Episode Four- Veritas- Acknowledgments

Acknowledgments

At the end of this story I can’t help but feel that somehow I rushed it.  I’m going on vacation soon and the last few pages of this story from when the missing team members return to the end feel like I really didn’t draft them well.  Only time will tell as well you the readers, but as I learned once from another writer sometimes you just have to let stories go no matter how many drafts you do of them.  So I’m letting this one go.  Readers please judge.  And now I come to the part of all my stories where I give thanks to everyone and everything that helped in its creation and research.  First, I’d like to thank the writers and creators of the game Zork Nemesis.  Their influence is painfully clear and helped me flesh out the history and culture of the Athosian people let alone their star system as well as fleshing out the darker sides of the Ancients and the Pegasus Galaxy Asgard.  For that I will be forever grateful because it’s a story arc that will continue beyond this story.  Next I’d like to thank, in order of the story’s chronology, all those who contribute to the Stargate Wiki especially the pages about the City of Atlantis’ piers so that I could identify where certain locations are for this story since the story takes place for the most part solely in the city.  A big thanks to the NASA website for it’s information on why planets have seasons and days and nights that I used here for Athosia.  I gave the sun of the Athosian star system the name of Veron in of Teyla Emmagan actress Rachel Luttrell’s mother Veronica MakihiyoShenkunde Luttrell.  I figure that since all we know of Athos, or Athosia, really comes from Teyla, that the basis of the Athosian star system should be important people in Rachel’s life and considering that the Athosian culture is supposed to be matriarchal then I figured that many of those people and their subsequent planetary bodies should predominantly be women.  And the center of those women, more like their start, would be their mother, the sun.  The one exception would be the one planet thought of as masculine in the Athosian star system, a desert planet over which a massive holographic battle is taking place, is named after Rachel Luttrell’s husband stuntman Lloyd Bateman and I added a part of their son Caden Dar’s name into to it too.  The ocean planet I named after Amanda Luttrell, one of Rachel Luttrell’s sisters.  I looked up the meaning of her name and thought it would work beautifully with an ocean.  The fire planet of the Athosian star system I named after Erica Luttrell, one of Teyla Emmagan actress Rachel Luttrell’s sisters.  Again I thought it made a powerfully wonderful name for a planet that Rodney argues should be named Mustafar after the volcano planet in STAR WARS Revenge of the Sith.  I named the ice planet of the Athosian star system that was featured heavily in my previous story “The Ruins” after Teyla Emmagan actress Rachel Luttrell’s sister, Gillian.  I thought of a way it could be altered to be the name of something else and thought that something that sounded so calm and soothing and pretty applied to a place known to be so terrible would be another horrible thing for the Athosians to realize, another underhanded thing that the Ancients did to them.  Another thanks goes to Brad Wright and Carl Binder for the great story of the Stargate Atlantis Second Season Episode “Critical Mass” as well as actress Rachel Luttrell and Brenda McDonald, the actress who played Charin, for their portrayals of their characters during that fantastic episode.  With the establishment of Teyla not having good cooking abilities, I could only think of this episode to refer back to in this moment of cooking talk and other things that plague Teyla’s mind in this talk between Lieutenant Kenmore and she.  Huge thanks and gratitude go out to Sarah Strange for her portrayal of Ganos Lal/Morgan LeFay.  I adored this character so much throughout her appearances with the SG-1 team and since the first Stargate Atlantis/Stargate SG-1 crossover episode was partially centered around this character, Ganos was my first thought for the Ancient in this story.  After all she was in city of Atlantis.  Much thanks to Stargate Atlantis Visual Effects artists Krista McLean and Jonathan MacPherson for their work on the series as the Playback Supervisor/Matte painter and Visual Effects On-set Technician/Visual Effects Assistant, respectively.  I took a few liberties with you two in turning both of you into characters in the Stargate universe, including perhaps changing up your nationalities and giving you accents that you perhaps do not have.  Hope you enjoy it.  As usual my final thanks goes to the person who first put a pen in my hand and encouraged me to write.  Thank you Mommy, it’s a blast.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Epilogue

Epilogue

It was well late into the night when Jennifer finally gave John the nod to leave the Infirmary—well, late into the night and after a few hours of rest, which constituted John sitting on a medical bed while Woolsey paced the floor conducting the debrief as John woofed down two trays of food from the mess hall kitchens that had been asked to stay a open little later in order to feed the missing and now returned personnel.  As luck would have it, dinner had been turkey breast in rich golden gravy over mounding scoops of some of the best damn mashed potatoes John had ever tasted in his life.

During that time, across the room, Teyla had approached a very stone faced and eerily silent Kenmore sitting on another bed, waiting for Jennifer to finish the Lieutenant’s post-“mission” medical exam.  Teyla told Kenmore that Halling had dialed the city and radioed that he had Michael to send back to them but that, seeing as how Kenmore had been taken and the city was believed to be dangerous, Teyla and Halling had decided together that Michael should stay the Lantean night with Halling and Jinto on New Athos.  After a heartbeat, the Lieutenant simple nodded, not really looking at Teyla…not really looking at anybody.  Teyla, herself, slowly nodded back and glanced over at John and Lorne, sitting in the bed on Sheppard’s other side and likewise eating a couple of trayfuls of food, before she left the Infirmary and returned to her own family in their quarters.

The two soldiers gave up nothing of why Kenmore was acting that way to the Athosian, but as soon as Teyla’s back was turned to them, they glanced over at each other and exchanged a look.  Woolsey caught it all of course and tried to press Sheppard and Lorne for why, but neither men would give him anything; they just claimed that it had been a hard mission and that Kenmore had been the target, the rest of them were just collateral from her.  And when Woolsey tried to get either one of them to tell him why she was the target, the two men informed him that Ganos Lal was behind it all.  At this, John had seen something that made him think that even confessing that much to Woolsey had been the seriously wrong move.  The look that crossed over Woolsey’s face…the former attorney looked down at the floor but with a distant look, his eyes moving from side to side, weighing and measuring something.  John didn’t like it.  The last time he’d seen a look like that it was in Woolsey’s office when Woolsey first told John that Kenmore was alive and recovering from her first outing with the team.  God help him, Sheppard was never going to forget that smile on the man’s face…After that, Woolsey had left the Infirmary and just as soon, Sheppard and Evan had looked at each other and started discussing what that look might mean.  It came to nothing except for one thing…

John walks down one of Atlantis’ corridors out in the city’s farther perimeter.  Out here the walls are gridded in these large three-foot by three-foot black squares whose edges are worn to a turquoise, rusted patina from millennia spent under the ocean and being one of the areas where the shield had failed and the ocean had seeped in and flooded.  Even the floors are as black as the wall panels only it’s much more scuffed and dirty looking, there again it comes from the years of flooding.  Wearing away the floor’s gloss and the furniture items that had been down here, being dragged across the stone and swept back and forth over it roughly by the ocean water’s currents as it infiltrated.  It’s never going to be pristine again.  This part of the city will never be as gorgeous looking as the rest of it again.  There’s no amount of polish or resurfacing on Earth that can be done to it, not even anything in the Ancient database had anything about that that could help.  He knows, people have checked and commented on it.  In truth the Expedition had been lucky to even get the just shy of seven feet long, four and a half inches wide, silver wall mounted lights to work.  But somehow the polished looking, probably from the rushing and ebbing and flowing water, silver things appearing here and there only as would be required throughout the hallway, like an underground bunker’s hallway, manages to put out a small glow of pale yellow light.  If the hallway didn’t look sickly before, it certainly does when it’s lights are lit…So maybe the Expedition hadn’t been so lucky to have gotten the lights down here to work.

He turns and heads down a short corridor that loops back into the rest of the city, but it isn’t a scenic U-turn he’s looking for; it’s the door to the city’s pier that he knows is halfway down the left side of this hallway that he’s looking for.  He walks up to the doors, they stay closed.  When you’re out this far from the city center, the doors don’t necessarily open at your presence no matter how Ancient your DNA is, you have to swipe your hand in front of the door sensors first.  But John doesn’t swipe right away, he just stands there and looks out the doors’ pair of horizontal half-circle, plain, clear glass windows.

Out there in the dark, the city’s lights casting the only light about twenty feet out there on the pier, Lieutenant Ursula Kenmore stands looking out at the ocean.  She’s not near a railing, not near the foot of the exterior staircase that ends a few feet away from this doorway, she’s standing out in the middle of the small observation area looking out into the impenetrable-seeming night.

John reaches out and swipes his hand in front of the crystal sensor panel next to the doorframe’s right side and the doors split open and slide into the walls pockets for them.  John walks through and the doors slide closed behind him.

There’s a breeze, he hadn’t seen it before, hadn’t noticed it.  It’s blowing nicely, rippling the Lieutenant’s long, wavy, dark brown hair back behind her.  Ruffling John’s own constantly shower tousled-looking, semi-short black hair.  If it were a bright cloudless, blue skied, sunny day, he’d call the breeze the perfect compliment.

He knows she knows he’s here.  Her body posture was taut to begin with and as soon as he’d come out here with her she seemed to be vibrating with restraint, trying to hold herself in.  She didn’t want him here.  He knew that too.  But…he also knows there are some things you can’t hold onto like this…some things you just have to let out.  He slowly approaches.

“She’s wrong,” he tells her back, “You know that, don’t you?  I told you you know it…You loved, love him.  You know you do…And that counts.”  John stops approaching.

Ursula isn’t looking out at the ocean anymore…she’s not even looking at the sky, but her eyes are still searching.  Tear streams have dried on her chilly cheeks.  They’re itchy.  Her eyes are red and ache.  Her head’s pounding.  She doesn’t think there’s enough aspirin in two galaxies to stop it.  At the mere mention of her husband, her eyes brimmed again.  Her face contorts, she can’t breathe.  She tries to hold herself together…but…but it’s, it’s so damn hard

John starts towards her back again, “You love him.  You know your son was conceived in love.”

He hears her gasp and walks around to face her.  She can’t look at him.  Her eyes just keep darting around, searching.  Anywhere but him.  She looks like hell and John knows what he’s saying is getting through…but it’s like she wants to believe him rather than she actually does.  She’s trying to catch her breath.  Fight back the tears from coming again.  He’s not going to let her do it.

“They lied to you,” he tells her, “They lied, Kenmore.”

She looks at him.  Still fighting to breathe.

“They lied,” he tells her again.

 

 

Ronon uses the cane Jennifer’d given him to hobble around, he’d only just found out that Sheppard’d been released from the Infirmary and he wanted to get the details from Sheppard on what had happened to the group.  But he’d been wandering the city for half an hour now and can’t find his friend.  He’d radioed McKay and McKay said he hadn’t seen him but he’d help look.  Then Ronon radioed Teyla, he’d woken her up, apologized for it, but told her that he couldn’t find Sheppard.  She said he should ask Rodney or Radek to use the city’s internal sensors.  He told her that Woolsey had nixed that and after a pause ended by a heavy sigh, she said she’d help him look for Sheppard.  Right now he was going off of a lifesigns detector that Rodney’d initiated for him that he was holding in his injured slung arm’s hand.  He pretty much knew that most of the dots he was seeing on the detector’s display were people already in their own quarters for the night or those members of the city’s nightshift still working.  So that’s basically all of the dots accounted for, including himself, but there are two dots that the lifesigns detector is telling him aren’t in the normal working or sleeping confines of the city.  The little handheld device keeps indicating to him the dots’ general direction with two little arrows pointing him onward.  When Ronon was within the detector’s range of the dots, the display would zoom out to give him a proper location for them.  But until then…

Ronon follows the arrows’ general direction and takes the first hallway heading right up ahead of him.  He checks the detector again, still out of range.  But there’s a transporter up at the end of this corridor’s Y-junction that will take him a little closer.  He stands for a moment and uses his cane holding hand to swipe in front of the transporter door’s sensors, they open, and he goes inside.  The panel at the back splits open to reveal the computerized schematic of the city showing large red dots with pulsating halos indicating the other transporter stations he could go to.  He pushes the one closest to the pier he wants.  It would be about a ten minute walk in his regular physical condition from there, it’s going to be more than that now.  The transporter doors close and he’s transported.  No lights, except if you were viewing the station from outside.  No sound either unless you were standing outside waiting for the station to free up for you to use next.  You just…transported.

Ronon likes that, he leans against the cramped interior’s left side.  Taking some of the pressure off of his uninjured leg.  He feels its muscles not ease at their temporary release from duty.  For a moment he regrets not taking the wheelchair Jennifer had offered him in the Infirmary, his uninjured leg is killing him it’s so tight from bearing the burden that normally was born by two limbs, but it’s only for a moment and if stressing his leg was going to cause him to take it easy then both he and Atlantis would be better off with him leaving the place.  Or at least being taken off active duty.

The transporter doors open and he walks out into a different part of the city.  As the transporter doors close behind him, he looks down at the detector again.  He’s just in range of the two pier dots since the detector’s image of the city’s layout is so zoomed out.  At least he can tell he’s supposed to go right again.  He heads off.

He goes about ten feet before there’s another hallway intersection, he takes left and makes slow progress moving along as he ignores the next four junctions and hallway intersections.  He starts to hiss a little at his uninjured legs intense tightening to vice-like conditions.  But he keeps hobbling along with the help of the cane, Jennifer had even offered him a set of crutches after the wheelchair and he stilled had passed on them.  He turns left.  Another five minutes of hobbling and he comes up on another Y-shaped corridor junction and this time he’s not alone as he heads towards the V of the two other corridors coming together ahead of him.  Teyla comes into view heading towards him from down the V’s right extension.  They look at each other, Teyla has an activated lifesigns detector as well.

“I, too, could not convince Richard to use the city’s sensors to conduct an internal scan for John.  Rodney activated a detector for me instead.”

Ronon nods then, “Any idea who might be with him?”  It wasn’t Rodney or Jennifer.

“No, but Rodney says that he will join us as soon as he possibly can.  He is just finishing talking with Radek about the energy readings from the hologram room.”

Okay, and it wasn’t Zelenka either… “Lorne?”  Ronon offers.

Teyla walks up to his side, they’re still about five feet away from the junction’s point, but they already start aiming for taking the left extension.

Her brows furrow, “Excuse me?”

“Lorne, do you think it might be Lorne that he’s with?”

“No, I saw Evan heading to his quarters as I was leaving mine.”

Ronon nods again, Lorne’s quarters are in the same area of the city as Teyla’s.  So it’s not Lorne either.  Then that leaves only one other person he knows of, especially since as far as he knew, and Teyla had now reconfirmed, that Woolsey was still sitting in his office typing up stuff on his laptop and staring at the screen occasionally with this really weird expression on his face, almost like he wasn’t sure he knew what to write next—well it looked more like he didn’t know what to say to the thing.  So that leaves Kenmore…and that is not good.  He knows Teyla’s done the math too because she’s rushing beside him, not enough to leave him in the dust but just enough to make him speed up to keep up with her.

The rush cuts down the time he’d anticipated for getting to the pier’s doorway.  Good.  They walk up to the doors but they don’t open at their presence.  That’s to be expected.  Ronon looks out the doors’ windows and sees Kenmore’s back lit up by the city’s light being cast out onto the pier through the doors’ windows.  And Sheppard is standing in front of her, facing her.  Talking.  Passionately too.  He’s gesturing, really talking to her…but she isn’t looking at him.  If anything, she’s trying to look away from him.  Anywhere but at him.  Ronon’s brows furrow.  Something’s wrong here.  Something’s seriously wrong…Seriously not right.  He steps closer to the doors, peers through the glass.  Teyla comes up beside him, looking out the windows as well.  Her reflection’s brows knit together too.

“What is it?  What do you see,” she asks.  She’s too short to see clear enough to try and read Sheppard’s lips.  She can tell he’s gesturing though, that’s about it.

Ronon doesn’t answer her, he keeps watching.  Sheppard’s moving so much he can’t really get any full words just bits and the tensing in his uninjured leg is so tight it’s distracting.  He doesn’t know what he’s seeing…but he doesn’t like it.

 

 

“You know it.  I can see you know it.”

Even if her eyes, her face, won’t meet his, his eyes are watching hers.  She’s trying so hard to fight.  Her fists ball up beside her thighs.  He glances down at them.  More than balled up, they’re shaking.  And more…he can tell her fingers are digging into her palms.  He sees an opportunity.  One he’s willing to take…one he was never offered when he divorced Nancy but he eventually took out on a bathroom mirror that night in his rental apartment after signing the papers in that damn attorney’s office.

He looks at her still fighting to look anywhere but him.  “Punch me.”

She gasps.  Fighting the air.  Her brow contorts in pain.  And exactly what he sees there:  rage.  The combination is more commonly known as another single word.  Anguish.

“Hit me.  C’mon.”  He spreads his arms wide.  Offering himself to her.  “Hit me.  You can’t hit them but you can hit me.”

She keeps fighting.  She needs the air she doesn’t seem to be able to actually get into her lungs.  He watches her.  Damn it, quit fighting!

“Get angry.”  He demands.  “C’mon.  Hit me.”

Like a rubber band stretch way too far.  Ursula suddenly snaps and lets loose a deft right hook John never saw coming.  He’d expected her left actually.  Should have known better, they’d sparred together that morning and she’d fought favoring her right the entire time.  Her knuckles sucker straight into his nose.

John’s head snaps back and he goes down clutching his nose.  Before his body even begins to tilt backward, he can feel blood from his nostrils against his fingers.  He hits the ground.

 

 

Ronon watches Sheppard order Kenmore, spread his arms out, opening himself up, order her again, probably something like get your ass back inside…suddenly Kenmore sucker punches Sheppard with a fighter’s right hook.  Immediately Ronon slams his shoulder against one seam of the door and shoves with his good hand against the other.  His cane falling to the floor with a loud echoing clack.  Teyla’s eyes grow wide and she swipes frantically over the doors’ sensor controls.  They won’t work.  She touches the crystals.  Nothing.  She looks at the clear, four-inch long crystal slats with pieces of silver circuitry grown into them.  Pulls two of the three out.

Rodney, eyes focused on his computer tablet down in his left hand with a pink-glazed doughnut in his right hand, finally walks leisurely up to them.

“Ronon, you promised Jennifer you’d at least use the cane.  I don’t think she’s going to like it if I told her you threw it.”

Ronon grunts and grits.  Trying to shove the door open himself.  Screw door controls.

Rodney finally looks up and gapes, “What the hell?!”

Teyla looks at him, desperate, “Lieutenant Kenmore just hit John.  We cannot get the doors to open.  We cannot get to him.  He is down, Rodney, and she is not.”

Oh, Rodney hurries over but he’s pretty sure he already knows what this is about…and he’s not entirely sure that Sheppard isn’t handling the situation exactly the way he needs to be.  But still, Rodney pulls out the spare Ancient/Earth technology computer jack he carries around in his pants pocket with him.  He plugs the ‘Earth’ end into his tablet, reaches over and pulls out the center slate control crystal, slips it into his pocket, and plugs the ‘Ancient’ crystal slat plug into the center crystal’s empty slot.  He gestures for Teyla to replace the two that she’d taken out, she does.  Immediately the programming comes up on his tablet’s screen.  There are three ways he could make this easy, six he could make difficult, and only two that he could use that would make it difficult without it being blatantly obvious that he’s dragging his feet on getting the doors open.  Unfortunately, neither would take up as much time as he wanted to give…

 

 

John tries to roll over onto the side of his shoulder.  Ow, damn!  This hurts!  He hadn’t expected it to be that bad.  Of course, he had expected to have enough time to brace for it first too.  But Kenmore didn’t apparently have to think long about John’s offer…and neither had he when he came face to face with that mirror in his apartment.  I should have known.  I did it, why wouldn’t she?

Through the bright stars in his eyes, and a surge of streams of pulsating light that seemed to be emanating from his nose superimposed over that star-seeing vision, he sees Kenmore finally able to suck in the air she was fighting to inhale before.  Just like he’d thought, just like he had needed when the end of his marriage was shoved into his face against his will, he’d simply needed a release.  Someone, something to twist the valve and blow the searing steam off.  He tries to roll over onto his side again and his movements jostle his hand against his injured nose.  There’s a blaze of pain.  He winces, Aww shit.  He groans and immediately rolls back onto his back…But then he feels gravity, and a sudden heat, pressuring his nose.  God dammit!  He clamps his eyes shut and tries to grit through it, and hears Kenmore panting now.  He’d seen before that her brimming eyes, after she’d punched him, were blinking away the threatening tears.  Her panting now told him that she was clearing, she was coming back down.  She, he’d taken her to the brink.  And now she’s coming back from it…And now he really feels that he should have offered her his quarters’ bathroom mirror instead of his face.  Way to go John.

Kenmore stares out at the sky.  Blinking, she can’t stop blinking.  And panting.  Air, she can finally feel air in her lungs.  Night air, night sky.  She can finally see the sky.  Wow, it’s dark out.  She flexes her fingers in her fist.  Shifts her weight from foot to foot.  Her whole body feels new.  Renewed.  Released…then she hears the groan, then another groan.

She looks down and sees Sheppard, he rolls back from a little on his side to on his back.  He’s squeezed his eyes shut tight.  She can hear him gritting his teeth behind his hands, his breaths going in and coming out in tense sloshing hisses.

She sighs at him, rolls her eyes, and leans over him…she hears some rather psychotic sounding banging somewhere behind her…and grabs onto one of his elbows then slips her hands up his bicep and pulls it towards her a little.  He takes the hint and starts to sit up.

“Come on.  I’ll take you to the Infirmary.  Let’s go.”  Her voice sounds simultaneously slightly exasperated and sympathetic.

She helps him up to his feet, careful of not bumping his nose too much.  Once on his feet, she shepherds him off into the darkness of the unlit side of the staircase to a service entrance a few feet away underneath the stairway.  It’s the same sort of private hallway entrance that the city’s exterior grounding stations have.  The door immediately slides open at its sensing of their presence, the lights them as well and come on, and they go inside; Kenmore keeping a hand on Sheppard’s arm the entire time.

 

 

Ronon watches Sheppard on the ground.  Kenmore’s not helping him up.  She put him there and now she’s just going to stand there.  He knew there’s a reason he hates this woman.  She won’t even look at Sheppard.  Coward.  Ronon shoves harder.  Straining.  Who gives a damn if he hurts himself all over again?  Sheppard’s down and she did it.

Teyla peers out at the situation again.  John is still down trying to help himself up, rolling over to his side…suddenly he rolls back onto his back.  He cannot get up…and the Lieutenant is not helping him up.  She will not even look at him.  Teyla looks back at Rodney.

“What is taking so long?”  She knows well enough to press Rodney in a clinch like this.  Somehow unnerving him seemed to serve his abilities well.  She knew their wait would be short.  But why is it taking him so long to open these doors?

“I’m working on it,” Rodney doesn’t look up, he just keeps stalling.  Hopefully he isn’t being too suspicious about it.

Suddenly Ronon starts banging his fists on the door.  Teyla and Rodney look.  Out the windows, Kenmore is now leaning over Sheppard…and reaching down to him.  Pulling on his arm.  Teyla rises onto the balls of her feet and sees the movement jostle his hands over his nose further into his face.  John’s eyes are clamped shut at the pain but he goes along with the Lieutenant’s lead.  Rodney watches, a little afraid at first, what if Kenmore’s helping him up just to deck him again?  What if she isn’t finished?  There was a lot for her to be angry about.  Angry enough to kill Ganos Lal.  Perhaps angry enough to kill Sheppard just because he’s close enough and the Ancient woman isn’t.  But then he sees how John’s following her lead, if John was down and felt threatened, he’d kick her not let her help him get to his feet; Rodney goes back to stalling on his computer tablet, restraining a sigh of relief.

Ronon keeps banging on the doors as Kenmore takes Sheppard into the outdoor stairway’s shadowed side…and blatantly out of sight.

Teyla bolts over to Rodney’s side as Ronon goes back to his Herculean attempt to physically pry the doors open.  She peers over Rodney’s shoulder and…her eyes widen.  Crap, Rodney sputters, his fingers suddenly fly over the tablet…

“I, I, I think I’ve got it…now, there.”

Suddenly the doors split open and Ronon hobbles out to where Sheppard had been on the ground with Kenmore standing over him.

But Teyla is staring at Rodney’s profile, wide-eyed and slightly drop-jawed.  He lied.  Rodney had been lying to them about the door being both locked and stuck.  He had been stalling.  But why?

Rodney looks out at Ronon looking around.  The Satedan looks off into the shadows and tries to hobble faster than he actually can in the direction Kenmore and Sheppard had gone…he ends up falling against the side of the stairway.  Rodney immediately bolts out to his friend, Teyla follows after a moment’s hesitation.  Rodney gets a hold of Ronon’s unslung arm and tries to wrap it around his shoulders, but Ronon won’t have any of it, at least it’s not for the same reason it used to be…

“I see the service hallway’s lights are on.  They went that way.  Go after them.”  Ronon grunts.

“You need to come too.  What if you fall, Jennifer’d kill me if I let you hurt yourself again.  Mostly because you’re a crappy patient, but still,” Rodney tells him.

Ronon glares at him and it’s like old times.  Teyla touches Ronon’s free side, she is still somewhat riveted by Rodney’s actions, but he is also right.  They need Ronon to come with them.  His injuries are too unpredictable as is his temperament.  If they abandon him, he just might try to follow and a reckless Ronon is even more dangerous to himself than a controlled one.

“But you’ll lose them if you don’t go right now.  Just leave me.”

“Ronon, Rodney is right.  You must come with us,” she tells him.

Ronon looks like he wants to argue some more then apparently thinks better of it and swings his arm around Rodney’s shoulders.  Teyla tends to his slung arm, making sure no further harm comes to it.

“We won’t be able to make much time on them with me.”  Ronon says.

“Perhaps,” Teyla offers, “Rodney can find out where they are heading.”

Ronon and Teyla look over at him.  Rodney looks slightly afraid of Teyla, she knows, but catches Ronon’s expectant look and quickly fumbles around for something.

“Per, perhaps they went to the Infirmary.  To get Sheppard medical attention.”

“No,” Ronon ends that thought bluntly, “she’d never do that.  She’d be reported for striking a superior officer.”

Rodney stares at his friend like, “You’ve got to be kidding me.  This is a woman who assassinated someone on a mission and Woolsey didn’t do anything about it.”

“That’s someone else, that’s not Sheppard.”

“So?”

“The people here like Sheppard, the other soldiers do.  She won’t be able to get away with punching him as easily as she got away with killing Shiana.”

He has a point although Rodney seriously doubts it, but it’s more the way Teyla is eyeing him that makes Rodney activate his earwig.

“Gateroom, this is Rodney.”

“This is the Gateroom, Doctor McKay, is there anything you need,” comes the gate technician’s happy voice.

“Bypass Woolsey’s order and conduct an internal scan of the city for Colonel Sheppard and Lieutenant Kenmore’s locations.  I’ll take the heat from Woolsey, don’t worry about that.”

He can hear the hesitation on the other end for a few seconds before the sounds of the piano-style Ancient consoles’ buttons being pushed come to his ears, “Okay Doctor McKay.  Just a moment…Okay, I have them.”

 

 

John sits on the edge of a medical bed in the Infirmary again, only this time it’s on the foot edge of a bed and Kenmore’s standing in front of him with a tray of bandages, some antiseptic wipes, and small gauze pads beside her.  They’re in a secluded area of the Infirmary wing, sneaking over to the handful of beds from a side entrance.  Kenmore turns back to the tray and picks up an antiseptic wipe packet, rips it open, discards the wrapper on the tray, and turns back to him.  She gently dabs the wet nap against the hot skin of his bruising nose.  He flinches and hisses.  She jumps the nap away from him then puts it against his nose again.  He winces again, but she doesn’t jump the wipe back, she continues to dab at the bridge of his nose.  Her demeanor, calm and focused on what she’s doing…gentle.  She’s being careful not to hurt him, he looks up at the ceiling.

“I think you broke my nose.”

“Oh I did not.”

“I really think you did.”

“I did not.”

“And how do you know?”

“Because I didn’t feel the bone break against my knuckles,” his eyes look at her, “The cartilage didn’t even shift a little.  So I didn’t break your nose, I just popped ya’ a good one.”

He eyes her for a moment.

“Who taught you about breaking noses,” he asks.

“Me.”

“And why didn’t you break my nose?”

Her eyes lock on his, she stops tending to his wound for a moment, then goes back to gently wiping the wet nap over his tender skin.

“You’re not the one I want to hit.  An Ascended bitch who played a part in Arthurian legend, yes, you, no.”

John sort of shrugs, he can see that.  She casually tosses the pinked wipe down on the tray then suddenly puts her hands on either side of John’s face.  He freezes, tenses.  He can feel her fingers as a steady warmth against his skin, her fingertips barely touching his flesh they’re touch is so gentle.  He stares at her.  Suddenly she tilts her head and her face comes in close to his.  Her lips come together in a soft pucker.  His heart pounds in his ears.  Pulse throbbing more than his nose…then she blows softly across the bridge of his nose, the area of skin she’d just wiped clean and moistened in doing so.  Her breath isn’t warm as he’d anticipated—well actually he thought she was going to kiss him—but her breath is cool.  Feeling cold and chilling across his hot purpling skin.  Then she moves her right hand to try and touch just above the bridge of his nose to see exactly how tender he is…Suddenly there’s a glow from her palm as it comes over the injured area of his face.  Kenmore gasps and jumps back from him.  Immediately John grabs her fleeing right wrist and holds it close to his face.  She stares at her right hand.  Scared.

He’s not.  He stares at her.

“It’s the ability to heal others,” he tells her, “Don’t be afraid of it.”

“Says the man whose body isn’t doing strange things to another person…,” then it dawns on her what she just said and her expression quirks, “wait, that didn’t come out right.”  She looks at him.

He smiles at her.  Funny.

She smiles back at him.

He takes the window of opportunity and slowly draws her palm back over his bruising nose.  She’s hesitates in letting him do it, he feels her shaking in his grip and it’s not from her resistance.

“It’s okay.  Just concentrate and want to heal it.”  But he sees it’s not working with her, he tries a different tact, “What are you thinking?”

“I’m thinking about the mission report I read where Sam, I guess Colonel Carter to you, tried to use a Goa’uld healing device on Daniel when he was dying of radiation poisoning and she ended up almost killing him sooner than the radiation already was.  Goa’uld healing devices work off a mental component too.”

Okay, at least he can see how her mind went there first, “I think you’ll find this a little less complicated.”

Less complicated,” she exclaims at him.

He gives her a controlled nod.  “Just focus on wanting to fix me,” he tells her slowly.

She nods, finally seeming to trust him a little.  She relaxes in his grip and he brings her palm fully over his nose.  She closes her eyes and really, really wants to not end up almost killing Sheppard the way a definitely very, very well intentioned Samantha Carter almost killed one of her closest and dearest friends.  Beyond her closed eyelids, a slight glowing happens.  She keeps her eyes closed and keeps praying that let alone is that a good sign but that it also means she’s still not nearly killing Sheppard.  Almost as quickly as it had come, the glow dies away.  Sheppard’s still holding on to her wrist though, firmly, not tightly, confidently.  She opens her eyes and Sheppard moves her hand off to the side so Kenmore can see.

He’s healed.  She did it.  She pulls her arm out of his hold and leans in closer.  Her left hand comes back up to the side of his face again, holding it, her thumb brushing back and forth over his cheek.  He finds it soothing.  She brings her right hand over and tentatively puts her fingertips on the bridge of his nose.  He doesn’t wince, doesn’t move.  She puts more fingertips against his warm but not hot, newly healed skin.  He’s fine.  She moves her right hand to hold his other cheek and leans in closer still.  Again the thought that she’s going to kiss him crosses his mind.  But no, she’s just awed by the sight of him, by how she’s actually managed to heal him.  She smiles, a gasp of dumbstruck escaping her.  He smells it, her breath smells sweet, an undertone of fruitiness to it that he hadn’t expected.  He likes it.  She leans back away from him, letting go of his face, the smile staying on hers.

“Well, how ‘bout that.”

He smiles too, “Thanks for not killing me.”

She points a finger at him, “Hey, don’t joke about that.  The idea was nagging me the entire time.  I just turned it to my advantage by praying I don’t accidentally kill ya’.”

He keeps smiling at her.

“So…do ya’ wanna go get some pie,” she offers, “It’s peach made from scratch.”

He doesn’t know how it possibly can after the two trays of food he ate only about forty-five minutes ago, but his stomach manages to growl at the thought of more food.  Homemade peach pie sounds good.  Really good.

“Sure,” he nods and hops down off the bed, “Where is it?”

“Should be in the mess hall kitchen still.”

They head for the Infirmary’s main area’s back door, made up of two doors that come together like an elevator’s door, right next to the back wall of the section they’d snuck into.  The halves of the door splits open at their presence and they walk through.

“We should hurry though,” she adds, “we might want to get there before Doctor McKay does and horks it all down.”

Sheppard and Kenmore turn right and the door halves come together closed behind them.

Ronon, Teyla, and Rodney stare.  They’d managed to get here just as Kenmore’s right palm glowed over Sheppard’s face and healed his bruised nose.  At one point, Rodney thought the woman was going to kiss Sheppard but she’d simply been examining her handy work…and then their conversation, it was so, so, so…friendly.  Her whole demeanor, John’s whole demeanor, had been friendly.  Good bedside and good patient stuff.  They were smiling at each other.  Saying ‘thank you.’  Then she offers him pie…What the hell was going on?  Even Rodney knowing what had happened between them in the Void’s castle is flabbergasted…Seriously, what the hell just happened?  The three of them don’t know what to do.  They just stand there, still gaping at an unmanned space.

 

 

Kenmore and Sheppard walk down the hallway side by side, heading for the mess hall.

“So how’d you get fresh peaches, Lieutenant,” Sheppard asks.

“You know that last stop off the Daedalus made here,” he nods, “well, Stevie dropped some ones off for me, they ripened on the trip over here from Earth.”

“Stevie?”

“Yeah, Stevie, Steven,” John still isn’t following, “Steven Caldwell, Colonel Steven Caldwell, Commander of the Daedalus.”

Sheppard actually manages to laugh.  Colonel Steven Caldwell, one of the most contentious relationships John has ever had in this galaxy…is nicknamed Stevie.

“Oh…and call me Ursula.”

John turns his smile to her and he eyes her for a moment then, “John,” he says, “Call me John.”

Ursula smiles back, “Okay, I’ll try.  Don’t expect much.”  He didn’t, but he had a suspicion she just might surprise him on that too.

John and Ursula follow the hallway’s bend.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fourteen

Evening sets in over Atlantis and the vast planet-covering ocean on which she floats.  The city’s exterior lights begin to snap on all over it the way the overseeing lights of a parking lot do at dusk.  Within a matter of moments the entire city is re-illuminated by the glory of its own power.  Some of its residents are asleep by now, others are just coming on to their shifts, others are just coming off their shifts and seeking the comfort of food in the mess hall, but there are still more others who are not doing any of that.  They have been working all day and now they are finally so close to what they’ve been working for…

 

 

Normally at this time of the evening Teyla would casually be walking back to her quarters with Torren and Kanaan after their evening meal, but this evening Teyla determinedly comes up the hallway through the path of preparing scientists lining both sides of it.  They barely seem to notice her as she passes by, only her wake ruffling them draws quick side glances as their only response to her.  Just as many are on the opposite side of the hallway from the hologram room’s door.  And working just as hard.  Teyla approaches the room and its door quickly swings open at her presence.  She goes inside.

 

 

Everyone’s, the scientists in the hologram room when Radek had his revelation, Radek himself, Jennifer, Ronon, and Woolsey’s, attentions immediately jump over to the just entering Teyla.  She nods at them.

“They are ready in the generator rooms,” she tells their expectant faces.

“Thank you,” Woolsey commends, Radek also nods his thanks and acknowledgement to her as she nods back to them.

Radek goes back to trying to hook up one of the Expedition’s laptops to the pulled open innards of the hologram platform’s control podium.  The room is relatively clear of the superfluous scanning equipment it had had in it from before.  Now there’s only a few monitors and a spare few other pieces of observation and energy influencing equipment to help control the wavelength when needed.  Woolsey looks back down again at Radek working.

“How is it coming, Doctor Zelenka?”

Radek wedges his shoulder against the podium’s interior a bit more and carefully balances himself as he pulls back some of the Ancient technology’s delicate lit tube wiring and delicately angles in the crystal tipped computer jack, “All I have to do is finish connecting my laptop to the podium and then I can begin running the wavelength program.  With the help of the naquadah generators’ energy outputs being redirected to focus specifically on powering the podium and the hologram platform, we should be able to maintain an opening that will be more than enough time to both contact Colonel Sheppard, Major Lorne, Rodney, or Lieutenant Kenmore and bring them all back.”  That is considering that they are all together and have stayed close to wherever it is they have landed…But Radek puts that thinking out of his mind.

Woolsey nods.  “Good to hear.”

The Czech scientist applies ginger pressure to the inserted jack, it’s stable and holding, hopefully that will be good enough, “There.  Everything is set up.”

Zelenka eases back out of the podium and switches his focus to his laptop, “I am running the program.”

On cue the other scientists turn to their own equipment and start their side of the work.  Jennifer, Ronon, Teyla, and Woolsey step away from the hologram platform and Zelenka working at its podium.

Suddenly one of the pieces of scanning equipment starts beeping and its screen starts showing a wavelength like a radio’s going haywire with a transmission.  The technician, Krista McLean, a Scot-born scientist who has been with the Expedition from their first arrival in the city, looks back at Radek.  The backed away group now standing by the door is already looking over at her…

“Doctor Zelenka,” she raises her voice to be heard over her scanning unit, her brogue a beautiful Glaswegian, “I’m registering energy fluctuations coming from the platform.”

Then another piece of equipment starts beeping, it’s scientist, Jonathan MacPherson, Scot-sounding name but not nationality, Canadian like Rodney McKay, announces, “The platform is drawing power from…from I don’t know where.  It’s not anything from Atlantis.  It’s not anything we’re doing.”

Suddenly all of the pieces of equipment start going off.  The scientists are frantic.

“What’s going on,” Woolsey shouts over the raucous.

The McLean’s wavelength is vibrating off its scale, “There’s a power buildup!”

Another technician, “It’s affecting space-time!”

MacPherson, “The anomaly is forming again!”

“Doctor,” Woolsey asks warningly.  Staring at Zelenka.

“I need more time.  Just a little more time,” Radek snaps, “If I can get the program to move faster, I might be able to bypass their anomaly with our own.  It is like dialing an outgoing wormhole before someone else can dial in.”

Chaos still reigns supreme though.  It’s quickly becoming apparent that Radek is nowhere near as fast as the Ascended he’s racing against.  The other scientists announce their panic…and so does Radek.

“I just need more time,” he starts tensely.  Talking very quickly to himself in Czech.  A sign of stress.

Woolsey watches everything going on around him.  The scientists’ fingers scrambling.  Turning knobs.  Pressing dozens of keys.  Every single screen registering things beyond its limits to show.  It’s getting worse.  He makes the split-second command decision.

“Everyone out,” Richard shouts.

They all look at him.  Machines cacophonous.

“I said everyone out!  Go!  Now!  Move!”  He orders.

He starts shooing people towards the door.  Everyone starts doing as ordered as fast as they can.  Only Radek shows a moment of hesitation at his computer before he curses at it in Czech and leaves it behind.  Teyla helps Jennifer speed Ronon along as best they can and Richard brings up the rear, making sure everyone’s out of the room ahead of him.  He feels a chilling wind start to pull at what hair he has left…and it’s picking up speed fast.  Woolsey looks behind himself.  He doesn’t see the room looking any different.  Nothing.  But he can feel it.  He finally exits the room.  The last person.  And the door shuts behind him.

Safely outside the closed door, Radek immediately commandeers another scientist’s computer tablet the same way Rodney always does in one of these situations and begins working on it.  It’s so relatively quiet out here, so…not what they had expected.  They can’t actually hear the anomaly reforming.  All they can hear is the equipment registering that it is.  While Woolsey, Ronon, and Jennifer maintain their focus on the closed doors directly in front of them, Teyla looks over at Radek.

“What is going on, Radek?”

He’s still working, “The anomaly is open, but…but everything is moving too fast.  I, I can’t—”

Suddenly the hologram room door opens.  And standing there are their friends, looking the same way they had just before they were taken early today.  The taken stare back at the people facing them; the returned look fine, calm even.  And those that had never left look shocked.

“Did we miss dinner ‘cause I have a dinner date with my girlfriend,” Rodney asks.

With a relieved smile, Jennifer runs forward, abandoning Ronon’s weight to be managed by himself and Teyla, and into Rodney’s arms.  They smile in their embrace and then the would-be-rescuers feel like they can take a breath of relief too.  Ronon watches from the sidelines.

“Is everything alright, Colonel Sheppard,” Woolsey asks.

“Yes, Sir.  Just had a lovely chat with the hologram teacher wherever she Ascended to—“

Kenmore suddenly shoves past Sheppard and on down the hallway, away from everyone.  Sheppard, Lorne, Woolsey, and Teyla look after her.

Lorne doesn’t look happy.  “Yeah, real lovely,” he comments.

“I expect a debrief by you, Colonel, in two hours,” Woolsey informs Sheppard, “That should give you enough time to get a good meal or two, you have missed that many after all.”

Sheppard nods, “Yes, Sir.”

“Well, good to have you all back.”  Woolsey offers them all a smile to which the Colonel and Major offer nods back then he leaves, taking the same direction of hallway Kenmore took.

After he passes by, Teyla steps towards John and Evan and smiles at them.  They smile back at her.

“It is good to have you back,” she tells them.

“Thanks,” Sheppard says.

“Thank you, Teyla,” Lorne nods.

Behind them, Rodney with Jennifer close beside him makes his way over to Ronon; he extends his hand out to the Satedan.

“Thanks.”

Ronon looks down at the hand apprehensively, “For what?”

“Helping,” McKay says simply.

Ronon looks Rodney in the eyes and takes his hand.  The three smile at each other.  Friends…friends.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Stargate Christmas and Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Thirteen

I love themed Christmases, they’re yet another chance to be festive with the things you love.  For my neice, it was Spongebob Squarepants when she was little and now that she’s an adult, it’s anything nautical/Kracken themed.  For me, it’s Stargate.  One big problem:  There is NO Stargate themed festivites anywhere.  Unless you make them yourself!  So I did.  I found some great wrapping paper that just so happens to be the same colors as the Stargate chevrons of SG-1 and Atlantis, not exactly difficult.  Then I went around to my family members and asked them which was their favorite series and who was their favorite character in that series.  Then I bought narrow ribbon the matching color of my paper and printed off fantastic pictures of those characters and the SGC logo in color for my tags.  How did they turn out?  Stargate Christmas, you have a go!

Teal'c of Chulak for Dad

Teal’c of Chulak for Dad

Ronon for Mom

Ronon for Mom

The Rising Wraith Queen for my Neice

The Rising Wraith Queen for my Neice

Jack for my Nephew

Jack for my Nephew

 

Chapter Thirteen

The sun sets on the ocean’s horizon, splashing waning piercing orange sunlight over Atlantis.  Through every window of the formerly lost city facing the setting sun, the light beams in.  Giving everything a warm autumnal glow.  Woolsey’s office is no different, although his light is tamer, but that’s mostly due to the fact that the light has to come through the massive, ZPM-shaped, stained glass window directly behind the inactive Stargate tens of yards away.  The light has farther to travel, more interior lighting to overcome in order to shine in Richard’s office, but it does reach there.  It’s a haze of rich color.  Going almost half and half with the stark triangular-shaped overhead lighting and the chiclet and dogbone-shaped wall sconces.  Normally he’d find it comforting.  Normally she would find it comforting.  But nothing is comforting this coming evening.  Still sitting and waiting for anything from anyone, Richard Woolsey and Teyla Emmagan each heave a heavy sigh in each other’s presence.  Nothing is ever easy in this city, ironically both would really like something, anything to go easy for once.  Just once.  That isn’t too much to ask, there was the odd occasion when the SGC had one easy moment, one easy thing.  Why not Atlantis?  Why can’t Atlantis have that?

Then the Stargate suddenly comes alive.  Its chevrons working quickly to lock into place the rotating LED glyphs and establish a stable wormhole.  Richard and Teyla start, sitting up in their chairs, staring down at the Gateroom below from their seats.  Teyla looks over at Richard and he immediately gets up.  She follows suit and they both head for his office door.  He leads across the bridge and into the suddenly frantic Command Center.  Richard Woolsey walks straight up to the Stargate DHD technician, Chuck Campbell.

“What is it?  Which one of the gate teams is it?”  Woolsey demands, even this fear, this dread, is coming to pass now.  Great, just great.  But they’ll roll with it since they have no other choice but to have to.

Chuck works confidently and efficiently at his console, “It’s an incoming wormhole, Sir—“

“Put up the iris,” Woolsey doesn’t hesitate to order.

“—From New Athos.”  Chuck finishes.

Woolsey looks over at Teyla at his side, she’s looking at him too.  Trouble?  On New Athos?  That would certainly be a surprise.  Teyla looks back at the Stargate then a thought suddenly comes to her, one that should have been there all along.  She looks down and shakes her head, how could she have forgotten?

“Teyla?”  Richard dips down his head to try and catch her lowered eyes.  He does.  Her head raises and she looks over at him again.

“You do not need the iris.  They are not in trouble.  I am ashamed to admit that I had forgotten that Lieutenant Kenmore had sent her son to New Athos this morning for schooling.”

Richard starts nodding, he had forgotten too…and breathing a very obvious sigh of relief.  Easy, finally.

“There’s an incoming radio transmission, Sir.  It’s Halling,” Chuck reports.

Richard and Teyla again look at each other.  They both know how the Lieutenant feels about Woolsey around her son especially when the Lieutenant herself is not here to supervise it.  Richard, frankly relieved that something so relatively simple has cropped up in their midst, has absolutely no hesitation in backing down from its responsibility.  He knows full well it would not be advisable for him to take it on.  A small smile pulls at the corners of his lips and he nods at Teyla, a relieved smile spreads across her lips.

“I believe you should take this,” he tells her.

Teyla nods, still smiling, and Richard turns and walks leisurely, almost lazily, back to his office.  When he is back across the bridge, in his office, and getting settled in his chair behind his desk again, Teyla turns her attention fully to the Stargate and looks down at Chuck’s computer console.  She closes her eyes for a moment.  Breaths in a deep inhale, lets it out smoothly.  Then opens her eyes and shifts her gaze to Chuck.  He is waiting for her, hand poised over specific controls.

“Let me hear it,” she tells him and his fingers finally come down on the buttons.

Halling’s voice is as kind as it always is and fills the room rather discreetly, something that few other people sending radio transmissions through the Stargate manage to do, “Atlantis, this is Halling.  I am sending Lieutenant Kenmore’s son back to you.  Is the iris down yet?”

A glimmer of Teyla’s smile flits across her lips, Halling knew very well Atlantis’ protocols, “No, Halling,” she answers, “The iris is not down yet.”

“Teyla,” he sounds joyed at hearing her voice…then concerned, “why is it not?”

“Is Lieutenant Kenmore’s son with you now?”

“No, he and Jinto are farther back along the path.  I came ahead in order to pave Michael’s way.”

Good, at least the Lieutenant’s child would not hear this, “Halling, there is a situation.”

There is a pause on the other end of the communication.  Yes, Halling knows full well the things that happen in Atlantis.  Let alone had he, like most of the Athosians, live in Atlantis for the early part of the Expedition’s first year in charge of her, but he had, also like Teyla, been a guide as well as a team member of one of Atlantis’ teams, Sergeant Stackhouse’s team.

“Is everyone safe,” he finally asks.

“No,” she has to admit, “no, everyone is not safe.  Lieutenant Kenmore, Colonel Sheppard, Major Lorne, and Doctor McKay have been taken by some unknown force.”

There is another pause and Teyla can see in her mind’s eye an unsettled and suddenly unsure Halling, holding a handheld radio up to his mouth, looking back down the path from their planet’s Stargate to their village.  Searching, fearing perhaps that at any moment he may see his own son arrive with the missing Lieutenant’s son…the child not knowing that his mother is gone.  The feeling does not need to be voiced, it is felt by them both as parents:  What to do?

“Is the city safe?”  The Halling of Teyla’s mind’s eye turns back to the Stargate again.

She shakes her head even though he cannot see her doing it, “No, they were taken while in the city by some sort of distorting of the air here.”

Another pause.  A longer one.  Like she, Halling is a parent of a child being raised in this galaxy, a son as well no less…and single like the Lieutenant, his wife culled in a Wraith attack long ago when Jinto was younger than the Lieutenant’s son is now and not the teenager Jinto has become.  Halling is thinking.  Teyla waits.  She hopes Halling will come to the same conclusion she has about this since first realizing her forgetfulness…

“I will keep Michael here with Jinto and I,” Teyla smiles; yes, he has, “Do you think the Lieutenant will be angry with that?”

“No,” Teyla alleviates his concern quickly, “I do not.  I believe she trusts you as Major Lorne does.  I do not think she will be angry with you for keeping her son safe away from Atlantis while there still may be great danger here.”

Then Teyla pauses.  Another consideration comes to her.  One, again, that should have occurred to her before now…

“Do you know what you will tell him when he asks about not being returned to his mother?”

Again a pause on the other end of the Stargate’s wormhole, but only about the span of a breath, “I will tell him that your team was called away on an unexpected mission and that his mother will return soon, but not as soon as anyone might expect.  Till then he will stay with Jinto and I.”

Teyla smiles, Halling is essentially telling the boy the truth.  Maybe not the finer details of the situation, but it is none the less the truth.  She can always count on Halling.  She breaths her own obvious sigh of relief, eyes sparkling with the pleasant release of yet another stress, “Thank you Halling.”

“Think nothing of it Teyla.  I believe Michael will like to spend the night with us, he and Jinto are getting along very well.”

“Please say hello to Jinto for me.”  She knows she does not have to ask him to continue to not alarm Lieutenant Kenmore’s son.

“I will, Teyla, and send good greetings to Torren and Kanaan for Jinto and I as well.”

“I will.”

“Halling out.”

Teyla nods as the communication is severed on New Athos; a heartbeat later, Atlantis’ Stargate shuts down, disconnecting it’s wormhole to her new homeworld of a little under three years now.  Teyla looks over at the Stargate then turns her head and looks down at Chuck beside her.  He is already looking up at her.  She smiles and nods at him, relieved.  He nods back.  Easy.

*                      *                      *

The last vestiges of Atlantis’ planet’s sunset gleams from one end of the hallway.  The bright piercing light is now nothing more than a waning glow, more like the dying embers of a quickly cooling fire than the blaze it had been a handful of minutes ago.  It is a blatant showing of the day’s passage of time that they did not need, he did not need…

Doctor Radek Zelenka stands in front of the closed doors to the hologram room as he has been all day since their comrades were taken.  He no longer has his scanning equipment, but he does have a computer tablet balanced on his science department blue, longsleeve shirt-covered forearm, like Rodney would in this sort of a situation.  There are about three other scientists still working the area with him, most of the rest he had ordered to go back to their regular laboratories and continue working on the situation from there.  It was more a matter of too many chefs in the kitchen and it was not a matter of spoiling the broth so to speak so much as one of overcrowding.  With so many people jostling around this small section of the corridor, there was simply no hope of getting their work done properly.  They might miss something critical due to a random bump or shove from behind.  And that is simply not acceptable.

The scientists currently around him are not working on what he’s focused on.  And that was another reason for ordering people back to their respective laboratories or offices, let alone were people stepping on each other’s toes physically, they were also stepping on each other’s toes figuratively.  Too many people working on the same exact thing at the same time in the same room.  By forcing everyone to disperse, Radek hopes to spread their interests to their absolute limits but with specific direction.  Before telling everyone to go, Radek had also giving said laboratories or offices specific things about the kidnapping to analyze.  Even after doing that, so far…He taps at his computer and its display shows him graph upon graph upon graph of wavelength analyses and other scientific data all of them have gathered so far.  He sighs, taps again…and again… and again…And again…and again.  Suddenly he stops and looks up at the closed doors in front of him, his mouth hanging slightly agape at them.  Why hadn’t he realized this before?  Why?  Perhaps it was his agitation before and it had taken this long for his mind to go numb that it finally caught this…this scrap.

He starts forward, the door swings open inwards and he goes inside where there are five more scientists working the hologram room itself.  The other scientists stationed around the platform’s perimeter ignore him, absorbed by their own large pieces of scanning equipment among the many other pieces crammed in here, as he makes a slow steady approach up to the hologram platform’s console.  He looks down at it then at the hologram platform then at his computer tablet.  Then mutters a revelation in Czech…

“Oh můj bože , proč jsem to neviděl dřív?  Je to procenta . Je to energie procenta.”

…then runs back out of the room.  That catches everyone inside’s attention.

 

 

The dying orange glow of sunset on the planet casts its dim rays through windows on the other side of the Infirmary.  Even more now than before, the darkness of Jennifer’s work area folds in on them and the stark white light of the chiclet lights against the walls around them and the glow of her now on desk lamp shine brightly.  Lightening the gloom…and the boredom.  Jennifer and Ronon, working closely side by side, continue to pour over the database.  Even though their translations are really more or less guesswork, but their friends and loved ones are on the line, so it’s a level of obstinate dedication.  It’s also not doing them much good, they’ve been at it for hours now and nothing.  From what they’ve been able to manage so far it’s just mostly records of either the technical specifications for the room, for its purpose as a classroom, or people, the Ancients living here at the time, complaining about the room, its maintenance and its purpose.  It is painfully obvious that the Ancients that had lived here before had the same issues with the room being a power hog that the Atlantis Expedition does now.  Still they keep leaned in and focus on the laptop’s screen.  Suddenly Zalenka bursts in, causing both Jennifer and Ronon to jump on their seats; Ronon winces at the sudden jolt of pain in his casted, slung wrist.  They stare at the Czech scientist, his expression says it all.

“What is it?  What did you find,” the words rush out of Jennifer’s mouth.

Radek rushes over to them and immediately shoves his way in between the two.  Shoving his computer tablet into Jennifer’s hands before he takes control of the laptop computer they’ve been working on.  He starts guiding the computer’s programming to two different subjects of interest, splitting the screen between them.  The SGC files on Daniel Jackson and Vala Mal Doran’s encounter with Ganos Lal/”Morgan LeFay” in that very same room a few years ago and the recordings of the energy readings from that time which the Expedition has kept in their own personal archives in a separate database located on a server system in one of the secure rooms in the inner part of the city.  As he does so, Teyla and Woolsey run up to the opened doorway.

“What have you found,” Woolsey asks out of breath.

Radek doesn’t acknowledge them, he keeps working.  Keeps typing.  In particular he’s bringing up the play by play graphs of not the room’s energy readings, but of the podium and the hologram platform’s energy readings.  Once up on the computer screen it only takes him a second to study them before he slaps the tabletop with the flat of his palms and shouts a Czech word of triumph.

“Mám to!”

The slap is loud and harsh enough sounding that Jennifer jumps again, wincing.  For a moment Ronon fears for her safety.  She’s so close to the erratic scientist.  Woolsey rushes forward with Teyla hot on his heels.

“What have you found, Doctor,” Woolsey repeats sternly.

Zelenka immediately straightens up like a Jack popping out of its box and faces Woolsey directly.  Radek’s glasses slip down his nose enough to give the look and control of a very studied man on a very specific mission.  It’s a reassuring sign.  He gestures as much.

“I was going over the energy readings we have from before the incident, during, and after for the twentieth time.  And all those times before, I did not see it.  But, but, it finally occurred to me…Doctor Jackson.”

They stare at him.  That’s it?  Woolsey waits for hopefully the rest of this.  Jennifer already had the idea, has been working on it with Ronon practically all day, “…Yes, Doctor?”

“It is not just what Jennifer at first hypothesized, it is not the room in general.  It is the hologram platform and its control podium specifically.  Look,” Zelenka goes back to the computer and the others crowd in around him trying to see, “The energy readings for the room when the hologram system is activated are incredible.  This we know.  There is no disputing it.”  Woolsey nods, Radek continues.  “But how much of that power is actually being used?  What percentages?  And where exactly?  A large percentage, the majority of the room’s power consumption, about sixty percent, comes from the hologram platform itself.  Of the remaining forty percent, thirty comes from the podium and the remaining ten is the natural consumption that of every room in Atlantis uses when someone is in it, i.e. the lights coming on at their presence.”

“What does that mean Radek,” Teyla asks.

“That if there is a specific gateway between the void where the Ascended Ancients are and our dimension of existence, it is not the entire room that is the gateway but the hologram platform.  And it also may have a connection to the control podium.”

“And how does this help us?”  Woolsey wonders.  How does this help Colonel Sheppard and the others simply being able to narrow down the gateway to a specific location?

But Radek is already there, “I have isolated the exact energy spike on the hologram platform and the podium when Doctor Jackson, Vala Mal Doran, and Doctor Weir reported that Ganos Lal was pulled away from them by the other Ascended.”

Okay…So?  Teyla, Ronon, Jennifer, and Woolsey again wait expectantly.  Their minds aren’t jumping around as quickly to whatever connections Radek’s are.  Yes both the podium and platform had been activated, put into standby but still active, when that had happened, but…

“How does this help us,” Ronon asks.

Radek turns to him, “I have isolated the exact wave frequency the other Ascended were using in order to open whatever gateway they were using to pull her back to them.  And according to the readings, we can use it too.  It does not go just one way like the Stargate’s wormhole like we originally thought, it in fact goes both ways.”

The others stare at the computer screen he’s gesturing to as though he’s offering it to them.  Is that what those graphs mean?  Jennifer searches the readings for a moment, like with reading Ancient, she isn’t understanding really any of what she’s seeing…then she looks up at Radek.

“Do you know what to do next,” she asks urgently.  All that matters is that Radek knows what those graphs mean.

Zelenka stares over the top of his glasses still slid down to almost the end of his nose at Woolsey’s profile.  Back to looking like the eternally focused scientist.

“I do,” Radek says.

Woolsey’s face immediately turns and stares at him head on.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Twelve

Chapter Twelve

It presides over everything, the only room that does.  Atlantis’ Commander’s Office juts out about two feet from the left side wall of the Gateroom like a play on a bay window and a short bridge connects it to the Gateroom’s overseeing Command Center or Operations as it is sometimes called.  It’s bayed wall is nothing but floor to ceiling windows, it’s other three walls are the same turquoise color as almost all the other walls in the city are, and the floor is the same color of marble bisected by silver bands to form large geometric shapes.  There are tall rust-colored, textured crystal-slat wall sconces indicating the transition from glass to actual wall.  And hanging in a place of prominence is the wooden cut and carved, polished emblem of the Atlantis Expedition.  A circle surrounding a Pegasus horse flying through the top pyramid-shaped part of a Stargate’s chevron.  The wall hanging is mounted between two three-paneled bright teal colored lights and on the other side of one of those lights, framed and gleaming behind a thin pane of glass are the Law degrees he earned so many years ago.

Richard Woolsey sits behind his modern-style, sleek, dark grey trimmed in strips of shining brushed nickel desk, watching people move in and out and all around the Command Center beyond the short bridge connecting his office to that area.  Being here, sitting here, it’s really all he can do…wait.  And make sure that nothing else disastrous happens to their city or its other personnel.  In spite of everything there are three other gate teams still offworld.  Two that stand a pretty good chance of running into hostilities that would require emergency backup to them, one of those teams at the hands of the Genii, the other at the hands of the Wraith.  The village they’re in is because their investigating a nearby village that is believed to be inhabited by Wraith worshippers.  It’s purely scout, but there’s always the chance that a worshipped Wraith vessel or party through the Stargate could enter their picture and that could be hazardous to the team.  With the Genii, it isn’t exactly like they haven’t run into something vaguely familiar to this with the Lucian Alliance back in the Milky Way Galaxy.  The Genii are bullying farmers for a share of their crops in exchange for ‘protection’ from the Wraith.  Richard Woolsey, as well as the team exploring the planet, doubts very highly that the Genii are going to do any protecting of these farmers and are most likely using them to bolster the Genii’s own foodstores and abandon the people to the Wraith in order to cover their own behinds.  Woolsey had ordered the team to stay with the farmers and try to get the Genii to lose interest in them.

The third team is checking on some interesting new indigenous flora on a habitable moon that bore a striking resemblance to what you’d imagine Earth to look like if there had never been humanity on it, untouched, unspoiled.  There should be no danger of Wraith or any other outside threats, but there is always the chance that someone could trip and hurt themselves, encounter hostile and previous unknown animal life, or hostile plants who were previously unknown to be hazardous, or someone could take a tumble and fall from a great height, something could fall on one of them…anything really, anything you could possibly imagine going wrong on a hiking or camping trip.  There is always a chance for any three of the teams or all three of them to run into trouble.  And Richard had to be ready to be in charge of the situation should it arise in the middle of the one here.  So here he is, sitting at his desk.  Waiting and watching.

He sees Teyla step into the Center, move through it, and walk across the bridge to his office.  His solid, clear glass office door slides open at her approach and she enters.  Her expression the entire time of her approach is not a happy one.  His expression becomes grimmer.  He doesn’t have to gesture, she takes the vinyl-covered, velvet-backed, light grey, modern-styled guest armchair directly across from him.

“I take it there’s no good news,” he says before she can tell him that there isn’t any.

Teyla Emmagan takes a deep frustrated breath, “It is not exactly bad news.  Jennifer and Ronon’s research has uncovered that there is indeed a link between the void in which the Ascended reside and the hologram room, it has been confirmed by Radek and his team’s analysis of the area both inside and around the room.”

Normally that would be interpreted as good news, “But…?”  Richard leads.

“Radek believes, and Jennifer and Ronon’s analysis confirms it, that the connection is very similar to those made between the stargates.”

“It’s a wormhole,” Woolsey’s stunned.

“No,” Teyla corrects, “but once a connection is made between the void and where we are, it is one way from the direction of whoever initiates the link.”

Richard’s shoulders lower, “Like travel through the wormholes.”

Teyla nods.  And that is how normally good news can be bad news.  Richard takes in this new information, and he doesn’t like it anymore than she does.  Hours, hours, and this is all that they have to show for it.  He leans back in his chair, he stifles the sigh he wants to issue.  Richard angles the chair off to the right and his nearer hand comes to rest on top of the somewhat bare, shiny glass surface of his desk.  His uniform is no longer the taut, formal, unruffled thing he prefers it be, to look like, it rumples at his stomach, collarbone, and biceps.  It’s not meticulous.  A mirror of how he feels, how this situation has made him feel…But being ruffled is all part of the job, a major part of this job especially.  Not unlike his old job.  Working for the I.O.A. meant that everywhere he went, he encountered nothing but animosity, anger, and in some instances flat out hatred.  And each and every time, Richard Woolsey never let the…adversity keep him from doing his job and doing it to the best of his abilities.

“So…,” he finally speaks, “we can’t establish a connection to the Void, can we?”

Teyla shakes her head, reluctantly, “No.  We cannot.”

“But,” he puts out there, “the Ascended can establish a connection to our realm of existence through that room.”

“Yes,” Teyla likewise confirms.  But she senses something in Richard’s voice.  His tone is different.  Not anything like Teyla’s own tone of voice.  He sounds more like he is hypothesizing.  Giving the finer details of a puzzling situation, laying out the cards as her Earth friends would say, not resolved to the situation being out of their collective hands.  He knows something, something in what she has told him has sparked his mind.

A pause.  Teyla waits.  He is considering whatever he is thinking further.  She does not want to disrupt him for fear that he is on to something useful.

“You know what this means, don’t you?”

She looks at him, her amber brows furrowed in confusion and question.  Still she waits.

“Our people were taken intentionally, not by some spatial anomaly that just so happened to occur, but by an Ascended being creating that anomaly.  Whoever it was, the Ascended wanted our people.  And we’re at the mercy of whoever that Ascended being is.  They are at the Ascended’s mercy.”

Teyla’s brows soften into understanding and something else.  The idea is not welcomed or looked on kindly by either of them.  The grim set of Richard’s mouth says as much.

Richard, with his eyes still locked with Teyla’s, continues, “Now the true question is why?”

*                      *                      *

The torchlight flickers, casting distrustful shadows all over the room.  Ganos Lal is waiting for them in the middle of the room.  She may be standing straight and erect, a tall elegant figure for them.  Her fingers are folded tightly into balled fists be her side.  Her sparkling eyes no longer have this enchantingly mischievous gleam to them, there’s no light in them at all, just worry.  Anxious, high anxiety worry.  Her entire body gives the impression of a rubber band being stretched to its capacity.  She’s practically vibrating.  Even as they enter the room and Lorne’s measured and expressive eyes make contact with Sheppard’s, the Ancient woman keeps looking at the part of the room back behind her.  The wall she had disappeared through.

“What is it,” the Lieutenant Colonel asks sternly.  Already on alert because this woman basically broke one of his strongest soldiers, but also because scared Ancients usually mean bad things.  And scared Ascended Ancients…well, that is just a whole new level of bad that he really doesn’t want to be dealing with right now.

For a moment Ganos is spooked by Sheppard speaking.  Actually starting at the sound of his voice.  The SGC soldiers exchange glances between each other, whatever had gone on while she was away, whatever she had gone off to try and handle, has gone from bad to worse.

“I’ve made a terrible mistake,” she tells them.  Her voice quavering.  Breathless.  She’s trying to hold herself together in front of them just like Kenmore had tried and failed to do in front of Sheppard, but, like Kenmore, she’s failing at it and like Kenmore, she’s going down by it without a fight.

“Oh good,” McKay retorts sarcastically.

They all look at him, he shrinks under they’re gazes, especially Sheppard’s glare.  Suddenly Ganos practically jumps out of her skin, staring behind her again.  Moving away from the back wall.  Her hand clutching at her chest.  She’s gasping.  She’s really gasping for air.  That get’s to Sheppard.  Fail.

“What mistake,” he asks hurriedly.  His eyes darting back and forth between the back of her head and the far wall she’s so afraid of.

“I thought I could hide you from them.”  She gasps.

“From who exactly?”

“The Others,” she sounds like a woman come face to face with the horrific monster in a movie you really don’t want to see alone late at night.  Even if those movies are John’s personal favorites, he doesn’t want to be in one of them.

But Sheppard already knew who ‘The Others’ are, what he wants to know is, “Which of the Others exactly?”

“I thought I could hide you from them, but your powers, they can sense you,” she breathes the last sentence.  Totally ignoring John.

Holy crap.  Which of the Others,” he sharply demands.  He wants to grab the woman and shakes her, but…

She finally looks back at them.  She’s terrified.  Bright beautiful eyes wide.  John had never really thought about what it would feel like to him to see an Ancient freaked out of their mind.  There had been that group of frightened Ancients in the time dilated sanctuary, but they hadn’t ascended yet.  They were mortal, they still had things to fear.  The same things he feared.  Like death.  What could an Ascended Ancient fear?  What could those Others possibly do to her?  What punishment is worse than death?  The thought jumps into his mind.  The punishment that never ends…and never can end.

“It’s all of them,” it rushes out of Ganos’s mouth, begging them to understand.  To know.  To run.  “Ursula, they’re after you.”

Sheppard stares at the woman.  He’s not sure he can help his people get out of this.  Rodney, slack jawed and scared eyes, stares at the wall Ganos is so terrified of.  He doubts that he’ll be able to get them out of this.  Lorne glares at Ganos.  He knew.  He knew when she showed up when they turned that corner that this was going to be bad.  Really bad.  Never when this woman showed up was it ever good for the humans she was talking to.  Ursula, frozen, just stares at the woman.  What has she gotten into?  What was she thrown into?  What about my son?

Suddenly Ganos jumps again, blatantly knocking back into John.  He catches her.  She’s absolutely riveted by the far wall that had been behind her.  Like it’s come alive but she’s the only one that can see it.  That’s familiar.  John gets the distinct impression that the hideous monster has arrived.  Or at the very least the horde is coming their way.

“We must go.  You must go,” Ganos paws back at Sheppard, “I cannot protect you here.  It, it was stupid of me to try.”

Before they can say anything, they’ve never heard an Ancient refer to anything that the Ancient’s ever done as ‘stupid’ before, Ganos quickly turns and begins shoving them towards the door.  One of her hands intentionally catching Kenmore and shoving her back to the door.  They obey.  Leaving the room.  Ganos last but certainly not least.  She gives the wall one last terrified look before fleeing.  The door closes of its own accord behind her with a jarring, thunderous slam.

With the boom still ringing in her ears and reverberating all around her, Ganos Lal quickly rushes to the front of the line of human soldiers and scientists.  Her cream and white gown fluttering behind her.  Making her look like an angel on the run.  They are running.  Fast.  The Ascended Ancient’s anxiety putting them on greater edge than usual.  Lorne taking up six then Rodney, Kenmore, and Sheppard at the twelve behind Ganos.

“Why are they after Urs?  What’d she ever do to them except be born?  Which is their doing I might add,” Lorne shouts.

“They want to destroy her,” Ganos answers.

The group freezes and its a few yards before she realizes that she’s not being followed anymore.  She stops.  Looks back at them.  They’re not moving.  None of them.  She rushes back to them.

“Come.  Come.  You must come now.  You do not have time for this,” she bursts at them.

“What do you mean they want to destroy her,” Lorne’s pissed.

“They made her,” Sheppard snaps just as pissed.

“Please,” Ganos begs them.  Her eyes darting to the storage room’s direction, “I will explain it to you on the way, but we must go now!  They’re coming!”

Against his better judgment, and his own urge to know, Sheppard nods.  Ganos turns.  John runs with the rest of his pseudo team behind her.  At the corner she ushers Sheppard around and goes with him.  Once again she leads the way.  Only this time, forget running, they’re sprinting.

“Okay, you said you were going to explain.  So explain,” John demands.  He hadn’t nodded for nothing.

“The reason we kept the experiment going was out of duty.  But we are determined to keep the highest concentration of Ancient in the descendants as possible.”

“Wait,” McKay speaks up already out of breath of course, “if, if you’re doing that…wouldn’t it be…be better to have a…half-human, half-Ancient and a…a full Ancient…have children together…That way their…their offspring…would be…three-quarters…Ancient.”

This time Ganos abruptly stops and looks back at Rodney.  Her expression’s horrified.  Eyes wide, Mona Lisa mouth gaped.  But by something clearly different than the Others currently hunting their asses down.

“That would never be possible,” she gasps, “No Ancient would ever agree to any sort of a sexual encounter like that.”

“Why not,” McKay presses, and taking the time to catch his breath while doubled over, “You want as close to racial purity as possible, that would be it.  Wouldn’t it?  Just keep breeding the experimental offspring with full blooded Ancients.”

Because I’m a half-breed,” Kenmore answers bitterly for Ganos.  “Huh?  No full Ancient would ever sleep with something like me, would they?  It’s too much like bestiality to you people.”

Morgan LeFay looks indignant, recovering some measure of that statuesque arrogant haughtiness from before, Bane of Camelot indeed, “I would not put it that way, but…We do not associate with lesser beings, why would we mate with them?”

The Ancient turns and starts running again.  Leading the way.  Again reluctantly, John leads their group to follow her.  But the thought rings in his head, Bitch.  And, why do people worship these guys?  What’s so great about them?  I bet if anyone ever took the time we’ve just taken to talk to one of them, that urge to worship would become a definite urge to kick their asses.

“So you could have had a higher concentration, it’s just…,” Rodney won’t let it drop.

“No Ancient would ever stoop so low as to screw anything even remotely human,” Evan bites.

“Is that why they want to kill her?  With her around it’s hard to hide the scandal.”  John can’t bring himself to let it drop either.  And his tone of voice is just as biting as Lorne’s.

“They want to destroy her because…There are some of us who believe you should be left alone, treated like any other human.  But there are others who believe that you…your creation…is an abomination.  Something unnatural.  Something that needs to be put down.”

And Bitch just keeps getting worse…They stop again.  But this time all of them at once.  SGC members at the end of their ropes and thinking that maybe they should just stop running period and let the Others punish this woman as badly as she’s thinking they will.  Except there’s that whole they also want to kill Kenmore thing and are as likely to kill the rest of them too just to clean up their mess.  Witnesses.  None of them are about to let that happen.  Let Ganos Lal/Morgan LeFay go down, sure.  But take themselves down with her, hell no.

But the Ascended woman is oblivious to their emotions and cautiously approaches the turn in the hallway.  She had started sensing that the Others are trying to outflank them, come at them from two sides.  When she yelled at the humans she’d brought here that she would explain everything if they would just come with her, she had simply needed to get these humans to move.  But, just as it had been when talking to them, it is proving far more difficult than she had anticipated.  They keep stopping, disliking what she’s telling them or causing her to stop because what they’re saying is so disgusting itself.

With all of these stops and starts taking up precious time, the Others may already be out in front by now.  She checks the way.  It’s clear but in the Void, that does not mean anything.  If the Others are already prepared, then they are all only running in circles in this fortress she created to temporarily house and protect them while she tried to warn Ursula of the Others’ intentions towards her.  The information has been passed along although most assuredly not in the way Ganos had originally intended, but none of this has gone on in the way she had intended when she started.  Hopefully the population among the Others that share her opinions and views on this matter will hold off the rest of the Others in order to give her enough time.  Buy them those precious few moments back.  She turns back to the humans.

“We are going to have to be quick about this.  This is the difficult part,” she informs them.

“I am not a freak,” Kenmore growls again through gritted teeth.

Ganos turns to look at the Lieutenant.  The Ancient’s expression is out of the blue maternal.

“No child,” she says as calmly affectionate as a mother or even a kindly grandmother, “you are not.  You were made, yes, but there is nothing unnatural about you except for the experiment that originally set the process that brought you about in motion.  There is nothing wrong with you or your son—“

Kenmore lunges at her again, “You stay away from my son!”

Lieutenant Colonel Sheppard stops his subordinate in time, but Ganos Lal is not taken aback by any of it.  She remembers fearing for the safety of her own son when the Wraith attacked the city.  He was one of Moros’s pupils, the elder Ancient’s assistant, and Moros was the head of their Council at the time and was extraordinarily inclined not to back down from anyone, or anything.  Extraordinarily stubborn even in the face of death.  Once back on Earth, her son, Medraut, although she understood that Earth legend and history as well as SG-1 call him Mordred, continued to be Moros, the famous Merlin’s assistant…and that damnable man led her child down a dark path.  A path that her son, her only child, quickly discovered was not what it seemed, not what Moros had told him it would be.  A path leading to a weapon that would destroy all Ascended beings in a galaxy.  A path resulting in the death of her son as he tried to stop that weapon from happening.

Her child never Ascended as she had, but at least Ganos had been spared the pain of watching him die an even more terrible death at the hands of the plague that wiped out many of their people.  She had arrived at her child’s side too late, she couldn’t even help him try to Ascend in his final moments…but she got the grateful chance to hold him and comfort him in her arms during his final minutes…and through his last breath…her precious child’s last breath…And in this very Void, Ganos had volunteered to hunt down Moros and stop his continuing experiments on Ascended beings-killing weaponry which had become even more dangerous and unapproved by the rest them here.  She wanted to hunt down and stop the man who had led her child into death…

“Whatever you may think of us, there are some here, very few I admit, but we are dedicated to protecting you and your son,” she tells the Lieutenant.

“And where were you when my husband died!  Where!  What protection was there when that damn weapon exploded!  Where were any of you to protect him when his body was burning!  When he was blown apart!”  Kenmore’s snapped again.  Rodney watches her.  As does Sheppard.

The tears come again, this time hot and angry.  No bawling.  Just infuriating pain.

“He,” she points back at Lorne, “used a fire extinguisher on what was left of my husband after our friends, our family stopped me from going into those flames and pulling him out.  How dare you stand there and say you protected us!  You protected yourselves!

“We did what we could, my dear—“

“We are nothing to you,” Kenmore throws back in her face.

“—But we are not perfect despite our existence on a higher plain than you.”

Kenmore’s not buying it.  No one is.  Well, except for the imperfect part.

“Simply know that we are trying.  In the strictest sense of the rules, we are trying.  We really are doing all that we can.”

Kenmore’s still not buying what’s being sold.  But the rest of their group is, a little.

Ganos goes around the corner, rushes forward, and reaches out to the castle’s front door.  She opens it and peers out into the black, bleak landscape beyond.  The lowered wooden drawbridge over a moat of nothing.  The desolate rocks.  Whole galaxies acting like pinpricks of starlight.

As far as she can tell, nothing is there.  But her silhouette prickles and crackles without sound here and there all over her body with flashes of her Ascended golden glowing aura which she did not need to use here.  They are indications of the coming storm of the Others hunting down the prey she’s trying to hide by latching on to her own personal Ascended presence in their realm…But that storm is not here yet.  They are busy rallying.  She looks back at those she has made the mistake of bringing here, trapping here.  Those she has sworn as her duty to protect in this Void…

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Eleven

Chapter Eleven

Now abandoned, the men look around their new room.  Well it sure as hell beats the empty, mind-numbing monotony of all those damn hallways.  Now they have a stack of a few chairs to play with.

“Well, isn’t this just great.  She brings us here and then leaves us,” McKay says.

“Well you’ve been here before Rodney, what should we do now,” Sheppard asks him.

Rodney walks over to the stack of wooden chairs and pulls one off the top and starts positioning it where he wants to sit.

“I’m figuring she brought us to this room because wandering the hallways was probably drawing undue attention also.  I suggest we just sit here and wait till she gets back and tells us more fun facts about why we’re here…well, actually, why Kenmore is here and we all just got brought along for the ride.”

John wanted to point out that it was Rodney who’d got brought along for the ride actually, but…

As Rodney takes his seat, Sheppard, not happy with just sitting here and doing nothing about their situation, looks around again.  He notices Lorne staring back at the door.  He looks back at the door too then back at Lorne.

“Hey,” he gets Lorne’s attention, “you stay with Rodney and watch out for him.  I’ll go talk to her.”

Lorne glances between the door and Sheppard, uncertainly.

“With all due respect, Sir, but you don’t know her.  You don’t even like her.  And she doesn’t like you.  And right now she needs someone she can trust.  And let’s face it, Colonel, that’s not you.”

Sheppard’s not exactly thrilled with Lorne’s bluntness no matter how true it is.

“I’ll do it,” Sheppard tells him.

“Sir—“

“Major, she’s under my command and the fifth member of my team,” he cuts him off, “Now stay here and keep an eye on Rodney.  I don’t think having a half-ass—“

“Hey,” McKay interjects.

Half-ass Ancient gene,” Sheppard goes on, “is going to keep him safe around here, him being here before regardless.”

Lorne glances at the door again.  He’s not buying any of it.  His loyalty and love for his friend is admirable but…

“Don’t make me make this an order, Major,” the Colonel warns him.

Evan looks back at his commanding officer…and nods.  A true officer.  Cut from the same cloth as Kenmore.  Never would disobey an order, but it would have to be an order in the first place.  And a damn good one at that too.  She’s one of the few officers Sheppard’s ever met that actually read her agreement to join the military through and through, including memorizing the section about being able to disobey a direct order when it is believed that the order will be detrimental to the mission and lives by it and makes damn sure every other officer around her lives by the same standard too.

Sheppard nods back at the Major then heads for the door.  He gets his hand on the wrought iron ring handle…

“Oh, and Colonel,” Lorne pipes up.

Sheppard stops and looks back at him.

“If you have ever trusted me,” Sheppard nods at him, John does, “then trust me now when I tell you, you don’t know it all.  What was left out of her personnel file and the reports is what’s still lingering on.”

Sheppard nods at him again then leaves the room.  Lorne looks over at Rodney and Rodney is looking like ‘What the hell did you two just say to each other?’  Then Evan heads for the back wall, if Morgan LeFay could go through it, maybe some of those Others could come through it too.  No sense in not checking to see if there are any structural weaknesses they might be able to take advantage of.  Maybe if they couldn’t break a chair and use its parts, or maybe they could ram McKay against it and use parts of him…

*                      *                      *

Back in the mind-numbing hallways again, only they aren’t quite so mind-numbing anymore because he knows who he’s looking for, John Sheppard comes around the corner and slows at the sight of Lieutenant Kenmore sitting on the floor.  Her back against the wall, her knees gathered up against her chest.  He stops.  Her face is buried in between her kneecaps with her arms wrapped around her legs, her long, naturally wavy, brown hair blocking her face from view.  She hadn’t been outside the door like he’d expected, but back farther along one of the many other doorless hallways they’d taken to get here.  And although her hair is definitely long enough of a block to see her face, it isn’t enough to hide the emotion.  He slowly walks up to her, and sits down against the wall opposite her.  After a long while, she looks up.  She’s been crying.  Still crying, but she’s trying to hold herself in.  Most likely because he’s not a friend.  Then it suddenly dawns on him that he’s never seen her cry…never known her to.  Get angry, sure, on basically every mission.  But she’s never cried, not in front of him, not any of them.

Sheppard keeps an even tone for her sake, respecting how monumental this is, “Tell me.”

It’s not an order or a demand of any sort, it’s simply a question.  What he’s asking is a lot, will she rise to it?

She won’t meet his eyes.  Can’t.  Instead she chooses to stare beside his boots and somewhere distantly beyond the stone bricks there…

“It’s a lie,” she whispers, “it was all a lie.”

Sheppard waits another long moment of silence then…

“What was a lie,” he asks quietly.

“My marriage.”

He stares at her, that was not the answer he had expected from her.  Of all the things he could have guessed, doubting her marriage was not anything he figured.  Having issues with the possibility that she’s actually descended from the sick Ancient bastards that initiated her being half-human, half-Ancient, that was definitely what he’d expected.  But he can see that even though her face is still, it’s tense and her eyes are brimming.  She’s in a lot of pain.

“How do you get that,” he asks.

And all of a sudden the anger is there.

“They bred us like animals.  There was no love.  It wasn’t a marriage, it was an experiment.  Their experiment.”  She seethes.  Barely controlled.

“Look, I know I don’t know you very well—“

Kenmore scoffs and tears actually manage to fall from her eyes, “You don’t know me at all.”

“But I do know you love your husband.”

She looks at him.  In the eyes.

“You’d rather still be married to his ghost, his memory, than anything, anyone else.  Now they,” he points back down the hallway towards Rodney and Lorne’s room, the one the Ancient hologram teacher woman had taken them to, “didn’t fake that.  They couldn’t.  They don’t know what the hell any of that is.”

“Those two Ancient geneticists did.”

Sheppard remembers finding the video of the two…

 

Stumbling around the ruins of the Ancient outpost on the oceanic planet Amna of Athos’s solar system was a joy, sarcastically, unto itself.  The typical beautiful marble floors of every single Ancient facility they’ve ever been in, and for Kenmore that basically amounted to Atlantis, has been reduced by humidity, weather, and time to something more akin to crumbling porous cheese.  The colors have been stripped out of it too rendering it looking more like really porous concrete or concrete-colored pumice.  Actually…everything’s been stripped.  And it was easy to tell that none of it had been done by scavengers, no one would possibly want what wasn’t here anymore.  Every single computer console or piece of anything even remotely technological has literally been eroded away.  Things John never thought in a million years could rust have apparently rusted in a matter of ten thousand years and they haven’t just rusted, the parts that have rusted through have crumbled into dust and are being blown away by the winds blowing through off the ocean and the massive waterfalls outside.  Wow.

The trickiest part of the whole place are the stairs though.  Where Atlantis had some stairways that are made of metal grating, this place had definitely dedicated more of its décor choices to aesthetic than utility…or longevity.  They’re lucky any bits of the wooden staircases are left—frankly John’s shocked that any wood is left in the place—, even though you could blatantly tell even now from the remnants that the pieces had to have been at least four feet thick; they aren’t even four inches thick now.  But their planted holes left in the stone are still there to show the real size that was.  As the team try to make their ways up to the second floor, hugging the walls, Kenmore’s boot slips on some fragmented wood giving way underneath her precarious step and fluttering down to the ground floor.  She gasps, gives a little yelp, but keeps her hold on to the swiss cheese-like stone wall behind her as she watches the splinters flutter away from her.  Teyla, beside her, and Ronon, on her other side, watch the splinters fall away too.  John and Rodney up ahead of Teyla, look back.

“Are you alright,” Teyla asks breathlessly.

Kenmore nods, more breathless.

“Everything okay,” John shouts back to them over the funneling of the wind and the somewhat muffled sounds of the waterfall.

The two women nod.  It’s not exactly the verbal communiqué he’d been hoping for but it’s something.  The team keeps moving to the only part of the second floor of the ‘building’ still left, some frayed wooden floor guarded by some relatively stable stone exterior and interior.  Rodney’s guess that the stone here was still somewhat stable was more or less due to the fact that there’s a giant foyer-like room they’d just left whose rounded walls were apparently big enough to provide this part of the building’s structure with some barrier to the elements.  But blocking it from the elements is about all it did.  Sheppard gets into the room followed by Rodney then a handful of seconds later by Teyla then Kenmore and then Ronon.  The group looks around.

Barracks.  Not military like the ones on the desert planet, Laema Dar, but more…dormitory.  Of course, Rodney and Zelenka had discovered before the team came here that the planet’s only structure had been a school dedicated to the Arts.  Think Juilliard.  Ancient beds, devoid of mattresses, paired with Ancient bedside tables, devoid of lights or any other technology like that, lined up against the parts of the room’s walls left standing.  The concrete-like, stripped marble flooring looked even iffier than the first floor’s.  No wall sconces or other forms of lighting of any sort anywhere to be seen.

There’s really not much left.  The colding wind blows through what’s left of the ruins and tousles their hairs around.  Really, not much.  Rodney, of course, makes his way over to the safest looking part of the room, this side of the wall they’d just clung to to climb the stairs to get up into here.  But it’s why he’s gone over there that’s different.  He saw something.  Not an animal, if Rodney thought he’d seen the Pegasus Galaxy answer to a rat scurrying around over there he would have either shot at it while screaming like a seven-year old Drew Barrymore coming face to face with E.T., or tried to run the hell out of the room while screaming, again like a seven-year old Drew Barrymore coming face to face with E.T., or just plain screamed.  No, Rodney saw something shiny.  Something he recognized.  A crystal.  And not just any crystal, a control crystal the kind of which are used on Ancient laptop computers.  Small, but usually pretty damn tough to remove—he knows McKay knows that from personal experience.  Rodney bends down into the elementally torn up floor boards and pulls out the Ancient laptop.  He dusts it off as the team gathers around him, no one willing to stray from the rest of the group too far in the falling apart building for fear of it falling apart the rest of the way and taking them with its fall without being able to reach out to anybody for help.  Rodney opens the once bright white, small computer up and tries to see if it’s got any juice left.  And magically enough it does.  Actually a lot more than even McKay’d thought it could possibly have left in it.

“What do you think it’s for,” John asks McKay, nodding his head at the computer in the scientist’s hands.

McKay stands up and starts pushing buttons, just to test out how many of them are still in proper working order.  The others crowding in close…when suddenly the laptop’s screen activates.  And so does its speakers, loud and clear.

There’s no mistaking the moaning and groaning of the woman and man.  And definitely no mistaking what the naked woman straddling the naked man are doing.

The team’s eyes bulge and immediately let alone does Teyla look away, she moves away too.  The other four just stare.

“Wow,” Kenmore says.  “Really?  We didn’t come up with calling someone a ‘frigid bitch’ on our own,” referencing some of Nemesis’ translated journal passages from back at the Athosian ‘college campus’, “And now we apparently didn’t even come up with homemade porn on our own?  Really?…I mean, really?  Is anything we have nowadays, anything, even remotely original that we came up with on our own or did we just inherit everything from themSeriously.

Sheppard and Ronon are actually kind of enthralled by the sight, and it’s in a really confusing way.  Confusing as in they don’t really know whether or not to find it interesting or to gouge out their eyes.  It’s more like accidentally catching your parents having sex…right now both men, especially John, are erring on the side of eye gouging.

“Wha-wha-what else is, is there…on that thing,” Sheppard stammers.  Uncomfortably running a hand through his tousled and windblown hair.

Rodney tries to check but all the thing is letting him do is check while not removing the homemade Ancient video from its screen.  Split screen.  Great…

“Well, all I can tell you is that there are a lot of communications, probably back and forth between the two of these two, and that’s there’s more videos than just this one.  Oh and this video’s length.”

“How, how, how long,” John manages to get out.

“Eighteen hours.”

Eighteen hours,” the others exclaim at him.

“Wait, you mean that this video is eighteen hours…of just this,” Kenmore points flabbergasted at the coital couple still going at it on the small screen.

Rodney looks back at her, “Well, I don’t actually know.  I haven’t seen the whole video.  I’m just telling you what the computer is telling me.”

“And it’s telling you that this is eighteen hours long?”

“Well, not exactly eighteen hours,” the others roll their eyes and scoff, it would figure Rodney would pad a number like that, “it’s actually eighteen hours thirty-eight minutes and forty-five point sixteen seconds.  Exactly.”

They gape at him again.  Over eighteen hours?!  Are you kidding me?

Rodney nods at them.  Teyla goes back to at the very least managing to avoid the video if not the audio, while the others go back to watching.  The four of them start tilting their heads to the left, following the action.  The fortyish pale skinned woman’s long black ringlet curly, like some Art Noveau siren’s, hair certainly is bouncy.  They finally have to actually turn their shoulders a little with their heads too.

“You know, I never thought of Ancients being quite that flexible before,” Rodney comments.

“Wow,” Ronon says.

“It’s sort of like Twister…or gymnastics,” John observes.

Suddenly the moaning and groaning hit overdrive, Teyla cringes, she really doesn’t want to be here for this.  Suddenly Kenmore straightens up and her expression says just as much as her words…

“Oh come on,” she exclaims, “that’s not gymnastics, that’s more like the Exorcism of Emily Rose…only naked.  Although come to think of it, I could see how a virgin priest would confuse a screaming orgasm with demonic possession.  Especially if he’d seen this.”

If it were any other time, John’d probably burst out laughing at what Kenmore just said.

 

…and John shakes his head.

“No, no, they didn’t.  That was lust.  That was screwing.  That wasn’t love.  That wasn’t staying married to a corpse because you can’t bear to not be married to him for one second in your life even if he’s not in it anymore…even if he can’t be in it anymore.”  The reluctant acceptance of those last words, he’s speaking from his personal memories of sitting in a divorce attorney’s office going through the bitter as hell divorce from Nancy.  There’s a lot of pain there too.

They stare at each other in a moment of silent understanding.  Then…

“The fire,” Kenmore says.

Sheppard nods, “Yes, the fire of loving them.  The—“

“No.”

Sheppard comes up short.

“The fire of his death,” Kenmore breathes.

He stares at her and she keeps her eyes on him as she tells her story.

“We were, we were on base that day, my son and I, he was two years old.  We were on base when it happened.

“My, my husband had developed a weapon to use against the Ori.  He and his team were testing it.  Its first test,” she loses her voice breathily then regains it, “Something went horribly wrong.  There, there was an explosion.”  She breaks, Sheppard waits for her to get herself back…she does but she can’t look at him anymore.

“I, I was one of the first responders to the scene…and, and,” she starts to crack again, “…I saw, I saw his body…on, on fire.”  She can’t handle it.  She can’t handle the memory even though it’s one that she nightmares every night of her life since it happened.

Sheppard sees it when she grabs the side of her head, her fingers poking through her hair as she grips anguished chunks of it.  John sees the bright red splotches starting to show up on the skin of her forearms and her hands.  The start of burns.  He suddenly realizes it.  It’s not just that she remembers it.  Her Ancient abilities make her relive it.  She’s there again.  Trying to pull her husband Michael’s burning corpse out of the fires.  Immediately John crawls over to her and wraps his arms around her.

“I saw, I saw what, what was left of his body on fire.”  She loses it into the collarbone of his black t-shirt.  Grabbing chunks of the cotton fabric over his chest in her hands.

He holds on to her.  She didn’t needed to be patted like a child or petted like a dog providing comfort.  She just needs someone there.  And he is here.  Just as he had been when Teyla came to his quarters after the announcement of Doctor Kate Heightmeyer’s, the Expedition’s then psychiatrist, death.  The well-loved woman had died in her sleep, because of a nightmare that an invading organism inside of her, one that John had inadvertently brought back to the city with him, used to make her body believe the nightmare it was going through was real.  Heightmeyer died in a nightmare.  Teyla had believed that John had tried to kill her in her nightmare, but her body nor psychology gave in to the manipulative organism and she survived.  It was also the reason she’d shown up on his doorstep like that, tear-streaked cheeks, calm but hurt demeanor.  Because of her nightmare, she had treated John differently.  Treated him like the to-be-avoided enemy that he had been in her nightmare.  But at Heightmeyer’s death, because of her death, Teyla had come to John to make amends.  Without a word she had stepped forward, wrapped her arms around him, and hugged him, the side of her head embracing his chest.  All John could think of to do in return was put his arms around her too and accept her silent but heartfelt apology.  Silently too, it was something he had always hoped she would do, come to his quarters…but he had hoped that it would have been under different circumstances and definitely for an entirely different reason, a more personal, intimate reason…

Somehow Ursula manages to get her voice back.  And John can’t help but admire the strength of a widow as it all comes tumbling out…

“I tried to go in.  I tried.  I tried to go into the fire to save him.  To save something of him.  But they wouldn’t let me.  Evan…Cam…Teal’c.   It, it took Cam and Teal’c to hold me back.  And then, and then there was a pinch in my shoulder and, and then everything started to blur and then it all went black.  And, and then I don’t remember anything until, until…,” she cracks again, John holds on, then her voice comes back in a whisper, “until I woke up in the infirmary…And, and I saw, I saw Cam and Daniel and Sam and General Landry there and…and I saw Jack.  Jack was there…and I knew.  I knew Michael was gone.  I knew my husband was gone.”

She breaks against John’s chest again.  He holds her tighter.  She’s trembling.  Shaking with the loss.  With the realization.  It’s like every fiber of her is coming apart at the seams.  Every raw nerve is becoming exposed.  And each nerve ending is being jabbed with a dull edged stick over and over and over again.

Then she somehow, somehow, he doesn’t know how, gets her voice back.  My God, widows, he marvels.

“And then…and then I started screaming for my son, our son, and Dan, Daniel told me that Teal’c had him.  Teal’c had my son on the surface…showing him flowers, and the sky, and nothing about…nothing about his father, nothing about me, nothing about fires or death, nothing…dark.”

John nods.  The side of his chin rubbing against the side of her head.  And Ursula’s fists full of his shirt tighten.  Shaking even harder.  He holds her tighter still as she fights to pull herself back from the brink.  Finally she eases.  It’s more than she’s simply done telling for now, he can feel in her body that it’s because she’s exhausted by remembering at least this much…and voicing it.  Her forehead simply rests on his collarbone now.  He can hear her panting, feel the heat of it easily penetrating through the cotton of his shirt and slamming rhythmically against his chest.  Flickering and moistening and matting his black chest hair underneath.  Her hard shaking goes back down to uncontrollable trembling.

John looks back towards the room where Rodney and Lorne where…only they aren’t there anymore, are they.  Rodney and Evan are standing at the turn in the hallway just a few feet away from John.  And judging by their looks, Rodney’s especially, the two men have heard every painful word she’s vented.  John gestures with his eyes for them to go back to the room.  Evan nods and goes without a single sentiment of hesitation; now he knows John knows, the ball is in his commanding officer’s court.  Rodney lingers for a few more moments then, just when John was thinking he was going to have to make it an order, walks away using a skill and tact in complete and utterless stealth that John never knew the man had in him.

John returns his attention to Kenmore.  The trembling has ebbed out of her body.  Finally, he takes hold of her upper arms and pulls her back from him.  He looks at her.

“You see,” she looks up at him, she’s a mess.  Exactly what he expected to see, pain incarnate, what he’d been steeling himself to see in those few precious moments before taking hold of her arms and pulling her back from him so he could look at her, “They can’t fake this.  They can’t fake how much you loved him.  They can’t fake how much you still love him.  How you feel about him is not a lie.  It never was.  It never will be.”  The voice of experience from an attorney’s office.

Suddenly there’s footsteps rushing down the stone hallway floor, they skid around the corner and Rodney looks down at the two of them.  There’s something that’s gone on here, something that makes him feel uncomfortable.  Something after he and Lorne left.  There’s a moment of silence between all three of them then…

“She’s back,” Rodney blurts out, “Ganos Lal is back.”

Ganos Lal, so that’s her name.  Quietly, Sheppard and Kenmore stand up.  The Lieutenant shirking her CO’s help and taking up the customary distance, especially physically and emotionally, that a subordinate is supposed to maintain in the presence of a superior.  It’s actually something John’s admiring about her even more.  They follow Rodney back to the storage room.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Ten

Chapter Ten

The small niche off the main Infirmary doesn’t get much light except for its lines of chiclet sconces, even then some Earth-made metal desk lamps are required.  They don’t put out much light and neither do the monitors that are turned on around the room.  No one’s working at the smaller of the two metal roller desks, the largest of which is stationed in the very middle of the room, Jennifer’s desk.  Behind it is a shelving/refrigerated unit housing row after row after row of large, medium, and small labeled bottles, some glass, some soft plastic squeeze.  On the bottom  shelf of the desk are large frosted plastic containers that look like plastic spare gas containers, some of them hold red colored fluid, others bright blue, and a bright red colored container is labeled with a large yellow hazardous material label.  Next to the desk are a couple of red plastic drums with equally large yellow biohazard labels on them.  Jennifer, sans her white lab coat more formally called a smock jacket, which is lying on her desk’s top beside her, sits at her desk on her simple metal stool with the laptop open on the desk’s top amidst the numerous medical supplies and two other spare laptops as well as a couple of desk lamps, continuing to review the database as she has been for the last three hours, almost going on four now.  She had to move here to her desk in the Infirmary, staying any longer in Rodney’s lab…it was reminding her too much of him…and how he isn’t here right now, how he’s in danger right now.  It was becoming too distracting.

Ronon hobbles into the eternally open doorway and waits there, watching her.  Jennifer’s elbow rests on her knee, courtesy of her semi-powder blue shirt with the zipper back being sleeveless.  It’s one of his favorites on her, Rodney’s too, because the cuts of the shirt’s pattern angles her figure and accentuates in all the right places on her.  Always making her look her best…or at her best.  She leans forward towards her desk, the butt of her hand’s palm holding up her chin.  Her eyes are focused intently on the computer screen, her middle finger moves the mouse cursor and her thumb clicks the pad’s left button to move to the next ‘page’ of information.  He clears his throat.  She looks up at him.

“Uh, um…do you need any help with that?”

There’s no warmly receptive, sweet smile for him.  “Do you want to help,” she asks.

Ronon takes the dig on that, he starts to hobble into the room.  After a few heartbeats of watching his struggles, he never was any good at using a cane, always felt it was a sign of weakness he couldn’t show, Jennifer always considered it a sign of pigheadedness, Jennifer’s compassion steps in and she hurries to his side.  Quietly she slips his arm around her shoulders and wraps one of her arms around the back of his waist and begins to help guide him to the guest chair, exactly like the ones in the computer lab he’d left about ten minutes ago, beside her desk he had been aiming for.  The one she’d pulled over to put her feet up on when they had been bugging her an hour ago; she never did like balancing them on one of the stool’s footrest bars, they never actually made her feet rest, just get achy.  Ronon keeps his eyes on her.  Her golden brown eyes are focused intently on the goal of the chair.  Giving her normally smooth porcelain skin and skittish facial features a calm, confident intensity that one would normally find on the faces of powerful Queens ruling on behalf of their people, well and strongly.  Her strawberry blonde-brown straight, shoulder length hair is pulled back into a bouncy, doll-like ponytail by a small brown hair band, and her forehead-covering bangs are swept over to the side.  He always thought that’s a pretty look on her, that it hid more about her than people realized.  Made her a sort of enigma.  Like there’s something under the surface if you cared to look or asked her to show you, and after talking to her for a few moments, you realized that she probably didn’t even know what was underneath her surface even though everyone else could see that there’s more to her than what her surface shows.  As they walk over to the chair borrowed from the little niche desk stationed in the niche beside the left side of the door…

“I never not wanted to help,” he tells her features.

Jennifer stays silent.  Stays focused on the goal.

“It’s just, you know, I’m not good at this stuff.  I’m not good at computers.  That’s always been McKay’s thing.”

He and Jennifer successfully plant him in the white mesh and silver metal roller chair then she goes around him and gets back on her stool beside him.

“But it’s not just that, is it though?”  She asks him.  Still with nothing of her usual kind and smiling nature that reminded him so much of Melena…although how she’s treating him when she’s angry with him is really similar to Melena’s nature of being very emotional and argumentative with him when she was angry with him too.  Something his Earth friends called a Fighter’s Spirit, on Sateda it was simply called time wasting, to him it’s irritating.  Always riled him up more than it should, made his and Melena’s arguments very heated…and of course the making up was very heated too.  He puts the old ideas that resurge in his mind of what it would have been like for him and Jennifer to make up aside.  But in doing so it brings up other old ideas…

“No,” he admits.  He looks down at his hands again, fidgeting again.  He was never any good at saying this either…“I’m sorry for punishing you and Rodney.”

Jennifer finally looks at him again.  A humble Ronon, a nervous Ronon…is not a usual sight.  He really is trying though, meaning it, that’s why he can’t look at her.  Emotional or moments he didn’t want to happen but knew had to are likewise not his strong suit.  She had always chalked it up to his being a Runner for seven years.  Day and night running from planet to planet across the galaxy, running from Wraith hunters whose sole purpose was to find him and kill him…for sport.  It really didn’t make for bonding experiences with other humans.  Too dangerous, he didn’t want to bring Wraith down on other people needlessly.  But when Tyre was here, one of Ronon’s dearest friends from before the Wraith destroyed Sateda, detoxing from being a Wraith worshipper since the fall of Sateda, Tyre had the same tendency to be embarrassed during apologies or, now that it occurs to Jennifer, the shame.  Maybe it’s a habit of being ashamed not embarrassed?  Ronon doesn’t have to be ashamed for saying he’s sorry anymore than Tyre had to.

“Thank you,” she says.  Really that’s all she had wanted to hear from the very beginning.  Just an ‘I’m being an ass, sorry, and things’ll get back to normal when I’m done being that ass’.  Nothing else really, just a timeline.  And a light at the end of the jerk tunnel.

The more she analyzes his humility, his humbling, the more Jennifer thinks of Tyre.  Tyre had quickly gotten over his embarrassment of shame by rededicating himself to helping the team find wherever the Wraith that Tyre had handed Ronon over to was and helping the team go there and free Ronon.  The other Satedan man had made it his life’s mission.  When the team had come back with Ronon but without Tyre, Jennifer had feared that Ronon had killed his own childhood best friend.  But when Ronon himself was detoxing from being turned into a Wraith worshipper, he’d screamed things in his drugged-out delirium.  He screamed one night, one of the worst nights, that Tyre had died saving him…and then Ronon kept screaming out to his friend that he was sorry Tyre had to do it, begging Tyre to forgive Ronon’s weakness…and to forgive Ronon for not being there to protect him and his other Satedan friends from being turned into Wraith worshippers in the first place.  That night was so heartbreaking for Jennifer to watch that when she tried to call in another nurse to take over for her, Jennifer was crying so hard she could only get choked squeaks out.  In the end, both the nurse and Richard Woolsey had come to take over for her, the nurse to escort Jennifer back to her quarters through a back way so that no one would see the doctor so distraught and worry, and Woolsey stayed to watch over Ronon personally.  That’s something Ronon never knew about, still doesn’t know about.  Jennifer doubts anyone but she, the nurse, and Woolsey know.

Ronon’s apology now is a similar sign to her as Tyre’s pledges had been.   Some sign that he wanted to help Rodney when Rodney was in danger, a way she’d know for sure that when the team was out on a mission everyone was looking out for everyone…and that he wanted to help her too.  That’s always nice to know too.  Safety, and comfort, in numbers.  Among friends…

She slides over the laptop to be between them.  Ronon turns, with a struggle, his chair to look at it.  Jennifer, discreetly smiling, gets comfortable on her stool again.  They both focus in on the database page on the screen.  Rededicating himself to finding and saving a friend, she can’t help thinking.

“You know that’s why he’s having you do this, right,” Jennifer comments in her normal casual tone of voice without taking her eyes off the screen.

“What,” Ronon asks, watching the screen and trying to figure out what the hell he’s seeing.  It just looks like a bunch of blocks stacked in lines or side by side or…it’s just a bunch of Ancient.  He doesn’t know Ancient, doesn’t pretend to know it—well, actually, he is pretending to know it right now.

She gestures at his injured body, Ronon looks down at himself, “That,” she says.  “You’d only be in the way because of how the training injuries are affecting the way you move, but rather than have you sitting around doing nothing because he knows you don’t like that and can’t stand it, Woolsey decided to have you help me so that you’d at least be doing something to help them out that would be effective and not a hindrance.”

Ronon nods at her, “I’m good with that.  So…,” he returns his eyes to the computer, again the irritation is creeping into muscles at the base of his neck and spreading into his shoulders.  He decides to tell her exactly how he feels, “What exactly are we doing?”

Jennifer turns back to the computer, her smile isn’t discreet anymore.  Its broadness is dimpling her cheeks as deeply as it normally does and her pink lips spread thin, “Searching for any helpful references to that hologram room being a gateway to wherever the Ascended Ancients are.”

“I’m not sure how much of a help I’m going to be here, I can’t read Ancient.”

Jennifer’s smile suddenly turns bittersweet in the glow of the computer screen, “You know, I bet if Lieutenant Kenmore were here she’d probably be able to have an Ancient computer translate all this into Satedan for you.”

Ronon starts nodding, feeling kinda bittersweet too at the thought himself, and who’d have ever thought that, “Yeah, I bet she could,” he says.

They keep analyzing the ‘page’ of the database.

“You know, I think those…squares say ‘altitude’,” Ronon points out with his usable hand.

Jennifer, finding humor, looks over at him with playfully furrowed eyebrows, “I thought you said you couldn’t read Ancient?”

“I don’t, but I think I recognize that one from all the times I’ve seen it on the Head’s Up when Sheppard’s piloting the jumper.”

She nods.

“Recognize anything else,” she asks.

He shrugs and keeps looking.  Maybe…

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Nine

(Since tomorrow is going to be so busy for me and a lot of others working Black Friday, I’m putting out my usual blog entry today and sending out a Happy Thanksgiving!!! message to everyone.)

Do Argo proud people! ;-)

Do Argo proud people! 😉

Chapter Nine

Simmering.  Boiling over.  There is no cooking term applicable to Kenmore’s expression as she stares down Ganos Lal in the stone torchlit hallway of an Ancient-made medieval castle.

“You leave my son and my husband out of this,” she finally manages to growl.  The men around her know what it sounds like when a mother defends her cub.

“I’m afraid I can’t do that, Ursula.”  And it sounds like Hal in 2001.  Ganos turns and begins to walk up the hallway.

Kenmore lunges at her but Lorne puts out an arm to stop her, “Don’t call me Ursula!  You don’t call me anything that familiar!”  Kenmore shouts after her.

Ganos stops and looks back at her.  The woman bows her head, “Very well Lieutenant Kenmore,” she returns back to her original direction and starts walking again.

Sheppard, Lorne, and McKay exchange wary looks then reluctantly follow the Ancient woman.  After a few feet, Lorne knows that the sounds of their full group’s footfalls are not what they should be.  Evan stops and turns back.  Ursula’s still back there, not moving, not wanting to move.  Ganos had crossed a line bringing her family into it then crossed a second by calling Ursula by her first name.  Since Michael’s death, she’d kept herself close to the vest.  Really only the people who had known her before his passing were the ones she allowed to call her by her first name, the closest of those are the ones she allows to call her by her nickname Urs.  He gently flicks a few fingers of his hand beside his thigh, the only one of his hands in her vision, towards himself; his polite and as gently a way as possible way of telling her to come along.  She looks at him.  She still doesn’t want to.  Won’t.  He mouths to her: I promise.  She shakes her head at him tightly, mouthing back: You can’t promise this.  Evan: I can try.  They stare at each other…he’s not going without her.  They keep staring at each other…Please, Evan mouths.  She still won’t follow him.  So he stands there.  Waiting with her.  They casually look around the hallway and occasionally at each other, but it’s not anywhere near the stare down it had been before.  They keep avoiding each other for a few moments more before they catch each other’s eyes again and Evan whispers to her…

“Trust me.”

Halfhearted, Ursula finally follows.  Evan turns back around and waits for her to reach him.  Subtly keeping that hand that had flicked for her to follow behind him.  When he feels her hand slip into his, he grips it and his feet start moving forward.  Hers too.

Up ahead, Ganos turns the corner to the right at the hallway’s end with Sheppard and Rodney a few steps behind her and Lorne and Kenmore a handful of feet behind them but gaining.  Morgan LeFay’s leading them somewhere, and as soon as she’s sure they’re all following her…

“As I said before, while we do not condone their experiment—“

“‘Their experiment’,” Sheppard questions.

“Those sick freaks who worked with the Asgard.  Veritas.”  Ursula answers bitterly from behind Lorne.

John uncomfortably looks at the back of Ganos’s head, that wasn’t exactly what he had meant.  He had meant to gall the Ancient by insinuating that it wasn’t just those geneticists involved, but that their buddies in Atlantis were complicit in it too, that somehow all Ancients were complicit in it.  Rattle the hologram teacher and get her to give up something she didn’t mean to.  Frankly he, Rodney, and Kenmore, just to name those team members present, would prefer to never think about that mission ever again and he’s pretty sure that Lorne would like to forget his experiences on the desert planet and the volcanic monastery place too.  There are some missions, some discoveries, that while are great to be unveiled and brought out into the light, but are the nightmares PTSD can’t even begin to come up with and will never be forgotten.  One can only hope it will.

“Actually it is our belief that you, Lieutenant Kenmore, are the sick and depraved creature.”

The group hits the brakes.  Kenmore trips into Lorne’s back and the Major keeps his friend directly behind him, protecting her physically.  The Doomer of Camelot, however, just keeps walking straight to a thick wooden door that looks pure medieval just like all the other doors they’ve seen so far at the end of their about twenty yard long new stone brickwork, torchlit hallway.  She opens it, conventionally via the thick wrought iron ring pull-handle and goes inside.  One could almost describe everything about her entrance, without so much as looking back at the people who had been following her, as blissfully unaware.  Blissful is just plain out of line and unaware…nope, she knows exactly what’s going on inside of the people behind her.

Sheppard looks back at Kenmore being kept back behind Lorne’s shoulder.  Even though all he can see of her is the bridge of her nose on up, he can tell she doesn’t look good.  Her eyebrows as well as the skin between them seems to be stretched extraordinarily taut, but her eyebrows aren’t lifted and her eyes aren’t wide, it’s as though that part of her body suddenly seized.  That sick freak crack the hologram teacher’d thrown back at her hit fresh wounds almost as raw as her widowhood…and that’s sayin’ a lot.

Lorne’s hand joined behind his back with Kenmore’s gently moves his thumb back and forth over his friend’s fatty part of her hand just between her thumb and index finger.  Sheppard watches Lorne’s shoulder joint suddenly yank back sharply and he knows whatever comfort the Major had just tried to provide to his friend had been completely and utterly rejected.  Yep, wounds rawer and deeper…she’s taken herself away from her friend.  Quietly and stone faced, Kenmore heads after Ganos Lal into the room.

Lorne with an alert poker face on, he’s keeping an eye on his friend, follows right on her heels then Sheppard and McKay follow too.  The steel laced stone expression on Kenmore’s face makes them all want to follow her as quickly and as closely as possible.  If the Ascended woman couldn’t be killed, then she was going to wish she could be when Kenmore gets her hands on her…

 

 

Inside the room is not empty.  Actually for what they’ve seen so far, it’s quite the opposite.  In fact it’d probably be more accurately defined as a storage room.  It’s a somewhat empty version of the hallways they’ve been traveling through this entire time, all brickwork and wrought iron wall sconces and windowless; like all the other rooms they’ve opened up doors on so far.  The only difference, and finally there a difference, that nails down the storage room part of it is that there are a few wooden chairs stacked randomly against the far wall.  There, it’s storing something, this room actually has a purpose.  But other than that…nothing.  Lending even more so to the idea that this place was thrown together at the last moment, and if what the Ancient woman is saying about bringing them here is true, then she most likely did cobble this place together at the last minute and is probably running them all on borrowed time before the Others she keeps going on and on about will find her, and them.  Not a great hint to be taking, but it’s most likely a real one.

Ganos stands in the middle of the room, waiting for them to follow her in.  She looks like she knew they would, but Sheppard has a sneaking suspicion that the woman is putting on one hell of a mask for them.  That’s if she really knew how close the truth was to Kenmore most likely turning back and leaving Ganos to stew in her little room.  Or perhaps that was what the freak crack had been about, to push Kenmore so far that she knew the Lieutenant would follow her.  Would want to.  Would want to have to.  Kenmore maintains eye contact with Lal as the four SGC personnel assemble in a semi-circle in front of the patient Ancient woman.

“Alright,” Sheppard demands, “what the hell are you—“

“I am not a freak,” Kenmore snaps.

John glances at her.  Whatever tenuous grasp on holding herself together she had had walking in here, she’s losing.

“No, you, your child—“

“I told you to leave him out of this.”

“Are not,” Ganos finishes herself, “Not now.  Their experiment was wrong, but it has produced you and…your family.  None of you were made…wrong, you are exactly as you were meant to be.  We are very lucky in that we did not have to alter as much of your bloodlines as we had originally thought we would have to.”

“What do you mean ‘alter her bloodlines’,” Lorne interjects.

“And ‘originally had to’,” Rodney adds.

The Ascended Ancient woman sighs as though she’s finding it frustrating to deal with children.  John feels the muscles in his shoulders and the back of his neck tense the way they do when Kenmore’s starting to get on his nerves on a mission.

Ganos begins, “We have rules we all must—“

“You interfered, didn’t you?”  She looks at Sheppard, she clearly hadn’t expected him to speak, and she’s clearly uncomfortable with his bluntness.  No matter how true it is.

“…Yes,” she admits.

“How,” Kenmore demands immediately.

“From the very beginning, the scientists meant to create two half-human half-Ancient children.  A male and a female.  To intermix and continue the experiment as a more natural process, but when the Wraith laid siege to our city, we were forced to evacuate this galaxy and return to our homeworld.

“Once there, several of us Ascended and in doing so we discovered what the others had done.  And even though only one of those orchestrators survived with the two required children that had been created, the plague was starting to more clearly assert itself in our population and we decided that their experiment had merit despite how it was begun.  So we—“

“You still bred them,” Rodney gapes, “Like animals?”

That snaps a thread in Sheppard.  He remembers Richard Woolsey comparing Kenmore and her five-year old son to a mahogany conference table.  Furniture.  At the man’s disposal.  Anytime.  Anywhere.

“But their people!  They were kids!  Babies!”  Sheppard shouts.  He’s been pissed before, angry before.  So angry in this Galaxy, at this Galaxy that’s he’s pumped an entire cartridge into a Wraith trapped inside a Lantean cell, been willing to go into Replicator Hell to get back an old friend and leader, had no problem going into a Hiveship to rescue another comrade and her then unborn child, and he’s been pissed off enough at all this bullshit to shove a certain Lieutenant into a food shed, kick her in the stomach, and leave orders with the doorman he placed to guard her to shoot her no matter what, even if she blinks he doesn’t care.  But this, this blows all of the excuses for all of that out of the water.  Where he comes from that’s sex trafficking of children.  Children!

“At the time,” Lal’s voice has an edge to it that shows her frustration is starting to seep through via more than just an overbearing sigh, “those who believed they could not Ascend turned to this experiment as a means of their only way of survival,” she tries to enlighten, “and as I’ve already explained, many do not view the results of this experiment as legitimate sentient beings.”

“And what about those of you who could Ascend,” McKay cuts in just as angry as his commanding officer, “What did any of you do?”

Ganos Lal eyes them cautiously…and lets her voice convey as much by choosing her next words very carefully, “We…Our rules state that we cannot interfere with the dealings of lower lifeforms.  But—”

“It was you people who started this thing so technically it wasn’t the dealings of lower lifeforms, was it?”  John guesses sarcastically.

“Technically, yes.  And when those of us did Ascend, we kept an eye on this experiment and continued to guide it as much as those who could not Ascend did until their deaths and even then they passed on both their knowledge and guidance to others like them before they themselves died.”

“You mean you’ve kept her half-human half-Ancient from the very beginning,” Lorne reconfirms, “You—“

“Yes, we have controlled the breeding of her and her husband’s bloodlines—“

“No,” Kenmore abruptly says.  Then turns and leaves the room.

“…To insure that—,” Ganos tries to continue even though she senses she’s lost control of the situation entirely now, not like she had control of it to begin with no matter what she may have thought before.

“You covered your own asses,” Sheppard seethes at her.

Ganos stares at him.  This is going to be far more difficult than she had anticipated when it first came to her to lure Ursula here.  Suddenly there’s a ripple in her mind.  She looks somewhere behind her as though she’s seeing something the humans can’t for a few moments then turns back to face them.

“The Others are growing suspicious at my distance from them.  I must go.”

Before either Sheppard, Lorne, or Rodney can object, Ganos resumes her white light Ascended energy form and disappears through the back wall.  The men stare at where she disappeared through for a moment then look at each other.  Well how convenient is that?

 

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Eight

Chapter Eight

The stark daylight is calmed here, bright but not near-blindingly brilliant.  Not colored white either, but a lovely calming hue of lavender purple through the sheer curtains, adorned with random strands of jewel-like beads, of the same color that makes everything feel slowed and at peace…at one.  Almost every turquoise wall is covered by some Athosian sheer fabric, some reminder of home.  Even the large rug covering the middle of the room’s rust-colored marble floor is an Athoisan grass woven rug in only two colors, the natural color of the dried woven grass stalks the rug is made of and the thick woven fabric that had been dyed black to provide a border band about two inches wide.  The bed to one side of the room, its frame made of hand-stripped, gnarled, Athosian driftwood and its sheets and blankets and handful of pillows made of tapestry fabrics of all the colors nature’s bounty can dye and man can weave.  The chiclet sconces are off, but the rose quartz colored candles set all around the room, on top of the dressers, and cabinetry are lit.  Their flames barely perceptible in the day’s light.  He sits cross-legged on the grass woven floor mat.  His hands, palms up, rest comfortably balanced on the top side of his knees.  He can feel the central tendon of the back of his hand balancing like a rock balances upon another against the side of the ball of his knee joint.  He inhales deeply and exhales smoothly, feeling the sharply knotted nerves in his jaw, neck, shoulders, and back distinctly not easing.  This time his exhale is swift, loud, and frustrated.  This is going to take much more effort.  Resolutely, he raises his left palm to the center of his chest and presses it against his body there.  Then raises his right palm and presses it against the back of his left hand.  Through it, he can feel the central bone of the back of his left hand again.  And through the palm of his left he can feel his heartbeat throbbing his sternum…every fiber of his being.  He inhales deeply again then exhales smoothly then inhales deeply again then…

“Yyyyyaaaaannnnnnn,” he intones with effort to stabilize the warble in his voice.  His breath comes to an end.  He inhales deeply again…and, “Yyyyyyaaaaaannnnnnnn,” he exhales again.  Slowly, ever so slowly, he feels some of the tension start to ebb.  But at this rate he will have to meditate and chant for days and nights and days again before it will go away.  But he will keep going.  “Yyyyyaaaannnnnnn.”

Teyla stands in the doorway to their quarters, watching Kanaan meditate.  He has to chant today, she looks down at the floor, he only ever does that when he is overly stressed.  More than he usually is.  She looks back up at him.  This had been what the argument this morning had been about.  Ever since burying her father’s remains and revealing to all of the Athosians the truth about the ruined city that they had revered for so long as well as feared, Teyla has been adamant about excising everything Ancient from her life as well as that of the other Athosians’ lives.  And when Kanaan had got down on the floor this morning to meditate with their son, Teyla looks down again, she had lost her temper…almost the same way she had lost it with Sergeant Bates.  She had not struck Kanaan, but, her head lifts again, she had wanted to.  Really, really wanted to.  Never before had she wanted to strike the man she loves, the father of her child, the man she willingly shares her life with.

Not for a minute did Kanaan back down from her sudden wrath though.  He had shouted back at her.  Reprimanded her for giving up on what makes them Athosian.  That had hurt, it hurt her that what makes her people themselves is what they had learned at the hands of a race of people that had manipulated her people into being lambs for their slaughter.  With tear-filled eyes, Teyla had lashed out at Kanaan.  Her gestures violent.  Shouting at him.  How dare he say that.  How dare he after knowing what those people had done to her father.  After knowing what they had done to all Athosians.  They had sold them out to the Wraith.  The Ancients had betrayed the Athosians faith, their trust, in them.  Kanaan shouted back that just because the Ancients were deceivers did not mean that the Athosians should turn their backs on their own history, on all the good the Ancients had taught them, passed on to them.  When Teyla had spit back, What good?  Kanaan equally threw back in her face that the Athosians are not the Genii.

…And with that Teyla had stormed out of their quarters, leaving behind Kanaan to tend to Torren who had become fearful at his parents argument and began to wail when Teyla started for the door.  At the end of the hallway their quarters are found along, she had run into Evan and Rodney along with a couple of soldiers running out of another corridor.  Before she could ask them what was wrong, what had happened, Evan asked her what was going on and informed her that they had heard screaming.  Teyla had been shocked.  And embarrassed.  She had not realized that she and Kannan’s argument had gotten so loud, so very out of hand…so public.  But then the sounds of the actual screaming sounded again from another hallway and Teyla knew then that it was not she and Kanaan’s fight that had reportedly been overheard, it was Ronon and Lieutenant Kenmore’s out of control fight in the training room that had been.

Kanaan’s voice stabilizes the chant.  He does it a few more times.  Teyla walks into the room and the door slides closed behind her.  Kanaan opens his as equally as dark as hers’ eyes.  Their eyes lock…and their gaze holds.

When she had been pregnant and Kanaan had gone missing with their people, she and Kanaan’s unique gift of having some Wraith DNA mixed into their own human DNA had exerted itself with Wraith hybrid Michael’s abuse.  Across a span of thousands of light years Kanaan and Teyla’s telepathy had found each other.  Especially each other.  Only each other…they also believed their son, still in Teyla’s womb at the time, had had a hand in that as well.  Helping unite his parents across the vast distance with his own gifted DNA.

Teyla walks forward and sits down on the mat in front of her life partner, she crosses her legs as well.  He can’t help but notice this…

“Do you not think that will be disrespectful to your father’s memory to sit like that?”

Teyla closes her eyes for a moment and takes the hit, “I deserve that, I know.”

He remains silent.

“I am sorry,” Teyla says.

“I am sorry as well,” Kanaan says.

“Why,” she asks, “Did you not uphold your own beliefs?  Are you not doing so now?”

He nods, “But it was wrong for me to shout at you…To hurt you.  I promised you after,” his voice catches, “after I was freed from Michael’s experimentation that I would never hurt you or Torren ever again.  I did not do that this morning.”  Teyla opens her mouth to protest, but Kanaan puts a gentle pair of fingers against her lips to silence her, they do.  Then he gently caresses her cheek, his thumb smoothly brushing over the apple of her cheek beneath her eye…, “I made you cry today, I promised you that I would never do that again.  I made our son cry.  I am sorry.”

Teyla feels tears threaten her eyes.  Again she feels lucky to have Kanaan in her life, to have him with her.

“And I should not be putting my own issues with the Ancients against you and our people.  You are right that we should not give up our traditions, our way of life, just because the Ancients taught us those ways and later betrayed us…betrayed me, betrayed my faith in them.  We have taken what they taught us and taught those who came before us and have made it our own.  Made it a part of us, who we are as a people.  Every village we come into contact with knows of our traditions, our compassion, and our strive for equality among all those we meet.

“You are right, Kanaan, we have taken the best the Ancients gave us and have lived our lives accordingly.  We have none of their evil, we are none of their evil, their darkness.  It was…it is wrong of me to demand everyone to do away with the good along with the evil.  I just,” words fail her and she lowers her head, closing her eyes.

Kanaan gives her time.

Finally she looks up at him again, her deep espresso eyes open, “It is hard for me to have faith in the good the Ancients taught our forbearers when I now know that they had a direct hand in the death of my father and so many of our people.”

Kanaan nods, “I know.  It is hard for me too, but as the rest of your team and the others here in Atlantis have pointed out, those Ancestors that were involved in your father’s death did what they did without the knowledge of the other Ancestors.  They were working in secret, behind the backs of many.”

Her skin crawls at this.  Ever since the revelation of the Asgard’s facility, she has flatly refused to refer to the Ancients as the Ancestors anymore.  Still hearing it uttered from someone’s mouth makes her feel ill.  Disturbed.  Uncomfortable…Angry.

Kanaan sees her jawline tighten, her cheeks become taut and strained, and she can no longer look at him again.  He tries to catch her eye again by dipping his head a little and trying to make eye contact with her.  Her eyes slide over to look at him, but her head does not raise, “They are the Ancestors.”

Her eyes do not look happy.

“And there are good Ancestors just as much as there are bad,” he finishes.

Teyla holds his gaze for a moment then sighs heavily and closes her eyes again, she nods.  “I know you are right.  The Ancients were not gods, they were people.  Just like us, just like our forbearers, but…I,” words fail her again and she looks away, this time off to her left.

“Did not think that they could do evil, be evil?”

She looks at him, he has it, he knows it exactly.  “Yes,” she breathes.

This time it’s Kanaan’s turn to close his eyes and nod.

“During…the experimentation, I thought about the Ancestors many times…and you.  I believe that is how Michael discovered our connection in the first place.”

Teyla smiles, she knew this already.  Kanaan had told her it during many of her visits to him while he was confined during his recovery from the reversing of Michael’s hybrid experimentation done to him.  Because the process of recovering from what Michael had done to him was so extensive and so intensive, Teyla still had trouble, nightmares, remembering watching him go through that.  That his recovery prevented her from bringing Torren with her to see his father.  She often left their son in the caregiving hands of Jennifer.  Kanaan much more than she does, has nightmares as well still.  Frightening ones in which he thrashes and screams out in the night and always now, always Teyla is by his side when he comes to, awakens from the shadowed darkness of his own mind, own terrible past, and weeps beside her.  She will always be there.  But why is he bringing this up now?…

“I thought that the Ancestors had abandoned me…but I knew that you had not.  And the more it went on, the longer I was experimented on, the longer I was trapped as his slave, the more I believed that they had abandoned me just as they had abandoned all humans to the terror of the Wraith.  The more I believed that you would find me, would save me, save all our people.  And you did.”  Tears well in her eyes again, “There is evil and there is good…And I chose good.  I chose you and our son and Atlantis.”

Teyla blinks and her brimming eyes spill tears down her cheeks.  She remembers when she had gone to him just before Atlantis went into battle against a ZPM-powered Wraith hiveship, she had come to this very room and told him, ordered him to take Torren and go to the Alpha site.  And in this very room he told her that he would not go, that he would not flee with their child to the relative safety of the Alpha site.  He told her, “If Atlantis fails, then our galaxy will fall to the Wraith.  If we are to die, then we will die as a family.  Together.”  She had been so proud of her courage and never thought that she could be prouder of him than in that moment.  And now he has proven her wrong as he has many times before.  Kanaan reaches a hand out to her and she takes it, slipping into his arms.  The side of her hip resting on the floor just before where his ankles cross each other and wrapping her arms around his waist, resting the side of her head against his chest.  He wraps his arms around her shoulders.  She can hear his heartbeat, it is low and thrumming and peaceful to her as it is at night when they fall asleep.  Her tension ebbs and she can feel his do the same.  She sighs across the pale green-tinted beige, soft woolen fabric over his chest and he sighs contentedly as well and she feels his warm breath gently brush the hairs of the top of her head.  They hold each other for a long moment.  Longer than she felt others would understand considering the crisis the city is currently facing, but…Teyla feels it is a moment whose length she needs to have, both Teyla and Kanaan need to have.

Suddenly there is rustling nearby.  Torren’s bed.  Their son is rousing from his nap.  They look over at him stirring and smile then they look at each other.  Kanaan nods, Teyla nods, and they help each other stand up.  They walk over to their son’s rustic, carved wooden, swinging crib.  As it turns out he is not waking, just wiggling in his sleep.  Coming to just enough to adjust his body to a more comfortable position then slipping back into his blissful slumber.  He settles down and his parents take the opportunity to smile at each other.  They wrap an arm around each other once again and look back down at their resting child.

“If only some things were as easy as his sleep,” Teyla sighs, the side of her head falling against the crux of Kanaan’s shoulder joint.

“Is it the situation with your friends?”

“Yes…and no.  It is a situation with my friends, but not the situation you are thinking of.”  Teyla sighs again and Kanaan gives her a few squeezes of reassurance and encouragement.  Support.  She takes it from him, she is going to need it.

*                      *                      *

The light is no longer golden, it’s searing white.  Makes you want to squint or squeeze your eyes shut.  And for the life of him Ronon can’t figure out why he’s stayed here, really he can’t.  He’s still sitting lazily in the same chair he had been when Jennifer had stormed out…almost an hour ago.  Why am I still sitting here doing nothing?

Teyla steps into the doorway’s opened threshold.  They look up at each other and she slowly approaches the edge of the computer console he’s sitting with his back to.  She puts her hands on the piano-style console’s corner.

“What?”

“Do you want to be doing this,” she asks him.  Taking on a professional tone with him.

“Yeah,” Ronon answers defensively, “Why wouldn’t I?”

“Because the Ronon I know would not be doing this,” she gestures at him just sitting there, “while his friends and teammates are missing and most likely in great danger.”

“Doing what,” Ronon looks down at himself in his white patient’s scrubs with a pale teal with white straps arm sling and a white cast with white wrappings on his arm and a pair of crudely and simply designed Athosian sandals, something he’d picked up during his short time living with the Athosians when Atlantis had temporarily been removed from the Earth Expedition’s control and placed back into the hands of some refound Ancients.  He’s kept a few pairs ever since because they’re what he wears when getting ready for bed, of course sometimes he just walks around his quarters getting ready for bed barefoot.  But during medical stays, the sandals have proven quite useful.

“Nothing.”

Well he wouldn’t call this nothing—well, actually he did.  But he’s helping Jennifer check Atlantis’ computer database.  It’s just…computers aren’t his thing.  Everyone knows that, Woolsey knows that…

“And instigating a fight with Jennifer.”  Teyla continues.

He stares at her.  Offended again.

“I didn’t.”

“She says you did.”  Teyla comes back at him quickly.

“I did not,” Ronon sits up, wincing.  Leaning forward, wincing more.  Attempting to challenge her.  He’s starting to get heated, angry with her.

“And I am inclined to believe her,” Teyla keeps pace.

Ronon glares at her.  Oh, do not glare at me that way Ronon Dex…

“And that is because the Ronon I have known and worked with and have called my friend for these past years has not been in Atlantis for a long time now.”

His glare softens.  Now that is more like it, Teyla takes on her big sisterly air with him.  She gently tilts her head to the side.

“Tell me…what is wrong?”

Very unlike him and very unexpected yet entirely so, Ronon begins to fidget and stares down at his fidgeting fingers.  Teyla waits for him as Kanaan had waited for her. After a long moment…

“I’m not good at losing people,” he says quietly.

“None of us are,” she replies just as quietly.

“I mean I’m not good at losing people while they’re still alive,” he finally looks up at her.

Teyla straightens her head, Oh.

“It is something I believe you must get used to in Atlantis,” she almost stammered there at the first.

“It’s not that I haven’t broken up with someone before.  I mean, there were other girls before Melena, but—“

“It is just that there have not been other women after her.”

“Well…”

“Not meaningfully.”

He nods.  Teyla gives him a gentle smile.  Ronon tries to stand up on his own and Teyla respects him having the dignity of the act.  Eventually he makes it.

“I honestly didn’t believe that there would be anyone after her.  I mean…I mean a lot of things, don’t I?”

Teyla nods, her smile unwavering and understanding.

Ronon makes his way over to another Ancient computer console nearby, empty of any Earth technology just like the others.  It had been covered by a white sheet once and it had long been covered in dust during Atlantis’ ten thousand-year secret submersion.  When the Expedition from Earth arrived, Elizabeth Weir eventually had it removed as each room was cleared of any dangers and had been inventoried.  The cover was never replaced.  The tips of Ronon’s fingers touch the textured copper surface.  Having something so palpable is a help to him, something he can feel beneath his fingertips.  The bumps, some sharp, some dull.  The grooves, some deep, some shallow…a lot like him, his life, his past.

“I’m angry,” he says.

“You have been since I met you,” she tells him with a slight sense of humor to her voice.  Remembering that the first time she met Ronon Dex was when she came to, bound back to back with John, as the Satedan Weapons Specialist’s prisoner.

Ronon actually smiles as he looks down again at the console’s clear, crystal slat, key-like buttons, he remembers too and he also remembers why, “I will always be angry at the Wraith, but,” he turns with difficulty to face her, “I’m not just angry at the Wraith right now.”

Teyla nods, “Jennifer says that she believes the reason you are angry right now is because of Rodney and she’s relationship.”

“She’s right.”

Teyla’s taken aback, her mouth gapes and her eyes widen.  She does believe Ronon has been taking his aggression out on many around him, not just the marines and airmen he was training, but she did not actually believe that it was truly as Jennifer had said.  That two of both Ronon and she’s closest friends are specific targets of his wrath.

Teyla stutters, “I…had not—“

“I know,” he interrupts her.  “I’m angry at her and Rodney for still being together.  They’re a part of Atlantis.  They have jobs in this city.  They’ve gotten promotions.  And they’re still here.  And they’re still together.”

There’s a moment pause.  Teyla looks down at the floor but her eyes seem unable to focus on any one part of the floor, and Ronon feels a moment of shame for her reaction.  He’s felt it himself, shame at his own jealousy at the happiness of two of his friends.  How is that anyway to act in the Pegasus?  He’s behaving like a Genii.  Not a Satedan, not himself.  He looks at the floor too, away from Teyla’s direction.  His fingertips still touching the Ancient computer console’s surface.  The metal is cold, like he’s felt himself being for the past few weeks.  Almost a month now.  Almost a month since she left.

“I know,” Teyla has found her voice, they look at each other “that Amelia’s leaving has affected you deeply, but I did not know that your feelings for her ran so deep.”

“They…don’t,” and that’s true; Amelia is no Melena, maybe that’s why he went for her in the first place.  There were things about her that reminded him of Melena though, her feistiness.  Amelia and he would spar and she’d score a could hit on him, drop him to one of his knees sometimes, and she’d gloat with this fantastic smile…with her long, reddish hair puffing this way and that around her face from the panting breaths coming out of her mouth…and suddenly his eyes would see Melena when she would lean over him during their lovemaking, her loosely curly red hair’s locks bouncing or swaying, her smile just as illuminatingly, teasingly fantastic, “It’s just that…I never thought that there would be anyone after Melena.  That there could be.  Then I meet you and Sheppard and Carson and you bring me here to Atlantis.  Doctor Weir gives me a place to stay and, and I never thought that I would ever have a home after Sateda.  None of this is what I ever expected my life to have when I was a Runner.”

“And after you were a Runner,” Teyla asks.

“A long sleep surrounded by a lot of Wraith bodies.”

Teyla smiles again, “That is not what I mean.”

“I know, but it’s my answer.  I thought I was going to die a Runner and I planned on doing it by taking a lot of Wraith with me.  I never thought there was going to be an ‘after’.”

“I understand.”

Ronon nods.  Good.

“And that is why you are afraid,” she states matter-of-factly.

He stares at her.  She looks him dead in the eyes.

“You are afraid to survive,” she says.

Ronon stays silent, Teyla has gotten in one.  She takes a silent moment to collect her thoughts on what she is about to say as she walks from one console’s edge to the other’s to stand more face to face with her friend, and she is sensing that her friend, the friend she knows, is coming back to her more and more as they talk here.

“The reason I stayed with Atlantis, why I do stay, is because I believe Atlantis is hope.  I will survive the Wraith.  My people will survive the Wraith.  My son and my partner will survive the Wraith.  It is much more than what we do.  It is who we are.  We are not their food.”

Ronon nods.  Teyla has said something like that to him before when he had considered leaving Atlantis and joining some Satedan friends of his that had also survived the Wraith’s destruction of their planet.  That consideration had ended disastrously with Ronon having to kill his dearest friends because they had become Wraith worshippers.  Just when I thought I couldn’t lose anyone else, any more.  But Teyla’s never said anything like…

“Perhaps you need to judge what you believe Atlantis to be.  Perhaps you need to judge for yourself what it is that you do, who you are.  Just remember, Ronon, that whatever your answers are, we are always your friends.  All of us.  Nothing has changed that.  Nothing will.”

Ronon nods at her and she nods back before turning and leaving.  Ronon stands in the room alone.  He looks around him…and thinks.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Episode Four- Veritas- Chapter Seven

Chapter Seven

The honey colored torchlight flickers as the group of four still stare at Ganos Lal standing in front of them.  No one’s answered her question yet.  And no one’s likely to.  Sheppard turns his head slightly to talk a little over his shoulder to the rest of his people.

“Okay, Rodney, so you didn’t insult everybody.”

“I can’t believe you’re actually here,” Lorne says, “I thought we might run into somebody, but you?

Ganos simply keeps smiling her interpretation of the Mona Lisa smile and gives a single tilting incline of her head.  A simple and smoothly elegant move that strongly evokes the same refinement as the same action coming from Jaffa warrior and freedom fighter, Teal’c of Chulak.  But unlike Teal’c, who closes his eyes when he nods like that, this woman keeps her brown eyes open.  And John notices that the enigmatic smile extends to her eyes, as though she knows something, a lot of things actually, and isn’t telling them any of it.  Sheppard looks back at the Major.

“You know her?”

“Yes, he does Lieutenant Colonel John Sheppard,” the mysterious Ascended Ancient woman answers for Lorne.

The mention of his rank and name instantly draws Sheppard’s attention back to her.  From the moment Elizabeth Weir had him be the first person to activate the children’s holographic educational program in Atlantis, he’d always thought the teacher was hot.  Pretty hot.  Now, seeing her standing right here in front of him, in different clothes but no less angelic and beautiful, John still finds her pretty hot and also eerily creepy.  Not a good combination.  Especially since she knows his name and he doesn’t remember his full name and rank ever being said in that room; Elizabeth saying ‘John’, yes.  All the rest of it, no.  Something’s not right about this woman, something is…off.

“As does Lieutenant Kenmore,” the once-a-hologram-suddenly-now-real woman spares a particular look at Ursula, instigating Sheppard to make a quick side glance at the Lieutenant too.  Something really off.

“I believe everyone at Earth’s Stargate Command knows of me,” teacher Ganos Lal goes on, “There are a few, like Doctor Daniel Jackson, that have had the honor and privilege to actually meet me before.  Even your Doctor Elizabeth Weir met me once, multiple times actually although she did not realize that it was actually me.  You as well, John.”  Her enigmatic smile broadens at him, making her eyes twinkle and glitter in the torch light at him.  A mischievous look.  John swallows hard, distinctly uncomfortable and fighting off reacting to the tingling sensation of his skin crawling.  Where once John would have been turned on if the hologram teacher had done that to him, now…nope.

“You’re the teacher program from the hologram room,” McKay finally speaks up and John could have either slapped his forehead complete with eye rolling and an ‘Really Rodney, and you say you’re the smart one?’ or kiss the man for getting John’s mind away from how much the woman is creeping him the hell out.

“Yes, Doctor,” she turns that mischievous smile to him with the turn of her head, she pauses dramatically, “Rodney McKay,” than she turns down the wattage of her lips and dousing the light’s charmingly playful reflection in her eyes.  The seeming fact that that all that glitters is gold crap might have been for John’s benefit…

“So does that mean we’re still in Atlantis, we’re just stuck in the computer program,” Rodney asks hopefully.  Remembering an episode of STAR TREK Deep Space Nine with Doctor Bashir, Garak, and a James Bond motif.

Ganos serenely closes her eyes and shakes her head, her bouncing dark mahogany loose ringlet curls gently swaying from side to side at the back of her head from the ponytail she has her hair in; her smoothed swept over bangs not fluttering in the slightest, her whole hairstyle reminding John of his Mother’s favorite doll in her doll collection, the very first Barbie sans the black and white striped 1950s bathing suit, “No, Doctor.  I have brought you here for a different reason.”  She opens her eyes again, their attention diverted to where they would next be addressed.

Kenmore starts at the words as Ganos knew she would, “You brought us here?”

“Yes,” the Ancient replies, “Well, actually I brought you here, Lieutenant Ursula Kenmore.”

The others stare at Ursula, she stares at Ganos, and Ganos keeps smiling her enigmatic smile at her.  The Ancient seems to be relishing the sudden silence…

Then Ganos goes on, “I had not anticipated the others coming along with you, but after I had started, I could not risk the Others noticing such use of power that would be required to disconnect Major Evan Lorne and specifically focus on bringing just you here.  So I was forced to bring all of you.”

“But there was a gap of time before I was brought here,” Rodney points out, “You can’t possibly say that I was just dragged along here with everyone else.  And where is ‘here’ exactly by the way?”

“You were an unfortunate side effect, Doctor McKay,” Sheppard takes a moment to gloat at Rodney about that, “In my rush to not draw attention to myself, there was an accidental feedback in the anomaly I had created to bring your comrade and subsequently your friends here.  It drew you in and once in the Void, and yes, you are right about that, Doctor McKay, it became my duty to protect you along with your friends.”

“And who is it exactly you’re protecting us and Kenmore from,” Sheppard asks, pointing out to her that they all four aren’t exactly friends with each other.

“The Others,” she replies simply.  As if that should be enough of an answer…

…She’s wrong.  “What ‘Others’ exactly,” he clarifies.

“The other Ascended,” Lorne, Kenmore, and McKay answer together.

Sheppard and Ganos look at the trio, the other three look back at them.

“What,” Lorne, Kenmore, and McKay ask in unison again, wondering what the other two’s problem is.

Rodney sighs exasperatedly, “Isn’t it painfully obvious?  If she has to hide her actions, bringing us here to the Void I was in while dying as I was ascending to a higher plain of existence, then the Others she’s talking about are the other Ascended beings here with her.  She’s breaking the rules.  They’ll punish her.”

Okay, he’s not dumb, John knows all that crap.  He was hoping he could get this woman who’d kidnapped them to actually use some names not a general, all encompassing term.  Specifics, he is looking for specifics.

“Again,” Kenmore adds to McKay’s unnecessary explanation.

The Ancient woman nods and her expression while doing it, John notices, shows that she’s uncomfortable with both apparently remembering the experience of being punished by the other Ascended, let alone being faced with the prospect of something happening to her again that’s probably going to be even worse this time.  Even Sheppard feels uncomfortable with the thought of that, what punishments could Ascended beings deal out?  He doesn’t want to know or find out for himself.

“Yes…Well, this time I feel that the cause is justified.”  Lal tries to recover…and her tone of voice does poorly at it.

“For Urs, yeah we know, you already said that.”  Evan already sounds both protective of his friend and apprehensive of Ganos.  Also not a good combination.

The Ascended woman’s Mona Lisa smile comes back more enigmatic than before.  And whatever was really off before is not anything John definitely wants to find out about now.  He can see why Lorne is apprehensive of this woman.  Hell, why the whole of the Stargate Program would be as apprehensive of Ascended beings and why the Atlantis personnel especially are apprehensive of all of the Ancients personally.  It’s the lies.  Everything that comes out of their mouths looks like roses and smells like something you’d scrape off the bottom of your shoes into grass.  Or something that someone would put on a front doorstep in a brown paper bag, set on fire, ring the doorbell, and run like hell from.

“Yes, I did,” Ganos says politely, her smile radiant.  Like a politician’s just before they kiss a baby right in front of cameras, “but it is only because she is that important.”

“How,” Sheppard and Lorne ask at the same time.

“Why,” from Kenmore.

Here the smile falters for a fraction of a heartbeat, “While we did not agree with how their experiment was initially begun, their experiment has been maintained for a reason.  You and your husband as well as your son were created for a reason.”

The group stares at Ursula, she’s staring at the still Mona Lisa-smiling Ganos Lal with her own look of fear…and barely restrained rage.

Posted in Season Six- Episode Four | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment