the rest of the dragons mimics in unison. Everyone on board a dragon holds their seats nicely, even McKay. Lieutenant Kenmore keeps eyeing the group though. John’s not sure why, the thought that they’d all handled the initial launch through the barrier pretty well runs through his head. Apparently it had gone through the Lieutenant’s as well, she faces forward again. Then she leans forward and lifts her body up like a jockey on their horse before the gate is raised and the horse is let out of the shoot.

The call starts low then shoots up to a higher note almost like a bird caw followed by another long whistle that starts at an even higher note then equally slides down a few notes like a ‘woo’ with no ‘who’. Red dives down.

As it descends, Ursula flattens her raised body against the dragon’s back. The wind roars over its wings from the steep descent. The other dragons follow unerringly. The transition between altitudes is smooth. The wind rushes up, clouds rush by. Exactly like Sheppard’s dragon told him, the increase in wind velocity doesn’t stifle or suffocate the riders in the least. The dragons are breathing fine, the humans are breathing fine. John’s stomach bucks, his heart swells. Everything is great.

The flyers straighten out again over the tree tops. The Naill red taking the luxury of this moment in their flight to lower its farthest left wingtip to pet the evergreen tops. The trees it touches follow its petting motion, but none of them snap and nothing falls off of them. Not a needle, cone, or flake of bark. Nothing. None of the other dragons pet the treeline, but John’s eyes drift down to look at the forest below them. A forest that a day ago had held them sitting in those same trees and one of the dragons had tried to eat Kenmore’s throat until something rustled the boughs nearby them and called its attention off after it. The red eases off playing with the woodland and John’s dragon flies over the petted spot and a flock of ravens take off from said trees, flying through the ’V’ to a higher height. Sheppard notices that the birds seem totally unfazed, it’s kind of good to know that the birds aren’t afraid of dragons, even to fly so close past them, practically skimming the dragons’ hides. Another thing Sheppard’s thankfully for is that their flight is soundless except for going from one elevation to another and even then that was the wind making the noise not them or their dragons.

The village lights, relatively few of them as there turns out to be, are coming towards them fast. Stealth speed.

Yes, the green answers Sheppard’s thought. John nods.

The Colonel spots the finer details of the village in no time at all. The hillcrest had been breached again. Worse this time judging by the giant tracks gouged into it. Mostly likely the Fomorians had learned their lesson the last time and used their corrupted dragons’, a.k.a. the Flying Mutant Monkeys, tails to slam into the crest operating under the assumption that another cloaked jumper might be hidden there again. There shouldn’t have been, Atlantis doesn’t have that many of the little craft and they’re too incredibly important to the Expedition to squander like that, but that little tidbit of not exactly spread around the galaxy information doesn’t seem to have stopped the Fomorians from learning from their mistakes and anticipating their opponents next surprise move. There also looks like there’s been one hell of a fight down there. Building up on the nasty one from the night before. All but two of the ‘important’ buildings have been knocked down, their rubble strewn over the dirt roads and caving in the other nearby structures around their remains. Most of the what John was thinking were houses have scorch marks on them or are burnt to the ground. All the siege weapons have been obliterated and it looks like they were taken out the same night they downed the jumper.

What’s striking Sheppard the most is that no one is fighting… or at least they aren’t fighting now. There are a few small plumes of smoke here and there, those are new, but for the most part the rest of the damage simply looks older than tonight. John can gauge that well enough from his time in Afghanistan, its strange the things war teaches you. A second later the Fomorians and U’dana’s people come into view. They’re just standing around at the very center of the all but destroyed village. John can’t tell yet whether they’re confused or if it’s something else or what, he’s too far away to see, but he’s hedging his bet on confusion with his mission group’s previous encounter of the two Fomor in the mountain as case historical backup for that. Sheppard’s having trouble spotting the black flyers though. He peers, trying to look for them, when a part of the darkness, or at least what John thought was just another part of the night surrounding the village and leading out of it, moves. Then other shadows near it move too.

Heads don’t even bother to turn until after the stealth ‘V’ flies over them. Big red and Kenmore aim straight for the flyers. Sheppard’s okay with that. Air combat is okay with him—

It is not that.

Sheppard looks down at this dragon’s head, “What?”

Green stays silent.

The flight group’s approach is silent and swift despite the fact that more than a few of the people they caught off-guard gasp loud enough John can hear them when they noticed the ‘V’ after it passed over them. The Fomorian flyers weren’t paying attention to them either even after the gasps. So confusion it has to be, John knows those things hear good enough to have definitely caught that.

Suddenly Kenmore lets one hand loose from the anatomical reigns. Sheppard catches the glitter of the village’s torchlight bouncing off the Silver Arm as she slides almost totally off her red dragon. Perhaps it’s his dragon’s influence, but Sheppard doesn’t call Kenmore out. He doesn’t say anything. As they practically broadside the first of the gathered flyers, Kenmore’s fingertips touch the first of the black creatures. The teardrop ruby glows violently. Gold lightning leaps out and snakes around the animal’s body. The red moves on. Kenmore’s hand stays out. Gold lightning wraps around another flyer. Then another. And another. Another. It keeps going. The flight group’s circling around the flyers is smooth and graceful. A perfect curving glide. The Fomorian flyers take flight behind their ‘V’ as soon as the healing powers of the Silver Arm finished its work.

In no time at all there’s a rainbow of color circuiting the broken down village.

John was expecting the flyers yet to go to jump up and try to fight them, but they remain still, patiently waiting their turn with the mythical gauntlet. When all of them are in the air, arrayed like a child’s messy crayon drawer flying over and around the village, the Naill red brings the initial ‘V’ formation in for a landing. The rest of the dragons land as well.

The villagers gather around them, getting closer than John thought they would. It’s another good note to have in his mind, these people aren’t afraid of dragons. Suddenly the reigns trapping John’s fingertips rise up into a line of upturned scales again. John pulls his hands back and the scales row lowers back down to be part of the dragon’s hide again. Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard simply sits there on top of a Kelly green dragon with sea blue-green multifaceted eyes, waiting for what’s next.

Everyone is staring at them. Sheppard’s particularly glad to see Lorne and Keller shove their ways through a bunch of villagers to the front of the crowd. A drop-jawed, bug-eyed Major Evan Lorne is a priceless sight, absolutely priceless, and John is pretty sure that this is definitely going to be the mission gossip when they get back to Atlantis. And Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard, the Atlantis Expedition’s Military Commander, is more than proud of that. He’s also pretty certain that he’ll be flashing everyone and anyone a smug-ass grin, like the one he has on his face right now, while not saying a single word to any of the other personnel in the city. His single thought being as it has been for last few minutes: I got to ride a dragon.

Yes, you did John.

He looks down at the green he’s on the back of then back up at their audience. Yep, he is still on a dragon.

Kenmore lifts and swings her leg over the head of her dragon and slides down to easily land feet first on the ground with barely a rumple of dirt kicked up by her combat boots. Sheppard doesn’t want to get off his dragon and the creature remains still beneath him so he figures that that means the dragon is just as happy with John staying where he is as John is. Sheppard crosses his arms over his chest like a seated hero preening for the enamored crowd.

Please tone that down. Your arrogance is starting to become irritating.

John’s smile falters. He stares down at the top of the green dragon’s head. His shoulders droop a little, deflated from the scolding.

I am deeply sorry to have had to put it that way, but it was becoming quite distracting.

“Sorry,” John mumbles. Even he can hear the pout in his voice.

The dragon shrugs, shifting John slightly to the left for a moment before returning him to his previous position. It is quite alright. You are extremely happy.

John shrugs off the slight misting of rain on his parade, passing it away, as U’dana and the rest of the Elders finally make their way through the dense crowd to the front. The women look disheveled, battle worn, but none the worse for wear and the ladies are a glad sight to him. Somehow, perhaps when he’d fought side by side with U’dana or when Boudica told Kenmore and he off as she passed them or at seeing the small and meek appearing Epona, he’s grown quite fond of these women and he didn’t want to see, to know if any of them had gotten hurt. The Colonel’s eyes scan the greater crowd. Quickly his cool grey-green eyes pick out the Expedition uniforms. Some tattered, some as clean as when the backup had originally arrived, and the smile comes back to Sheppard’s face. As far as he’s counting, he isn’t seeing any casualties belonging to them. Good. Really good. His eyes turn to the Fomorians. They look dazed and dazzled, a lot of them are leaning on the villagers nearest to them for help. Yep, all of this is a really good sight to see.

U’dana’s eyes light on the Silver Arm and she steps up to Kenmore with open arms and a proud smile.

“Welcome home my child.”

Ursula grns and walks straight into the embrace.  A part of her is home.  And it feels so good.  It’s a part of home she hasn’t felt the warmth and kindness of in a long time, even before her husband’s death.  Ursula senses strong emotions coming from U’dana as well.  The old woman must have been worried about what had happened to the residents of Hy-Brasyl for all these thousands of years without letting on her deep worry to anyone around her.  This hug, their hug is somehow a culmination of so many things that both of them thought was lost to them so long ago, that was so out of reach to them to try and help or fix.  Now, it’s back.  Here in their arms.  Their long, tight hug ends and the to Tuatha Dé Danann women look at each other. True at peace smiles that haven’t seen the light of day coming forth once more.

A Fomorian, he looks to be about the same age and size as Elathan, steps towards them. Despite the extreme darkness of his skin, his features look forlorn and as though he’s finally found shelter and comfort all at once. He reaches out towards Lieutenant Ursula Kenmore the same way Sheppard had seen countless other oppressed people do to their incoming liberators: It’s the look of ‘Thank you for saving me’…

“Anna,” he says to her, “Anna.”

Kenmore looks over at him then back at U’dana. She smiles at the older woman then let’s go of her and walks over to the desperate man. She takes one of his hands in both of hers. The ruby teardrop begins glowing again.

 

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Seventeen

The Ancient rings redeploy themselves as they had on the plain, but instead of rising from the ground, they appear one at a time descending from the ceiling with the same hum, ka-thum, and screech. The screaming molecular beam of light radiates down into the ring cage again as a brilliant overreaching flash of light. The mission group reassembles back to their original solid matter minds and bodies inside their naquadah cage. Then the rings once again systematically retreat back the way they’d come. When the light of the rings leaves with them, it also abandons the group in the near total darkness of the cavern the Ancient ring system has deposited them in.

Immediately they look around and assess the situation.

“I thought that was supposed to take us outside,” Rodney exclaims in his ‘Oh, come on!’ tone of voice.

The rest of his comrades break out their flashlights, flick them on, and start scanning the area with the small beams of light. They’re at a crossroads of three tunnels. The tunnels themselves are about twenty-feet tall, a good solid two-stories, with an equally as wide diameter. Light, weak and white, is coming from somewhere at the end of two of the tunnels while no light, merely deeper shadows are at the end of the third tunnel off to the group’s left. An indicator that that one most likely leads further into the ebony mountain. The team turns their attentions to the two tunnels that both look like they lead outside.

“Does anyone know which one to take,” Sheppard asks, confidently and comfortably back in commander mode.

Rodney reaches for the vest pocket he keeps his lifesigns detector in when rustling comes from the dark tunnel. The whole group turns. Weapons aimed and ready. Each trigger finger waiting. The shuffling keeps getting closer and closer. Their fingers poise over their triggers. Getting comfortable. The figure appears in their converged flashlight. A Fomorian… but there’s something wrong.

“No!”

Ronon doesn’t hesitate to fire, but Kenmore shoves his arm and aim up in time. The Satedan’s energy blast shoots harmlessly into the air. Dissipating quietly against the stone of the intersection’s ceiling. He glares at her.

“Why did you do that,” Ronon snaps.

Kenmore doesn’t answer him. She keeps her eyes on the approaching Fomor. It’s how it’s moving… and then it starts to talk… well, try to talk. There is no heart racing battle cry. No overwhelming roar of defiance. No rage. It’s wispy sounding and babbling like a frail old man trying to speak but where the spirit is willing, the body is weak. Kenmore realizes that’s it. He’s an old man. He stumbles towards them, scuffling his feet across the rock floor, and waving his arms out in front of him. Not like the other Fomor they’ve fought against, but like…

“He’s blind,” Kenmore rushes forward as the old Fomorian trips on a slight jut of rock face on the floor. She catches the man in her arms. Daniel rushes to aid her.

He takes up one side of the old Fomorian, but the stumble’s forced the elder’s already weak body to give. His legs won’t support him any further, they guide his crumple as much as they can and carefully drag him the handful of feet over to the back wall of the intersection. They sit the Fomorian down and brace his back against the wall. Sheppard and his team gather around. John watches the Fomorian’s head wag from side to side in that sad helpless way that a sightless person trapped in a bed still tries desperately to see. John feels part of his heart ache for the enemy and it’s brought to the brink of breaking when the senior starts his feeble mumbling again, trying to talk to them. Teyla, heart sore, kneels down behind Daniel, maintaining a position beside the Fomorian’s feet. The compassionate woman placing a gentle, comforting hand on one of the black, stick thin, knobby knees. The elder Fomor stirs and Ursula puts a hand on his arm. As soon as her Silver Arm-bound hand encloses around the pitch-colored, spindly limb, the mythical gauntlet’s teardrop ruby glows brightly like the Goa’uld hand device’s gem about to unleash it’s God’s fury and a patch of the Fomorian’s black skin around where Ursula is touching him suddenly flees from her grasp like ocean water rushing away from the granular shore it had just rushed up over. Bleaching the flesh to as warm a peach hue as said sandy beach, the color of summer.

Kenmore gasps and yanks her hand away from the man. The ruby dims and the black tide washes back over to cover the peach. Ursula, slack-jawed and wide-eyed, gapes down at the gauntlet. The rest of them too.

“What the—“

“Rodney, how did that Ascension machine work,” Daniel interrupts Sheppard.

“It, uh, it manipulated its subjects body on a genetic level. Making specific changes to the genome in order to accelerate the human body’s evolution to make ascension easier.”

“Alright,” Daniel starts nodding his head, processing the information.

“But,” McKay has to stress, “it didn’t work. The thing didn’t take into account the mental component you need in order to ascend. It didn’t—“

“Ursula, do you remember what Lynn told you the Fomor looked like,” Daniel asks.

Kenmore looks at him and nods.

Daniel reaches out and takes her Silver Arm by the wrist. He slowly guides it back towards the elderly man. Ursula fights him for a moment, but Daniel puts that to ease, “Trust me. If I’m right, and I think I am, all you need to do is touch him and remember what your mother taught you.” God he hopes all the connections he made are right.

Urs lets Daniel finish guiding her Silver Arm back to the old Fomorian. He places her hand on the old man’s chest then his eyes go to hers. She feels the feeble heartbeat dab lightly against the skin of her palm. Daniel lets go of her. The ruby glows and the beach of peach is revealed by the ebb of black, but the tide only ebbs so far. Ursula takes that as her cue, she closes her eyes and thinks a single thought. What did the old Fomor really look like?

The Silver Arm’s contented hum charges up into a higher pitch. There’s a flare of red-orange hued light, but Ursula keeps her eyes closed and keeps repeating the thought in her mind as a mantra. The rest watch the ruby’s sudden burst of radiance coalesce into a single string of gold light. It coils around the old Fomorian’s body, wrapping around his body from his shoulder to his toes and back up again. The gold lightning bringing with its course the same influence Kenmore’s touch has. The black ebbs from the emerging peach. Well etched life lines and folds of skin are suddenly revealed. Joints that are engorged by a combination of shrinking skin and arthritis. The lightning makes a final turn around the aged head, showing baby blue eyes so filled with cataract they look like frosted glass, then the electric string of golden light returns to the energized gauntlet and its teardrop ruby. Hair suddenly begins growing from the aged bald head, ghost white and so thinned the strands are barely there. Kenmore opens her eyes while the gauntlet dims. The rich healthy peach tone of his skin dies away like the ruby’s light, taking on a pale translucent color. They all stare at the Fomorian, he’s decrepit and naked.

Amid their stunned silence, he stirs again. Most likely roused by the sudden lack of sound. He begins waving his arms in front of himself and mumbling again. Ursula instantly touches his arm, but this time the Silver Arm doesn’t react. His mumbling becomes intelligible…

“Ooh-uh…ooh-uh…on nuh…on nuh…”

“What’s he saying?”

Kenmore looks back up at McKay, “How the hell should I know?”

“Well, you’re the one going around here talking whatever to that old lady, so what’s this old man saying?”

“It’s not Gaelic, McKay. And seriously, how racist can you get?”

Rodney’s taken aback, “I am not racist,” he turns to Sheppard beside him, “Tell her I’m not racist.”

Sheppard nods at Kenmore, “He isn’t racist,” McKay’s pacified, “He’s just incredibly insulting and incredibly ignorant of anything and anyone that isn’t him,” Kenmore’s pacified and Rodney’s irate.

“I am—,” Sheppard looks at him as does Daniel, over the brim of his glasses. Rodney’s forced to acquiesce with a roll of his eyes and a dismissive wave of his hand; okay, he gets it, move along.

Daniel Jackson returns his attention to the elderly Fomorian, “Actually I think I do understand him. I think he’s trying to say Tuatha Dé Danann.”

Kenmore stares at her friend, he shifts his eyes to her.

“Anna, anna,” the old man wails, flailing even more.

Kenmore is about to open her mouth when she feels the shiver ripple through the emaciated frame. She looks down at him as does Daniel.

“We have to get him someplace else,” Jackson says.

“Uh-huh,” Kenmore nods.

Daniel gently wriggles one arm behind the man’s back…

“Anna, anna,” if the elderly Fomor writhes much harder, he’ll fall over.

“It’s alright. We’re trying to help you,” the Lieutenant tries to placate and succeeds. The old man calms down and Daniel gets his arm around the senior’s back and his other arm under the crook of the old man’s knees. Ursula helps tilt senior against Daniel’s chest as Daniel slowly rises to stand. He thought it was bad when he barely felt the old man leaning against him, it’s even worse when he realizes the man is a feather weight, literally the weight of a feather in his arms. Daniel knows he has journals that weigh more than the life he’s holding does. All at once he honestly believes like never before that he’ll never be able to watch Schindler’s List the same way ever again because he’s holding an alien ghost of the Holocaust in his arms. Daniel also has the overwhelming urge to visit and thank every veteran and survivor of World War II he could ever possibly find. He’ll check with the Department of Veterans’ Affairs and the Holocaust Survivors and Victims Resource Center. If he couldn’t anything from them, which he doubted, there’s always Jack he could go to and ask him to pull some strings for him and get the information he needed. Ursula gets to her feet with them and begins looking around, they all do. McKay starts for one of the lit tunnels.

“I don’t think taking him outside is going to be such a good idea,” Daniel interrupts.

“What? Why not? It’s warmer out there than it is in here, isn’t it? Why wouldn’t that help him?”

“He’s blind, Rodney, and I’m pretty sure it wasn’t a sudden condition. He’s probably been like how we first met the Fomorians for years, most likely all his life. If we take him out into the moonlight, it might traumatize his body more than he can handle. I could kill him.”

Rodney McKay looks the decrepit figure in Daniel’s arms over, Daniel doesn’t look like he’s even trying to hold the man up, isn’t breaking a sweat. Not even breathing hard, in fact, there’s no change in his breathing at all. Rodney nods, maybe the archeologist is right. The group turns and looks at the unlit tunnel. Rodney instinctively plucks his lifesigns detector from his tactical vest. He looks down at its bright display and wanted to say ‘Finally’ but went with business as usual instead.

“There’s a room about twenty feet from here down that way.”

Sheppard looks at the Canadian, “That thing working again?”

McKay, consulting the display illuminating his face in blue-tinted white light, nods.

John turns his head and tries to peer into the darkness well beyond the barrel of his rifle, “Schematic?”

“A big one and really detailed.”

“Good, what’s in the room?”

“A bed and some nightstands and things like that.”

Sheppard nods, “Anybody incoming?”

“No.”

The Lieutenant Colonel assumes a tactical stance and moves to take point as usual. Teyla and Rodney fall in second-naturedly behind him, flanking him. Kenmore and Jackson slip into the middle of their diamond formation. And Ronon Dex takes to guarding their six. John quickly affixes his flashlight to his P-90’s barrel then leads his mission group into the darkness.

 

 

He isn’t sure what he’d been expecting to come at them in the sensor deprivating black of the unlit tunnel… that isn’t true. He knew exactly what he’d been expecting. Fomorians, not like the old man but the big, scary, hard to beat guys they’d run into when the village’d been attacked. Or their freakish flying buddies—for a moment his mind stutters at the mere thought of calling them freakish. He fights the urge to glance back at Kenmore. Am I ever going to get over that?

…No.

He scowls. God damn voice.

“Turn right up ahead five feet,” McKay orders.

John nods, his night eyes had already caught the subtlety of an ever so slightly darker slit of shadow in the right wall up ahead without Rodney pointing it out, but it is nice to know that that is the place they need to go.

“Clear,” Sheppard asks in hushed tones.

“Yep.”

Good. Sheppard stalks up to the slit and enters. At his presence, a set of eight torches, two set into each wall of the small square room, burst to life. Although it isn’t much of a lighting setup. Even with eight of them, the room isn’t really thoroughly lit. He can see enough to know the room really is clear of enemies and that they haven’t walked straight into a trap. If it is a trap though, it is the crappiest dud of one John’s ever been in and that is saying a lot. A lot. Jackson quickly rushes into the empty room and lays his cargo down on the simple bed of mange-ridden animal furs and dirty woven blankets that look as old and tattered and haven’t seen the light of day as the old man. Daniel doesn’t like the feel of the unforgiving ‘mattress’ that brushes along his arms as he lays the elderly Fomor gingerly down on it, but it’s not like he has any other choice. Kenmore rushes over to them with the remnants of a blanket she’s found from her scavenging for something to cover their patient up in as soon as she’d entered the room. Daniel helps her tuck in the edges under the man as best they can where there’s enough blanket edge to actually tuck under.

Teyla looks around the room, she does not believe that that is going to be enough to warm the shriveled frame. She too had felt the aged man shiver, it had been deep and her natural Athosian demureness had evaporated when his skin had paled so much and the chill surged through his body. In that moment she did not care that he was completely naked, she cared that he was helpless and needed someone, anyone for help. The young Athosian leader pulls open one of the small two-drawer nightstands made from dead grey wood and finds a whole blanket. It looks as if it has not been touched in many years and its insect damage is considerably more minimal than she had been expecting it to be. Teyla takes it out and lets gravity unfold it as she hurries over to the Lieutenant, Doctor, and their foundling. The Lieutenant stands up from the primitive bed and steps aside for Teyla Emmagan to take her place. Together, the three of them wrap and tuck the new wool blanket over and around the man. He calms easily, shutting his foggy eyes and settling his head back on the hard bed. He doesn’t seem harmed by the tough surface. In fact he seems comforted by it. His head lulls to the side and he appears to drift off into a soothing sleep with a final mumble.

“Anna…”

Teyla, Daniel, and Kenmore exchange looks. At least one part of this turn of events has alleviated. They look back at the rest of their group. What next?

Sheppard doesn’t know. He opens his mouth to ask Rodney but the scuffling sounds that come out of nowhere behind him capture his attention. John’s P-90 snaps up as Ronon’s blaster does after the Satedan jumps. That alone puts Sheppard instantly on edge. Ronon doesn’t jump at sudden sounds, he doesn’t. Nothing seems able to sneak up on the massive, formidable man. Nothing. But this something—John’s barrel flashlight’s beam locks onto the Fomorian staggering into the room—has.

Oddly, neither John nor Ronon fire. Maybe it was because of their ordeal with the old man or maybe it’s the fact that this Fomorian, while blatantly no old man, is feeling his way along the edge of the room’s entrance. Or perhaps it’s the second oddity in this scenario, his eyes are pale blue like the old man’s but not blinded with engulfing cataract. As soon as the younger Fomorian gets an eyeful of John’s flashlight, he looks away. Blinking, but absolutely refusing to let go of the wall to shield his eyes from the glare. John lowers his weapon without knowing why he is other than compassion, he was always taught by his mother it is impolite to blind someone who is looking for help.

“Do you,” Sheppard begins but gets promptly cut off.

“Tuatha De Danann,” the Fomorian says, his voice oddly pleasant to the ears while simultaneously sounding unused to use, “My father said the Tuatha De Danann was here.” The Fomorian coughs. Trying to get his voice back.

John exchanges looks with Ronon. Uh, um… Kenmore shoves past him to stand in between him and the younger Fomorian. Straight away his pale blue eyes latch onto the Silver Arm on Kenmore’s arm, he lunges at her. It isn’t a hostile move. The tears filling the Fomorian’s eyes made that plainly clear. Relief and salvation. It caught John off-guard when the same look came over an Afghani tribesman out in the middle of nowhere, tired of being brutalized, were thankful for a moment’s peace and that’s all it ever seemed to last, a moment. Kenmore catches him and again as soon as the Silver Arm comes into contact with his black skin, the flesh nearest it ebbs to reveal peach-tinted grey coloring. Kenmore locks eyes with him and, in shock, wonders what he really looks like. The gold lightning quickly gives her her answer. Suddenly a golden-haired man with the exact same build as Ronon and looking to be the same age too with peach-tinted grey skin is standing in front of her. As naked as his elder had been.

“Elathan,” Ursula breathes.

The Fomorian’s eyes quirk at her. As though he’s confused by the possible notion that he should know her.

“I,” he tries to begin, “I have not heard that name in a long time.” It is like the man is waking up from a horrible, mystifying dream, “You,” he peers at her, almost like he’s trying to peer into her eyes to literally see her soul, “are not Nuada.”

“No, I’m his descendant.”

He nods at her. Another look comes over his young lean face. It’s an odd mixture of concern and curiosity.

“Do you know my son Breas? He went to dwell with the others of our three tribes in Hy-Brasyl. If you are Nuada’s descendant, then you must know what happened to my son on Earth.”

Kenmore startles and she’s not the only one. Sheppard’s never heard any native in the Pegasus Galaxy ever refer to Earth as Earth before the members of the Atlantis Expedition had introduced themselves to them and struck up a close enough friendship for the Lantean emissaries to spill that particular bean.

“He ruled the Tuatha De Danann for a time after Nuada lost his kingship, but later Nuada regained it and Breas,” here Ursula isn’t sure how to go on so she opts to start over in a way, “Breas’s reign was not a good one.”

Elathan nods sagely at this, “Our ways are not yours. He was not a fit leader of your people, he should have stayed among our tribe.”

Kenmore nods, accepting the words, and as soon as her eyes dip down, she reacts, “Oh my god.” She immediately looks away.

Elathan looks down at himself and realizes his nudity, but he doesn’t know what to do about it. Rodney casually walks over with another blanket he’s pulled from the same drawer Teyla had gotten hers from and hands the Fomorian the item in the ensuing silence. Elathan nods a swift ‘thank you’ at the theoretical astrophysicist and wraps himself with the wool cover up as a sarong. His eyes catch sight of his father on the inhospitable bed and he makes his way jerkily over to him. Teyla quickly gets out of his way, retreating to Rodney’s side. Elathan fills her spot. They watch the Fomorian warrior gently pour over his elderly father, tenderly lifting wisps of thin white hair away from the closed eyes.

“I, I thought you went with Breas to Earth, you and your father, Delbaeth, King of the Fomor,” Ursula stammers.

The others stare at the old sleeping man.

Elathan shakes his head, still doting over the aged. “No, we did not. Our place is here, my son’s mother went with him to Earth,” he pauses then turns his head a little towards her to talk to the knowledgeable Lieutenant over his shoulder, “What became of Éri? What became of my wife?”

Eyes turn towards Kenmore.

Oh boy, this doesn’t get any easier, does it? “Uh, she, uh, she…”

Elathan looks away from her, his shoulders sinking. She knows that sink. All too familiarly.

“They are both gone,” he says soberly. Sadly. Certain.

Silently behind him, Ursula nods. Looking down at the ground. Everyone observes the moment of silence.

“It was believed on Earth that you were there with your son, you and your father, and that he and Éri joined you two before the Second Battle of Moy Tura.”

Daniel sees a slight smile tug at one corner of the Fomorian prince’s drawn mouth, “Then perhaps one day we will be united again in the Undying Lands. Perhaps we will one day prove your legend true,” something occurs to him. He turns to Kenmore, a furrowed expression on his incredibly handsome face, “Second Battle of Moy Tura? There has only been the First.”

Here, Teyla steps in, “Your people are waging war against the village at the crest of the hill from here. They are recreating what my companion here believes to be the Second Battle. Did you not know this?”

“No, my family has not ruled for some time. When Balor left on Hy-Brasyl, the Three Sisters agreed to take over his duties. We, we,” his confusion returns, “we have not ruled since then. I do not remember much since then. The Sisters took control.”

The mission unit exchange troubled and knowing looks between each other. That explains a lot, a very sinister and bad lot. The only time they’re given to think this over is the chance they take to look at each other, Elathan snaps himself out of his thoughts and them too, “You must go. Now. Stop this before there is a war.”

“We were trying to do that, but we got transported here instead,” Rodney complains.

“Transported? You have been to the beast’s room,” Elathan’s immediately disturbed.

“It’s alright,” Kenmore allays him, she waves the Silver Arm at him, “I kind of already took care of the Evil Eye.”

The Fomor prince keeps his heavy sigh of relief to himself. His people’s terror is over. They could begin again.

“It will take you too long to use the trail,” he tells them, “The path down the mountain is considerable. You must go on the dragons.”

Sheppard, Rodney, and Daniel’s heads snap to him at that.

“Dragons,” McKay repeats and John’s avid nodding seconds.

“Where are they,” Daniel and Ursula ask quickly.

“If you take the second of the two tunnels leading to the outside, it will take you there.”

“Thank you,” Ursula bows and starts to turn away for the entry…then stops herself. She looks back at him, “Delbaeth,” she begins.

Elathan turns his attention back to his father, again he pets back his father’s thinned hair from the wrinkled, age-worn forehead, “You cannot help, his time has been coming for a long time. At least he has been freed before the end. His last moments will be spent as they were before the darkness came. That is good.”

Ursula nods as does Teyla. They understand. The Silver Arm may be capable of great things, great healing in returning the Fomorian bodies to the way they once were, but there are some things that are inevitable and the fragility and entropy of human life is one of them.

“Thanks,” John adds quietly and starts to step back towards the entry.

His team, Kenmore, and Jackson take his cue. They hurry to his side, Daniel giving Elathan a swift squeeze on the shoulder, which the young man returns with a small considerate nod, before joining up with the rest of them. Not exactly feeling comfortable with this himself, John exits the room last. Watching a son’s final moments with his father… John wishes, is pained by the fact that he’d never gotten that chance too. John turns and runs after his people. His dad is dead and there isn’t going to be any of that for him ever. Just leave it behind.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Five | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Sixteen

Over their heads the undulating shadows split open to reveal the gold disc within light grey. It comes alive, the red dot tracking to each of them in turn. Looking them over, scanning them. It’s disconcerting. The Stargate unit keeps still. Sheppard hopes that this thing might be like the T-Rex in Jurassic Park, maybe if they stay still and stay silent, it won’t be able to track them as well. Then again maybe not. He and Kenmore had stood still in the center of the hallway and it still tracked them. He tries to dissuade himself about that by pointing out to himself that Kenmore’d moved to touch the thing and they talked and, more importantly, the hallway had been narrow. It was single-mindedly designed for the creature to do anything other than come at the two of them.

The eye starts sliding down the wall. Now that is just downright freaky looking. Like someone’s gotten their eyeball stuck in between a pair of elevator doors and the elevator starts moving down to the ground floor with the eyeball still stuck in between them. John responds to his urge to shiver at the gross idea by narrowing his sights down the barrel of his P-90. Bullets may be worthless against this thing but he can’t shake the feeling that they might be able to dent the energy creature or manage to slow it down with enough lead pumped into its cloud-like body. Or at least get that freaky looking eye to stop staring at them.

The eye gets to the height it was when Sheppard and Kenmore had run into it in the hallway, eye level—where’s the bah-dum bah when you need it—and starts coming towards them.

The SG-team begins stepping backward. Ronon, Teyla, and Rodney keeping the urge to form a solid straight line of armed and ready team to stop the one-eyed shadow from getting any closer at bay. The fresh, summer-colored green grass begins disappearing beneath the black mass of dark energy as it crawls towards the humans. Coal-black tendrils snake out towards the soldiers the way an octopus uses its tentacles to crawl across the sandy bottom of the ocean in search of the prey that knows to stay clear of the predator’s den. Except this prey has accidentally walked straight into said den, now the octopus is playing with them. Cat and mouse. How comfy. Some of the tendrils pull themselves away from covering above Crom-Crúach’s eye, unveiling the cloud of white energy that crowns the Worm God like hair. Rather than helping it’s dark counterparts pull itself along, the white tendrils flare straight up like the hackles of a very pissed off animal. White fire. The shadows finally pull fully away from the walls, slinking in behind the approaching eyeball and exposing the ebony stone that composes the mountain around them. The jagged and ragged surface twinkling where the light from no obvious place catches its facets. Giving the impression of a wondrous star-filled night. It was like being on an island in space. Or on another world entirely.

The team continues retreating, measuring pace with the Demon God’s approach. The God is corralling them into the center of the grassy island field. John feels his own hackles start to rise, he doesn’t like this. How many times is he going to be led to do something? When is anything going to be his choice? He told Kenmore he didn’t like being handfed like this. Now it’s looking like they’re about to be handfed to something they can’t possibly shoot. He feels trembling… he can’t be shaking, John Sheppard doesn’t shake in front of things like this. But he feels it in his boots. Then he hears the roar building in his ears. An earthquake? Now? Crap.

Pillars of stone unexpectedly come up out of the ground around them. Engraved and painted with red symbols. Some of the pillars are henge formations. Daniel grins. The Stargate team is surrounded by concentric circles of stone pillars and henges. Now this might be a fair fight.

“Are those what I think they are,” he hears Sheppard ask, detecting the unmistakable relief bordering on joy in the Colonel’s voice.

Daniel Jackson nods. “Yes, yes they are.”

“Great. Now does anybody know how to use them?” McKay rains on their parade.

“How about you and Jackson get right on that,” Sheppard offers, “Fall back to the nearest of the stones behind us and start reading.”

The scientists do but Rodney can’t help pointing out that, “There might be something important on the stones nearest to the creature too.”

Well if that’s true, John and the rest of them will figure out a way to bait the shadow creature away from those stones whenever they need to have a shot at reading those after they’ve finished reading the safer ones. Till then…

“Kenmore,” Sheppard orders next, “Reach into my pack and pull out that Silver Arm. If things go south, I want you to figure out how to use that thing and start healing us as fast as you can with it.”

“I could just use my hands. I decked you then healed you, remember? That turned out alright. Unless that isn’t how your nose looked before?”

John’s eyes flit to her direction for a moment. There isn’t anything wrong with the way his nose looked before she’d punched him…  Was there? His eyes quickly snap back to the approaching Evil Eye.

“Maybe the Arm works better and faster,” John defends the order and feels the prickling in his shoulders returning. The muscles tightening. Even now she has to question, has to start things. She’s always going to do that, isn’t she? And there’s nothing wrong with his nose, it looks perfectly fine. Plenty of women in the city have no problem with the way it looks then and now, plenty of civilian women especially.

“Like the healing device,” Daniel calls out from behind them. Reminding her.

As Sheppard, Kenmore, Teyla, and Ronon fall back, they get close to their friends analyzing the stones. Too close.

Silently Kenmore relents. She shifts her P-90 to her left hand and reaches over with her right. Sheppard feels her hand at his back. Then he hears the Velcro give as the Lieutenant’s fingers pry their way into his tactical vest’s single large pocket. His body tugs back towards her as she wrestles the silver gauntlet out of his vest. She falls in step behind him, using him as cover as she abandons her P-90 to dangle by its clip in front of her as she slips the gauntlet on over her right arm, the arm according to legend that Nuada wore it on.

It may have felt cold on the outside, but it sure feels warm on the inside. As soon as she fits its top rectangular piece against the back of her hand, the gauntlet clamps down on her arm. Sealing itself against her flesh like a second skin. Kenmore panics. She stares down at the thing as she tries to pry it off of her. Clawing. It won’t come. The Silver Arm’s fine gold engravings light up. The teardrop ruby center piece glows blood red. Like the control crystal of a Goa’uld ribbon device.

Immediately Crom-Crúach’s eye widens. He roars.

Sheppard opens fire. So does Teyla. And Ronon. The metal bullets pierce the Evil Eye’s ‘hide’ in puffs. The lead goes in, but does absolutely nothing to the enraged creature. Ronon’s blasts crackle against the Worm God’s surface. Dissipating. Harmless.

Crom lunges for Sheppard. Kenmore throws him out of the way.

Ursula cringes behind her Silver Arm as the shadow’s black tendrils lash out and catch the gauntlet’s surface. There are flashes of lightning and an enormous crack of thunder that shakes the whole plain followed by a shrieking howl.

The tendrils retreat, Crom retreats. Kenmore grabs her right arm, holding it close against her body. She fights the yelp in her mouth. Slamming her eyes shut. Vibrating with the pain. Her legs buckle then she goes down.

Crom begins pacing the outside of the circles of stones and henges like a caged animal waiting for its prey to make a mistake, a single mistake.

Sheppard sidesteps over to Kenmore. Before he can even begin to kneel down beside her, Crom whips a tendril at his head. It doesn’t come anywhere near close to touching John, but it succeeds in forcing him to keep his attention on the Worm God. Not on the Lieutenant. Teyla takes the chance instead and rushes to Kenmore’s side.

“What are your injuries,” Teyla asks.

“I don’t know yet. It’s just pain. A lot of pain,” Kenmore grits yet her muster falters during her last sentence. Her voice warbling. Sheppard glances down at her.

Crom takes the opportunity. Ronon does too. The Satedan pumps five blasts into the tendril, forcing the coil to retreat from Sheppard again. Crom-Crúach returns to pacing outside their cage. He’s not going to give them a chance like that again. He’s not going to back off to the harmless energy blasts of Ronon’s gun. The Worm God has shown them something in his toying with the human warriors.

“I thought you said it couldn’t hurt you,” Sheppard calls out.

“Apparently the Silver Arm changes that,” Kenmore grits again. Suddenly, finally, she manages to breathe, it’s a ragged exhale and intake of air. Again Sheppard’s gaze flits at her.

Crom doesn’t take the opportunity, Ronon’s gaze hasn’t shifted.

Kenmore finally eases her body up a bit. It’s enough to let Teyla try and examine the potential injuries. The Athosian reaches out for the gauntlet… and sharply yanks her hand back from it with a hiss.

“Are you hurt,” Sheppard doesn’t chance an actual look back, Crom is starting to growl. A low rumble that sounds like an oncoming thunderstorm.

“No,” Teyla answers him.

“What happened?”

“I attempted to touch the Lieutenant’s gauntlet. I did not even get near it. The heat is too intense.”

“Heat,” Daniel’s head pops out from behind the pillar he’s trying to examine.

Teyla nods at him.

“Yes, heat, Daniel,” it’s Kenmore’s turn to growl, biting back the extreme pain, the damn thing flared up again when Emmagan tried to touch her, “where do you think the pain is coming from.”

“Didn’t your family tell you that was going to happen,” Ronon asks.

“Our history really wasn’t that detailed,” she winces.

“Excuse me,” Rodney chimes in, his head also popping out from behind a standing stone, “you mentioned naked, starlight, the four elements, a crimson flame, and coiling blue lightning and now you’re claiming none of that is detailed enough?”

“Well there wasn’t a friggin’ mention about how much this hurts. In fact Nuada was said to feel no pain after he got the Arm.”

Something occurs to Teyla but before she can open her mouth, Crom tries lashing out at her. She ducks. Sheppard and Ronon cover her. Crom goes back to pacing, starts growling again. Low and guttural this time, more animalistic. Warning them. Sheppard eyes the massive energy creature, this thing isn’t going to back down the next time it takes a chance to strike at them. They’re running out of time.

“Perhaps,” Teyla returns to voicing her occurrence, “it is your human DNA that is causing the problem. You indicated that Nuada was most likely an Ancient.”

Ursula starts nodding, forcing herself to mentally shake off the sensation of burning veins of blood; it feels like the metal is actually melting itself to her flesh. Emmagan might be on to something. Kenmore looks at the woman. Teyla tries to smile at her, trying to encourage her. Okay. Okay, I’ll play along. Anything to make the pain stop or at least for my mind to not register it anymore. Ursula knows herself too well, she has to talk it out for the personal distraction to work.

“That, that coil thing didn’t happen so, uh, maybe, uh, the Silver Arm isn’t fully activated. Or, um, it’s not on right,” she tries to get up but her legs buckle, shake too much; Teyla braces her petite frame against the Lieutenant’s full figure and helps Kenmore uneasily to her feet, “The red flame is definitely here and if this heat is anything to go by, I am so feeling the radiant energy part.”

“And what of the starlight,” Emmagan tries to help, “Was there any starlight when you put the Silver Arm on?”

Kenmore shakes her head, biting her lower lip no longer in the cutely trapped in a corner way. “No,” she groans.

“So what was supposed to happen when you put that thing on, hasn’t,” Sheppard clarifies, “I’m thinking that it was a bad idea now that you put that thing on.”

Enough talking, Crom-Crúach the Worm God lunges at the team again. Sheppard takes aim…

“No,” Kenmore’s voice echoes unnaturally as she suddenly lunges forward. Shoving Sheppard out of the way again.

The wall of black energy slams into the Silver Arm. The flash is blinding. The bone-penetrating crack deafening. Quickly the contact lightning coils, not around Kenmore’s Silver Arm, but around the concentric circles. The symbols on the pillars and henges start glowing. And glowing brighter. And brighter. Building power.

Daniel abandons his pillar and yanks McKay away from his, throwing both of them back into the center just before the power reaches full capacity… but it doesn’t. The symbols’ light’s flaring but all that happens is the electrical current travels from stone to stone. Circuit to circuit. There’s no shockwave. None at all. Daniel and Rodney scramble to their feet and retreat back to the safety of the rest of the group. Well, relative safety. The scientists start to ask what Sheppard plans on doing next, but get caught with their mouths open. There are tiny pinpricks of…

“Starlight,” Daniel breathes. Awed at the sight.

The glowing lights suddenly prickle across the ceiling and walls. They’re not the glittering facets of obsidian anymore. They are dozens maybe even hundreds of constellations. Some Daniel recognizes from Earth’s skies, the Milky Way’s Galaxy. Others from Atlantis’ original homeworld and its second one, the Pegasus Galaxy itself. As the hideously screaming Evil Eye recoils and gathers all of itself in, the ‘stars’ descend and pool around Kenmore’s outstretched gauntlet.

Somehow, Daniel can’t even begin to fathom how, the stars suffuse into the gauntlet and the whole thing shines like new polished silver. The filigree work pulsing silver and gold. The red stone embedded at the center of the piece on the back of Kenmore’s hand glowing a violent blazing red. Every part of the Silver Arm looking less like a healing device, more like a weapon.

“Mental component like the ribbon device,” Daniel shouts over the energy creature’s shrieking.

“Yes it is,” Rodney tells him, “Her voice does that weird echo thing any time she taps into her Ancient abilities.”

Lieutenant Ursula Kenmore isn’t moving though. Sheppard peers at her. She isn’t trapped in a moment of time, she’s trying to keep herself from breaking. The Lieutenant is standing there with Silver Arm outstretched at Crom-Crúach. Eyes squeezed shut. Tears streaming from them. Face contorted in openmouthed silent torture.

“Kenmore!” He shouts.

She loses her personal battle and crumples to the ground.

“Ursula!” Daniel dives for her.

He puts a hand on Ursula and brings up his P-90 as the Evil Eye charges again. Sheppard, Teyla, Ronon, and Rodney charge forward to Daniel and Kenmore’s sides. They hold their fire. Letting it get closer. Crom barrels towards the perimeter of the outermost circle. They’re fingers poise over their triggers. Suddenly Crúach slams into a net of electric blue lightning invisibly erected between two standing stones. A whole fence of blue lightning shimmers between the stones of the stonehenge like the forcefields in between the bars of Atlantis’ brig’s cells. The SGC soldiers are protected.

Daniel immediately turns his attention down to his friend, the young woman he’s known since she was sixteen. Her eyes are still squeezed shut. Her face still grimacing in suffering. He shakes her.

“Ursula! Urs!”

She finally answers him. The anguished wail erupts from her mouth. She starts squalling. Sheppard, Rodney, and Teyla stare down at a woman in her own private Hell. She keeps screaming with every part of her body straining. Pressing the gauntlet against her body. They all can feel the heat of the Silver Arm’s radiant energy coming of her like a wall of fire shoving itself in their faces with Kenmore at its center. They can only imagine what it’s like to feel like your entire body is on fire within your own flesh. Kenmore writhes but keeps the gauntlet away from them.

Suddenly Ronon opens fire. The others look up. His blast dissipates against the henge’s lightning field. He lowers his weapon.

“No good,” he shrugs.

The rest of his team and Daniel gape at him. He looks down at them.

“What?”

“Ronon,” Teyla gasps. He startles at the expression on her face…it’s disgust.

“I,” he begins but the slow shaking of her head finishes him before he even starts. “Teyla,” he tries again but she looks away from him.

Sheppard does too. This is getting out of hand. Way too out of hand. John drops down to one knee beside Jackson and Kenmore. He tries to reach out to her the way Jackson had and again he doesn’t even get a handful of inches to her before the heat of the Arm overwhelms his skin.

“Ow. Damn,” he shakes his hot hand. He’ll never sear meat again after this.

“You shouldn’t do that, it’s easier for me to. Sam was exposed to heat like this on a mission once. When Odin and I got her out of it, I had to pull her clothes off of her. Part of her skin came off with them, the heat had fused her skin to the fabric.”

Sheppard looks at him.

Daniel doesn’t look back, “Valhalla,” the Doctor says quietly.

Kenmore’s wailing starts to ebb. She manages to close her mouth, pull herself together a little. John hopes that means her Ancient ability to heal is kicking in. Otherwise, it’s shock and if it’s at the level where the body’s no longer feeling any pain, then Kenmore is too far gone in whatever injuries the gauntlet is doing to her for any of them to be able to save her… except if they get that damn healing device her bloodline’s meant to wield to work—That’s it!

“Bloodline,” Sheppard says to himself.

Ursula begins curl herself up into a fetal ball. To Sheppard’s eyes, she’s confirming that it’s shock pouring into her system. Her time is running out. Sheppard hopes that his idea works. If not, he will have to give a child the message that his mom is never coming home, if they ever manage to make it back to Atlantis themselves afterwards.

He draws his diving knife and fights through the Silver Arm’s radiant heat to press it against Kenmore’s chest. Almost immediately his skin reddens, but he keeps the knife against her chest, making sure she knows it’s there. He leans down to her. He can barely breathe from the high temperature, his hand and arm start blistering.

“Kenmore,” she’s not hearing him. He raises his voice, “Kenmore! When we back up, I want you to cut your hand like you did back at the first tunnel. Okay?” Maybe she’s understanding. Maybe not. He can’t tell. He shakes the knife pressing hand against her chest, “Understand, Lieutenant!” It’s an order.

Finally she nods. Understanding.

He nods. Grabs Jackson and yanks the man back with him as John runs away from Kenmore. “Back up! Move! Come on move!”

Teyla looks at him then at Kenmore. Her mouth opens to try and voice objections, but all she finds is that she trusts in John Sheppard’s judgment. The Athosian leader falls back. Ronon goes with her. Rodney does too but…

“You cannot just leave her there like that. I know that none of us really like her except for Daniel, but that’s still no reason to just abandon her to that thing in the condition she’s in. We’re better people than that.”

John looks at him, “Yes, we are.” He looks back at Kenmore. Watching. Waiting. Come on, bloodline. Come on, blood. Come on.

Rodney turns to look at Kenmore too. She’s moving. God, it looks like it’s taking everything out of her, but she takes the knife from against her chest in hand. Her body’s quaking—or is it looking like it is because of the intensity of the heat waves? She turns away from them. Curling up again.

“Kenmore!” Sheppard shouts. She’s moving but he’s not sure what she’s doing, “Lieutenant!

Suddenly the lightning field starts crackling. Snapping all over. The group looks around. The tendrils of black and white energy beat against the forcefield. Hit after hit. Crom-Crúach is trying to wear down the lightning field’s strength. That doesn’t bode well for them. With how big this creature is, he can easily do it. No question.

John looks desperately back at Kenmore. The others do too. Slowly, shakily, she raises her arm. The Silver Arm. Even from this distance and with the heat, John can see the gauntlet is smeared all the way down with dark red blood.

“John, what have you done,” Teyla breathes.

What he was supposed to, he hopes.

Kenmore’s outstretched hand contorts into a claw. Her arms drops. Slamming down onto the ground in front of her. Instantly the henge goes critical like it’d been waiting to all along. The lightning field shockwaves out from the henge. Tsunami-ing against the chamber’s walls and Crom-Crúach, the Demon God of Death.

Energy interacts with energy. Sheppard, his team, and Daniel cover their ears, sinking to their knees under the strain of the cacophony of a God being torn to shreds by light itself. Sheppard’s mind races to the video of energy lightning erupting from Kenmore and incinerating a Wraith in midair over her head. He’d hoped that’d been the key, that there was more than one way for an Ancient to produce lightning. That it’s in their blood. And this bloodline likes a lot of blood if that first tunnel is anything to go by. Even the very ground requires a drink of it.

Within a minute, the black and white energy creature dissolves. It’s eye melting away in a really disgusting similarity to how the Ark of the Covenant in the Indiana Jones film melts the faces of Nazis. Immediately everything that once seemed solid about this thing suddenly liquefies. The colors meld everywhere like a kid handful of their crayons in their mom’s oven. Rivulets streaming down into drips that’re incinerated before they can hit the ground in puffs of red-colored mist. John actually has to swallow part of last night’s MRE down all over again, the taste of which alone re-tests his gag reflex. God that’s disgusting. He passes the test again, not losing his lunch on the grass or his black combat boots. In a matter of seconds, the monster is gone.

Sheppard runs back over to Kenmore, he doesn’t care if anything else is going to happen next. Doctor Jackson outpaces him out of nowhere and beats him to her first. The archeologist rolls his friend towards him, onto her back. She’s breathing heavily, but there’s no more heat coming from the Arm. Normally Daniel’d take that as a good sign if it weren’t for the fact that the mysterious weapon is humming contentedly still in its place on her right arm. Her hand is healed though, if that’s where she’d drawn the blood Colonel Sheppard had told her to, and other than her windedness, she seems fine. Perhaps seeing the insatiated concern in his baby blue eyes or maybe to confirm how fine she seems to be to herself, her mahogany brown eyes look up at Daniel and Sheppard’s faces. She smiles. It’s a weary smile. But it’s still a smile. The two men smile back. Relief, John Sheppard feels relief coursing through him. Not for the first time in this galaxy he’d thought, feared that he’d made a horrible, horrible mistake that’d cost a valuable Expedition member their life. Now for once in this galaxy, his choice may have been crazy but it was the right one. One he can look himself in the mirror about tonight when he’s brushing his teeth in his quarters back in Atlantis and one he’ll be able to sleep on tonight. A first in a long time. The rest of the group crowds in around them.

“Lieutenant Kenmore,” Teyla inquires urgently, her voice conveying her anxiety about Kenmore’s condition.

Before Kenmore can answer, the ground starts shaking again, rumbling. Earthquake. Daniel and Teyla’s instincts cause them to cover the downed Lieutenant with their bodies while Sheppard, Rodney, and Ronon look around to see what’s coming at them now. Returned Fomorians? Genetically engineered flying mutant monkeys? No, it’s the stones. No longer needed, no longer powered up for use, they’re receding back into the grass-covered plain. In exchange, rising up about ten feet behind their position, back in the central spot they’d retreated to while Kenmore wielded the Silver Arm against Crom-Crúach, is a familiar and definitely friendly device: a set of Ancient transporter rings. Shiny like new and completely inviting. The ready-for-use way out.

As soon as the last tip of stone pillar and flat of henge disappears back into the earth of the verdant plain and the top of the ring system is glistening in the still bizarrely coming from nowhere they can see interior light, the rumbling dies away as does the shaking. Experience tells them to not buy the reprieve for a second. Sheppard, Ronon, and Rodney keep their eyes peeled. But for once that seems to be it. It’s done. Over with. The men look at each other as Teyla and Daniel pull themselves off of Kenmore and look at each other too. Then Kenmore holds up the Silver Arm. The group look at her and the gauntlet still grafted to her arm, she’s grinning with a twinkle in her eye that even after knowing her only for a short time Sheppard recognizes all too well. Daniel grins back. Oh yeah, she’s fine, she’s back.

“Wanna go kick some Fomorian ass,” she asks.

Sheppard grins, Hell yeah.

Daniel extends out his hand to Ursula. She takes it with her un-gauntleted hand and he helps her up to her feet. Her body seems weary from the ordeal, but it also seems to be quickly rebounding like her spirit already has; her grin is contagious. Teyla is beaming, Rodney looks goofily relieved, and Ronon, well, Ronon hasn’t caught what’s catching.

Ursula and Daniel look over at the ring system and marvel at how relieving and soothingly comforting it makes them feel to see such a familiar sight. They’re aiming the same look at it as the look they had given each other when they’d first met at the start of this whole business back in Atlantis a few days ago. It’s the cheering sight of an old friend and oh how sweet a cheering sight it is. The grinning is contagious.

Without hesitation, the two Cheyenne Mountain old hats head over to the Ancient ring transporter system with Atlantis’ flagship team following them. They step over the shining naquadah threshold and settle into the center of the rings. They retake up their P-90s as the familiarly unique hum of the rings coming online sounds all around them. A beam of stark light suddenly shines around them, seeming to come from their beneath them and spotlighting them in the center of the compact metal circle all at the same time. All five rings rise up around them one right after the other in equidistant segments ranging at the top of Ronon Dex’s height with the last ring staying down on top of the grassy ground beneath their feet. They’re trapped inside when the transporter system’s own unique version of the Stargate’s chevron’s ka-chunk sounds, this is more like ka-thum ka-thum ka-thum ka-thum ka-thum with the ambient background sounds of a Transformer changing shapes in a nice baritone pitch rather than tenor. Then the screech, not unlike traversing the threshold of the wormhole and again as familiar as the coziness of home, comes as their minds and bodies are broken down to the very molecules that make them and elongated into six solid beams of energy that has the same hues of the skin tones, the tones of their hair, and the clothes that they’re wearing. The molecular beams are sucked down into the ground with a wide, brilliant, single flash of light whose ray flares out for a second or two beyond the confines of the rings as its prominence descends into the ground. Once gone, the rings sink back into the ground as systematically as they’d risen with the same baritone Transformer-changing ka-thum for each ring’s grand exit. The rumble is only minor this time as the plain reclaims one of its secrets for the final time.

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Fifteen

Daniel keeps his P-90’s aim trained for anything trying to ambush them from down below as he takes steady deft steps down each stair of the spiral staircase as Teyla follows closely behind him, occasionally losing ground as she looks behind her while guarding their six, but she always quickly closes any gap that forms between them just as soon as her honing eyes made sure that nothing has followed them down here.

Daniel’s keen blue eyes keep searching the metal spiral staircase. It’s grating, only the first handful of steps had been composed of the computer room’s flooring then changed into metal grating. The black paneled walls are like those in the deepest sections of Atlantis’ piers, giving the idea of advanced elegance in their stark gloom. There are ovoid Ancient wall sconces dimly glowing on either side of them, barely illuminating their faces and the immediate area of the stairwell. He looks for anything again. Any symbols. Any more hidden seams. However his eyes are catching nothing. Absolutely nothing. Doctor Daniel Jackson feels the short stubbly hairs on the back of his neck prickle and not in the enticing, tingling way they do when Vala tickles them when she’s teasing him in the mess hall back at the SGC when either she didn’t care who might be looking at them or, at night, when they’re lying in bed together and she’s stroking them absentmindedly in her sleep; lovingly, gently, like he could feel every care she has for him in her fingertips, a sweet gesture that has often lulled him contentedly to sleep. No, this is creating a very different feeling. He’s being led, they are all being led somewhere. This isn’t like in the tunnel or the Lantean-like hallways that they’d traversed in order to get here. Although there, yes, they were being led, but Daniel had felt different about that. He’d felt like humans had traversed it before and then seeing Crom-Crúach, he knew humans had traversed it before. Yet, this… he feels undeniably that no human has traversed this passageway before, regardless of the fact that it is a tunnel sized perfectly for a human being of average height to be in. All he can sense around them, all he can feel up ahead are booby traps. He knows this sort of sixth sense well. You develop it quickly and season it equally as fast when you’re a key member of a flagship field team of the Stargate Program; if you don’t, you die. They weren’t meant to come down here. Well, at least not all of them. He can’t shake the suspicion that somehow they’ve made a very grave mistake in coming along with Urs. She was meant to do this alone, Lugh had.

After a handful of minutes further, Daniel’s combat booted-foot steps off of the loudly clanging, metal grating and onto soft, muffling sod. He freezes and looks down. He tests his foot again, not daring to take the other off the grating quite yet. Yep, grass-covered dirt. The walls still stand and their appearance hasn’t changed. He brings his other foot down on the turf.

“Well this is certainly different,” he comments.

Teyla looks down as well before stepping down off the grating a step behind him. Daniel looks at her. Her brows are furrowed, knitting. Suddenly Daniel remembers a scene from Teal’c’s favorite movie trilogy…

Daniel shifts his weight rapidly from foot to foot. Testing again, but for something else. Well the ground’s not squishy. He pops off a single deafening-crack shot and the dirt spits up fresh dark earth and small chunks of grass blades with their roots still attached. Teyla stares at him, wide-eyed, skin tight over her cheekbones. Shocked at what he’s done. He looks up at her.

“Just checking for mynocks,” he answers her expression, “And making sure we haven’t landed in a giant space slug.”

She still stares at him… then finally replies, “Your world has some very strange customs.”

“Actually it’s not our world,” he looks back up their grassy path. He can’t see the end. From his vantage point, it looks like endless grass-floored tunnel with polished black stone for a ceiling like with the spiral stairwell, “it’s our movies.”

“Is there a difference,” she asks as he walks a few more steps forward, walking the path.

He pauses then turns his head towards her, “Actually no, now that you mention it, I really don’t think there is.”

She nods, he turns back, and they continue walking.

 

 

The glow of the lifesigns detector is starting to freak him out.

“Can’t you dim that thing,” Ronon growls, looking behind them, then in front of them.

“Yes, in fact I can.”

He looks at McKay, he hadn’t actually thought Rodney could. He’d been thinking that it would be nice if Rodney turned the ‘useless thing’ off.

“And I can also get it to play music too. What would you like to hear? Rap? Rock n’ roll? Some nice light jazz courtesy of Ella Fitzgerald?” Rodney mocks.

Ronon rolls his eyes and goes back to covering their backs and their fronts, “Just turn the stupid thing off, McKay.”

“I’d love to… but I can’t.”

Ronon stops.

“What?”

“I can’t turn it off anymore. It won’t obey me.”

“So we’re just supposed to go through this tunnel with a light on? Like we aren’t big enough targets already?”

“I’m not doing it intentionally.”

“Are you sure this isn’t a nightlight thing?”

Rodney turns and looks back at him.

“You’ve been talking to Sheppard, haven’t you,” the scientist turns back to the front and keeps walking, hoping that this grass lawn isn’t going to turn into boot sucking mud when they aren’t looking. That would be all they needed. “And no, I’m not using it as a nightlight.”

Ronon smiles, “Really? And it wasn’t Sheppard, it was your sister when we first met her in the mess hall.”

Rodney’s jaw drops. “She, she, sh-sh-sh…,” he sputters but words fail him as his eyes bug out of his skull.

Ronon keeps grinning as he passes Rodney and retakes the lead. As he past the scientist, his eyes intentionally dropped down to notice the lifesigns detector’s screen’s map showing only energy signatures. The wall sconces barely show up, their signals staticky and easily flickering on and off. The Ancient device isn’t actually showing lifesigns at all, but it is handy to know that that energy creature doesn’t appear to be up ahead of them. Maybe later, but not for at least the next hundred yards. And the least McKay could have done was say so.

“I did not use a nightlight!” McKay’s voice is so sudden behind him that Ronon jumps. It’s loud too, echoing in the tunnel. The dirt and grass must have muffled his obviously quick approach behind the Satedan in order to catch up with him.

Ronon resumes the lead with Rodney biting at his heels.

“Yeah,” Ronon grins again, “you’re right.”

Rodney losses some of his fluster.

“She said it was something called a lava lamp.”

“No it wasn’t,” Rodney denies.

“Pink too.”

It was not.

“With glitter.”

Shut up!

Ronon thinks about it a moment, “Uh… no.”

Rodney grumbles at the ground in front of his feet as he continues following closely behind Ronon, “Damn it Jeannie, I’m gonna punch her the next time I see her.”

Ronon glances at him, “You wouldn’t.”

Rodney looks at him, “Hey, it’s not like I haven’t hit her before.”

Oh he’s not buying that for a second, Ronon Dex stops and looks at the man, “Really McKay? You’ve hit your little sister before?”

“Well no.”

That’s what Ronon thought. The Satedan turns away from him.

“I said ‘punch’. I was very specific on that.”

Ronon re-turns around to face the scientist with a confused expression on his face, “You punched Jeannie?”

“Well, it wasn’t punched so much as I cold-cocked her in the eye with my elbow.”

Ronon keeps staring at him.

Rodney tries to explain, “I was really trying to punch this other girl named Moira.”

Ronon keeps staring.

“We were kids,” Rodney exclaims.

Ronon keeps staring.

 

 

John puts one foot down on it and, “I don’t like this.”

Kenmore looks down at the grass from her spot a couple of steps above him on their spiral staircase, “Yeah, well, we don’t have a choice. This is it.”

“I hate this.”

Ursula looks at him, “Why?”

Sheppard steps fully onto the grassy ground, turns, and looks up at her. “I don’t like being fed all of this,” he gestures around at the staircase, at the tunnel, at the only way they have left to go, “We’re not choosing any of this.”

She tilts her head, still confused by him, “Yes we are.”

“What?!” Did he just hear that right?

“We chose to come down here. We chose to go back to that pod and find out what those clicking sounds meant. We chose to go into that damn room in the first place. We chose to come to this mountain. We chose it all.”

“No, we didn’t have a choice.”

“Yes, we did.”

“And what choice was that exactly,” he yells at her. His aggravation peaking to boiling.

She steps off the staircase. Getting in his face, “We could have done nothing. We could have just stayed there and never come!”

“That’s not a choice!”

“That’s because we’re good people!”

He stares at her. Stunned. Does she realize what she just said? The compliment she’s given them, these people that she detests. He remembers that she’d mentioned that she has friends in Atlantis. Those friends may not be John or Rodney or Teyla and definitely not Ronon, but they are friends, people she’s known since joining the Stargate Program. People like Lorne and others that transferred to the city from Cheyenne Mountain.

“You can’t be in this program and do a damn good job at what you do without being at the very core of you a good person. I don’t care if you or Specialist Dex or anyone else shoot me in the back,” John’s about to object, they wouldn—well, he wouldn’t—, “just as long as you don’t let even a single one of those people suffer or die. That’s not who we are. That’s not why you join this program. That’s not what we represent.”

John nods. Damn good orator. Maybe he’ll let her handle all the first contacts from now on. Teyla. Okay, well, at least he plans on letting Kenmore plead their case whenever they get their asses in a sling again, and there’s always an again. Shiana. Alright then, at least he’s going to let her open her mouth from now on on missions. Yeah, that one sounds the best. So far, and it’s not like she doesn’t do that already but at least next time he’ll, he’ll… he has no idea where he’s going with this but he knows he started going somewhere, he can’t remember where exactly. Damn good orator.

“Okay,” he starts following the tunnel’s path.

Kenmore falls in behind him. The silence holds for a couple more heartbeats before he can’t hold it back anymore, “You do realize you just gave us a compliment, don’t you?”

“Regretting it already.”

He smirks, But you can’t take it back. God he wants to say that so bad right now, but he’s getting the feeling that the silent gloating thing might just rankle her just as badly… of course he could combine the two. Say it and gloat. That way she’d still be rankled and he’d still—

Suddenly Kenmore gasps and latches onto his arm. He grips his P-90 harder and turns towards her. Aiming at the wall beside her, nothing. Aiming someplace else, still nothing. What the hell had she’d seen?! He looks around them. Trying to see anything.

“What? What is it? What did you see?” The words surge out of his mouth.

“You can’t tell Doctor McKay,” she begs him breathlessly.

He stares at her, “That? That was what that was all about?”

“To paraphrase one of my favorite shows because I believe they put it the most succinctly, he’s like the William Shatner of theoretical astrophysics.”

Sheppard considers that then starts nodding, “Yeah, I’d say that’s a pretty accurate assessment.”

“There’s more. The last thing the William Shatner of theoretical astrophysics needs is an ego boost.”

“I agree.”

They turn and start down the tunnel again, accruing more and more distance between them and the staircase.

“He get’s that and his head’ll explode,” Sheppard says.

There’s a heartbeat.

“Are we so sure that would be a bad thing, I mean his head exploding? It might be kind of nice not having to listen to someone bitch and moan about having to walk more than two steps from a Stargate in order to reach a village. Or have a mental breakdown at a hang nail.”

“Yeah, that would be nice for a change, but then something would go wrong in the city and wouldn’t you know it, we’d need him.”

“Yeah, I guess we do kind of need him around for that… Damn.”

John smiles.

A hundred yards pass in silence. Sheppard thinks about starting a conversation almost a dozen times, but he didn’t know where to start. It’s actually thrown him to hear the Lieutenant give he and his people a compliment. We’re good people.

“Thank you,” he finally says.

“Don’t mention it.”

“Really?”

“Actually, I could care less.”

He turns his head to ask further about that when he it comes into view. The walls, the sconces, and the ceiling all end up ahead. Another forty yards or so. The grass still continues though, he’s not entirely sure what to make of that. He doesn’t have to gesture at Kenmore, she’s caught sight of it too. Their pacing ebbs as they approach slowly. The grass continues into an open—lawn? He glances over at Kenmore. She may not be looking at him, but her expression looks as confused by the sight as his is. They step out of the tunnel onto the grassy plain. It’s a tri-level grassy plain at that, really wide and long. Somehow they’ve managed to come out on what apparently is the main level with the whole of the vast field stretching out before them and as they walk out onto it, it stretches out around them also. Their eyes turn upward, the place is high too; they can’t see a ceiling but they know it’s there, it has to be. It’s way too dark up there for there not to be ceiling.

“Wow.”

Sheppard and Kenmore turn and about thirty yards ahead from where they entered and about five feet up from their level is a steppe of grassy ground, obviously level two, where Doctor Rodney McKay and Ronon Dex are standing, again obviously having come out of their own tunnel. Rodney is bug-eyed and gaping around at the field, he looks like every part of his body wants to bolt out there and see what’s on the other side of the field. Ronon is blatantly eye-balling John and the Lieutenant. A dark glower that’s… suspicion.

Before Sheppard can say anything, Daniel Jackson and Teyla Emmagan arrive on another steppe of grassy ground about nine feet above where Sheppard and Kenmore had entered. The group looks at each other. Daniel walks the two-person wide path of the third level then hops down off the edge where their level trickles away into the last few feet of the second level. He turns and helps Teyla down from the four-foot height, Ronon and Rodney walk over to meet them as do the Lieutenant Colonel and Lieutenant. Sheppard and Kenmore wait as the other four make the jump or climb down five feet from the second level to the main one. Once the group reassembles, the first time since picking one of three ways into the Ancient part of the mountain facility, they survey the new area again.

It’s indescribable how tiny they feel in comparison to the expanse they now find themselves in. It isn’t like they’ve shrunk, especially Ronon, the third level hangs above them by a good solid three feet still, but maybe that’s it. The shade of the third level is covering them so much that they feel like they’re being protected closely by something much bigger than they are from something even bigger than itself. Like the chin of a mother as her child nestles under it while she cradles it, protecting it from whatever has driven it into the safety of her arms in the first place. Shade. Shade, Rodney looks up at the dirt and exposed root system bottom of the third level above them then down at the grass of the main level underneath their feet. They have shadows. His eyes return to the ‘ceiling’.

“Where’s the light coming from,” he asks.

The others turn to him, he meets their eyes, and points down at their shadows.

“How can we have shadows when there isn’t any light coming down on us from above,” he points up at the ‘ceiling’, literally pointing out the anomaly.

“He’s right,” Daniel says.

“Of course I’m right. Look this place is lit up like—“

“Like a football stadium,” Sheppard finishes, scanning the ceiling for anything that could possibly be emitting a light source as strong as full-on stadium lights geared up for a night game, but there’s nothing there. “Everybody keep close,” he orders and steps out from under the overhang of the third level, heading out into the very center of the plain.

The others do as ordered and fall in behind Sheppard; Rodney trailing a step or two behind John’s right side, Daniel doing the same on the left, Kenmore in the middle, and Teyla and Ronon pairing to bring up the rear. They keep their eyes peeled around themselves. Giving up on the ceiling for any indications of the light source and changing their strategy to searching the ground and the—

“Where are the walls,” Teyla asks. To her eyes it is as with the ‘ceiling’, something must be there, has to be there but it looks as though nothing is really there. It is simply black, like shadow.

Rodney’s jaw abruptly slackens. He slows down and taps Kenmore just above her elbow, “How big did legend say this Worm God energy creature was?”

Everyone stops. Sheppard’s combat-ready demeanor turning into ‘Holy crap’ unholy quick. Teyla’s eyes widen, creating a somewhat unattractive appearance of bugged eyes paired with her tensing and tightening facial muscles; she grips her Earth rifle tighter, shifting her fingers to get a more comfortable and effective hold for discharging the weapon quickly. Ronon looks at the walls and prepares for a fight, aiming his blaster with his customary spinning flourish like some sort of space cowboy in a high noon showdown. His black eyes as formidable and keen for the fight as his weapon, clearly not considering how the possibility of fighting energy with energy would bode and having absolutely no problem with finding out. Daniel faces the ‘wall’ and retreats a step back into the center of the group, instinctively taking up the same posturing that he had when SG-1 was facing down a mutated bear in the woods near General Landry’s rented cabin. On this occasion, however, he is genuinely feeling afraid, very afraid.

“Massive,” he says, “Very. Massive.”

Quickly the rest of them shift on the balls of their feet to face the walls and step back towards each other, forming a tighter circle of defense. The whole group stands shoulder to shoulder together. That’s what Stargate Command does.

The troops wait. Watch. They don’t have to wait long, sure enough the black above them starts rippling like wind blowing hard across the surface of a deep lake. Gradually something appears, the Evil opens its eye.

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fourteen

The door splits apart with all the familiar sounds of Atlantis, but the room inside is definitely not like any of the ones in Atlantis. It’s like an Ancient version of a tomb. Except it’s not like the one Kenmore and Lorne’s team, and later Sheppard’s team, had encountered on Athos, the small tomb of the Ancient known as Nemesis in the front yard of the ruined Ancient college campus’ main building. First of all, the room is essentially not unlike a normal lab in Atlantis; in fact, it reminds Sheppard of the lab that he and his first year team had found a ten thousand year old Elizabeth Weir in. The one exception is the Ancient stasis chamber isn’t embedded in any of the walls like a prominent display, it’s lying on a raised dais in the middle of the room… and rather than being crystal clear and exhibiting whoever’s inside it, it seems to be filled with white smoke. Blocking any view of the interior. The creepy sense of ‘Not good’ seeps into the Colonel’s shoulders.

Sheppard and Kenmore walk into the circular room. They take note of the Ancient computers and lab equipment lining the walls right away. Oh great, bad signs galore, Sheppard and Kenmore look around at the rest of the room. No Worm God energy creature. No one’s here. At least no one outside of an eerily familiar and all together bad news stasis pod in the middle of the room. As if he didn’t need any more bad memories showing up as bad omens, the damn thing reminds John of the stasis chamber they’d found a psychopath mad scientist named Dorane in. It was one of their first missions of the Expedition.

Sheppard keeps eyeing it with visions of Dorane and the psycho’s hideous Koan dancing through his head. John peers at it, trying to distract himself. Well, he supposes that the white smoke contained in the chamber could be the creature’s ‘hair’, but judging by how much is filling up the stasis chamber, that is a lot of ‘hair’ and a lot less black smoke ‘body’. Too little and way to go on the distraction bit there, John, switch out one first-year disaster for another. Gold star for that one. Anyways, he highly doubts that that thing could fit into the chamber unit period. Especially if the child/baby version was able to fit into the cage unit the Ancients had set up for it in Atlantis. He looks around but he can’t help but glance at the chamber again, well, actually, the thing probably could fit in there. The stasis chamber is much bigger than the cage unit had been. Aw crap. He makes a mental note to keep his attention on the stasis chamber at all times. And to quit making such damn stupid choices on how to distract himself.

Elsewhere in the facility, their comrades have entered the doors at the end of their hallways as well.

 

 

While Ronon stands guard at the entrance, Rodney rushes over to one of the computers. Before he touches it, he hesitates and checks his detector one last time. He sighs and taps his earpiece.

“Please tell me you are all still alive?”

 

 

The others look at who they’re paired with. Sheppard reaches up and taps his earpiece first.

“We’re here, Rodney,” he reports as he keeps his eyes on Kenmore.

“As are we, Rodney,” Teyla’s voice comes on over the radio link loud and clear.

Both of them sounding confused and unsure of what they just heard.

 

 

Rodney breathes a sigh of relief again and Ronon does too although he doesn’t let any signs of it slip.

“Any chance on explaining why we aren’t shielded anymore,” Sheppard’s voice asks over the radio.

Rodney finally feels safe enough to reach out and touch the computer console. It comes on and he starts up whatever programming on it he can get while answering, “We’re still shielded, but apparently we are all now within the same shielded area so our radios work again. The lifesigns detector is still relatively useless though, but it did register enough random power signature ghosts that let me know our radios might be working again.”

“Speaking of ghosts,” Daniel’s voice interrupts, “Teyla and I ran into—“

“Crom-Crúach,” Kenmore’s voice abruptly answers.

“If you mean that energy creature we encountered our first year in Atlantis, then yes, we did,” Rodney amends.

“That wasn’t the creature from our first year, Rodney,” Sheppard interjects.

Ronon looks back at Rodney as McKay looks up at the computer’s screen, but not seeing it, with a confused expression on his face.

“How do you know that,” he asks.

“Because the energy creature we encountered our first year in the city didn’t have scales or an eye or hair,” Sheppard reprimands like isn’t that the most obvious thing in the world to recognize.

Rodney looks back and meets Ronon’s gaze. The two exchange wary and confused looks between each other. And they aren’t the only ones.

 

Daniel aims a questioning look at Teyla, but he finds just as many questions in the look she’s returning him. Her head is angled away from him a little. Her normally smooth and elegant features are tight. The corners of her mouth are drawn down gently and when he pairs that with the knitting of her brows together, he sees everything he could possibly ask and then some. He knows that the both of them are looking for the same answers that neither of them have.

 

 

“What scales, eye, and hair,” Ronon asks.

 

This time it’s Sheppard and Kenmore who exchange confused looks between each other.

“We ran into an energy creature that had scales and an eye and hair, I think,” he looks over at Kenmore for confirmation.

She shrugs while nodding. Sounds like an accurate enough description of what they’d seen to her. Sure, why not call it hair.

“The one Ronon and I ran into looked just like that first one,” Rodney’s radio voice objects, “It’s the exact same size as the one I got it to go through the gate.”

“As did the one Doctor Jackson and I encountered,” Teyla’s voice seconds.

Kenmore and Sheppard’s looks at each other change. No confusion though this time. Just a whole lot of ‘Holy crap’.

“Apparently what you two ran into was its head. And what the rest of us ran into was the rest of its body,” Daniel’s conclusion fills in the silence over the radio link.

Okay, for the time being, John’s just going to let that one hang out there and not touch it.

“We’ll discuss that later,” he moves on, “right now Kenmore and I are in this sort of lab with a stasis chamber in the middle of it. Kind of looks like the one we found that Dorane guy in.”

 

 

Teyla looks around her again. Her eyes careful to avoid looking too directly at the stasis chamber for her comfort. “As are Doctor Jackson and I,” she replies. That mission had compromised her to the team, to Atlantis, and especially to John and Rodney in a way she hadn’t known was possible before. It was the mission that had proved to her that she is indeed fallible far more than she has ever realized. It is an acknowledgement she does not care to stare in the face of ever again.

 

 

“Us too,” Ronon adds. He turns furrowed sharply angled dark eyebrows to Rodney, silently asking ‘Who’s Dorane?’

Rodney stays silent with a heavy shrug and an exasperated roll of his eyes. God, he does not want to relive that one and there is simply no way he’s talking about it right here, right now. He’ll tell Ronon when they get back to Atlantis, probably over both of their considerable trays full of breakfast.

 

 

Sheppard eyes the stasis chamber. He knows that both Teyla and Rodney know this design of stasis chamber very well. They’d both been on that Dorane mission back when the team’s fourth was Lieutenant Aiden Ford, not Satedan Specialist Ronon Dex. It was a haunting mission for Sheppard, as well the other two he guessed, he wasn’t exactly sure about them. All he knows is that he still wakes up in the middle of the night sweating and scared as hell and immediately bolts out of his bed, heads straight for the jumper bay, gets into Jumper One, sits in the pilot’s seat, and thinks at the little ship. And every time the jumper comes on for him at his thought, he breathes a heavy sigh of relief, keeps panting, wipes the sweat off his face, and thanks God that he still has his own genetic makeup back. Thanks God that he’s still human and enough Ancient for the jumper to recognize him. Waking up and having to test yourself to make sure your humanity is still there is not something you easily shake. But it definitely shakes you. And keeps shaking you like you’re a ragdoll.

“Any idea what’s in the stasis pods,” he asks.

 

 

“Give me a second,” Rodney works on the piano-like Ancient computer console, “Okay, this might help clear things up.” And if there’s anything in there that looks remotely like that nut job Dorane or one of his weird creature-feature friends then Ronon can shoot the hell out of it.

Rodney pushes in a command and the smoke clears from all of the pods. Revealing a woman in each of the entirely glass chambers. A very much human looking woman… although Dorane had looked very human too before they found out that he was a crazy, self-experimenting serial killer with a truly severe revenge complex.

Two of the women have black hair, the ones in Rodney and Ronon’s and Teyla and Daniel’s pods. But the third woman has white hair with beautiful lowlights of lavender purple woven throughout it and its plaits. The black-haired women are wearing ancient gowns accented by dark brown that seems plum purple where the light catches it full on. The white-hair woman is wearing an ancient gown accented by a reddish brown the color of dried blood. Yet another bad sign. They all stare at the women, Rodney returns his attention to the Ancient computer as Ronon moves closer to the pod.

“Who are they,” the Satedan asks, weighing whether or not he’s prepared to kill an innocent woman wearing clothes so sheer that despite the shade of their dyes he can clearly see her voluptuous body underneath… and the blatantly obvious fact that apparently she’s very, very cold inside her glass box. Even lying down, her breasts are perky and he’s not sure whether to be turned on or not. There’s also something about the lines of her facial features. They’re so soft, serene, but sharp in a regal way. This is definitely a woman he’d sleep with.

“They’re Ancient scientists. Sisters. I’m getting three names: Macha, Nemain, and Morrigan,” Rodney answers.

 

 

Daniel and Kenmore start. The archeologist can’t help, but gape at the stasis chamber. His blue eyes wide and focused exactly on what is so bad. The Worm God, Demon God of Death is one thing, this, this is so much more. This is so much more helpful. It’s one thing to encounter a mythologically evil entity, it’s another to be around a mythologically good one. He doesn’t know what they’re going to do next, but whatever it is, he hopes that it involves waking these women up. Ursula quite simply can’t believe her eyes, she keeps her mouth shut, but she can’t believe her eyes. This can’t be possible. It can’t.

 

 

“The Badb Catha. The War-Witches,” Daniel answers reverently.

 

 

Kenmore stares at the stasis pod, fixated, “My family.”

 

 

Rodney pauses. That’s, that’s somehow not good and even more not good all at the same time. Does that mean that these ‘War-Witches’ as Jackson called them are among the very few scientists that were a part of the Veritas project? Three of the assistants that had helped the main five geneticists? Or are they more Ascended Beings that retook human form from the Lieutenant’s bloodline, replenishing? Even though Kenmore said that she doesn’t remember any others than that Nuada guy, it doesn’t mean that there aren’t any that she hadn’t known about. It’d floored Kenmore to realize the Ancient ancestry is so clearly there just on the trip from the Stargate to the village.

Rodney quickly returns to working on the computer. Bringing up any further information on the Ancient scientist sisters and expanding his search parameters to include any mention of the word ‘Veritas’ or Athos, Athosia, or Athosian or any of the other possible terms he can come up with even remotely associated with the Athosian star system, it’s planets, the Asgard, and genetics experiments, hideous or otherwise. God, please be ‘No’.

“I don’t know what’s going on,” he says as the computer’s first search brings up a negative on anything connected to Project Veritas, he holds in another sigh of relief while feeling every ounce of it, as well as bringing up the results of his other searching, “but somehow they’re all three tied in to each others’ pods as well as the rest of this facility. This place is huge by the way. Not quite the size of Atlantis, but more like its medium-sized littler sister.”

The theoretical astrophysicist takes the computer into the finer details of its search…  That’s odd, “It looks like their pods are sending out some sort of signal set to a specific brain frequency.”

He digs a little deeper into the information…  Okay, that is definitely not good.

“According to this, the frequency is apparently the Fomorians. They’re controlling the Fomorians. They’re the ones causing them to attack the village.”

 

 

Teyla stares down at the beautiful passive Ancient face beneath the sheet of clear glass in front of her. It is just as with the world Gian of her home star system, something thought of as so beautiful, a guiding light of sorts, is revealed to be tainted. Danger lurking underneath the surface… or hidden by it. How quickly the mask falls away when all one does is dig even the slightest bit deeper? Teyla Emmagan knows that her friend Rodney is both swift and skillfull when he comes to his talents with computers, any and all of them from what she’s seen over the years, but not even he is this fast or this talented with one so quickly despite it being an Ancient computer console with which he is very familiar. It is Athos all over again.

“How is that possible,” she asks.

She still marvels. How can someone so angelic be the origin of so much brutality? However Teyla also remembers how Jennifer had looked at her when they had both been stranded on New Athos and had discovered that Teyla’s people had been kidnapped… the Earth doctor had never looked so horrified as when she’d witnessed Teyla fiercely take on the Bola Kai scavenging the remains of her people’s village. Of course, Teyla considered it ‘fierce’ perhaps Jennifer considered it brutal… and, of course, Teyla knows that many men as well as women of the Atlantis Expedition consider her to be very beautiful. According to Lieutenant Kenmore, Teyla also seems to be a fantasy woman of sorts to many of them. So why not these women, why not this gorgeous face before her be so attractive and lethal a combination? What makes Teyla herself so different from them?

 

 

Rodney keeps staring at the computer’s Ancient floating screen, shaking his head. He’s not sure either, “I’d need more time to read more of their research. There’s a lot of it here.”

“It was believed that the Hy-Brasilians worked with sound-based advanced technology. They used it for a variety of things ranging from masonry to healing to weaponry,” Daniel interjects over the radio link between the pairs, obviously hoping that the information might be a help in some way.

Luckily, it is.

 

 

“Well we’ve seen the weaponry part,” Sheppard says, thinking of the Stonehenge weapon defending what’s left of the village.

 

 

“Yeah, and this looks like the brainwashing part,” Rodney analyzes the information scrolling down the hanging screen like rain trailing down the surface of a window pane, “Look I can try and bring these women out of stasis. It looks like that might shut off whatever they’re doing to control the Fomorians and their freakish winged friends, which by the way appear to be the genetically engineered creations of these women.”

 

 

Sheppard glances over at Kenmore, she’s a genetically engineered creature here too. And she’s knows it. No one’s letting her forget about it, at least not on this mission.

 

 

“That may not be the wise thing to do, Rodney,” Daniel informs him, with the turn of events his excitement to meet them is gone and the most likely reality has easily settled into its place, “In a battle frenzy, the Witches were known to be just as violent and vicious as the Fomorians, if not worse. Think in terms of the Greek mythological Harpies. If we wake them up…”

 

 

Rodney swallows hard. His Adam’s Apple bobbing. Okay, so don’t wake them up.

“I could partially pull them out of stasis. It’d be kind of tricky, but I could get the pods offline enough to stop them from controlling the Fomorians and possibly stop the attack while still keeping the women unconscious.”

 

 

Sheppard nods, sounds like a plan, “Do it McKay.”

 

 

Rodney goes to work and after a few moments…  “Uh-oh.”

 

 

“What,” Sheppard asks. His eyes lock with Kenmore’s. Even though the Lieutenant’s been with them for only a little over a month now, she knows the sentiment already: Gee, how familiar is this?

 

 

“There’s a feedback coming from breaking off the mind control. Probably a failsafe to prevent someone from doing exactly what I’m doing. It’s sending extra power to the stasis pods. Bringing them fully out of stasis.” Rodney works at the computer frantically. Trying to outrace the system protocol.

“Well stop it,” Sheppard’s radio voice demands like it’s as easily said as done.

“I can’t,” Rodney snaps… then gives up on the computer. He really can’t do it this time. The failsafe program is moving too fast. Way too fast. He can’t keep up. “Look, I’m doing things, but I’m just not fast enough. Anyone got a Plan B and,” he rechecks the computer screen, “we better be able to pull it off in less than thirty seconds.”

 

 

“Oh, that’s bad,” Daniel immediately answers. He looks over at Teyla.

“What should we do,” she asks. Equally without any idea as how to proceed.

 

 

There’s silence as everyone tries to think of something. Anything

 

 

“Shoot them,” Sheppard says, staring at the white-haired woman in the pod in front of him, Morrigan. Encased in a clear glass stasis pod etched with elegant Celtic knots and scrollwork of frosted glass on all fours sides of the squared-off rectangle. A pretty tomb. Snow White. The stasis chamber is one form of final encasement already, why not turn it into another, a coffin?

 

 

“What,” Teyla breathes. She cannot believe John is purposing this. These women, unlike the Bola Kai, are defenseless and they do not yet know for sure that any of these women pose any immediate or direct threat to any of them if brought out of stasis. It has only been the rumors and conjecture by Doctor Jackson that have brought up the possibility. These women may not have anything to do with what happened to Teyla’s people during the years of the Veritas project that created Lieutenant Kenmore, but if Kanaan has taught her one thing since their argument in Atlantis, it is that she should blame the Ancient people directly responsible for the betrayal of hers and her people’s faith in them. Not all Ancient people, no matter how much she would like to. Teyla Emmagan is not prepared to kill an innocent let alone three.

 

 

“Shoot them,” John repeats the order.

 

 

The others look at each other for a moment then Ronon takes aim at the pod as does Rodney. Somehow the phrase ‘Better safe than sorry’ comes to their minds and so far all of the arrows are pointing at all the wrong signs.

Teyla reluctantly takes aim at the pod in front of her, but only after Daniel has absolutely no problem taking aim at it first. Even then she feels in her mind and body that she will not be the first one to pull the trigger if indeed she pulls her P-90’s trigger at all. Her anger at the betrayal by the Ancients has taught her many things, this is one of them. While he doesn’t know her memories, his motivation is a single outstanding one, one he’s mentioned before: Anubis’ clone. A terrible pet project in how to create an advanced human to use as a host. Now these women may not be advanced humans, they’re Ancients, but so had been the clone to a degree. Sometimes, and come to think of it maybe this is what Jack was trying to get at about Reese, advanced beings have to be dealt with the same way Jack had dealt with Reese. Sometimes you have to kill them, sometimes no matter how much potential they have, their potential for incredible evil is more. Their survival means almost certain catastrophe. When Jack killed Reese, Daniel had leaned over the Replicator-creating android’s body and in his grief called his best friend a stupid son of a bitch. Daniel believed so much that they could counter the Replicator threat with friendship, Reese’s friendship, but that had wrong and he experienced firsthand how wrong when he was killed by a Replicator version of his good friend Samantha Carter, Gemini. He’s ultimately come to terms with Jack’s choice. Daniel had come to terms with it so much that he personally advocated Jack’s same belief when they’d dealt with the clone Khalek, a man who was both Anubis’ creation, son, and Anubis himself, father. You have to kill them before they can kill anyone else.

 

 

Sheppard aims at the pod, but notices that he’s the only one. He looks over at Kenmore, she seems frozen in a moment of time. Staring down at the pod. Staring down at the sleeping face of the striking white and lavender-haired woman inside. A dancer’s lithe body, but the voluptuousness to insinuate exotic dancer. Youth, stunning vitality. Seductivity. Wavy hair so curly it’s naturally sectioned itself into almost dreadlock like chunks… the same way Ursula’s hair does when she doesn’t bun it up… So that’s where she gets it from?

“Kenmore,” he says her name.

She doesn’t respond. What else did she inherit from this woman or her sisters?

He watches her eyes. They’re focused. Not intense, searching. He gives her the time she needs. She’s gone, distant again. More memories? He can’t tell this time whether or not these ones are good, bad, or both. It’s only a few more moments of waiting before she snaps herself out of her reverie and takes aim at the pod as well, she nods.

“Let’s do this,” Lieutenant Ursula Kenmore agrees with him.

“We better do this quick. We’ve got ten seconds left,” McKay’s radio voice announces.

“Alright,” Sheppard braces, “In three, two, one.”

The six of them open fire at the pods. Their lead bullets and bright orange energy blasts shatter and burn holes through the glass. Slamming into the women’s bodies within. Their pale milky smooth bodies yanking this way and that. Jerked around by every piece of ammunition. Spurts of blood flecking, painting the pods’ interior. After a handful of seconds it’s all done.

 

 

Rodney hurriedly rechecks the pods’ status on the computer.

“That did it,” he confirms, “We got to them in enough time that they never fully regained consciousness. They won’t be able to heal themselves either, there wasn’t enough of the mental component re-established to allow for it. And the computer’s showing so much damage done to the pods that there’s not enough power getting into them to keep them going. They’re dead. All three of them.”

Everyone breathes a sigh of relief, somewhat…  Rodney’s got something else on his computer screen.

“The Fomorians and their flying monkeys are still fighting the villagers. I’ve lowered the shielding and it looks like that energy creature went further into the facility.”

“He would,” Daniel says, “If the War Witches have been taken out of the picture, then he simply slides in to fill the void.”

“‘He’? How do you know it’s a ‘he’,” Rodney questions. Where are these people coming up with this stuff?

“History,” the archeologist answers; McKay rolls his eyes, oh please like that’s a real answer, and Daniel goes on, “The Worm God, not goddess please note that Doctor McKay, or the Evil Eye as he was sometimes referred to as, lived in the inner sanctum of Balor’s Palace of Ebony. In a room that was said to be a realm that lied both in this world and the next.”

Rodney looks up from the computer, alarmed, “’The next.’ What ‘next’?”

 

 

Ignoring the back and forth of McKay and Jackson, Sheppard leans over to Kenmore.

“You okay,” he asks quietly enough for the radio feed not to pick up.

“She was family. She was a cousin of sorts. A consort of Nuada in his delirium.”

“I’m sorry,” Sheppard offers, he knows now how much this Nuada means to her.

“I’m not so sure I am,” she meets his eyes. He gauges what he sees there, some sort of cold, fiery confidence. Her brown eyes are unflinching, maybe unapologetic. Yet he sees in them sorrow that it had to come to this. He sees in her eyes every tough decision he’s ever had to make in this galaxy, things they don’t train you for…

“McKay, figure a way out for us,” John orders.

They can hear Rodney working on the computer console, “Got it,” he announces shortly.

That was a cinch. “Okay, let’s get out of here,” Sheppard calls.

He and Kenmore turn and head away from the pod… they hear clicking sounds coming from behind them. Sheppard and Kenmore stop at once; Sheppard’s jaw clenches, Rodney said that the damn things were out of juice, that the women couldn’t heal themselves anymore even if they wanted to, then why the hell are the damn things clicking?!… they slowly turn… and look back at the clicking stasis pod.

A small hidden compartment has slid out of the stasis pod’s base. The ¼-inch thick, clear crystalline plate is holding a silver gauntlet balanced lengthwise on it. The gauntlet seems to be silver or at least it looks like it’s made of silver with fine, far shinier strands of silver and gold wiring woven over its surface in the forms of delicately intricate Celtic knot designs swirling over and under and paralleling each other. There is a small paper punch-sized chip of ruby on the back the main forearm part of the gauntlet near its top and there’s a smaller piece of gauntlet, a rectangular-shaped piece, embedded with a large teardrop-shaped ruby surrounded by angles of thicker gold wiring with accents of the silver wiring. Equally as thick latticework of the silver wiring connects the rectangle to the rest of the gauntlet. It’s a spectacular representation of craftsmanship. It truly is a piece of art. For more than a moment, Ursula’s heart stops beating. She feels the sudden hollowing in her chest and can’t breathe. She feels her veins, her entire body, warble. Her, her, her heart, her fam-family. Ursula tries but she can’t breathe. She holds herself in check, restraining the tremoring, and forcing herself to think. Her breathing returns. Shallow, but rhythmic and focused.

Sheppard and Kenmore stare at it, weighing the pros and cons of the term ‘booby trap’. They come to a mutual decision at the same time and walk back over to the pod.

“Did anyone else’s pod give them a surprise present,” Sheppard asks over the radio.

 

 

On the thresholds of their stasis rooms, the other four freeze. Oh that’s not good, in all their years, that is never good. The other four mission members twist on the balls of their feet and look back at their stasis pods.

“No,” Rodney and Daniel report at the same time. Their disturbed voices ironically harmonizing.

 

 

“Well ours did,” Sheppard reaches out and picks the exquisite gauntlet up off its artist’s pallet. If anything’s going to blast him, Kenmore’ll shoot it and if it’s like the Evil Eye, Kenmore can touch it, so he figures he’s covered. Suddenly that nasty little voice, that obnoxious goddamn thing that’s been so silent for a long enough while that he thought he’d finally gotten rid of it suddenly echoes in the back of his mind, making it’s all too familiar loop: … guinea pig

Shut up. I don’t think of her that way anymore.

It loops again… do you?… another loop… have you really put that behind you?…

Yes I have. Now shut up.

Another goddamn loop, slithering past the forefront of his mind…I’m still here…

John’s eyes flicker to Kenmore, analyzing her as she analyzes the gauntlet in his hands in awe and wonder and on the brink of incredible emotion. In the fraction of a second he catches her lower lip quiver and then steel itself at what she’s looking at. The last time he saw her lip give it was in the horror of recounting, reliving her husband’s death. John had held her then, been a warm rock for her to lean against, to cry against, to grieve against. They bonded in a way… and yet ‘I’m still here’. How? How can that be?…  His eyes return to the treasure he’s holding.

With the gauntlet in his hands, nothing happen. The voice goes back into silent mode and he and Kenmore step away from the pod with their pretty new trinket. The Lieutenant carefully reaches out and touches her fingertips lightly against the cool surface of the Silver Arm. The filigree starts glowing gold despite the silver and there’s the sound of a soothing hum like an ‘ohm’ that permeates his entire body. Edges of his tense muscles loosen ever so slightly, hinting at the possibility of the best massage ever. The mythical gauntlet hadn’t activated for Sheppard, but at least it’s getting its motor running for Kenmore.

“It recognizes more than just the Ancient gene,” she says, her voice utterly fascinated, “it recognizes a specific bloodline. His bloodline. My bloodline.”

Sheppard looks at her again, but Kenmore keeps her eyes on the glowing and humming piece of history. He hopes her pride in at least this part of being half-Ancient holds out. They could use that.

“What did you find,” Daniel’s voice comes over the radio link.

“The Silver Arm,” Ursula answers.

 

 

Daniel’s shoulders droop. To say he wished he was there with them would be an understatement. It’s things like this that he dreamed about his entire and he’s done many of them. He’s touched a pyramid of Giza on another planet. He’s touched Thor’s Hammer, broke it actually. He’s seen Thor’s Chariot in the sky. He’s even seen the famed sword Excalibur in action in the hands of Cameron Mitchell. Daniel has done many things, touched many myths and legends and he wants to touch more. To see more. He bucks himself up, forcing a tight smile. Although he’s not there to see it and feel it, that doesn’t negate that they’ve actually found it. They’ve actually found the Silver Arm.

“You said it recognized you, your bloodline, how,” Daniel Jackson asks. Ever the inquisitive scholar.

“Sheppard picked it up, but it didn’t activate until I touched it.”

Daniel nods at the answer over his earpiece. Makes sense. Lieutenant Colonel Sheppard may have the Ancient gene, but it’s her DNA that actually makes the gauntlet work…  Oh he’d love to see it. This particular item has been a matter of Irish historical importance for centuries and here it is, they’ve found it. Ursula found it. How fitting.

“Okay, so you’ve activated it. What is it doing now?”

“Humming,” Ursula answers again.

Daniel’s brows furrow, but before he can go on, Teyla says exactly what’s on his mind, “Did you not say that the Hy-Brasilians used sound-based technology?”

Daniel nods, “Yes, yes I did.”

“So what does this Arm do,” Ronon’s gruff voice issues from the radio link.

“It was a healing device. It connected Nuada’s hand back on after it got cut off,” comes Kenmore’s reply.

“Urs is right. It was also reported to have been given to him in the Other World during his delirium,” Daniel adds.

 

 

Ursula nods, but purses her lips so tightly together they practically disappear. Sheppard can’t let a display like that slide.

“What is it,” he asks knowing full well he’s talking more than loud enough for the radio link to catch it all.

Kenmore eyes him. Biting her lower lip awkwardly. If she weren’t hiding something that is so blatantly making her think twice, he’d think it was kind of cute how fidgety she’s acting.

“I, I know how it works…  Exactly how it works…  To the detail.”

 

 

Daniel starts, “Uh, what?” Did he hear that right?

 

 

Sheppard is thinking the same thing.

“What details?” He asks in the same tone of voice in which he all too often speaks the name ‘Rodney’ warningly. Letting his voice rise in pitch at the end in order to let whichever one, Rodney or now Kenmore, know that they have a very limited ETA of testing his temper before he snaps at them. A very short ETA.

She bites her lower lip again, looking anxious. You know that really is cute. “Like…,” she begins slowly, God she really doesn’t want to have to do this, “it’s an old family secret. Passed down from one heir to another. To whoever has the Ancient gene apparently.”

Sheppard keeps eyeing her, if he holds the look up long enough, she’ll break. Nope, can’t let you wiggle out of this one. You can squirm all you want, you just can’t squirm out of it.

“What details,” he orders.

She winces. Squeezing her eyes shut. Then blurts it out a mile a minute. “It works best when the patient is naked, like a newborn. Starlight gathers around the wound, each point of light massing over it. The stars will start to quiver. The four elements and ice mix to make crystals so fine and tiny that they’re like white sand from the stars. They form the new limb or heal the wound from pure light, purest silver. Then a beam of crimson flame embeds itself into the silver making it pulse with life. Then a flash of blue lightning coils around the patient’s whole body and fuses the silver with a burst of radiant energy. And after that the starlight falls away and the patient is as good as new.” She opens a single eye to peer at him.

Sheppard is staring at her. From his slightly tilting head, his brow for once is only a hint of furrowed. His whole face looks all at once taut and frozen in a moment of looseness and his eyes focus solely on the ‘What the hell’-moment he’s just witnessed. Reflecting his brow line, his eyes are ever so slightly narrowed with the moment’s question in them. Kenmore winces before him again, squeezing her opened eye shut again, and this time shrinking her body down like a child who’s about to get the biggest scolding of her life, bracing for the audible impact.

But John isn’t going to scold her. In fact…

“That, that, that’s really detailed,” he commends while nodding at her, his chin pressing flat to push his mouth into an attempt at a smile.

She opens both eyes and starts nodding emphatically, but there’s no such thing as a smile on her face. Her facial expression went from wincing to looking forlorn like a puppy that got caught messing up the house when its owners came back from wherever they went. He wonders why, it’s not like he yelled at her, until she says hopelessly, “My mother’s going to haunt me till the day I die and then she’s going to ride my dead ass for the rest of eternity.”

Sheppard nods, understanding. Ouch.

“Really? That’s all you have to say? ‘Really detailed?!” Sheppard and Kenmore roll their eyes at McKay’s exclaiming ranting in their ears.

 

 

“It’s a play-by-play! Does she have a manual? Seriously is she reading that from one of the computers in your room,” Rodney demands.

He gets silence in return and scoffs, looking around his and Ronon’s room. How was he supposed to do anything about their situation when Lieutenant I-Make-Strange-Crap-Work keeps finding the manuals to said strange crap and doesn’t tell anybody about it until Sheppard orders her to? Yes he is a genius, but it’s not like he’s psychic!

“We’ve seen that lightning coil engulfing a person thing before,” Ronon says out of nowhere. Remaining calm in the presence of McKay’s complaining.

Rodney looks at him, not getting it for a moment then… all of a sudden the Canadian astrophysicist starts snapping his fingers rapidly.

“He’s right,” Rodney announces, “The Ascension Machine.”

 

 

Daniel looks over at Teyla, “The what?”

Teyla’s face quirks and her mouth moves. She is not exactly sure where to start in reference to that particular occasion. Whether to begin with the medical emergency that followed Rodney’s encounter with the device in which he proclaimed himself, not for the first time, that he was a dead man or after that occurrence when they returned from a mission covering another team in a firefight in which Rodney declared that he had been the one to jam the enemy’s weapons… with his mind. Or perhaps later, when they landed, in which he recounted his beliefs about jamming the enemy’s weapons to both teams as well as Elizabeth and proved his point by levitating Doctor Carson Beckett into the air several feet off of the jumper bay’s floor… with his mind. Or after that how Rodney could hear everyone’s thoughts… became even more incredibly intelligent than he already was at that time… how his ever growing intelligence threatened his life to the point where he started being nice to everyone… how he had healed Radek from death with only the power of his mind and his hands… healed Ronon of his torturous wounds at the hands of the Wraith… how he had engaged in the Athosian Tea Ceremony with Teyla in honor of her father’s death… Teyla shakes her head lightly as the corners of her lips curve upwards in a polite demur smile, she does not know where to begin.

 

 

Kenmore looks at Sheppard, squinting at him then raising a quirked left eyebrow. Her ‘What the Hell?!’ look amping up the possibly cute factor just a little bit further by how utterly comical and genuinely unattractive she’s looks with that expression on her face.

“You have an Ascension Machine,” both Daniel and Ursula say in unison to their companions.

 

 

Teyla switches easily to nodding with a kind and relieved smile. Grateful that that answer at least she can give him with certain clarity.

 

 

Sheppard eventually nods, “Yeah.”

Kenmore thinks about it a moment… then, “Why?”

Good question, Sheppard starts nodding again, and he doesn’t have an answer and he hopes if he keeps nodding long enough that one will come to him.

“It was the Ancients,” Rodney volunteers.

Sheppard’s nodding turns more vigorous, “Yeah, it was them.” See, all he had to do was keep nodding and eventually an answer came.

Kenmore looks at him funny.

Sheppard looks back at her, What?

 

 

Rodney continues on, “I accidentally activated it in Atlantis when we were investigating the systems the returning Ancients had activated after their short stay in the city courtesy of the Replicators. When I touched it, there was a flash of blue lightning that coiled around my body. I don’t recall feeling a burst of radiation, but that would explain the alterations that started happening to my body in order to speed up the Ascension process.”

Rodney looks around his and Ronon’s room again. His blue eyes tracing over the wall paneling that in Atlantis would normally be rust red and decorated with raised details of geometric shapes in a matte silver, but here are brilliant, antiseptic white and still decorated with matte silver. The computer consoles, designed like the multi-tiered keyboard of a pipe organ and nicknamed ‘piano’ consoles by the Expedition, are matte silver finished like the walls’ details rather than the familiar rust red again like back in Atlantis; the clear glass operating ‘keys’ of the computer’s keyboard are the usual though. The walls, well, wall considering that the room is round, seem to glow. He can’t tell whether or not that’s because the walls—wall is actually lit from behind all the way around or if it’s because the white of it is so brilliant in all the relative darkness or dark colors they’ve been around so far that it just appears to be a source of light all its own. His eyes continue traveling the space around him. Down the walls to the non-matte finish silver, but still not shiny silver. Polished, buffed and polished. Then over to the downright gorgeous woman shot to hell in the glass stasis pod stationed in the middle of the room on a small, three-inch thick raised platform of buffed silver. He has to say it, “I think it’s safe to say that these women may have been the ones that personally created that machine and they used some of their knowledge to help create this Silver Arm device.”

“It’s an arm,” Daniel says over the radio.

“Yes, it’s an arm. We got that already. It’s why we’re here. Would you please keep up with the rest of the class, Daniel.”

“No, I mean it’s a device that fits on your arm in order to be used.”

Rodney’s about to comment on how slow the archeologist is when he gets what Jackson’s getting and Rodney starts another round of finger-snapping, “Goa’uld healing devices.”

He can practically hear Daniel nodding over the radio link, “We know that the Goa’uld were scavengers, they took the Stargate network and made it their own. We know the sarcophagi were developed from an Ancient device—“

“That cube thingy.”

There’s an audible sigh, “Yes,” Daniel corroborates in a flat tone of voice, “Telchak’s Fountain of Youth device, the cube thingy.”

“A device so powerful that rather than heal humans it messed them up.”

“Devastated their minds and bodies,” Daniel adds onto Rodney’s thought in his regular voice.

“So where does that leave us,” Ronon asks. As far as he can tell, all the scientists’ chitchat added up to was nothing useful.

“The Silver Arm could be the original device that the Goa’uld healing devices are based off of. They’re handheld,” Daniel offers.

“Handheld is your only idea,” Ronon criticizes.

“No, but it’s a start,” Daniel justifies his beliefs, not for the first time in his life let alone his career, “This healing device combines elements from what you guys’ describe of this Ascension Machine as well as the Fountain of Youth device and the Goa’uld healing device as well as requiring it to be Ancient gene activated and not just Ancient gene activated, but a very specific genealogy of Ancient genes.”

There’s a moment of silence to let what Daniel said sink in.

“So what else does this Silver Arm do,” Ronon asks.

“Crom-Crúach,” Kenmore answers, but there’s something in her voice, something to her voice.

 

 

John looks over at the Lieutenant, he heard it too. The numbness that sounds like it’s born out of resolve.

“What are you resolving to do,” he asks and the question actually manages to surprise her.

She looks at him, her whole face ease and also shock. He really has caught her off-guard with that one. Strange thing though, she doesn’t look like she seems to mind that and John likes knowing that she can be caught off-guard every once in awhile, that her whole Lone Wolf routine didn’t always work as well as she thinks it did. John just hopes that none of the Wraith will be able to catch her off-guard like that on a mission.

“I, I, I,” she stammers, “was thinking that I have to go after the Evil Eye. He can’t be left unchecked. Someone has to control him.”

“That’s not you, Ursula,” Daniel’s voice startles Sheppard; it’s abrupt, loud, and commanding, so unlike Daniel, “The only person that controlled the Evil Eye was Balor and he was prophesied to die at the hands of his grandson, Lugh the Il-Dana, which he did on Earth.”

“But Lugh married into the family and led the Tuatha Dé Danann as leader of the Shi. And if what we’ve learned here is to be believed, then I’m the only one with any sort of a tie to him here. I’m the only one that can do this. I’m the only one that’s got the right bloodline.”

“But you’re not of his bloodline, you’re of Nuada’s.”

“I’m of both! He became family. That was enough for us then, it’s enough now.”

Silence. Uncomfortable and stark. Exactly the same it had been after the flare up about the exposure of the Stargate Program.

John can hear Jackson trying to calm himself down at one of the other ends of the connection. He can see the archeologist in his mind’s eye look away from Teyla, look towards the door to their room. Maybe pinch the tip of his nose between his thumb tip and the side of his pointer finger as a useless means of wiping his nose, something he’s seen Jackson do more than once before when he’s so stressed about a situation that he can’t speak for a moment but he can move. John hears the man sniff a little, confirming his mental imagery.

“No, it’s not and you know it,” Daniel reprimands sternly. Sheppard guesses taking those few moments to calm himself down really hadn’t worked. Either that or what Kenmore’s purposing to do pushes Jackson to the max and he isn’t taking his friend’s stubbornness anymore.

“I’m all they’ve got Daniel.” Her voice soft, almost pleading. “And you know it.”

“We’ve got more than just you,” Ronon snaps defensively over the radio link.

“She wasn’t talking about you people,” Daniel bites back.

Another silence.

Ursula waits for her old dear friend’s decision. Maybe she’ll decide to take his advice or maybe she won’t, but she’ll allow him to have his say first, she owes him that much.

Then it comes. Daniel finally sighs, but it’s not exactly a sigh of defeat, “The Silver Arm was always written about as a healing device, a medical device, not a weapon, Ursula. That was Lugh’s Spear of Light.”

“So where’s that,” Ronon barks. One tail after another after another. Going in circles. One device here, dud. Another device there, dud. Now another!

“Wherever Crom-Crúach is. Balor would never let something like him go unguarded. I think it’s a measure that Crúach even came out to us and tried to make a play for us.” Sheppard hopes Jackson can hear it in her voice, the Lieutenant’s got her game face on.

“And what the Light has laid claimed to the Darkness cannot touch,” Daniel agrees. If they were in the same room, he would have seen his old friend smile at the words her mother often spoke to her coming out of his mouth. If they were in the same room, she would see him smiling fondly at the thought too. Dammit Lynn, you just keep haunting people don’t you? Living up to the banshee, huh?

“What stupid saying is that,” Rodney interjects.

“One that saved our asses, Rodney,” Sheppard reprimands. He may not exactly like Kenmore, but that was a handy little tidbit of information courtesy of her mother and the Lieutenant’s particular brand of Ancient DNA that’s proven useful here.

“Oh please, you cannot be agreeing with the little psycho about going after that energy creature, are you?”

Suddenly it is Teyla that is the voice of reason and putting a thought in the discussion that hadn’t occurred to Sheppard but had to Kenmore, living up to her mother’s teachings about the vow her heritage had made about the land of Ireland and its people, “We cannot let such a creature roam free, Rodney. If these Ancient sisters were controlling the Fomorians, what is to say that they were not controlling this Evil Eye as well? The villagers must be—“

“Protected,” Sheppard finishes for her while eyeing Kenmore.

The young woman standing next to him’s rich brown eyes locked with his.

“Will this thing start going after villagers if we just leave now,” he asks her.

“The Fomor won’t stop fighting unless their leader is dead. Now, here they don’t have the leader I grew up with, they have these ones,” she gestures down at Morrigan in the stasis pod, “The Badb Catha were on our side during the Second Battle of Moy Tura. Nemain and Macha were killed by the Evil Eye in hideous ways during that battle and Morrigan fled at the sight of it. They shouldn’t be controlling the Fomor at all. All three should not be here. Their power was broken.

“But they are here and they are—were controlling the Fomorians. But the Fomor are still attacking, aren’t they,” John nods, no one’s come into the complex to stumble upon them so yeah, that would be his guess too, “I think that’s because Balor was one of their last leaders and he controlled the Evil Eye. Without Indech ruling them on the ground, Balor was all they had left, and now there’s no Balor… but there is still the Eye.”

“But Rodney discovered that the Badb were controlling the Fomor here,” comes Daniel’s voice.

“What if that’s the thing,” Kenmore begins, “What if instead of killing the sisters, like it was said he did on Earth, well at least two of them, what if he took them hostage? What if he used them? They’ve been kept separated from each other, but only just barely. It’s like keeping prisoners dependent on each other in adjacent cells in order to keep them working for you because they know each other are okay.”

Silence greets her theory.

“We have to stop Crom-Crúach. That will stop the Fomor. That will bring peace back to the groups here,” Kenmore tells them.

Sheppard eyes her for a long time. She’s a rousing orator, he’ll give her that, but it’s also the look in her eyes. Ever since he first met her, he’s startled himself with how much he notices her eyes. And now he knows why. She is in her eyes. The faith of her beliefs… the confidence of it all… the dedication to that…  It’s all there. Every time she looks at a situation, every time she looks at a person, it is all there. You can either go along with her or not, but you are never going to stop her, she won’t let you. At least for this moment, this mission, he didn’t want to stop her. There are villagers and his people being God knows what out there by these giant Fomor people and their flying genetically engineered monsters. Those things have already downed a jumper and they haven’t felt any more shockwaves from the villagers using the henge weapon and he highly doubts they’re deep enough in the mountain to have not felt it if it was used again, which meant that it was probably only good for the one shot.

“Rodney, can you use any of the computers where you are to track this Crom thing? The lifesigns detector maybe,” the Colonel asks as he keeps his eyes locked with the Lieutenant’s.

 

 

For a moment Rodney isn’t sure he heard that right, did he? No…yes, holy crap, yes he did. Oh my God! The insanity is catching.

“I’m not looking,” Rodney puts, slams his metaphorical, “I’m putting my foot down. I’m standing right where I am,” crossing his arms over his chest, and not budging one damn inch. “If you,” Sheppard, “want to go chasing giant energy creatures with Lieutenant Brat, then you can go by yourself. Doctor Rodney McKay is done.”

And judging by how still and unmoving Ronon is, the great big Satedan feels the same way. Neither of them are going to follow her lead even if Sheppard is. They’re tired of this.

“I’ve got a detector too,” Sheppard’s voice warns over their earpieces.

“Still not budging,” Rodney answers.

Ronon nods while standing stock still across from McKay, him too. Sheppard’s lost his edge with his Satedan friend.

“I have a lifesigns detector as well,” Teyla’s gentle voice suddenly comes over their earpieces.

Ronon and Rodney stare at each other. Okay, that might actually change things for them. It’s one thing for Sheppard to go along, but it’s another if Teyla does. She hasn’t developed this sudden bond with the Lieutenant so they are giving her decision more credence than Sheppard’s, something they’d never thought they’d ever do, ever have to do, but…

“I can try,” Rodney gives in to Teyla.

Ronon escorts him back over to the computer console he’d used before, the Satedan keeping his focus on the stasis pod as they go. Just in case. The Wraith popped back up after being all shot up, why not evil Ancient hot chicks?

Rodney starts working on the computer… but quickly discovers that it really isn’t meant for what he’s trying to get it to do. He moves over to another computer, brings it online… and it doesn’t do what he needs it to do. He goes on to another. Nope, not that one either. Another. No. Another. Still no. Another, last chance… and nope. He turns to face Ronon.

“The computers are a no-go,” he reaches up and pulls out his detector from his vest, Please be useful

It’s not.

Damn it, the detector’s still useless,” he puts it back in its pocket, “Anyone else got any other bright ideas because this genius is out of them?”

 

 

Daniel and Teyla look around their room, ignoring the computers seeing as how Rodney has now proven they’re not of any use, they need not waste any of their time on them. That really only leaves the stasis pods themselves. They glance at each other, exchanging the thought, then they slowly approach the destroyed containment unit. Doctor Daniel Jackson’s face crinkles in analytical thought at it, if the Colonel and Ursula’s stasis pod gave them the Silver Arm, what if the other pods give up things too? Maybe not another Silver Arm, there was reportedly only ever one Silver Arm, but what about a map or something else? Like Lugh the Shining One’s Spear of Light maybe? Conceivably it might be meant to be used in tandem with the Silver Arm the way a shield and sword are. Combat during this time period at least in Earth’s history did utilize a pairing like that especially among elite warrior sects and the Tuatha Dé Danann definitely count as an elite warrior sect, at least they do to him. Or another reliquary maybe? Another Ark of the Covenant, only this one left behind and not taken to the Milky Way? U’dana said Merlin was from the village, his library is still there for God’s sake, it’s not exactly out of the realm of possibility.

Teyla aims at the pod again as a precaution as Daniel kneels down beside the pod; he’s careful to keep one of his hands on his own P-90 as he reaches out to the damaged glass construct’s base. His fingertips feeling along the cool smooth metal for any indications of loose paneling or hidden touchpads or iconography of any sort. Any indicators. He goes down one length, nothing. He goes down another and touches upon some bumps and groves, but as far as he and his years of experience can tell it, those are merely blemishes due to the metallurgy process. Nothing more, nothing else. He moves his fingers on, blindly caressing like he’s reading a book written in Brail. Suddenly he feels heat. It’s not actually hot per say, but it’s definitely warm. He leans down and looks at where his fingertips are touching more closely.

At first there doesn’t appear to be anything there, but when he turns his head a little to get a better angle of view, the light catches the ever so hairline seam. Daniel pauses, what if it requires Ancient DNA to open? He may have been an Ascended Being once, but he isn’t now and hasn’t been for awhile. And even when he was, he wasn’t actually Ancient nor one of their descendants. That would be Jack… and Urs. But as quickly as the idea came, he pushes it aside, not letting it go but not letting it take up residence in the foreground of his mind. He pushes on the seam. It splits open at the pressure and out slides a single crystal slat with circuitry embedded in it on a clear plate, like it’s being presented to he and Teyla. Daniel takes the Ancient control crystal and holds it up in the light of the bright room to examine it better.

Looks familiar enough, simple enough. It measures two and a half inches long by three-quarters of an inch wide by a quarter of an inch thick to his well-honed archeologist’s eyes, even with eyeglasses. His blue eyes look past their prize to Teyla Emmagan’s waiting face, asking the question: Any ideas?

She shakes her head at him, a swift movement that causes her amber hair to bounce in its swinging back and forth. It reminds him of Vala’s black pigtails when she shakes her head, although with far less bounce. A part of him hollows for a moment, he’s missing her. His eyes return to the crystal slat.

Miss Emmagan does not have a clue as to what to do with the control crystal, but she does agree with the Doctor that their discovery does not particularly look like an incendiary device or anything else harmful or strange.

“We have found an Ancient computer crystal concealed in a secret compartment in the base of the stasis pod,” she announces for the rest to hear.

 

 

Ronon and Rodney look at each other again. What the—? Then they look over at their pod. Ronon walks over to it, kneels down, and starts feeling around the un-shot up metal base. His harsh pushes quickly find the secret compartment. Its seam splits open and he retrieves a circuitry-containing Ancient crystal slat from the extended plate. He holds it up to look it over better.

“We’ve got one too,” he announces over the radio link.

 

 

Sheppard and Kenmore look down at their pod again. Okay, they’re two for two. Maybe it’s really three for three—or actually maybe it’s more like three for three Part B. Sheppard kneels down and starts feeling around the pod’s metal base as the Lieutenant reports to the others.

“Hold it a sec, Sheppard’s checking ours for extra prizes.”

John feels blindly and fast, pressing his face right up against the bullet hole-pocked glass of the stasis pod. He can smell the acrid combination of spent ammunition, fresh spilt blood, and stale processed air. It’s an uncomfortably familiar scent… but he’s not about to let memories of Afghanistan get a sudden foothold in his mind right now especially with his own worst thoughts lingering in there somewhere. He’ll deal with the ghosts of pre-Atlantis military life later, probably tonight in bed. He’ll fall asleep then suddenly come up swinging, sweating, and panting and trying like hell to blink away the nightmare—nightmares. The lingerings of PTSD. Terrific, something to look forward to, yea.

Suddenly his fingers find purchase on the tiniest of peculiarities. He presses and the other hidden compartment splits open and another crystalline plate slips out. He angles himself for a look down and picks up the waiting crystal slat. He holds it up, looking it over as the other’s had as well; curiosity seems to be a common trait among SGC members. The Ancient control crystal looks common enough. His eyes flit to Kenmore.

“We’ve got it now,” Kenmore informs the radio link. Waiting for further instruction or other discoveries from the others.

 

 

Rodney looks back at the computers lining his and Ronon’s room again. Scanning each console. There was something on one of them that had nagged at him, bugged him. At first he’d thought that it might be why the computer wouldn’t let him do what he wanted it to do because of course the stupid computer wasn’t all there but now there might be a reason for that. Aha, there it is. Rodney hurries over to the third console he had gone to in order to try and track the energy creature.

“Okay, everyone find the computer console in your room that’s missing a crystal. It should seem obvious that it’s missing one or at least it was obvious to me that it was missing one.” He reaches out his hand behind him to Ronon as he hears people moving around in their rooms over the radio, quickly doing what he’s told them to do. Good.

Ronon brings the crystal over to his friend and puts it in Rodney’s waiting hand.

“Got it,” Sheppard announces.

“I have it as well,” comes Teyla’s much more formal confirmation.

“Okay,” Rodney begins, “Put the control crystal you just got from the stasis pods in the hole. But wait till I say, I’ll count this down that way if this was meant to be done in unison by all three sisters, we’re not totally screwed.”

Ronon shrugs. Sounds like a good plan to him. He hopes it does to the others too. There’s silence. Hopefully that means ‘yes’.

Rodney poises his crystal slat over the console’s hole, “Okay, in three, two, one.”

He puts it in.

Nothing happens. To say he’s disappointed would be a severe understatement of how relieved he is. He cannot even begin to count out how many times they have encountered worse things happening when they’ve done something like that than nothing. Thank God this is not one—industrial lock sounds start coming from the pod’s immediate area. Oh, but that does sound so very much like the sort of worse they’ve met up with before when they’ve done something like this. Rodney and Ronon immediately turn around and look at the pod, Ronon’s weapon snapping to the pod.

It sounds like something huge is moving there, but they aren’t seeing it. They keep staring but it doesn’t look like anything’s happening there. Retaking up his P-90, Rodney and Ronon move around the stasis unit. Semi-circling it. Rodney lagging a couple of steps behind Ronon like usual. Their weapons up, aimed, and ready for the unexpected… the men pause, the floor. The floor on the pod’s other side, the side that had been out of their view from their place at the third console, is moving. A wedge of it is sinking down beneath its original level. As they keep watching, the wedge continues to sink a smaller slit at a time into a descending spiral staircase. Elegant design, effectively hidden. Ronon and Rodney exchange looks. It’s much less ‘Do we go down there?’ and much more ‘Do you want to go first?’ Then familiar egg-shaped Ancient light sconces come on on the walls down inside the revealed hidden descending passageway.

“Shall we go down,” the two men hear Doctor Jackson ask over the still open radio link, obviously to Teyla.

Silently Rodney thanks God that he and Ronon aren’t the only ones who’ve opened up the very real possibility of Pandora’s box.

“We are. Meet you down there,” Sheppard answers.

They can hear the Lieutenant Colonel and Lieutenant’s movements over the radio. The rustling of their BDUs is crisp and clear. He knew the sounds of Sheppard’s clothing well, the bare whispering of well worn fabric, not starched. It sounds like Kenmore’s taking the lead though, her clothes are starched. Already Ronon Dex knows the sounds of her well tended to, well cared for battle dress uniform. He barely fights off the urge to roll his eyes, instead gripping his blaster tightly in his hand again. No twirl. No flourish. Just intense certain pressure.

“Okay,” Daniel replies, “You kids have fun.”

There’s the sound of a snort, maybe. Then there’s the increasing sound of static and, of course, more sounds of movements. Ronon knows the delicate sounds of fabric moving as gently and surely as a dancer’s refined movements and clumsy sounding movements, Teyla and Jackson are heading down their room’s staircase.

Ronon’s black eyes shift to Rodney, the scientist was already looking at him.

“Rock, Paper, Scissors for who goes first,” the Canadian asks.

Ronon starts heading down the narrow stairs.

“Okay, so no then.” Rodney follows him.

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Thirteen

The hallway’s windowless but familiar looking architecturally speaking. It’s the same design as the more water damaged lower levels of Atlantis’ piers are. That’s good, works in their favor. Sheppard and Kenmore keep their P-90s up and aimed, the shiny gold of the new metal latch that’s been made for his weapon catching his eye for a moment. He wonders if that’s going to be a distraction from now on or not. It’s pretty to be sure and he’s really honored that let alone did the villagers make him a new latch, but that they’ve done it out of solid gold, the real stuff, the real good quality stuff. It’s, it’s—well it’s shiny. Really shiny.

They’re walking a quicker pace than John would like, but they’re still managing to keep a good eye out around themselves regardless. Their boots aren’t sounding too loud on the matte-finished cement gray floor. He isn’t sure why he thought they wouldn’t be able to keep their steps quiet and their eyes keen considering that the hallway doesn’t have any other doors than the one they’d entered through. It really is like the Janus hallway in Atlantis. All they have to do is follow the hallway’s lead, that’s it.

And that’s bad on so many levels from so many past experiences. Especially Rodney and Jackson discovering the hallway’s secret in the first place. Usually in predicaments like this the only choice you’re given leads straight into a trap, that’s why you’re being corralled. Forced to go the one ‘perfect’ way. That’s why John wanted a slower pace than this even though it’s not like they’re racing down the hallway. But still, he keeps wanting to go over to a set of the sconces, tap on them, and race to the end of the hallway into the wall to see if it’ll let him run through it into a hidden room. Another thought keeps occurring to him too, he hopes there isn’t something on the other side of the wall panels that might be able to do the same thing on its side and come through the walls and attack them.

They keep following the hallway for all its turns and bends. Another thought nags him, he hopes there aren’t bad guy Asgard here too. That’s all they need.

 

 

Elsewhere in the mountain’s Ancient facility, the others are doing the same. Rodney gabbing the entire time and desperately holding on to his detector the way he had in Michael’s underground facility where the mad scientist Wraith hybrid had killed the Taranans. Daniel meanwhile takes his cues from Teyla’s lead, her eyes search the walls for any indications of upcoming areas, both hidden and otherwise, like she’s used to seeing in the same sort of hallway back in Atlantis.

 

 

Heading towards another right turn at the end of their hallway, Sheppard and Kenmore see an extremely tall shadow suddenly fill up the end of the hallway. They stop and break to the side walls opposite each other. Covering both flanks. At first they think it’s a Fomorian, a left behind guard, but the shadow quickly proves way too tall. It fills the hallway from floor to ceiling in less than a heartbeat. No Fomorian they’ve seen so far is anywhere near that big. At second thought, it might be their own shadows fusing into one. But why would that happen now when it hasn’t happen before in the hallway? The light hasn’t changed any. And why would their unified shadow still be moving, still be getting larger like that when they’ve stopped moving? And the third thought is always the unknown.

They aim down the hallway. Prepared to fire. A tendril of black smoke-like something curls around the hallway corner like an octopus tentacle reaching out of its hiding hole. Sheppard stares. Of all the things, he hadn’t expected this. Oh no

Another tendril curls around the corner then another. Looking even more like an octopus coming out of its den as more and more of a large black cloud fills up the end of the hallway, coming around the corner. Holy crap, Sheppard rushes into the middle of the hallway. Providing a line of defense.

“Kenmore. Kenmore, get behind me. We have to go back.”

The Lieutenant stays where she is, watching.

More of the energy creature comes around the corner. Sheppard knows what happens to you if one of these things gets to you. He remembers what had happened to Lieutenant Aiden Ford, the original fourth member of his team. The dark entity hadn’t killed the young man, but it had made a good try at it. The damage it did to him made it like Ford got hit by lightning. Even though technician Peter Grodin and Elizabeth had thought at the time that the creature was going after one of the naquadah power generators they were using at the time and Ford had the simple misfortune to get trapped in its way, John always believed the thing had simply gotten pissed at them for making it go in circles chasing after generator after generator because every time it got near one, Peter shut the generator down and forced the entity to move on to another greater power source to feed on. He still thinks the reason it trapped Ford and another marine in that hallway was to specifically show them all, it had to have known sentient as it was that they were watching it with the city’s internal sensors, that if they kept jerking it around, it was going to go after humans despite the fact that the generators had more power for it to absorb than the electrical charge generated by the human body. Attacking Ford was its way of telling them that their shell game with it wasn’t going to attract its attention elsewhere anymore. Now John knows there’s no other power source in this hallway and—wait, why aren’t the lights reacting to it? When the energy creature had passed through a hallway back in Atlantis, the lights either flickered or went out completely because the creature was feeding on their minimal energy outputs as it went after bigger and better power sources. Shouldn’t this thing be feeding on the lights’ energy here too? There’s plenty of it—What the…?

Sheppard peers at the energy creature as more of it fills up the hallway. He starts seeing something substantial. Something more than just a black energy cloud. Something with scales. Black scales. Then some sort of large emerald green disc, gleaming like a… there’s another much smaller disc inside of it. That one’s light grey like marble or granite, with another slightly smaller gold disc inside of that and a dot of red inside that one with another smaller dot of white inside of the red one. It takes John a moment to put all the colors he’s seeing together. An eye. It has eyes. Well, an eye. And atop the creature like a crest of hair are white tendrils of the thing’s smoke-like body. White energy.

What the hell,” he whispers, not believing his eyes.

The creature completely fills up the end of the hallway plus a few feet in their direction. Kenmore suddenly rushes to Sheppard and wraps her arms around him. The embrace reminds him of when he caught Larrin when she was still tipsy on her feet from having her life returned to her by a Wraith. But this is different. It’s closer. Tighter. More life and death than relief at getting life stolen back from the brink of death. And her arms aren’t under his, they’re around his biceps. And she isn’t facing him, she’s looking over at the creature. Fear. He can feel it in her. She’s afraid of this thing.

“You know what it is,” he asks her.

“Don’t move,” she whispers at him, her voice wavering slightly. He feels a slight tremor shiver throughout her body like a wave that surges then quickly dissipates.

“What?”

“Don’t move. Just please don’t move.”

He obeys.

They remain still as the creature approaches. One of its black tendrils comes off the wall, unfurling and reaching out to them. A creeping octopus limb lulling prey.

Kenmore swallows hard against his chest. Her tremor comes back and doesn’t go away. Her mouth’s gaped enough that let alone can he feel her equally quavering breath against his chin, he can hear it. Then Kenmore starts reaching out towards the energy creature.

“Don’t,” he hisses.

She doesn’t stop extending her arm. Against his better judgment, John drops his P-90 and wraps one arm around her waist and cautiously lifts his other to try and catch her reaching arm…

“Don’t. Let me.”

“What,” he can’t believe he’s hearing this and reconsiders whether or not he should have asked ‘Are you crazy?!’ instead.

She shushes him and fully extends her arm out to the creature. Its approaching tendril suddenly stops. Pausing, perhaps it’s thinking over that Kenmore’s seems to have made the first move. But Rodney said that these things don’t think on the same level as humans do. Even if Teyla proved that one of them had enough intelligence to not want to be in Atlantis anymore after being trapped there for over ten thousand years, Rodney said that trying to reason with it would be like trying to reason with a shark. They may be really intelligent, but all they really do is eat… Come to think of it, that’s all Rodney really does either. So maybe these things do think on the same level as humans. Or at least Rodney’s level. Suddenly the tendril snaps out at Kenmore’s hand. The viper striking.

There’s a flash of blinding white light when the tendril comes into contact with Kenmore’s hand. Nothing happens to her, but the flash of light apparently hurts the creature like hell. It screams the same way the wampa did when Luke Skywalker cut off its arm. A deep, penetrating, baying howl overlapped by a shrill shrieking like a frightened baby screaming it’s lungs out. Graaah! Deafening. The shadow creature rushes back the way it came. The octopus sucking itself back into its lair. It disappears as though it’d never appeared in the first place. Kenmore and Sheppard stay embraced, staring at the end of the hallway, still freaked out by…

“What the hell was that,” he breaths. It definitely wasn’t what he thought it was. Or is it the fully grown adult version of what he thought it was. Had they dealt with a child back in their first year in Atlantis?

“Crom-Crúach the Worm God. The Demon God of Death. Balor’s backup,” she answers breathlessly.

“Does that mean this Balor guy’s still alive?”

“I don’t know.”

Kenmore and Sheppard allow themselves a ten-count and a lot of hoping the Evil Eye entity is really gone before they come out of their embrace. Silently the two soldiers retake up their P-90s, finding comfort in the feel of the weapons in their hands even if they would prove completely useless against the thing just like they had with that first year creature.

 

 

What Sheppard and Kenmore don’t know, due to the shielding’s interference blocking any radio contact, is that the rest of the creature had come down the other two hallways towards the other members of their mission group.

Like with the Colonel and Lieutenant, the height of what they thought was an approaching enemy halted the others in their tracks. Then the black creeping tendrils folded over their hallway’s corners too. Rodney and Teyla recognized immediately the first signs of the black energy creature that Sheppard remembered oh so well too.

“Fall back,” Rodney and Teyla ordered harshly. Simultaneously.

“Quickly,” Teyla added.

“What,” Ronon asked McKay. Confused. While Daniel hadn’t hesitated to do as ordered by the more experienced in this galaxy teammate he’s paired with.

“Get back as quickly as possible,” Rodney re-ordered, backing up.

More of the creature came around the corner. Filling up the end of their hallways and starting to overflow towards them. But unlike with Sheppard and Kenmore, neither Rodney and Ronon nor Teyla and Daniel see anything indicating that the creature had a face of any sort. All they saw were the black tendrils of its body. It’s considerable, considerable body. Rodney and Teyla retreated their duos to the back wall of the corner they had taken in leading their companions to this point, but stop.

“It will do us no good to fall back any farther,” Teyla told Daniel, focusing her P-90 on the dark cloud in front of her for all the good it will not do them.

“No matter how far back we go, it will follow us and we don’t have any doorways to try and put between it and us,” Rodney braced with his back against the wall, not bothering to raise his weapon. But Ronon isn’t someone who can just lay down his arms so easily in the face of an opponent, no matter what opponent.

“So what do we do,” Ronon and Daniel asked.

The creature came as close to them as it had dared to to Sheppard and Kenmore. When it’s reaching out to Kenmore backfired, its body had screamed as well. The terrible screeching forced Rodney to wince, cover his ears. Teyla and Daniel slammed their backs against the wall behind them and braced to open fire, but as the creature retreated from Kenmore and Sheppard, its body retreated from the other hallways as well. Much to the shock and fear of the remaining mission members.

“What was that,” Ronon asked and Rodney had no answers for him. For several long moments, Teyla and Daniel do not move.

 

 

Kenmore and Sheppard, like their other mission members, eventually slowly and cautiously stalk up to the end of the hallway they’re in. They look around the corner. Nothing’s there. Sheppard gestures forward and he and Kenmore move around the corner, maintaining their guard of either side of the hallway. The others do as well.

*                      *                      *

It’s maybe another half hour of stalking down more long, winding, empty, windowless hallway before they come to a door. Finally. The only door they’ve met since stepping through one to get into the hallway in the first place. And thinking of that first door, this one is the first door they’ve come to that actually looks like a door. A real door, like the ones they have in Atlantis, not a hidden door disguised as just another piece of wall paneling.

Sheppard and Kenmore hang back for a moment. The Lieutenant’s thinking being what if Crom-Crúach had crawled into the hallway from there or retreated from the hallway through there, either way this isn’t good; Sheppard’s thinking being that the wall has no crystal slat sensor panel next to it to swipe their hand over which means that the door opens via sensors that detect a person’s presence standing in front of them, which also means that as soon as they walk up to the door, it’ll open and the two of them will be screwed by the energy creature waiting just behind the door for them. The thing could have slithered back here and still be here for all he knows. Hiding…  But it’s the only door they’ve come to…But the entity is still running, well slithering or whatever it does, around here somewhere…  But it is the only door they’ve encountered so far. Damn, he hates having to hedge his bets like this. Why is there never any other options—Then another option occurs to him.

“Back there,” he whispers over to Kenmore from his position right up against the left side wall, “why couldn’t it touch you?”

Kenmore doesn’t answer. Sheppard looks over at her. Her eyes aren’t focused on the door. They’re distant. She’s remembering something.

“Kenmore,” he whispers, trying to draw her back to the present.

A smile, faint and happy but he can see that one of its corners is downturned with some sort of sadness. He recognizes that sadness. He’d felt it, looked it when he’d looked down at his father’s closed casket. So many unresolved issues that would go on being unresolved…  Loss. She’s remembering some sort of loss. A considerable one if John’s own loss of time with his father is anything to go by.

“It’s something my mother used to tell me,” she finally says, “something she’d learned from her grandmother. My great-grandmother. The one from Ireland.”

Unresolved parental issues, John knew it. She looks over at him from her position against the right side wall, “What the light has laid claim to, the darkness cannot touch.”

John starts nodding… and keeps nodding. That’s actually good to know. Something useful.

“So what does that mean exactly,” he presses.

Her unresolved-issues-smile turns rueful, she gives a mirthless laugh, “It’s in my blood.”

Ahh, “I bet you’re getting tired of that? The whole half-human, half-Ancient, Project Veritas stuff being brought up all the time.”

“Actually, this isn’t pissing me off. Or hurting quite as bad.”

His brows furrow at her.

“I’ve been raised with this knowledge of my bloodline all my life. I am a proud Tuatha Dé Danann. My mother’s people, my people, are good. We are benevolent. We have always pledged our swords to the land, to the people first and a tyrant with a pretty little headpiece sitting on a cushy big ass chair second. It is something that has been passed down from one generation to the next: ‘If ever the people should need us, we will answer their call.’ If ever the land should need us, we will answer her call. I have never been ashamed of that in my blood. Ever.”

She speaks so passionately even when whispering to him that he kind of feels he’d follow her lead anywhere. Passion has always been an attention-getter to him. It’s hard for him to turn away from. To ignore. John looks back at the door at the far end of the hallway, and in this case it’s a big help too. He hopes it means that she’ll back off the recklessness a little.

“It’s my Dad’s blood that I’d rather not acknowledge,” she grumbles.

He looks over at her again.

Her eyes remain on the distant door, “But it’s a little hard to do that considering he was the Hispanic one and I’m not porcelain, day-glo, could use my body for headlights white like my Mom was.”

Sheppard smiles and returns his eyes to the door. Daddy issues too. Great. Gees, they make the perfect couple… uh, wait, he doesn’t mean it like that.

For his own comfort and distraction, he reshifts the butt of his P-90 to snuggle closer into his shoulder joint. Works his mouth a little.

“We approach the door together, okay? Whatever’s behind it might not be able to take the both of us out at once and if it’s that Crom thing, he can’t touch you so if he’s there, I’ll dive behind you and you take the lead.”

She nods, “Guinea pig time.”

He glances at her, there was no call for that, then he refocuses on the door and starts moving. Kenmore twinning him.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Five | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Twelve

Chapter Twelve

It’s a typical tunnel as far as any of them can tell. Semi-smooth walls indicating it’s been carved into the mountain and not a naturally occurring phenomena. Curved ceiling. All in all, typical. Everyone keeps looking around, but the only one that seems to know what they’re doing in these conditions is archeologist Doctor Daniel Jackson. The rest of them are just waiting around pretty much until the archeologist comes up with something like whatever the symbols he’s found are or might be or has he seen them before or are they from Earth or are they Ancient or Asgard or what. Pretty much anything. Out of nowhere the sound of dozens of bagpipes comes to their ears. Daniel may be so experienced and so engrossed in his work that he can tune the screeching racket out, but the rest of them sure as hell can’t. They immediately look back at the village.

They don’t know when the assembly happened, but on the village’s crest line is one long row of dozens of bagpipers with several banners flaring behind them along with their bearers. In fighting columns and rows behind the piping line is what looks like every surviving villager, about a hundred more warriors from they have no idea where, and Lorne’s team. Every single one of the defenders waiting and ready for combat. Suddenly the torches of the Fomorian parade come into sight at the bottom of their view. The waiting village crowd starts roaring challenge with their weapons raised defiantly over their heads or clanging them against the edges of their shields. It’s the sight movies have made iconic. Kenmore smiles as Daniel finally comes up beside her to watch the display as well.

“Specialist Dex,” he looks over at the Lieutenant as she continues watching the village proudly, “That’s how we fight back.”

Ronon’s apprehensive as he returns his eyes to the village. Screaming and banging intimidation at your enemies is completely different from actually taking them on. He’ll believe any of this when he sees it happen.

The challenging roar aggravates the Fomor, who pick up their pace by making a full out run toward the village. The village answers with the sudden adrenaline-surging pounding of drums rallying with the blaring pipe music. The cacophony is staggering even from this distance at the mountain’s tunnel. Rousing too. John can feel his blood pumping through his veins and pounding in his ears in time with the village drumbeats along with the very distinct urge to charge down there himself and start kicking some ass.

The Fomorians and their beasts easily bear down on the village crest unchallenged. Ronon’s about to say something about making it easy for the enemy again when things start glowing in the forests in between the crest and the base of the mountain. It takes the group a few moments to figure out it’s the standing stones. The stones’ symbols are glowing with what looks like strings of peridot-colored chasing lights. What the hell—? Then the standing stones rise into the air somehow, lifting out of the ground easily with bits of dirt and foliage still clinging to their rounded bottoms. The group gawks.

Rodney’s eyes bulge, Harmony’s Shrine stones never mentioned anything that could lead to any sort of a possibility of that. Tiny drones, miniature drones, yes, he’d seen those with his own eyes. Unless that’s how the tiny drones deployed which he seriously doubts because of how he knows the big models deploy from stacks like wine holders down in basically Atlantis’ basement and that Harmony’s stones didn’t have to rise up into the air to deploy—Oh God, oh God, what if, what if this is something else Harmony’s stones could do? What if this is another facet of that miniature drone launcher weapon? What if this is like Phase II or something? Oh, crap.

Teyla’s normally gentle features steel. Her keen eyes narrow ever so slightly as she peers down at the glowing stones. She had seen great weapons made by the Ancients before such as the land-based satellite weapon used to defend the Dorandans’ planet against an entire Wraith fleet. It had wrought terrible damage. Both to the Wraith fleet as well as the Dorandans themselves. It had destroyed their world. She wonders if this weapon is as safe as Rodney claims the Ancient shrine of the young ruler Harmony’s planet was or if they are now about to face the same fate as the Dorandans.

Sheppard stares, the flesh above and between his black eyebrows pinching. His mouth ever so slightly open, allowing his breathing to come out measured and without sound. His entire body is tense. He doesn’t know what’s going to happen next, but whatever it is he doesn’t like it. Not at all, not one bit.

Daniel has the same interest in the sight as everyone else, but there’s also something else. He squints at the floating glowing stones. His touching lips betray nothing but ease, but the puckering of his dimples on either side of his mouth’s corners subtly illustrates the clenching of his jaw. He remembers something about this… or is it he thinks he remembers something… he can’t tell which, it’s been too long.

Although she’d been expecting the final stand of bagpipes, drums, and hollering warriors right in the faces of the Fomorian lines and flyers, she hadn’t seen this coming. Stonehenge, and henges in general, they, they…

Ronon looks over and gauges the Earth peoples’ reactions.

“I take it your Stonehenge doesn’t do that back on Earth,” he asks.

Stunned, the Earth-born SGC members shake their heads. No, it sure didn’t. But now it looks like there might be a whole new idea for what the geological construct was meant to do. Or is capable of doing.

When the pale yellow-green light of the standing stones reaches its brightest, a deafening crack sounds. The collection of eight concentric circles of levitating stones emits a unified forcefield that looks like Atlantis’s city-wide shield only more blue-green in color than purplish between them. Abruptly the forcefield shockwaves out from the stones. The first third of the Fomorian parade is repelled and flattened in the blink of an eye. Several flyers are flung out of control away from the battlefield. They plummet down into the ground.

The mountain rumbles and quakes in the quickly decreasing few seconds it takes for the field to reach it. The team brace themselves just inside the tunnel’s threshold. The wave impacts. They manage to remain upright as a storm of dust and dirt and God knows what else surges up the mountainside like a tsunami surge pouring over a beachfront wall. It gushes over the tunnel entrance and its small outcrop of rock platform as though neither is there. A few of the flung flyers smash into the base of the mountain. Covering their faces from the debris wave already, the team is forced to their knees as the mountain shakes with the hits. The thunder ebbs away in the same time that heartbeats last like hours. The team looks up as the dust starts to clear away. Daniel and Teyla cough as Sheppard, Kenmore, and Ronon brush themselves off.

“I take it that there’s nothing around Stonehenge that indicates it’s capable of that,” Rodney coughs at Kenmore and Daniel while trying to swat away the dirty air as though that will clean it faster.

The Lieutenant lowers her arms sweeping off her shoulders, she shakes her head. But Daniel has an idea. It’s unconventional, but unconventional seems to be their stock and trade… he draws Ursula’s diving knife from the back of her tactical belt and slices it across her palm while she’s coincidentally holding it out in front of him in an ‘I have no clue’ gesture.

“Ow. Dammit Daniel,” she hisses, “Ask first.”

Daniel takes the bloody knife with him back a few feet into the tunnel then wipes some of Ursula’s blood on his fingertips and drags them across the shallow trench of one of the designs. A short segment, the segment he ‘painted’, of the design’s line glows dimly golden. Kenmore’s eyes widen. She turns to the rest of the group.

“Quick. Start cutting me,” she points directly at Dex, “I said cutting not stabbing and not for the kill.”

She holds her palms out to them. Like a peace offering. Sheppard’s team hesitates, shifting wary glances between each other. Then Daniel comes over again and slices the knife deeply across Ursula’s other palm.

“God damn Daniel, I said ask.”

“Mother may I,” he quips as he leaves again to ‘paint’ some more of his gently glowing design with her blood.

Before it can heal, Kenmore takes her bloody hand and smears her blood on the nearest wall symbol. Atlantis’ flagship team stares at probably one of the strangest sights they have ever seen, and that’s saying a lot considering their years in the Pegasus. It’s when they see the dim glowing of the symbol Kenmore smeared that they can’t exactly argue with the results. The method, maybe, but not the results. Sheppard’s team slowly takes out their knives. Ronon’s being the biggest one he carries on his person. Of course. He has no problem helping the Lieutenant do this.

“Drag the blades across my skin anywhere you can,” she directs them.

Again Sheppard and his team exchange wary looks between each other. What the hell is up with this mission? They’re not used to this. You don’t turn on one of your own team members as a sacrificial lamb in order to get the job done. They’re not used to having to injure someone like them in order to move further in a mission… actually, one of them has before. He had to kill his commanding officer during what amounted to their first mission in this galaxy. And then when some wealthy, deeply disturbed man took Rodney’s sister Jeannie hostage, this same team member had to hand over a man to be fed on by a Wraith right in front of him in order to save her. Neither decisions… almost all of his decisions since joining Stargate Command have never truly sat well with him. The most he’s been hoping for since that first mission execution of then Expedition Military Leader Colonel Marshall Sumner is too be able to look himself in the mirror. Sometimes he can. Sometimes he can’t. And once, he punched the mirror… reluctantly Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard draws first shallow blood on Lieutenant Ursula Kenmore.

She hisses but, “That was a paper cut. You’re going to have to do better than that.”

Sheppard locks eyes with her. You don’t do this to anyone wearing the same uniform as you.

Daniel reaches over and draws blood again on her other palm, she winces, and he paints another symbol. Kenmore nods at Sheppard. Urging him on. He looks down at her healed palm. It’s still pink with the freshness of the heal. He sucks in a deep breath, sees the ghost of an emaciated Colonel Sumner’s face nodding at him with foggy eyes at the forefront of his mind’s eye… and drags his knife blade deeper across the Lieutenant’s palm. Kenmore hisses again as the deep red line brims on her palm. The color spills up onto the edge of his knife blade. The memory of blood spurting from a body after going through the feeding hand of a Wraith Queen takes center stage away from the ghost, John wipes the bloody blade off on his hand and starts smearing his red hand on part of a symbol. It too begins dimly glowing. Equally as reluctant, except for Ronon, the rest of his team follows their leader’s example.

With their help the walls quickly glisten in the dark with Kenmore’s blood and barely glowing golden symbols…but that’s all the symbols are doing. Something’s off. Something’s missing. The group looks around, what else? Maybe the shielding genuinely is hiding wall sconces or some other useful thing from them and the darkness is helping it by keeping said item from their sight. There is hope though, the golden glow is practically nil but ‘practically’ is counting for them right now. Teyla and Daniel’s fingertips touch the walls for any other symbols. Kenmore looks up…and sees the shadows of more symbols on the ceiling. Suddenly she grabs her knife back from Daniel, pinches its blade edges between her fingertips, and yanks the weapon out. She hisses and freaks out. Wincing and dancing around while flailing her hands up and down.

“Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow, ow,” she wines, looking like a loon.

Sheppard worries about her. He really didn’t need her cracking right now, not at the beginning. Then she suddenly shoves her knife hilt at him.

“Hold this out for me,” she orders.

He doesn’t know why, and he definitely knows he doesn’t actually want to know, but he reluctantly does as ordered. Kenmore takes a moment to brace herself, closing her brown eyes as she regulates her breathing. Calming herself down. Oh God, Sheppard winces, Jesus, does he really want to see this? Can he go back on helping whatever insanity is going to happen next that’s so extreme Kenmore has to physically and psychologically prep herself to do it? She puckers her lips and blows her easing breath out. She pinches the blade edges with her other hand’s fingertips and yanks them down the blade.

She stifles the hiss, but can’t do anything to stop the agonized groan behind her tightly pursed lips. She doubles over. Clenching the newly wounded fist white-knuckle tight. Breathing hard through her nose. Ursula quickly forces herself to straighten up, shaking the newly injured fist as she does. She doesn’t waste any more time and starts jumping up and down. Reaching for the ceiling and smearing her bloody fingertips on it as best she can. It starts working, the ceiling’s symbols start to glow the same dim gold as the wall symbols. And yet McKay can’t let something as ridiculous looking as this just go…

“Do you have any idea how stupid you look doing that?”

Suddenly Kenmore stops jumping and slowly turns to him, “Yeah, McKay,” using that name for the first time rather than her usual ‘Doc McKay’, “‘cause everyone looks like a freakin’ genius when they jump up and down smearing their blood on the ceiling of a cave.”

Sheppard stifles his grin and chuckle. She’s gotten another point on McKay and John’s finding that he in fact likes it when she scores a point on Rodney. Then Jackson walks up to him and takes Kenmore’s knife away from Sheppard. The Doctor casually swipes at Kenmore’s exposed skin again and smears her blood on the rest of the ceiling. Still nothing. Something is still off. God, what the hell is it? What are they missing? The group looks around the tunnel again. What could possibly be left? They’ve covered the walls, the ceiling’s now covered, the ground… The ground! Kenmore snatches Sheppard’s knife from its sheath on his belt, pinches the blade, and yanks. Keeping her wounded hand clenched, she drops to one knee and drips a trail of fresh blood across the tunnel’s threshold then uses her bloody fingertips to smear the cooling droplets into a connected dusty, muddy line going across the dirt floor and up a little bit of both walls.

The moment the blood connects the dim glow becomes as bright as that of the weaponized standing stones. Illuminating the tunnel like ropes of running lights with symbols all over the walls… the floor… the ceiling. Everywhere. It’s a sensory blitzkrieg of illuminated imagery. Intertwined. Intermingling. Foreground. Background. Every ground. Overlapping so that your mind distorts whether or not there are walls, a floor, or a ceiling even there anymore.

Each and every single one unmistakably Celtic symbology all around them. Knots. Spirals. There are some things Sheppard thinks might be letters. Others that Teyla believes might be elaborate renderings of flowers. Ronon thinks he sees some animals. Rodney tries squinting at what he guesses are decorative designs of stars and moons and comets, all sorts of astronomical phenomena. Daniel simply marvels as his eyes trace every curve, every dot, every beautiful work of symmetry and asymmetry meant to explain whole life histories, world histories, genealogies. It is stunningly beautiful and stunningly beautifully complex. A treasure trove of mental expression meeting the stream of time. A certain measure of desperation to inscribe everything they could remember before it slipped away from them, but still maintaining the respectful beauty of their culture, not sacrificing but giving it to the march of history…

“How exquisite,” he whispers to himself.

“Hey, that’s my Mother’s symbol,” Ursula points at three Celtic unicorns intertwined to form a Celtic knot triad, “and there’s Nuada’s,” she points again at the image of a sword with symbols covering it’s hilt and running down the center of its blade teamed with the Celtic depiction of a severed hand with half its forearm still holding onto the sword hilt with a beautiful curling and spiraling depiction of smoke or light perhaps haloing and emanating from all around the sword. Her eyes marvel at the sights, her whole face smiling.

The group travels down the superbly lit tunnel, continuing to look around at the inspiring appearance of what once was dark. All of a sudden Ursula races over to another prominent symbol. This one of a simply-designed short sword, again with a hand and partial forearm holding onto the sword’s hilt, but this time accompanied by a crescent moon on its back with its concave side aimed upward on either side of the blade, “And my great grandfather’s.”

She turns, “and Niall’s,” she rushes over and wonders at the depiction of a tall, craggy, four-tiered mountain encircled by a thick ring of Celtic knotwork.

“They’re all the symbols of your bloodline,” Daniel reports, still mesmerized.

If that is true then…

“Where is your symbol,” Teyla asks, equally as mesmerized by what she is seeing around her but not forgetting the task at hand. Although not even the healing Shrine of Talus had sported this sort of splendor despite the grandeur of its disguising waterfall and central column of finely carved ancient writings and symbols. What beauty the Lieutenant’s people had, what magnificence she comes from. Warriors’ spirits and artists’ hands, how wonderful.

As their group approaches the end of the tunnel, the golden glow suddenly forms a massive tree with its intertwining branches spreading out and curving downward to begin interweaving with the knotting lines of its roots. If folded in half, the tree would be a reflection of itself. At the heart of the tree’s solid trunk is a trident-like three-pronged flame. On either side of the trunk, at the hearts of the two round areas created by the trunk and the circling of the tree’s canopy into its roots, is a single crescent moon on its back with its concave side aimed upward. A version of the Tree of Life symbol right in the middle of the tunnel. With all the overlapping symbols around them, the Tree symbol leaps out of its background like the hidden image of a Magic Eye picture. Kenmore freezes at the sight of it.

“The Tree of Life,” Daniel breathes, “It’s the unity of the universe. Everything connected to everything else.”

Ursula can’t help but think of the holograms both the Ancients and the Asgard had a penchant for using when creating obstacles that humans were meant to traverse. Thor’s Hammer. Thor’s Chariot. The knight of Glastonbury Tor. Merlin and the Black Knight guarding Excalibur. Gingerly she reaches out to the seemingly floating symbol right in front of her… and touches the heart of the Tree’s trunk, the flame. The elegant symbol dissipates and the stone back wall of the tunnel that the symbol had been covering slides down into the ground revealing a small foyer-like area with three more darkened tunnel entrances leading further into the mountain. Hologram, yes, and also the key to the lock that it’d been hiding behind it. Effective. How… Ancient.

They walk into the foyer area. No sooner does Ronon, solely bringing up the rear, walk a few feet into the area then the lowered tunnel wall starts rising behind him. He tries stand on the upcoming stone ledge, trying to use his weight and brute strength to stop it. Teyla and Sheppard throw their own weights down on it too by falling onto the ledge on either side of their friend’s feet. Using their feet still on the ground to help their bodies push the stone door back down as Kenmore, Rodney, and Daniel desperately search the foyer’s walls for any mechanism that can possibly stop the door from closing. They all may be trying, Ronon’s shoulder muscles braced against the doorway’s top and his body fighting the strain of his body being folded by his legs rising up to meet his shoulders, but they’re definitely not succeeding, Dex roars with the crumpling strain, and they aren’t going to. Ronon suddenly kicks Sheppard and Teyla off the door ledge and dives off himself before the door’s top reaches its slot up in the ceiling. It seals them in and he’s going to feel that in the morning.

The group looks around again. They’ve got no choice now. Pick a way, any way. Rodney tries his detector again.

“Still nothing. We’re still shielded,” he reports frustratedly as he puts his detector back in its pocket on his tactical vest when what he really wants to do is chuck the stupid thing at the nearest wall. He hates to admit, but it’s kind of his security blanket and no matter how irritating it is to him when circumstances won’t let it work, he’s not going to let go of it.

Their eyes, a colorful assortment of black, grey-green, mahogany, espresso, and blue, look from entryway to entryway to entryway.

“Any ideas, Jackson, on where these lead to,” Sheppard asks.

“I’m not seeing any defining markers,” Daniel answers. Silently hoping that they won’t have to illuminate these tunnel walls or activate anything else with anymore of Ursula’s blood. Even with her recently discovered Ancient ability to heal from incredible wounds at an incredible rate, he doubts she can withstand shedding any more blood without it affecting her.

Ursula walks down the tunnel on the right. The entryway’s only about five feet long and, at her presence, the back wall slides open revealing an Ancient looking hallway. Its walls are grids of large, squared, heavily textured panels. Kenmore casually steps into the pale gray painted hallway and turns right. The entryway door starts to close behind her. Sheppard chases after the Lieutenant and just barely slips through into the Ancient hallway behind her. He looks back at his team and Jackson.

“Split up and go down the other entryways. We’ll—,” the door seals shut in his face, “find each other later.” He finishes. John takes a moment to fume at the closed door, which from this side isn’t stone at all but a regular wall panel like the sort in the Atlantis city hallway that Rodney and Jackson had found Janus’ secret lab at the end of. He wants to hit his forehead against the rough wall texture, divide and conquer without a coordinated plan seldom actually works in the SGC and it’s a crap shoot with the Vegas odds definitely against you here.

Sheppard turns and stalks after Lieutenant Kenmore. Well at least this part is well lit by fist sized, cross cut, egg shaped, frosty white wall sconces hooked at eye level into the half-foot wide square columns stationed every five feet of wall length and the trio of overhead lights set so closely together on the overhead square beams that they look more like one long light instead of three small ones. All of it offering as much light as the Aurora’s virtual world had, it’s nearly blinding… and Kenmore’s healed so he can shoot her for insubordination later when this is all over and before they reach Atlantis, then she can heal from that too and they’ll all go home happy.

 

 

The others left behind look at each other then at the remaining two entryways. Again, no choice. Pick. Daniel walks down the one right behind him, the middle one. After five feet, its door opens at his presence. He turns to face Rodney, Teyla, and Ronon, he gestures at the doorway.

“Ladies first,” he offers with a slight tilt of his head.

The trio exchange looks again, but Teyla walks up to Daniel and steps through into the Ancient hallway beyond, feeling a slight sense of trepidation at it. Ever since the discovery of what the Ancients had done to her people, it has become trying for her to step into Ancient locations other than Atlantis. Daniel falls in a step behind her and the pair keep going straight down the empty hallway, it has no wall blocking off their entrance and forcing them to immediately go to the right as Sheppard and Kenmore’s had. Their entryway door closes behind them. Ronon and Rodney look at each other again. Oh great more duo time together, yea. They look at the remaining door.

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Eleven

Chapter Eleven

Sheppard and Ronon, and Kenmore, stand guard throughout the night; the men because it was their turn and the Lieutenant because she was still sore from Rodney’s beating and couldn’t find a comfortable position to sleep in to save her life so she thought she might as well stay up and save everyone else’s.

As before, with the first piercings of dawn light, the winged beasts start returning to the mountaintop. They aren’t loud as in snarling or roaring or perhaps grumbling, it’s their wings that make the sound. The long steady flapping from such large wings working to keep such a heavy load up in the air is what first stirs Teyla and Daniel to waken. Those that’re already awake stay still and watch, making sure to measure their breathing and trying not to blink too much in case the Fomorian creatures have eagle-eyed vision.

After another of the creatures returns, disappearing into some unseen hole on the mountain’s front side, the five awake SGC personnel wait again… watch again… listen again. No more flyers follow. Sheppard gives it a ten-count before he figures that that means that was the last one. He gets up and pours some water from his canteen on the long dead remains of their campfire to make sure they don’t start a forest fire. With their luck, that would be a real possibility if he didn’t take care of it now. With his movements, Ronon, Kenmore, Daniel, and Teyla start moving too. Teyla wakes Rodney as the others begin to break up camp.

*                      *                      *

His eyes look up and it’s high noon. Literally. The sun is high in the sky as they march up the semi-ragged, semi-sheer mountainside. There are faces of the side that are so completely flat that not even their fingernails can find purchase on it and then there are faces that are so ragged that every part of their bodies could get a hold on the rock if they wanted to. Thankfully there’s the slimmest of paths, forcing them to go single file once more and making it easier to hide their numbers in case the Fomorians scout this side of the mountain. Doesn’t look like it, but at least it’s still a path. Better than what their travel options where at times, mountain climbing with McKay complaining about the chances of running into alien scorpions hiding in the gaps in between the stones. Which John, already familiar with mountain climbing as an old hobby of his back on Earth, had already been worried about, but he’d also figured that no scorpion he knew on Earth would dare live anywhere near those flyers. Prey, no matter how small, didn’t usually take up residence so close to predators of any size.

The large formidable trees of the forest have become scraggly, thin, practically bare, stunted things. Teyla looks up at the rest of the mountain they have yet to traverse and sees that there are no trees at all in the distance of a few dozen feet above them. Nevertheless John keeps pushing their group on towards the top. They have still got a long way to go despite how far they have already come. It had not been far from their encampment when the encountered the abrupt incline of the mountain’s base. When they had looked up, it again seemed as though they were looking at a goal that distance would prevent them from achieving. However Daniel quickly found a way up, a natural trail created by the treelines zigzagging up the mountain. The used the roots as a walkway until the stone itself provided them with one about a third of the way up. Now they are halfway with half the day already gone and half the impressive edifice above them. As it had before, reaching the mountain’s top seems to be an impossible distance to reach. Teyla goes back to watching her step.

John keeps his head down though, never looking up at the sight in the first place. No use in making himself feel like they’ve got no hope or that this is never going to end. That they’ll never finish it. That it’ll all come to nothing. See, even when he doesn’t look at what there is to see above their heads, it still gets him to think those things. John shakes it off by refocusing on the stone in front of his black boots. When the village Elders had said ebony, he had thought of that deep dark black color that the wood polished nicely into. Gleaming black piano keys. But this stuff… he’s looking, but he isn’t seeing any black anywhere. None whatsoever. It looks to him more like granite. Gunship gray and white with a vein of paler gray running through it sort of granite. He isn’t sure when or where the obsidian is going to come in, but it sure isn’t on the outside. Come to think of it, Boudica had mentioned something about the interior’s obsidian echoing like crazy with weapons’ fire any louder than knives. He has no problem admitting to himself that he’s curious about seeing that. No kidding, he really wants to. He’d never heard before about a palace whose exterior was made out of obsidian. He imagined the thing reflecting sunlight like a nature-made lighthouse beacon. Blinding. But from what he’s seeing so far, this place is definitely no reflector. It probably couldn’t even blind a mouse. Lucky for the mouse. He keeps climbing, leading his mission group higher and higher.

*                      *                      *

They finally reach the mountaintop… well, close to it. The actual top is still a good solid five miles above them, bare and snowless. They’re not sure why that strikes a few of them as a bad sign, but it just does. There’s a flat top jut of stone sticking out of the mountainside. It looks to be more than wide enough for the group to stand up and move around on.

Lieutenant Kenmore climbs up on it first. The wind blatantly whipping around the mountain at this height since the altitude choked the trees to death long ago down below them. The strong gusts take Kenmore’s hair long, naturally wavy hair and lifts it up around her head like licks of flames wriggling up from the core of a fire as she stands on the outcrop, bending over to lend a hand down to Doctor Jackson. Sheppard looks up to know if he’s going to have to render the Doc any assistance from underneath and sees that Kenmore isn’t looking down at her friend, she’s looking in the direction of the village. It dawns on him then that they’re finally at the side of the mountain, not it’s back anymore, and that means that the village should be back in their sight again. It also strikes him that the dying golden glow of the sun silhouettes her nicely… like, somehow, she belongs here… like some part of her has been here all along. The thought crossing his mind for the first time: perhaps she isn’t getting played here, perhaps she’s genuinely needed here. Maybe John hasn’t made the wrong call in following her this time. A part of him eases, the first time this entire mission, into a sentiment he’s familiar with; that they’re on the right track.

Daniel gets up onto the jut beside his friend then turns and starts helping others up along with her. Sheppard takes Kenmore’s blindly offering hand, Teyla takes Daniel’s. As soon as John help’s Daniel help Teyla up, holding her stable by providing his hand underneath her nearer bicep, and John himself gets his feet up on the landing too, Kenmore moves off to the jut’s cliff-like edge. Teyla Emmagan turns at Daniel Jackson’s side and helps Ronon up as Doctor Jackson helps Rodney while Sheppard goes to stand by Kenmore’s side. The two of them look out towards the village.

Smoke columns are coming up from various places all over it. Fires. There’s a particularly huge column coming up from slightly behind a large building, one of the important ones, that’s been partially demolished by something clipping it as it had come crashing down to the ground. They highly doubted one of the flyers would smoke after being brought down so there was no need to guess what had crashed so badly. Lorne’s jumper. All either of them can do from this distance and after the fact is to hope that the Major had gotten out alive. Both of them still refuse to go to their radios to make sure Lorne had survived. They still know they can’t chance it, now it’s Sheppard’s team, the Lieutenant, and Doctor Jackson that are too close to the Fomorians for it to be a safe thing to do… what a crap thing.

Their eyes keep searching for any other details. Even from this distance they can see that several other buildings’ roofs have been literally ripped off, obviously by the animals. Torn and most likely chucked as another weapon. The village itself looks quiet. Dead down there. A ghost town. Not good. After the first night’s attack that they had survived, many of the unscathed villagers had gone about life as usual when the day had come and they’d continued to do so well into the evening before the second attack. But there’s none of that now. Nope, ‘their’ side had not fared well at all and that’s another bad sign. ‘Right track’ goes right the hell out of his mind and again Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard wonders if he’s made the wrong choice, not his first in this galaxy. Was he just wanting the Lieutenant to be right? Was he just hoping he felt protective of her because he wanted someone to protect him from—Suddenly a raven, large as any eagle and black as any starless night John’d ever seen, passes into their eye lines. The eerie thing is that it’s moving incredibly slowly. Riding the strong wind current like water slipping over the surface of glass; the thing doesn’t even look ruffled, no flitting of wingtips. For a moment John thinks he’s hallucinating. He blinks a few times before he settles on leaving his eyes open. Nope, the bird is really flying in front of them that slow and that easily. It’s surreal.

Then the giant avian turns its sleek black head and locks its black beady eyes with Kenmore’s. Her heavy breathing suddenly shallows to the point where Sheppard thinks she’s holding her breath. The bird and Kenmore keep their eyes locked as the raven continues its slow glide all the way around the perimeter of the jut edge then it disappears around the mountain’s other side. After the bird is gone, the Lieutenant keeps staring after it. Waiting to see if the raven’s going to return. Sheppard does too for a moment then looks at the back of Kenmore’s head then back at where the raven had disappeared then back at Kenmore’s head again. Already, by her body posture alone, he knows something’s up.

“What is it,” he asks. God, he’s always going to have to do this with her, isn’t he? What’re you thinking? What’re you thinking? Well, until he learns an unspoken shorthand with her like he’s got with Ronon and Teyla. But he was really hoping she wouldn’t be around long enough for him to have to do that with her.

Kenmore’s brows furrow at the spot where the raven disappeared. She tilts her head, narrows her eyes. Thinking… and studying.

“I was born under the sign of the Raven. In two cultures,” she tells him.

“So what does that mean,” he steps closer to her, “Is it some sort of a sign?” One in a long list of other ones.

“Not necessarily a good one,” Oh great, but John refrains from saying it; the Lieutenant keeps talking, “In Celtic mythology, the Raven was the sign of the War Goddess. In Native American mythology, the Raven is the trickster and forced Seagull to give the world the sun, bringing about life on the world and light into the darkness.”

“How is this going to go for us then?”

Kenmore looks back at him, “I’m not sure,” she shakes her head. Her brows furrowed in confusion.

She’s a brat, but at least she’s an honest brat. Maybe getting her butt kicked by Rodney McKay Klingon Warrior last night schooled her in manners a little. John’s seriously doubting that, but a guy can always hope.

She returns to looking back at the spot where the raven had disappeared behind the mountain, continuing to analyze it while the rest of their party finally steps over to see what’s become of the village.

“My God,” Rodney breathes, “There’s no one down there.” He sounds genuinely fearful, after all his girlfriend was down there. He hopes Jennifer made it back to the gate and got out of there before the fighting broke out. God, please tell me Jennifer didn’t play hero, he starts begging a deity he’s never really talked to before.

Ronon gestures off-handedly, “The jumper went down. Hard.” His mind and black eyes taking the tactical view.

“Can we not radio them now,” Teyla asks, a certain desperation creeping into the furrows of her delicate face; these people, U’dana, reminds her so much of her own people, her own loved ones and she cannot bear the thoughts threatening her mind, “There are no Fomorians around. We cannot possibly reveal ourselves as well as distract them from protecting themselves now.”

“No,” Daniel tells her firmly as he too watches their outlook, “There may not be any Fomorians down there, but now we’re up here and so are they. Even if we did radio down to them, it wouldn’t be safe for them to radio back to us. Besides, we’re out of radio range,” Daniel looks no less happy with the situation than anyone else here and he’s no less experienced with the fact that this is how it has to be.

Teyla nods, her eyes lowering from the archeologist’s face. Reluctance is never pretty. Her somber eyes return to the heavily damaged village and she and the group continue to eye it for signs of any further information it can give them whether they like to have the intelligence or not.

Lieutenant Kenmore moves towards the far edge of the jut, towards the same spot that the raven had gone behind. She comes right up to the blunt edge and looks over. She doesn’t see anything. Can’t see anything that doesn’t look like it’s dozens of feet below her. An immobilizing if not fatal drop below her. Crazy. Insane. She hesitates a moment. Then looks straight ahead of herself. Takes a deep breath. And steps off the edge…

…directly onto another smaller ledge. Way smaller. It’s scarcely large enough for one of her boots to barely fit. Ursula quickly swings her body towards the mountainside, grabbing onto the rock face as well as she possibly can. The front of her body slams against the dusky gray stone. Her heart pounds in her ears, rushing at how more than half of her body could have taken her off the mountain side as quickly as she could blink. But she’s still here. At least she’s still alive. That’s lucky, really lucky. Ursula Kenmore eases her face away from the stone a little, enough to look down at her feet.

The ledge’d been hidden from common view. Camouflaged by natural geological formation and the elements somehow. It reminds her of the Leap of Faith test in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. One of her favorite movies, one of her favorite scenes, and terrifying as hell to actually go through herself in real life. What sadistic crack were George Lucas and Steven Spielberg on when they came up with that stunt? Jesus Christ. Sweet Mary, Mother, and Joseph. She pants as she realizes how long the fall would have been for her again, it’s easy to be so terrified considering how directly behind her boot heel is said sheer drop. She can’t help but thank God again that let alone is Last Crusade one of her favorite movies, along with Raiders of the Lost Ark, but it was also one of her mother’s, grandmother’s, and aunt’s catch-alls. The film was even one of her grandmother’s Christmas traditions to watch it on Christmas morning while the Christmas turkey and the rest of the massive dinner was being prepped. Ursula’d always thought that that was a little weird but whatever floats your boat and now it’s saved her life. Funny how things work out that way.

She turns her head and looks yet again at the spot where the raven had gone behind the mountain. Ursula eyes it like a goal. Like the top of the rope net up the wooden tower in Basic. Back then, well, and still, heights scare the crap out of her. Each and every time she faces them because her Mom taught her a long time ago not to let anything get in her way, even herself. She took a deep breath to focus herself and swallow down the gut-gripping fear that made her tear up and climbed the 40-foot cargo net of Victory Tower. Ursula takes a deep breath, fear but no tears, and starts carefully working towards her goal. Just like she had that day back in Basic.

Sheppard looks away from the rest of the group and back over to see if Kenmore’s figured anything out about the raven yet… and sees only about half of her body sticking up from the jut’s far ledge. What the—? She starts moving. Going somewhere. Following the raven. John goes over to the side of the edge she’d been near when he’d first looked away from her and peers over it. It’s tricky, he has to track it from where her boots are back to him, but he spots the narrow ledge she’s on. He sits down on the landing’s edge and gentle climbs down onto the narrow track of stone. He angles his body to face the mountain side, gets some satisfactory handholds like he did when he free soloed back on Earth, and begins following Kenmore.

Drawing the archeologist’s attention by moving away from the main part of the group in the first place, Daniel takes after Sheppard. Originally he’d looked to the Colonel for thoughts or orders on what to do next, but apparently something different was going on without him knowing about it beforehand. He watches Sheppard climb out onto an apparent out-of-sight ledge right behind Ursula. Daniel knows what to do next. He follows the Lieutenant Colonel out onto the ledge too.

Rodney turns to say something to Sheppard… and notices that John isn’t there anymore. He looks around for hi—Rodney reaches over and taps Teyla on the arm. She looks up at him, catches his expression, then averts her direction over to where Rodney is looking. Ronon does too. The three stare at the other three.

“Where are you going,” Rodney asks.

“We’re following a raven,” Sheppard answers like he’s following the ordinary directions of a road sign.

Under the cover of her long hair, Kenmore sneaks a look back at Sheppard and offers him a trying-to-be-subdued-but-still-blatantly-mischievous smile. Sheppard takes advantage of the fact that he’s facing her and offers his own roguish smile back. Apparently there’s also common ground to be had between them on enjoying teasing McKay, or at the very least of messing with the puffed up genius scientist’s mind. The Lieutenant goes back to looking where the raven had gone and so does the Colonel.

The line keeps moving as Teyla joins behind Daniel after she and her friends had exchanged looks. Frankly they’ve done weirder things in this galaxy than following a large black bird’s lead.

The group keeps following the narrower ledge as it traces around the mountainside. They hazard occasional glances down and realize that the Fomorian path down the mountain is close to them. It’s still about a mile below them, but that’s a lot closer than any of their comforts like. And it’s coming up to meet them quicker and quicker the farther along the ledge they go. Way too close for comfort.

Then Kenmore sees it. There’s a sliver of shadow about ten feet ahead of her and still a good half-mile above the Fomorian path’s apparent entrance into the mountain down below their ledge. It’s a distinct possibility that this could be where the winged beasts go, but she tries to put that out of her mind with her quick estimation of how tall the sliver appears to be. The Flyers would have to compact themselves a good bit to accommodate the height and she’s never seen a predator as establishedly dominant as the Flyers have to live somewhere uncomfortable. They could simply pick wherever they want to to kick down for a nest. Kenmore moves closer. The sliver turns out to be an indicator of an entrance the size of a single human being only a couple of inches taller than Specialist Dex with a little arm room on either side. Comfortable, cozy, not exactly battle-ready, and definitely not the entrance to the Flyers’ nest. There also seems to be another flattop jut of stone right in front of the small mountain entrance that looks like it’s big enough to hold the group again. But the fit would be with barely any room between them this time. They’ll have to cram together on it. But still…

“I’ve got an entrance here,” Lieutenant Kenmore calls back to the others, “Kinda tight.”

“Oh great,” McKay returns.

Carefully Kenmore steps onto the smaller landing and peers in at the entrance. It’s black inside the tunnel?—yeah, she thinks it’s a tunnel; seems like it at least. The light from outside doesn’t stretch very far in, only about two feet at most. The floor itself is loose dirt, not stone. Sheppard steps up onto the jut behind her and peers in too, he’s not sure he likes the dirt floor. Boudica had mentioned echoing and dirt absorbs sound which means a part of their initial intel is off. He’s not sure this is right. Daniel works his way onto the landing too. Already it’s starting to get crowded, but that doesn’t last more than a second or two as Daniel squeezes his way past Ursula and steps into the tunnel proper. Freeing up his spot on the jut to give the rest of their group some extra room on it. His curious archeologist’s hand instantly reaches out and touches one of the tunnel’s walls, tracing something his eyes caught the minimal light of. He feels for a moment then goes to the other side of the tunnel and traces something else. His eyes scan further on. It’s harder to tell, but his archeologist’s eyes can spot the fine details between the dark and the even darker shadows.

“There are symbols here,” he tells them, his curiosity and confusion peaked, “Dozens of them.”

“Any torches,” Sheppard asks, “Or signs that there should be torches?”

“No,” Sheppard looks back at Rodney and sees that the scientist has broken out his lifesigns detector, “And this mountain or at least this entrance to it is shielded. Kenmore’s signature is glitchy, and yes, that is the term I’m going to use,” McKay quickly adds before John can make his own condescending comment, “and Daniel doesn’t even show up. This thing has been completely useless this entire mission,” he complains before he puts the Ancient device back in its usual pocket on his tactical vest.

They really haven’t used it as much as they thought they were going to for fear of the light of its display attracting either the Fomorians or their winged friends’ attentions despite their planning against such matters. Kenmore’s encounter with a flyer on the tree branch had pretty much spooked all of them a lot more than any of them are willing to admit to either each other or themselves, but they’re willing to admit it when comes to any vote about using the bright device. Always ‘nay’. And now the mountain is shielded which pretty much guarantees not using it in the immediate future.

Sheppard’s gaze travels past Rodney and goes out at its view of the outer right edge of the ghost town village. He feels a sudden slight breeze funnel through into the tunnel entrance, it’s getting colder outside and darker. U’dana had been right about the trip taking up most of this day as well as yesterday. The sun is starting to set again, all this way and they’ve basically gotten to the start of their new mission on this planet. The Fomorians and their flyers will be launching soon for another attack. Most likely to finish off the village. Well, what’s left of it at least. John’s not sure the village has anything left to repel with, doesn’t look like they do. He looks back at the rest of the tunnel ahead of him with Kenmore a step ahead of him and Jackson a few more ahead of her, checking the walls with a flashlight. John can see the multitude of grooves in the rock face, but the image at the forefront of his mind is the village…

“The faster we get through with this, the faster we can go back and help them,” he announces.

Everyone surveys the tunnel. Agreed.

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Ten

Chapter Ten

Darkness covers the ground, making their path and footsteps hard to see, but the sky is still light with the silvery purples, blushing coral pinks, and fresh blood reds of a setting sun. However that beauty also means that pretty soon what little they can barely see will be absolutely gone… it also means that the Fomorians’ and their winged friends’ attack will begin soon. The team had found the path the Fomorians apparently take down the mountainside, a wide road like one used for mountain logging back on Earth, a couple of hours ago. It was Daniel who’d stumbled upon the packed dirt and rock road wide enough for two logging trucks first. None of them had particularly liked the idea of taking the obvious road, but it was also the unanimous consensus that it would save them considerable time. Both Rodney and Kenmore had tripped up a few times on jutting parts of rock embedded in the solid ground, but the group had progressed far up the mountain despite the stumbles and having to check to make sure that neither of them had hurt themselves… they just haven’t gotten as far as any of them would have liked by now. U’dana’s estimating the distance in terms of time had been no joke and it has also not been anywhere near accurate. It’s a long way that never seems to get any shorter. They’re on the mountain side and the top of the thing still looks so unreachably far away.

This time it’s Teyla’s boot toe that stubs into a rock. It makes her step ungracefully and awkward, but she doesn’t come at all close to falling. But… everyone knows what’s wrong with this picture. Slowly, as a unit, they all slow to a stop and the looks start traveling up and down their line from one person to the other. The sentiment the same:  this is not going to work.

Their voices come out quietly just in case there are some Fomorian scouts around, traveling early to make a good report. They doubt that that’s likely given how far they’ve come using the Fomorian road and given the Fomorians’ penchant for battle frenzy. If there were scouts out, they would have attacked them on sight for sure by now. It’s also apparent that the Fomor don’t think they need scouts and seeing as how it was usually the villagers that fought with them, there was a good chance that the villagers had never crossed into the territory of the Black Mountain before as part of a preemptive strike. Would never risk a move that could possibly be considered a declaration of war… or brainless suicide. And even when villagers have come up here, they barely managed to make back to the village in time before they died according to Boudica.

“Any ideas,” McKay asks quietly.

Teyla takes another glance up at the sky, “They will be coming soon,” she warns.

Kenmore keeps looking around at the environment around them. Especially up at the higher parts of the thick, tall-growing trees.

“Well, I think I’ve got an idea about that,” she says.

*                      *                      *

The team, Kenmore, and Daniel spread their line out across the trunks and substantial branches of three large evergreen trees. They face the trunks and hold on to them while trying to walk across the branches. It’s like an SGC version of the Flying Wallendas. They keep their eyes on the branches under and ahead of their feet as best they can, the darkness has started creeping upwards from the ground to meet their height. The rest of the mountain is still ahead of them and occasionally they, in their own individual times, chance a look back at the village. The place is lit up with enough torches to look like a highly populated city with a great nightlife. How much of a bad sign could that be? How easy a target? Teyla looks up ahead at the mountain again and suddenly stops.

“They are coming,” she hisses the alert.

The group immediately halts and looks up at the mountaintop too. The torches are appearing there again. One by one. Starting to snake down the main road. Coming for the village. Coming towards them.

“You know what to do,” Sheppard quietly orders. They had been waiting for this.

Not going any further, the group members sit down on the branches. Backs to the tree trunks, waiting, and watching the oncoming attackers silently from about thirty feet above the road’s ground.

“How did you figure out to do this,” Rodney ‘whispers’ in the meantime. He’s never been good at silent stealthy covert ops stuff like this. Still isn’t, but he’s trying to get better.

“It’s how I assassinated Shiana. Sat in the trees and picked her off.”

There’s no comfort in that confession.

“You mean you expect us to pick off some of these guys and their winged buddies?!”

Kenmore looks over at McKay. Seriously Doctor Scream Like A Little Girl And Shoot Like Crap…  “No. We just shut up and wait here until they pass.” My God, ya’ don’t be stupid by hiding here then revealing your location by mowing them down in the heart of their ranks. Really?! These guys don’t have to climb trees. They’re big enough they could just knock the suckers down. The advantage of being up here would be totally lost and render them as the best visual aid for the phrase ‘Sitting ducks’.

Rodney looks like he’s going to argue this some more, along with Ronon, but Ronon mostly just for fun, when there’s rustling. All the reaction time anyone had was for Kenmore to press herself back as flush with the tree trunk and stop breathing as quickly as she possibly could before the winged Fomorian beast crashes through the forest. Latching onto the rest of the branch Kenmore’s on. It bears down on her.

Everyone’s eyes widen. The thing sniffs and snarls inches away from Kenmore’s exposed jugular. It reminds John of Sigourney Weaver in her encounter with one of the Aliens. Only far less macabrely sexy and a helluvalot more scary. Not to mention that he isn’t watching it on a screen, he’s up close and personal. Kenmore’s too terrified to even breathe, she blinks instead. The animal reacts. Lunging at movement. Drawn to it. But not striking at it yet. They realize that the Flyers are neither deaf nor are they blind. Kenmore slams her eyes shut. The creature doesn’t lunge. It extends its long purplish-black tongue towards the Lieutenant’s throat. It’s perfectly long enough to wrap around her throat like a python choking a calf with its coiling body…

Before it can taste or eat or suffocate and then eat her, another sudden rustling further beyond their group ruffles a scraggily treetop. Immediately drawing the creature’s attention. It roars then abruptly bolts after the rustling. Apparently deeming it better prey. After a ten count of hearing the hunting animal crash and barrel its way through the trees in pursuit of whatever had had the stupid misfortune to move near it, Kenmore opens her eyes again. She lets out a slow, silent, rattled breath. The others watch her try to hold back her panting when the Fomorians show up.

Marching in a roaring, battle-frothed parade filling up the entire road beneath them. No one moves. Breathing so shallowly it’s like they’re not breathing at all. Learning from Kenmore and McKay’s mistake and fearing attracting any further winged attention. Praying the bright Fomorian torchlight won’t reveal their positions.

 

 

Hours pass. Still sitting up in the trees in the exact same spots with the middle of the Fomorian parade continuing to pass below them, the group watches as the front line approaches the base of the village of Uisneach’s hill’s crest. The SGC team watches the first handful of Fomorian lines start their charge up the steep embankment… and run face, and in some cases head, first into an Ancient forcefield. They fall back. Repelled. Confused by being thrown back by what looks like empty air, they try to charge again… and are repelled again. The Fomor get angrier. No matter the confusion or the pain, the Fomorians charge up to the forcefield and begin using each other as links in a living chain. Crawling up. Roaring even louder from the voltage surging through every part of their bodies. It’s only a couple of minutes before the chain reaches the top of the large ellipsis-shaped forcefield.

Ursula chances it. He’s close enough to her, it might not draw any attention.

“It was a good idea to bring in a jumper,” she whispers to Sheppard on her left.

Rustling in the upper reaches of the trees nearby silences any reply he was going to make, but Sheppard takes the chance and makes a small nod of acknowledgement that he knows Kenmore can see. They continue to watch.

The Fomorian chain makes it halfway over the top of the cloaked jumper and plenty are now pouring into the village around the edges of the jumper’s forcefield’s extents. Lorne uncloaks the jumper, but doesn’t lower its forcefield. He raises the little ship off the ground. Taking most of the living chain with it. With the ‘dam’ removed, the rest of the Fomorian lines flashflood into the village. Lorne takes the jumper up to near fatal heights then tilts the craft sideways. Dropping the links of the living chain on top of their invading brothers. Some of the oncoming Fomorians trample their fallen links to death. Others rip the fallen apart with their bare hands in their battle frenzied bloodlust.

Teyla’s eyes widen. Horrified by what she’s seeing. “They are worse than the Bola Kai,” she whispers.

“Worser,” Kenmore whispers back.

“You read that mission report,” Sheppard asks, Kenmore’s penchant for reading the reports out of order still dumbfounding him. How can anyone not go in order? How can someone just skip around? It’s not like mission reports are stories or episodes of a television series. You can’t just skip around and guess you’ve got the gist of what’s going on or what’s happened. Gees.

Kenmore’s eyes shift to him and her expression quirks, “What mission report?”

Sheppard takes the gamble and looks at her. His own expression equally as quirked. What the hell is wrong with you?

Suddenly the winged animals come into play with piercing roars and shrieks. Their eyes return to the village.

 

 

After the long procession of Fomorian onslaught finally passes them by and the flying animals become entirely absorbed by Lorne in the puddle jumper trying to draw them away from the village, the group takes the opportunity to abandon the Fomorian road and make their own way using their lifesigns detectors hidden inside their vests. All it takes is activating all the detectors for them to realize that all of them using the bright equipment is a dumb idea. It’s a unanimous vote to let McKay keep his detector lit and guide the way. One hidden light is better for safety’s sake than six lights.

Rodney maneuvers them towards the edifice’s back, deciding to try coming up to the mountain’s top that way and praying there’s some sort of back door that the Fomorians either don’t care about or don’t even know is there. He has no idea when the last of the village’s people thought it was a good idea to come up here only to return to the village to die, but he hoped it’d been awhile and he hoped that the villager who was stupid enough to come up here would also be stupid enough to walk through the front door and help keep the Fomorians from away from any other entrance. But that’s looking like those are questions that are going to have to be answered tomorrow. Their day is getting done. The lack of sleep the previous night, the exertion of fighting constantly throughout it, and the effort of tending to wounded throughout the day has drained them. Even Ronon and Teyla are starting to feel the drag in having to lift their feet when they take steps. The group has to rest.

Taking the longshot that the winged animals don’t nest or whatever they do on this side of the mountain and hedging their bets even further on the density of the forest canopy, Sheppard makes the command decision to go ahead and okay a campfire. A small one though, like with the light of more than lifesigns detector, there’s no need to draw too much attention to themselves. In reality, he’d rather not make a fire at all but there’s a sharp chill in the night air and it feels like it’s brewing itself to get a lot cooler as the night progresses. Glo-sticks or nothing just isn’t going to cut it with the clothes their wearing, they’re too high up to survive a cold night without a heat source. Sheppard and Ronon along with Daniel and Kenmore pull over some thick downed logs to use as benches as Rodney and Teyla start the fire. When it’s up and going, they sit. Ronon and McKay on one log, Teyla and Sheppard on the next, and Kenmore and Daniel on the third. They’re all silent, staring at the fire, pitiful by comparison to their overwhelming number assembled to one side of it. They try to process their uncomfortable feelings about leaving a battle while it’s going so bad for ‘their’ side… and not even being involved in said battle in the first place, it rankles them.

“We could try radioing them,” Rodney offers to the silence.

“We can’t chance the Fomorians or their flyers tracking where we are,” Sheppard denies.

More silence.

“And do you really want any one of our people stopping what they’re doing just to answer their radio,” Kenmore adds.

“Oh shut up Miss Minshara,” Rodney snaps.

Kenmore as well as the others look at him. Ronon’s smiling, looking so damn proud to be sitting next to Rodney McKay for once, let alone that everyone knows the obnoxious scientist is his friend. Kenmore works her tongue in her mouth, eyeing Rodney for a moment, then she gets up and crosses over to a birch-like tree. She looks it over. Finds two suitable looking branches. Then draws her diving knife from the side of her tactical belt and hacks them off. As she walks back over to the group, she uses her knife to trim both branches into fit recognizable condition. She stops right in front of McKay. Ronon glares at her, the muscles in his body, his shoulders tensing. He’s preparing to stand but before Sheppard can try to throw a coughing fit to distract him from doing so, the Lieutenant extends one of the trimmed limbs out to McKay.

“Care to put your money where your mouth is, Spock?”

McKay looks up at her cockily smirking down at him… and takes the damn arced limb with two extra equally parallel arcing prongs near it’s tips from her.

Kenmore replaces her knife in its scabbard as McKay stands up from the log.

“McKay,” Ronon tries to warn, but Rodney shrugs him off.

“I’ve got this.”

Ronon doubts that. He’s tried to train Rodney a few times over the years and each and every time was a thoroughly qualified disaster. The scientist may have as Teyla would put it a ‘warrior’s spirit’ but the man just isn’t a fighter. A computer guy, sure. What Ronon, Sheppard, and Teyla are, nope. Not at all. Although he’d never admit it out loud, the Lieutenant had dropped Ronon easier than it should have been possible for her to. Rodney isn’t going to stand a chance against her, she can even best Sheppard for Ancestor’s sake.

McKay takes up position opposite Kenmore, leaving about ten feet of space between them. The Satedan shoots Sheppard and Teyla a look and gets the same one back, don’t hesitate to intervene when the Lieutenant starts kicking McKay’s ass. Their eyes return to watching the showdown and their bodies prepping to intervene at a moment’s notice.

Kenmore spins her own arcing and pronged tree limb in her hands, confidently and skillfully. It reminds Sheppard of her with a pair of bantos rods. Yeah, they’re going to be picking McKay’s ass up off the ground in about two seconds, if that. He kind of wishes Rodney would just lay on the ground now like some sort of Redshirt with the good enough foresight to lay down first and maybe the monster or whatever it was will just pass him by going after some other dumbass who hadn’t the good sense to throw the towel in right from the start.

Kenmore turns around to face the astrophysicist. He’s still glaring at her as he shifts the tree limb into position in his hands. No flare, unlike the Lieutenant. No fumbling, oddly like the Lieutenant. Kenmore’s still smirking as she shifts her own tree limb into position in her hands. They eye each other.

Daniel sighs. “Oh come on you two.”

They start circling each other.

Daniel sighs again. “Please,” he tries. This is ridiculous.

For once Sheppard gets to see Kenmore make the first move. Direct and confrontational, the exact opposite of how she’d been with him. A thrust with the point of one end of her tree limb. Somehow, no one’s sure how, Rodney dodges it easily, gracefully in fact, while successfully blocking the blow then using a wrist flick to bounce the end of Kenmore’s tree limb back in her face, almost making her hit herself in the nose with it.

There’s a moment of shock throughout the group. What the hell did they just see?! Kenmore eyes the arrogant astrophysicist suspiciously. Then backs up from him.

They start circling each other again. Scrutinizing each other just like the group is scrutinizing them. Kenmore tries another attack, a swing to Rodney’s right thigh. Without even turning and keeping his eyes locked on hers, he blocks it blindly with a deft slip of his tree limb’s edge to defend his endangered side. She squints at him. Ronon does too, analyzing Rodney’s fighting pattern while simultaneously dumbfounded at the fact that, yes, Rodney McKay does have a fighting pattern. An actual legitimate fighting pattern. Where has he been hiding it all this time?

Kenmore retreats a few steps again… then quickly lunges full force at Rodney. A decisive strike meant for his head. Rodney finally shifts from his position. He easily swats her branch end aside like he’s casually swatting away a fly. Then does a couple of tight spins, getting in close to the off balanced Lieutenant. Starts a third spin with a stiff powerful slam of half of the back of his branch to the middle of her back and sends her staggering forward a couple of steps. Rodney finishes his spin by coming around to her other side, shifting his tree limb in his hands, swinging it up, and cracking it down across the top of Kenmore’s back. Dropping the bent over Lieutenant down on the ground over her knees in an unceremonious pile. Like a sack of potatoes. Rodney holds his ending position for a few resting heartbeats then leisurely backs up, letting Kenmore get her time and bearing to get back to her feet to try this again. Kenmore’s face is contorted and her mouth’s open but nothing’s coming out as she curls her head down onto the ground, she’s in pain. This is going to take awhile to recover from, she can feel it.

Everyone else’s jaws are dropped. Before their thought had been ‘what the hell did they just see’, now it’s simply ‘What the—?!

Eventually Kenmore gets up… she shakes herself off… regrips her tree branch. Her breathing is labored and she’s shifting her weight constantly from foot to foot exactly like Sheppard had when she whooped him with those Athosian sticks. She isn’t caring about eyeing the Doc anymore. Her mind is more on the fact that she just got dropped by him. How could that possibly happen? What is going on? Sure the battle last night had been rattling. Sure tending to the injured during the day seemed to never end. As for watching some of her buddies take on that battle all over again and knowing that she isn’t over there to help, that, that is numbing. Enraging. But it shouldn’t be enough for Doctor McKay to get the drop on her like that that easily. It just shouldn’t. Nothing she’s ever been through short of her husband dying has ever gotten to her enough for an enemy combatant to take advantage of her. Damn.

She starts circling again and Rodney starts doing the same, still keeping his blue eyes keenly and tranquilly on her. That’s disconcerting but Kenmore finally meets his eyes. She’s cagier this time. She knows to be. They keep circling each other for awhile. And at last the sight starts reminding John more of the skillful fighter with a pair of bantos rods that he had gone up against and dropped his ass. However also like how he’d been during that sparring match, she does eventually make another play at McKay. Kenmore makes a low swinging uppercut at his legs. Without hesitation Rodney sidesteps, taps her branch with his to transfer her momentum to him, does a large spin, and slaps the end of his branch against the back of one of her knees. Staggering her again. He takes advantage of the opportunity, reverses his spin, and slams the other branch end into her gut. Doubling her over. Then he pivots, shifts his branch in his hand to bring its flat side to bear, brings the weapon up, and snaps it down. Slapping the side of Kenmore’s face down with enough strength and momentum transference to send her spinning to the ground.

The Lieutenant lands hard on her back. There’s half a heartbeat of frozen time before she curls up with a more anguished expression crinkling her face and her mouth forming a far more grandiose silent ‘Ow’ of pain and rolls over onto her side into the fetal position. Sheppard, Teyla, and Ronon remember what she’d done to Ronon… well, somewhat of what she’d done to Ronon. Somehow neither of them figures that ‘manhood’ is playing any part in her pain. Severely deflated ego’s a sure bet though.

She finally groans, “You’re a Dahar Master, aren’t you?”

Rodney doesn’t have to respond, his smile says it all. She catches it through her squinting eyes.

“Aw crap,” she closes her eyes and tries to struggle to pick herself up off the ground, wobbling back and forth trying to shake off the pain. Eventually she does move her arms from wrapping around her waist and puts her palms flat on the dirt. She slowly rolls over onto them. It takes her a few tries before she manages to push herself up and pulls her knees under her to get herself on all fours. Humbling doesn’t even begin to cover it. It’s another pair or two of heavy breathing moments before she starts moving one of her legs to press against her belly and pushes herself up onto her feet.

Once up, she staggers back to start the circling again… but she can’t really make it. She has to stop herself and spend time doubled over waiting for her body to finish recovering. Part of a warehouse wall had crumbled down on her, killing her for two hours, and this, this is what’s giving her body a hard time to bounce back from. Oh God, if Teal’c or Cam hear about this…

Rodney nods. Still smiling. “Know where you went wrong?” He asks, amusement in his voice.

“You mean other than pickin’ a fight with you,” she starts nodding, “Yeah, I dropped my left flank by point zero three centimeters.”

Sheppard’s about to say ‘How the hell can you possibly know that precise a measurement’—

“Actually it was point zero three two five centimeters. And that was enough of an opening for me to take advantage of. More than ample. You should never let your flank drop by anything, anything more than point zero three. Do you understand me?”

Kenmore nods. Still winded, still doubled-over and using her bat’leth-shaped branch as a cane to support her recuperating resting.

When she finally has enough of her breath back in her to speak again, “Could you teach me,” she asks.

Rodney considers it…

“Yes.”

He walks back over to his and Ronon’s log, drops his bat’leth-shaped branch down beside it, and retakes his seat. The Lieutenant takes a couple more minutes hard, laborious breathing before she staggers back to her and Daniel’s log. She abandons her branch beside it too—just lets the thing fall out of her hand like gravity wanted it to—and practically collapses onto her spot beside Daniel. He gapes at her. She looks in bad shape, he’s never seen her take this long to physically rebound from anything except her husband Michael’s death.

“Are you going to be okay,” he’s genuinely concerned. He doubts there’s as serious an emotional connection with this circumstance as there had been with her husband’s death.

“Yeah,” she breathes, still fighting for breath despite the some five minutes of relatively undisturbed rest she’s given herself so far. But she can see in Daniel’s eyes that it’s going to take more than that single word to allay his worries, “Don’t worry. I’m healin’.”

Daniel doesn’t look away from her as though a stare-down is going to help clarify things between them or make her Ancient DNA given abilities heal her body faster.

The rest of the group however is staring at Doctor Meredith Rodney McKay. Still wide-eyed… slack-jawed… still ‘What the hell?!’ It’s a couple of moments before McKay realizes that his friends are staring at him not to mention how they’re staring at him. He looks back at them, “What?”

Sheppard starts shaking his head, he doesn’t know where to begin…

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Episode Five- Bloodline- Chapter Nine

Chapter Nine

It’s very… foresty. That may not actually be a word, but it is the best description. Everywhere they look since leaving the village is woods, woods, and more woods. For Kenmore it was like going down her family’s ranch’s driveway. A wide green-covered lane with tall lush woods consisting of evergreens, birches, and wild maples and oaks on either side with the occasional oddity of a fruit tree such as a wild apple or a flower tree such as a lilac showing up here and there. The group continues walking up the ‘garden path’; it isn’t a path so much as an aisle of tall grass that winds through the trees. Daniel leads the line followed by Kenmore then Sheppard then Rodney followed by Teyla and finally Ronon.

“You know I’m glad we got this time together.”

“Thanks Doc, it’s always nice to hang out with you too,” Sheppard answers.

Daniel’s mouth tightens slightly. Whoops, messed that one up. He’s not sure how to say this exactly, “Actually,” he opts for sheepishly, “I was talking to Ursula.”

Sheppard’s pacing eases a moment, he looks up at the back of the archeologist’s head. Whoops, “Oh,” his pacing returns.

Kenmore smiles, “Really, Daniel? Why?”

“Well, for a start neither you nor Michael have responded to any of my letters.”

Ursula stops and quirks her face at Daniel’s back, “What letters?”

This time it’s Daniel’s turn to stop, he turns and looks back at her with his own quirked expression, bringing the whole group to a halt, “What do you mean ‘what letters’? I’ve sent dozens of letters to both of you starting with two for each of you written the day you both left.”

Ah, now she gets it, she starts nodding. A bitter smile comes to her lips, “So… Woolsey’s confiscating our mail. How wonderful.”

Daniel starts smiling bitterly too, his lips pursing so tight they almost disappear. “Ah, isn’t though? So I guess that answers that then.”

Kenmore nods with an ‘mmm-hmmm’. Yep, it sure does, “Well, you know you could always tell me what’s been happening since we’ve left? We’ve got the time now.”

Daniel glances at the others then abruptly turns and starts their line moving again, “I’d rather you’d read the letters.”

“That mean spirited towards Atlantis, huh?” Ursula picks her way over a rotting twig. No need to attract any predatory attention since they’re bound to run into a lot of it when night falls.

Daniel’s expression squints and squirms even though none of the others can see his face and he hopes his body posture and demeanor didn’t give any of himself away either as he stays silent.

Ursula’s smile tightens. She knows what that means, Daniel keeping mum and trying way too hard to look normal when he suddenly starts walking stiffly. Classic overcompensation from him. All that’s missing from the way he used to avoid confrontations like this sort is him bunching up his hands into white-knuckle fists and awkwardly holding them, stiff-armedly, down by his sides.

Hey. “You know we aren’t that bad. I mean you personally know, Doctor Jackson, that we’re not bad people,” John speaks up.

“But you aren’t family,” Kenmore points out.

“And that’s the point,” Jackson adds.

Teyla eyes John wondering if he gets the point of their earlier conversation regarding Ronon now.

Sheppard thinks he can see the Doc and Kenmore’s point. He doesn’t like it, but he thinks he can see it. He feels the same way about his team. It’s that he doesn’t like it when it’s his team that are the outsiders, his team that aren’t the ones considered family.

Rodney, trying and failing miserably to cover how severely winded he is, has to say this, “You know maybe if you tried to actually make friends then you would, I don’t know, start to have a family here too.”

“I do have family here.”

“Like who,” he asks.

“Like Lorne, among others. What, you thought all your personnel just came poof out of nowhere? Most of them come from the SGC first, Doc. That’s Cheyenne Mountain. I know plenty of people in Atlantis already and I have actually made some new friends in the city as well.”

Rodney really wanted to do the coughing while saying ‘Bullshit’ thing, but he went with his usual go to: sarcasm. “Oh really? And what do these ‘new friends’ talk to you about, you know over your imaginary tea parties?”

Kenmore smirks as Daniel looks back to glare at McKay. It’s okay that Daniel wants to do that, Ursula has more than enough intel to count as ammo to aim at the obnoxious man to make her not rise to his bait.

“Oh, well, they do let me in on the local scuttlebutt,” she plays coy.

McKay isn’t buying that for a second, “Which would be?”

“That about half of the city thinks the Colonel’s screwin’ Emmagan.”

“What,” Teyla suddenly exclaims behind them.

Everyone but Kenmore freezes. She keeps walking with her eyes still down on the ground making sure she isn’t about to screw up her steps by losing her footing on some stupid rock stuck halfway out of the ground and twisting her ankle. The top of her head runs into Daniel’s chest and that stops her. She looks up at him. Slack jawed. Big eyed. He’s shocked. She looks back at the others. So are they. Sheppard is staring at her with wide-eyes. Emmagan is also wide-eyed with shock and there’s enough of something else to her expression that Dex, whose well within her striking range, has taken a few steps back away from the Athosian woman.

Sheppard manages to calm himself down into seething so much that he has to say this slowly or else he’s really sure the Fomorians and their mutant monkeys are definitely going to hear him from here, “What… did… you… say?”

“That about half the city thinks you and Emmagan are sleeping together.”

“We are not. We will never. My partner is Kanaan.” The furious Athosian woman takes stiff jerking steps towards the Lieutenant. Every part of her tiny body vibrating with anger. Suddenly she didn’t look so small and tiny. Those Bola Kai definitely hadn’t stood a chance in hell and the fire in Teyla’s eyes show that a simple Lieutenant from Earth surely won’t either, Teyla Emmagan will make sure of it.

Kenmore nods at the Athosian though. She knew Emmagan wasn’t doing anything like that with Sheppard. The woman wasn’t doing anything with Sheppard other than being on his team and being his friend—without benefits. But that still isn’t what the rest of the city is saying… or thinking.

“I know,” Kenmore says, “I’ve seen you and your family, reminds me of my own.”

That eases Teyla. A little. She does know how Lieutenant Kenmore feels about her child and her love for her deceased husband, indeed everyone in the city knows that. The fact that the Earth woman says that the affection Teyla shows and has for her own family is reminiscent… Teyla nods. Yes, that does cause some of her wrath to ebb. Teyla starts walking again.

Ronon, sensing that Teyla wasn’t going to attack Kenmore anymore—regrettably—for talking about his friend’s strongly kept private life, starts following. During his time living with the Athosians on New Athos after the rest of the people in Atlantis returned to Earth when some Ancients came back and took control of the city, he learned that all Athosians keep their family lives private. Really, really private. And they guard that privacy like a precious gift meant for them and them alone.

The rest of the group takes Teyla’s behavior as their cue as well to start walking again. But not everybody is eased by Kenmore’s words.

“And what does the other half of the city think,” Sheppard growls, eyeing her back darkly.

“That you and McKay are gay lovers.”

Whoa. Wait. What?! John and Rodney’s steps stop immediately. They stare at Kenmore’s back. Still moving on even if neither of them are following her.

“What,” McKay squeaks like a spooked mouse, “What did you say?! You did not just say that! Seriously you did not just say that!”

“Oh yes I did. And by the way they even have a codename for it.”

The two men dart up to her.

“Which would be,” Rodney blurts.

Kenmore’s smiling turns into gloating. What’s the appropriate saying for this…  Ah, yes, ‘Have them by the short and curlies’. “I’m not telling,” she sing-songs.

“As your commanding officer, I order you to tell me the codename,” Sheppard demands.

Kenmore’s eyes slide over to him, still gloating, “I’ve been on three missions with you and it is really cute that you think pulling rank on me is going to work. Freakin’ adorable.”

God damn it. Sheppard glares at her.

Rodney starts grasping at straws, “Oh my God, half of the city thinks we’re… we’re…”

“Don’t even, McKay,” John warns him dangerously.

“I’m not.”

Kenmore pretends to cough, “McGay.”

Rodney glares at her as Daniel stifles the chuckles. Sheppard isn’t happy about that joke either.

“But, but, but why would they think that,” Rodney sputters.

“Maybe because they know you, Rodney,” Daniel’s gloating now too.

Rodney stares at him.

“Actually about the same amount of people that think you and Sheppard are together think that Emmagan and Doc Keller are lesbian lovers,” behind Sheppard and Rodney, Teyla’s jaw drops and her eyes widen once again, “Yeah, they think that you’re using Keller and Sheppard’s playing up a ‘crush’,” she gestures bunny fingers, “on Emmagan and that Keller and Emmagan are using, well, you Doc McKay, and both Sheppard and her partner as beards so that no one’ll figure out your secrets.”

Teyla cannot believe her ears. Even as she walks right into a low hanging spindly tree branch. It slaps her across the left eye. She yelps as her head jolts back from the strike. Everyone stops and looks back, worried, as Teyla staggers away from the tree branch. Covering her struck, squeezed shut eye with her hand. Her uninjured eye still wide open. Staring at the Earth-born when her dropped jaw finally manages to enable her to speak…

What the Hell is wrong with you people?!

They all stare at her. Shocked. Did Teyla Emmagan just cuss? At the top of her lungs? Did the ‘Nice One’ really just say that? Let alone did Teyla just curse for the first time ever, but…  Wow. Everyone’s afraid to move. Well, almost everyone.

Rodney turns to Kenmore, “Why does everyone think I’m gay? Let alone that I’m with him.” He gestures at Sheppard.

All eyes turn to the Canadian.

“Really, McKay,” Daniel asks in the same disbelieving and accusing tone of voice that he had when it suddenly dawned on him that Rodney can really only give a compliment when he thinks the person he’s complimenting is dying.

“Actually pretty much everyone thinks you’re the man in the relationship and Sheppard’s the woman,” Kenmore clarifies.

All eyes return to her.

“What?” Rodney leans towards her, tilting his head; he isn’t sure he heard that right.

“Basically everybody thinks that because Sheppard is always in command publicly, you know being the Military Commander of the Expedition and all, that when it comes to the bedroom, he’s the one who likes to be pampered and taken care of. You know, the Girlie One. There’s even artwork depicting it.”

“What?!” Sheppard’s voice cracks.

“Yeah, apparently people think you’re a,” she tries to get this out with a straight face, “snuggle bunny.”

Wide eyes. Jaw looking like it’s being held up solely by his chest. John Sheppard has never looked more floored in his life.

“I am not gay.” He turns to Rodney. “Tell them we’re not—”

“I’m the masculine one,” Rodney’s actually smiling now. Who’d have thought when he’d asked John in private if the man thought that the two of them were equally attractive and John had replied by asking Rodney whose been lying to him, that they’d end up here…  Really, Jeannie, I’m no John Sheppard? Really?

“Rodney,” Sheppard yells at him.

“I’m the man,” McKay points at himself, gloating like he had after John had pushed him off a balcony near the Command Center and Rodney had popped up with his own sing-song of ‘in-vul-ner-able’ at Peter Grodin and then Expedition leader Elizabeth Weir.

“Rodney!” Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard looks around. He can’t believe this. He cannot believe this. This cannot be happening. It cannot… he refocuses on Kenmore. “I am not gay.”

Kenmore smirks, “My thinkth the feminine identifiable gender role in the homosexual relationship doth protest too much.”

He fumes at her and she can’t help but laugh at him. His shoulder muscles rankle, he’d expected her to do that from the moment he heard that damn Shakespeare paraphrase leave her mouth. Knew she was going to laugh at him. Then in an uncharacteristic, at least for her time so far with his team, she shows a bit of generosity and consideration.

She calms herself down then, “If it’s any consolation, there are a group of people in the city that believe Emmagan and Specialist Dex are together. And there’s artwork of that too.”

Ronon and Teyla’s heads shoot up at her in unison and the expressions on their faces… yes, that does make John feel a little bit better. What’s the saying, ‘Misery loves company’.

“Say what,” Ronon says.

“There’s a picture of Emmagan wearing basically a green version of the like skanky Princess Leia slave outfit from Return of the Jedi only with a lot less fabric and a hell of a lot more gold doing some apparently our people’s idea of some sort seductive Athosian bellydance by a campfire for your onlooking pleasure.”

Teyla is horrified. Her eyes are bugging out of her skull. Her mouth is trying desperately to but she can’t form words. Her brain simply can’t do it. Ronon’s brain has come to such a staggering stop he’s not sure it can actually process anything anymore either. John feels even better.

Daniel reads the cues he’s seeing from Teyla and Ronon’s body language, and Sheppard’s too, and quietly turns on the balls of his feet and starts walking again. After a few moments of not hearing anyone else’s shuffling foliage behind him, he clears his throat loudly. Eventually he hears the others following him again. But he knows better than to simply believe what his ears are telling him, he does exactly what Teal’c has taught him over the decade plus he’s been friends and teammates with the Jaffa warrior. He shuts out all the extemporaneous sounds of the forest like breezes in the trees, birds and other wildlife skittering around, and hones his sense on the sounds of feet ruffling through tall and short grass. He listens carefully to the distinct sounds of their treads, heavy but stealthy, light with a dancer’s agility, plodding with effort and absolutely no care for quiet, and two other average footsteps that sound very familiar to him because he’s spent the last ten plus years around soldiers… yes, all of them are following him. Right now he’s going to take their silence as a good sign and keeps going.

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