Thursday, April 12, 2007

Zebras Bite Back - SGA

Zebras Bite Back

By

Stealth Dragon

Rating – PG

Disclaimer – If I owned Stargate Atlantis I wouldn't need a job. But I do need a job, therefore, I don't own Stargate Atlantis.

Synopsis – Yet another installment of my in which series. In which John finds himself caught between some mud and a wraith... and a monster, and more wraith. Rescue is certainly taking its sweet time in coming.

A/N: I was bored, and overwhelmed by the desire to write, and kept thinking about the annoyance of mud. Then, viola! A story was born. And I remind you, I'm not medically savvy. I'm taking liberties with possible multiple stun side effects, whether they're plausible or not.

SGA

John awoke to a trumpeting roar, and pins and needles simultaneously pricking up his spine, down his limbs, and gathering all effort at his fingers and toes. He groaned, squeezing his eyes shut, then peeling them open to determine why the side of his face was cold. The world was a mesh of fuzzy gray and green shades, one of which – a mass of gray green – was apparently moving. John blinked his eyes until the fuzz coalesced. He would have leaped back if he could, but was stuck fast as a tree to where he was, so yelped instead.

“ Holy geez!”

The mass of movement in question was big as an African elephant, with a long sinewy body that rippled with ropey muscles beneath taut gray-green mottled skin. Its neck was long, but its whip-like tail was longer and barbed. On the end of that neck was an elongated, feline shaped head with ears John mistakenly took to be horns, being so pointed as they were. The creature had its head low, baring its fangs in a wide-mouth snarl. It lunged, only to rear its head back at an explosion of blue-white light. But instead of slumping into the mud that wouldn't let it move, it shook off the effects and snarled.

John stared at the thing in numb fascination, until the numb let up, leaving only the pins, and recollection slammed into his skull.

PX4-957 – an overcast world apparently in the middle of fall going on winter, colored various levels of gray offset by depressingly dark green plant life. Stepping out of the event horizon had caused John's heart to immediately plummet. One look and he'd gone depressed, as though the world had forced its present mood on him. Of course what really got him down was all the water and mud, mud he was stuck in now up to his waist thanks to a wraith with mean football skills. Teyla had sensed them coming, but the drab coloring of this world had hid them. Ronon and John split up trying to draw them off so Teyla and McKay could get back to the gate. Then came the tackle when a drone burst out of the woods, an eternal tumble down a, rocky steep hillside, and then...

Mud. Mud, mud, mud. A pit of gray sludge like wet, congealed ash surrounded by the hill and a misshapen crescent wall of tall, ash colored trees. Knobby, gnarled branches reached over head like massive bony arms creating a patchy canopy of gray and depressing green, so on the only plus side John managed to scrounge, at least he couldn't be spotted from above to be culled.

Although, he had yet to hear the distant whine of wraith darts. He would have been curious as to why, but at this juncture, he couldn't care less except to be thankful for the oddity.

The creature had returned its head to the lowered position but refrained from striking. John craned his neck back enough to catch the pale-fleshed and muscle-bulging arm of the drone standing waist high in the muck. So John could count his luck two for two. Someone had to be liking him enough to have him end up behind the creature and the wraith in front. But that someone was being challenged by another who thought it'd be funny to have John's P-90 go flying out of reach to the very center of the pit. True, there was still his 9-mil, but the muck had rendered it useless. He found out after he tried to shoot at a wraith illusion.

John averted his gaze to the wayward P-90 lying on top of the mud, too light to sink. The mud's consistency made it almost gelatinous, but not quite enough to keep it from fusing back together after John managed to swathe a two foot path. Suction was the problem. The bottom was solid, but it was also where the mud was thickest, and moving his legs so much as an inch left them strained and aching. Plus it didn't help that the wraith kept getting in a lucky shot now and then. A very lucky shot. Not a shoulder hit or a glance off the flank, but two pointers directly in the back. John's recent wake up made this the third direct hit to slam between his shoulder blades. He would have easily succumbed to sinking into the muck if it hadn't been for the flat plank of tree bark he managed to grab from beside him. It was long enough and wide enough to keep him above the mud after every hit, plus gave him something to cling to should the mud get any deeper.

John did a quick glance back toward the wraith. Bruno, as John had come to call him, was still preoccupied with the dino-kitty, and dino-kitty had managed to move enough to block John from Bruno's line of sight. So John's way was as clear as it was going to get. Going back to looking at the P-90, John gritted his teeth as he pulled his foot up then pushed it forward, leaning his upper body forward with arms on the slat of bark. The pull of the suction on his boot was wreaking havoc with his ankles that were starting to throb. But what was one more throb amongst a collection of uncomfortable pulsating aches focused around his back, shoulders, ribs, hip, and legs? Although things weren't so bad from the hip down thanks to the arctic cold mud that was numbing him better than a stunner.

John grunted when he moved his other foot. Lift, push forward, then lower. Again; lift, push forward, and lower. Three feet now, and he was panting, leaning even more heavily on the wood. He reached down into the mud for his canteen, and yanked it from the pull of the muck. He unscrewed the cap, tilted his head back, and poured the water in rather than putting his mouth on the muddied spout. His throat less parched, he replaced the cap and shoved the canteen back into the mud to hook to his belt. Then he continued on. Lift, push forward, lower. Lift, push forward, grunting, and lower.

Energy readings, energy readings, let's follow the energy readings. I'm going to kill McKay. It was always the elusive energy readings that tended to be the downfall to what should have been a fairly average day. And were they ever worth the trouble? In terms of finding a ZPM, hell no! Of course even had they found a ZPM somewhere in this swamp, it wouldn't have altered John's desire to vent off on a particularly persistent physicist.

Lift, push forward, lower. Lift, push forward, lower, and again John had to stop to catch his breath, sweat beading on his forehead and running down his face and neck. The P-90 looked no closer. John huffed out a heavy breath.

“ Son of a bitch,” he gasped. Gulping, he trudge on. Lift, push, lower, lift, push, lower. When he stopped to rest again, the mud level had risen from his waist to the bottom of his ribcage. He looked over at the dino-kitty, noting more carefully the depth at which the beast was stuck. The mud came to its flanks, which is – as far as John could guess – where his head would come were he standing beside the thing. The gun was on the other side of the creature. So at some point in time, John would be unable to move any further or else be buried up to his neck. But he didn't need to get too deep, just within range to snag the weapon with the plank of wood. Still, he was going to be cutting things close.

Lift, push, lower, lift, push, lower. His ankles were going from a throb to all out hurt even in the cold mud. He stopped again, giving the mud a moment to numb the area back into tolerance. A blinding flash made him cringe, and made the beast howl. But when he looked, the creature still had it's head raised, and again was shaking off the effects.

“ Why don't you just give up!” John snapped. “ It's not working and you're just pissing the thing off!” Not that he really cared how mad the beast got at Bruno, he was just sick of being blinded, and the noise the beast kept making on each blast. The myriad of throbs had migrated to his skull, which was inciting nausea, and John needed every last pint of concentration to be focused on getting closer to his P-90. He could have changed his path, kept to the shallows and made his way to land, but with wraith illusions rampant with the closest wraith too preoccupied to create them, then John wasn't going to get very far without that weapon.

A blast flashed from behind John but too far out to even make him flinch. John snorted, shook his head, and proceeded to lift his right foot. Except his right foot refused to go very far. John panted through his clenched teeth, leaned forward on the wood, and pulled.

“ Come on...” he ground out. “ Come on you stupid... come on!”

His leg jerked, and his foot felt strange; too cold, a little more free as it were. John grimaced but pushed his foot forward and down. He moved his left foot, then his right foot again, and felt his sock slip like slime from his foot. He grimaced again.

“ Ah, man.” On setting his foot back down, he was surprised at the uneven, rough feel of rock rather than slick, compact earth. He was also surprised that the going was easier without the boot, though he was loosing feeling in his toes.

He chanced a glance in the direction of the wraith and beast, getting an eyeful of the beast's rump but seeing nothing of the wraith. But he didn't need to see the wraith to know it was making its even more arduous way either around the beast or toward the shore. The last John had seen, Bruno had been trying to make his way around, so chances were good he still was. The wraith as a whole had a lot going for them – immortality, healing abilities, numbers, and strength - yet were shamefully lacking in matters of strategic thinking. Bruno was going to stick with trying to take the direct route to his prey rather than doing the smart thing by heading to shore and waiting John out.

The mud depth climbed two more ribs up, then John's left foot refused to budge. “ Ah hell!” He leaned forward and pulled until his foot slipped free, thankfully lubricated by the mud. But this boot refused to relent the sock, leaving John's foot in the buff to start numbing over at the toes.

“ Stupid freakin' boots...” John was unable to continue his tirade when numb struck his back, slapping darkness over his eyes before he had a chance to pitch forward onto the wood.

sgasgasgasgasgasga

John awoke to pins and needles... and twitching, mostly in his hands. His head pulsated to the beat of his heart, and his stomach acid roiled like a tsunami. Lifting his head made the pulsing become a pound, and he dropped it back onto the wood with a grimace and groan of pain. He remained lying on the wood, breathing, until the tsunami became a breaker that he could handle. He raised his head more slowly, testing the motion, blinking away the haze. He turned his head on his aching neck toward the creature, and caught sight of half of Bruno aiming at dino-kitty but looking in John's direction.

“ That son of a...” John breathed. Bruno was still distant enough away from dino-kitty not to get snatched, but dino-kitty was struggling hard, making leeway an inch at a time and keeping Bruno busy trying to inch back. John shook his head clear, and turned back to focus on the P-90. He started pushing forward, which had the mud increasing pressure on his pissy stomach, making it more pissed and start roiling again.

Five feet, he managed five feet when numb shot up and down his spine, knocking him back into darkness.

sgasgasgasgasgasgasga

Waking up was harder. Every muscle was twitching, his stomach acid was splashing, and his skull felt like a wedge was being driven into it. He would have remained pressing the side of his face into the cool, mud-slicked wood, but his stomach was fed up. He barely lurched sideways in time to keep the coming vomit from spewing onto his path. The burning, amber bile pooled on the slick surface of the mud, the putrid stench rising into John's nose, inspiring another need to vomit. The second time around, the bile was more of a thin stream, and ended in three dry heaves that left John shuddering, panting, and spitting chunks.

“ Oh man that sucked!” he rasped. He turned away from the vomit puddle before it could entice more reactions from his gut. He set his head back on the wood, just for a moment, to catch his breath and let his stomach calm now that it'd had its way.

There had to be some sort of side-effect to being hit multiple times by a stunner in the same spot. It might explain why his back was aching more than the rest of him, and why the muscles kept spasming, although that could also be the fault of the cold.

When his stomach had finally settled, John raised his head and peered over his shoulder. Dino-kitty was having a fit, launching its head at Bruno, snapping its jaws in a clack of teeth, but missing by centimeters. John turned back and forced his sluggish body to move, foot by numb, hurting foot, toward his weapon. The P-90 looked closer, or maybe that was just him being optimistic. At the moment he didn't really care, he just wanted to be out of range of Bruno's stunner.

Foot, by foot, by foot. Lift, push, lower. Mud slid around his leg, over his foot, through his toes. His right foot lowered onto something strange, like a perfectly smooth rock. He slid his foot about the rock, feeling with his heel and arch since his toes seemed to be non-existent. It was a strange rock, going from round to being elongated, punctured by two large holes, and a row of something rough and sharp.

John winced and swallowed. Rocks could be oddly shaped and smooth, but logic was adamant about this object being more like a skull. He pushed his foot forward over the supposed skull and continued on.

A flash of movement pulled his eyes up to the wall of trees. He had yet to discern anything within the shadows when there came a flash that struck him in the chest. He slumped, but not before the darkness snapped back into place.

sgasgasgasgasgasgasga

John awoke to the same old song and dance. Pins, needles, throbbing, nausea. But there was a new player in town – a rapid heartbeat that was making it a little tricky to breathe. He remained lying on the wood, breathing carefully until his heart descended from its race and his stomach settled. He lifted his head, looking to the woods where the shot had come from. His heart jumped back into its race. He saw, glaring within the darkness, the pale skin and ice-white hair of wraith flashing through the trees, too vivid and constant to be illusions.

John shrank back, shaking his head. “ Hell no, hell no, hell no!” he snarled. He twisted his head around, searching for a clear area of land, but saw only more pale skin and white hair. Perhaps most were illusions to hide numbers, but even one wraith was bad enough if he couldn't reach his P-90.

John didn't even have the luxury of having to face one wraith. Two of them stepped to the edge where the mud-pit began, both masked drones, both aiming at Sheppard. To the right appeared a wraith commander, tilting his head to the side as he studied John like a dog contemplating how to reach an unreachable slab of meat.

Nature specials popped into John's mind; antelope and zebras trapped in drying watering holes, surrounded by lions, leopards, and hyenas. Woolly mammoths in tar pits with saber-tooth tigers leaping onto their backs. Except – though John loathed to admit it – he was no woolly mammoth. In terms of size and strength, he was the antelope and the wraith were the lions.

No, zebra. He was the zebra. At least that's what McKay would say, adding on a comment concerning John's dark, spiked, zebra-like hair.

Yup, zebra in a pit. John dropped his head broodingly onto the wood slab, and realized that, at some point in time during his trudging, the mud level had come up to stop at the tip of his sternum.

The wraith made no move to get into the pit. Unlike their brother, the present wraith had brains, or at least a brain in the form of their commander. Commander was prowling within sight, moving in and out from behind the trees like a phantom. John followed its movements, looked to his gun, back to the wraith, and back to his gun.

The thing about zebras was that they had a reputation for being biters. When he was ten, John had gone to the circus with a cousin and aunt. Before the show began, there was an area to the side of the tent where baby animals were held within reach for the kiddies to pet. Except for the baby zebra. Its pen had sported a sign reading 'Caution Bites'. But had John's cousin cared? Or more appropriately, had he ever cared? He tried all the same to reach in to touch the tip of his fingers to that zebra's nose, and nearly lost them when the zebra nipped. His cousin had called that zebra every nasty name under the sun. John just doubled over in laughter. As much as John had liked his cousin – like a brother – it had served the guy right. Even to this day the man couldn't get it through his head that rules, laws, and caution signs applied to everyone, and that he had yet to prove himself to be the exception.

John would have loved to nip back, but his 'teeth' were still out of reach. However, there were other ways to bite, though in the long run said ways were more likely to end up getting him hurt. But they had their merits and were worth the risk if they worked as distractions.

Big if. Lift, push, lower.

“ You know,” he said, lifting his other foot. “ This could all end a lost faster if you'd just bring in a dart and scoop me up. Not that I'm anxious to be shoved into your meat locker, but at least I don't have to be in the mud anymore.”

The commander grinned, or seemed to. John could never tell. Wraith always seemed to be smiling, as though so proud of their teeth they just had to show them off. Which John couldn't figure why. For one, they had more teeth than needed, and for another they didn't need them to begin with except to enhance how butt freakin' ugly they were. Perhaps that was the reason for the teeth, sort of a novelty addition to aid in the debilitation of prey through terror. Sort of like a lion's tawny coloring so it could blend into the grass and remain hidden.

Commander didn't reply, just grinned and prowled, back and forth, dead twigs and foliage crunching under his boot, and mud puddles splashing, getting the nice boots all dirty. He was toying with John, enjoying his plight, or perhaps was trying to hide his agitation at having food within reach but unable to get to it. The thought both frightened and angered John. He scooped up a handful of mud and flung it with everything he had at the wraith.

“ I'm talking to you smiley! You just gonna keep pacing until I die or until you starve to death?” Inch by inch by inch, hopefully imperceptibly.

No such luck. The commander stopped pacing, then pointed at John. One of the drones fired, a direct hit to the chest, and John was out.

sgasgasgasgasgasgasga

John awoke. Goody. Pins and needles, back ache and a heart skipping one too many beats. On the plus side, he was quick to recall, and what he recalled pissed him off. He doubted zebras had to put up with this kind of crap. They went out in two ways – death by devouring or death by dehydration, with no stunning in between. John didn't get what the wraith were playing at, unless they were trying to keep him from his weapon long enough for a dart to come.

John lifted his head, only to drop it and squeeze his eyes shut when the world tilted and spun, reawakening the rage that was his now empty gut. He was shivering, all the way from toe to head to chattering teeth. Speaking of toes, he was pretty certain he would end up losing his to frost bite. Hell, his whole foot to boot.

Boot, ha! Very punny. Ah crap, I'm delirious.

John moved his head more methodically on lifting it the second time around, resting his chin on the wood when the world wobbled. The wraith commander was still pacing, albeit a little faster, and grinning to give the Cheshire cat a heart attack. John dubbed the commander Rufus. Not because he looked like a Rufus, but because he didn't, which was all John could think to do in terms of vindication.

John narrowed his eyes at Rufus, then simpered, batting his eyes. “ Hungry?”

Rufus' smirk faltered, and his prowling picked up speed. John lifted his head and leaned his full weight on the wood. He was tired, and felt heavy enough to drop had there been no bottom to this pit. He flicked a glance in the direction of dino-cat. The beast was still all eyes for John's original pursuer, who was thankfully out of sight on the other side of the beast. John returned to looking ahead, just in time to see a drone lift his stunner. John stopped, ducked, leaned to the side, and missed the beam by two centimeters.

“ Son of a bitch!” he snarled, straightening, only to slouch when his back pounded out the aches.

“ Do not move,” snarled Rufus. “ Draw nearer to your weapon and we will fire.”

John, slouching on the wood, snorted. “ Forced nap time isn't exactly much incentive to listen to you.” John started up again, taking wider steps, shoving his measly defiant progress into Rufus' face. He stopped, dropped, and leaned in the other direction for two stunner blasts to whip by.

Rufus' smile returned. He tilted his chin at John. “ You are quite persistent. I am impressed.”

John righted himself and pushed on. “ Yeah, I'm a pain in the ass that way.”

Rufus chuckled, a low, throaty sound that never ceased to make John's flesh crawl. “ Do you think I actually believe stunners alone to stop you?” Rufus said. “ It is a cold world, human, like the dead of winter. I can see you shivering from here, hear your teeth clack. You are cold, human. If you stay in that pit much longer, you will succumb to the cold and die.”

John smacked. “ Mmm, Sheppardcicle. Well, at least I'll be kept nice and fresh for the worms come summer.”

Rufus hissed. “ The more we incapacitate you, the less you move, and the less you move, the colder you become. It is only a matter of time, human.”

John turned his mouth up in a bitter grin, and his chest jerked in a single, breathy laugh. “ I'm impressed. Didn't think wraith could use big words like incapacitate. Bet you can't spell it though.”

Rufus stopped pacing to plant one foot on a stump tilting precariously toward the mud. “ You should save you breath human, it won't be much longer until it stops.”

Lift, push, lower. Lift, push, lower. Closer and closer. “ Well, that's the thing about us humans. We all have different degrees of tolerance. Plus movement kind of helps. Listen, I'll make a bet with you. I bet I can reach my gun before the cold shuts my heart off...” Lift, push, lower. “ No, better yet. I reach my gun, gun you guys in half, and make it to shore just as hypothermia sets in.”

Rufus chuckled again. “ Then I have already won.”

John's concentration on moving cost him. Another blast in the chest, and lights out.

sgasgasgasgasgasga

John was growing certain that multiples hits to the chest wasn't good for the heart. At least the unconsciousness didn't last long, or so he assumed since the sky had yet to descend toward dark. Then again, this world could have tortuously long days, just as Athos had short days. On awaking, John could barely move his cold-stiff limbs, or lift his throbbing, cracking head. The first two attempts had him dry heaving, and the third dropping his head back to the wood. He kept his head on the wood as he trudged on, feeling the cold intensify as the mud rose to his armpits. Now cold mud, he new for certain, wasn't good for the heart. His tak vest, jacket, and shirt helped to keep out most of the cold, but it was only a matter of time before the sludge seeped through the gaps in the apparel, soaking him with moisture.

He could barely feel his feet, which made progress slow when they slipped out from beneath him, and had him missing the traction of his boots. He felt like he was swimming through ice-cream.

If only.

Where the hell is rescue! He hadn't really pondered rescue, concentrating on moving as he had been, but the motion to move had become second nature, leaving him room enough to think. A jumper should have been here by now, or at least another team. Just because John chose to be the one to draw fire didn't mean he had every intention of dying. Actually, he tended to laugh in hysterical relief and joy when the calvary arrived.

“ You're wasting your time, human,” Rufus badgered.

John snickered ruefully. Again, he doubted zebras had to put up with being taunted by the lions. Then again, like he knew what the lions were saying when they surrounded the trapped zebra. The pity for a trapped, helpless animals was a given, especially if that animal was an infant. But at the moment, John's sympathy was going far deeper, becoming almost like rage. Rage against wraith, against lions, against hyenas, alligators and all predators in general. They were jerks, all of them. Nature's jerks. If John survived this, he was going to start a support group.

A tired chuckle hiccuped from John's throat. A support group made up of zebras, antelope, bison...

Except the only difference between him and those poor creatures was that he could fight back... if he could just reach the means to.

I refuse to be the zebra! Lift, push, lower, slip, crack on the chin, bite to the lip drawing blood. Crap!

The blast came from two fronts, behind and in front. John managed two thoughts before succumbing. One, that Bruno had bypassed dino-kitty and two, he still refused to be the zebra.

sgasgasgasgasgasgasga

John was having a hard time breathing. Combination cold, pressure from the mud against his chest, a stuttering heart, and all around pain had turned his panting into wheezing, obstructed rasps. Stuns, it seemed, had side effects for the lungs as well. But John pushed on, clinging to the wood like a man overboard lost at sea. Although he would have gladly traded the mud for viscous ocean. He was barely making progress, if he was making progress at all, but he couldn't tell with sensation stopping at just above his ankles. He must not have been gaining ground since his personal entourage of lions had yet to knock him back out. Peering over his shoulder showed him Bruno within firing sight, but still unable to get past the unstunnable dino-feline. Even the combined stun blasts of all three wraith had no effect. John would have hugged that cat if it wasn't so pissed.

Rufus just kept laughing at him, encouraging him to give up, and reminding him of the futility of trying. A pep-talker's worst nightmare.

“ You are failing, human,” Rufus prodded. “ The cold is devouring you, as is the mud. Why do you persist?”

John coughed. Congestion was forming. Whooptey freakin' do! . “ I already told you, I'm a pain in the ass that way. Besides,” he grunted when his feet slipped out from under him and his chin slammed into the plank. He started sinking, but pulled himself up using the wood. “ It gives me something to do.”

“ Do you honestly think you can make it?”

John shrugged, keeping his eye on the P-90. “ I kind of stopped thinking about it. Mostly I'll be content dieing in a manner that has nothing to do with you getting full. So you might as well kiss off. Unless you got a dart up your sleeve, I'm no ones lunch... or dinner... or whatever the hell meal time it is.” John stopped struggling to move and looked up to regard Rufus suspiciously. “ Why are you sticking around? Unless a dart comes or you come out here, you're not going to get me?”

Rufus smiled. “ Very perceptive, human. You are of Atlantis. Even if I cannot feed, observing your slow death will still prove satisfactory. I know of you, human. Have seen your face through the shared thoughts of my kind. You are the destroyer, the murderer of queens, a bane to our kind. I will take your carcass back to my queen, and your bones will be her trophy.”

John sighed wearily. “ I feel so special. Would your queen like my autograph while we're at it? 'To the wicked witch of the cosmos. Hope my rotting corpse stinks up the joint. All my loathing - Sheppard'. Something along those lines I think...” he gasped when his heart seemed to trip over itself. The beat was heavy, flaccid, as though the organ had over-tenderized itself on his bones. He couldn't quite fathom what his heart was doing or trying to do, and it was scaring him worse than being stuck in the mud surrounded by wraith. The muscles in his back, from his lower spine to his shoulders blades, wouldn't stop twitching out of time to the rest of his shuddering body. He gulped, steadying his breaths in hopes of steadying his fluttering heart.

Then he inched forward, agonizingly slow, his legs burning but his feet non-existent according to his brain.

“ I guess the important thing,” he panted, his breath unsteady in it course. “ Is that in the long run, I won't be eaten. Which counts for something if you think about it. Actually, it counts for everything. I bet the zebras think the same thing. 'Hey, I'm dying of dehydration. No munchies for the lions.' Of course all the lions have to do is wait until the mud dries to get to the corpse.” John stopped and smiled. “ Hey, I finally got one up on the zebras.”

Rufus lowered his eyelids in a glower. “ What are you babbling about, human?”

“ None of your freakin' business.” John resumed struggling, inching at a rate that a turtle could outrun, his heart struggling with him. “ Although on the downside, I never will find out how many licks it takes to get to the center of a tootsie pop, or who shot JR, or where Hoffa's buried, or if McKay finally gets to marry Colonel Carter (or at least meets some other nice blond genius 'cause you know how he likes blonds with brains). And I'll never get to read the last Harry Potter book, or see the rest of the movies. I was really getting into those. War and Peace... well, no real big loss there. I should have picked a shorter classic. Maybe a Tale of Two Cities. I read that in Highschool and can't remember a damn thing about it. Except for the guillotine. Lady Guillotine – still better than ending up wraith chow...”

Rufus snorted in disgust. “ You are losing your mind, human. Not long now.”

“ Actually,” John said, turning the wood from width-wise to length-wise, “ I was just distracting you so I could do this...” He tilted the wood down, enough to shove into the mud beneath the P-90, but enabling him to pull the wood up at the same time a drone fired. The gun slid into Sheppard's right hand just as the blast reached him, the beam splintering the top of the wood in an explosion of splinters. In the same move no longer than five heartbeats, John brought up the P-90 and fired, glancing over his shoulder long enough to make sure he struck Bruno and not the dino-cat. Bruno convulsed in the rain of bullets, then slumped forward, within dino-cat's reach. The beast's head shot out to snap up the upper half of Bruno's body and start shaking it like a dog with a rag. Bone snapped and crunched, and dino-cat downed Bruno as a seal would down a fish.

John swung his weapon about and started firing around his flimsy shield, which he eventually dropped at the sound of alarmed grunts. John waved the P-90 back and forth, filling all three wraith with as much led as the weapon possessed. The wraith staggered back until they finally fell. John stopped firing, but kept his weapon at the ready. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw dino-kitty's head arched his way, the green slitted eyes staring at him with wary hostility.

“ Nice kitty,” John placated. “ You play your cards right, avoid eating me, and I can get you out of this mess. We're in this together, pal, so no funny ideas.” John coughed. “ But first I gotta get out of my own mess.” But he didn't know if he could. Those last couple of inches had taken a lot out of him, and a haze of lethargy was trying to cloud his mind. It snapped back when Rufus sat up suddenly. Yelping, John filled him full of more bullets. He tried to back away, to get to shallower ground, but didn't move at all with his legs finally refusing to cooperate.

He just didn't have the strength.

John sucked in a shuddering breath. “ Rescue would be nice right about now.”

Time passed. One of the drones awoke, so Sheppard shot it. Then the other, so Sheppard shot that one. Rufus awoke twice more, and the second time around after turning Rufus' face into shredded hamburger, John's gun clicked empty.

John sighed heavily. “ Well, it was nice while it lasted.” Although none of the wraith had yet to awake since.

sgasgasgasgasgasga

John didn't sleep. He was trying not to. But his head had become too heavy for his neck, so he rested it on the remnant of wood. The day was finally showing signs of waning, going from gray to darker gray, to gray blue. Beside him, John's mud companion let out a long, trumpeting, and mournful wail that rose then died, over and over. Maybe it was calling to friends, calling for help, saying good-bye, or singing it's own lament.

John lifted a trembling fist. “ Sing it, my man... or woman. Whatever you are. Hermaphrodite maybe?” Coughing wracked John and ignited another round of muscle spasms in his back. The creature arched its head around, hissed, then resumed its singing.

“ If I'm dead by morning,” John said, “ and you get out. You have my permission to eat me. You deserve that much, and I'd rather not be some queen's house warming present.”

Oddly enough, what was irking John the most was that he'd only won half the bet.

sgasgasgasgasgasga

John peeled his eyelids apart when a new sound penetrated his awareness. The lulling singing had stopped, replaced by shrieks and hisses. The creature was looking up with back and neck arched, snapping at the air. John would have loved to have seen the cause for the ruckus, but didn't have the strength to move his head.

Suddenly, lights blinded him, lights from above, and a familiar hum made his body vibrate to the bone.

“ Colonel Sheppard!”

A human voice saying his name gave him incentive enough to turn his head as far as his neck would allow, then roll his eyes up at the jumper hovering overhead. The light was momentarily blocked by someone being lowered down in a harness.

“ Colonel Sheppard!”

John closed his eyes, grinned, and started chuckling. “ Took you long enough!” he shouted.

The marine in the harness raised his hand to tap the radio at his ear. “ He's alive and responsive. I repeat alive and responsive.”

“ Indeed I am soldier,” John breathed.

“ Colonel Sheppard, are you injured?”

John shrugged one shoulder. “ Probably. But I can't really tell at the moment. Get me out of this mud and let the good Scottish doc be the judge of that.”

“ Yes sir. I've gotta warn you though, sir, it's going to be a little... um... tricky.”

“ Define tricky.”

“ Involves acrobatics on my part.”

John snickered. “ Then acrobat away soldier.”

The soldier hadn't been kidding about the acrobatics. He maneuvered himself by swinging his legs up to wrap around the rope to be dangling upside down as he shouted to be lowered. When face to face with John, he shouted a halt, then pulled a second harness from his belt. Up close, the soldier looked to be in his mid twenties, with dark, military cut hair and a heavy build. The name on his vest read Lt. Cosington.

“ Any broken ribs sir?” Cosington asked.

“ Lieutenant, I can't even feel my ribs. I'm pretty much just a floating head with a pair of arms at this moment.”

Cosington had to literally get his hands dirty strapping on the harness around John's chest and under his armpits, which was as far as strapping went under the circumstances. “ That might be a good thing, sir, in case anything is broken.” Cosington pulled the straps of the harness tight. “ That should do it, but in case it doesn't, at least you have something soft to land in.”

“ I'd rather make this a one time thing, Lieutenant. So I'm making it an order that you don't drop me.”

Cosington gripped both of Sheppard's arms. “ Yes sir.” Then called to be hoisted up. John caught the whine of the hoist, then felt the pressure around his chest and beneath his arms increase when the rope went rigid. His body felt as though it were being pulled two ways, and he silently prayed that the mud didn't have a mind to take his pants. There was a kind of sucking slurp, and his body was out, his pants still intact and around his waist. Chunks of mud dropped from him to plop back into the pit. The cold became a little more distinct, but other than that he still had no real feeling from the chest down. His heart thudded with concern, then fluttered, causing his breath to hitch.

“ You all right sir?” Cosington asked.

To which John replied in a slight whimper, “No.”

On reaching the jumper bay, hands shot down to grab Cosington by the ankles and haul him in. Those same hands reached down for Sheppard once the Lieutenant was on board, and dragged him over the lip of the ramp onto the solid floor of the jumper. Cheers erupted as John was laid out on his stomach on the jumper floor. His position didn't last long when he was rolled over onto his back for the hands to start unstrapping his vest. He glanced around, and saw McKay's face hovering over him, along with Teyla, and Ronon sporting a dry, bloody cut over his eye.

“ Colonel,” Teyla said, eyes bright with worry, placing her hand on his head. “ Are you all right? Do you have any injuries?”

John snorted. “ Ask me that later.”

His vest was removed, then his jacket, and finally his sodden shirt peeled from him over his head to be tossed aside. McKay paled, rearing his head back.

“ Wow, that's... that's a lot of bruises.”

John lifted and turned his head enough to look himself over, and blanched. It was a lot of bruises, mottling his chest, a few on his stomach, the heaviest and darkest on his left side forming a shape very reminiscent of Italy – or maybe Florida. His right side was just as bruised, but not as dark, and definitely not shaped like Florida. John dropped his head back to the floor when his bruise collection was obscured by the blankets being draped over him.

“ What happened?” Teyla asked.

John sighed. “ Took on a hill and the hill won.” He then lifted his head again in time to see the bay doors sliding closed. John struggled into a sitting position, swatting the hands away trying to push him back down. “ Whoa, whoa, wait! Hold up! Don't leave yet. There's something you've gotta do first.”

“ What sir?” Cosington asked. John nodded toward the rope coiled on the floor.

“ How much weight can that line handle?”

sgasgasgasgasgasga

John used Rodney as a crutch since his own body wasn't putting up much of a fight to stay upright. He leaned his shoulder against Rodney's to keep the blanket clutched around himself, and McKay had his arm around John's waist to keep him from toppling the other direction. John craned his neck to watch the marines tie the rope into a slipknot lasso, then lower it down.

“ You know,” McKay said, scowling. “ There's really no reason for you to be standing. It's not like it's going to solve anything.”

John heard the hiss and roaring trumpet of the dino-cat. The two marines at the winch knelt before the lip of the ramp and began to maneuver the rope.

“ Got it!” Cosington shouted. McKay shook his head.

“ You're going kill us over a steroid popping lizard cat. This isn't exactly what I would call a 'getting the cute kitty out of the tree' scenario. That monster may very well have the means to fling this jumper into the hill. And if we don't blow up it means we're all getting a much unwanted mud bath.”

John, still shivering hard enough for his teeth to chatter, twitched his head. “ T-t-trust me, McKay. I know w-what I'm doing.”

“ Do we really know that? You could be delirious. And maybe we should sit down before...”

The jumper lurched like a stauled car, nearly knocking everyone off their feet. McKay reached out to the wall to steady himself, and John steadied himself against Rodney.

“ Yeah,” Sheppard said. “ Maybe we should.”

Both men dropped onto the bench, John wrapping the blanket tighter around himself and leaning forward. Cosington looked back at his CO, nervous but collected.

“ It got a little spooked sir. It'll keep pulling back when we pull forward.”

John nodded. “ I know,” then looked at the Satedan. “ Ronon. If you would. And keep your aim to the rear.”

Ronon nodded, rose, and went to the ramp with his gun. He aimed downwards and fired several shots set on stun.

“ Go now!” John shouted. The jumper moved forward, then jerked when the rope pulled. There came trumpeting cries, and Ronon fired two more shots.

“ It's moving sir!” Cosington announced. “ Getting closer to land...”

John heard the creature's hiss, and the jumper crept forward like an inch worm.

“ It's in the shallows, moving on its own,” called Cosington.

“ Stop moving! Cut it loose,” John called, rising without Rodney, getting his support from the wall. He moved to the back in time to see Cosington cutting the line and the rope dropping away. Looking down, the lights of the jumper illuminated the dino-cat as it clawed the rope from its neck, leaving it in a shredded coil, then taking off into the woods with mud clumps flying from its body.

John slumped against the wall with a smile of satisfaction. His heart stuttered, and felt strangely heavy in his chest, making his breath catch. His hand went to his chest, over his heart, feeling it pound through flesh and bone against his shaking hand. He would have slid to the floor, but strong hands caught him and raised him back to his feet. Ronon then gently guided John back to the bench. John dropped onto the seat beside Rodney, and Teyla moved from the bench across to sit beside John. Ronon handed her another blanket that she layered over the first, then wrapped both tightly around John so that he was cocooned and barely able to move.

John's breath hitched again when his heart thudded.

“ Colonel?” Teyla said.

John pressed his hand harder against his chest, as though doing so might actually take effect to steady his heart. “ I feel weird.”

John's team exchanged worried looks. Teyla put both hands on John's shoulders. “ Perhaps you should lie down.”

She rose, as did Rodney, and guided John to lie on his back with his legs drawn up. More blankets were draped over him, but no matter the number or the weight of them, his body had no heat to pool, so wouldn't stop shivering.

“ Uh, Sheppard?” said McKay as he tucked a blanket around John's legs. “ Where the hell are your shoes?”

Indescribably odd, cold, aching, tired, and nauseas as John felt, he couldn't help a silent, somewhat caustic, chuckle.

SGA

McKay explained everything. He and Teyla had gotten back to Atlantis, rounded up a rescue posse in two jumpers, and emerged back into the frigid swamp world for immediate confrontation with two darts that came in fast and firing. The fight had been a merry one, taking them halfway to the other side of the world until the two darts were finally dispatched. Jumper two was forced to return to Atlantis after taking damage, and Jumper one had followed the flashing dot on the HUD's LSD to Ronon, who'd tumbled down a steep hill into a (lucky him) mudless, waterless ravine too narrow for the jumper to get through and too deep to get Ronon by foot. Thus the utilization of a winch and harness system. Once Ronon was out and relatively checked over as being able to survive despite the head wound, they'd hovered over the swamp until a white dot had finally appeared – two white dots that had caused quite the panic.

John had the feeling most of the panicking had been handled by McKay.

John listened to Rodney's explanation for the late arrival, but harbored no specific reaction. He was a little too preoccupied with his going-toward-arrhythmic heart that felt as though it were stumbling like a runner on the last leg of a massive race. Heart attack came to mind, but that was usually preceded by pain in the left arm. Or at least that's what Sheppard had heard. He'd also heard of people having heart attacks and thinking they were only short of breath. He'd heard a lot of things about heart attacks, none of which proved helpful for determining what was going on with him at the moment.

Night and darkness had become absolute by the time they reached the gate and slipped through. The jumper eased out on the other side, rose into the bay, and immediately lowered its ramp. Never in John's life had he'd been so happy to see Beckett striding purposefully into the jumper. Not even being home filled him with so much relief, and without realizing it, said as much when the Highland doc came up to kneel beside him.

“ C-C-Crap, Doc, am I g-glad to s-see you,” John rasped.

Carson's hands froze in mid application of his stethoscope to his ears. He stared at John as though the man had developed a skin condition consisting of green warts.

John wrinkled his brow in growing consternation, wondering if he had sprouted some kind of funky skin problem. “ Doc?”

Carson twitched, snapping from his trance, and completing the act of putting the stethoscope to his ears. “ Uh... Sorry. Sorry lad.” Carson pulled back the mound of blankets just enough to expose John's chest for a listen to his heart. He didn't leave it long, and proceeded to move it slightly further down John's ribcage, when John grabbed his wrist to keep the stethoscope in place.

“ Wait, j-just wait. Y-You need to l-listen.” John could have sworn he was getting colder with each second that ticked by. Though if that were true, he would be dead by now. Trust to the powers of subconscious self deception to make things worse.

Unless he was getting colder, thanks to his now deranged heart.

Carson's brow lowered. “ Listen to what?”

John's heart stumbled, making his breath catch, and Carson's eyebrows shot up nearly reaching his hairline. “ Oh, that.”

John nodded breathlessly. “ Y-Yeah... that...”

Carson moved fast removing the stethoscope to drape around his neck. “ Let's get you into the infirmary before that develops into something neither of us will end up enjoying.”

sgasgasgasgasgasga

Carson moved even faster when in the infirmary. John made a mental note to – when possible – time Carson and his staff to see just how fast they really were when it came to stripping a patient down and slapping them into scrubs. Had to be between mere seconds and a minute for John to be out of the remnants of his muddy clothes, wearing scrubs, hooked to a heart monitor and I.V. with a warming blanket on top and a heating pad for the twitching, tense muscles of his back beneath. Somewhere within the transition from half-nudity to scrubs, Carson had probed Sheppard's ribs and chest, both men finding tenderness there, but John having to suffer the radiating pain of discovery.

John couldn't care less about his ribs at the moment, or getting X-rays. He watched Carson intently, worriedly, that worry betraying itself on his face, as the Scottish doctor kept the stethoscope pressed over John's heart.

Though the heating blanket and pad had only recently been applied, John had hoped to stop shivering by now. Or at least his teeth stop clacking at the speed of a rattle-snake's tail.

“ Well?” John pressed.

“ Well,” Carson replied. “ Ya said ya got hit with a stunner multiple times – back and front. Combined with the cold and anxiety, that could have put your heart under a considerable deal of stress. But I dunna think it's anythin' to be worryin' about. I know it feels uncomfortable, but it's not all that bad.”

John cocked a skeptical eyebrow. “ Not all that bad? Doc, every time it skips a couple of beats, I can't breathe.”

Carson removed the stethoscope to place back around his neck. “ Think of it this way, Colonel. When you were recoverin' from the retrovirus, you were pretty bloody weak. You recall moments where maybe ya lifted your arm, or sat up, and it left you breathless with your heart poundin'? But only for a brief moment?”

John rolled his eyes to the ceiling as he thought back. “ Yeah, a couple of times. Plus dizzy.”

“ That's basically what your experiencin' now, only without anythin' instigatin' it. Chances are it'll right itself within a few hours as your body warms and relaxes. If not, there's ways to remedy it, though you may not like some of 'em.”

John eyed Carson warily. “ Why wouldn't I like some of them?”

Carson shrugged nonchalantly. “ One method requires the use of a very mild electrical shock, sort of like a one time pacemaker, to get the heart back on rhythm.”

John swallowed and shrank deeper into the warming blanket. “ Like a mini-defib?”

“ Pacemaker, lad. Think of it like a pacemaker. But like I said, your heart should right itself. Same with the muscles in your back, though they may be a bit sore for a while. Although a few more jolts and there's no tellin' what that might have led to. Heart failure's my belief, even possible spinal damage. A body can only take so much electrical interference like that.”

John's heart thudded, making him gasp and the heart monitor speed for two seconds then slow. Carson patted John's arm. “ Rest, give your heart time to settle, then it's off to X-ray with ya. I didn't feel any breaks, but cracks can be bloody tricky to feel when they want to be.”

John nodded, and squirmed deeper into the blanket, averting his eyes to stare at the ceiling. Carson wandered off to attend to other matters, but within hearing range of the monitor, his accent – even in a mumble – always distinct and always close by. John's eyes started to slip close, until his heart stuttered, making them snap open, then slide close again. It was like a dance – or more appropriately like tug of war – with his heart snapping him awake but his bone-deep weariness pulling him back under. So he couldn't tell how far apart the thuds were.

Then the next time he awoke, it wasn't because of anything his heart did. It was to voices, garbled and crawling toward coherence as the dark fog lifted from his brain and his eyelids pulled themselves apart when the brain demanded to know the source for the intrusive yammering. When the fuzz cleared from his sight, he let his head loll to the left to see McKay and Dr. Weir standing beside his bed, talking in low voices. John rolled his eyes and shook his head. People had yet to learn that whispering was still talking, talking was noise, and noise wasn't conducive to good sleep.

“ I know this isn't the Ramada Inn or anything, but Carson should still consider investing in the creation of a few 'do not disturb' tags,” John mumbled. It was still audible enough for both Rodney and Elizabeth to turn abruptly in wide-eyed surprise.

“ John,” Elizabeth yelped. She had quite the talent of reestablishing quick composure, while Rodney continued to blink rapidly.

Elizabeth moved closer to John's bed with her arms folded and her lips quirked in a small smile. “ Sorry,” she said. “ Didn't think we were talking that loud.”

John moved his eyes to look at McKay. “ Some people haven't figured out that talking one octave lower isn't whispering.”

Rodney gave John a lazy look. “ And some Colonel's haven't figured out how to sleep through a pin being dropped. Seriously, Sheppard, is it my fault you're paranoid even when you're asleep?”

“ Cautious, McKay,” John replied. “ It's called being cautious. Besides, I get kind of curious when people start talking about me.”

Rodney folded his arms across his chest and smiled in challenge. “ You're hearing can't be that good, Colonel. Who said we were talking about you?”

“ In the infirmary, by my bed... I just put two and two together, McKay. Doesn't take a genius to do that.”

McKay, however, refused to relent. “ Still doesn't mean we were talking about you.”

“ Actually,” Elizabeth interceded, still wearing a smile, “ we were talking about you. Rodney was telling me about your insistence on saving a giant reptile cat.”

John narrowed his eyes at Rodney. “ Tattle-tale.”

Rodney raised both his hands palms in defense. “ Hey, I was just giving Dr. Weir my verbal report. And to prove my point that you are the type to risk all of our hides in the pursuit of rescuing kitty-cats.”

John snorted. “ That kitty-cat saved my butt, McKay. It was all I had between me and that first wraith. So pardon me for wanting to return the favor.”

“ And the risk of dumping us all into the mud?” Rodney countered.

John shrugged. “ It wasn't that strong.”

“ Oh give me a break, Colonel, it...”

“ Gentlemen!” Elizabeth jumped in. “ I don't think it really matters. You got the creature out, the jumper's in one piece, so in the long run... it's not really all that important.”

“ And I'll be throwin' ya out on your arse, Rodney, if ya keep agitatin' the Colonel,” came Carson's accented voice. The Scottish doctor passed between McKay and Weir to come up beside John's bed. Beckett placed his stethoscope to his ears and pulled back the warming blanket enough to slide the listening end down John's scrub shirt to press to his chest.

“ I wasn't agitating him,” Rodney sniped. “ He was agitating himself. The man doesn't know when to concede to defeat in an argument.”

John chuckled, Carson rolled his eyes, and Elizabeth had to turn away to hide her smirk from Rodney.

Carson shook his head as he moved the stethoscope about John's chest. “ Pot callin' the kettle black,” he mumbled.

Rodney narrowed his eyes. “ What?”

Carson sighed “ Nothin'.” He fell silent as he listened, pursing his lip and nodding. “ Well Colonel,” he said after a moment. “ Your heart's soundin' quite regular, so no need for the unwanted remedies.”

“ Unwanted remedies?” Rodney asked.

John shook his head. “ You don't wanna know, McKay.”

Elizabeth moved to be adjacent and a little behind Carson. “ How's the rest of him?” She asked.

Beckett moved the stethoscope lower to listen to John's breathing. “ A wee bit congested. The stunnings and the cold made him a tad vulnerable in the viral department, so he may be sportin' a brand-spankin'-new cold by mornin'. I still need to take him into X-ray, but I'm pretty certain if his ribs aren't cracked then their bruised in a very unpleasant manner...”

John's face twitched when the stethoscope moved to said bruised area. “ Tell me about it.”

“ Hypothermia was what had me worried, but it's at the bottom of the list of concerns at the moment seein' as how he's warmin' up nicely. And now that his heart is back on rhythm, I can safely say he's goin' ta be fine. Fine enough to rest away the cold in his quarters tomorrow so long as it doesn't turn nasty overnight.”

Elizabeth nodded. “ Always good to hear those words.” She then reached out to clasp John's knee. “ Up for a little story telling, Colonel?”

John opened his mouth, But didn't get even a noise out when Carson pounced. “ Oh no, not tonight. I need to get him into X-ray then I need him to rest, you can glean a report from him in the morning. Until then, I need ya all out.”

“ Yes mom,” Rodney said in a high, nasally voice as he turned and started heading for the door.

Carson glowered at the man's back. “ I heard that!”

Epilogue

John sneezed three time into the tissue – three massive sneezes that practically tossed his upper body forward, awakening the pains of his body to wail and gnash, especially in his back. He dropped back onto his bed with a groan and arms splayed. But he supposed he should be thankful for the lesser little evil that could have easily pumped itself up into becoming pneumonia. It was still a possibility that had Carson coming in every four hours to check John's lungs, but not enough of a possibility to keep him confined to the infirmary for observation. Either that or Carson was giving into leniency to spare himself the aggravation of a bored and persistent Lt. Colonel.

Knowing Carson, the latter was a bunch of crap. Carson was notorious for keeping patients in for observations over splinters and paper cuts. 'Ya can never be too cautious in an alien galaxy' had become his motto, and a very repetitive one at that.

John's upper body tossed itself up in another sneeze fit; only two, but explosive enough to expel the vast majority of the phlegm plus a third of his lungs. Plopping back, he moaned, coughed, and grimaced when it angered his bruised ribs. This was John's body's form of revenge for all the crap he'd put it through over the years. Effective in causing suffering, but harmless. Sneaky SOB, his body.

There was a tap at his door. John rolled his groggy head in the direction of the barrier, and coughed lightly a few times to clear his throat.

“ Come in.” His voice was pathetic, barely above a squeak as though his vocal cords were wrapped in cotton. The door slid open and McKay strolled in carrying a tray sporting a bowl of steaming soup, a glass of water, and a small plate holding two small vitamins.

“ And who's the lucky stiff you gets to serve you hand and foot for lunch?” McKay snapped. “ Me! The man susceptible to every disease known to man. Thanks to Carson's eloquent manipulation that allowed him to volunteer me for this task, I'm going to purposefully spread your delightful plague the moment I get it.”

John eyed the bowl uncertainly as Rodney set it down while simultaneously using it to shove snot-rags and empty water bottles off the small table. “ Rodney, you came by yesterday for Weir's private briefing. If you're not showing symptoms by now then I think it's safe to say you haven't caught it yet and might never catch it in the long run.” John wasn't sure if he could handle even soup. At the moment, his stomach was feeling a little full and upset by all the phlegm John hadn't been able to cough out.

“ Give it time. Then everyone'll be sorry.”

John grinned drunkenly. “ Promises, promises.”

Rodney pulled up the chair normally situated in the corner of John's room. “ They will, you mark my words.”

John sniffed and wiped his nose with the back of his hand, smearing it with snot and not caring. Rodney's face twisted in disgust and he grabbed several tissues to hold out to John.

“ At least have a little decency when guests are present.”

John took the tissues and wiped both his hand and nose. “ So you really hoping to catch this thing? Is that why you're not hightailing it out screaming like a little girl?”

“ First off, I would leave with dignity, not scream like a girl. Second,” he shrugged. “ Carson said a little conversation would help ensure you stayed put. You know, stay off the boredom and such? Honestly, the man's starting to see me as some kind of gopher. Teyla and Ronon were right there, so why the hell didn't he ask them? I'm a busy man, with things to do. I don't have time for idle conversation or sickness. I mean he knows I'm a hypochondriac, why would he do this...?”

John rolled onto his side, closing his eyes wearily. “ Rodney, know one makes you do anything. You came because you wanted to. However, since you will never admit to it, feel free to continue to deny it, just please don't go on about it. You won't have to stay long anyways.”

“ What, you kicking me out already?”

John had to force his eyes to open, and sucked in a deep breath that made him cough, causing his chest to jerk and his ribs to throb.

Rodney seemed to soften and sag. “ Oh. Yeah. Carson... uh... had mentioned something about not staying long. Just for the record, you look horrible. All pale and sunken eyed if you hadn't noticed.”

John's chest jerked, but this time in a single, silent laugh. “ I'm still able to use my bathroom, Rodney. I've caught sight of myself plenty of times. But thanks for pointing out the obvious.”

Rodney slapped his own knees. “ Always a pleasure. At least you're clean though, right? No more mud, especially in unsightly places...”

John narrowed his eyes dangerously. The mention of mud would soon go the way of the mention of bugs, except with reactions involving decking someone rather than reactions of discomfort, especially should jokes be involved.

John's illness must have enhanced his glare, because Rodney visibly paled.

“ Uh... You know, when you talked about... um, being in that situation... Funny thing,” he laughed nervously, then stopped, dropping both smile and pretensive humor. “ Okay, not really funny, kind of disturbing actually. You being trapped, surrounded by wraith, like some kind of...”

“ Zebra?” John interjected.

Rodney blinked in surprise. “ Yeah, actually. Kind of made me think of that movie, Swiss Family Robinson, when they saved that zebra from the mud. The poor thing surrounded by hyenas and leopards until the humans popped up to pull it out. Although it didn't have the fortune of a monster cat to protect it. Still...”

John started chuckling, but so softly that Rodney had yet to notice.

“ I mean that had to be terrifying. You see all those nature shows and some poor animal stumbling into a dried-up watering hole, struggling to get out with nowhere to turn. And it's always the babies. Always has to be the little, helpless newborns.”

John stopped chuckling, bristled, and replaced his smile with a scowl. “ Are you calling me a helpless baby, McKay?”

“ No,” McKay snapped back. “ But zebras in mud pits did kind of jump to mind when you talked about being stuck in the mud. Must be the hair...”

John started chuckling again, and now it was Rodney doing the bristling.

“ What? It's not exactly that funny, Colonel. Like it or not, you were pretty much helpless, and that was pretty freakin' too close of a call. If that giant cat hadn't been there, your other pit buddy could have sucked you dry. And what if we hadn't engaged with the darts? They could have scooped you right out of the muck for later feeding. It's no laughing matter, Sheppard, so I don't know what you think is so funny...”

John's laughter climbed until he was both laughing and coughing. “ You McKay,” he said, pointing a shaking finger at the physicist. “ You're just so freakin' predictable.”

McKay frowned, half-lidding his eyes. He reached out to place his hand against John's forehead. “ Still hot. You're obviously delusional. The helpless zebra's brain is fried.”

John stopped laughing and frowned back at McKay, narrowing his eyes back to dangerous. “ McKay, have you ever been to a petting zoo? Not the kind with all the farm animals, but the exotic kind with giraffes and llamas?”

McKay kept his hand on John's forehead, turning it from palm to back, then back to palm. “ I've been to one of those drive-through wildlife parks.”

“ Ever pet the zebras?”

Rodney reared his head back. “ Are you kidding? Hell no! They bite.”

John smiled wickedly, and Rodney's eyes rounded over.

“ You wouldn't.”

“ Delusional, remember? I'm capable of a lot of things right now.”

Rodney snatched his hand back to curl at his side. Free of the hand, John pushed himself up with a grunt and grimace against the pull of aching muscles and bones into a sitting position on the edge of his bed. He took the tray in both hands, and carefully set it on his lap, then took the spoon to begin swirling the chicken broth until the noodles surfaced. He gathered a small amount of liquid and two noodles onto his spoon, holding it long enough to let it cool a bit.

“ You'd be surprised what zebras can do,” he said, “ when backed into a corner.” He leaned forward and took a bite, slurping a little for effect. He pointed at Rodney with the now empty spoon. “ We're persistent that way.”

The End

A/N: Hope you all enjoyed. It was fun to write. And yes, Swiss Family Robinson played a small part in the inspiration. Nature shows too. And zebras. I went to a petting zoo where you were allowed the pet the zebra. Then came the sign.













Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Crash - SGA

- SGACrash
Sequel to Buzz
By Stealth Dragon
Rating – pg
Disclaimer – I own this like I own a million bucks and a Corvett – which I don't. I could go for the million bucks though.
Synopsis – In which Sheppard demonstrates the problems of mixing medications.

SGA

Ring of Fire. Burning Ring of Fire. That lovely little Johnny Cash ditty ran circles in Sheppard's mind. It was an easy means of thinking warm thoughts, and a far superior song to get stuck in the head than that Sesame Street theme song about sunny days. How that even got drilled into his skull to begin with, John had no idea.
The heat of the sun absorbing into the bare skin of his back had Sheppard pulling in a contented breath. An unyielding rock surface pressed into his sternum and ribs as a result, but like hell he was moving. Flat, warm rock warming his chest, sun warming his back – something soft and relenting would have made it heaven, but warmth was warmth and he was a man who took what he could get without complaint. He lifted his head from his arms to turn it the other direction before his neck solidified into a crick he'd never pull out of. A small, fluffy weight warming the area of his spine between the shoulder blades twitched but remained fixed in the exact same spot. John inhaled cedar-scented air, and exhaled with a sigh.
Cedar-like scent. The trees had an uncanny similarity to pine and spruce, just without the pleasant smell so coveted by air-freshener companies.
The fluffy weight moved. John could feel it uncoiling, shifting, probably stretching. A long tail of fur tickled his back when the weight recoiled to face the other way. John grinned. He'd admit to Rodney's observation – Sherbet had a lot of cat in him. But there was enough dog to make it more like a hybrid and, possibly, the world's ultimate pet. King of pets, actually. It was every conceivable pet rolled into one with the exception of anything with wings.
John was a grown man. He wasn't supposed to admit to such opinions, but the little beast was undeniably cute. Not that he would ever say it out loud. And not within hearing range of McKay.
The perfect pet, the kind that would have little girls squealing with delight. Size of a kitten, with rabbit-soft fur colored bright orange and striped in yellow and red, and a prehensile lemur-like tail, extra long for such a tiny body. It had a kit fox face – small snout, huge ears, and button eyes. Afghanistan had familiarized John with kit foxes. The timid little rat-dogs, normally shy, were quick to lose inhibition when food was tossed to them. Yes, they were all precious when they darted from holes to snatch bread chunks thrown to them, but not so precious when in the morning packs and MREs were shredded and bits of food scattered to attract the mice later on. Little snots.
Sherbet had no inhibitions. Day one of coming to this world and Sherbet had poked his little nose out from behind a stump. Two seconds later, he was bounding about their camp, sticking that same nose into sleeping bags and sacks. Five minutes later it was rubbing up against everyone's leg, purring. Animals could be such devious plotters. It had known, John could have sworn it had known, that its feline attributes would be the melting point for McKay's rock-solid heart. Leg rubbing led to McKay breaking the rule he normally clung to and pushed for so adamantly – don't feed the alien animals. McKay started the feeding with bits of power bar. Five hours later and fate was sealed. The little cat/dog/rodent the locals called a Mir'ka took up residence curled in Rodney's lap, and John caught a glimpse of what McKay must have been like as a kid – or at least a vague shadow of it.
And thus attachment was complete. Except with Ronon. The man had no concept of 'pets'. McKay worried about waking up and finding the adorable rat roasting on a spit.
McKay called him Herbert. Herbert! What the hell kind of name was that? A wraith name. In fact, John had been contemplating naming their next acquired wraith prisoner Herbert. The bright coloring screamed Sherbet, like Sherbet ice-cream. John wasn't normally one for cute names, but Killer and Black-hawk would have been the instigator of non-stop laughter, giving John the look of a man trying too hard to maintain masculinity.
Two days after meeting, and Sherbet might as well be the fifth member of the team. Integration had been flawless, as though the Mir'ka had always been around. The locals weren't surprised. The vast population of Mir'kas were domesticated because the kids liked carrying the babies around. It was when the Mir'kas got older that interest was lost. Typical, very typical, in any galaxy apparently.
Mir'kas would have no problem remaining owned on earth. Their perpetual kitten size wouldn't allow anything else.
It took effort for John to peel his own eye lids apart. He blinked until the world focused into solid forms and colors. Breezes made the branches bend, creak, and leaves whisper like ocean waves. John rolled his eyes up to the canopy and sunlight glittering through the green. Birds were birds no matter the planet, singing with high-pitched twittering from distant places, though something seemed to be trilling, and something else wailing like a loon. Not bad sounds, really. Pleasantly lulling when he didn't listen to them directly. The breezes were a problem when they brushed him. The temperature had to be a good eighty verging toward ninety, but John's body seemed intent on making it feel fifty going on forty. He would have left his shirt on except that he was tired of the remarks concerning him being the Stay Puff Marshmallow Man's scrawny cousin, the ghost of Atlantis, the reject from Dawn of the Dead, and whatever else McKay came up with that John couldn't recall.
John's eyelids slid closed on their own volition, and he shivered when another breeze snaked around him. He would get color back to his skin even if it killed him – or turned him beet red.
Footsteps crunched their way toward him over a pine and twig-littered ground, but knowing the source, he was inclined to keep his eyes closed. Opening them was too much work.
“ Jeez, Colonel. Have you no modesty? Put your shirt back on. No one wants to see your ribs.”
John smiled. “ Jealousy, McKay, is an unsightly virtue to have and behold.”
Three, two, one...
The anticipated snort sounded. “ Oh, yes Colonel, I'm just so enraged that you have such a skeletal physique and I don't.” He snorted again for round two. “ You look like... like... a pencil, Colonel. Anyone ever tell you that?”
“ You just did.”
“ And you're welcome.”
John's chest spasmed in a silent, breathy chuckle. “ Shut up McKay.”
“ When pigs fly.”
“ Then find me a catapult and a pig.”
John pictured perfectly Rodney's responding scowl, and chuckled again, breast bone pushing into the flat striated rock face uncomfortably.
“ Are you unwell, Colonel?”
John pulled one eyelid open to the worried visage of Teyla kneeling beside the rock. It took a moment for the other eyelid to follow. “ Fine,” he replied. He lifted his head and moved his arms to push himself up. The motion took a moment to disrupt Sherbet. John felt the fuzzball stir, going from a solid mound of fluff against his spine to four tiny paws light on his skin. Sherbet leaped from his back to the rock and proceeded to rub up against his wrist.
Getting up was far more of an ordeal than opening his eyes. His arms shook, his joints complained in dull aches, and his head felt three sizes too big for his neck. So he thought screw this and lowered himself onto the rock, slowing to turn onto his back and let the sun warm his chest. Sherbet rubbed up and down along John's right ribcage, digging his head in, smacking John in the face repeatedly with the hairy, ropey tail on each turn. John spat fuzz and swatted at Sherbet's tail. That, in turn, instigated Sherbet to join in the game by dropping onto his side and pawing at his own tail-tip, yipping and grunting.
“ Are you sure?” Teyla pressed. John rolled his head sideways to look at her.
“ Teyla, it was just strep throat. I'm fine now, not even contagious anymore. Beckett cleared me, it's all good, and if it wasn't I wouldn't be here.”
“ But you are still taking medication...”
John flopped his hand in the air dismissively. “ Precaution. Sometimes it likes to make a comeback. No big deal.”
“ But the other medicine...”
“ It's just a muscle relaxant in case my back acts up again. Precaution, Teyla. The key word is precaution. I'm fine. So I'm having a hard time getting up. It's comfortable here, warm, quiet. No antiseptic smells, no heart monitor, no I.V. Crap, Teyla, it's the best sleep I've had in days. And I think that tea you're having me drink is really doing the trick. My head isn't doing that in-time tempo to my heartbeat. Hell, I haven't felt this relaxed since... um... since...”
“ Ever?” Rodney piped. “ That's because you're doped half way to the other side of this planet and back again.” McKay materialized beside Teyla, standing – and on the rarest of occasions – actually towering over the prone John. He leaned in with hands planted on his knees. John pulled his head back, then had his upper body follow.
“ McKaaaayyyy? What the hell are you doing?”
“ Checking your eyes, seeing if they're dilated.”
“ Personal space, McKay. Ever heard of it? I tend to take mine seriously... Where's Ronon? I need him to man-handle you out of it.”
McKay had his neck fall limply sideways, and smiled tightly. “ Relax. You should be used to this by now. In fact...” Rodney's hand went straight for John's forehead, but John blocked it with a well-timed and well-practiced swat.
“ Not even! I'm fine, get over it. Teyla, help me up.”
He lifted his hand for Teyla to grab, and with her aid rose to a sitting position on the rock. Beside him, Sherbet had given up on the game of grab the tail to start bounding about in a circle, making happy little 'yeeping' noises. John shivered and grabbed his shirt crumpled beside him to yank it on. The act of sitting, and redressing, seemed to make his heart thud a little heavier. He waited a moment, catching his breath, before rolling off the rock and onto his feet. Sherbet widened his circle and would have 'yeeped' contentedly like that all day if Rodney hadn't gathered him, letting the mini-furball scuttle up to his shoulders to rub along the physicist's neck, purring.
Ronon was by the fire pit, stoking it and tossing on more wood. Beyond the fire was the little stone hut that was the team's 'cabin', with an itchy looking thatched roof that probably couldn't even keep out bird crap. But, really, no different than a cheap tent. John lowered himself onto one of the logs serving as a seating arrangement and held his hands out to the fire. Circulation wasn't his friend today. Turtles moved faster than his blood.
When the flames were licking the air, Ronon set a metal grate on the two larger stones either side of the small ring of rocks. On top of the grate was place a pot full of water and an iron pan that Ronon tossed chunks of meat and vegetables into from the small blue cooler.
John smiled wistfully. He loved camping. Never mind that they were doing so because the locals didn't trust them enough to let them stay in their village. The place smelled anyways – animal musk and something inexplicably more pungent than that. Stepping into that place was the one time the body didn't mind the prospect of suffocation. Out here, in the woods smelling softly of cedar, the only thing pungent was the fire – and the meat eventually, but that was more pleasant. It took John for a mental skip down memory lane, to childhood and such, and days spent with his grandfather out in the woods of norther California, even all the way up to Washington. All that was missing was a glassy lake and mosquitoes. The evening chill was present, except it wasn't evening, it was afternoon. And it was a warm afternoon, his body just had yet to tell the difference. He would have stood and walked around to get the blood flowing, except that he was comfortable. No use losing that for circulation that would decrease the moment he sat back down.
He saw Teyla out of the corner of his eyes sitting on the log next to him and holding something out on the tips of two fingers. John looked over to see his jacket, then looked at her with a raised eyebrow.
“ Touching your hand was like touching ice,” she said. “ You really should be more mobile, Colonel.”
John took the jacket and pulled it on. An improvement, especially with the fire warming the front of him. He scrubbed his hand through his hair and yawned before he spoke. And when he did speak, he laid on the sarcasm thick.
“ Gee, I would if the camp didn't need my protection and all. What the hell is up with that, anyways? Any luck convincing Odran I have no intention of 'looting' his precious collection of crap?”
“ He's had many bad experiences with soldiers from other worlds,” Teyla reminded. “ Our separation is only for a time. Odran promised.”
John pulled a Rodney snort. “ Yeah, promised. As in ' saying what needs to be said to keep the nasty soldier from being annoying.'” He looked at McKay, crouched before the fire, poking the meat and vegetables with a fork, sporting an expression of uncertainty. John leaned in toward Teyla.
“ You even warn him about McKay's occasional sticky fingers?”
“ I heard that,” Rodney snapped. Sherbet yeeped, and continued rubbing. “ But if you feel quite inclined to ruin this scientific opportunity, do it at the banquet tomorrow. Odran and that mayor guy, what's his name,” McKay snapped his fingers repeatedly and Sherbet pawed at them. “ Vron! Yeah, Mayor Vron. And their priest Hyran, Hyron...”
“ Hyreen,” Teyla corrected.
“ Yeah, whatever. Head honcho for their religion/cult thingy. They've set up some kind of banquet, loaded with officials. Peace treaty celebration or something like that.”
John's heart dropped uncomfortably like a rock at this news. “ Wow. Sounds like quite the dinner party. Sure I'm invited? Maybe it's just me feeling sorry for myself but I got the impression Odran and the rest of the town folk were a little insulted by my presence.”
“ You are just feeling sorry for yourself,” Rodney sniffed.
John's jaw clenched. “ McKay, some of them spit on me.”
“ Which is one of the reasons for this banquet,” Teyla said. “ To come to know us better. This banquet is a sign that they are beginning to trust us, though we still have a ways to go. Perhaps afterwards they may be more open to both you and Ronon, and invite you both with us to the old temple.”
“ Sure Odran isn't looking for ways to get me in spitting range?” John murmured. He started rubbing the side of his jaw thoughtfully. He needed to earn some trust points in order to accompany Rodney and Teyla to the temple. He didn't care much for the people – it was the planet he didn't trust – and a divided team was an ineffective team should the wraith come a'cullin'. Especially so since once in the temple, long-range communication became precarious, and the only way Sheppard was ever going to know if there was trouble was if either Rodney or Teyla kept screaming non-stop.
So if this banquet thing worked to their favor, it might just be worth putting up with Odran's negative innuendos concerning soldiers and low I.Q.s.
“ Put up with it Colonel,” Rodney stated dryly. “ This isn't just another Indiana Jone's temple run that may or may not uncover something. This temple contains a lot of Ancient information, including possible locations for possible outposts that could very well contain ZedPMs. So if we want to continue having free access, then it'll be up to all of us to play nice with the locals. Got it?”
John feigned a grimace. “ Then you'd better pretend you're sick, McKay, or we're screwed.”
Rodney turned his heavy lidded gaze on John. “ Actually, Colonel, the locals like me just fine. It's you that better be a good doggie or Weir won't hesitate to order Beckett to whip out the big needles on you. Paranoid snots or not, Sheppard, we need these people's help. My advice – just keep your mouth shut and play the part of the dim-witted soldier to their liking.”
John ground his teeth, sifting through his myriad of come-backs and insults. He settled for quick and easy, and let loose a shrill whistle.
“ Sherbet, come'ere boy!”
Sherbet yeeped and leaped from Rodney's shoulder only to be snagged by the physicist half-way down. “ His name is Herbert!” Rodney growled, placing the Mir'ka back on his shoulders. It didn't stop John's smug smirk of vindictive satisfaction.
SGA
“ Colonel. Hey, Colonel!”
John snapped his eyes open, sucking in a lungful of air. He curled as tightly as he could deeper into the sleeping bag, but his body heat seemed practically non-existent, and he shuddered.
“ Colonel, what the hell? Did you even ever get up this morning? What if there had been an emergency?”
John blinked back sleep film and rolled his head to be staring up at the irate face of McKay. At least John thought it looked irate. The film was thick this morning... noon... afternoon. He recalled waking up when the others did, having breakfast, sitting by the fire, going numb with boredom, then crawling back into the sleeping bag when he'd toppled to the ground, twice, half-asleep.
When blinking proved fruitless, John pulled his hand from the slightly warmer confines of the sleeping bag to rub both eyes using thumb and fingers.
“ What time is it?” John groaned.
“ Time to haul your skinny butt out of happy-land and slap yourself awake. The banquet's in an hour. Plenty of time to stop looking like you've been surviving the wild and start looking more presentable.”
John sighed heavily, and speaking of heavy, his bones must have gained a few pounds if that were possible. John slipped his led-weighted body from the sleeping bag and shivered.
“ You fell asleep in your jacket!” Rodney practically whined. He was never good about sounding as irate as he looked, but could shriek to make a banshee jealous. “ Colonel, it's like eighty degrees outside. Oh! I knew it. You're still sick, aren't you!”
John was starting to wonder that. Being cold, aching – all the proper signs. He flinched in alarm when Rodney pressed the back of his hand to his forehead. The physicist tilted his head to the side in confusion.
“ Ooookaaaayyy? Maybe not. No fever. Actually you're like ice. See? This is why naps aren't all they're cracked up to be. Bet it's that tea. Go splash some cold water on your face and walk around before the villagers see you and think the dead are walking the world. They just actually might believe it.”
John did another sigh and ran his fingers through his hair -the farthest he ever went in terms of taming it. He slapped his boots on and headed – more like lurched rather drunkenly – from the hut to the stoked fire. The need to sit was torturous, and he stared at the log seats with longing as he stood by the fire and warmed his hands. Sherbet was at his feet, rubbing up against his boots while purring.
“ Hey pip-squeak,” he murmured drowsily. Sherbet took up bounding circles around John, yeeping.
Teyla was sitting on a log on the other side of the fire, watching John steadily. “ You have been sleeping much, Colonel. Are you sure you are well?”
John yawned until his jaw popped. “ Oh yeah. McKay just did a head check. No fever. Could just be the massive boredom's finally taking it's toll. Seriously, this banquet better be worth it. I need something to do besides keeping alien ants out of the food.”
Having his hands out before him had them shaking for the whole world to see. He snatched them back and shoved them into the pockets of his jacket. This was getting strange, and if he wasn't careful, he might end up agreeing with Rodney about the tea after all.
SGA
Sheppard was up to something, probably hiding something again, namely a wound or alien disease with a fever antithesis to the norm. It wasn't that far to the village, and not only was Sheppard not taking the lead, every time Rodney glanced back he saw the Colonel's breathing becoming more of an effort for him.
The usual plan of action for a situation like this was to wait until Sheppard finally collapsed. Normally by then Rodney's anger was replaced by terrified worry, but it always managed to make a come-back once said crisis was over with. This time around, however, Rodney would act fast. The moment the Colonel dropped, Rodney would spout a string of curses and insults concerning self-sacrificing numb skulls too macho-centered to know when to call it quits and admit to infirmity. It would serve him right, and not get interrupted by Beckett wanting to join in.
It might have been a shallow thing for Rodney to think, but he honestly hoped the crisis would either happen now or wait until after the banquet. Preferably before. Sheppard was starting to look a shade pale, and Rodney doubted that illness would work too well in getting the locals to grant Sheppard leniency. Soldiers of any planet really didn't sit well with these people. They had a nasty history of being invaded by those under the pretense of being 'peaceful explorers.' They'd only opened up to the Atlanteans since there was only four of them, and McKay had agreed to their terms despite Sheppard's polite protest. Perhaps after all this Sheppard might be allowed to accompany them to the temple and stop his whining, but Rodney doubted they would ever be allowed a stay within the city walls.
No love loss there. He could smell the place from the camp when the wind's direction was just right.
“ Colonel Sheppard,” said Teyla. “ Are you sure...”
“ Yes,” John snapped. “ Fine. Positive. Just... a little drowsy. Think I shouldn't have taken that pain pill.”
Rodney rolled his eyes even though Sheppard was too far behind to see it. “ You think?”
“ Shut up, McKay. I had a crick in my neck that was killing my head. You want me to keep my mouth shut? Better drowsy than biting people's heads off because they yap too much which – I know you don't realize it – but these people are quite adept at doing. Probably even better than you.”
Sheppard probably was in some kind of pain, because he was really starting to push it. Even worse, they were coming up to the village. Rodney could see the high walls of brown and yellow striped flagstones. Nothing like walking into a soldier-hating town trailing a pissy Colonel in the rear. Rodney could envision the pitch-fork waving mobs in the near future. He was so using the Colonel as a shield if it came to that.
Some sort of trumpet blared, and the massive metal gates groaned open. Odran was there – Rodney's height and round with a paunch stomach and hair receding so far back there was barely any left. He was dressed in a kind of long, copper robe adorned in white thread stitched to look like leaves or something. Beside him was the Mayor, Colonel Sanders white hair and white beard, dressed in a kind of gray leather jacket with gray slacks and a white shirt. Next to him was that priest guy, also wearing a robe, this one red, orange and gold. He was tall, thin, and severe looking with his hairless head covered by a kind of silver cap. He held a staff crooked at the top with a bell dangling from it that chimed with every slight breeze and minor movement from palsied hands.
Rodney greeted them with the customary head bow, and the three men returned the favor. Odran then approached Rodney with outstretched arms.
“ Dr. McKay, welcome.” He didn't embrace Rodney, just pat him on the back. He nodded to Teyla and Ronon, and completely ignored Colonel Sheppard.
“ We welcome you to this pinnacle occasion. A celebration meal over our new alliance.”
New alliance as in 'you haven't tried to kill us yet, so let's party.' But Rodney McKay had yet to ever be one to pass up a free meal. They entered the town with its dirt streets and neat little box buildings. Rather third world, the kind with bits and pieces of something advanced, such as electric lights and something akin to bicycles. Opposite that were the ugly vulture/chickens running through the streets, along with various other kinds of livestock and a few critters like Herbert – except smaller. Herbert, who had been simultaneously following while running circles around the team, had taken up residence on Sheppard's shoulders, tail erect and fur bristling. Apparently, the territory spawned bad memories, or he just didn't like the look of all the other animals.
The three men led the way through the various streets to a kind of open pavilion where a long wooden table was set. When they arrived, servants pulled out the chairs for everyone to sit. There were others present, most likely officials by their bright robes and more tolerable smell, a few the spouses of the team's three hosts. The three men sat on the left, the team on the right across from them, and as soon as they were settled, more servants arrived carrying wooden plates of various meats, fruits, and vegetables along with glass decanters in a rainbow array of assorted drinks.
Sheppard ended up, somehow, by McKay, which immediately had his nerves singing an unpleasant tune. Teyla was next to him, and Ronon on her other side. Servants spooned a little of each food onto the smaller plates, then set out the eating utensils and cups. Drinks were poured, some odd pray in some odd language was murmured by the priest, and folks began digging in.
“ Dr. McKay, this really is quite a marked day,” said the mayor in his joyless, scratchy voice. “ To have such peaceful interactions after so long, and them being residents of the great Ancestral city. This is beyond an honor.”
The secondary reason for the better reception – For some, snubbing one from the Ancient city had the equivalent of tossing a billionaire out of ones home. Thanks to the wraith, too many once technologically advanced cities had been reduced to pauper poor places verging on dumps, desperate to regain what they had lost. And as long as it didn't turn into another Genii fiasco, there was no reluctance to sharing. Of course, since an Ancient gene was required to work most of the Ancestor goodies, sharing normally involved weapons, better farming techniques, and aid in surviving a cull.
“ It is even more of an honor,” Odran jumped in. The man was high-strung and excitable to a point that made Rodney feel calm and collected. “ That you have come to aid us in the translation of the old temple. Too many have had other intentions in mind, as I have told you. And the headway we are achieving is remarkable. You are quite skilled in the Ancient language.”
Smiling while slicing a piece of meat with the side of his iron fork, Rodney actually had to look away for a moment to hide the fact that he was blushing. “ Well, it was more of a necessity than a skill. But translating the wall markings has been helping me to build the skill up better. It really is quite fascinating, all the history. Oh um, please don't take this the wrong way, but none of this food was soaked in any of that acidic, sour juice we talked about?”
Odran beamed. “ Of course not, Dr. McKay. We are not fond of sour foods. Please, Dr. McKay, could you repeat the story of what became of the Ancestors for the mayor? We only know of the legends concerning the victory of the wraith.”
McKay nodded and talked around a mouth full of meat. “ Of course...” It really was good food. The meat was tender, the vegetables crisp. Rodney saw out of his peripheral vision Ronon bent over his plate, shoveling, and Teyla taking more refined bites.
That left Sheppard, low and behold already causing trouble by doing nothing more than pushing the food around his plate. And it didn't go unnoticed. The priest guy was giving Sheppard a look that really should have had a hole burning through the Colonel's skull and exploding into flames.
Rodney elbowed Sheppard in the ribs. Sheppard's head snapped up with a start, which startled Herbert who slipped from his shoulders with a yelp, only saving himself by clinging to John's back. Rodney cleared his throat to continue on with the abridged history lesson.
When finished, the priest shook his head sadly – or as sad as a face like his could get. Really he looked more as though he were scowling. “ Such a terrible tragedy. It causes one to reflect – if the great Ancestors could not defeat the wraith with all their power, what hope have we?”
Rodney shrugged nonchalantly. “ Hey, if we can drive them back, I'd say there's hope. On our world, we've had to deal with a pretty nasty enemy but... we've managed.”
“ Only to have someone else come leaving flaming bags of destruction on our doorstep,” Sheppard mumble, taking a bite of meat using his fingers. Rodney elbowed him again, harder.
The mayor leaned forward. “ W-what did he say?” Rodney started to wonder if the man was old enough to be an Ancestor himself.
Rodney glared threateningly at Sheppard, who was paying about as much attention to him as the food he was chewing. In fact, nothing was getting the Colonel's attention. His eyes were glassy, vacant, with eyelids going heavy. Rodney's heart pounded in a combination of nerves and fury. He dug his elbow sharper into Sheppard's ribs, which produced a better reaction when Sheppard stared bullets at him.
“ Um,” Rodney stuttered. “ Nothing, he didn't say anything. He hasn't been sleeping well so my say stuff for no reason. Don't pay him any mind. So... What were we talking about?”
Herbert managed to return to his perch on Sheppard's shoulders, curling up against the back of the Colonel's neck. When the plates were empty (with the exception of Sheppard's, earning stern and unfriendly scrutiny from all three officials) they were removed to be replaced by bowls full of some kind of sweet-smelling green soup.
“ It is a delicacy,” Odran explained, picking up his spoon to swirl the creamy liquid. “ Clamanny soup. Although it's not really a soup but a kind of dessert. Difficult to make but very worth the effort.”
Rodney took a sip. It tasted like roasted pineapple and banana with whip cream flavor – not bad at all.
“ What is the Ancestral city like?” the priest asked between sips.
“ Huge,” Rodney replied. “ It...” he caught, in time, Sheppard's head dropping to his chest. Alarmingly, so did Odran and the priest. Rodney elbowed Sheppard and he jerked awake, glancing around in confusion until able to mentally reorient himself.
Now it was Odran doing the bullet-glare at Sheppard. “ Do you not find the soup to your liking, young man?” he queried with a lifted eyebrow.
Sheppard blinked numbly. “ Uh... No, no... it's, um... fine.” To prove it, he took a sip, smacked, and smiled. “ See?”
“ Then it must be our conversation that dulls your senses so. I apologize that it does not concern such topics as war and the various ways to gut a man.”
Sheppard's hand gripped the spoon until the knuckles went bone white. He pressed his lips into a firm, hard line, and his throat moved in a tight swallow.
“ I'm just a little tired. Hard work trying to protect a camp,” he ground out. Rodney stiffened, and reconnected his elbow to Sheppard's ribs – five times. Sheppard, however, was off on another plane of existence, one consisting entirely of fighting back rage.
Odran sniffed and turned his attention to swirling his soup before taking another sip. “ Yes, well, I apologize for the lack of any blood to be shed. Really, if you wish, we could offer up some of our sick and wounded livestock for target practice, if that would stay your boredom.”
Now John's jaw was working to grind his teeth hidden behind his sealed mouth. He looked down at his soup, and with a shaking hand dipped the spoon into the sweet sludge, brought it up, and shoved it in his mouth.
McKay was starting to feel bad for John. The man was trying, honest to goodness trying, not to screw this up. Granted it was fun to badger Sheppard, but what Odran was doing was nothing more then him establishing himself as a grunt-hating jerk, as well as shoving superiority in John's face. John was a soldier, therefore had to be the good little pup and obey commands. What was even worse, Odran didn't know when to quit, and not even Sheppard's arsenal of dirty looks could stop him.
McKay thought fast to diffuse the situation. “ Uh... let me tell you about... um... how we came to find the Ancestors. It was actually all his doing,” he jerked his thumb at Sheppard. “ Just dropped his skinny butt in a chair, and next thing we know, here we are. But that's not the half of it...”
He had wanted to talk of their first days in Atlantis – which would involve how the wraith came to be rudely interrupted from their century long nap - but caught himself in time. McKay wasn't good about omitting details, and Sheppard didn't need provoked hatred added to the unprovoked prejudice continually being dumped on him. So he skipped all that to tell about time traveling and how it had saved the city and their expedition. The story had them enthralled, so much so they didn't see Sheppard dropping off again.
Until he literally dropped. He tilted forward, inch by inch, then suddenly pitched to go diving face first into the soup, toppling from the chair, and sliding from the table taking the bowl with him. His hand shot up to grab the edge of the table, and gradually he raised his head, peeking sheepishly over the top, face green, hair green, and Hebert shaking green droplets from his fur.
John pulled himself back into his seat, head down, which siphoned more drops onto the table. The pavilion was dead silent – a cricket could have died and they all would have heard it's gasping choke. The three officials were gaping, as was Rodney and Teyla. Ronon just had both eyebrows raised. Time halted for an uncountable number of seconds before Sheppard reach out tentatively to take a cloth napkin and wipe his face.
“ S-sorry,” he whispered. He tried for an abashed smile, which faded when the gapes morphed into death glares.
McKay's fingers twitched to satisfy the need of throttling. But all in good time.
SGA
There was an actual effort involved in keeping Rodney's fingers from wrapping around the Colonel's neck during the dead-silent trek back to the camp. Just one quick squeeze to cut off the air supply, scare the hell out of Sheppard, and weaken him enough to be more of a match when the inevitable fist fight would ensue. Rodney had to satiate sadistic needs by giving Sheppard the occasional shove when he began to slow down, and return the man's annoyed glares with his own laser-sharp, heavy-lidded gaze of fury.
Sensing the tension, Herbert had taken to hiding within Sheppard's jacket, mewling. The scent of roasted pineapple was a heavy, not-so-pleasant and quickly souring perfume on the both of them.
Rodney let his rage simmer toward boiling point. He needed it hot enough for a proper tirade, the kind that would have even impenetrable fly-boy Sheppard shrinking back and begging for forgiveness. They had nearly lost temple visitation privileges, had to endure the high-pitched rants of pissed officials and the smug 'I told you soldiers are worthless scum' speeches from Odran. They wanted Sheppard gone – not kept away from the temple or out of the city – they wanted him off the planet, which was a no can-do since Sheppard was the leader and Weir probably wouldn't have it. Unless Rodney could find the right word and plea combination to convince her otherwise, maybe trade Sheppard in for Lorne. That might work...
They reached the camp where the fire was reduced to nothing more than red embers and gray ashes. Time to let loose the dogs of insult.
McKay opened his mouth, took a deep breath and...
Sheppard whirled around. “ I am really, really, really freakin' sorry McKay. I don't know what the hell happened, I don't know why I did that, and I sure as hell didn't mean to. It wasn't the conversation, I swear, maybe something in the food...”
Rodney just stared. This wasn't how it was supposed to be. Sheppard wasn't supposed to be apologizing yet. And Rodney hadn't had his tirade.
Oh hell no! He was going to have his tirade. The situation owed it to him, the tirade was his due, and Sheppard was in no way on this world or any other going to get off that scott free.
“ Shut up, Colonel.”
Sheppard's apology got caught in his own throat, and he gaped at Rodney as though the physicist had back-handed him twice while insulting his mother. Satisfaction warmed in Rodney's chest.
Just started and already on a roll, Rodney planted a finger hard on John's chest. “ All you had to do was keep quiet and not piss off the locals. But no, you had to find another way to screw things up and nearly cause us to lose the most significant – no, let me rephrase that – life or death important find since coming to this galaxy. ZedPMs, Colonel. Those lose meaning for you or something? It was one stupid banquet, sit through one stupid banquet and you couldn't even do that! Now they won't even let us in the temple until you're physically escorted off this rock! Which can't happen until Elizabeth okay's a replacement! Which means we'll be behind on the research until that happens!”
The roll was cresting into a tsunami, and Rodney had no intentions of letting up. “ I hope, that when you get back, Beckett pulls the biggest, nastiest, inhumanly cruelest needles on you and injects you with something that'll keep you awake for a few hours! Wouldn't want Elizabeth getting offended when you fall asleep during one of her briefings. Oh, wait... You do! What the hell is your problem, Colonel? Huh? Just assume since it's not entertaining for you that you can just slip off and no one would notice? Or were you too impatient to dope yourself up again and mixed medications to get the right buzz?”
John's features darkened. “ McKay...”
“ No, Colonel, don't even start! You're always doing that. I talk or Elizabeth talks or anyone else talks and you zone out so far you actually, physically drop! I'm sorry if our important topics don't interest you. But you're not here to be entertained, you're here to serve and protect, and since you're doing a rather crappy job at both, then you don't even need to be here. So you can be the one to head back, tell Elizabeth how you nearly messed this up, and send someone else. We don't need you here, Colonel.”
Too little too late, with the rant complete, the follow-up regret was sneaking up on him, causing him to try and recall anything he'd said that would have Sheppard laying him flat with a fist to the face. Except such reactions usually manifested by now.
What manifested might as well have been a deck to the head. The look on John's face was unexpected.
Apologetic, pure apologetic. No retorts, no explosions of anger or petulance. John was really doing a poor job of living up to Rodney's expectations. A new, different fury roiled in McKay. Sheppard wasn't fighting back. He was supposed to be fighting back, not taking on the uncanny resemblance of a kicked puppy.
Sheppard set his mouth in a straight line and nodded. “ Yeah. Okay. I'll go...”
Teyla stepped up then, having remained tensely muted the rest of the time. “ Perhaps we should not jump to such a conclusion so soon. If we could convince the mayor to accept John's apology...”
John looked at her oddly. “ Why? McKay's right. I'm useless here and – evidentially – getting in the way. It's not a big deal, Teyla.”
Ronon joined in on the Sheppard support group. “ It is if they're getting their way. They shouldn't be able to push us around.”
Rodney rolled his eyes. “ They're not pushing us around! Look, this is their world, their rule, their paranoia. Sorry to smack reality in your faces, but if we want to find these ZedPMs, then we're going to have to suck up to whatever they want us to suck up to. Which means – sorry to say – the Colonel has to go.”
Ronon glowered, which made Rodney shudder. “ It's not right.”
Rodney shrugged uncomfortably. “ Probably not, but Sheppard should have thought about that before he doped himself up. I'm telling you, it's that tea, you need to stop drinking it.”
“ We may need him,” Teyla pressed. “ Could we not convince them to let Sheppard stay at least in the camp? He is closest to the 'gate and will need to secure it for our escape if it ever came to that.”
Teyla had Rodney there. Not that he would say it out loud – especially in the here and now – but Sheppard had his uses, which normally came about during a crisis. And though nothing bad had gone down yet, it didn't mean misfortune wasn't in their future.
Rodney sighed. “ Okay, fine, we'll go have a talk with them, see if we can't put our collective heads together to form the right words that might change their mind. No promises though. And you stay here, Colonel. Seeing your face is bad enough, they shouldn't have to smell you.”
John shrugged. “ Whatever McKay. I really don't care.”
Sheppard's words struck Rodney as odd. In fact, his whole demeanor was titling the scales toward unnervingly strange. Too subdued, way too subdued – and agreeable? Now that was just messed up. Then their was Sheppard's all-out wearied appearance as though he'd just ran forty miles while blasting down some wraith and it was just now catching up to him.
Sheppard made his way over to the rock, plopped down, and laid back. Herbert scurried from his jacket to go bounding over to, and around, Rodney's legs.
Rodney's anger had lost its savor. Sheppard's behavior screamed warning, but Rodney pushed those warnings aside with the thought that it was just the tea causing the Colonel's marked drowsiness. Just the tea.
“ Um,” Rodney stuttered. “ We'll be... Right back. Don't go anywhere.”
“ Wasn't planning to,” John murmured, head already lolling limply to the side with eyes closed.
SGA
“ Son of a...” Rodney muttered. Barely to the city gate, and he was starting to feel lower than the stuff that accumulated in drain pipes. But then that was the problem with anger, it sucked energy fast, and wore out fast, leaving Rodney's mind to suffer through the reprimand of his old pal logic.
Yes, Sheppard's apparent narcoleptic moment had been embarrassing as hell, but it wasn't as if he'd done it on purpose. Should have known better than to pop pills and weird tea, but still hadn't done it on purpose. Then there were the town's folk who would have jumped on an inappropriately timed sneeze to assault the Colonel and skin him alive. Really, one would have thought the villagers pleased that who they believed to be a dangerous and not to be trusted grunt had humiliated himself - brought himself down several pegs.
Ronon was right – this wasn't right. Kicking a man off a planet because he fell asleep in his soup – Rodney would have hated to see what the result would have been if Sheppard's gun had accidentally gone off and killed one of those chicken-things. Probably all out war, and that made Rodney shiver.
Teyla was walking along side Rodney, and in all that time had yet to say anything, which wasn't helping McKay's state of mind. Teyla was the sensible sort, and had already realized what McKay was just starting to – that the officials had been too hard on Sheppard, and that McKay was dragging along behind that particular band wagon.
“ I believe,” Teyla said, breaking the silence and startling McKay, “ that the Colonel's apology was most sincere. He is our leader, but he is also like any other, and makes mistakes. The Mayor is being too harsh. John did nothing wrong. He is simply weary.”
You noticed that too, Rodney wanted to quip. It was almost habit to say that something was wrong, except that nothing was wrong. Sheppard didn't have a fever, and confessed to taking a pain pill which Rodney was fairly certain caused some sort of mind-numbing reaction when combined with the chemical properties of the tea. But was that really Sheppard's fault? It wasn't as though both tea and pill came with a warning not to be taken together. The tea was alien, so there was no saying what kind of reactions were created when other medicines were involved.
Now Rodney was worried. Perhaps if they explained it as thus to the Mayor...
They weren't even at the door when it groaned open and the three were waved inside by an armed guard.
“ Quickly!” he hissed. “ You must hurry!”
The team slowed and exchanged questioning looks before Teyla finally asked.
“ Um, is something wrong?”
“ Danger! Come in, quick. You'll be safe inside.”
Rodney halted and stiffened. “ Danger? What danger? Where? What's going on...?”
His questions were halted when two more soldiers hurried out to usher the team through the doors, practically shoving them.
“ Colonel Sheppard!” Teyla yelped. She turned with the intent of charging back to the camp when the city doors were shoved closed with a resounding thud. The look of terrified shock on Teyla's face had Rodney's heart going double time. He whirled around and around, trying to fine someone of higher authority, and stopped on seeing the Mayor, priest, and Odran hurrying toward them.
“ My friends!” Odran said. “ You have made it just in time. We were about to send someone to fetch you. It is not safe to be out in the woods.”
Rodney's head whipped back and forth between the door and Odran. “ What? Why? What's out there? What's happening?”
“ We have to go back!” Teyla frantically pleaded. “ Colonel Sheppard is still at the camp.”
The priest's heavy brows creased, shadowing his eyes, reminding Rodney a little too much of the highschool principle that had never really cared for the overbearing genius much.
“ He is still on our world? Why!”
Rodney snapped from his numbed stupor. 'Teammate' and 'left behind' made 'what' and 'why' obsolete. “ Look, that doesn't matter. What matters is that he's still out there and we need to get him.”
The mayor, however, shook his head. “ It is too late. The Murg have already come.”
Odran crossed his arms. “ I'm sure your Colonel Sheppard is quite capable of saving himself. He is armed, and has legs that look sufficient for running. And seeing as he is one of yours, I suppose we could keep watch for him and let him enter the city should he make it.”
The twitch in Rodney's fingers had returned with sights on Odran's neck.
They hesitantly followed Odran to the stairs hugging the wall leading to the battlements. Not surprising for a paranoid bunch of hot-heads, they had a perfect and direct view through the trees to the camp. Only distance was the hindrance until spyglasses were handed around. Rodney settled for the mini-binoculars tucked in his vest pocket.
Now he could see, and what he saw besides Sheppard dozing on that out-jutting rock was absolutely nothing. No marauders, no invaders, not even a freakin' alien vulture fluttering down to see if Sheppard was dead.
“ There's nothing out there!” he snarled. He wanted the tone to be accompanied by a look of rage, but found he couldn't tear his gaze from the camp. Keeping Sheppard in sight, for Rodney, provided a small indefinite – albeit delusional as he knew it was – amount of safety for the Colonel (in other words, made Rodney feel slightly better since as of yet there was nothing more they could do). “ Can't we just call to him or something? What the hell is a Murg!”
“ A very deadly predator, Dr. McKay,” Odran explained. “ Very deadly. You will not see them as of yet since they keep away from the clearings until prey is discovered. Even then, their coloring allows them to blend into their surroundings. Watch for movement along the ground. You will see them soon enough.”
Rodney's heart beat fit to break bone. He ground his teeth, and fought the need to bash the officials in the face. “ Then why can't we call to Sheppard? Warn him? Give him a chance to haul his butt up here?”
“ The Murg are fast and will catch him before he is even within range of our weapons. Your friend's life depends on him remaining motionless and asleep – which I'm fairly confident he will have no trouble with.”
Keep pressing buttons, pal! Screw the temple. It wasn't worth Sheppard's life.
Rodney felt a small weight on his shoulder, fur against his neck, and a small body trembling and mewling fretfully. Then Rodney saw the movement.
SGA
Yes, keeping both shirt and jacket on did wonders. Sheppard didn't have the energy to remove either anyways. Hell, a bug could have landed on his face, called its buddies, had a party, laid eggs, and John wouldn't have been able to do a damn thing about it. Okay, he was exaggerating to himself, but it summed up the utter sluggishness of his body appropriately. He knew he should have been concerned, except concern took energy, and he was trying to save on that.
The bird twitterings of the forest were strangely subdued, almost muted, except for the hooting which had picked up in number and pitch. There was another sound too, a new one – some sort of whuffing, very reminiscent of dogs sniffing something out. Alien bloodhounds? Some kind of hunting party?
Just how pissed off at me are these people?
Rancid breath like bad meat puffed in his face. John winced and peeled apart one eyelid. He blinked away sleep-film until his vision adjusted to the ugliest mutt face he'd ever seen. Kind of like a gray-hound, an emaciated, bald greyhound with mottled brown, tan, and green skin, no visible ears, two large nostril slits for a nose, and the sickest shocker of them all – not eyes.
SGA
Rodney squinted, leaning forward until his stomach pressed against the edge of the wall. His heart was trying to crawl into his throat, taking his stomach with it. One of the Murg were right in Sheppard's face, but every time it stilled, Rodney lost sight of it. The suckers really were naturally gifted with super camouflage. Rodney breathed faster, and he flicked his tongue over dry lips.
“ W-w-what're they doing?”
“ Exploring the area,” Odran said, sounding strangely fascinated by it all. “ The Murg are quite unique creatures. They have no eyes what so ever – are completely blind, so must rely on their other senses heavily. Smell for one, and even touch. Their skin is so sensitive that you do not even have to touch one, just move in close enough, and they will feel your presence. And though they do not have ears, sound is their most powerful sense.”
Rodney swallowed against a dry throat and asked without really caring for an answer, “ Uh-huh. How so?”
“ Oh, why, they can hear your fear.”
SGA
Thin lips parted from yellow-tinted fangs. The ugly hound was relentless in its panting, and Sheppard was actually getting dizzy from the stench. With a groan, Sheppard turned his head the other direction.
“ Go away,” he muttered, his one eye sliding closed.
Something warm, wet, and slimy as an earth worm slid across the back of his neck. Hidden energy reserves were yanked from hiding, and Sheppard snapped his head up, wiping at his neck, then swiping at the overly friendly hell-hound.
“ Ah crap! That's nasty! Get away from me you freak!” He growled, and swiped at the blind mutt with his other hand.
SGA
“ What do you mean 'hear fear'? How the hell do you hear fear?”
“ The heart, Dr. McKay. Fear increases the pace of the heart. Rather than picking up the scent, they pick up the sound of the heart, then the scent of sweat. It aids them in knowing what to go after, since creatures more dangerous than them would express no fear...”
McKay was surprised the hounds didn't surround the city. Then he heard the hisses and gutteral rumblings from below. He didn't dare look down, not when John had taken to swiping at one of the beasts.
“ Oh crap, no!”
SGA
The putrid breath eased up, and John contentedly curled tighter onto his side, using his arm as a pillow. He continued to hear the whuffs, accompanied by hisses and low growls. He opened his eyes and watched with lazy interest the dogs sniffing about the camp. Their interest became keen on the food cooler.
John closed his eyes and exhaled heavily. “ Great.” He let that get knocked over, McKay would probably skin him alive to refill it. Nap time was a bust until the eye-less dogs went on their blundering way. The town's folk claimed him as rude – at least had he brought in some earth animal he would have had the decency to keep it from running a muck throughout their city.
John pushed himself up stiffly, almost painfully, and breathing heavy from the exertion. With a loud groan he stumbled over to the cooler, kicking at the dogs and snapping at them in a voice octaves similar to a real growl.
“ Get out of here you mutated excuse for mutts!”
The dogs yelped, whined, snarled, and slunk back a ways with tails between their legs. They were even uglier when cowering, knobby backbones stretching skin like stumpy spikes, and thin ribs looking more fragile than twigs. John could not begin to see the appeal these creatures had on the locals.
SGA
“ My word!” Odran exclaimed. “ He shows no fear, no fear at all!”
Rodney became surrounded by collective gasps of wonder and fright. The gasps hit a high-note whenever John kicked or yelled at a Murg and it slunk away.
Rodney shook his head, and was unable to keep his jaw from hanging open. “ What the hell is wrong with him!”
He heard Ronon grunt beside him. “ Either he knows what he's doing, or is being very foolish.”
“ I'm inclined to go with the latter,” Rodney mumbled, solving his slack-jaw problem by gritting his teeth. He watched half-seething and half with bated breath as John lifted the cooler, staggering under a weight that even Rodney knew wasn't all that heavy. He carried it over to the hut, then proceeded to lift it up with precarious effort and slide it onto the thatched roof, all while Murg danced around him, hissing, yelping and growling.
Rodney made a small sound of alarm when a Murg nipped at John's boot. Then John whirled around, lifting his arms high and shouting out for everyone to hear.
“ Get out of here!”
Rodney could almost discern the vicious snarl in his voice.
“ Go on! Beat it you butt-freakin'-ugly reject Resident Evil zombie dogs! Go back to momma Cujo and leave me the hell alone!”
Leave it to John to go for the movie quotes. Rodney would have gone more Cerberus and Hades.
Rodney twitched his head. John's lack of terror was rubbing off – or maybe it was the cowering retreat of a supposed vicious beast – because Rodney's heart had descended back into it's proper place in his chest.
The Murgs were still within the camp, just not close to Sheppard. As Sheppard began to clean the camp, tossing packs and what-not onto the roof out of the Murgs' reach, he would occasionally make a run at them, arms raised, growling and snarling, until the creatures were finally beyond the perimeter of the camp. John then went into the hut, and didn't come back out.
“ That was amazing,” Odran breathed. “ Completely amazing! No one has ever shown such calm in the face of a Murg.”
At this, Ronon sniffed. “ Bet I could have.”
Odran didn't seem to hear. “ You must bring your Colonel here. We must know how he was able to accomplish this. Murgs are very dangerous, and difficult to get rid of unless one's own numbers are greater than that of the pack's.”
Rodney lowered his binoculars.
Yeah, nooow you like him. Nooow you want to play nicey nice with the soldier you didn't mind spitting on a few minutes ago. Oh how Rodney wanted to say it. Well, it would have to be nuts to them. They'd left Sheppard to die, and it was only because of his - because of his what? Naivety? Macho idiocy? The fact that he never cares if he lives or dies? McKay went for all three – that he was alive.
Chalk one up to the man with the self-sacrificing death wish – Kamikaze attitudes finally came in handy.
The men along the walls fired at the Murgs circling the city, and still Sheppard didn't emerge, which was good reason to worry. John reacted to gunshots even when they were seventy miles away – kind of like a spidey-sense thing with him.
The whines, yips, howls, and snarls of the Murgs died off into the distance, and the moment they did, McKay was off running down the steps from the wall, with Teyla and Ronon following on his heels.
SGA
They raced into the camp, then into the hut, skidding to a halt that raised a small cloud of dust. In the dusky light they saw the huddled form of Sheppard in his sleeping bag, breathing deep and evenly. His face was turned to them, and even in the crappy light, the lack of color was disturbing.
Teyla quietly approached Sheppard and knelt beside him. When she placed her hand on his cheek, she gasped.
“ He's so cold,” she said, looking worriedly to Ronon and McKay. She looked back to John, and leaned down close.
“ Colonel Sheppard? Colonel, can you wake up?”
John inhaled – long and deep – and opened bleary eyes. The dark circles enhanced his exhaustion, giving his features an almost skeletal quality.
John sighed a weary-heavy sigh. “ Hhhhey Teyla. How'd it go?”
Rodney could barely hear him. He marched over to John and dropped in a crouch beside him, giving the Colonel what he hoped was a dangerous glare. “ What the hell is wrong with you!” He barked. Teyla's eyes went wide.
“ Dr. McKay...”
Rodney didn't listen. It was rant time again, and never wise to hold out when it came calling. “ What, you see a bunch of dogs and think Lassie? Those were psycho vicious predators, Sheppard!”
John blinked in apparent confusion. “ They were?”
“ Yes, Colonel, they were! Lack of collar, snarling, growling... Was it really all that hard to tell! Just because Herbert was all cute and cuddly doesn't mean everything is!”
John's brow furrowed in a poor scowl. “ I didn't think those mutts were cute...”
“ Then what were you thinking! You could have been killed!”
Sheppard shivered, then huddled deeper into the sleeping bag. “ But I didn't get killed. S'doesn't matter. S'all good...”
His eyes were drifting closed, and would have if Rodney hadn't patted his face.
“ I'm not done yet, Colonel. So wake up! Did you drink more of that tea?”
“ No,” John mumbled.
“ Pain pill?”
John shook his head.
“ Then what's wrong!”
John's eyes opened, just a little, as best as he could get in terms of widening them, and Rodney saw his whole frame shaking within the sleeping bag.
“ I-I don't know. I'm so tired. I'm just... I can't... I can't stay awake. I'm cold. Why am I cold?”
John should have been panicking, looked like he was about to, probably would have been by now, but his eyes were winning the battle to shut. Rodney's fear-born fury got shoved aside for just plain fear. He put his finger's to the ice-cold skin of John's neck, feeling a pulse – steady, but incredibly weak. Rodney's heart sank to his intestines.
“ Oh crap,” he whined. “ Oh crap, oh crap, oh crap I knew it. Something's wrong. We've gotta get him out of here. Teyla, wake him up.”
As Teyla patted John's face, Rodney pulled the zipper of the sleeping bag. Teyla's administrations got John back into the waking world enough for Rodney and Ronon to help lifted him to his feet. They then stumbled from the hut, both men supporting most of John's weight.
“ Leave this stuff, We'll get it later,” Rodney said, glancing back to the packs on the roof. The gate wasn't that far. Same distance as to the village, but like Rodney was going to take John over to those Neanderthals. Impressed as they had seemed by his supposed bravery, any cures administered by these backwater troglodytes would probably involve spitting on him some more.
Even with the distance barely anything, Sheppard half asleep as they practically dragged him turned the trek into miles. It was in sight, but too much like those nightmares where the more one walked, the farther away the destination became. Teyla ran on ahead to dial the gate and enter the IDC. She then went through, and Ronon, Sheppard, and Rodney followed after.
One always nauseating ride later and they stumbled through. They continued to hold John upright until Beckett and his medical team arrived, Carson wearing his game-face of 'no-surprises-here' with just a smidgen of concern.
With the help of nurses, they got John onto the gurney, where he immediately curled up.
“ What's the matter?” Beckett asked, looking John over for injuries.
Rodney exchanged a questioning look with Ronon, who shrugged.
“ Um...” Rodney stammered. “ He's sleepy.”
Beckett looked up and cocked an eyebrow. “ Sleepy?”
“ Yeah, as in he's having a nasty time staying awake, plus his pulse was really slow. Oh, and he's all cold. Not hot. No fever. Just... cold.”
It was odd, not describing an injury or possible illness – not to mention hard. Beckett placed on his stethoscope and slipped the listening end down the collar of John's shirt.
“ Uh-huh. His heart rate is alarmingly low. Let's move him to the infirmary. But I swear, if this has somethin' to do with drinkin' too much... The big needles!”
Sheppard moaned, and shrank smaller.
The medical team wheeled John away in no immediate hurry. Rodney, Ronon and Teyla followed, concerned, and Rodney a little nervous about Beckett's wrath should this be nothing more than an overdose of that tea. John was a prodigy when it came to deception.
Elizabeth joined them, worried as usual. “ Did something happen to make him like this?”
Rodney shrugged. “ Can't say yet. He was just... sleepy all the time. Almost lost us temple visitations when he dropped off into his soup at dinner. But that's not really important. What's important is...”
He didn't know what was important, because something was wrong, he didn't know what, and until he knew, nothing was important.
They entered the infirmary, hovering at the back, confused for once rather than panicked. There was no chaos except for an almost leisurely chaos. McKay didn't like it. So Sheppard's main problem seemed to be excessive fatigue. Didn't make it any less important.
Then again, it wasn't like there was much for Beckett to do. No wounds, no fevers, just an overly limp and shivering body. They removed John's jacket, then his shirt by slipping it off rather than cutting it. John curled tight, wrapping his arms around himself and shaking.
“ I-i-i-it's-s-s-s c-c-c-c-cold.”
Beckett was all concern now – just not the usual frenetic concern. This one was more along the lines of a kind of parental worry over a kid with the flu, joined by a little pity. Even without a fever, John looked ill – pale, sunken eyed, and weak in his movements.
“ I know lad. We'll get ya warmed in a minute,” Beckett kindly assured him. They attached the heart monitor, took some blood, then covered him with a warming blanket. He was out the moment the heated blanket touched him.
“ Rodney,” he heard Weir tremulously say. “ What the hell is that?”
He turned to her, but she wasn't looking at him, at least not in the face. He felt movement at his back, under his jacket. Reaching behind himself, he felt for Herbert and pulled him out by the scruff. Herbert pressed against his chest while sniffing the air.
“ Oh, this. Yeah, forgot about him. He's a – uh... friend.”
Weir looked at him oddly, arms folded and mouth slightly ajar.
Rodney smiled sheepishly and hugged Herbert to him.
“ Uh... Can I keep him?” he said, and followed up with a nervous chuckle.
SGA
Heaven, thy presence be here. It was official, Sheppard had found his paradise. Warm chest, warm back, and softness; blessedly yielding softness that had his bones sighing in contentment every two minutes. More like singing, really, each time he moved and nothing sharp and solid tried to dig into him. He ignored the fact that there were no bird songs or the pleasant scent of cedar – replaced by steady beeps and antiseptic smells – but soft and warmth made up for it.
John drifted in and out of dreams, and was quite happy to remain in that state, except that a constant movement in the real world – taking place about the bed and his body – forced him to pull from it and remedy the disturbance. He opened sticky, unfocused eyes and rolled them to the blinding brilliant fluff roaming about the sterile white blankets. John didn't need 20/20 vision to identify that small bundle of blazing color. He pulled his IV free hand from the blankets to tap his chest.
“ Come 'ere Sherbet you little spaz,” he croaked, and coughed thanks to a parched throat. Sherbet yeeped and bounded over to John's moving fingers. He sniffed, pawed at them, then rolled onto his back to bat the waggling appendages.
“ What the bloody hell is that rodent doin' in here?” Beckett's enraged accent had John gathering the blazing bright fluff protectively against his chest.
“ 'Is cool doc,” and John coughed A straw materialized out of the corner of his eye, and John turned his head to take it into his mouth. He sucked and gulped fast, unrelenting, and so causing drops to squirt from the straw when Beckett pulled it away.
“ Take it slow, Colonel. Not that you're dehydrated – not bloody well while you're in my infirmary – but you've been in and out for a wee bit of a while and your body isn't too happy about it.”
John tested his throat by clearing it then swallowing. The lack of his esophagus sticking was as heavenly as the bed. “ Define a wee bit of a while.”
“ 'Bout two days, possibly more until your body finally gets to rightin' itself.”
John twitched his head in the Scottish Doc's direction, narrowing his eyes as he stroked Sherbet, feeling very James Bond villainous – or more appropriately like Dr. Evil minus the alien feline being bald. “ Explain?”
Beckett sucked his teeth, clucked his tongue, then shook his head. “ Well... rather funny really – not in the long run but rather in retrospect. Seems you suffered a pharmaceutical mishap, lad. No thanks to me, mind ya. What with curin' the strep throat, dullin' down your wrenched back, and your high blood pressure, I didn't stop to consider the consequences of mixing medicines. Of course, I didn't think of that Athosian tea in terms of medicine...”
John went stone still except for his widening eyes. “ Son of a...! So Rodney was right. It was the tea.”
Beckett nodded sheepishly. “ Aye... sort of. It was more the result of the combination of the tea and the meds you've been takin'. I honestly didn't think there'd be side effects... But there was – and I'll be the first to admit it was a doozy. The mix of chemicals meant to dull pain and relax ya worked to actually slow your heart rate and continue to slow it. I've yet to sort the details, but I've a pretty good idea how it's possible since both the tea and the meds affect the mind in order to stem back the pain receptors from receiving pain signals. But to put it more simply, the combination had created a kind of super muscle relaxant, like a mild sedative. However, unlike a sedative, it didn't affect ya right away, but slowly built up as you continued to take the tea and the meds.”
Carson chewed his lip, then grimaced. “ The tea's quite slow about leavin' the system, and joinin' with the pain meds kept them in your system as well. Each time ya took both, the little cocktail built up, which slowed your heart even more. Had ya not been brought back for us to figure this thing out, and you kept takin' the meds... you could have died son. Your heart would have eventually come to a point where it would have stopped – just stopped – and it would have been my fault.”
John didn't like the look of guilt on Carson's face, and took immediate pity on the man. The Highland doc – being chief physician – had enough on his plate dealing with worry over patients who couldn't stay healthy for more than five minutes. He didn't need guilt chipping at him.
“ Like hell it would have,” John said. “ I mean how the hell were we supposed to know that tea and Aspirin don't mix? It's not like they have a warning on the bottle, and I usually pop a pain pill with tea anyways. Besides – you know how you like to blame me for the messes I get into despite the fact I can't predict when the wraith are going to pop up? Well, now you can reprimand me to your hearts content since I probably would have kept taking the meds if my team hadn't panicked and brought me back. I don't exactly think straight when tired. Plus you'd of had to have been there shoving the pills down my throat for this to be your fault. We got it in time, doc, and learned a valuable lesson from it without it costing us anything. So don't go beating yourself up over what is obviously shared naivety. You know me, I ignore the warnings until it's all one step away from being too late.”
Beckett smiled and clasped John on the shoulder. “ No denyin' the truth there. I'll try not to beat myself up, but I still take the blame – some of it.”
John smiled wearily back. “ I'll take the rest of the blame then. So that aside, what's the treatment? I like sleep as much as the next guy, but this is getting ridiculous, and I refuse to lose muscle tone to lying around waiting for my heart to kick it into gear. I get enough crap with Rodney's pale jokes.”
“ No real treatment say for lettin' the chemicals go from your body. Another day, perhaps.” Beckett then grinned, and John eyed him warily. “ After that, there's somethin' I think I'd like to try that might get ya back on your feet quick as a wink...”
SGA
Rodney was almost at a run down the metallic corridors leading to the infirmary. Three days of Sheppard being in a practical comatose state from having a dangerously low heart rate, then out of the blue Rodney overhears Teyla telling Ronon that Sheppard was being released today.
Rodney knew he should have gone in sooner, talked to Sheppard while he was barely coherent. It would have been easier then, and Rodney could have slipped in a few insults without the worry of retaliation. The Colonel had been too easy to put down thanks to his 'condition', and that had been just wrong.
Rodney was closing in on the infirmary doors, almost there, opening them with his thoughts. He came to a sliding halt inches from a tall, gangly body blocking the entrance.
“ Whoa, what the freak!” He stumbled back, panting, and looked up into the bright eyed and bushy-tailed grinning face of Sheppard, dressed in BDUs and a black T-shirt.
“ Colonel, Sheppard, John!” Rodney gasped.
John jerked his head in a nod. “ That's my name.”
Rodney put a hand to his chest and took a moment to catch his breath before speaking. “ Good, found you. Great. Um...” He dropped his hand to his side, started rubbing his hip, and cleared a throat prematurely tightening in the discomfort he was about to endure. “ Um... Listen... I just wanted to – you know...” he cleared his throat again. “ To apologize... For, um... the way I acted – pretty much treated you – back on the planet.” Rodney couldn't take it. A broken bone he'd take, but apologies were a more sadistic torture for him, and he had to look away. “ I'd been unfair. Hell, I even knew something was up. But rather than doing anything about it, I let it happen, then called you a screw up for it. But you're not. I am. I was so damn intent on that temple I didn't see what was happening and it almost got you killed. I just wanted you to know that – and that you're not a screw up, and that what happened on the planet wasn't your fault. You didn't deserve all that crap, not from those anal officials and especially not from me.” Rodney then let out a sharp, relieved breath. “ There, I said it. And to make it up to you...” now was the part he was truly regretting, “ You can call Herbert Sherbet.”
Rodney felt the weight of a warm hand on his shoulder, and looked back into Sheppard's face to see him smiling warmly.
“ Apology accepted thanks Rodney.”
Rodney nodded and rocked back on his heels. “ Thanks. So... How're you feeling.”
John patted Rodney's shoulder.
“ Awesome.” He then lifted his hand holding a familiar green can, and took a sip. “ Beckett's got me on this kick-butt recovery that's got me more energized than a freakin' battery and to tell you the truth I haven't felt this awesome in days and I was thinking that maybe I'd teach Ronon to skateboard since he's been asking me and asking me and asking me so might as well use this energy for something right? You wanna come with?”
Rodney gaped, snapped his jaw shut, then narrowed his eyes to slits. “ Oh I am gonna kill that witchdoctor and shove his voodoo doll down his throat!”
John shrugged and took another sip. “ Suit yourself but I'd stay clear of the halls for a couple of hours come on Sherbet wanna play fetch!”
John then took off down the hall at a trot, Sherbet bounding and yeeping at his heels.

The End