Tittle:
For Whom The Bells Toll
Author:
KaraMeL
Email:
Kristine_sci@hotmail.com
Summary:
When Daniel is sent to prison, the SG-1 team must find a way to rescue
him before it's too late.
Rating:
PG-13
Disclaimer:
This story belongs to MGM and all the other companies/cooperations that
own Stargate. So, initially the characters don't belong to me. Darn.
“You
have to be kidding me.” Daniel mumbled as he was dragged away. Jack jogged
next to him as the two humanoid males dragged Daniel away from where they
had been only moments ago. Jack didn’t look too happy himself and was yelling
at the two males using very colorful language. The two males took no heed
and continued their quest towards the looming building in the distance.
Jack looked at Daniel and shrugged.
“Shit! Would
you people stop!” Jack looked ready to explode and the leader of the natives
came running down, pulling at Jack’s fatigues. Jack stopped and glared at
the man.
“I must
insist you calm yourself or you will be forced to go to the prison with
your friend.” Jack seethed and Daniel found himself resuming his way down
to the looming prison. Jack looked at Daniel then gave the elder man a snarl.
Jack ran up ahead, briefly patting Daniel’s shoulder.
“Don’t worry
Danny-boy, I’ll make sure that you get out.” He stopped running and Daniel
tossed him a helpless look before he was dragged away. Daniel looked at
the two males who hadn’t even paused and were continuing to drag him. Daniel
looked at the top of the rise where he saw Teal’c and Sam join Jack at the
top of the hill. Daniel wondered what had happened. First, they stepped
through the gate, then the next thing he knew, he was being dragged to prison.
Daniel didn’t even have the slightest idea why. And alone? After Hadante
he really didn’t like prison, In fact he had never been in one, well on
Earth any ways and he did not feel good about going into this one, alone.
At the top of the hill, Daniel could still see Jack, his arms waving madly
and gesturing in his direction. Behind Daniel the doors of the prison opened,
the chains clanking against each other and Daniel smelt the awful stench
of dead bodies and feces. As he turned around to face it he saw the vision
of many bedraggled men and woman, their cheekbones protruding and their
clothes rags looking at the would be prisoner. Daniel took one more frantic
look at the hill before he was thrown into the prison and the doors closed,
leaving him in the dark, smelly and musty prison.
“Okay,
so you’re telling me Daniel got arrested for WHAT?” Jack’s face was almost
bright red. Sam flinched and replied meekly.
“For saying
the ancient language. They said that that meant he was a Goa’uld and that
all people who served or spoke the language were thrown into prison.” Jack
ran a hand through his hair and turned around. He spun on his heels pacing
like a madman.
“At least,”
he stated in a monotone voice, “They didn’t throw him in prison for wearing
glasses.” The novelty of the joke was worn, and Jack’s lack of enthusiasm
was slightly off. He sighed and sat on the bed that had been provided for
him. They had sent Teal’c back through the gate to tell Hammond about an
hour ago. Jack wasn’t expecting help to arrive any time soon. He blinked
wearily and then squinted at the major, his hands now placed neatly in his
lap.
“Why weren’t
we arrested then?” Sam shrugged the light dancing reflecting off her hair,
making a little halo of light crest the top of her head. She sighed and
sat down beside him, her eyes almost as weary as his, maybe more.
“They didn’t
say. They told us that the trial was tomorrow and that either we were to
support him or be his counsel or they would chose for us.” Sam lay back
on the pillows, nothing like the ones on earth, but still soft and supple.
She groaned quietly under her breath and closed her eyes. “How do we managed
to get in these messes?” Jack shrugged, then realized that she couldn’t
see the gesture. He laughed softly to himself.
“Just lucky
I guess.” Sam laughed, but her heart wasn’t in it and Jack felt himself
worrying about the archeologist, too many times, too often.
Daniel
blinked as he managed to focus on the loose circle of thin men and women.
They stared back, their eyes accusing and unwelcome. His mouth suddenly
inexplicably dry, he reached down to get his glasses, only to pull back
when a collective gasp rose from the crowd. Daniel turned, not fast enough.
He found himself sprawled on the ground and he made another vain attempt
for his glasses. A foot came out of nowhere and crushed his glasses. Daniel
winced as the boot dug its heel into his palm. Little lances of fire ran
through his arm and he almost yelled in pain out loud. There was a voice
that accompanied the boot and it was masculine.
“Puny human,
what was your misdeed.” The voice was guttural, unfamiliar to Daniel, but
still frightening non-the less. Daniel managed to take his hand from under
the man’s or thing’s boot. He cradled his fist to his stomach and looked
up, his vision swam slightly and finally stabilized. He continued his gaze
upwards, over the metallic clothing, bluish skin and finally the monstrous
head. He recognized the creature, but to avoid the suspicion he asked the
obvious.
“Who are
you?” The monster bent down, his claw-riddled hand clutching Daniel’s chin.
Daniel winced but kept still, the claws bit deep into his flesh and he could
feel tiny streams of blood starting to roll down his neck. The thing leant
back, taking Daniel with it and it grunted, raising Daniel until only his
toes touched the floor.
“I,” he
started as if it were an insult to hear the man ask such a question. “Am
Unas, the first one.” As one, the crowd dissipated and left Daniel and Unas
alone in the middle of the room. Daniel swallowed and blinked quickly. This
wasn’t good.
The room was suddenly filled with a deep blue light as the Stargate activated. Major-General Hammond watched with barely contained impatience as the room filled with commandos and the iris was opened. The usual voice rang through the gate room, still able to be heard in the room above the control center. Hammond looked at his watch, expecting the usual radio message all SG teams relayed after twenty-four hours. Instead, an ebony figure stepped through the gate and it disengaged. It was Teal’c. Hammond raised his eyebrows and as Teal’c looked up he knew SG-1 was in trouble.
Daniel
smiled and blinked quickly. He really wished he had taken up Jack’s offer
of self-defense lessons. He smiled quickly and looked up at the mountain
of a man. He searched his brain quickly for any thing he could use to calm
down the monster in front of him. If that wasn’t bad enough, he was starting
to run out of air. As his vision dimmed and spots began to dance in front
of his eyes he did one thing that he knew would release him.
“Unas kree.”
It was a gargled and choked attempt but brought a result to it any ways.
Daniel found himself thrown roughly to the ground. A collective gasp ran
through the crowd and as he looked up, Daniel knew he was in trouble.
“You dare
try and command the powerful Unas?” Daniel slowly levered himself into a
sitting position. He refused to get on his knees for this beast. The blue
tinged monster raised his head, addressing all those around him. “Ha! The
Tau’ri seek to control the Unas?” Slowly, Daniel leveled himself higher,
until he was finally upright on his own steam. He could feel the blood on
his neck dry and harden on his skin. He imagined that he looked pretty stupid
now. Alone, facing a monster that probably owned the place. Daniel looked
at the crowd that circled the two in the shadows. He was beginning to wish
that he hadn’t taken this particular assignment.
“No.” There
was a physical shudder as the crowd murmured at the word. He could identify
a few phrases here and there, some saying that his intelligence exceeded
his appearance. He wondered what that meant. Unas gathered himself up to
his full height and looked at the crowds. He seemed to battle with a decision,
then, as if deciding, he spun to the crowd who silenced immediately. He
turned to Daniel and for a moment Daniel feared that his answer had brung
on an unexpected result. A fate worse than death. The large creature growled
ferally and yelled to the crowd.
“There will
be a fight tomorrow me against this pitiful human.” The distaste in his
voice was evident. Daniel blinked as the thing continued. “One of us will
survive. One of us will not. Fate will decide who the winner shall be.”
The crowd parted as Unas strode away. Daniel looked at the crowd who’s sudden
silence scared him. He knelt down and picked up the remainder of his glasses.
The horribly twisted frames and crushed lenses made him shiver. Daniel hoped
that he wouldn’t be the casualty tomorrow. He looked at the glasses again
and dropped them. Striding through the crowd he didn’t see the tiny hand
picking up the bent frames and tucking them safely in its pocket.
Jack
blinked and sat up. He didn’t know what woke him, just that there was trouble
and he felt it. Jack searched the open room with a practiced eye and looked
around. His eyes fell on the still form of Sam’s figure, her slow and steady
breathing still audible even to him all the way across the room. Jack looked
around again and chastised himself for being silly. He was too old to still
believe in ghosts. Jack put his head down and closed his eyes. Silly superstitions...
A hand came out from nowhere, grabbing his mouth and effectively silencing
him. Jack kicked out, satisfied when he heard a slight grunt of pain. Jack
managed to get another shot in when the hand released him. Jack spun, his
arms up, ready to kill the man or person that had tried to silence him.
Instead of the big harry man he supposed had almost overpowered him, he
found himself facing a slight, almost fifteen year old girl. At first the
girl looked frightened, but soon her fear turned to irritation as she rubbed
her elbow. Jack narrowed his eyes. He was getting old.
“What are
you doing?” he hissed. He looked back at Carter who was snoring peacefully
under her sheets. Jack rolled his eyes as she snorted to his remark.
“What do
you mean, ‘what I’m doing here?’ What are you doing here?” The girl hissed
back at him. Jack straightened from the crouch that he had been in. Unconsciously,
he found himself staring at her. She stared at him back and for the first
time Jack noticed the tattoos that she sported, running from her hairline,
all the way down he cheek, then neck where it disappeared. Apparently all
the inhabitants of this world had the same tattoo. Jack finally lowered
his gaze and squinted.
“What?”
She brushed herself off as well and proceeded to take wrappings off her
shoulders and head. She almost looked Abadonian in her build and slight
tinge to her skin which made Jack wonder if she was a descendant of Earth
as well. She finally finished taking off the rags she had been sporting
and put on a robe she had pulled out of nowhere. Jack looked around him,
back at Carter who was still snoring, then back at the woman. Jack watched
with growing interest as she let down her hair. Unlike the Abadonians, the
people of this world had strawberry blond hair, with the slight tinge of
their skin; they looked like they had just gotten off the beach. Finally
the girl turned and looked at him.
“Shouldn’t
you be with your friend?” The question caught him off guard and for a moment
he stared stupidly at the girl. She looked down at Carter’s sleeping form,
then back at him. Obviously she didn’t want Carter knowing about her. Instead
of continuing the loophole conversation they had began, she reached over
Carter’s head and pressed a button. Behind Jack a door appeared with only
a whoosh of displaced air. Jack stared at the door, then back at the girl.
She strode past him and grabbed his lapels, dragging him along with her.
Jack had barely enough time to voice a complaint before she and he disappeared
through the door.
Jack
drew in a deep breath as he found himself in the center of a beautiful garden.
There were so many plants of colors he hadn’t even bothered to classify.
Plumes from ceiling high trees brushed his face and he smelled the air,
so full of flowers and foreign objects. It was all so much and soon he found
himself reeling. How this had been created he didn’t know, all that he cared
to know was what this place was. In the distance he heard the fall of water
and separated fern like plants away from his view. Jack looked at the waterfall
that fell down through the clearing, down and downwards to the ground that
could have been more than thirty stories down. Jack noticed that there was
at least ten levels going down, and he could see people of all sorts adorning
railings that circled the precipice. Jack was so enthralled at the sight
he almost forgot the nameless visitor that had rudely awaken him. She sensed
his questions and grabbed his lapels again. Jack frowned slightly as he
was pulled along. This was getting pretty old fast. They stopped at the
mouth of a cave like area, Jack could hear the thunder of the waterfall
on one side and as he stepped in he smelled the water as it spread through
the air from it’s wave that spewed downwards just outside the front side
of the cave. The girl pulled him down, to the back of the cave and down
to the benches that lined the wall. Jack could still hear the thunder of
the waterfall but it was more muted.
“Who are
you?” Jack found his voice talking and was surprised when she actually answered
him. After dragging him everywhere he didn’t think she was one of the talkative
types.
“I’m Abby.”
She smiled briefly when he offered his hand. She raised hers above his and
he looked at the hand above his. Obviously not all earth customs were used
around this galaxy. He put his hand down and looked down at the deserted
gardens.
“Why all
the secrecy? Why all this showing of secret gardens and places?” She shrugged.
“Our rooms
are ... in your words ... contaminated. They hold listening devices. No
one’s thoughts are protected. That is the price we pay for the garden. It
is the life source for all Polyna.” Jack shook his head. Now he was really
confused.
“What do
you mean?” The girl looked at the shadows.
“We live
on the abundance of plant life. Each plant here represents a Polyna. Each
drop of water gives life to the Polyna. Without the garden we are destroyed.
We wilt like the flowers that we treasure so much. Years ago, when I was
only a child, an evil alien came through the circle of standing water, bringing
armies of dangerous serpents. He destroyed most of the garden and left my
people for dead. With the seeds of our ancestors we managed to re-grow our
young and replenish our supplies. We fear the day when the evil one will
return and kill more of the Polyna.” She looked around the silent cave where
they were seated. “Ever since the evil man came, the Polyna built a house
that stores evil. When your friend spoke the ancient language he condemned
himself to stay in that prison.” She fished something out of the pocket
that she had been toying with restlessly. She brought out an object that
glinted. She pressed it into Jack’s hand and looked around her again. “Be
aware. If you are taken to the prison you will never see the light of day
again.” With her final words she rose with a whisper of cloth and fingered
her robe. “Go back to your quarters. You mustn’t speak a word of our transgression
to any of the other Polyna. You word would condemn me to death as well.”
Jack watched as she disappeared into the forest and he stared at the glinting
object. At first he thought they were precious stones or some sort of jewelry.
He opened his fist and looked at the twisted metal. They were Daniel’s glasses.
“No.” Jack
said and dropped the glasses. The remaining shards of glass from the glasses
crashed to the ground and shattered, obscuring the beautiful peacefulness.
As Jack raised his head to the waterfall, searching for any sign of Abby
he fought in vain to keep the tears of horror at bay. He refused to believe
that Daniel was dead, and right now, he was ready to believe anything that
would keep hope alive in this death-laced paradise.
Sam snorted
softly as Jack reentered the room. As he looked at her sleeping form he
was struck with a sudden urge to talk to her, to tell her what happened,
to say all he needed to say. He looked at her, innocence, just like Daniel’s,
almost on the outside, but not quiet. Daniel wore his badge of innocence
on his sleeve. After three years the young man had proven himself a worthy
adversary, intelligent, able to care and most of all able to become friends
with every damned alien they stumbled on. Jack smiled briefly and sat down
on his bed. The mattress creaked and groaned and with a snort Sam yawned.
“Sir?” she
said sleepily. Jack turned, glad that her back was still turned to him.
“Nothing
Carter. Go back to sleep. Sorry if I woke you.” Sam didn’t reply, another
snore gave him a feasible answer. Jack smiled wanly. She could sleep through
anything. Jack looked at the ceiling and he let himself sink back into the
slightly uncomfortable mattress and he let himself close his eyes. Tomorrow
was going to be a busy day, and he hoped that nothing would happen to the
archeologist until then.
“So you’re
telling me...” Hammond trailed off and looked at the far window. The top
rim of the Stargate could be seen over the metal casing of the bulletproof
glass. After the incident with the trinium metal arrow, Hammond had really
begun to appreciate the technology that was out there. He turned on his
chair to face the impassive Jaffa and his forehead furrowed.
“...That
Daniel Jackson has been taken prisoner.” Teal’c completed the sentence,
making up for the sentence gap that had been created by Hammond. On occasion,
Hammond noticed the man looking towards the Stargate as well, and he almost
wished that SG-1 would come through, unscathed of course.
“Was there
any reason for his arrest, any clue why the people would toss him into prison...
anything?” Teal’c shook his head and Hammond found himself looking at the
ceiling above him. What that team could do to get themselves in trouble.
“The inhabitants
mentioned word about the ancient language.” Teal’c helpfulness was a welcome
relief in the sudden stillness of the room. At least that answered one of
Hammond’s questions. Hammond stood; his brightly polished bars glinting in
the harsh light of the room hat existed twenty-eight stories underground.
A few hundred knew about this facility, many of those hundreds worked under
him, only thirty had the training to help in this current situation. Only
twelve of those were currently on earth. Only four had the capability and
willpower to do so. Hammond looked at the gate, the lights dimmed slightly,
locking up for the night. Hammond knew that this facility never slept. Who
knew if an injured team would come through, who knew if something would
go awry. He blinked slowly and turned back to the Jaffa. He couldn’t trust
himself to make a decision that could either terminate a friendship with
potential allies or to face loosing a brilliant young man.
“I’ll call
the president. See what he says.” The words laid heavily on his mind and
he quietly left the briefing room, letting Teal’c stare silently and briefly
at the Stargate. Hammond had a feeling that SG-1 was on their own. He knew
Teal’c had felt that too. The only bad thing about that was, he reflected,
there was nothing he could do about it.
Daniel stared sleepily at the wall in front of him. With a jerk he straightened. He couldn’t afford to sleep. Not now. He was most vulnerable without friends and without any type of protection. He would probably find himself waking up stark naked. Shivering at the thought he continued his lonely vigil between a post and the sorry wall. It smelled awful here, probably one of the reasons that the corner had been empty in the first place. Daniel settled back again, his eyes taking in the startlingly thin figures and how their eyes seemed to follow his every move. It unnerved him to be here. At least he had had Jack, Sam and Teal’c in Hadante. Here, he had nobody. The story of his life. He shivered unconsciously this time. According to Unas he didn’t have long to live. In such cases as these he really wished that he were back on Earth. Once again he reminded himself of Hadante and how he had felt on the brink of death while Sam and Jack had watched. He remembered the hazy thought of not being able to breath and how he hadn’t even been able to cry out for help, to tell Jack to tell Sha’re that he loved her. He wasn’t even able to look at Sam who was trying her best to get towards him and the regret when he had actually figured out the address that would save them all. All this lost just because he had to save three lives needlessly being throw away. He slapped himself again. Not only was he rambling, he was falling asleep. Daniel blinked slightly. The memory he had just submerged himself into had given him one piece of crucial evidence. Now fully awake, Daniel straightened out his feet and he reached down into his boot. Unlatching the sheaf and pulling up the object, Daniel chastised himself for not remembering sooner. He held the small knife up to the light, a little bit of primal satisfaction coursing through his veins, something he hadn’t felt since Tuplo’s planet. He slid the knife in his boot again and looked around darkly. A little something Jack had told him once scrolled silently across his head... ‘kill or be killed’. Daniel closed his eyes and a slight manic-induced smile played on his lips. As he sat against the wall in the deep dank prison he smiled wider, Jack’s words from so long ago ringing through his head... ‘kill or be killed...’ ‘kill or be killed....’ ‘kill or be killed....’
Jack
tossed and turned. He could hear anguished screams coming from somewhere,
they sounded like Daniel’s but he wasn’t there. Jack turned and he saw Daniel
behind him, bloodless lips were completely white and he looked like he had
seen a ghost. Jack smiled and walked towards his friend, only to see a small
trickle of blood run down the side of his mouth and then Daniel dropped
to his knees and keeled over. Jack looked down, Daniel was dead, there was
no mistaking that. A large dagger or spear jutted out through his back and
already blood had stained the edges of the dagger. Jack looked up to see...
“Whoa!”
Jack woke with a start and slapped the hand away from his shoulder where
it had been vigorously shaking. The hand moved away and Jack looked around
disoriented. Where was he? He finally focused on the figure in front of
him and he rubbed his sleep weary eyes. He felt like crap.
“Sam?” he
yawned and the blur in front of him coalesced into a feminine figure. She
looked unnaturally chipper and fresh and somehow he was annoyed at that.
He wished he could look that good in the morning.
“Good morning
sir.” Jack yawned in response. He really resented this morning business.
“Any word?”
The obvious question lay unanswered, like a physical barrier between them.
Jack felt slightly uncomfortable and stretched deliberately. Sam shrugged
and looked helpless.
“I’ve been
up for a while trying to talk to the natives. There was absolutely no one
out there, like they all sleep at the same time or something. They didn’t
start waking up until five minutes ago.” Jack continued to look impassive.
Somehow he knew this had something to do with the flowers and how the people
of this world depended on the fragile plants for life. Jack nodded and stood,
feeling his muscles contract. Sam looked at the room and Jack noticed for
the first time that the room was in no way personal. Was that talk with
the Polyna girl Abby a dream? The name itself would imply an earth name...
of course so did a lot of places in this galaxy. Jack motioned to Sam to
get moving and he grabbed his jacket, the tell tale patch on the sleeve
seemed to taunt at him. Opening the door, he was shocked at all the bustle
and movement that was out in the tiny hall. Small children to adults scurried
around with such haste and Jack wondered what was going on. Stopping a small
child and raising him up to his level he looked the kid straight in the
eyes.
“What’s
going on?” The kid squirmed a bit and realizing the futility of the situation
he shrugged. Jack had the odd feeling something big was going down.
“The trial
is commencing today.” Jack stared at the child dumbly.
“What?”
“The trial.
School has been canceled because of the trial. The glass eyed man will be
sentenced today.” Jack groaned and replaced the child into the bustling
crowd. Not only was Daniel on trial for a crime against speaking an ancient
language, he was also going to be the biggest thing since canned beans.
Obviously these people had little or no forms of entertainment. Sam looked
up at her superior officer, a thousand questions on her tongue but no words
in which to form them.
“What are
we going to do?” Jack looked towards the heavens as if trying to extrapolate
the answer from the ceiling itself.
“I have
no idea. No idea at all.” He grabbed Carter’s arm and the entered the traffic
clogged hallway. The least they could do was to try and save their friend
but Jack had a feeling that it wasn’t going to be that easy... not with
these people any ways.
Daniel
shook off his weariness and stood; glad that the dank smell didn’t follow
him he cautiously peeked around the corner and sagged in relief. There was
nobody that looked more threatening than a sneeze. As he looked towards
the peaked ceiling he noticed the faint rays of light penetrating the deep
darkness. With a slight smile he exited his little cove. Keeping an eye
out for Unas and his scraggly followers. Satisfied that there wasn’t a soul
watching him he cautiously made his way over to the small fountain, directly
underneath and in the slight shaft of light. Daniel edged over and cupped
his hands, when he managed to get all the cold water pooled into his hand
he splashed it over his face. It was surprisingly cool and refreshing and
for a moment he let his mind wander. He wondered how Teal’c, Sam and Jack
were doing. Hopefully they had managed to stay safe. Suddenly Daniel gasped
as his head was cruelly jerked back. As his eyes watered with pain Daniel
saw what he had feared the most. Unas’s thugs. One of them jeered and drew
a hand over his cheek.
“Looky here!
We’ve got ourselves a trespasser!” The other men laughed and jeered him
on. Daniel tried to jerk his head back, refusing to notice the burn at the
end of his throat.
“Leave me
alone.” Daniel choked out. The man looked at him and smiled a strange smile.
One that made shivers course through his body.
“I don’t
think he’s had enough!” The other men laughed and suddenly Daniel found
himself in the fountain, his head completely submerged and Daniel kicked
weakly. He hadn’t even been able to take in a breath. Daniel tried to jerk
his head back but the larger man had held a death grip on it. Daniel found
that his breath was completely depleting and he tried not to let the precious
air escape. The man lifted his head and Daniel gasped. It was a short relief
and he found his face pressed to the bottom of the fountain again. Daniel
kicked, this time catching the man’s shin. He found himself free again and
he gasped as his head cleared the water. He staggered and collapsed heavily
at the pool and looked into the dark orbs of madness itself. Daniel coughed
and the man threw a punch. To weak to move Daniel allowed the man to take
his share before all he could do was slump by the edge and allow everything
to go on. He felt as if a pressure was being released and suddenly the bonds
that tied him to earth were disintegrated. Daniel was just about to succumb
to the inky darkness before a loud voice boomed out of nowhere.
“Kale stop!”
Daniel finally found himself released and he stared at the peaked rook once
again, his thoughts turned inwards. He lay there for a minute before a shadow
made him squint. The combined attack of light and water made his vision
swim and Daniel closed his eyes drowsily.
“Get up.”
A harsh voice and a nudge in his rib area made him stir and for a moment
he envisioned Jack waking him up after an all nighter. It certainly felt
like it. Daniel groaned and managed to hitch his battered body up and stopped
when he was in a kneeling position to the boots that belonged to the voice.
“I won’t
be wasting my time with the likes of you. Get up or I’ll have the guards
personally haul you out.” Daniel winced slightly and he rolled to his feet.
He staggered as his knee twisted underneath him and he felt a twinge in
the bone. Not good. Not good at all. The man made a disgusted noise and
called to someone. Daniel stared unresponsively at the floor until he felt
his arm pulled and he mumbled something under his breath. Thankfully the
man didn’t hear him and Daniel found himself going towards the daylight.
The harsh brightness almost blinded him and he blinked rapidly.
“Where am
I going?“ He asked dumbly. The man who supported him grunted softly and
it was the man who had nudged him that answered him.
“You are
being sentenced. Don’t worry, you’ll be able to see your friends in the
prison again.” That was exactly what Daniel was worried about. At least
he had this time to recuperate and hopefully see his real friends again...
Sam watched
as the Colonel paced angrily down and up the hallway. It was nearly over
an hour since they had been put in this hallway. The Polyna leader had promised
them at least a fifteen-minute conference alone with Daniel. Sam hoped he
was alright. What she had heard the people in the hallways saying, she was
pretty doubtful that Daniel would be in one piece. The knob of the door
lowered and Jack stopped pacing. The door swung open and a very tired looking,
limping, bruised Daniel Jackson entered. He looked ready to collapse and
Jack moved to support him.
“Daniel!”
Sam couldn’t help the exclamation and Daniel looked wearily at her. Sam
almost recoiled at the sight of Daniel’s purple-blue molted faced. There
were five marks in his neck and what looked like streaked blood. Daniel
took a step towards her before he crumpled completely. Sam heard herself
cry out again and reach for the younger man. She knelt beside him; happy
to see he was still conscious.
“Hey Daniel.”
Jack even surprised Sam with his iron willed strength and passion. Daniel
blinked and finally focused on their faces.
“Hey.” He
smiled briefly. Jack shook his head and instructed Daniel to lean on Sam.
“What happened?”
Sam stroked Daniel’s forehead as Jack rolled up Daniel’s pant’s cuffs. Sam
breathed in deeply and blinked at the sight of the horribly bruised leg.
It was a wonder Daniel managed to stagger into the room on his own willpower
at all.
“I apparently...”
Daniel coughed and Sam winced. Jack caught the motion and gave her a reassuring
look. “*ahem* I have a death threat on me by means of one mad alien, which
we have a certain familiarity with.” Jack narrowed his eyes.
“Cut the
crap,” Daniel looked at him. Jack shrugged. “I mean who is it. Don’t give
me the usual tech-no-babble.” Daniel nodded wearily and Sam put her hand
against his forehead. He was slightly warm, nothing too serious.
“Unas.”
Jack’s face contorted and he directed his gaze downwards as he proceeded
to take out some gauze from his backpack. As he wrapped Daniel’s knee he
continued asking questions.
“Did he
do this to you?” Daniel shook his head, wincing As Jack jerked the bandage
too tightly.
“No. It
was his thugs.” Jack nodded. He looked at Sam and to the door.
“Great.
Okay Danny-boy. We’ve got a date with an executioner. Sam looked confused
and at that moment the door opened, revealing the man who had helped Daniel
in and the Polyna leader. Jack looked back at her and she wondered if she
was supposed to take that as a sign or something. Jack put Daniel’s arm
around his neck and helped him hobble out of the room. The leader looked
sorrowful and for a millisecond she thought that he gave her an anguished
look. Sam looked at the empty hall and followed her two teammates out the
door.
They
were greeted with a roar of approval and Daniel heard Jack mutter under
his breath something about bored pilgrims. Daniel winced as he was jerked
out of Jack’s supportive embrace and into a kneeling position on the stone
dais in front of at least a dozen Polyna representatives. The ages varied
and Daniel wondered about how these people chose their leaders. The one
at the head of the table, or rather podium in front of him spoke first.
Daniel found it very hard to concentrate on the flowing words that he identified
as late Greek, maybe an ancient deviation of Latin and maybe Italian. Finally
he stopped and stared squarely at Daniel. Although he was feeling slightly
nauseous he met the man squarely in the eyes.
“You,” he
stared with an elaborate sweep of his hand, staring at all the people assembled,
“are charged with speaking the forbidden language.” He opened his mouth
to speak more before but before he could Jack spoke up from the back.
“Uh, excuse
me...” Jack trailed off slightly when the man sent him a withering look.
“Uh... okay, any ways, I would like to object.”
“For what
is the objection placed at.” Jack raised his eyebrows and turned to Sam
who shrugged.
“Well,”
Jack started, staring thoughtfully at the ceiling. If Daniel hadn’t been
in pain he probably would’ve strangled Jack himself. This was after all
his trial. “You can’t prove that he spoke it.” Jack looked satisfied. Carter
rolled her eyes and the crowd murmured.
“We have
witnesses. I myself heard him speak.” The crowd’s murmuring increased ten
fold. Jack looked enraged. He started to say something before Sam covered
his mouth and spoke harshly to him. Jack sullenly shut his mouth and sat
down.
“We retract
the statement. Please continue.” Sam sat down and the room was silenced
as the elderly man raised his hands. Daniel took most of the weight off
of his injured leg by leaning on the wooden bar in front of him. The leader
cleared his throat and continued.
“Then if
there are no other objections,” The man glared at Jack, “Then I pronounce
you guilty and condemn you to a week in the prison.” The crowd roared with
approval and Daniel found himself hoisted up by two burly men. Daniel threw
a panicked look in Jack’s direction and finally, before the men were able
to drag him he yelled to the elder.
“Wait!”
The crowd silence and Daniel wrenched himself away from the two men. He
looked franticly at his two team members as they joined his side.
“What do
you wish to say?” Daniel’s mouth gaped open... what did he have to say...?
“For one,
this wasn’t a fair trial. The second thing is that I don’t exactly relish
the idea of going back there.” Jack threw Daniel a look and the elder looked
at the group.
“I have
deemed your punishment. One week is less than a usual offender would receive.
Because you are newcomers I have decided to be lenient. You will go now.”
The elders dissipated and this time Daniel was roughly hoisted and he momentarily
lost sight of Jack and Sam as the crowd surrounded him, chanting something
about ‘those who are evil are those who shall be purged.’ Daniel almost
yelled as his knee was twisted and he was dragged out. He looked at the
sun that had raised high overhead. The crowd followed him and Daniel finally
saw Sam and Jack, arguing with the elder. They pointed in his direction
and as Daniel finally lost sight of them he was dragged back to the prison
that would probably be his death unless he got out of there, fast.
“Shit.”
Sam looked at him but he paid no heed. “Shit, shit, shit, shit, shit.” Sam
closed her eyes and leaned back.
“I have
to agree with you on one thing sir....” Jack looked up from twiddling his
thumbs.
“Shit?”
Sam opened her eyes and frowned, her brow creasing with the movement. Under
her scrutiny Jack finally backed down and shrugged.
“No, I mean
the thing you said about rescuing Daniel a couple minutes ago.” Sam closed
her eyes and sank further in the armchair of the leader’s waiting room.
“Yeah, well
I thought about that. I thought we’d first wait for Teal’c. I’ve been wondering
if he’s been rounding up the troops or something. We shouldn’t do anything
rash... well yet any ways.” Jack sighed deeply and Sam found herself pitying
the man. He and Daniel were the closest of friends, a bond that would probably
never fray. She pinched the bridge of her nose, an unconscious habit that
she had picked up from Daniel. She stopped self-consciously.
“Did you
notice how scared Daniel looked about going there. I didn’t think that Daniel
was too worried about Unas. I don’t think the kid will be able to stand
up for himself... literally...
I mean,
did you see what those bastards did to his knee? He’ll be useless on his
feet.” Sam looked at his and for a minute she though she saw something emerge
in Jack’s eyes.
“Colonel...”
she started off threateningly. Jack grinned guilelessly.
“What?”
“That look.
You’re going to do something foolish. I know it.” Jack shrugged and Sam
narrowed her eyes.
“Okay,”
Jack sighed. “Here me out before you reprimand me. I met this woman.” Sam’s
eyes raised. Jack narrowed his. “I don’t know what she does for a living
around here but she gave me these.” He fished in his pocket and brought
out Daniel’s crushed glasses. “Okay Captain, here’s one for you. How can
she have gotten those unless...” He trailed off.
“...Unless
she either works there or something else.” Jack nodded.
“Brilliant.
I going in.” Sam was nodding; not really listening until the words sunk
in.
“Whoa, no,
no, no. Your worried about him getting in Danger and you’re planning to
go in there?” Jack shrugged.
“With weaponry
of course. What’s a little arsenal against a half-crazed Goa’uld?” Sam covered
her eyes and admitted defeat. Once Jack had his mind set on something he
didn’t give up, besides he was her C.O. and there wasn’t a friggen thing
that she could do to stop him. Jack’s eyes were already glazed over with
thoughts of going into possible combat and Sam waved her hand in the direction.
“Go ahead.
Be careful. I try and hold the fort until Teal’c comes back.” Jack nodded
and sprung to his feet. Waving a cheerful goodbye Sam couldn’t help and
wonder if she would see either of them ever again... Alive any way.
Daniel
grunted as he was thrown into the prison. He winced and rubbed his sore
behind. What he wouldn’t do for a bath right about now. The walls glimmered
slightly and Daniel found himself wondering what kind of material the walls
were composed of. Of course they had to be stronger than titanium. He thought
wryly of the huge Unas that had towered over him. To keep a thing of that
size and sheer weight would take an element like trinium. Daniel blinked.
He wasted time like this a lot. Of all things, he needed to hide, to find
cover. If anything, he needed a fairy godmother. Daniel managed to limp
into a dark corner, trying to blend into the silent darkness that had settled
on the prison. An ominous growling made the hair on his neck stand on end.
Unas. Daniel tried to shrink further into the darkness, exceeding in only
bumping into a slumbering creature. Daniel yelped and a large hand pushed
him into the center of the prison, lit up with a glow that came from the
slight hole in the ceiling above.
“Crap.”
Daniel watched as the gigantic monster slipped out of the shadows. Suddenly
Daniel felt queasy. He was supposed to fight this... this... thing? Daniel
swallowed nervously and he raised his head – still bearing bruises from
the assault that morning – to look at the monster straight in the eye. If
ever so, the thing looked huge. Not only did Daniel have the unpleasant
thing in his face, he also noted that the Unas reeked. Terribly. Daniel
held his breath and stood on watery legs as they suddenly rebelled. Unas
circled him and as if a ghost was in the room, Daniel head a few comforting
words, picked out of the air and they were all to familiar from Daniel’s
boxing sessions with Jack.
“Come on
kid! Keep your eye on your opponent. Turn your back, and you’re as good
as dead!” Daniel blinked and spun on his heels, following Unas’s movements
around his body. Daniel swallowed as he got an up-close and personal look
at the slime that dripped from the thing’s mouth and he found himself wondering
about the dead Unas that they had left on Cimmeria. The only time he had
seen it was when it was dead, or rather near death. Personally it didn’t
look more frightening than a dog. But of course, after Jack’s vivid details
of fights and endless bullets deposited into the being’s body, Daniel had
grown a new appreciation for the beast that had been an experimental host
to the Goa’uld.
“Human...”
The thing started off with a growl and it lisped his classification with
a certain drawl. Daniel found it altogether more dis-appealing and revolting.
The Unas smiled ferally at the look that Daniel gave him. The spit or slime
increased and Daniel swallowed, his lashes fluttering in time with his heart.
Unas seemed to enjoy this heightened sense of fear and it moved closed.
Daniel swallowed his fear. He hadn’t endured endless courses on self-defense
and military tactics to crumble in front of a monster from halfway across
the universe, no way. He straightened and the Unas stopped. Daniel was aware
of the collective gasp through the crowd that spread like wildfire. Obviously
when a prisoner that dared to mess with Unas usually took either a run for
it or was killed on the spot. This had to be a good thing... sort of. Daniel
shifted, feeling the twinge of pain that radiated from his knee. It really
hurt now. He hated this weakness right now. Here he was, on a god-forsaken
planet, across the galaxy and the first thing that he thought of in a full-fledged
confrontation with one of the most dangerous creatures on his list and he
was thinking about pain. Daniel blinked. That was all Unas needed. He lunged;
the spit that Daniel had been so acutely aware of was splattering over the
floor. Soon his blood would join that slime. Daniel felt really dispassionate
at that moment. Not only did he stare at the advancing creature like an
idiot; he didn’t even feel like moving. Life was definitely not on his side
today. Daniel watched the creature come closer and closer. Daniel still
didn’t move. Finally when the creature was almost on him, Daniel dropped,
sticking his uninjured foot outwards. With a howl of dejection, Unas tripped
and fell to the ground. Instead of the onrush on human bodies that Daniel
expected, the crowd backed into the shadows, their gasps and lines of communications
mixing as one. Daniel stood from his crouch. Wearily searching the blue
and wrinkled face of his opponent. Oddly, the man didn’t advance as quickly
as before. Instead, the monster sunk into the shadows. Daniel had a distinct
feeling this wasn’t over. Daniel smiled and for the first time almost all
of the people that had surrounded him only seconds below could see the evil
glint in the archeologist’s eyes. Somewhere, in the back of the prison,
Daniel heard a bone chilling howl and it shook him up more than he cared
to admit. He stretched, the light encircling his body like a halo, and Daniel
retreated into darkness, finding his refuge and once again preparing for
a long night.
Jack
rubbed the bridge of his nose and squished his body deeper into the shadows.
He was getting pretty tired of waiting... ‘SLAM’ Jack jumped when a door
opened and slammed. Scurrying into the silent darkness to the night, Jack
could see a small figure racing out and into the inky night. Jack frowned.
“She certainly
doesn’t care about making noise.” He thought out-loud and He picked up the
bundle he had gotten to hide all the things he was hoping to bring with
him. Jack picked up his face as he realized that the person was gaining
speed. Obviously this person knew he was onto her. Jack quickened his pace,
wincing as his breath hitched and his side twinged with pain. This was the
kind of thing he was getting too old for. Jack neared the rise of the hill
and he stopped. He had lost her.
“Why are
you following me?” Then soft question from near his right made him inhale
and swing around. He hadn’t even heard her come up...
“Uh... Well,
to be honest with you, I was hoping you could do me a favor.” The girl laughed,
a trilly and vibrant sound that shimmered like the Aurora borealis that
he had had the good fortune to see on some cold nights on the road, coming
from the Cheyenne Mountain complex.
“You want
help... From me?” She laughed again, this time a harsh sound that almost
hurt his ears. Abby looked embarrassed. She tossed her head, her hair shimmering
in the moonlight. Odd, it seemed both her melodious voice and hair made
a perfect combination.
“I need
to get into the prison.” She looked sharply around her and then at him.
“Don’t be
a fool,” she blinked, “I don’t go there for the hell of it.” Jack smiled
slightly.
“You think
I want to?” She smiled shyly; Her eyes focused on a far off point that he
couldn’t see.
“I suppose
not O’Neill.” Jack narrowed his eyes. He had never told the woman his name.
She noticed the look and rolled her eyes. “The council was right. You are
a very suspicious race.” She shook her head and took a piece of cloth from
a bag that she had been carrying. She wrapped it around her head like a
turban and looked at him.
“What?”
Jack asked sarcastically. When Abby looked at him he shrugged.
“You need
a disguise.” She reached into bag and brought out a long robe.
“Thanks.”
He said without meaning it. The rag he had been given smelled weird and
needed a good wash.
“If the
smell bothers you now, you will hate the method in which we enter the prison.”
She graced him with a smile and with a finger to her lips she motioned him
into the forest. Jack looked at his surroundings and followed her. Abby
led him through a maze of trees before stopping beside an old redwood that
had seen better days. Abby looked around and pressed her palm to an impression
that had been barely visible in the darkness.
“Corrosive.”
She said under her breath.
“What?”
Jack blinked as the trunk vanished and was replaced by a door. Abby swept
her hands down into an elaborate show of courtesy.
“After you.”
Jack smiled weakly and looked into the open doorway. He looked back at her.
“You cannot
be serious. This thing is endless.” Where there was supposed to be a floor,
there was a large hole. Jack stuck his head back in “... I can’t do this...”
“Isn’t that
too bad.” Jack had barely enough time to let out a protest before he was
shoved through the hole and into the dank, bottomless pit.
Sam paced
around the narrow confines of the room. It had been no less than an hour
ago that the Colonel had left. Unlike all the other times, the Colonel hadn’t
been dragged in kicking and screaming, insisting that he needed to be out
of the hellhole he had been placed in. Sam found herself feeling uneasy
and apprehensive. It wasn’t like any civilization she had ever encountered...
well, actually, they had encountered. Sam finally went to the door, and
in a bout of frustration she hit the keypad. Suddenly the door whooshed
open. Sam jumped backwards into a defensive posture and stood when there
was nobody outside. Odd. Sam had half expected the same bustle that had
also permatrated the hall in the morning. Instead, the halls were dark and
quiet. Sam narrowed her eyes, this was defiantly odd. Sam felt defenseless
without any weapons or armor. Sam thought about that. They had automatically
assumed that the culture they had stumbled upon was advanced and possessed
weapons of mass destruction. There had been no weapons at the sentencing,
they had used bodily force to drag Daniel off, and the gate wasn’t guarded...
just manned. Sam looked at each door. Dark, no evidence of light. It seemed
like the planet that they had gone to and the Goa’uld were experimenting...
what was it called... That’s right... Argos. Everybody was asleep. Sam also
noticed the lack of plants or living decoration. Usually worlds controlled
by the Goa’uld or had been controlled by the Goa’uld used plants as ornamental
things. Here, the walls were white and bare, unlike anything they had encountered
before. Sam looked at every doorway, searching for any sign of life... even
better... the leader. At least he could tell her something... or stick his
cronies on her. Whichever came first. She stopped at a door. Light
streamed from the crack where she assumed had to do with some function of
this facility. Sam raised an eyebrow at the panel. Oh well. Repeating the
same thing she had done to the panel in her room, Sam pressed her fist against
the panel. The door opened diagonally and Sam found herself in a beautifully
decorated room. There were artifacts that she recognized and some that she
didn’t. From Daniel’s little speeches and constant ragging telling Sam that
she should study this and look at that, she recognized the Aztec cups, Greek
jars, Egyptian sculptures and what looked like two Goa’uld devices. The
hand device and the healing device. Sam looked around the room, puzzled
when she found it empty. Interesting. Sam reached out to get the hand device,
when a wooded cane came out of nowhere and hit her on the wrist. Sam scowled
and looked at the person who had hit her.
“Hey! What’s
your problem?” Sam shot a glance in his direction.
“Excuse
me?” She didn’t mean to be sarcastic. She had obviously been around Jack
O’Neill for a little longer than she had thought to be.
“Are you
deaf? You youngin’s. Well, I’ll tell you. In my days I didn’t go tromping
off into rooms. Do you know how much trouble you can get into?” Sam decided
to play along. It was a little easier than explaining where she had come
from and what she was after.
“Well? Out
with it.” Sam looked up, startled.
“Hmm?” the
man looked pointedly at her and for the first time she felt conscious about
the green fatigues and equipment belt that she wore. She seemed very out
of place in this facility.
“I mean,
what’s with the get up?” He shook his head. “Kids these days and fashions.”
Sam shrugged. She had absolutely no idea what the man was talking about.
Instead of saying anything further, the man jerked his head and indicated
that she should follow him.
“Uh... where
are we going?” Sam managed to ask before the elderly man reached out and
pressed a panel, well hidden. The man looked surprised as if he had never
heard such a stupid question.
“What do
you mean ‘where are we going’? You are a part of the night crew aren’t you?”
Sam shrugged.
“No.” The
man grunted. The wall in front of them imploded into tiny shards and Sam
stood stock still, expecting the shards to hit her. Instead, they folded
inwards and created a doorway. The elderly man stepped through and Sam followed.
“Oh my...”
Sam stared upwards. In the core of the city, or as it seemed, there was
a huge, at least twenty story structure. Sam say the plants and vines that
grew downward, the thousands of trees and in the middle, a beautiful waterfall,
folded into itself and spiraled to the bottom of the cavern or whatever
this place... rather haven this was. Sam smiled and smelled the flowers.
Each were distinct and gave off wonderful aromas. Sam made a move to pick
a lovely bloom when suddenly the older man hit her again.
“Do not
touch the flowers girl.” Sam raised an eyebrow. Wonderful. She was a girl
now.
“I’ll have
you know...”
“Nothing.
I’ll have you know nothing girl. You aren’t to touch the plants. They are
us. What planet did you come from.” Sam shrugged.
“Uh, Earth...”
The man looked sharply at her.
“You mean
to tell me that you are not of this planet?” The man shook his head. Touching
a lovely bloom, he picked up a can from the ground and went to a little
alcove underneath the waterfall. There was a little pool that gathered water
from the waterfall as the spray collected. Sam wandered to the back of the
cave, stopping as her shoes stepped on a brittle substance. She went to
her knees and picked up shards of glass. She held them up to the light and
found them to be compressed. They were obviously Daniel’s. There was no
other substance around here that looked compressed. Maybe Jack wasn’t lying
about the Abby girl. Sam stood up again, following the man who had shuffled
back to the plant. The man spread the water and whispered a few comforting
words to the withering plant. Sam looked at the beautiful paradise.
“No I’m
not.” Sam answered the man’s question, almost forgetting that he had asked
it prior to he getting up from expecting the glass. The man looked up.
“Then why
are you here?” Sam shrugged.
“We’re explorers.
We explore the galaxy.” The elderly man shook his head sadly.
“If I were
you I would stop. When I was around your looks,” - Sam raised an eyebrow
at that - “I wanted to travel. We found the circle and unburied it. We were
not mindful of the stories our elders had told us about the evil rulers
and all the misery the circle had given us.” The old man smiled wanly at
Sam and shuffled back to his house. He looked over his shoulder to make
sure she was following before he continued. “Myself and my friends pressed
buttons, just for fun. We had been experimenting one day when we pressed
a sequence that we had found on an ancient tablet that had been left in
a near-by tree. One of my friends went through. Needless to say, he never
returned. We started to fear the circle. One day, visitors came through
the gate. They were similarly dressed to the men in the tales. They killed
many people before they realized our life force resided in these plants.”
He waved vaguely at the flowers and vines. “They destroyed most of the plants.
Only a few of us survived. Since then, we have become a large species. Just
recently younger people, like you, opened the circle.” The man shook his
head. “The day you came through, the circle was supposed to be buried. Until
this is resolved we will not be able to bury the circle; therefore we are
venerable to invasion by the evil men. “ The man sighed as he reached the
final leg of the journey and went inside his house. Sam followed him, her
scientific curiosity getting the better of her. Sam stared at the artifacts
for a minute.
“How did
you get these?” The man shook his head softly.
“That was
the price I was paid so that I could be loyal to the evil men.” The elderly
man picked up the healing device. “You see, I was blended once. I know you
were as well. I was gifted long ago with the ability to see into people.
The evil men thought that to be a wonderful aide in their battles. I was
taken by the people called Tok’ra and given leave of my evil captor.” Sam
felt her eyes well up in sympathy. She knew where he was coming from.
“How did
you end up here?” The man sighed.
“The Tok’ra
helped me find my world. If it were not for them, I would have surly not
been able to come home.” Sam didn’t move as she absolved this new information.
The elderly man came foreword and gave her the healing device, then shuffled
to the shelf and retrieved the hand device. He gave that to her as well.
“You will
need these.” The elderly man then left and the door returned to its normal
shape. Sam looked at the now empty room. At least it was more help then
the Colonel had given her. Sam took one look at the priceless artifacts,
a price not worth paying. Sam collected herself and left.
Jack
finally came to a halting stop in the middle of a tiny room. He stood and
with a small screech, Abby crashed into him as he tried to dive away. Jack
fell flat on his face, wincing as Abby landed on top of him. Jack coughed
as the dust arose and he levered himself up on his knees.
“Thanks
a lot. You could have at least told me you were going to shove me down a
huge slide. I would have been a little move understanding.” Jack winced
slightly and rubbed his backside. Wonderful, not only had they been taken
to OZ, there wasn’t any sign of the yellow brick road. Abby brushed off
her disguise and motioned to Jack.
“Come this
way.” Jack shrugged. This was an awful waste of time. They should have gone
through the front door. Abby stopped at a certain spot, and once again she
said something. Jack strained to listen, but it was spoken too softly. Jack
watched Abby put her hands into two depressions and winced as a low grinding
erupted from the wall. Slowly, a large rock removed itself and Abby jumped
nimbly aside as it crashed to the ground. Jack raised an eyebrow and looked
at the yawning darkness that extended into the cavern that Abby had uncovered.
“Interesting
trick. Mind telling me how you can do that?” Abby looked at him. Jack shrugged.
Kids these days, no respect for adults. Abby crawled into the hole. Jack
took one look and yelled at her disappearing figure. “Hey! Isn’t there something
you can do about the dark?” Jack heard a shuffle then a bang as something
was tossed in his direction. Jack picked up the shiny object. His lighter.
“Wonderful,” Jack said.
Daniel
shifted as the pain in his knee started up again. How he wished that he
had some aspirin. He shifted again. The stench here was unbearable. Giving
Up, Daniel hopped to his feet, well, actually, more accurately, foot. Wincing
as he did so, Daniel determined that he would not be using his knee any
day soon. He hopped along the wall, grimacing as the movement jarred the
tight bandage that Jack had wrapped up with the gentleness of a boar. Daniel
smiled at the though. How he really missed the three of them, Jack, Sam
and Teal’c. Daniel stopped. He wanted a drink, but now he felt like passing.
There, in the stillness, Daniel could see the outline of a huge hunkering
figure. Something told him it wasn’t any cover girl. Daniel hated being
right. Unas sauntered out of the shadows, a fair amount of think drool still
running down the side of his mouth. Daniel cringed as the thing spoke.
“Hear me,”
There came a loud chatter from the darkness. Daniel wondered if anybody
had been asleep at all. Daniel came to attention to listen to the creature.
Already, he knew full well what the monster wanted.
“I want
to congratulate the human that had humiliated me today. I would also like
to invite him for another match, or would he be to frightened?” Daniel felt
a type of anger boil through his blood. Something he had identified long
ago as primal rage. Something that had been buried when the anti-histamines
had returned his body to normal. Something that had almost killed everyone.
Daniel tried to stay back, but as Unas would have called it, his human pride
did him no good.
“I accept
your challenge.” The prisoners around him gasped collectively. “But on one
condition.” Unas growled in the back of his throat and made a gesture the
let Daniel continue. “I want you to leave every prisoner alone. I don’t
want you to ever bother another person, human or not, again.” Unas smiled,
the goo still dripping from his fangs. Daniel looked darkly to the shadows,
aware of one face after another. He wanted them to understand what was a
stake here. He was hoping that they would be able to overthrow the Unas,
and he hoped that along with his overthrow, the Unas would finally not strike
fear into the hearts of people that didn’t deserve to be afraid. Daniel
smiled slightly, remembering when they had been on the demon planet. He
hadn’t been afraid of that Unas, and he certainly wasn’t afraid of this
one.
“Then it
is settled. A battle to the death, tomorrow at dawn.” Daniel nodded. Unas
stomped away and Daniel watched as little children and adults alike scurried
out of the way. There wasn’t going to be anymore fear. That was at least
one thing he could do for Sha’re.
Jack
wedged himself through the last hall. They seemed to be getting smaller
and smaller. Of course, Abby had no problems; her lanky frame was thinner
and a little less wider than O’Neill’s. Jack gasped fitfully as he struggled
to catch up with her. How the hell did she manage to continue doing this
ever day, ever week, every month of the year? She must have been either
really motivated or really stupid to take a job like this. Jack finally
came to a halt and watched as his lighter started to splutter. Of course,
Jack thought sourly to himself, as soon as he quit smoking and had a lighter,
it would run out. Wonderful. Where was alien technology when he needed it?
Up ahead, Abby sighed.
“I would
have told you long ago, but I thought it would be interesting to see how
you would fair with that little thing. Abby crawled back and took the lighter.
She raised it to the ceiling and touched what looked like a torch. Soon,
the lights flared from one flare to another, a strange light festival that
seemed to go onwards. The lights flared up and up until Jack could see the
row of lights extending through miles of tunnel. Then Jack realized it was
a reflection. Both and front of the tunnel had mirrors. Which meant... which
meant everything was screwed. Jack groaned.
“Oye.” Abby
looked back at him.
“Oh, you
intrepid explorers. All it ever is for you is excitement. Never is there
any work. My, I wonder how you ever lasted.” Jack looked offended.
“What do
you mean? I’m one of the people on my team that does the most work. I’m
insulted.” Abby stopped for a minute.
“I see.
Have you by any chance ever done anything in your life that ever resulted
into anything?” Jack stopped as well, sitting on his butt. He smiled fondly,
remembering Sara, then Charlie. His throat started to choke up on that one.
Them he thought about Daniel.
“Yeah. I
gave the geek a chance.” Jack smiled mysteriously and Abby stared at him.
“I am unfamiliar
with the term ‘geek’.” Jack smiled again, this time tightly.
“Daniel.
He’s a geek.”
“Oh, I see,
so then the woman would also be a geek?” Jack laughed.
“No, the
term ‘geek’ refers to a person who tends not to have fin and that would
rather read a book then watch a game of hockey or baseball.” Abby looked
confused.
“I see.
What are these terms, Hockey and...
“...baseball?
They are the best things. I’ll have to show you how to play as soon as we
get Danny-boy and get out. It’s a lot of fun.” Abby stared at him. The flickering
lights gave her pale complexion a whitish glow. Jack shivered. She looked
so much like a person he had know...
“Let’s go.”
Jack dwelled no longer and Abby continued. She must have felt something
from him, something that held a certain urgency in it. Jack knew that this
was no weird Deja vu, this was something all too sinister. Something big
was going to happen, and frankly, he knew Daniel had something to do with
it.
Daniel
leant fitfully in the corner of the space he had been in. Two hours of night
left. Two hours in which he would think only about these people, their lives,
Jack, Sam, Teal’c, his right to fight for what he stood up for, the evil
that had leeched every single good thing in this universe. Then there was
Sha’re, he silky hair framed by the soft candle light, her lips gentle and
smooth, her eyes the color of the rich brown sky that darkened as the day
on Abydos grew still. He was torturing himself. Why left Unas have all the
fun? Daniel blinked wearily. No sleep came to him in this deep alien place,
no eyes stared at him with a killing intent, he could feel comfortable,
if the damn smell would just go away. Yet, in this mist and quiet darkness
Daniel could hear the quiet breathing of every soul, collective breathing,
an art in it’s own way. Daniel smiled as he heard the quiet tunes of a mother’s
voice calming her child to sleep.
Forever
and ever will the mountain wind blow
To and fro,
to and fro.
From darkness
to light, will we shine,
Until the
holy hand divine,
Will let
us free, will give us strength for yet another day,
To see and
feel, to want and wish, to breathe another breath...
Daniel listened
to the haunting tune, his eyes prickling. This was definitely a good reason
to fight, to die. If there was any reason at all to fight, freedom was the
best. Daniel blinked slowly, looking at the purplish sky that dotted the
shafts above. The shine of thousands of stars made him wonder in which one
lay Sha’re, her oval face lax in sleep and her eyes closed. Daniel wondered
and then turned to the dungeon which had just condemned him. He would be
damned if he would let that monster terrorize these people any further.
Outside of the prison, The sky turned beautiful colors and night became day.
Sam stepped daintily through the light deprived halls, she could already see the beginnings of light start to seep throughout the walls, their bright interiors forming grotesque shadows. Sam wondered to what the elderly man had told her. If the light was the only thing that was supposed to wake these people from their ‘sleep.’ If that were the case, she had less than a half-hour to clear out. She had had no word from the Colonel, she couldn’t reach him over the radio, so she assumed he was either out of range or he had his radio turned off. Sam was hoping that he wasn’t any other option... like dead. Sam shivered minutely to herself and continued to forge her way out of the massive structure. Sam looked at the two bulges in her pockets. The healing device and the weapon device. She couldn’t help but not have them. She didn’t want to use either. Humph, she mused to herself. If you want peace, prepare for war. With that thought, she came to the giant doors and pulled them open, her face smiling at the familiar touch of the sun’s light on her heat starved cheeks. Sam walked out onto the large dais and stepped into the fertile garden, trying to get to her friends and colleagues.
General Hammond stared from the briefing room, as the Stargate billowed open, its unstable vortex splashing back into a serene pool. The General watched as Teal’c and SG-2 walked up the ramp, each disappearing with the same speed of light into the dark oblivion. There was no salvation in this constant bitter war against the enemy, there was never anything more than a sour struggle for power in this world, the same realization General George Hammond had come to realize when the Former First Prime and his Master: Apophis, first appeared. There was never good and evil. Evil always existed, Good had to be created. As the Stargate shut down, The general hoped that they would rescue Daniel Jackson, and further more, get him back in one piece. The General sighed, he could relinquish his waiting period, in his office, writing and finishing the mountain of paperwork that this facility had to offer. The stillness was unnerving, as it was when any one of his people was in trouble. It was a shame that Daniel Jackson was usually the cause of this worry.
Daniel
stared at the wall ahead of him. It was day. Like an echo, it started, the
steady stomping of the two gigantic feet, as the huge hulking body approached
him. Daniel looked at the surrounding people, children with hopeful looks
on their faces, adults giving him sympathetic looks, smaller children wailing
in terror as the Unas approached. Obviously, the Unas was a large chunk
of the fear generated in this society. That had to stop. Daniel could feel
the tension in the room, it was unnerving to think in such an atmosphere.
Daniel frantically tried to wrack his brain for anything that he had learned
from those numerous and useless training lessons Jack had made him take.
He shot a peculiar expression at the ceiling, remembering one of the lines
Jack had constantly drilled into him, but he always forgot. Until now. Let
the energy of the kill flow through you, let it be your advantage, not your
disadvantage. Jack had ended off the lesson, by flipping the archeologist
on his back and then hitting the showers. Too exhausted to move, Daniel
had lain there. IT had been hopeless, insurmountable. Unfortunately this
was more so. Daniel redirected his attention back to Unas. At least the
monster would probably kill him off quickly, that would be a little better
than dying in pure agony. Daniel winced slightly as the pain in his knee
bothered him slightly. The pressure bandage Jack had put on it helped his
balance and gave him a little more security that he wouldn’t collapse any
time soon... After thinking about his last thought, Daniel closed his eyes.
The Unas would probably be a little more agile than Daniel would give him
credit for. Suddenly, the man who was apparently going to start them off
looked at Daniel, then at Unas.
“This fight
is for the death.” He said. Daniel felt a shiver of cold fear run through
his veins.
“There will
be one victor. No more.” Unas said gravely, the starter man looked at Daniel,
and not trusting his voice, Daniel nodded his acceptance. The man raised
a hand... the fight to the death started.
Jack
winced and rubbed his sore behind as the slide deposited quite roughly on
the hard packed dirt floor. He was really starting to wonder if this tunnel
would ever end, Abby looked back at him.
“We are
almost there O’Neill.” She felt around the edges of a wall, her small, delicate
fingers tracing over smooth rock to a little imprint. She placed her palm
on the stone and it began to flare, Jack raised an eye brow, and watched
as layer after layer of dirt fell away, a maze of roots replacing the drab
dirt. Now, the only problem was getting through the tangle of roots. Abby
smiled as if sensing his thoughts. She closed her eyes tightly in concentration,
and as if magic, the roots lifted, revealing a passage through to the prison.
Abby smiled and hopped into the hole, crawling through the maze. Jack shrugged
and followed her, his ears still accustom to the silence perked slightly,
he heard something, cheering, screaming thumps. Fearing the worst Jack hissed
through his teeth, trying to get Abby to hurry up.
“Do not
worry,” She chided in her soft accent. “Patience is a virtue.” Jack closed
his eyes. There was that quote again. Hen had heard it millions of times
from teachers, parent, even friends. That was the point, his friend was
in danger and she was moving along like a slug. Finally the tunnel came
to an opening and Jack could see the sunlight. Ow. That hurt his eyes, all
the time under ground had made the concept of real light as churlish as
a child’s Christmas list. Bad example. Finally, Abby disappeared from view,
jumping down from the hole. Jack followed suit, finding the surrounding
area deserted and quiet. The noise although, was coming from the direction
of the main area. Jack hid in the slight shadows, his movements controlled
and precise.
“You will
die for your insolence human!” Jack remembered that voice. The one that
nightmares were even afraid of. Jack winced and peered into the dim arena,
the sunlight steaming on two figures in the center. One he could identify.
Unas. He remembered Daniel telling him about the monster. Any ways, the
real surprise came from the other figure. At first Jack thought he was too
lithe to be Daniel, but it was. Dodging and weaving every one of the blows,
Jack found that he was congratulating himself on a job well done teaching
Daniel the art of self-defense. Now, only if they had gotten to the fighting
part. Jack watched as Daniel once again evaded the monster, it’s hulking
mass provided a bit of a stopper on the creature’s movements. Maybe the creature
wasn’t always as formidable as the legends told. Jack watched as Daniel evaded
yet another blow. Jack cold see that the monster was tiring. Daniel, on the
other hand, looked like he was having fun, except for the small amount of
blood that was trickling down his nose. Jack wasn’t surprised. Obviously
Daniel hadn’t been able to evade all of the punches. Instead of helping
his friend, he watched for a minute as the Unas tried once again to take
a swipe at Daniel. Jack was about to step closer into the crowd when suddenly
the smell of burning something assaulted his nose. Then all hell broke loose.
The door
started to turn red and Sam could feel heat as the hot waves radiated from
the surface as the metal-based door melted. It stank horribly, but if this
was the only way. Within wall, Sam could hear shouts and cheers. Obviously
she had come at a ‘good’ time. Sam winced as flecks of molten metal flecked
off the door, landing and destroying the grass. Sam watched the metal lock
melt and melt, and finally she began to see the last bit of metal melt.
Sam closed her eyes and intensified her thought flow towards the golden
hand device on her wrist. The gem in the center glowed eerily and the light
flashed. Finally, with a groan of metal, The door gave. Sam nimbly jumped
aside as the metal door swung open, the tired and gore covered faces of
hundreds of prisoners looked up, their eyes gaunt with exhaustion and misery.
Sam took one look at the center of the ring where she saw Daniel at a heap
at the Unas’s feet. Unas looked up and narrowed his eyes at the daylight.
A formality in a place such as this. With that single look, the creature
raised itself on its haunches and let out a tremendous howl of fury. Sam
couldn’t decide whether it was one of fury of its game being ruined by the
unexpected visitor at the sudden light that had blinded it. Whatever it
was, Daniel took it. He lashed out, his feet connecting solidly with the
beast’s upper torso and jaw. With a howl of pain this time, the Unas lurched
backwards, grappling around him for any sort of arsenal to fend off his
human attacker. Daniel threw himself back onto his feet, Sam was surprised
that he was moving so fast, by the hopeless expressions on the people’s
faces, Sam had thought Daniel was dead already. Her attention shifted to
where Daniel had just lashed out, his feet hooking underneath the Unas’
and effectively dropping the beast. The creature lashed out, this time catching
Daniel’s foot, his bad one, and dropping him like a sack of potatoes. Daniel
groaned slightly and Sam started to push her way through the crowd. The
adults and children looked at her, their eyes watching and their mouths
moving. Finally her slow progress ground to a halt.
“No, they
whispered. “He must complete the challenge set before him. Only then are
we truly free.” Sam watched helplessly, restrained, as the Unas grumbled
and got to his feet, rising to his full height. Daniel didn’t stand a chance.
Instead of reacting in fear or terror in their predicament, the people began
to sway and their voices met, forming words of ancient origins.
There is
always hope, there is always peace,
For every
life taken, a new one exists
Freedom
is a cherished value
Let the
fate decide our plight, for we are the lost ones
Sam felt
her worries diminish, the haunting tunes of the last verse made her eyes
water with a very human emotion. These people couldn’t fight, their only
crimes were those of speech and entrapment by the same force that had destroyed
their civilization. They wouldn’t leave either. They were bonded by hope,
and only hope would let them free. As if they had sensed her change of mind,
they relaxed their relentless grip and continued their haunting tune. Sam
searched the crowd, looking for any sign of the Colonel. Finally, there,
also held, he was. Sam threw a glance in his direction, his eyes never wavered
off of Daniel. Sam redirected her focus on the battle. Daniel was up on
his feet, the last hit had got him bad and he was now limping. Sam felt
the grip on her arm tighten, as if the prison dwellers didn’t want to give
her a chance to save Daniel’s life. She couldn’t. Not for Daniel could she
violate the very thing he valued most. Peace. She instead forced herself
to watch, as Daniel rolled in the dirt, his body tumbling as he ducked another
viscous blow. Sam’s eyes started to water and as she looked up at the peaked
ceiling she did one thing. The only thing she could so. She called out.
“Daniel...”
She hesitated slightly as one of the gaunt eyed people looked at her, and
she continued to yell. ”Daniel. We’re here, we believe in you...” Sam watched
as Daniel swiveled in the direction of the voice and smiled briefly as the
blond woman came into view.
“Daniel
watch out!” This one didn’t come from Sam, this one came from the struggling
person on his right. Jack. Figures. Daniel ducked and he could feel the
air as it whistled past his head. Daniel then scooted backwards and under
the Unas. Sam watched as for one terrified moment, thought the creature
was going to pick up Daniel and throw him. Instead, the Unas dropped Daniel
and howled in pain. Sam squinted and saw the buried hilt of a Standard SGC
boot knife. Jack yelled something, but all Sam saw was the downwards slash
as Unas’ arm raised for a final attack. Obviously the Unas wasn’t going
to die without a fight. Sam watched in horror and did what came naturally,
she tore her hand from the male prisoners grip and stumbled foreword, her
hand poised and already she felt her mind grow in turmoil. She closed her
eyes and a blast of pure energy shot out, engulfing the Unas as his would
be victim. The Unas crumpled, just missing Daniel who was released from
the creature’s grasp. Instead of sounds of joy, misery, or even anger, there
a stunned silence. All Carter could hear was the steady thumping of her
heart beating against her chest. She pushed through the crowd, intent on
finding Daniel. Dead or alive. Sam reached him before Jack. She turned him
over and she held her breath, wiping the dirt off his cheek. She put a hand
under his jaw, searching for a pulse, and sighed when she found it.
“Argh!”
Daniel sat upright, his eyes searching wildly around the surrounding area.
He winced and brought a hand to the back of his head.
“Ouch. You
didn’t have to shoot me too.” Daniel looked beyond Sam at the creature that
lay in a heap, blood oozing out of the wound that was surrounded by the
knife. Daniel smiled slightly in Jack’s direction and then reached over.
For a minute, Sam was afraid he was going to collapse, but he levered himself
onto one knee, and grabbed the hilt of the knife, jerking it away from the
dead corpse of the Unas. Jack winced slightly and Daniel shoved the knife
back into his boot. Raising a questioning glanced at Sam and Jack, he took
their hands and levered himself upwards. Sam winced as his arm hit something
metal. She took it out and stared at the gray/red device. The healing device.
Sam looked at the device, suddenly glad that she hadn’t needed it as the
old man had prophesied. She looked at the Unas and tossed it onto his still
figure. Thank god for small miracles. Apparently satisfied, she looked at
the door and her mouth opened in surprise, there, framed by the remains
of the metal door, lined up, ready for combat, was Teal’c and SG-2. She
threw a glance at Jack and Daniel and they started off, Daniel limping in
the middle of them. Sam smiled and she watched as the prisoners finally
cheered. They were free. They ran out into the darkness, Jack could see Abby
among them. She embraced one of the younger males and Jack had a fair idea
who he was. As they limped out, the last thing the empty prison heard was
Daniel’s question.
“So? Do
you think I learned anything from those self defense lessons Jack?” Jack
laughed and the three teammates left.
KaraMeL
Yeah,
I bet you’re all asking what the hell is wrong with me... well, to tell
you the truth, I really was busy, and You’ll probably have another story
soon! It’s almost Christmas!