Disclaimer: Stargate SG-1 and its characters are the property
of Showtime/Viacom MGM/UA, Double Secret Productions, Gekko Productions,
this story is for fun (I don’t think Jack enjoyed himself though)
and I sure as hell didn’t get any money. No copyright infringement
is intended and you can’t post this story anywhere else without
asking me first damnit!! But I’ll probably say yes anyway, so go
ahead and chance your luck kiddo.
Authors Comments: Thanks to Ruth for the encouragement and help
– it wouldn’t have been this good if she hadn’t pestered
at the end! Feedback is always treasured, and constructive criticism always
taken on board. Enjoy!
the moment
O’Neill waved his hands and hollered frantically.
He jumped up and down on the soft grassy verge and screamed at the hordes
of figures with their backs to him. They twirled unceremoniously, their
brutish arms flailing as they turned to face him, eyes wide in surprise.
A unified shout went out from among them and they broke towards him, sprinting
forward and up the beginnings of the hill that lay below the plateau where
Jack stood. He ceased his noise and span away from them, muttering as
he launched into a run, ‘why am I always the one who’s running
away?’
----------------------------------
‘Damn it,’ Daniel cursed, leaping to his feet as he and Teal’c
watched floods of men follow Jack O’Neill towards the thick woods.
He turned in the opposite direction to see Carter flapping her hands in
anger as she jogged towards them.
P4X-819 had been presumed uninhabited from the MALP’s minimal findings,
a forested, quiet planet within its four month winter. But SG-1 had found
a people there. Hidden from view they had watched hundreds of hunched,
dark figures within a huge pit, like a crater or volcano top. They seemed
to be conducting some kind of crude ceremony and SG-1 had separated, trying
to get a better overall view of the activities. Daniel had been drawing
conclusions about the people’s apparently barbaric civilization
when his attention, Teal’c’s attention and that of all the
alien figures was diverted to Major Carter.
A part of the crater wall had collapsed, almost taking Carter with it,
the rock crumbled loudly, rolling down the grassy edges and lifting every
alien eye up to where Major Carter was scrabbling away from the unstable
edge. An enraged roar had burst from the aliens, a deep nasty sound that
made Daniel wince. But no sooner had that sound finished echoing through
his ears than he heard Jack. The Colonel had stood, in full view, screaming
at the top of his lungs, desperate to be heard and distract attention
from the Major. And that he did.
Watching in horror as the aliens charged after their CO, Daniel’s
mind still ticked away, observing that they were primitive in their attack
– caring only for the moment, as they hadn’t sent any of their
number after Carter. They were driven by their immediate senses and instincts
and didn’t seem to follow a leader so much as act as a unified ‘one’.
His musings stopped abruptly as a gasping Carter reached them, ‘my
gun doesn’t work!’
‘We may assume,’ Teal’c added, with an edge of concern,
‘that Colonel O’Neill’s sidearm is incapacitated also,’
he pressed the fire button on his Zat gun. Nothing happened.
Before they locked their minds into the why-for of it all Carter waved
a hand, ‘He’s heading for the forest, come on, he might be
able to lose them!’ and she set off at a sprint after her CO, not
knowing what else to do.
------------------------------
Foliage whipped out of the way as O’Neill charged full speed through
the thickening woodland. Leaves and twigs were crushed underfoot as he
noisily slammed one boot after another onto the ground, striding onward
at an ever-quickening pace. His lungs were on fire with desperate need
for oxygen as he heaved frantic breaths – timing them with his footfalls,
beating out a rhythm of exertion as he ran. He couldn’t hear his
pursuers, only his own tired gasps reverberating round his head and the
rustling of the bushes as he crashed through them.
His walkie-talkie crackled to life, almost tripping him with surprise;
he regained his footing and rhythm and grabbed it from his vest. Carter’s
voice broke from its tinny speaker, ‘Sir – can you hear me?
Colonel, come in.’
‘Carter,’ O’Neill gasped in an exasperated sing-song
voice, ‘I’m a little busy right now.’
‘Right,’ Carter replied, thinking fast, ‘I suggest you
find somewhere to hide Sir, they’re close behind you, you won’t
outrun them. We’ll get help as soon as possible.’
O’Neill’s shaky voice practically shouted back, ‘just
find a way to make our damn guns work!’
‘Yes Sir,’ Carter signed off and replaced her talkie.
She stopped then, crouching down on her haunches as the three panted
to regain their breath. ‘Right, running ourselves ragged pointlessly
is doing nothing. We can’t really help the Colonel in any immediate
way now so we’d best focus on the big picture. Teal’c head
back to the gate as fast as you can, you could make it in 2 days, get
reinforcements and some weapons that don’t require power or electrical
mechanisms. Hopefully they’ll work. Go wide of the wood and watch
for more aliens, stay hidden. Daniel and I will stay and try to make these
guns work and see if we can help Colonel O’Neill. Go.’
Teal’c nodded, needing no further information, and set off at a
good speed, heading for the edge of the woods and the general direction
of the Stargate. Carter watched him go and then turned back to Daniel,
‘lets find some cover and work on these guns.’
Daniel nodded and followed her, glancing in concern at the woods where
Jack had disappeared followed by hundreds of aliens. He knew Sam was right
that they couldn’t do anything but he hated just leaving Jack to
fend for himself. He felt so helpless.
--------------------------------
Colonel O’Neill felt like he’s been running for an eternity
and his adrenalin had run out years ago, he wasn’t so much running
now as falling forwards, his eyes desperately searching for a likely place
to hide. Just as they fell on a dense patch of brush that looked promising,
his exhausted limbs failed him and he dragged a foot a little too low.
It caught on a root and he stumbled, fell forward and landed heavily on
his front, the air expelled from his lungs suddenly. Scrabbling to his
knees he crawled, gasping for air into the dense group of bushes, forcing
himself into their centre. The hard twigs scratched his face and hands
as he curled up tight, trying to conceal every part of his lanky frame.
Even with his camos he wasn’t sure that he was hidden well enough
but he knew he couldn’t run any longer, he had no choice but to
rest. He tried to slow his breathing, painfully aware of how loud it was
in the silent wood.
It could only have been ten seconds that he’d been calming his
breathing before the forest around him erupted into noise. Feet thundered
the ground and shook beneath him as the aliens converged on him. O’Neill
screwed his eyes shut in anticipation, holding his breath and willing
the strange people to run straight past. For a second it seemed that they
would, the front runners passed him at a tireless speed and he almost
sighed with relief that he wasn’t immediately visible.
But then the thundering changed, he opened his eyes as the running seemed
to stop but he still couldn’t see anything except leaves and twigs.
He stayed absolutely still and as silent as possible as the wood around
him got steadily more and more quiet. He knew the aliens still surrounded
him but he could no longer hear them.
It was incredibly unnerving to not know what was going on or where his
hunters were. For agonising minutes all he could hear was his breathing,
every intake getting louder than the previous as he tried to keep still.
His limbs were jumping from the abrupt change of running to stillness,
they were starting to go numb as he fought to keep them still and quiet.
A strange scream shattered the silence and O’Neill jumped despite
his efforts, something gripped his ankle hard and he twisted instinctively
to get away. The vice-like grip gave a harsh yank and he was pulled out
of his hiding place. A roar rose around him, deafening his ears and he
looked up to have his vision filled with thick-skinned, warrior like figures.
Before he could untangle his vocal chords to introduce himself hands roughly
hefted him to his feet from behind. He made to shake himself free but
those in front of him crowded forward and he heard a deep growl before
the largest man directly in front of him shoved a huge fist into the Colonel’s
stomach. He curled forward with the force, making a faint retching sound
as his insides were crushed. He felt hands tie his wrists behind him with
what felt like cord or rope as he coughed and spluttered.
Without warning someone whipped his feet from beneath him and he crashed
to the ground at the animals feet, jarring his jaw and tasting metallic
blood against his tongue. He felt them tie his feet tight as well and
he coughed harshly.
‘Look, what…’ he started, but he was silenced as the
largest again hit him, in the face this time, banging his head against
the ground and crushing his nose mercilessly. He yelped, unable to bring
his hands up to his face. Pain centred in his skull as a pounding headache
and he felt warm blood flow down from his nose into his eyes, down his
cheek and onto the forest floor.
‘Jesus Chri…’ again he couldn’t finish as another
animal made a wild disapproving shriek and kicked him savagely in the
side. O’Neill gasped and tried to absorb it, a hard thing to do
when you’re hog tied, he noted. He figured that they didn’t
like his talking so he stayed silent, trying to blink the blood from his
eyes and breathing shallowly to limit the pain from his chest and stomach.
There was a fair amount of discussion going on now between the animals
and although O’Neill couldn’t see much for the all the blood,
he listened to the strange grunts and growls through which the animals
seemed to communicate.
They were strange beasts, they seemed to have tough thick skin, almost
like muddy pink elephant hide. They wore cloth trousers on their lower
halves and tough looking but lightweight shoes. So, Jack decided,
they must be pretty civilised, they make clothes and have a language
and from the looks of their earlier activities they have organisation
and communal practices. Just as Jack was beginning to feel rather
like Daniel, and wondering if that was a good thing, the animals seemed
to make their decision.
With angry ferocity, two of them grabbed O’Neill’s bound
feet and pulled him forward to a sharp pace, they all moved with O’Neill
being dragged along amidst them. Jack’s back dragged along the ground,
his hands catching on twigs and rocks as the pace quickened to a jog.
He held his head a high as he could, clear of the ground, feeling like
a sack of potatoes. He didn’t know how long he could hold his head
in that position. His mind turned to Carter and rest of SG-1, they were
his only hope at the present time and he knew how far they all were from
the gate so he couldn’t expect help any time soon. He nearly yelped
as his knuckles bashed a sharp stone but he bit his lip, not wanting to
anger these strange Neanderthals any more than he already apparently had.
--------------------------------
Colonel Jack O’Neill jerked awake, blinking madly to try and clear
the dried blood from his eyes. When he could finally open them he didn’t
see much – it was pitch black but he could make out stars so he
figured he was outside. Upon trying to move his hands his body suddenly
woke up and he groaned as pain assaulted him.
Everything was stiff, his shoulder joints had cramped from being held
back for so long. He could feel his hands raw from the journey and his
back was aching from a million dents and bruises. His head felt dangerously
nasty at the back and he decided not to move it, he had no idea when he
had passed out or how long they had dragged him like that, he hated to
think of the damage.
Amidst all the strange pains, the thing that troubled him most was his
thirst, he was parched and he couldn’t see any way he’d get
any water if he was punished every time he said something. As his eyes
adjusted to the dark around him he tried to look around him and eventually
had to give in and roll his head to the side. He ceased the movement suddenly
as nausea swept over him, making the ground sway beneath him sickeningly.
Definitely a concussion, he thought, or worse. When the world stopped
spinning he moved again and the nausea was bearable this time so he carried
on.
To his left, some twenty feet away, a large group of the beasts were
silhouetted against a large fire, sitting and grunting at each other.
Typical night in with the lads, Jack snorted to himself. Behind
them was a tall structure, and he saw another to his other side when he
turned that way. He seemed to be in a basic kind of courtyard. Shifting
his hands and feet slightly, and trying to ignore the agonising pins and
needles, he concluded that he wasn’t harnessed to anything, merely
hog-tied. Realising this didn’t make much difference to the hopelessness
of his situation anyway, he closed his eyes and tried to think.
Then his exhausted mind latched onto something – his knife! He
had dropped his useless gun while running but they hadn’t taken
his knife! At least not while he was conscious, and he curled up, trying
to detect its presence on his belt. With a little flexibility and some
yelps of pain, he felt the knife sheath dig into his thigh and smiled
triumphantly. He carefully moved his hands close to it and managed to
grab the handle with stiff and bruised fingers. He drew it out slowly
and rolled onto his side a little. He carefully twisted the knife in his
hands, turning it onto the cord on his wrists and making small sawing
movements. He could do no more radical movements than that and simply
lay for a while, eyes closed and knife biting away at the thick bonds.
He had almost dozed off when his hands fell free and he dropped the knife
as his tortured shoulders and wrists moved sharply. Jagged pain washed
up his arms and he lay gasping for a few moments, trying not to cry out
and attract attention. Slowly he brought his arms round to his front,
mumbling obscenities to help him absorb the pulling agony in his muscles
and ligaments. Blood flowed into his swollen hands as he rolled over onto
his back and he bit his lip, slowly trying to sit up. His chest screamed
at him from the effort and he fell back down again, swallowing with a
dry throat, startled at his own weakness. He tried again, this time rolling
to his left side and curling upwards in a sweeping motion, ending up sitting
up finally.
He sighed and started to struggle with the bindings around his feet,
cutting all the lines of cord he could and finally freeing them too. His
hands moving instinctively up to his radio he found that it was no longer
clipped to his vest, he figured the beasts may have taken it, but decided
it was more likely that it fell off during his journey to this place.
O’Neill placed his hands on the cool ground, letting the wet grass
soothe his sore palms. He stared towards the fire for a short while, checking
to make sure they hadn’t detected any of his movements. Once he
was sure they were unaware he let his eyes wander the possible escape
routes. He seemed relatively unguarded apart from the beasts at the fire
and with his limbs free he allowed a little hope to flood into his stressed
mind.
His eyes latched onto a thin gap between two building through which
he could see more stars indicating a horizon and a clear way out of there.
Growling softly he rolled onto his hands and knees and started very cautiously
to make for the escape route, some forty feet from him. Every time he
placed his weight on his hands his arms threatened to give out on him
and trying to go easy on his battered shoulders he crept slowly forward.
His breath was tense and his eyes darted from his escape route back to
the fire, watching the beasts and willing them to stay put and not have
to send out for more beer, or whatever they were drinking. His mind flared
at the thought of beer, his saliva glands springing to premature life
and he nearly moaned out loud at the severity of his thirst. He shook
his head, feeling himself drifting from the task at hand and knowing full
well it was due to the head injuries he had sustained.
Eventually, despite his fears that the beasts would detect him, he made
it to the small corridor and lurched inside with relief, leaning back
against the wall with exhaustion. His chest sang at him, begging him to
stop and lie down, just to rest for a minute. He shook the thought away
and looked to the end of the corridor, it was so dark he couldn’t
be sure what was out there, but it looked like a clear space, maybe a
field, and he could see far-away trees silhouetted against the stars in
the distance. Whatever else it looked like, it sure as hell looked like
freedom to him.
He leant back, peering up at the heights of the buildings, checking
for any visible sign of beasts watching from the top. He saw no lights
or figures and hoped that meant that they wouldn’t be able to see
him when he crossed out into the open. Putting his palms against the wet
wall and pushing, he managed to get himself into a standing position,
with his torso resting against the wall. His chest ached from the stretching
and he stooped slightly, to relieve the pain of muscles that had stiffened
while he had been curled up.
Pushing off from the wall slowly and giving his head time to adjust to
the balance, he stood alone, glad that he was still able to and feeling
quite positive about the whole thing. He pushed the thought that he no
idea where he was to the back of his mind, all he wanted to do was get
out of danger and other things would follow in due time.
Swaying slightly, he left the corridor between the buildings and stepped
out into the pitch blackness, squinting his eyes to try and see some indication
of what was in front of him. His feet fell hesitantly on soft grass and
he speeded up, anxious to get as far away from the structure and his captors
as possible. It had crossed his mind that what with the animals’
sense of smell being so apparently good, they might miss his scent after
a short while, but then again, he smiled to himself, after
all that exertion they can probably smell me from here.
His brief good humour was whipped away with breathtaking speed as the
ground seemed to disappear beneath his next footstep and he slammed to
the ground, helpless to prevent a scream of pain escape from his lips
as he slid dangerously down a steep slope.
His breath was taken away completely as he hit water hard, coldness sunk
into his bones as he floundered, exhaustion and surprise weighing him
down as his head slipped under the surface. He choked on the deep liquid,
flailing desperately for something to haul him to safety. Kicking frantically,
he knew he had no chance of getting his laced boots off and he had lost
all sense of direction, he could see nothing in the darkness and had no
idea where the bank was.
His head slipped under again and he coughed on foul water, tipping his
head back to get to the oxygen that hovered above. He splashed his hands
violently on the surface, pushing himself upwards again, trying to swim
in the direction that he thought he’d fallen from. But something
in his left shoulder gave out, he felt it pop and he yelled, taking more
freezing cold water into his mouth and lungs and sinking below the surface
his eyes closed from the fiery agony that consumed his body.
Trying one last pathetic attempt to reach the surface, Jack fell further
and further from the surface, everything black and cold. His mind fogged
over as his lungs gave out and he took a first terrible lung full of water.
He spasmed, shaking uncontrollably as his body rejected the water and
cried out for oxygen, his teeth slammed together and a stream of bubbles
burst from his mouth, a last enraged scream of dying agony.
-----------------------------
Something slammed on his chest.
And again, and again.
A relentless pounding, so sore and harsh as his mind struggled back from
the blackness of the water.
Coldness gripped his consciousness and suddenly he remembered the anger,
it flared back and he came to awareness, coughing harshly, hacking and
choking the water from his lungs, expelling the putrid stuff onto the
ground beside him as someone rolled him onto his side delicately. Delicately?
He dared to hope, and opened his eyes, still coughing painfully. It was
still dark, either that or you’ve gone blind, his mind
suggested nastily.
‘Sir? Breathe Sir, that’s it.’
His heart leapt as he recognised Carter’s voice and something inside
him relaxed; now that he was reunited with his team the whole terrible
day seemed to fade somewhat from his memory.
‘Carter?’ he gasped, releasing a fresh set of coughs and spitting
some more water.
Major Carter took the P-90 from Daniel and set it on the ground, letting
the light from it illuminate O’Neill’s pale face as he collapsed
back onto his back again.
‘Oh my…what did you do to me?!’ he groaned, his chest
feeling like it’d been crushed by a bulldozer, every breath wheezing
in his throat.
‘You were… dead sir. I had to get your heart going again,
sorry, I think I broke a few of your ribs.’
‘Oh for sure Major, for sure,’ O’Neill muttered, wincing.
His mouth tasted of disgusting stagnant water and he spat again, trying
to rid himself of its putrid staleness.
‘Can you walk Sir? We need to get out of here, somewhere safe
where we can warm you up and let you rest.’
‘Mmm,’ Jack hummed softly, his mind desperately wanting to
slip back to that place where he felt none of the complaints that his
body showered on him now.
Daniel’s concerned but pestering voice brought him back to awareness.
‘No Jack, stay awake, we have to get out of here,’ and he
felt arms under his, lifting him to his feet. He bit back the yelp that
was eager to sound itself and worry his team more than he should, instead
channeling the sound into grunt as he settled his feet on the ground and
his arms over the two willing shoulders of his team.
‘Teal’c?’ he croaked through a raw throat as they
started walking slowly through the darkness. He was getting sick of not
being able to see the ground under his feet but understood the need to
stay invisible.
‘I sent him back to the gate for help Sir, he should be nearly there
by now, we’ll probably meet the reinforcements on the way back.’
‘How long has it been Major?’ Jack asked, intrigued by the
idea that Teal’c could cover such a large distance in such a short
time.
‘It’s been a day and half a night Jack,’ Daniel surprised
him with his answer, and he raised his eyebrows sluggishly. His head injuries
must have been worse than he’d thought, to have kept him under for
that long.
Their pace quickened as they moved further and further from the buildings
and the strange people that inhabited them and Carter’s worried
voice brought Jack back to reality, he hadn’t even realised he was
drifting and tried to concentrate.
‘Sir, you’re really shaking,’ she stated, rather pointlessly
he thought.
‘Of course I am Major,’ Jack gasped with newly chattering
teeth, ‘my entertainers hadn’t invented central heating yet
and I’ve just taken the coldest bath this side of Russia. Let’s
just get out of here and start a fire,’ and then he added, just
under his breath, his voice tinged with sarcastic exasperation, ‘and
throw me in it!’ He let out a huge shudder, his muscles starting
to tense with the numbing cold that was claiming them.
He didn’t see the concerned look that passed between Carter and
Daniel. Carter was worried about hypothermia and shock and was desperate
to get her CO warm as soon as possible. His soaked clothes were freezing
to the touch and could only be getting colder in the cool night air. Her
eyes latched onto a nearby dip in the terrain and she directed their efforts
towards it.
Jack watched his feet drag along the ground in a daze of exhaustion, managing
only small attempts at actual footsteps, and his team dragged him onwards.
----------------------------------------
‘Okay, easy, let’s put him down over here.’
‘God, he’s cold Sam.’
The voices drifted pleasantly through Jack’s unconscious, floating
around timelessly as he rested in silence, his body in no way anxious
to return to the world of the living.
‘I know, look I’ll go and try to find some dry wood for a
fire. Get him out of those wet clothes and into our spare gear and our
sleeping bags fast. I’ll take a look at him when I come back.’
‘Okay.’
The voices and sounds faded again and for a while there was nothing save
occasional vague memories of what might have been pain.
But soon the blackness began to crackle and break up, it crumbled, broken
by shards of consciousness. The feel of cold air on his face, dry rough
fabric against his skin, blood coursing through swollen, damaged limbs.
Daniel watched Jack’s eyelids flutter and his bruised nose wrinkle
slightly, as if in disgust at the sensations he was about to return to.
‘C’mon Jack, wake up.’
The voice assaulted O’Neill’s ear drums loudly and he dragged
his eyelids open, latching onto Daniel’s face. Daniel smiled, ‘hi.
Welcome back.’
‘Where did I go?’ Jack asked in a weak voice. His throat was
raw from thirst and the rest of him didn’t feel too good either.
‘You passed out on the way here, we carried you the rest of the
way.’
Jack cast his eyes over his surroundings. Daniel’s P-90 torch-light
illuminated the small rocky shelf that they were on. It was overhung by
another rock and some vines, well hidden from the rest of the forest and
from prying eyes. Jack was wrapped in two sleeping bags, he could feel
their heat thawing his shaking body and taking away the freezing numbness
that had spared him the pain of many of his injuries. One of Daniel’s
woolly hats was tight on his head, protecting his wet hair from the cool
night breeze. His shoulder was throbbing along with his sluggish pulse,
feeling like it was twice its normal size, and all his stressed joints
were complaining, his back and chest on fire, their pain fluctuating with
his breaths.
His head worried him most though, he recognised the strange cool line
of pain that flared across his skull. It was so fiery that it felt almost
cold, gripping his brain like an icy cheesewire. It felt like a skull
fracture, and he knew what that felt like.
He swept his tongue round a parched mouth and addressed his most immediate
concern,
‘Water?’
Daniel nodded, fumbling for his flask and holding it over Jack’s
blue lips. He tipped it slightly and O’Neill caught the cool liquid
in his mouth, closing his eyes as it slipped down his arid throat. His
swallowing eased as he drank and Daniel let him sate his thirst, giving
him small amounts at a time.
The flask finally empty, Jack smiled slightly, ‘Thank you,’
he whispered, his raging thirst satisfied for the time being.
Daniel put the flask down again and sat, looking over his friend’s
tired face. He was pale, and this was exaggerated by the dark bruises
that hung under each of his eyes, emanating from his bashed nose.
‘How did you get away from them?’ he asked, hoping to keep
Jack talking and conscious until Carter returned. He began to assemble
the sterno stove as Jack answered him in a rasping voice, ‘I woke
up at that place, they seemed to have lost interest in me. I was able
to untie myself and creep away.’ He furrowed his brow, ‘it
was all going so well until the swimming lesson.’
Daniel ignored the last sarcastic comment and nodded, ‘that fits
with their earlier behaviour. They seem to be very tied up with the moment,
very instinctual. Probably what with you being unconscious they got bored
with you.’
‘How rude,’ Jack muttered.
‘But probably quite helpful, it means that they probably won’t
come actively looking for us.’
‘Probably?’ Jack asked, shooting Daniel a look through half
closed eyes.
Daniel pursed his lips together and was about to retort when torch light
glanced off the rock at his side. Carter slid down onto their shelf of
stone, depositing an armful of dry sticks and mosses onto the floor. She
sat down heavily beside them, sighing dramatically and turning to O’Neill,
‘hi Sir, how do you feel?’
‘Like a squashed popsickle Major, how are you?’ he replied
through chattering teeth.
Carter pulled her P-90 strap over her head and set it on the ground, letting
the torch light fall in Jacks direction. Then she scooted over to him,
glancing at Daniel, ‘Could you get that fire started Daniel, while
I check the Colonel out? And put some water on that sterno for some hot
drinks.’ Daniel nodded and lit the small stove, watching its tiny
flame leap into the darkness wildly, its reflected orange light bouncing
off the walls of their hiding place in mad patterns. He started to gather
the fire wood together in what he hoped was a vaguely fire-shaped pile.
‘I’m fine Major, just a little tired,’ Jack lied,
as Carter leant over him and undid the first of the sleeping bag zips.
‘That’s what I’m worried about Sir. Can’t let
you sleep until I know how you are, you’re awfully cold, and you
could be in shock.’
As she opened the second bag, letting in a draft of cold air, Jack sighed
in resignation.
‘Okay, but be quick, and no splinting.’
Carter glanced at him from the corner of her eye, letting her lips twitch
into a vague smile at his black humour. ‘You want painkillers first?’
she asked, knowing full well what his answer would be.
‘I’m fine.’
‘Okay then, where needs attention?’ she asked, fingering the
dry camos that Daniel had dressed him in.
‘Uh, my back I guess,’ Jack replied, resisting the urge to
repeat that everything was fine. She was trying to help and had already
started so he might as well co-operate if it made her feel better.
Daniel chimed in as his pile of wood collapsed, ‘his head is pretty
bad at the back too Sam.’
Carter nodded, ‘okay then, sounds like we need to turn you over,
can you do that?’
‘I’m not paralysed Carter,’ Jack spat sarcastically
and then wished he hadn’t, shaking the regret and making a move
onto his side. His shoulder screeched as he shifted and he decided to
make that the next order of call for Doctor Carter. He felt her hands
supporting him as his head span and he stopped momentarily, letting the
floor settle back to its rightful place before slowly rolling onto his
front, channeling the pain into a long breath as he settled on his chest
and turned his head to the side.
Carter’s face twitched involuntarily as she saw specks of blood
that had already soaked into the fresh camos. She took a hold of the bottom
of the jacket and pulled it upwards revealing Jack’s battered back.
It was covered in fully developed deep purple bruises and long scratches
and cuts. She put a hand to his cold skin, surprised to feel him shaking.
It reminded her of the dangers of hypothermia and she speeded up, grabbing
the tube of antiseptic and gauze strips.
‘Well, does it look as bad as it feels?’ Jack asked quietly,
drifting on the edge of sleep, trying to resist the temptation to curl
up against the terrible cold.
‘You’re a work of art Sir,’ Carter replied sadly, dabbing
ointment on some the worse cuts. Several had slivers of rock embedded
in them, it looked like flint or something and they had already started
weeping.
‘I’m just going to pull some stuff out here Sir, it’ll
hurt.’
‘Do your worst Doctor Major,’ Jack breathed and brought his
right hand up in front of his face, clenching it into a fist. As he felt
the first tug he watched with despondent interest as his fist tightened
and his knuckles went white. The second elicited a gasp from between his
gritted teeth and he cut it short, not wanting to distract Carter.
Carter winced in sympathy as she tugged free a three inch length of flint
from her CO’s back, throwing it to the ground in contempt and delicately
taping some antiseptic covered gauze over the bleeding wound. Six winces
later she had covered the worst of the wounds and pulled his jacket down
over his freezing back. She hefted the sleeping bag up over him too, trying
to give him as much heat as possible, ‘right, you’re back’s
done, I’m gonna take a look at your head Sir.’
O’Neill grunted and tilted his head a little towards her, he knew
it would be bad up there, he could feel the familiar floating that made
him feel like he wasn’t quite attached to his body. That meant at
least a concussion and he was pretty sure about the fracture, so he had
his diagnosis all worked out before she had even removed his hat.
Cold air hit Jack’s head like an axe and he gasped quietly, not
expecting the pain that such a simple action caused. He heard Carter pick
up her P-90 and he saw the torch shine on the ground to the side of his
head as she examined it. He heard her grunt and flinched suddenly as her
fingers touched a tender spot and his abrupt movement sent waves of cold
agony through the split line in his skull. He squeezed his eyes tight
and tolerated her probing fingers. Finally, as he was teetering close
to unconsciousness from the cold wheeling round his sore head, she finished
and he felt the hat being carefully pushed down over his head.
Sitting back down again Carter took a good look at her CO’s face
and his blue lips She reached out for his hand, clenched into a tight
fist. Jack’s eyes opened slowly at the contact and let her open
his hand, she turned it round and stared closely at the nail-beds before
letting it go again.
‘What?’ he mumbled sleepily.
‘Cyanotic,’ Carter replied, and predicting rather than seeing
his confused look, she continued, ‘cyanosis indicates that your
pulmonary system is pushing de-oxygenated blood to your extremities, now;
sluggish peripheral circulation can have many causes but unless you’ve
spontaneously developed veno-occlusive disease,’ and she gave a
little laugh, ‘I’d say that it’s a sign of…’
‘Carter!!’ Jack exploded, desperate to stop the tirade of
medical terms that meant absolutely nothing to him. Carter stopped abruptly,
then seemed to come to her senses,
‘Sorry,’ she shot him an apologetic look while simultaneously
wondering just where she had heard of veno-occlusive disease and exactly
why. She condensed her theorising into a Jack-sized portion and tried
again, ‘cyanosis is when your nail-beds and lips go blue, it’s
symptom of hypothermia Sir.’ Having doubts that in his current state
he would understand even that, she simplified further, ‘it means
you’re cold.’
‘I could'a told you that Major!’ O’Neill snorted suddenly,
wondering if the whole confusing exchange had been for nothing.
Carter smiled. ‘There’s cold and there’s cold Sir. Here,’
and she held out a thermometer to his mouth, he opened and she popped
it in, letting her hand fall back to the ground again, merely watching
him.
She could feel herself going into a doze, they hadn’t slept since
the Colonel had been taken and she was extremely tired, she was being
sent to sleep simply by the exhausted expression on her CO’s face.
Daniel woke her from the trance as he yelped triumphantly. ‘Hey!
There you go!’ he grinned at the fire, finally starting to spring
to life. Carter smiled and moved over to the cooking sterno, watching
the water bubbling inside the pan sitting on the flame. She sniffed through
her cold nose and broke open a packet of hot chocolate powder, grabbing
a mug from their supplies.
------------------------------------------
Jack O’Neill was finding it very hard to relax, he was more comfortable
on his front for sure, he could hardly feel his back any more, but he
was constantly shivering, his muscles tense and cold. He couldn’t
seem to get warm and felt amazingly drowsy despite his inability to sleep.
His head throbbed nastily and the pain seemed to have joined with that
of his shoulder, linking them in a line of fire, beating out in time to
his slow pulse. He brought his hand up to his face, trying to shield even
that small area from the cold air, he was so cold. So cold.
------------------------------------------
Clutching his own hot chocolate, Daniel moved over to where Carter had
just sat down, in front of Colonel O’Neill. He seemed to be asleep
for the moment, his body shaking with the cold, and Carter carefully removed
the thermometer from his mouth, frowning at its tiny readings.
‘Well?’ Daniel asked, peering at the thermometer in Sam’s
hands.
‘Says 32 degrees C. That’s hypothermic, bordering on severe
Daniel,’ Carter wrinkled her nose in distress as she tried to pull
the relevant information from her tired brain. They had covered hypothermia
in basic training but it was a long time ago and she realised that her
concern was panicking her and preventing her from using her knowledge.
Shaking her mind sternly, she turned to Daniel, her eyes emanating detached
professionalism, ‘okay, we need a hot water bottle, erm…’
Daniel cut in, ‘we don’t have a h…’
‘I know,’ Carter brushed his comment aside, ‘okay…we
need something that will hold hot water safely.’
Daniel reached for his water flask, fingering it briefly and then throwing
it down with a toss of his eyebrows. The plastic wouldn’t hold very
hot water, he thought, or at least he wasn’t sure and that wasn’t
good enough.
‘Oh!’ Carter said faintly, her mind hitting on something,
she dove towards her rucksack while asking Daniel, ‘do we have any
heavy duty tape? Can you look?’
‘Yeah sure,’ replied Daniel with a frown, curious as to her
idea.
------------------------------------------
‘C’mon Jack, get up.’
Jack felt himself being pulled upwards and he grunted as his shoulder
gave a warning shot of pain.
‘Well wake up then and help me you big lump!’ Daniel exclaimed
in response to Jack’s expression of pain.
O’Neill opened tired eyes and heaved himself in the direction that
Daniel was pulling him. He stopped in a sitting position, blinking in
the light of the morning sun that sluiced down through the vines above
him.
His head pounded as Daniel pushed a rucksack behind Jack’s back
and he rested back on it, easing the tension from his stomach muscles.
As cool morning air swept past his face he realised that he had stopped
shaking. He was still the coldest that he had ever felt but he no longer
shivered uncontrollably and he was glad for the merciful stillness.
Oddly, his stomach was the warmest part of him and he couldn’t think
why. His attention was distracted by Daniel who seemed to be waving a
mug in his face, ‘Jack, drink this.’
‘What is it?’ O’Neill asked, rescuing his right arm
from the depths of the sleeping bags and reaching for the mug.
‘Sweet hot chocolate. Do you think you could eat something?’
‘Uh yeah,’ Jack replied, sipping the hot drink, wincing as
he swallowed through a raw throat. As Daniel scrabbled inside his own
pack for a food packet Jack turned his head to see Carter, lying curled
up on the stone floor, sleeping soundly. He smiled, feeling a little guilty
at using his team’s sleeping bags all night.
Shifting his hand to his stomach he felt a heavy weight there, it shifted
when he tugged on it and he frowned, ‘what’s this? On my stomach?’
‘One of these,’ Daniel replied, holding up the foil food packet
that he’d just filled with water for Jack.
‘Y’know,’ O’Neill frowned, lifting the sleeping
bag cover and peering at the wrapped foil packet on his stomach, ‘normally
food goes on the inside,’ and he pointed vaguely to his mouth.
Daniel shot him a small grin before explaining, ‘you were hypothermic
Jack, we needed something to heat you up and Sam realised that we fill
these with boiling water every day and they don’t break. We cellotaped
one up and wrapped it. Only had to change it once all night.’
Jack grunted his approval, setting his own mug down and taking the food
pouch that Daniel offered him.
‘How’s you head?’ Daniel asked casually.
‘I’m fine. We should move from here soon, try to meet the
reinforcements half way,’ replied Jack, anxious to get his team
to safety. Daniel nodded, reaching for his flask of water as he heard
Sam stir.
Carter groaned quietly, her breath hanging in front of her in the cold
air as she opened groggy eyes, ‘what time is it?’ Daniel poured
some water into a mug for her as he answered, ‘it’s five-thirty
in the morning.’
O’Neill choked through his food, ‘akk, if I’d known
it was that early I wouldn’t have woken up!’
Carter smiled sitting up and stretched stiff joints, ‘you look better
Sir.’
‘Thanks to your make-shift hot water bottle thingy. Nice thinking
Major.’
‘Thank you Sir,’ Carter replied, receiving the mug of hot
chocolate that Daniel handed over.
‘Have you had any success reviving our guns Carter?’ Jack
asked, motioning to their P-90’s. Carter shook her head, taking
a sip of her hot drink,
‘I can’t understand it Sir, I’ve taken them apart and
I can’t see anything physically wrong with them. I have two guesses.
One is that there is something about this planet’s magnetism that
is affecting them. I figure it mustn’t affect Naquada or the gate
wouldn’t work.’
‘What’s two?’ O’Neill enquired, hoping for more
helpful answer.
‘Two, is that something or someone is protecting the planet –
we’ve encountered species with the ability to disable our weapons
before.’
‘I don’t see anyone,’ O’Neill countered stroppily.
‘Right,’ agreed Carter. ‘So, magnetism.’
‘Magnetism, great,’ Jack raised his eyebrows in despair.
‘Well sir, it could be worse. I’ve been thinking about it
and if it is magnetism then I think the Stargate counteracts it. We were
able to control the MALP when the gate was open so something was allowing
it to function.’
‘But,’ Daniel cut in, ‘if it was some kind of guardians
of the planet they might only disable weapons, and anyhow, what about
our walkie talkies?’
Carter scrunched up her eyes in thought, ‘the walkie talkies are
electronic whereas the guns have some magnetic function, plus they’re
made of metal alloys and we really have no idea how an alien environment
could effect them, so that would still fit with the theory.’
‘So how could it be worse Major?’ Jack asked, responding to
her earlier comment, his eyebrows raised.
‘Well, if the Stargate counteracts it, the rescue team may be able
to use their weapons with the gate active.’
O’Neill nodded slowly, trying to dissolve all the information into
his sluggish mind.
Just as Carter was about to ask her CO if he felt able to move out, her
radio crackled to life beside her,
‘Major Carter come in, do you receive?’
‘Teal’c!’ Carter radioed back, relieved to hear his
confident voice.
‘It is I. Have you found Colonel O’Neill?’
‘Yes Teal’c,’ Carter nodded, looking to her CO, ‘he’s
here with us. He’s okay for the time being, where are you?’
‘We have only just exited the Stargate, how far are you from our
position?’
‘About two days Teal’c, we should be able to cover some ground
towards you but you’ll have to do most of the work I’m afraid,
we won’t be travelling fast. Teal’c, we’ve done a little
theorising here and we think that this planet’s magnetism is interfering
with our weapons.’
‘We ascertained this also. It seems to be proven as my weapon now
functions and stays functioning until the gate is closed. We do not know
how far from the gate this will last however, we will endeavour to reach
you using your radio signals. We will contact you as we approach.’
‘Thanks Teal’c, out,’ Carter signed off, her brow creased
in thought. ‘The Stargate must depolarise the air around it when
it’s active,’ she met O’Neill’s vacant gaze and
shook the thought from her mind. Right now they didn’t need scientific
theorising, they needed to get home.
She clipped her radio back on her vest decisively, ‘are you able
to move now Sir?’
O’Neill nodded, setting his finished food pouch on the rock floor
and waving a hand to Carter, ‘finish your drink Major, then we’ll
go.’
Daniel snorted, ‘as if she hasn’t had enough,’ and responding
to a look from O’Neill he continued, ‘when we couldn’t
wake you last night she was forced to drink your hot chocolate as well
as her own,’ he shot a mock jealous look at Carter. O’Neill
turned to Carter, ‘your dedication is extraordinary Carter.’
Carter smiled, ‘I try Sir.’
------------------------------------------------
Throw weight forward.
Catch weight on leg.
Throw weight forward.
Catch weight on other leg.
Jack had never realised before how much walking was really all about
trying to not fall over. He felt like he was forever catching himself
on the brink of collapse, he knew they can’t have been walking long
but it felt like forever to his punished limbs. Add to the leg-swinging
the fact that he had to remember to breathe too, and Jack was finding
it all a bit much.
Daniel watched with growing worry as O’Neill stumbled for the third
time in two minutes, and caught himself just in time. He slowed slightly,
to let Jack get his pace back and then followed on as they trudged through
the dense forest.
Carter was leading the way, guiding them towards the Gate and the reinforcements
that were making their way towards them. She held her gun high, aware
of the ever present threat of the inhabitants of the planet, she was determined
to get her CO back to the gate in some semblance of one whole piece.
O’Neill walked between them, wearing dry camos and clutching a
sleeping bag around his shoulders in an attempt to keep some warmth in
his body. He stared at his feet as he walked, trying to keep to a rhythm
as his boot tramped the hard ground. His eyes passed over small patches
of frost hiding under leaves and roots, reminding him of the air temperature
and making him long even more to feel the SGC ramp under his feet and
Janet’s concerned gaze on his face.
His mind turned to her response when the events of the trip would be explained.
Well, he thought defensively, it sure as hell beats the alternative;
taking Carter back in pieces. His chest tightened and he gasped a
breath, God Jack, remember to breathe, it’s kinda important,
he chided himself and lifted his eyes, feeling the winter sun falling
on his cold face.
Just as he was about to give in and suggest that a break might be a
nice idea, Carter stopped, her radio expelling a spurt of static.
‘Major Carter? Do you read?’ asked a rushed voice that the
Colonel didn’t immediately recognise.
‘Reading you, who is this?’ Carter replied, glancing back
to her CO. He nodded to her, quite happy to let her do the communicating
for the moment, he didn’t think he could manage breathing and talking
at the same time.
‘This is Major Griff, we are unable to reach you, we were attacked
upon entering the forest surrounding the Stargate. We’ve had to
fall back…’
Unable to resist, Jack grabbed Daniel’s radio from his hand, his
brow furrowed, ‘is Teal’c there? Is he okay?’
‘Colonel! Good to hear your voice Sir, yes Teal’c is here,
he’s helping the others fall back, a few of my men have been injured,
but we haven’t lost anyone.’ Colonel O’Neill could hear
shouts and gunshots in the background as he slid down against a tree into
a sitting position, clutching the radio. Carter sensed that he had finished
and lifted her radio again, ‘do you have the situation under control?’
The reply came back slightly calmer than before, ‘yes. We can hold
them off easily with our guns while we’re in the clearing, we just
can’t enter the forest safely. I don’t want to risk my team.’
Carter nodded, ‘understood, don’t put yourselves at risk,
just hold the gate for the moment, we’ll think of something. Out.’
Her radio fell silent and she moved over to her CO who was sitting untidily
on the cold ground, taking uneasy breaths. ‘How are you feeling
Sir?’ she asked in concern, knowing he wouldn’t like the question,
or having to give an answer.
He wrinkled his nose in annoyance. ‘Irritated,’ he answered
dryly, and then coughed harshly, wincing as his lungs protested. Carter
rolled her eyes at his stubborn reply. She took a good look around, checking
that the forest was fairly quiet and clear. Satisfied that it was safe
to stop she sat down beside her CO, and Daniel did the same.
They waited patiently as Jack got his coughing under control and managed
to get a few words out. ‘So, how are we going to get to the Stargate
Major?’ he asked, turning the problem into his team’s waiting
arms. The discussion officially opened, Carter started,
'it seems that trying to get through the forest would be suicide.’
Daniel nodded, ‘we have no idea how many more of those animals there
are, there could be millions of them!’ Jack rolled his eyes at Daniel’s
optimism.
‘Okay,’ said Carter, ‘so if we can’t get through
them, then we need to get rid of them. Could we distract them
with something?’
‘That would probably work actually,’ Daniel started. ‘They’re
so dependant on ‘the moment’ that a big enough distraction
or threat would probably remove all of them for long enough for us to
leave. And we wouldn’t have to hurt them,’ he added.
Jack cringed, ‘Daniel, they beat me up, dragged me ‘til I
passed out, starved me and then got bored. I want to hurt them!’
and he succumbed to another fit of coughing, holding his chest as his
lungs radiated hot pain.
Daniel ignored Jack’s stroppy return and continued along their
strain of thought, ‘what could we use – preferably not another
person.’
Carter wrestled her eyes from her CO and turned to Daniel. ‘How
about a MALP?’ she suggested absent-mindedly.
‘Or better,’ Daniel raised his eyesbrows, ‘your flying
MALP – the UAV!’
‘That’s it Sir!’ Carter said, enlivening, ‘we
get General Hammond to send through the UAV, get it to fly away from us
and the gate and they’ll all follow, hopefully. Even if it fails
electronically, it will glide for quite some distance – certainly
long enough to get rid of the animals and probably even to fly back as
the last of us enters the gate. It’ll out-fly the indigenous people
easily!’
O’Neill nodded, gasping from his last coughing fit, ‘radio
it through Major, let’s get out of here.’
Carter nodded, picking up her radio and hitting transmit, ‘Major
Griff, Teal’c, do you receive?’
This time Teal’c’s voice boomed back, ‘Major Carter,
I am receiving you.’
‘Good to hear your voice Teal’c, we’ve got a possible
solution to the problem. We want you to get Hammond to send the UAV through
the gate to distract the planet’s people so we can get out.’
‘This is indeed a good strategy, and limits the damage to all involved…’
Jack snorted angrily. ‘Why is everyone so keen on these guys?!’
and then, suddenly nautious, he turned and threw up, emptying his stomach
of his breakfast. Daniel held him as he retched, his eyes screwed shut
with tension and pain.
Carter turned a desperate face away from them, ‘Teal’c, get
it done fast, and have Janet standing by for the Colonel.’
Teal’c recognised the urgency in her tone and made his reply fast,
‘it will be done, out.’
Carter put down her radio and watched as Daniel helped O’Neill
lean back against the tree again. ‘Oh God,’ Jack breathed
quietly, clutching his chest with his right arm. His breath was coming
in audible wheezes as he tried to regain his composure. Daniel pulled
the sleeping bag tightly around his friend, trying not to be too rough
or aggravate his injuries. Carter took out her water bottle, ‘we’ll
be out of here soon Colonel. Here, can you drink a little of this?’
O’Neill took the bottle she offered him and took a few hesitant
sips before coughing again. He felt like even though he was taking in
enough air, it wasn’t working properly somehow. He was needing to
take continual big gulps which increased the pain emanating from his lungs.
It had grown worse over the last few hours and now they were really hurting,
protesting each breath that he took. Carter let out a long sigh, ‘I
figure we’re only about ten minutes from the Stargate. We daren't
go any nearer or we might run right into the middle of those animals.
We can only wait for the OK from Teal’c’s end.’
Colonel O’Neill nodded, his head heavy with exhaustion; for a moment
it looked like he was about to say something, but then he seemed to think
better of it and stayed silent. Shivering against the cold, he pulled
the sleeping bag tighter around him and closed his eyes.
-----------------------------------------------------
Jack O’Neill woke a little confused. He didn’t remember falling
asleep but he figured he must have or he wouldn’t have been able
to wake up. His own rasping breaths echoed through his sore head and he
realised that he was lying down on his back. Voices and radio crackle
cut through the silence.
‘He’s been sick Janet, and his breathing is sounding really
forced.’
‘Has he been coughing? Dizzy?’
‘Coughing yes. I don’t know about dizzy, we’ve got him
lying down sleeping at the moment. We’re trying to keep him as warm
as possible.’
Doctor Janet Fraiser stood in the Gate viewing room, talking to Carter
through the MALP radio receiver. She watched the teams of engineers in
the gateroom as they frantically worked to prepare the UAV for flight,
‘it should be ready soon Sam. Keep an eye on him, he may be suffering
from secondary drowning. All you can do is keep him warm, elevate his
feet about five centimetres and make sure he keeps breathing. Don’t
give him anything to eat, but let him drink if he can.’
‘Okay Janet, is he going to be alright?’
Janet nodded, ‘yes, you just get him back here fast and I’ll
take care of him, I’m sure we can deal with it Sam, don’t
worry. Out.’ Janet sighed, then left the viewing room towards the
infirmary to assist in preparing for the Colonel’s arrival.
Major Carter clipped the radio back onto her vest and turned back to
Daniel and the Colonel. She noticed that O’Neill’s eyes were
open slightly and she moved over to sit down beside Daniel who was scribbling
in a small notebook.
‘Won’t be long Sir, the MALP’s nearly ready.’
‘No rush,’ Jack replied dryly through harsh breaths. The ground
seemed to be moving in a most unnatural way beneath him, and he decided
it couldn’t still be his head injury making him dizzy.
‘Have a nice…chat with Doc?’ he gasped.
Carter moved down to his feet and pushed her rucksack under them to elevate
them a little.
‘C’mon Carter, you know how I like to hear all the gossip.’
Carter sighed and sat down in front of him, ‘Janet thinks you might
be suffering from secondary drowning. She says she can deal with it Sir,
but we need to get you back.’
Daniel looked up from his writing, shooting a worried look at Carter,
he had questions but not ones that he felt he could voice in front of
Jack. Carter shot him a small comforting smile, realising what he must
be thinking. She held her water bottle over to her CO, ‘try to drink
Sir.’
Jack managed a good few gulps before he coughed this time. Carter winced
on his behalf as he pushed the bottle away, ‘I would offer you aspirin
Sir but Janet says I’d better not seeing as we’ll be back
at the SGC soon.’
‘S’okay Major, I’m fine,’ O’Neill chanted
– the line had become second nature to him in a crisis. No matter
who was hurt, who was in danger, who was poking who full of holes, Jack
was always ‘fine’. Carter nodded sadly at his standard spiel
and started to repack things into her pockets. ‘Best get ready to
move Sir,’ she commented, and Daniel put away his notepad.
As he reached for Jack’s sleeping-bag zipper, their radios crackled
to life once again.
‘Major Carter,’ Teal’c’s voice rang out urgently,
‘the UAV is in flight and being pursued by the creatures, but we
do not know for how long, you must use haste.’
‘Right, we’re on our way! Out!’ Carter replied, bursting
into action. Daniel helped Jack struggle from his sleeping-bag and then
shoved it into his pack. Hefting their rucksacks onto their backs, Daniel
and Sam reached for their CO’s arms. Jack rose wobbily to his feet
only to have the ground lurch beneath him, he was thrown off balance and
the edges of his vision went grey as he crashed down towards the ground
again.
‘Woah!’ Daniel caught him as he fell and without thought placed
his arms round Jack’s stomach and hefted him onto his shoulders,
taking off at a run. Jack gasped as the world spun, his head and chest
were consumed with pain and everything slowly darkened to black for the
third time that day.
-------------------------------------------
Seven minutes after Teal’c had watched the UAV burst from the even
horizon of the Stargate, and seven minutes after the hordes of animals
had run full pelt after it – roaring in rage – Teal’c
was also running. Using SG-1’s radio transmitter he was running
towards them, as they were running towards him. Several SG personnel followed
in his wake but none could keep up as he ploughed through the undergrowth.
His sharp eyes spied movement up ahead and his team mates burst from the
forest, running fast. Daniel had an apparently unconscious Colonel over
his shoulders and he looked exhausted. They met without words –
everyone too out of breath to speak. Daniel lowered Jack from his shoulders
and their strong Jaffa friend took him over his own as they made for the
Stargate at a desperate pace.
One minute later SG-1 strode into the clearing, Teal’c’s
long strides taking them to the Stargate in seconds. Upon seeing them
Major Griff had dialled the gate and it whooshed open now. The blue surface
settled back and they charged up to it together, not needing to say a
word or break their pace.
The Stargate spat them out one by one onto the SGC ramp and Teal’c
headed straight for the gurney that Janet Fraiser stood by, near the door.
The Jaffa gently lowered O’Neill’s limp form down and an oxygen
mask was instantly placed on his face. Doctor Fraiser set a stethoscope
against his chest briefly and ordered, ‘right, infirmary, let’s
go,’ and she and her well briefed team of assistants moved away
at speed.
Daniel felt someone pull him aside and there were shouts, ‘clear
the ramp!’
‘Get out of the way!’
He and Carter and the other teams were swept hastily aside and for a
brief second they waited by the side of the ramp. Then the UAV exploded
from the rippling surface of the Stargate, hitting the ramp at speed and
skidding down it, only stopping when it hit the far wall with a crunch.
The iris closed, the even horizon dissipated and the tension in the gateroom
dissolved.
------------------------------------------
Jack O’Neill was getting used to waking up slightly confused, but
this time there was a pleasant difference – no pain. He lay for
a while, staring at the inside of his own eyelids, perfectly happy to
not feel anything at all.
Finally his peace was disturbed, as it always was, by Doc Fraiser’s
insistent but patient voice, ‘come on Colonel, open you eyes for
me, I know you’re awake.’
How does she know? Jack cringed, wishing that she didn’t.
He heaved heavy eyes open and took in the scene.
Yup, there was good ol’ Doc leaning over him with a smile on her
face. There was General Hammond looking fatherly. There was Carter looking
overly concerned, Daniel looking like a tired, frightened twelve year
old, and Teal’c looking like, well, like Teal’c.
General Hammond smiled, ‘Welcome back Son. How do you feel?’
‘I think,’ Jack commented with a rasping voice, ‘these
drugs are here so I don’t feel Sir.’
‘And a good job too,’ Janet remarked, ‘you took quite
a punishing. But the damage is repairing, you’ll heal Colonel, but
you need rest.’
General Hammond nodded, taking that as his que to leave, ‘rest Colonel
O’Neill. SG-1, de-briefing at fourteen hundred hours.’
Colonel O’Neill looked over his tired team with groggy eyes. ‘I
think I’ll sit this one out kids,’ and he let his eyes drift
shut, for once happy to be doing absolutely nothing.
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