RATING: PG - for some swearing
SEASON: Third Season - sometime after "Irresistible" but before "McKay and Mrs. Miller"
MAJOR CHARACTERS: Team Fic - McKay, Sheppard, Ronon and Teyla
DISCLAIMERS: The characters, Atlantis, etc, all belong to Sony, MGM, Gecko, Showtime, the Sci-Fi
Channel.
SUMMARY: The team is searching for Gates to harvest and comes across a
space station that was set up to record a supernova.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: Tipper and GateBiscuit. They issued me another challenge,
giving me eight spacey pictures, along
with some other details that I shall not reveal until the end. They insisted on a space
story! Blame them.
NOTE: I'm sorry if the science stuff is off. Remember, this is just
for fun, and they FORCED me to write a space story!
FEEDBACK: Yes please! comments and suggestions are greatly appreciated.
SPOILERS: Small one for my own Story, Warm
and Safe and Dry, and small one for Irresistible
DATE: Completed October 12, 2006 - updated March 10, 2007
Among
the Stars
By NotTasha... star-struck
PART 1: FOOTBALL
The jumper lowered from the bay just as the football
sailed through the interior, whisking over the top of one physicist’s head,
and descending perfectly into the awaiting hands of the former runner in the
back of the ship.
“Hey!” McKay shouted, irritated as he ducked his head and scrubbed at his
hair. “Cut it out! This isn’t the place for that!”
Ronon grinned, and leaned back, and shot the ball back the way it had come.
The football arched perfectly, and seemed to hover for a moment over McKay’s
tucked-in head before it continued forward. Sheppard captured it from the
pilot’s seat, hardly moving from his position. He grinned, realizing
that any team in the NFL would be glad to have the Satedan.
“Enough!” McKay shouted. “You can’t be throwing that thing around
in here! No monkeyshines in the jumper!”
“Monkeys shine?” Ronon tried, remembering a primate they’d spotted on one
of their adventures. Sheppard had used that word to describe the creature.
“Do they… glow?”
“No… no!” McKay shot back. “They do not. Unless… unless of
course they’ve been painted with some substance or genetically altered
to…” He shook his head sharply, stopping himself. “Just… you
shouldn’t be throwing things around in the jumper!”
Ronon shrugged. “Why not?” he asked as the ball came back to him,
falling perfectly in the cradle of his arms.
“This!” McKay started, his face turning a bit red as he pointed to his
laptop, “Is a crucial piece of equipment programmed with very important
information, essential to our mission. If your actions caused any harm to
my laptop...”
“It’s shock proof, McKay,” Sheppard responded glibly.
“Which doesn’t give you the right to test that theory!” McKay shot back.
Sheppard shrugged. “Nothing’s going to happen to your laptop.”
Rodney pointed in the direction of the control system. “And this is a
highly advanced space vehicle! Created by the Ancients. This is not
a place for… fooling around. Do you have any idea of the type of damage
you could do if… Ronon!”
But the Satedan had released the ball, but it went a awry as Ronon tried to
avoid the fuming physicist. Sheppard reached, but the oblong ball bounced
off the colonel’s fingers, went a little wonky, and collided with a WANG
on the DHD.
“See! See!” McKay struggled out of his seat.
“It’s fine.” Sheppard grabbed the ball as it skittered, and shoved it
protectively under his seat.
“You could have damaged the equipment beyond repair,” the scientist
squawked as he moved forward to run his hands over the buttons, searching for
any sign of injury. “That’s it! Jumper 5 is going back!”
“Nope,” Sheppard returned. “Too late. We’re all set to
go.” A voice was buzzing in his ear over the radio as they hung in the
gateroom, before the engaged stargate. “We’re not going back.”
“The DHD could be damaged irreparably!” McKay insisted, intently
looking for any sign that something had actually been hurt with the mild
collision.
“Irreparably?” Sheppard repeated. “Thought you could fix
anything?” And he gave McKay a grin.
“Well, yes, I can fix it,” Rodney admitted, “With the proper tools and
replacement parts, and sufficient TIME – something I am rarely given.
But crystals may have been cracked, or knocked out of alignment. Who knows
what damage the two of you have caused! If we’re trying to get
back through the Gate with some more annoyed aliens on our tail…”
“We’re just going to check out a gate for the bridge project,” Sheppard
grumbled. “And we didn't hit it that hard. You whack the buttons harder when you’re dialing a Gate,
especially in you’re in a mood.”
The Canadian’s jaw dropped, his attention finally drifting from the DHD.
“I do not!” he shot back and his eyes narrowed as he added, “and
what do you mean by ‘mood’?”
“What, you don’t know what ‘mood’ means?” Sheppard asked, his
smug smile increasing.
McKay jutted out his jaw in contempt.
Teyla had been doing her best to keep out of the ‘discussion’, but she
finally spoke, “Dr. McKay, I believe the DHD is undamaged.”
“Yeah, McKay,” Sheppard agreed, getting settled for the flight. “It
just got a little bump. Sit down. We got to get going.”
A voice came over the comm., and Weir asked, “Is there a problem,
colonel?”
“Nope,” Sheppard responded, touching the radio with one hand as he easily
tossed the football to Ronon with the other.
McKay scowled at the Satedan as Ronon came past him to take a seat up front, and
then he went back to jabbing away at his laptop.
Ronon flipped the ball in his hands and then jammed it into a storage
compartment at his feet.
“Everything is A-okay,” Sheppard continued over the radio. “We’re
ready to go.” He smiled at Weir through the ‘windshield’ of the
jumper as she leaned at the balcony railing.
“Safe journey,” Weir told them. “Come home safely,”
she added with a warm smile.
With a groan, Sheppard asked his crew, “Why does she have to jinx us like that
all the time?”
“Ah, you see!” McKay pointed out. “You’ve already possibly damaged
our means of getting back safely. Thank you very much! There’s
reason enough to believe this journey is ill advised.”
Unconsciously, Sheppard ran a hand over the DHD. “It’s fine, McKay.”
“We’ll see.”
“There’s nothing wrong with it!” Sheppard sniped. “I thought you
wanted to find a couple more Gates before Lorne or the others completed the
quota.”
McKay’s taut face changed a bit at that fact. He looked contemplative
and then nodded. “I see your point,” he stated.
“Great. Everyone ready to go? No more fits?”
“Fits? All I was saying is that it isn’t a good idea to horse around on the
ship,” McKay explained. He paused as if he meant to leave it at that –
but couldn’t help himself. “Because we all know what happens when
there’s too much horseplay, don’t we?”
Ronon and Teyla both frowned at the terminology. And, before either could
ask, Sheppard groaned and eased the ship forward -- and they disappeared into
the blue.
And then… they were in space.
McKay leaned forward, eager to press his point, and instead uttered an
astounded, “Oh,” as the jumper cleared the Gate. For a long moment,
his quiet exclamation was the only sound heard within the ship.
There was something special about traveling through the Gate, Sheppard realized.
Well, to enter an environment that he’d had never seen before was always a surprise.
A few years ago he would have laughed at the prospect – but now he was
stomping around on foreign worlds on a daily basis.
New worlds, new places were always worthy of a moment of awe. Okay, that
wasn’t necessarily true, Sheppard realized. As much as gatetravel should
have always inspired him, the planets had begun to have a sameness to them –
one desolate city was pretty much the same as the next one – one dirty shack
was rather like the other dirty shack – and Ancient ruin looked pretty much
like any pile of rocks -- one ferny forest didn’t hold that much significance
after he’d been through five or six that looked just like it.
But there was something different about a space gate. Space was pretty
cool to begin with, but this particular view was … spectacular. Sheppard
held his breath as he gazed out, letting his eyes widen at the sight – as if
he couldn’t contain the entire image otherwise.
A ringed gas giant loomed before them, filling their windscreen, looking like
one of those surreal posters that the science geeks always had tacked up on
their walls in college. It was too vivid, too astounding, too goddamn
gorgeous to be real.
The planet was all dressed up in swirls of oranges and pale yellows. From
their angle, the surrounding disk was delicate and tilted. A series of
Earth-sized moons hung around it like remarkable ornaments.
They’d come looking for a Gate to harvest. They'd been through the
Ancient's database and this particular Gate seemed like
a perfect candidate. There weren’t any human civilizations nearby -- not
even a livable world. There’d been conjecture about why the Ancients had
bothered to place a Gate here – in the middle of nowhere – but now Sheppard
had an idea. Maybe the Ancients had just come here – from time to time
– to stare in perfect wonder at the beauty before them.
It reminded Sheppard of a long drive he had taken to the Grand Canyon – all
the way wondering when the hell they’d reach the place – and then never
wanting to leave once they’d made it there.
And for that reason, it seemed almost a sin to remove this Gate in the middle of
nowhere.
The planet and its moons looked illusory, too beautiful to be real, too
remarkable to be comprehended, and for a long moment Sheppard and his team just
looked upon the sight, unable to utter a sound.
It was McKay who again broke the silence, rattling off the possible composition
of the big beautiful world, speaking in an almost dreamlike manner. He talked about
the possibility of metallic hydrogen at its core and molecular hydrogen above,
probably talked about some other gasses too. He went on about ice
particles, silica rock, iron oxide that probably made up the ring. He
started speaking about the Kelvin-Helmholtz mechanism when his voice just sort
of faded and the four passengers of the jumper just continued to stare at the
remarkable sight.
“Sure looks cool,” Sheppard finally voiced.
“Yeah,” Ronon added.
“It is… lovely,” Teyla confirmed.
“That’s what I was saying,” McKay insisted.
“Let’s check it out,” Sheppard said, not expecting anyone to disagree with
him. He brought the jumper around, swinging it closer to one of the
planet’s moons. The satellite was cratered, looking rather like
Earth’s moon. It’d have to provide an unparalleled view of the gas
planet. Nice place to set up a vacation cottage -- a domed city,
Sheppard thought as he cruised past. Long as you have enough oxygen, and
food… and water.
“What did the Ancestors call this place?” Teyla asked, her eyes large as she
watched the remarkable scenes unfolding before her.
McKay frowned and consulted his laptop. “Muskingum,” he responded,
flipping one hand and making a face at the sound of the name.
Sheppard shook his head. “Let’s call it Saturn II.” He smiled.
“Yeah, I like that better. Or maybe Sheppardonia.”
McKay scowled at that suggestion. “The names for the moons are no
better,” McKay went on. “We got Toboso, Moxahala, Rehoboth and
Philo.” He sighed. “For such an advanced race, you’d think they’d
try a little harder.
“We change them. Hmmm. Got it. Groucho, Chico, Harpo and
…” Sheppard started and frowned. “Who’s the other one?”
“What, Zeppo?” McKay responded as they cruised closer to the glorious rings.
His gaze left the laptop to take in the close-up view of the fragile looking
rings. “Or Gummo?”
“There was a Gummo Marx?” Sheppard questioned.
McKay took a moment to answer, his attention on the planet, and not really
paying attention to what Sheppard was asking. He swallowed and answered
with a dry, “Yeah. He didn’t made it into ‘Animal Crackers’ or
‘Horse Feathers’ or any of the movies. Was in their Vaudeville act but
didn’t like performing. Became an agent or something…”
Ronon looked curiously toward Teyla, and the Athosian just shrugged. She
was more used to their incomprehensible conversations than the Satedan was, and
had learned when it was best to just 'let it go'.
“Okay, well, we’re not naming anything Gummo,” Sheppard decided, as he
guided the jumper around the planet, taking in another moon that seemed all ice.
“Unless we find a tiny little moon that doesn’t matter anyway.
Maybe we should call the planet Marx World or something. Think that’d
fly?”
“Honestly?” McKay stated, “No.”
“It’s not like we’re going to name any of the moons ‘Karl’ or
anything.”
“Still, not such a good idea.”
“People have no sense of humor. I mean, all they have to do is…”
And again there was silence as the puddlejumper came around the big creamsicle
planet, and the four gazed out at a sight even more incredible than the big
ringed world. The ethereal thing
had been hidden by the bulk of the gas giant. A cottony shape blossomed in
space -- a cloudy apparition, all in reds
and pinks and shot through with an intense purple-blue. It looked almost
looked alive, unnatural in the vacuum of space.
“Dr. McKay,” Teyla said softly. She glanced toward the astrophysicist
and saw a look of rapture on his face. “What is that?” she asked.
“Supernova,” McKay whispered, his voice reverent.
PART 2: ASTRONOMICAL
The jumper came to a stop. “Supernova?” Sheppard responded, his voice
alarmed. He felt every muscle tense as he turned to look at the
astrophysicist. “I don’t know a whole lot about those things, but I
know they’re big and they go BOOM.” McKay didn’t answer, his
gaze still on the colorful blot. “McKay?” Sheppard’s voice was
sharp.
“What?” McKay returned, annoyed.
“How much time do we have?” he barked out.
“Time?” McKay suddenly realized what Sheppard was getting at.
“Eons,” he responded. “This is tens of thousands of years old… but
wow. I mean… wow! I … I read about this one in the Ancient
database and have wanted to see it up close. And it’s …” he paused,
contemplating. “A long way from here,” he decided. “I won’t
know the exact distance until I’ve done some research, taken some readings.
We are staying here, aren’t we? At least long enough for me to get some
work done?”
Sheppard sighed, relieved at that news. He'd seen too many sci-fi movies,
he decided. “Sure. Why not? Just as long as this doesn’t
take too long. I’m not hanging out here for days.”
“This could take a while.”
“We’re not hanging out here for days!”
“And the nova wouldn’t have gone ‘boom’, by the way because…”
“There’s no sound in space. Yeah, I know … Mr. Astrophysicist.
Thanks for reminding me.”
“Well, you needed to be corrected on that point.”
“I got it, McKay. I think we all understand that. Sheesh.”
“It’s all because of bad sci-fi shows,” McKay muttered. “Why do
they insist on adding sound effect explosions in space? I mean, they have
to go out of their way to add it. And, if they couldn’t help themselves
from adding a big ‘boom’, they should just avoid it altogether. Just
take the damn explosions OUT and save us all from bad science.”
“Explosions are the best part a movie,” Sheppard shot back. “And,
what the heck, I like things that go boom.”
“It drives me crazy!”
“Some people go to the movies to have fun, not to pick them to pieces.”
“What’s that?” Ronon asked, pointing toward the nebulous mass, and
managing to cut off the latest argument between his teammates.
“That,” McKay responded, sounding a bit persnickety, “Is the remnants of a
supernova. Weren’t you paying attention?”
Furrowing his brow in annoyance, the big Satedan responded, “I know that.
I’m asking what THAT is.” And he jabbed his finger toward the nova
again.
Sheppard squinted, wondering if he saw some black blot in-between their ship and
that supernova. Instantly, the HUD came up, displaying an elongated
structure of some sort.
“A space station!” Rodney surmised. He immediately started
typing on his laptop. “I think I’ve seen that same structure in the
databases somewhere… hang on.”
“Let’s go have a look-see,” Sheppard stated and he guided the jumper
closer to the blot. He watched in wonder as the shape grew larger even
though the supernova in the background seemed to remain the same size.
McKay kept typing, pausing only when a football suddenly thumped into his
shoulder.
McKay winced, cringed and whined a little. “Great... Great. That
was wonderful,” he groused, scrambling to grasp hold of the ball with one hand
as it bounced haphazardly on the floor of the jumper. He never had a
chance.
Ronon captured it as it wobbled his way, and secured it beneath his seat.
He grinned proudly.
“Juvenile,” McKay mumbled, rubbing his maligned shoulder. “And I’m
sure to get a bruise. And then I won’t be able to lift my arm or
anything. So when you’re complaining to me about why I’m not toting as
much gear as the rest of you, you’ll know why!”
“McKay, you NEVER carry as much gear as the rest of us when we’re on a long
mission,” Sheppard told him tiredly as he came nearer the station. It
looked oddly like a potted flower. A dome ‘flower’ at the top, a stem
leading to a disk shaped section and a ‘pot’ beneath that. Crazy.
“That’s not true. I carry a lot.”
“Hell,” Sheppard went on. “You’re usually getting the rest of us
to tote a thing or two of yours. You get the locals involved whenever you
can. You turn everyone around you into your own personal
sherpa.”
“I carry my fair share,” McKay mumbled. “The important stuff.
The vital equipment that should be handled with a gentle touch, that can’t be
trusted to those who tend to be a little more… impulsive and erratic with
their movements. That stuff weighs a lot!”
“His pack is quite heavy,” Teyla added, remembering the times she’d been
pressed into service.
Sheppard couldn’t deny this fact – but he’d be damned if he let McKay know
this. On the everyday missions, McKay probably carried more weight than
any of them.
McKay kept typing, then paused, lifting a finger as if to get silence from the
others. “I found it!”
“Yeah, what is it?” Sheppard asked as they drew nearer the thing.
“An observation station,” McKay told them as he read through the
description, still partially in Ancient. “These were set up when the
Ancients wanted to witness something on a galactic scale.” He
grinned then, widely. “It was put here to observe the supernova!”
“Yeah,” Sheppard responded. “That’d make sense. The
supernova’s pretty enough.”
“No, no… not because it’s pretty. Look, it’s obviously been here
for over 10,000 years, probably much longer,” McKay replied quickly. “It
was placed here as soon as the Ancients figured the star was in the last stages
of its existence. It probably recorded the entire event – what led up to
it, the explosion, the aftermath.”
"No 'boom' though."
"No boom! Definitely, no boom!" McKay spoke faster and
faster. “The data contained in that station would be… of incredible
value. No one has every recorded a supernova happening, let alone from
start to finish. Do you understand the magnitude of this discovery?”
Sheppard glanced back at the scientist and noted the almost rabid expression.
“Down, McKay,” he ordered. “Calm down.”
“We should board that station and download the information that has been
recorded,” McKay proclaimed, clutching at his laptop greedily. “The
value of this information would be…” he paused and smiled, “…
astronomical.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Sheppard said tiredly, looking at the station they approached.
It loomed just in front of them. The size was still difficult to judge,
but it looked as tall as a seven-story building. “We only have the one
spacesuit. I’m kinda doubting that it has any life-support so…”
The images on the HUD suddenly changed, illuminating sections of the schematic.
“Power!” McKay called, pointing to the lighted bits. “It’s got
power! And it looks like life-support is already running!”
“That is unusual, is it not?” Teyla asked. “Life-support should not
be active.”
The thought made McKay’s expression drop for a moment, and the screen changed
on the HUD again. “No life-signs. It probably turned on the
life-support when it sensed our approach. Like a welcome to the
neighborhood.”
“Yeah…” Sheppard responded, giving Ronon and then Teyla a careful glance.
“Power,” McKay went on. “Well, of course it should have power,
otherwise it would have been affected by the gravity of Marxworld,
wouldn’t it. Sure we’re a way’s from it, but it’d only be a matter of a
few thousand years and it’d be pulled into the planet. It must be
capable of controlling and correcting its positioning.”
Sheppard raised one eyebrow. “You’re thinking… maybe a ZPM?”
With a nod, McKay agreed, “To keep this thing powered and recording for over
10,000 years – it’s gotta be a ZPM keeping that thing going.”
“All right then,” Sheppard concluded. “Let’s check ‘er out!”
------------------------
The
beauty of the space station became apparent as they drew near it. The
upper section was a half sphere, its flat edge attached to the rest of the
structure, and the glass-like dome was covered with a web of intricate metal.
Beneath it, a series of segments connected it to the wide disk below, all of it
overlaid with the same ‘Frank Lloyd Wright’ style geometry that reminded
Sheppard of Atlantis. Beneath the disk, the bulb shaped compartment looked
like a flower pot.
As the jumper drew closer, McKay told him, “There should be a jumper bay on
the central disk.” He glanced up from his computer. “There,”
he said, pointing. “That would be the bay door. This structure was
designed with these ships in mind so we shouldn’t have any trouble.
There’s an atmosphere capable room just waiting for us.”
“Our very own garage,” Sheppard decided.
“Yeah,” McKay answered. “Just got to get the door open.”
“Gotcha,” Sheppard stated, maneuvering the jumper closer to the indicated
square. He thought ‘open’ and was disappointed to find nothing
had happened. ‘Open’ he thought again. ‘OPEN, dammit!’
and nothing.
“Are you trying to open it?” McKay asked from behind him.
“Yes!”
“I mean, mentally.”
“YES!”
“Oh,” McKay responded and tapped at the keyboard.
“Perhaps it requires an IDC,” Teyla tried.
“Might have to dial it,” Ronon decided looking at the DHD. “Would be
too bad if the DHD was broken.”
“It’s not broken!” Sheppard shot back.
“We hope,” McKay said petulantly. “Anyway, it wouldn't require the
DHD to open. No, this should open with a mental command. Are you
sure you’re thinking about the door and not something else?”
“Do you know what I’m thinking right now?” Sheppard growled as he turned
to the scientist and fixed him with a glare.
McKay gave him a tight grin and responded, “It might involve me and certain
physically impossible contortions.”
That got a small chuckle out of Sheppard, and then a sigh. “So, how do
we get it to open?”
“I don’t know,” McKay grumbled. He glared, through the windshield.
“It should have just… opened as we drew closer. It should know we’re
right here.”
“Might be blocked,” Ronon surmised.
“Maybe if you offered a verbal command,” Teyla tried, helpfully.
“Open the pod bay doors, HAL,” Sheppard ordered.
Nothing happened, except that McKay made a little chuckle, and then said in a
pleasant monotone, “I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.”
Ronon leaned toward the Athosian and asked, “You ever get the feeling that
you’re being left out of a joke?”
“It is most annoying,” Teyla responded, wearily. “And it is rather
rude. One must learn to ignore them when they act this way.” She
threw McKay an irritated look.
McKay smiled at her, looking a little tickled to have caused this reaction. But
he frowned as he returned his attention to the bay that remained stubbornly
shut.
Sheppard frowned, and muttered, “What's the problem?”
McKay grinned, nearly glowing with glee, as he said in the same sweet monotone,
“I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do.”
“Huh?” Sheppard returned.
“No, no,” McKay said animatedly, “You’re supposed to say, ‘What are
you talking about, HAL?’ and then I say, ‘This mission is too important for
me to allow you to jeopardize it’.”
For that, Sheppard gave McKay a disgusted look, and growled, “Nobody knows the
rest of the dialogue, McKay."
"I do! Come on..."
"Don’t do that.”
“What?”
“We need to know how to get in there, McKay,” he stressed the name,
as if to ensure that the physicist was quite sure that he was only a super
genius and not a super genius computer bent on killing everyone. “How to
we get in?!”
The HUD changed again, indicating different section of the station.
“Ha!” Sheppard declared, pursing his lips with a grin, “You were wrong,
Mr. Smartypants.”
“No, I’m right,” McKay reiterated. “THAT is the jumper bay.
Why are we leaving the jumper bay?”
“Because it doesn’t want us there.” Sheppard directed the jumper
around, lazily circling the station. “It wants us over here.” He came
around the far side of the station as McKay tapped at his keyboard.
“That’s just a docking station,” McKay stated, as a shape came into sight
on the side of the station. “Oh, a docking station. That’d
work.”
“Yeah, street parking,” Sheppard added.
The dock was shaped roughly like the back end of the jumper and Sheppard quickly
figured out what he needed to do to hook up. “Funny that you
didn’t find this dock yourself,” Sheppard chided. “Maybe you should
study those schematics a little closer next time.”
For that, McKay jabbed at his keyboard, muttering, “I am putting myself to the
fullest possible use, which is all I think that any conscious entity can ever
hope to do.”
When that got an odd look from Sheppard, McKay frowned and stated, “What?
So you can quote a line from ‘2001’ and I can’t?”
“You’re pathetic, you know that?” Sheppard said, returning his gaze
to the HUD and the station.
“Oh, and let me guess, you can quote nearly every line from ‘Caddyshack’
and probably ‘The Blues Brothers’.”
“And ‘Young Frankenstein,’ because those movies were cool and ‘2001’
was mostly lame.”
“Lame?” McKay sputtered. “It’s just probably the most realistic
movie about space travel that has ever been produced!”
“What, all that squiggly light stuff and the floating fetus at the end were
realistic?”
“Okay, that, not so much… but…”
“And the dullest part about that movie was that all the ‘space’ scenes had
no sound.” He tsked, hearing McKay make a strangling sound. “And
seriously, they needed explosions to liven it up.”
“No… wait… come on…”
“Quiet down while I get us docked,” Sheppard stated, amazingly silencing the
sputtering scientist. “Let me just sidle up here and see if we can’t
get us into that thar space station.”
McKay harrumphed, but offered no further complaints as he pecked at the
keyboard. Ronon and Teyla had nothing to say in the matter.
After a bit of finagling, Sheppard brought the ship inline with the dock,
backing it into the shape that resembled the rear of the jumper. As he
drew close, the station seemed to take over. Something extended from the
hatch and latched onto the jumper with a jolt.
For a second or two, the four waited, as if they expected something else to
happen, but the ship was still and the jumper automatically shut down.
There was a hiss as the jumper equalized its pressure with the station.
“Okay then,” Sheppard responded, standing up and making his way to the rear
of the ship. He suited up, pulling on his vest and hefting a P90, checking
it over quickly. He watched as Teyla and Ronon did the same, and Rodney
shut down his laptop and quickly secured it in his pack.
“Ready?” Rodney asked excitedly. “Come on, let’s check it out.”
“You sure there’s oxygen in there?” Sheppard asked, pointing the muzzle of
his weapon toward the jumper’s hatch.
McKay pulled a scanner from his pocket and nodded as he held it out.
“Breathable atmosphere, acceptable temperature. You did hear the system
match up, didn’t you?” He poked again. “There’s gravity even.”
He smiled. “The station rolled out the red carpet and is ready for
us.”
“And no life signs?”
“Nothing,” McKay stated as he eyed the life sign detector.
“Yeah,” Sheppard said with a sigh. He nodded to McKay to hit the
control for the hatch. “I just don’t want any surprises.”
The hatch sighed as it opened and the four stood, watching and waiting.
McKay cringed backward, holding his breath as if he wasn’t entirely sure about
the atmosphere’s breathablity, and focused on the life sign detector in his
hand.
The empty corridor was revealed beyond the hatch and Rodney let out a surprised
gasp, expelling his held air.
“What?” Sheppard asked, realizing already that he was going to regret this.
“There’s nothing on the life sign detector,” McKay stated.
“You already said that,” Ronon told him.
“Nothing! Don’t you get it?” McKay stated sharply. “WE are
not even showing up!”
And at those words, two men stepped from either side of the hatch, weapons
lifted and ready to fire into the jumper.
PART 3: IRONSPOT
“Drop
your weapons!” the larger of the two men ordered as he came into view.
“Hold it!” Sheppard shouted almost at the same time, aware that Ronon would
have mowed the two down in an instant if he hadn’t been commanded otherwise.
Behind him, the Satedan growled unhappily and McKay made a sound that was rather
like an “eeep!” Teyla remained silent.
“Put ‘em down!” the big man ordered again – he was built rather like
Ronon, a little bit shorter, and a little bit broader. He had fine,
stringy black hair tied in ponytail, and a rough beard. The other man was
skinny and short, all sharp angles, with red curly hair that fuzzed like a halo
around his head.
The big one scowled and repeated, “Drop ‘em.”
“You do the same, and we’ll think about it,” Sheppard returned, holding
his weapon on the bigger of the pair. John didn’t have to look at the
others – he knew they held the same pose, that they had equally divided the
targets.
“This is our vessel,” the smaller man said in a reedy voice. “This
is our place and we’re not letting you in without a fight!”
“You’re not taking what’s ours,” said the big one.
The two men hadn’t fired, and really didn’t seem to be planning on doing so.
Sheppard regarded them. No, they were just protecting their home, the same
as he’d do if someone dropped into Atlantis unexpected. Sheppard
realized that they were the invaders in this situation.
John lowed his aim, saying, “We’re just travelers. We saw the station and
wanted to check it out. We didn’t think anyone was here.” He
resisted the urge to throw McKay a disgusted look. No, his attention
stayed on the larger man. The muzzle of the P90, although lowered, could
quickly be raised again.
“We just want to download some files,” McKay said helpfully from behind him.
“And to check out your power source because, if it’s a ZPM, we could be put
to use elsewhere, that’s for sure. Because, honestly, we need a back up
ready and available, and I’m kind of thinking that the one you have is almost
empty anyway, so maybe…”
Ronon hissed out a “McKay!” to warn the scientist to silence. McKay,
dutifully, quieted.
The two men looked confused.
“We mean you no harm and our mission is peaceful,” Teyla said sweetly,
lowering her weapon as well, “We would like to trade.”
“Trade?” the smaller one said, trying to gaze around the four to see into
the jumper. “What d'ya got?”
“We have little of trading value with us at this time,” Teyla continued in
her calm and understanding voice. “But we would be willing to return
with what is agreed to as an acceptable exchange.”
“You have food?” the redhead asked.
“Some,” Sheppard responded. “Not a whole lot. We can get more
if that’s what you’re after.”
Still, the smaller man didn’t react to that news. He seemed intent on
looking into the jumper. Sheppard shifted uncomfortably, as if to obscure
his view.
“It’s of the Ancestors, isn’t it?” the redhead asked. “Made by
‘em, wasn’t it?”
“The jumper?” McKay returned, jerking his head back toward the rest of the
ship. “Oh yeah, the Ancients knew what they’re doing. I know it
looks like a flying Winnebago, but it’s fast as anything. I’ve been
through every inch of this ship and…”
“McKay!” Sheppard stopped him.
“Yes, yes, shutting up.”
Ronon’s aim never wavered from the bigger of the two men. He locked his
gaze on the other, and they regarded each other across the narrow space.
Beside him, Teyla kept her weapon pointed at the smaller man, while McKay
haphazardly did the same.
“You know about Ancient technology?” the smaller man asked, his gun falling
to his side.
“Rix!” the other man called sharply.
“Listen, Zeno,” he said, nodding toward McKay. “Maybe he could fix
the Ironspot. If all they’re looking for is the database, they can have
it, right?” He paused, watching Zeno as Zeno kept his gaze on Ronon.
“That’d be worth it.”
“And the ZPM!” McKay added. A growl came from Ronon, but Rodney went
on, muttering, “We’d at least like to look at the power source for this
station.” He glanced to Sheppard, unable to catch his eye. “It
would be a good thing to know about, wouldn’t it?”
“We should let them look,” Rix placated Zeno. “If they can fix the ship,
we could get out of here.”
This news seemed to sit well with Zeno. “How long would it take?”
With a disgusted huff, McKay explained. “I have no idea. I’ll
have to look at this ship before I can give an ETA.”
Zeno crinkled his brow at the unknown acronym, as Rix said quietly, “We could
leave this place if he fixes it. We could… go.”
Zeno blinked at that, and then said gruffly to the others, “We’re in charge.
You do as we say.”
“As long as you let us get at the database and the power source…” McKay
haggled.
“How ‘bout we call it a ‘partnership’?” Sheppard countered. “You have something we want, and apparently we have something you want.” And
he nodded toward McKay. “We work out a bargain.”
Rix seemed excited about this prospect, but Zeno regarded them with a narrowed
gaze. “You don’t go anywhere in the station without one of us,” Zeno
told them. “You play by our rules while you’re here.”
Sheppard flashed them a ‘trust me’ smile, and said, “No problem.”
Rix and Zeno stepped back, letting Sheppard and Teyla through, followed by
McKay, who tripped on the entrance to the station, barely catching his balance
before stumbling forward. He looked toward Ronon as if expecting a helping
hand. None was forthcoming.
Ronon was the last to leave the jumper, keeping careful watch on the two men.
They were in a hallway, curved to match the disc shaped section of the station.
The passage was wide enough that two could walk abreast, but the group moved in
single file. Rix led the way, with Sheppard just behind him, then Teyla followed
by Rodney. Ronon would have preferred to take the last position in the
group, but Zeno had other ideas, so the Satedan kept close his team. Zeno
hung back, then took up the rear, caging them in.
“I’m Rix, by the way, Rix Mills. The big guy is just ‘Zeno’.”
“Kind of like, Cher?” McKay asked, getting only puzzled looks from everyone
except Sheppard.
“I’m Colonel John Sheppard. That’s Teyla Emmagan, Dr. Rodney McKay
and Ronon,” Sheppard quickly introduced.
“Ronon Dex,” the Satedan clarified, as if he wanted to ensure that Zeno knew
he had more than one name.
“Excellent!” Rix responded. “Just glad to have some new faces around
here. Come on, I’ll show you our ship,” Mills stated, as he moved down
the hallway. “Then you can see the rest of this place. I can’t
tell you how glad I am to see you.” He glanced over his shoulder and
gave Sheppard a grin.
“I bet.”
“We’ve been stuck here forever. Didn’t have much of a chance of
getting that thing flying on our own, and could only hope that someone would
come by. How’d you get here?”
“I was about to ask the same thing,” Sheppard returned.
“Escaping from the Wraith,” Zeno responded from behind.
“Yeah,” Rix quickly added, “We were evacuating this little crappy planet.
I mean, who’d expect the Wraith to show up on that dirt puck, but here they came.
People were grabbing up whatever transportation they could get. Me and
Zeno ended up with the Ironspot, but it was too late.” They moved
through the hallway as Rix spoke, his voice animated. He ran one hand
along the wall as he moved, following the curved space.
“Probably was for the best actually, ‘cause the Wraith took out everyone
still headed toward the Circle of the Ancestors. We got out after the
Wraith left.”
“How’d you manage that,” Ronon asked, his voice low.
Rix smiled. “The Ironspot has a couple of good things going for it.
It can hide.”
“Cloaking device?” McKay asked hopefully.
Mills nodded. “Wraith were sitting right on top of us and they never
knew it. They can’t see through it, you know. Well, when they
finally left, we left there and went to one place where we knew the
Wraith wouldn’t find us.”
“This station?” McKay asked. “Because they wouldn’t be able to see
your lifesigns.” He snapped his fingers. “Makes perfect
sense.”
“Would’ve been great if the ship didn’t, you know, breakdown,” Rix went
on. “We barely made it here and the thing just tubbered out.”
“Tubbered out?” McKay tried.
“It means that the craft would no longer function,” Teyla translated.
“Oh,” McKay responded. “Well, that was obvious.”
“Left us stuck,” Zeno grumbled.
“Well,” Rix responded, sounding rather blasé about the matter. “Better in a box than under a tree.”
The Athosian and Satedan nodded to the wisdom of these words, while Sheppard
shot McKay a look. The Canadian could only shrug in response.
They followed the turned hallway. Ronon kept his hand near his weapon,
uncomfortable with Zeno behind him. He walked, with his head half turned,
watching the man who watched him with the same intensity.
“And how long have you been here?” Teyla asked.
Rix shrugged. “Longer than an Adruvio night,” he said with a sigh.
“Honestly, you kind of lose track of time in here. No day. No
night. It all melds together.”
“So, what have you been eating?” McKay asked from his position between Teyla
and Ronon. “I mean, you gotta eat.” He walked at a halting pace,
pausing to examine the details on the walls. He brought a hand forward,
almost touching an ornamentation, but stepping forward as Ronon pressed behind
him.
“We had rations, but those ran out after a while. The Ironspot was
stocked with plenty of tava meal,” Rix explained. “It was part of a
shipment being sent to one of the colonies. We lucked out when we grabbed
it.” He raised a humorous expression to his partner, and added, “
‘Though I’m pretty sure Zeno would say otherwise.”
“It’s fine, Rix,” the man returned, looking annoyed.
“Gives him gas,” Rix explained to Sheppard in a stage whisper. “He
blows up like a Matoo!”
“Enough of that, Rix,” the tone had become darker.
“ ‘Course, that means I suffer, too, but…” and Rix gave a little shrug.
“What about water?” Sheppard asked, to change the line of conversation.
“Oh!” McKay stepped quicker to input what he knew. “The station is
equipped with a waste recirculation system. All water is recycled.” He
flipped one hand as if to demonstrate some step in the process. “What
goes in, must come out, right? So the ‘out’ liquids are simply
recycled. It’s a remarkable procedure that utilizes waste water from
throughout the facility, sends it through a filtration and sterilization system
which…”
“That’s more that I want to know,” Sheppard cut him off quickly.
“We have the same system… back home… for when …you know, our home
isn’t in its usual… ah, aquatic environment and…”
“McKay!” Sheppard shot back.
“Really, didn’t need to know that,” Ronon grumbled.
"Remind me not to drink any tap water here," Sheppard whispered over
his shoulder to Teyla.
Rix blinked at them, not really sure what to make of the exchange, and then
touched a door. It slid open, to reveal a room. “Here it is!” he
announced, gesturing into the space.
He stepped forward, letting the others in. The room was large and open,
with a ‘garage door’ at the far wall. In the middle of the room was a
strange looking craft, and the colonel furrowed his brow, trying to figure out
exactly what it was. It was ugly as hell, with something that looked like
a crane tucked up on top, and weird engines on the sides that didn’t quite fit
with the rest of it. But in spite of the unpleasant looking bits, there
was something familiar about it.
“Hey!” McKay called as he followed. “That’s… that’s…”
Rix smiled, saying, “I know, more haffette than bloxel, huh?”
“What?” McKay shot back.
“He meant…” Teyla paused, searching for the best translation. “…it is a mixture of several things.”
“That’s an understatement,” McKay muttered as he strode toward the thing.
“But it’s a jumper, isn’t it?”
“Jumper?” Rix repeated.
“Our ship…” Rodney gestured in the direction of their ship.
"We call them 'jumpers'." And he winced a little at that term.
“Ah yes, well it was… once,” Rix responded brightly. “I
guess…”
The ship seemed to be pieced together, a hodgepodge of several technologies.
The basic shape was a jumper, but here and there other bits were globbed on in a
rather haphazard fashion.
It looked as if it had been cut down and reformed at some point. The
graceful and practical engines had been sheared off the bottom of the craft and
replaced with something that bulged obscenely. There were other strange
and bulky protuberances that had been welded to it, resembling tumors.
Sheppard had never considered that the puddlejumper was a ‘beautiful’ ship,
but after gazing at the monstrosity before him, he had to admit, the jumper was
a sweetheart of a craft.
McKay made his way to the open rear gate of the ship and poked his nose into it,
frowning at the mess inside. The original seats had been torn out, and
replaced with thick, padded chairs – the rest of the space was open cargo
area. There were strange boxes adhered to the ceiling and wires ran along
the interior.
"What did you do to
it?” Rodney gasped, looking at Rix as if the man had just gutted a living being.
Rix held up his hands. “Oh, it wasn’t me! We found it this way.
I’m surprised we were able to fly it at all!”
McKay looked scalded as he stomped around the area. “What is this here?
Genii tech? And this bit over here probably came from Hoff. Why
would anyone replace Ancient technology these substandard devices?
Wraith? Is this section from a Wraith ship? Why would anyone want to
do something like that?”
“So people could fly it,” Zeno answered from near the back of the ship,
where he stood, watching Ronon. The Satedan remained outside the ship as
well as Teyla and Sheppard had moved forward.
“Oh,” McKay said with a nod as he squatted down to look under the
‘dash’. “No ATA gene.” He made a disgusted sound as he saw
only more bastardizations of the graceful technology.
Rix squatted down beside him. “But you can fly the ship of the
Ancestors?” He glanced first to McKay and then to the others. “You are capable of operating their technology?”
“Well,” McKay returned. “That’s rather obvious. I mean, we
did manage to get here, didn’t we?”
“That’s enough, McKay,” Sheppard ordered him.
“That must be something,” Rix said wistfully. “To be able to fly one
of these crafts as they were meant to be.” He opened his mouth in a wide
smile. “I bet you could activate EVERYTHING on this station!”
“Yes,” McKay said, not even trying to sound humble.
“That must be something… something special.” Rix said, shaking his
head in wonderment. “We’ve heard stories of people who are capable of
doing this. I thought that maybe it was just flabbet and babbet.”
McKay was too interested in poking about in the Ironspot to pay Rix much
attention. “Hmmm,” he said in return.
Not sure what to think of that retort, Rix asked, “Can you fix it?”
“It’s a mess,” McKay told him unhappily. His voice raised in
irritation as he stated, “I don’t know how someone managed to get all of
this stuff patched together, and I don’t YET understand how it all interacts.
I need more time.”
“But you can fix it?” Rix asked excitedly.
“I said, I didn’t know how…”
“He’ll fix it,” Sheppard assured. “Now, what about that database
and the power source. Think you can show us those?”
Rix nodded happily and stood, slapping his knees. McKay continued to poke at
the underside of the control panel.
“He stays here and gets to work,” Zeno told Sheppard, nodding to McKay’s
hunched form.
McKay smiled smugly at them from his position at the control panel. “I’ll work a bit here. You go check out the rest of the station.
Let me know what you find.”
“Yeah, fine,” Sheppard replied.
Rix made his way from the cockpit of the cockamamie ship. “Come on.
I’ll show you,” he said, indicating Sheppard.
The colonel turned to Ronon, giving him only a look. The Satedan nodded.
McKay went on as he puttered, “Just find the control room. I should be
able to tap into the database pretty easily – as long as it’s not in the
same shape as this…” and his expression became a dour as he regarded what he
was faced with in the ship. “Oh, and the ZPM…”
“Yeah, we’ll check it out,” Sheppard promised.
“We will inform you concerning what we find,” Teyla assured and she stepped
from the Ironspot with the colonel, following Rix from the ship.
Ronon remained in place, aware of Sheppard and Teyla following Rix from the
room, but his attention was on Zeno – who, in turn, kept close watch on his two charges.
PART 4: FLOWER POT
“It’s amazing that you found us,” Rix remarked as
he left the jumper bay and stopped at a door immediately across from the room.
“I mean, it’s not as if we’re near a major planet or something.
Why’d you come this way, anyway?” he asked, turning to face them.
“Exploring,” Sheppard responded. “We like exploring.”
“Sounds like we got something in common,” Rix replied, proudly. “My
people are explorers.”
“Who are your people?” Teyla asked leadingly as they stood in the hallway.
“What is your home planet?”
With a shrug, Rix told her, “We haven’t had a home planet in many
generations. We stay on the move and keep the bait on the bunting.”
Sheppard didn’t bother to try to understand the idiom, saying, “Yeah, I
bet.”
Rix went on, “We’re always one step ahead of the Wraith. They
couldn’t catch us.”
“Until this last time,” Teyla clarified.
“Huh?”
“You said that you and Zeno escaped the Wraith while the others of your group
were culled.”
Rix paused before he stated, “Well, I wasn’t with my people at the time.
Me and Zeno were trading. It’s so unfortunate what happened to those
people.”
“Lucky they had the ship,” Sheppard stated, “And that you were able to fly
it.”
He grinned at Sheppard when he said those words. “Yeah. I’m good
at that.”
“I see,” Sheppard responded, giving Teyla a look as Rix tapped at a control
pad. A door opened, exposing a small room.
“So, you’re exploring,” Rix continued. “Looking for anything in
particular?” he asked leadingly as he lingered in the doorway.
Teyla smiled sweetly, stated, “We are looking for neighbors with whom we might
trade.”
“Yeah,” Rix responded. “We’re the same. Looking for stuff.
We do a lot of that.” And he stepped into a cylindrical room, about seven feet
in diameter. “We got
to go up the central core,” Mills explained as he grasped onto a ladder and
took the first step.
“Up,” Sheppard repeated to Teyla as he entered the small room after Rix.
He tilted his head back, finding that the ladder went up about one story to the
'ceiling', and
Rix was quickly covering the distance. His thin arms and legs jerked, looking
like strange shears snipping away.
When the man reached the top of the ladder, he nodded down to them. “Come on in, John,” he called.
“Teyla, you guys got to step
all the way in.”
Sheppard glanced to Teyla, who offered a slight shrug, and they stepped fully
into the little round room. The door came down behind them with a heavy
sigh. Almost instantly Sheppard felt pressure in his ears and glanced
about in surprise.
“Sorry,” Rix called down as he pressed a panel. “Should have warned
you.”
A door opened beside the ladder where Mills clung, and the pressure was
relieved. “Air locks. The central core is full of them. Can’t
open the next door unless the others in that section are shut.” He stepped through
the opening and peered down at them, waiting. “I think this space
station was made in pieces, brought here, and then hooked together with these
air locks. You coming?”
Sheppard slung his P90 over his shoulder and responded, “Airlocks? You
don’t say?” and started up the ladder. As he clambered up, he was
reminded of the water tower near his uncle’s farm. He’d climbed the
thing with his cousins one summer and had attempted to find a way in.
They’d never made it into the structure, but as his feet clomped on the rungs,
Sheppard had a feeling that the inside might have been something like this
space.
Teyla watched from below, waiting until Sheppard reached the top before she
followed him through the open doorway above. The door
snicked down behind her.
They found themselves in another rounded hallway, identical to the one that
they’d just left. Rix moved across the hall and activated a door, opening the
room directly above the jumper bay. “This is the control center,” he
explained as he stepped into the room.
John paused at the entrance, seeing a room filled with control
panels, display screens and other whatnot.
Rodney would be thrilled, Sheppard decided. The overhead lights had come
on with Rix’s advance into the room, but there was a stale feeling to the
space, a stillness, as if no one had been in there for a quite some time.
“Figure this is where the database is,” Rix said helpfully. He ran a
hand over one control panel as he walked by it. “We don’t do much on
this floor, and haven’t been able to activate anything, but maybe…”
And as Sheppard came near the device, the controls illuminated. Sheppard
raised an eyebrow at the change and Rix stepped back in surprise.
“It’s working?” Rix asked, surprised. He came to stand near Sheppard
and gaze in wonder at the lit panel. “Look at that! John!
You’re amazing! And so it’s true? You ARE of the Ancestors!”
He looked at Sheppard with new appreciation.
Sheppard considered what to say, but figured that McKay had already spilled the
beans. “Yeah,” he drawled. “Makes a good parlor trick.”
If Rix was confused by the reference, he didn’t show it. “It really
kicks the bale, don’t it?” was his response.
Sheppard shrugged, getting used to Rix’s way of speaking. “I’m
surprised you guys haven’t cobbled together an interface for this like the one
in the ship. You might have been able to send off a distress call, or
something.”
Rix laughed. “Aw crackers! Distress call? And let the Wraith know we’re here?
No. We had enough food and water to keep us, so we figured we’d wait until
some of our people showed up.”
“Oh,” Teyla responded. “You are expecting them?”
With a shrug, Rix told her, “Eventually… I mean, our people know about this
place so it’s only a matter of time before someone cruises by, but it’s been
quite a while.” He paused, as if troubled, then went on with, “There’s no
reason to mess with this stuff and I wouldn’t want to. No telling what
we might accidentally shut off.” He walked about the room, his hands behind
his back as he stared in wonder at the activated panels.
“Yeah, you wouldn’t want to shut off life support by accident, would you,”
Sheppard decided.
“Exactly,” Rix told him. “It’s all too complicated for me.
That’s why it’s so damn good that you all came by here!” He smiled
widely and then turned to Teyla. “What about you then? Do you have
these powers, too?” His smile was rather sweet.
The Athosian shook her head. “No, my people are not blessed with this
ability.”
Sheppard added, offhand, “It’s a gift.”
Rix continued, “So, your ship hasn’t been altered? It is as the
Ancestors made it?”
“Yeah, pretty much,” Sheppard replied, not sure of what to make of the
inquiries.
“So only those with this gift can fly it?” he asked.
“Yeah,” Sheppard replied. “ ‘Fraid so.”
“Great,” Rix responded, looking away to examine the lit keys. “Do
you think Rodney’ll be able to fix ours?”
“He is very good at repairing equipment,” Teyla told them.
“Yeah, he can fix just about anything -- if he wants to,” Sheppard added.
“And, if he doesn’t manage it somehow, we can give you a ride somewhere.”
“Oh,” Rix responded, smiling tightly. “Well, let’s wait and see if
Rodney fixes the Ironspot. That would be best for everyone.” He
moved quickly through the room, seeming distracted by the illuminations.
He paused suddenly and asked, “Why do you want to download the database?”
“We are interested in the information regarding the supernova,” Teyla
explained.
“Oh?” Mills responded. He puzzled a moment and then asked, “Why?
What are you planning to do about it?”
Sheppard shrugged. “Supernovas are pretty cool. McKay wants to
study it. He gets excited about stuff like that.”
“Dr. McKay is quite interested in such phenomenon,” Teyla told him.
“Oh, okay,” Rix nodded, thoughtfully stroking his chin. “So… how
much do you think it recorded? Do you think it has information only about
the supernova? It wouldn’t be interested in anything else, would it?”
Sheppard blinked slowly. “I’m sure that’s what the sensors were
concerned with,” he placated.
“Okay, good!” Rix nodded, and rocked back on his heels. “I
guess I can show you the next room, okay?”
“Sure,” Sheppard responded. “What the heck?”
“Great! Come on, John, Teyla.” And Rix ducked past them and into the
hallway.
Teyla and Sheppard exchanged a look as they paused before leaving the room.
His glance carried the warning – watch out for this guy – watch out for this
place.
Something just didn’t feel right.
----------------------
Ronon watched from his location just outside the Ironspot, watching as Rodney examined the handiwork inside the Ironspot.
PART 5: BABOON HEART
They
followed Rix through the hallway, to find another doorway and another room.
Both Teyla and Sheppard recognized the device in the center of the room, and
they smiled. Oh, Sheppard thought, this is going to make a
certain scientist very happy.
“Our power comes from here,” Rix said, standing near the doorway.
“Don’t know how it works exactly, but this is the place.” He
gestured to the ZPM unit.
“Yeah, looks like you may be right,” Sheppard returned. He cocked his head
as he smelled the air that came from the room. It seemed fresher than the
last room. Of course that meant nothing – this room must be kept
ventilated due to the power unit. Or maybe, Rix or Zeno had been in this
room sometime in the near past. Still, it was a difference from the last
place they’d visited.
“You don’t come here often?” Sheppard asked, just to see what the
answer would be.
“Nah,” Rix responded, tossing his curly hair. “Why would we?
We got nothing to do here.” He turned, almost pressing them from the
room. “You want to see something pretty impressive?” he asked.
John looked to Teyla, and stated, “Who wouldn’t?”
“Come on!” and Rix stepped clear of the room, waiting for the door to slide
shut before he headed back toward the ladder.
John lingered with Teyla a moment, wishing he understood exactly what was going
on with these people. He had the distinct impression that they’d best
get the hell out of this place as soon as possible. Something was rotten
in Denmark.
And for a moment, Sheppard pondered if Rix knew a similar phrase that was
popular in the Pegasus Galaxy.
“Where are you?” Rix queried from somewhere ahead of them. “Teyla?
John?” He came back toward them, smiling broadly when he caught sight of
them in the curved hallway. He gestured, calling, “Let’s go!”
So they went.
Soon, Rix had them back into the airlock. Teyla and Sheppard needed to
descend the ladder, as Rix stayed at the top. Once they were all within
the central core, he punched another control. The door to the hallway
closed, and the ceiling opened. There were two layers of hatches that
opened as one unit, revealing another segment of the central core with the
ladder continuing.
“Up!” Rix declared and they climbed up. “You guys are going to love
this.”
They traveled through the airlock, closing the double-door behind them before
the next set could be opened. And then went through another. When
they completed the third segment above the control level Rix paused and looked
down on them, grinning. “You ready?” he asked, and without waiting for
a response, he opened the panel above, revealing a great black speckled slate
instead of yet another white tube.
He chuckled as he climbed up and out, and waited for them. Sheppard stopped
and look around in amazement once his head was clear of the airlocks.
“Wow,” was all he could get out as he quickly scrambled out.
He offered a hand as Teyla made it to the top of the ladder and they were soon
standing on a platform, under a great dome, surrounded by stars.
Neither said anything at first, staring in quiet wonder at the velvety blackness
that surrounded them. On one side, the cloudlike supernova highlighted the
‘sky’. In the other direction, the ringed planet ornamented the black.
The planet and its moons looked different from this angle, dimmer, more
mysterious. The sun was behind them, making the edges of its black moons
glow in eclipse.
And all around them, so many stars it seemed impossible to count them.
Sheppard had been among the stars before. They’d seen several spacegates
in their travels. He’d been in space. It was always cool… but as
he stood, with stars all around, with the strange beauty of the supernova on one
side, and the simple elegance of the gas giant on the other, a sense of awe
filled him.
Teyla stood beside him. They didn’t look at each other – their
attention reserved for the spectacle. This stage to the stars took
his breath away. He wanted to stand and stare, he wanted to turn slowly,
to see everything, to be silent, to be filled with the incredible sight.
“This is the observation deck,” Rix’s voice cut through the quiet, and he
moved about quickly in the domed space. “But I bet you’ve seen stuff
like this all the time.” He came to stand beside the control panel in
the center of the room, watching them and smiling as if he thought their
reactions were rather amusing.
“No, haven’t seen anything like this,” Sheppard admitted. “Not
quite.”
“No? Wow… really?” Rix was perplexed. “I kinda thought
you’d seen everything.”
“No,” Teyla said softly. “This is very new.”
“Yeah?” Rix continued. “I’ve been here a few times, but it gets a
bit boring after a while. I mean, how many times can you see big squishy
thing? It never changes.” He gestured to the supernova, shrugging.
“I thought you’d like to see it though.”
“Yeah, thanks,” Sheppard said, craning his head to look straight up.
He felt giddy and a little lightheaded, understanding how McKay could find such
interest in the stars.
John figured he could stay here and stare for hours, for days.
“Okay,” Rix said and he went back to the ladder and began descending.
John and Teyla lingered for a moment longer, their eyes scanning the great dome
over their heads, the stars that filled every inch of the ‘sky’.
“Come on!” Rix called. “I want to show you the rest of the place.”
“We’re going to want to check on the others before we see anything else,”
Sheppard stated, his tone leaving no room for argument. He touched his
radio, and frowned at the static. He glanced to Rix.
“Oh, I know!” he explained. “Only the most basic transmissions work.
I mean, we can set off an alarm if necessary, but that's all. I think it has something to do with the whole
life-sign blocker thing.”
“We need to check in… now,” Sheppard said, his voice low.
“That’s fine,” Rix responded from below, his voice sounding hollow in
tube. “We’ll go back to the others, and then I’ll show you the
living quarters and the rest.”
“Fine,” Sheppard returned and started down the ladder with Teyla following.
---------------------------
“So?”
McKay asked from his crouched position beside one of the Ironspot’s tumor-like
additions. “Find out anything?”
“Radios don’t work.”
“Yeah, we figured that out already,” McKay replied.
“Nice.”
“Ronon tried to call to make a report on our progress. Couldn’t reach
you.”
“That’s good to know.”
“What did you find that was useful?”
“Looks like they got a ZPM,” Sheppard said calmly, coming to stand just
outside the ship, alongside Ronon.
McKay’s reaction was as Sheppard expected – Rodney jumped to his feet,
looking ready to burst his buttons. “Excellent!” He wiped his
hands on his shirt, surprised to find grease. He frowned at the stain, but
was too excited by the prospect that Sheppard had related. “Working?
A working ZPM?”
“It does appear to be working,” Teyla told him. “And we have been
shown the control room, and the observation deck as well.”
McKay waved a hand, as if to dismiss the last detail. “A control room --
perfect!” he asked, bouncing a little and grabbing his laptop as he made his
way to the exit of the jumper-hybrid. "Does it look like I can access
the database from the control room?
“How should I know, McKay?” Sheppard responded.
Rodney closed his eyes for a moment, his features seeming to say, ‘I work
with imbeciles.’ “Fine!” Rodney bit back. “Can you at
least tell me what happened when you entered the room? I mean, did
anything light up or beep when you got close to it?”
“The place lit up like a Christmas tree,” Sheppard explained.
“Should be ready and waiting for you.”
McKay smiled, and started to make his way off the ship.
“Wait,” Zeno ordered, as he straightened, holding up a hand as if he meant
to restrain the scientist from leaving the vehicle. He stopped short of
actually touching the man – not letting on whether it was his own design, or a
reaction to the protective stance of the Satedan. “Ship’s not
fixed yet. You’re supposed to fix it.”
Letting out a disgusted sound, McKay told him, “And I won’t be able to with
the materials on hand. I need a new control crystal, and I’m betting
that my best chance of finding a replacement for it will be in the control room.
So, if you’d excuse me…?” He picked up his pack and gave Zeno a
scathing look.
Zeno stepped back far enough to let Rodney pass, but his expressions remained
dark and unpleasant, and McKay had to brush past him to get out of the ship.
Before Zeno could follow, Ronon pressed in behind McKay, narrowing his gaze at
the man and allowing Rodney enough room to get down the ramp and join the
others.
Zeno made a sound like a mountain gorilla and let them pass.
Sheppard watched the exchange carefully, and then voiced a congenial “Hey!”
He smiled. “I’m going to need a minute to discuss things with my team, if
you don’t mind,” he looked to Zeno and Rix, letting them know that this
really wasn’t a request.
“Yeah, we’ll…” Rix paused, contemplating. He turned toward the
exit and said, “We’ll just get out of your way for a minute and…”
“Don’t worry about it. We’ll head to the jumper. You can cool
your jets here,” Sheppard told Mills with a grin.
“Great!” Mills returned. “Hey, we can have supper when you return.
We’ll get the dining hall set up if you’d…You said you had food?”
“Yeah, sure…” Sheppard told him. “We’ll provide the feast.
It’s the least we can do, all things considered.”
And for the first time Zeno seemed to smile – if only a little.
With a nod, Sheppard added, “Be back in a minute.” And he turned, quickly
stepping through the doorway and into the hall. He was a little surprised
that his teammates followed without a complaint.
Nobody spoke as they made their way back into the jumper. They filed in
through the dock and met in the forward compartment – leaving the rear hatch
open, not just as a sign of trust, but also as a means of keeping tabs on the
men within the facility.
McKay grumbled as he looked down on his Life Sign Detector, still picking up
nothing. “There’s something going with them,” he muttered.
“Yeah,” Ronon agreed.
“And I don’t just mean that they’re getting ready for dinner,” McKay
continued.
“They are not to be trusted,” Teyla informed.
“They’re hiding something,” Sheppard added. “Why the hell are they
here? I’m getting the distinct impression that they’re not here by
accident.”
“They’re lying about the ship,” Rodney told them.
“What? It’s not broken?” Sheppard asked.
“Well, yes, it’s broken. But their explanation for what
happened is completely wrong. That ship, in that state, could never
function.”
“Hardly looks like it could get off the ground,” Sheppard told him.
“Yeah, it’s a deathtrap,” McKay continued. “But it’s a dead
deathtrap. It has no control crystal.”
“Yeah? And?”
“No control crystal means that it’s not going anywhere.”
“The crystal broke,” Sheppard concluded.
“It’s gone,” McKay said, folding his hands over his chest.
“There’s an empty space where it should be.”
“Perhaps they removed it in an attempt to repair it,” Teyla tried.
“Zeno says they never touched it,” Ronon put in.
“And I rather doubt that the squirrelly guy knows anything about how the ship
works,” McKay told them. “Without the control crystal, the thing just
won’t go.”
“It’s a hybrid,” Sheppard mentioned. “They probably figured a way
to get around it.”
With an exasperated sigh, McKay stated, “It’s like the heart of the ship,
Colonel. Can a human being survive without a heart?”
“Well, yeah,” Sheppard answered. “Don’t people get mechanical
devices these days… and baboon hearts?”
McKay closed his eyes and pinched the top of his nose for a moment.
“Okay, right, people can live with replacement hearts -- transplants, Jarvik-7
and baboon hearts. Yeah, I get what you're saying. They're still hearts of some kind, but fine!
Whatever! So, let’s say that the control crystal is the brain of the
ship, because I’m pretty sure that humans can’t survive without a brain,
although I have questioned this at times.” And he gave Sheppard a narrow
look. “But the control crystal is not really like a brain, it’s really
more like a heart, but you ruined that analogy.”
“So sorry,” Sheppard said without remorse.
“Well, just believe me when I say a jumper or jumper-hybrid won’t fly
without the control crystal – and the Ironspot doesn’t have one,” McKay
tried to summarize. “What that means is, someone removed it from the
ship after it arrived here.”
“They purposefully disabled the ship?” Ronon asked.
“Someone did,” McKay said with a sigh. “I kinda doubt it was Rix or
Zeno.”
“Someone else?” Sheppard responded.
“Why would they want to trap themselves on this station with nothing but tava
meal and recycled pee?” McKay inquired rhetorically, and was rather glad that
Ronon didn’t try to answer the question. “I’m betting someone took
the crystal, and left them here with a ship that won’t work.”
“Do you believe that they are prisoners?” Teyla asked.
“Yeah… kinda…” and McKay paused, trying to rationalize the facts.
“But this place wasn’t set up to be a prison. They’re not supposed
to be here. I think someone stranded them here.”
“So,” Sheppard said and nodded. “That’d explain why they were so
interested in who could fly the jumper. They can’t, so they won’t be
able to steal our ship.”
“Unless they kidnap one of us!” McKay responded sharply. He touched
his chest, saying, “And I’d be the most likely candidate for that!
Because they’d want me around to fix things. Do you think they’re
going to try to kidnap me?” He looked frantically from one of his
friends to the next. “I really don’t want to be jumperjacked.”
“It’s not going to happen, McKay,” Sheppard assured in a low voice, then
he frowned as he looked about in the jumper. “Does Jumper 5 have a
control crystal?”
“Of course it does,” McKay responded. “Didn’t you hear my
‘heart’ analogy?”
“Would it be in the same place as the one on their ship?” Sheppard
went on.
“Yes, yes, yes,” McKay sounded exasperated. “Their ship is built on
a jumper’s base. They just added stuff. The basic operating system
is the same.”
“So, if they were able to gain entrance to this ship, would they be able to
remove our control crystal and use it for their ship?” Sheppard pressed.
McKay gave him a smug expression. “I doubt they could manage it,” he
returned. “Frankly, Zeno seemed more concerned about butting heads with
Ronon here. I doubt he paid any attention to what I was doing.”
“He’s right,” Ronon confirmed, trying not to pay attention to the pleased
look McKay displayed at this news.
“And Mr. Obvious didn’t give away where the missing crystal was?” Sheppard
asked the Satedan.
McKay grumbled unhappily, and Ronon responded, “Nope. He was complaining
the whole time he was in that ship. Doubt anyone could figure out where
the worst problem was.”
“Good,” Sheppard responded quietly. “At least we got that on our side.
They’re not going to take our ship.”
“Why are they not content with the idea of being relocated?” Teyla asked
quietly. When Ronon and McKay looked at her curiously, she restated, “We
asked if they might want a ride to a planet where they could continue with their
lives.”
“And Rix refused…” Sheppard finished. “Seems that all they’re
interested in is getting the Ironspot fixed. He seemed pretty concerned
about the database, too, and what might have been recorded there.”
“The database!” McKay exclaimed, pulling his laptop from his pack.
“I got to get this set up and start the download.” He tapped excitedly
at the sides of the laptop, his eyes gleaming.
Ronon didn’t look happy. “We should leave this place,” he
proclaimed.
Sheppard let out a breath, looking discontent. “What about the ZPM?”
he asked.
Ronon shrugged. “Do we really want to deal with these people?” he
asked. “We’re just asking for trouble.”
“Yes,” Teyla responded. “But gaining a ZPM is well worth the
effort.”
When Ronon looked unsure, McKay replied with, “The ZPM could mean the
difference between life and death for us the next time the Wraith show up.
Let me get the download started. The information that they’ve gathered
is … well it has to be incredible. Then, we grab the ZPM and all of us go.”
He looked at the others, seeing their reluctant expressions. “I mean,
whatever these guys are up to, all they seem to want is to have their ship
fixed, right?”
Sheppard contemplated it a moment, not liking anything about this situation, but
McKay was right about the ZPM. Even a partially depleted power source
might be the nudge they needed to keep the shields active in a bombardment.
“We’re not leaving the ZPM behind,” Sheppard declared.
“And the database,” McKay added quickly. “We’re not leaving
without all the data they’ve collected on the supernova.”
“If push comes to shove, McKay…”
Rodney made a face, looking like a child about to throw a tantrum. “You
have no idea of the value of this information! Consider the
importance of the find! If I were able to download even a fraction of the…”
He paused, trying to draw his thoughts together into something the ‘common
person’ could understand. “It’s important data because when a star
in our part of the galaxy starts acting wonky, it sure would be nice to know if
it’s about to blow us to pieces. If we have this sort of knowledge, it’d go
a long way in predicting this sort of thing.”
“Fine! Do the download,” Sheppard grumbled.
McKay smiled, and probably would have bounced around a bit in his glee if he
wasn't in the confines of the jumper.
Sheppard asked, “You can fix their ship?”
“Sure, sure, sure,” McKay answered. “I can borrow a couple crystals
from the control room and cobble something together. Find something
that’ll work as a replacement – a ‘baboon heart’ sort of thing.”
“How long will the download take?”
“An hour – two tops.”
“And the repair?”
“About the same.”
“Then how long to get the ZPM?”
McKay blew out an annoyed breath. “Well, the ZPM unit should have a
power buffer. I just have to make sure that the buffer is charged.
It should give the station a few hours of juice, more than enough to get back to the jumper
and launch it with full life support.”
“And if there is no buffer?”
“We have spacesuit,” McKay responded, jamming a thumb toward the suit's cabinet.
“Someone will just have to go in with the environmental suit, and then maybe
have to deal with the loss of gravity and… the airlocks might not function…
and that sort of nonsense, because whoever does it…”
“And that would be you,” Sheppard told him.
“Yeah, me… big surprise there! Fine, I’ll be the one who shuts down
the station and grabs the ZPM after the Ironspot has launched. You know,
it’s a good thing we docked here because it’ll be easier to detach from the
dock than it would be to leave the pod, considering the possibility of having no
power.”
“Thank goodness for small favors.”
“So, before we go too far down that road… if I could check the ZPM,” McKay
stated, sounding a little condescending. He jammed the laptop under
his arm and popped one hand against his fist.
“Right, go,” Sheppard said with a nod. “Ronon, stay with him. I’m
sure one of our hosts will be more than pleased to escort you.”
Ronon made a grumbling sound, but nodded.
“Fine, glad we got that settled. Now, supper.” Sheppard opened a
panel to check through their supplies. He thumbed through the MREs,
pulling out six packets and then grabbing a few bags of water. These
collected, he jammed them into a pouch. He slung the supplies over
his shoulder.
As he started to shut the storage cabinet, he caught sight of the football,
still under one of the forward seats. He stepped toward the cockpit,
grabbed the ball, and shoved it into the bag with the rest, thinking he could
use it to harass McKay during dinner.
Rodney groaned, “Is that really necessary.”
“Hey, it might come in handy,” Sheppard said with a wink. He stood,
nodded to the others, and they left the jumper again – this time, locking the
hatch behind them.
-------------------------
Ronon
watched McKay, wishing he’d hurry as he messed about with wiring his laptop
into the space station’s main control panel. McKay would tap a few keys,
pause, get a contemplative look, tap a little more, and watch the images that
played across the screen. He’d frown, tap again, look annoyed, tap and then
slowly smile. He seemed to be satisfied with the outcome – in fact he
turned to the Satedan and grinned smugly manner.
“Download has started,” McKay proclaimed. “I should be able to
process the entire database.”
“Good,” Ronon responded. “Sooner you get that done, the better.”
McKay informed him, “I know you don’t care about this sort of thing, but the
knowledge contained in this database must be incredible. We’ve only been
able to conjecture about what happens in a supernova. This is our first
chance to find out everything – minute by minute – year by year
– millennia by millennia.”
“Fine,” Ronon replied. “You got it hooked up, so let’s get
moving.”
“Wait, wait,” McKay responded as Ronon turned toward the door. “I
have to see if I can find the crystals I need to fix the Inkspot.”
“Ironspot,” Zeno corrected from his position near the doorway, then asked
“Crystals?” His voice was suspicious as he watched the proceedings.
“Yes, crystals,” McKay said, a little pissily. “You’re missing a
necessary organ on your ship and I’m about to make a transplant.”
Zeno looked a little lost as he asked, “And you think we’ve had the right
part here all along?”
“Well, not exactly. I mean, you’re missing a specialized crystal, but
I should be able to find something here that’d work in a pinch,” Rodney told
him, squatting down and ran his fingers along a panel for a few seconds.
He dug in his fingernails and managed to find some sort of release that Ronon
hadn’t spotted. After a second, he pulled the piece loose.
Ronon smiled as he watched for Zeno’s reaction. Zeno was surprised as McKay
revealed the hidden components of the control panel.
The scientist set the panel aside and started to look about inside the space,
half crawling into it to get at what he wanted. McKay started making happy
little sounds as he worked, plugging his tablet computer into the crystals –
pulling one piece out from time to time – putting some back and shoving others
into his pack.
The Satedan kept himself positioned between McKay and Zeno, who’d insisted on
showing them the room, while Sheppard and Teyla descended to the living quarters
on the station with Rix.
He didn’t like this – he didn’t like that they were still at the space
station. This was a bad idea. He saw no reason to help these people.
They should grab the ZPM and go.
There was no reason to help Rix and Zeno.
In another lifetime, back when he was a runner, he would have shot these two men
on sight, and then he would have been free to do whatever he wished, alone, in
this complex. It would have been easier. Another lifetime…
alone.
“Okay, got it!” McKay announced, standing and jamming another crystal into
his pack. I think I got what we need to fix the Ironspot.”
“Get back to the ship then,” Zeno told him, “and fix it.”
“Yeah, yeah,” McKay responded. “But first we should check the
ZPM.”
“No,” Zeno proclaimed. “You fix the ship.”
“I don’t think so,” Ronon put in before McKay could open his mouth.
He rested his hand near his weapon as he said, “We check the ZPM, like the man
says.”
McKay looked between the two and scoffed, “Come on. You’re like a
couple of gorillas fighting for who gets to be the silverback. Look, I got
to check the ZPM’s buffer. If it needs charging, then I set it up.
That way, while the download continues and I fix the problem with the Ironspot,
the ZPM can also be charging the power buffer that’ll allow us all to leave
safely. See?”
He glanced to the other two, discovering that neither was really listening to
him. With a sigh, he added, “I think we’re planning on eating some
dinner before we got too far, so let’s do this check and take a break.”
He settled a hand on his stomach. “I could eat,” he declared.
Zeno stood stiffly, oozing discontent.
Tired of it, McKay snapped his fingers and ordered, “Let’s get moving!
The ZPM room!”
Ronon held a smile as Zeno left the room and shuffled forward, leading them
around the curved passageway to the room that held the ZPM. The
Satedan kept a careful watch, even as Rodney nearly skipped on the journey.
When the door opened, McKay’s eyes lit up and he stood for a moment in the
doorway – just staring within. Zeno, on the other hand, held back.
Ronon regarded him with sloe eyes, curious at the man’s reaction. Zeno
didn’t want them in this room, he decided. That fact made Ronon all the
more willing to enter it.
Rodney nearly pounced on the ZPM module. “It is!” he exclaimed.
“It’s a working ZPM!” Ronon wasn’t sure, but McKay might have
giggled. “Amazing! If only a lagniappe such as this would drop
into my lap at every one of our missions.”
Ronon smiled slightly at Zeno’s annoyed and confused expression.
As McKay frittered around the controls, muttering and mumbling, spouting off
stuff that Ronon was probably supposed to retain. The Satedan surveyed the
room, wondering at Zeno’s reluctance.
The big man’s gaze glanced toward one wall, and Ronon regarded it
surreptitiously. Several boxes had been piled in front of the panels, but
the parcels had a staged quality to them – as if they’d been purposefully
settled there.
He diverted his gaze before Zeno might catch on, and he waited as McKay finished
his work.
PART 6: COUNTRY CAPTAIN
The living quarters for the station were in the ‘flower
pot’ bottom of the structure, and it was there that the group gathered. McKay had no desire to take a tour of the crew facilities, and Zeno
didn’t feel like leading him about any longer. There was little to see in any case – the mess hall, the ‘head’
with its usual Ancient restroom facilities, and a ‘work out’ room where
makeshift exercise equipment had been set up. Teyla, Sheppard and Rix had ended
their tour in the ‘barracks’ with its messed up beds and
tossed-about clothing.
Rix had been a bit embarrassed of the place when he showed
it to Teyla and Sheppard, kicking used garments under the bunks. “Should have done laundry a few days back,” he muttered.
“If we knew you were coming, we’d have cleaned a bit.” With a laugh, he explained that they avoided washing the sheets for as
long as possible by simply moving to next bunk down in the series of six beds.
“It’s like a game of huxey-hoddle,” he’d explained.
It was a good thing that the environmental controls were in
full working order because John was fairly sure the place would have stunk
without a good filtration system. Teyla’s
scrunched up nose had told John that she has suspected the same thing.
The Mess Hall was a fairly large room, obviously meant as a
gathering space for the scientists that had worked at the facility. “The
Ancients probably made regular visits,” McKay surmised. “To check the systems, to ensure that everything was running correctly. Made minor adjustments, stayed a few days, and then went on their way.”
It made sense, because Sheppard seriously doubted that
he’d be able to spend a lot of time on this space station, and it left him feeling a
bit sorry for stranded Zeno and Rix.
The tension in the room relaxed considerably when the MREs
were brought out.
“That’s food?” Zeno asked suspiciously as he crowded
close to get a look at the packets.
“Food?” With
a shrug, Sheppard commented, “You can call it that.”
“You have a Beef Ravioli in there?” McKay asked
hopefully as he leaned toward the colonel to see what was coming
out. Sheppard jerked the packs away
from the scientist’s hopeful gaze.
“Dr. McKay,” Teyla calmly remarked, “our hosts should
have first choice, don’t you agree?” And
she made a little scowl as she saw ‘Country Captain Chicken’ emerge from
Sheppard’s bag.
“They won’t know which one’s good. This is all Greek
to them,” McKay commented, and then paused as he thought of something. “Try the ‘Veggie Burger’,” he told Rix.
“You’ll like that one.” When
he noted the name of the top packet, his expression fell a bit. “Oh, there’s a ‘Country Captain’!
You should gets that one. Be my guest. You’ll like
it.” He glared at Sheppard for a
moment, saying in an accusing whisper, “I thought they stopped making that
one.”
The colonel made a disgruntled sigh. “I figure the folks on the Daedalus bogart the good ones and leave us
with these, then no one wants to pack them for missions, so they end up in the
jumpers.”
Zeno pawed through the packs that Sheppard had tossed to the
table, looking at indecipherable writing with the same greedy expression as a
child when first glancing a pile of birthday presents. He picked up one pack and squeezed it experimentally.
Rix looked uncertainly at the packaging. With a conciliatory
glance to Zeno, he said softly. “We
got to take it easy, you know. Zeno,
if we eat so much of a new thing, our guts are going to want to revolt.”
Zeno snatched up a bag labeled ‘Thai Chicken’ and
mumbled, “I’ll take my chances.” He
sniffed at the metallic packet, longing to find out what was within.
Rix’s wisdom won out in the end. He cooked up a pot of tava meal, augmented with
half the ‘Beef Stew’ and part of the ‘Pasta with Vegetables’. Ronon grabbed the ‘Beefsteak with mushrooms’ and Teyla made away with
‘Thai Chicken’ while Sheppard found ‘Beef patty’. McKay, sadly finished up the remains of Rix and Zeno’s half-used meals,
raiding the Country Captain for its toaster pastry and mashed potatoes. The entrée remained forlornly on the table.
The water bags were also of great interest to the residents
of the space station. Rix slurped
down the contents of one packet almost immediately, declaring he’d forgotten
what good water tasted like. He grabbed another when he thought no one was
looking and secreted it under the table.
The food eased the tensions of the room. Rix and Zeno munched
at their weird concoction – Zeno looking contented as he shoved
the mixture into his mouth, and poked ' potato sticks' and ' wheat bread snack' after
it. Rix was more cautious, but soon
got into the spirit of the meal when he discovered the wonders of ‘chocolate
sports bar.’
McKay pecked at his meal as he worked on the crystals
he’d collected. He frowned at the
vegetables mixed into his pasta, pushing them out of the way to get to the
noodles. As the others spoke
congenially, he tapped at his data tablet, and then held the crystals up to the
light, examining them visually, as if he could conjure their exact use.
Well, Sheppard thought, if anyone could figure out those
things – just by looking at them – it’d be McKay.
Sheppard and Ronon, finished with supper, started tossing
the football back and forth in the big room, quickly gathering the attention of
Rix and Zeno, and gaining the annoyance of McKay, who had to duck more than once
to avoid a concussion.
A couple of times, he didn’t see the missile in time, and
the ball whacked him in the shoulder, or back, or side… to wobble off in a
different direction. He’d fume,
of course, but the play continued.
Finally, fed up – or finished -- McKay announced that his
work was done and that he needed to return to the Ironspot to see if the repair
would function properly. Rix
quickly volunteered for the job of escort. Sheppard glanced to Teyla, and she went with them.
As they left the room, Zeno picked up the ball and tossed
it experimentally to Sheppard, allowing himself a smile.
“What’s it called?” Zeno asked as Sheppard caught the
wobbly ball with some effort.
“Football,” the colonel replied.
“It doesn’t look like a foot,” Zeno responded as the
ball was tossed back to him. He
hefted it in his hands and then glanced to the others. “Are we supposed to use our feet to catch it?”
Sheppard made an attempt to answer, but Ronon cut him off. “Don’t ask too many questions about it,” he told Zeno.
“It’ll just confuse you and ruin the game.”
--------------------------------------
Back in the Ironspot, McKay went to work, fussing and
poking and experimenting with the equipment. Rix and Teyla made themselves somewhat comfortable sitting
in the forward seats
as McKay worked.
Rix watched lazily, asking questions, but getting little in
response that he could comprehend from McKay. Mills would
glance to Teyla, hoping she might provide some insight into what was being said,
but her expression told him that she was often just as baffled.
She smiled at Mills, and gave him little encouraging nods
when his questioning flagged. It
gave him the will to go on.
McKay continued to answer, with a bit more snap
with each passing moment, but Rix yawned more often. It was only a matter of time and the man’s first good meal
made him drowsy. Soon, he was leaned back in the seat and dozed.
A little tired herself, Teyla stood and stretched and moved
closer to where McKay was working.
“Teyla, you’re just in time,” Rodney said brightly at
her approach. “I appreciate you
staying out of my way until now, by the way,” he said in an attempt to make a
compliment.
“Yes,” Teyla responded softly. “I thought it would be best.”
“And you got our ah… host… to finally shut up. Very good of you.”
She smiled slightly at that and said, “I did my best.”
“Well, good… good,” McKay gestured grandly to the
crystals. “The work is complete. Have
a look.” He stepped back, folding
his arms over his chest and bouncing slightly as Teyla stepped forward.
She did her best to examine the set of crystals, finding
that it looked exactly like every other bank that she’d seen in the past.
She turned toward the physicist and smiled warmly at him. “Well done, Dr. McKay,” she complimented.
He grinned even more, and spoke excitedly, “It
required quite a bit of patching and it’s not as clean as it should be.”
A finger pointed into the works of the display. “See here, I had to make room for my ‘patch’, so I removed some of
the crystals that they’ve already overridden with their own equipment. But see this, this here?
This
section that looks like it was completed by baboons?” He pointed emphatically to a section that looked rather like
every other section. “Let’s
just start off by saying, I didn’t do that.”
“That is obvious,” Teyla responded serenely.
“Yes, of course,” McKay replied. “If we had unlimited time, I would make the repair a bit
cleaner, but apparently it works, so I’ll leave it as it is. But do you know what they’ve done here?”
“No, I am afraid I do not.”
“Well, if you look here, you’ll see what’s been
patched in,” and he pointed to a strange looking protuberance that was hooked
into one wall, “I think you might recognize the technology.” And he paused, waiting for Teyla to take a look at the mechanism.
Teyla obligingly stepped closer to the device, feeling that
she’d have no chance of recognizing the source of the technology, but as she
leaned in, there was no mistaking the ‘fleshy’ looking bit of business.
“Wraith.” Teyla stepped back in disgust, as if needing to get away
from the thing. “They have had
dealings with the Wraith?”
McKay waved away her concern. “They’ve scavenged bits and pieces of technology from
everywhere. I wouldn’t be
surprised to find bits of a Soyuz and the Cassini-Huygens in here.”
He paused, cocked his head and amended, “Okay, I would be surprised by
that.”
Teyla said nothing, knowing that she’d be better off not
questioning the reference.
McKay went on, “And the fascinating thing about this
piece of technology?” He tapped
it with one of the tools he’d been using. “It’s a shield device.” He nodded and smiled smugly.
“They’ve managed to wire a Wraith shield into what used to be a
jumper. More effective than that barrier the Wraith put up for us on that
desert planet. Very clever.” He glanced to the
slumbering Rix and commented softly, “I rather doubt that this brain
trust had anything to do with it.”
The magnitude of what McKay stated sunk in. “Being able to add a shield to the jumpers would be very beneficial,”
Teyla responded.
“Yes, well yes, that’s obvious, isn’t it?” Rodney said with a nod.
“I’m
going to have to study all of this a bit more to figure out how they did it.
Oh, and they have the ability to fire torpedoes, too.
“Torpedoes?” Teyla
tried the word.
“They couldn’t use those squiddy drones because, well,
they don’t have the ATA gene to activate them, but they’ve replaced the
drone launching system with a pair of torpedo tubes. I discovered them when I went over this earlier, but I’ve
just been able to access the systems.” He
leaned down and heaved open a compartment in the floor, revealing a tube that
ran under the floor. “Seems
pretty simple, actually. They just
need to load in an explosive and they’re ready to go. They’re fired by pushing that button on the control panel, the mauve
one.”
“Mauve,” Teyla tried the word.
“The purplish one, that looks like
it was added using duct tape and chewing gum.”
“And how is the device aimed?”
McKay paused, considering. “I think it’s just point and shoot,” he decided.
Teyla looked around the Ironspot apprehensively. “Are there any other weapons present?”
“Nope,” McKay responded quickly. “Not that I’d ever want to rely on such a … simplistic
weapons system, but the fact that they were able to integrate it into the jumper
is… amazing. Just the knowledge
that they were able to do this could prove helpful in the future.”
“That is good news,” Teyla responded, smiling still.
“Yes, of course,” McKay replied, angling his head up
slightly. “And, naturally I’ve already committed all of this to memory.
I’m a veritable font of knowledge.” He smiled. “Now,” he
added. “I want to go check on the
ZPM charge and the data download to ensure that we have them running correctly
before we run a test on this …” and he patted one wall of the ship, “…monstrosity.
It should
fire right up.”
Teyla glanced to Rix, finding him sleeping soundly. “That would be wise,” she responded.
“Yeah, like I was saying. So… we head up to the control room?” he looked to Rix.
“You want to wake him?”
She paused a moment, regarding the sleeping man. “I shall remain,” Teyla decided.
“It might be best if he does not know that you have completed the
repair. It will allow you to
perform your inspection without interruption.”
“Yeah, true,” Rodney conceded.
“They seem to be interested only in the repair of this
ship. It would be best if we had
what we want, before they received what they want.”
“Excellent. Good,”
McKay responded, bouncing slightly on his heels. “Okay, I’ll go check.”
He turned and made his way off the hybrid jumper. “You sure you’ll be okay here with him.”
Teyla smiled slightly at the sleeping man. “I will have no problems,” she decided.
“Great, okay,” Rodney responded, looking apprehensive
about leaving Teyla.
“I will be fine, Rodney,” Teyla assured.
“Of course,” Rodney replied, and he gave her what might
have been an encouraging smile. “I’ll
be right back.” He offered nodding toward the door.
Teyla smiled as the door activated and he stepped
through the opening. Once the door
closed, she sighed and returned her attention to the sleeping man, curled tightly on the
seat.
-------------------------------
The doorway to the central core didn't give McKay much
trouble. He’d seen both Rix and Zeno activate the door, had witnessed
the series of buttons pushed, so he only needed to replicate the movements and
he was through.
He grumbled as he was met with the ladders again, not
caring for the means of moving from one level to another. “Haven’t they ever heard of transporters?” he asked no
one as closed the door behind him.
Great! His arm
hurt – exactly where Ronon had hit him earlier with the football. “I told them I’d bruise,” he said under his breath.
“Great thing to have when I’m is trying to climb a ladder – a big
BRUISE on my arm. Not helping matters.”
Muttering unhappily, he clung with one hand to the ladder
when he reached the top. He quickly
entered the code to open the door to the upper level, and with a whoosh, it
opened.
He smiled when he entered the control center, and
approached the laptop. Checking the progress, he discovered that the download was
complete. He hummed a little as
he examined the data, delighted to see the extent of it. Eyes darted back and forth as lines of information scrolled across the
screen. Days could be spent just
paging through the download, and for a moment he considered staying put and
doing exactly that.
But, remembering his
other responsibilities, McKay shrugged and closed down the laptop.
He frowned, realizing he should have taken his pack
with him. It would make toting the
laptop much easier. Oh! Especially when he went down that ladder!
Well, great… just great.
So, the Ironspot was fixed, the data download complete --
two missions complete – one to go. If
the power buffer was now sufficiently charged, they’d all be free to go.
He tucked the laptop under his arm and walked from the control room to the power
room. He
couldn’t keep the bounce from his step. This
little mission would prove to be one of the most profitable they’d ever
completed. They would come away
with a ZPM, knowledge of how to install shields on their jumpers and… he
patted the laptop lovingly… a wealth of information regarding the death of a
star.
Already, he was itching to get back to Atlantis so that he
could go check it all out.
He opened the room to the power room and stepped inside,
smiling blissfully at the ZPM station. The
only disappointment was that the buffer wasn’t completely charged. He frowned at the
readouts, and then decided it wasn’t going to bother
him. Another ten minutes or so
would do the trick.
He sat back, prepared to open his laptop and make good use
of the time by starting his examination of the data he’d compiled. The astrophysicist in him was straining to
study the data, but as he
looked around the room, the perfectionist in him took over.
There was something wrong with the far wall. The boxes were completely out of place, but it was more than that.
This room was the wrong size. He’s
seen the schematics for the station, had known exactly where to find the ZPM
room, and he knew that the room should have been twice this size.
Why was the room shortened? It was as if someone had blocked off the back half of this space and
created another room.
Rodney set the laptop down on the ZPM station and wandered
toward the boxes. He leaned his
head one way, and then the other as he examined the wall. Reaching out one hand, he felt along a seam, and grinned.
There was a door. Yes, quite possibly a storage space behind it. Perhaps even another
ZPM? Excitedly,
he pulled out his scanner and tried to get a reading, but the system was still
flummoxed by the station’s jamming system.
“Great,” he muttered. “I guess I’ll just have to check and see. And… move the boxes.”
He paused, and then looked over his shoulder, wishing he’d brought
Teyla and Rix along to help him with this task. “Why did they have to leave these boxes here anyway?” he whined
softly. “I mean, really!”
With a grunt, he moved one box, and then another, pushing
them clear of the door. “Bet it
was Zeno,” he muttered as he worked. “Seems
like the sort of thing he’d do,” Rodney grumbled. “If they were planning to put these boxes into the
storeroom, they’re total idiots to leave them so that they were BLOCKING the
door. Asinine!”
After a couple moments of sweat, Rodney managed to complete
the task. Smiling at his
accomplishment, Rodney ran his hand around the door, finding a concealed control panel
after a moment. The door didn’t
open, but that was little hindrance to a mind such as Dr. Rodney
McKay’s.
“Here we go,” he said out loud, keying it with the commands. “Let’s see what’s
inside you.”
And the door slid open. For a moment, Rodney was startled by a flash of gold – gold, or
something like it, glittered from the room. Everything within was gold and silver, like a treasure trove.
There were jewels and little Ancient devices, all hastily jammed into
boxes and containers and shoved into the space.
His jaw dropped and he was frozen in surprise as he took it
in. “What the…” he started, and jumped back as something moved at
him from within the hidden room.
“What? Who?”
he demanded, his voice getting a bit higher as a woman stepped into the doorway.
He stared at her in disbelief – and she stared back with cold dark
eyes.
“What are you doing in there?” McKay questioned, and
flinched as she lifted a weapon from her side, bringing it to bear on him.
Rodney raised his hands in surprise and submission as he
tried to back away. “Sorry!” he
squeaked, not knowing what else to say.
The woman said nothing as he moved away, following his
progress with her weapon.
“I didn’t know… I…”
She was compact, dark-skinned, with long black hair that
fell in long braids down her back, and a severe face. Silently, she watched him, until Rodney reached the door.
When she spoke, it was a smoky growl. “Stop,” she ordered.
“I didn’t see anything in there,” Rodney tried to
convince. “Nothing, I just…” The exit was just behind him, opening as it felt him draw
close. “Let’s forget this
happened, okay? You can just go
back into your little hole and shut the door. I’ll even move the boxes back if you want.”
Her sharp expression didn’t change and the weapon
remained pointed at him.
Out of the corner of his eyes, Rodney spotted his laptop
– filled with information that would make any astrophysicist cry. He made a grab for it, unwilling to leave it behind. His hands clasped
tight and he drew it to him.
He didn’t hear the shot. It was like a punch to his side, and he stumbled, spinning into the
doorframe and falling even as he grasped the laptop to his chest.
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