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Brief Letter
by
moon_n_star
Jack coasted to the final checkpoint, his exhausted
feet dragging with the notion of adding his signature to yet another useless
paper. Mentally ticking off the current
NHL standings as he walked, his gait devoid of its usual swagger, O’Neill
anesthetized his mind from any recollections of the past few days. After a few needles, a speedy debriefing,
and an even speedier shower, he resolved while dressing to abandon all thoughts
of work. As he neared the line’s end,
the person ahead of him turned to the stationed SF, her eyesight never rising
above the clipboard in her hand.
He recognized her just the same.
“Hey.” Sam looked up at the sound.
Mutely, she stepped aside as O’Neill quickly took the proffered document
and scribbled his name. His head
motioned toward the exit as he returned the log, wordlessly requesting to
accompany her outside.
“Goodnight Colonel ...
Doctor.” The SF issued the firm
salutation, receiving a polite nod from both in reply.
Without words, the two figures
stepped forward ... side-by-side, but ensconced in silence marred only by the
scuffing of shoes against pavement.
Sheer and still, the night flaunted its majesty
with a parade of its liveliest tinders that littered the sky. Neither glanced up to view the tiny candles,
however, both too worn out and too cognizant that the harsh lights from the
mountain would blur the spectacle. The
air had cooled since Jack had last stepped outside, but not wintry enough to
see his breath – the O’Neill yardstick for measuring temperature.
“You heading home?” Jack breached the intimidating stillness, avoiding her line of
sight while his hands pursued the keys within his pockets.
“Long day,” she muttered tiredly, watching him from
the corner of her eye. Their strides
continued into the parking lot, the fluorescent lamps that beamed overhead
spotlighting the almost-tangible silence.
“Yeah.” He
agreed weakly, his attention directed toward his feet, absently measuring each
step.
He was waiting – hoping idealistically that by
opening the door of communication she would flood the gate, volunteering the
thoughts and emotions that he knew lurked underneath. But both experience and a quick shot of her hunched frame told
him that she wouldn’t say a word ... nor did she have to.
When briefly his eyes wondered
upward, confirming she still tottered at his side, he found her staring
vacantly, her eyes fatigued and unfocused.
“You okay?”
Arriving at her car, their feet abruptly stopped
along its side. Her eyes finally
fetched his, their familiar luster hooded as if shaded by sunglasses ... and in
them reflected his own disquiet.
“Fine.” The
riposte sounded worn and unconvincing, the word whispered as if in a library –
and it did little to reassure him.
The pair stood apart – their uncertainty guzzled
the fresh evening breeze, constructing a bubble of stale air between them, as
if standing in a vacuum. Both understood
that their newborn arrangement hinged on a careful adherence to their new, yet
undefined, rules. With their heightened
apprehension of overstepping the bounds, however, they quantified everything
with extreme precaution – questioning each action and each word – and the fear
separated them like an invisible shield.
He snuck his hands into his jeans, his legs leaning
forward onto their toes. “I mean, back
there ... Turghan ... he didn’t ...”
“No, Jack, I’m fine.” Excluding her lips, Sam remained perfectly still, her eyes coming
to rest solidly on his. “Really.”
He sighed; she’d said as much during the
debriefing. But his mind secretly
battled his heart, each at opposite sides of an imaginary tug rope. One side, stimulated by memories and
emotions, demanded that he enfold her in his arms and harbor her from the world
with his stalwart embrace. The other
forced him back to earth, grounding him to the reality that now coexisted
between them.
His feet rocked back onto their heels as he stared
out into the night, the droning darkness numbing his threadbare mind. He knew she would be fine – he learned long
ago never to underestimate her strength.
But, still, he ... worried.
“Friends do this, right?” Jack grimaced as he grounded out the question with a throat
suddenly bone dry.
Never breaking contact, Sam tilted her head. “You mean care?”
“Yeah, I guess,” he shrugged.
“I’m not sure I could *not* care.” Sam’s embarrassment at the inadvertent
admission was immediate, compelling her to look away. Hastily blaming it on her acute exhaustion, and one heck of a bad
mission, she calmly risked a small smile before finally shifting to acquire the
keys from her purse. “Well ... good night.”
He watched her swing open the car door, nimbly
dropping into the driver seat. “Night,
Sam.”
Her hand halted midway to the ignition; their eyes
caught for a split second before he walked away. She observed his retreating form until her eyes were blinded by
the darkness. Sam started the car and
promptly pulled away, a delicious smile tickling her overtired lips all the way
home.
******
Dear Sam,
So it comes down to this ... to words.
*My* words.
A lifetime of experiences ... and emotions ... and
memories ...
... all restricted to tiny, pathetic words.
And you know what a craftsman *I am* with
words!
Yet, there are things that need be said ...
... things said to *you* ...
... I just don’t know how to say them.
You always said that I mastered the ability to
dissect things to their simplest. So
why break with tradition now, right?
I’m a soldier.
Deep down, that’s who I am.
But, without that, who am I?
*Where* am I but on a distant planet ... abandoned
to the solitude of my thoughts ... trapped inside a rapidly decomposing body
with only a lifeless statue for company.
Lifeless.
Neither in the world of the dead, nor in the world
of the living.
So close, but so far.
So close to an answer, a solution ... and yet, too far
away for it to matter.
So close to you, and yet so very far away.
We’re *very* far away, Sam ... we have been, for
too long.
But I’m stuck.
Stuck staring at this damn piece of paper for hours
– for the last residue of my eternity – examining it like a player scrutinizes
a chessboard, waiting for his mind to formulate the next move.
Not that you’ll know that.
Huh! Not that you’ll ever *read*
this!
But yet it must be done.
A soldier, tried and true, I cannot just surrender
without a fight.
Without saying the things left unspoken.
Even if you’ll never hear them.
******
“Colonel!”
Straight away, the cry flagged Jack’s attention, the sight of Kawalsky
waving his arm breaking Jack’s vacillation ... at least the decision was
made.
O’Neill had clocked in early, intending to tackle
the paperwork stockpiling on his desk.
Halfway into the mound, a petulant grumbling thundered in his stomach;
so he childishly kicked away from the desk, the wheels underneath spinning the
chair recklessly backward, and then bounded toward the door. Reaching the commissary, his body directed
toward the food line. Snatching a clean
tray, he had selected his usual – cereal, milk, banana – when he heard it.
Sam’s laughter navigated the room, its melodious aroma
enchanting his senses. It wasn’t loud,
but he presumed that his ears had fine-tuned the sound over the years. At first sweet candy to his ears, the sound
soon soured as he grounded to a halt, coming full-stop upon reaching the mess
hall, tray in hand.
There he stood, each foot yanking him in a
different direction – one toward their table, the other toward the exit ... he
was convinced the former had conveniently forgotten about their last
‘encounter.’
She’d jumped him ... well, a virus-infected,
prehistoric *form* of Sam had jumped him.
God, but she had felt good in his arms, so much so
that O’Neill had almost broken because of it ... nearly chucking their
embryonic friendship out the very wormhole that instigated it for the feverish
temptation that had assailed his reserve.
All his logic and reasoning were threatened with one intoxicating,
blistering kiss.
Not that it had ended there.
What Sam would never remember, at least he hoped,
was how he’d turned the tables by spiraling her around, effectively pinning her
heated body between himself and the locker.
They dueled passionately with hungry nips and moans, their groping
fueled by a natural competitiveness that, with each kiss, escalated their temperature
ten degrees until he swore his head would combust. No thoughts existed, no rules, only a fire that, despite the laws
of science, intensified as their urgent kisses deprived them of oxygen.
Until she moved, propelling him backward, then
slamming him down onto the bench. Like
a sledgehammer to the head, the brunt force jumpstarted his senses, all the
reasons for *not* doing this deluging his mind ... including the fact that Sam
was, obviously, not herself.
So Jack had stopped her – taking quite a beating in
the process – and had escorted her to the infirmary. After distributing the vaccine both on base and on P3X-797,
he endured several sleepless nights replaying that scene in the locker
room. O’Neill knew he’d already been
infected by that point; but, he pondered whether it was the virus that
triggered his rather inappropriate behavior or whether it was ... something
else.
He never found the answer.
Thankful that no one had witnessed their little
tango and that she, apparently, retained no memory other than *her* part in the
seduction, he wrote off the incident.
And, other than her apology afterward – which he dismissed, as usual,
with a flippant remark about her wrestling skills – neither had mentioned it
since.
Convinced it was best – for *both* of them – to
move on, his feet did just that, traveling forward until arriving at their
table. O’Neill deposited his tray
before settling himself in the chair beside Kawalsky, who updated Jack on their
conversation. “I was just telling Sam
about Daniel’s – performance – on P3X-595.”
“Ah!”
Comfortably seated, Jack gripped the milk container, adroitly peeling
the paper carton to pour the contents into the bowl before him. “Yeah, Daniel was a *big* hit! Not much of a singing voice, though.” Spoon in hand, a grin divided his lips before
he drove a spoonful of cereal into his mouth.
“Must be the eyes.”
“YMCA?” Sam
quizzed him unbelievingly.
“Ah, yes ... the disco medley!” Jack replied
sarcastically.
“Don’t forget about the dance moves.” Kawalsky added, the two men looking at each
other in mock seriousness.
“No, couldn’t forget *that*.” The picture of Daniel doing that *stupid*
dance too much, his face erupted into a full-blown smile before adding dryly,
“As much as I try to.”
“Well, in that case, I think a special request for
all teams to carry video cameras on missions is in order.” The two officers veered their questioning
gaze toward her, obviously clueless as to her meaning. Quickly casting her eyes between them, she
hastily added, “So that we can capture these – cultural – experiences ... for
further study.”
Having that episode permanently etched on tape for
Daniel’s eternal torture would thrill Jack to no end ... especially since the
anthropologist hadn’t remembered a thing.
He’d actually accused O’Neill and Kawalsky of concocting the story,
until Teal’c corroborated their account.
Of course, they *had* omitted the exact reason he woke up without his
clothes – they figured Daniel had suffered enough humiliation, regardless of
whether he remembered or not.
“Uh, maybe you should be careful what you wish for
there, Sam.” Kawalsky, long finished
with his breakfast, stirred cream and sugar into his misting coffee. “I mean, imagine having that Land of the
Light virus stuff on tape. We’d *never*
hear the end of that!”
A rosy blush pinched Sam’s cheeks, while Jack
scrutinized the swimming shapes in his bowl.
Kawalsky, however, basked inside at their reaction, but not out of
cruelty. Charlie had known Jack since
before he met Sam, and had remained friends throughout their marriage. He’d never swallowed their breakup, secretly
maintaining the torch that both were too eager, in his opinion, to douse. “Although, I could think of a few scenes
that might be pretty fun to watch.”
“Careful, Charlie.” O’Neill’s warning was instant, and it sported his best command
voice. Jack did *not* want to talk
about this – not with Kawalsky, and certainly *not* with Sam.
Of course, she shared his discomfort; but Sam also
understood that, if left to fester, it could undermine everything they’ve
worked for. So, she ripped a page from
the O’Neill handbook, and utilized humor.
“Or we may just have to bring up the Bachelor Party incident.”
Focused on the fork scraping the remaining eggs from
her plate, she missed the shock that aligned their expressions, although she
could practically feel Kawalsky’s disbelief.
Surprised with her ease of conversation in light of
its context, Jack chimed in, taking from her cue. “We have pictures of that right?
“Oh yeah.”
She confirmed vigorously, her smile now possessing a devious glint. “They’re locked away in a secret storage
facility at the Pentagon ... for safekeeping.”
“Hey, can’t computers turn pictures into videos
nowadays?” O’Neill prolonged the
conversation, discussing the matter with a seriousness rivaling any topic
deliberated in the briefing room.
Their banter played like a tennis match, with
Kawalsky as an unwitting spectator.
Although firstly embarrassed, inside he enjoyed their playfulness, and
each round only served to confirm his earlier suspicions.
“Absolutely,” Sam declared excitedly. “I’ve got this computer in my lab that can
digitally re-master any image. It can
even add sound effects.”
“Sound effects?
Cool.” O’Neill grinned at the
idea. “What d‘ya think? A little moaning ... some gasping
perhaps?”
“Oh, will you two stop?” An exasperated Kawalsky finally intervened, albeit a few decibels
higher than normal. “I give up
already!”
Jack and Sam swapped victorious smiles. “Never could hold one on us, Charlie.”
“Yeah.
Well, you better watch it, Colonel,” Charlie warned kiddingly. “Because, when it’s your turn, I’ll be there
like the paparazzi to document *every* second!
I’m talking video recorders, microphones, cameras – the works!”
Jack shook his head emphatically. “Not gonna happen, Kawalsky.”
“Really?”
Kawalsky drawled, donning an evil grin as the fabled light clicked on
above his head. “Kind-of like the time
in basic you told me about? You know,
the girl who did that thing with her ...”
“Charlie! For cryin’ out loud!” Jack’s eyes seared the man next to him;
although O’Neill had virtually shared everything with Sam through the course of
their relationship, there were *some* things he kept private ... for obvious
reasons.
“What?”
Charlie feigned innocence while Sam watched with avid curiosity. “Now, Colonel, don’t be shy. I’m sure Sam would *love* to hear about that
one.” Sam slanted forward until her
elbows contacted the tabletop; cupping her chin inside her open palm, she
raised her eyebrows in anticipation.
“Okay ... fine.” O’Neill readied for his
strike. “Well, *maybe* she’d *love* to
know about that little incident in Germany.”
Charlie’s smug grin dropped like an anvil from a
skyscraper. “You wouldn’t?” A self-satisfied smile his only response,
the two friends locked their eyes in a playful standoff. “You so don’t want to start this with me,
Jack. I’ve got *so* much on you, and
I’d hate to embarrass you in front of Sam here.”
Briefly flitting his eyes toward Sam, he returned
to their gridlock stare, immediately countering the faux threat. “And what makes you think I don’t have *so*
much on you?”
“Well, bring it on then!”
“Okay, flyboy, you’ve so had it!”
“Gentlemen!”
Sam reluctantly interrupted their childish game, one normally engaged in
while drunk ... not to say watching this sober version was any less
amusing. “As much as I’d like to watch
this fascinating exchange, I do have some reports that need writing.” Sam stripped the jacket that hugged the seat
back as she stood, draping it across her arm while the same hand poised her
coffee mug.
“See ya, Sam!”
Kawalsky tossed behind him as she passed, his eyes never leaving
Jack’s.
Unexpectedly, Sam halted near Charlie’s back and
pivoted toward him, leaning her free hand on his shoulder. “Oh, and Charlie?” She whispered the words deliberately into his attentive ears. “Jack told me about Germany a *long* time
ago.” Kawalsky froze, his eyes searing
the man opposite – the one pretending not to hear every word, but betrayed
himself with the mile-wide grin pasted on his face. “You didn’t *honestly* think I bought your story about the
tattoo, did you?”
Not waiting for a response, Sam traded a brief
smile with Jack. She straightened her
back, nodding at O’Neill before steering her body toward the door. “Let me know who wins.”
“Oh, I could tell you that already,” Jack flung
after her as she quit the table.
Stalking her trail until impeded by the corner,
Jack’s eyes restored to the tray, absently inspecting the remaining
crumbs. Ladling the last remnants of
cereal, Jack halted the movement when he sensed someone watching him.
Kawalsky ... staring straight at him ... a
goof-ball grin plastered to his face.
“What?”
O’Neill growled.
The grin widened like a cheshire cat. “Nothing,” Charlie unconvincingly replied,
his eyes darting between O’Neill and the seat previously occupied by Sam.
Jack rolled his eyes in irritation before polishing
off the final spoon of cereal. He
understood ... perfectly. But, though
the familiar exchange fit comfortably like an old blanket, he considered it a
good sign for their friendship ... and nothing else. “Come on, we’re gonna be late for our briefing.”
Kawalsky cancelled his amused grin; but, whatever
conclusion Jack had extracted from this morning, Charlie challenged it with his
own. The past twenty minutes had proven
something – something he intended to fix ... with or without their help. “Teal’c was in his room earlier meditating,
but I haven’t seen Daniel today.”
“Oh, he’ll be there, *believe* me...” Both men arose capably, slipping into
military mode with each step away from the table. “... if his excitement from the MALP readings yesterday are
anything to go by. He probably left a
trail of drool all the way to the gateroom.”
******
But I’m also a man, Sam.
A man struggling with himself ...
... struggling with his actions ...
... with his regrets.
A man struggling desperately with his legacy.
It’s ironic really ... *me* writing these
insignificant thoughts on this insignificant slice of paper ... just like the
thousands of glyphs that have landscaped our travels through the stargate ...
... the ones Daniel usually gushes over ...
... the ones I usually dismiss as rocks ...
Thousands of glyphs, accumulating
into a historical diary ... sketched centuries ago so that their story – their
legacy – would not be drowned in the sea of time.
I give them credit now. It’s a lot ... defining one’s existence.
I’ve done a lot of things in my life, Sam – awful
things.
Things I *should* be asking forgiveness for.
Things I hope you’ll never know about.
This being one of them. But, of course, you already know about this one, don’t you?
It’s certainly not my finest moment.
God, Sam, I’m sorry.
I’m sorry for everything ...
... for leaving you when you needed me the most ...
... for promising you long ago that I was something
I turned out not to be.
I’m old – very old, in fact – and I’m tired.
I’m tired of the peace and tranquility here.
A place that leaves me nothing to do but think ...
... that affords me nothing but thoughts and
emotions better left to the past.
I look around me, at these young kids. They’re so determined to live their brief
life to the fullest ... striving to not waste a single moment.
Guess I’ve striven to waste every damn good moment
I’ve had.
But we used to be that way, Sam. I do remember that.
All the crazy and wild things we did together ...
until we were ripped apart.
Is that what I’m doing, Sam?
When I tell them their ‘god’ doesn’t exist, am I
extinguishing their flame of happiness ... like ours was extinguished?
Maybe these young kids know more than me. Maybe living for only a hundred days isn’t
such an injustice.
Tomorrow *is* only an illusion.
I learned that the hard way.
I’m *still* learning it.
******
“What are you working on?”
Peering up from the keyboard, Sam’s eyes zoomed
around the bulky monitor to discover the petite figure her equipment had
concealed. Janet bestowed an amiable
grin as she moved around the computer stand to park at Sam’s side.
Unable to fathom how Janet, in essence, snuck up on
her – especially since the echoing footfalls from the shoes Janet typically
wore announced her arrival seconds ahead – Sam shook off her surprise
nonetheless. “Oh. I’m just completing the analysis of the soil
samples SG6 brought back today.”
Janet looked over her shoulder as Sam pointed to
the screen. “Need any help?”
“Uh, sure.”
Sam shifted her chair sideways, making room near the computer
console. “I’m, uh, surprised you have
the time.”
Janet crossed the room to haul a vacant stool to
Sam’s side, positioning it within viewing range of the monitor. “Well, all of our teams are either on
downtime or off-world at the moment.”
Janet poised herself on the stool, crossing her legs in effort to
mollify the unpleasant chair; her downcast eyes avoided Sam as she continued
innocently. “And, since no one’s
assaulted a member of the opposite sex in the locker room of late, I guess it’s
recess until the bell rings.”
Sam grimaced for the second time that day. “Am I *ever* going to live that down?”
Risking a cursory glance in Sam’s direction, Janet
carried on, the mischief in her tone undeterred. “Well, if Lt. Johnson will forever be known as ‘froth-mouth,’
don’t you think jumping Colonel O’Neill in the locker room – and inflicting
some pretty nice shiners, by the way – would be hard to forget? So, in short, no.”
“That’s comforting.” Sam remarked dryly.
Sam pointed to the disk resting adjacent the
computer, which Janet handed to her.
“Well, it couldn’t have been *that* bad!”
“No,” Sam answered automatically, her body bent
over as she inserted the diskette into the drive. “But then sex with Jack was always incredible.”
Disbelief hit first, her eyes screwing shut as if
the sheer pressure could undo her words.
Next emerged anger, as she cursed herself for her lack of
restraint. Sam *never* talked about
such personal things ... and certainly not with a stranger, which Dr. Fraiser
practically was to her.
Ignoring Janet’s amused complexion, Sam returned to
the computer, her quickly tapped keystrokes yielding the next test
results. All the while, Janet regarded
Sam curiously, striving like mad to bite back her threatening smile. Janet related to her frustration, having
suffered through a divorce herself – although she suspected that Sam never
called O’Neill a cheap, misogynistic, drunken redneck.
So, despite the wide-open door Sam just created,
Janet considerately closed it ... slightly anyway. “At any rate, it wasn’t your fault. Like I told the Colonel, you were afflicted by an organism that
released a hormone into your system, which stimulated the primitive regions of
the brain.”
“I know,” Sam rushed, fluttering
her hand to block the explanation. “It
just had to be me, though, you know? It
couldn’t have been the other way around.”
Sam hated the whine in her voice, but found it difficult to muffle her
mortification as she relived the events in her mind.
“Could’ve been worse,” Janet
uttered soberly. “It could’ve been him
with another woman.”
The notion turned Sam cold ...
because she was right. It could happen
– it probably *would* happen sooner or later – for either of them. It was a consideration she had weighed
heavily upon during their truce, and an eventuality she had since tried to prepare
herself for ... until she concluded there *was* no way to prepare for something
like that. And since he obviously felt
no concern, for surely he had to have contemplated the prospect as well, she
resolved herself to the same indifference.
“Janet, we don’t see each other that way
anymore.” Still unable to meet her
eyes, Sam chided Janet with all the insistence she could muster, uncertain
whether her efforts attempted to convince Janet or herself. Regardless, Sam kept her eyes firm on the
green letters that flashed like Christmas lights amid the black screen.
Although a believable performance, Janet wasn’t
buying it, *especially* after the ‘incredible’ comment. Janet, nevertheless, thought it high time to
change the subject. “So ... always?”
Biting her lower lip, Sam nodded in affirmation,
affording a small grin before the blaring klaxons preceded an out-of-breath
Kawalsky storming into the lab.
“Kawalsky?”
Sam checked him over before stretching her eyesight past him into the
hallway. “Where’s the rest of SG1?”
“Uh, still on Argos.” Charlie rasped, the words trickling off three hardened
breaths. He paused to catch his breath
before rushing out his explanation.
“We’ve come across a bit of a ... problem.”
“What kind of problem?” Janet asked the question this time. Both women climbed off their stools to inspect him closer.
“A virus.”
Noticing their panicked reaction, he quickly added, “I’m not
infected. It’s not airborne.”
Carter relaxed somewhat, releasing her indrawn
breath, as Janet continued. “Maybe you
better start at the beginning.”
“Okay. Um,
on our first night, the Argosians fell unconscious ... all of ‘em, at the same
time. Next morning, they all woke up
simultaneously. Same thing happened the
following day. Daniel deciphered some
text from a statue in one of their buildings, and believes the Argosians suffer
from a virus.” His outstretched thumb
lingered over his shoulder, its direction indicating the gateroom. “He and Teal’c are still translating the
rest of the statue.”
“They lose unconsciousness in tandem? That’s odd.” A quick glance over to Dr. Fraiser confirmed the sentiment.
“It gets worse.”
The doctors again directed their attention to him. “Dr. Jackson delivered a baby when we first
arrived, a healthy boy. Next day, he
was the size of a toddler.”
Janet shook her head. “I’m not following you.”
“According to Daniel,” Kawalsky disclosed, “they
live about 1/250th of our normal lifespan.”
Sam squinted as she absorbed the information. “You’re talking about accelerated
growth?” Her mind boggled at the
concept, the mounting excitement inflating her tone.
“Yep.
According to them, the Argosians live for ‘100 blissful days’ ... before
they die. And,” Charlie paused, his
fists clenching at his side, “we believe Colonel O’Neill has been infected.”
An corrosive whirlpool sucked her into disbelief;
it froze her mind, and her body trembled with shell-shock.
“Wait, you just said the virus wasn’t
airborne.” Janet commandeered the
interrogation, her professionalism overriding the empathy she intuited for her
new friend.
Thankful for the question, since it stopped him
from stopping, Kawalsky nodded at Janet.
“That’s right. Daniel, Teal’c,
and myself are fine.”
“How exactly did Colonel O’Neill contract the
virus?”
Kawalsky cringed at the innocent question, wishing
Sam weren’t around to hear the not-so-innocent answer. Perhaps, he thought, he could explain the
circumstances without divulging *all* the details. “Well, you see, one of the Argosian women did this – dance – in
front of the Colonel, and ...”
Nope, he knew where *that* sentence headed. So he ignored the standoffish pose from Dr.
Fraiser – he didn’t *dare* look at Sam – and opted for an alternate route. “Well, you see, there was this cake that was
... ‘only for him.’ And, afterward, these women grabbed him and
...”
Without meaning to – in fact, he’d meant just the
opposite – Charlie dug himself into a deeper hole. With no other choice but the truth, he opted just to spit the
words out. “We think the cake that
Colonel O’Neill ate was drugged.”
Kawalsky articulated purposely, then hastily added to the defense. “He had absolutely *no* idea what he was
doing, *that much* was obvious. One of
the Argosians had chosen him, and took him into one of their shelters. We found him again when the others left for
the same ‘house’ and fell asleep.”
Charlie managed in his uncalculated ramble to skip
some *minor* details, like Jack’s state of undress when they found him, and
what Kawalsky *thought* had occurred during those missing moments.
Until Sam asked the inevitable question.
“And how is it that Colonel O’Neill contracted the
virus, and the other members of SG1 didn’t?”
Kawalsky silently cursed Sam for being so, well, Sam
... didn’t she know that her question basically forced him to say it,
regardless of how much it would hurt her?
“Unless it was the cake.” Janet piped in; her hand hovered by her temple while her mind
assimilated the information. “Perhaps
ingesting the food, or even the drug itself, caused his infection.”
Kawalsky could bend down on his knees and kiss
Fraiser’s feet!
“True,” Sam nodded thoughtfully. “It’s something we shouldn’t rule out.” She paused for a moment before she turned again
to the Major. “Is there anything else
we should know, anything that separates his actions from the rest of the
team?”
Despite the pointed question, Kawalsky *knew* Sam
hadn’t suspected ... because who would?
Anyone who knew him, at least before, would never think him capable of –
this – with anyone other than Sam.
But he had.
Not that Jack had confirmed it, but come on ... Kawalsky wasn’t
blind.
Daniel had excluded air as a means of transmission;
Charlie supposed ingestion of the cake was a possibility – after all, no other
team member partook in it. On the other
hand, if he omitted something potentially vital, with the knowledge that it
might hinder their progress ...
No. He
couldn’t do that to him, no matter how painful this was.
Jack was braver than that.
So, he would be, too.
“When we found the Colonel, he was ... uh ...
undressed.” Kawalsky started out slow,
prepping himself and his audience for the blow to come. His eyes briefly skirted toward Sam, but her
disciplined expression gave nothing away.
Knowing that she hung on his every word, though, Kawalsky plowed onward,
employing his best professional tone.
“Although Colonel O’Neill has neither confirmed nor denied it, I believe
he ... slept ... with Kynthia.”
“Slept?”
Janet restated the word gently, “As in sexual intercourse?”
“Yes.”
And there it stopped ... the electronic whirring
elicited from the machines encircling the room ... the meaningless muddle
unsuspecting airmen engaged in as they traipsed outside the cold lab ... the
rhythmic beats tolling through her body, familiar pulses that were supplanted
by a cavernous sting that dulled her ability to breathe.
“I see.”
Janet afforded one look at Sam before her eyes retreated, fearful that
the sight would crack her professional demeanor. “Okay. That may prove
important. I’m, uh, going to run a
routine check and protein analysis on these blood samples. Sam,” Janet gently queried, “I’ll need you
to run some tests here in the lab.”
Mentally slapping herself, Sam responded vacantly,
“Sure. Right.”
Fraiser determinedly exited the room, hurriedly
shuffling down the corridor with the samples she received from Kawalsky. Sam, meanwhile, positioned herself back at
the console, stoically extracting the disk from the computer and, then,
clearing the results that still adorned the screen ... not noticing – not
*wanting* to notice – that she wasn’t alone.
Charlie remained in the lab, his presence quiet and
unsure. He wanted to say something, comfort
her somehow, but the proper words eluded him.
Only his silence prevailed, and he hated it.
Sam heard the nervous scuffling of his feet against
the hard cement. She knew, and her
heart squeezed at the gesture, but she couldn’t talk about this ... not
now. So she ignored him, pretending to
busy herself with her work, until he finally gave up and silently walked
away.
Once alone, she leaned back into the uncomfortable
stool, and wrenched her eyes tightly ... wishing, not for the first time, that
she hadn’t made that stupid request.
She’d still be a member of SG1 – she would’ve accompanied them on this
mission ... she would be there now, *doing* something, helping somehow. She could’ve ...
What?
Stopped this from happening?
No, she couldn’t have stopped this, no more than he
would want her to. Yes, he’d been
drugged – even her befuddled mind had taken in that much.
But it didn’t help.
It did nothing to numb the pain that cultivated
deep within her, a pain she felt everywhere ... in every joint, every bone,
every muscle. And it weighed her down
like a bag of stone. Lost in thought,
her left thumb habitually rubbed against her ring finger; but instead of its
usual comfort, she found only bare skin, and the emptiness from the gesture
snapped her from the entrancing cycle of hurt and pity.
She would *not* think about this now.
Now she needed to work, to help Janet solve this –
breaking down would not help anyone, least of all Jack. As much as it hurt, she couldn’t let him down
... she *wouldn’t*.
Yep, she knew it would happen eventually.
She just never thought it would be so soon.
******
I’m not good at this ... I guess I never have been.
But *we* were good, Sam.
Finding you was the smartest thing I ever did.
Although, you’d probably argue that *you* found
*me*.
God, I wish you could ...
... just to hear your voice one last time.
I’ve considered myself the luckiest son-of-a-bitch
to ever walk the earth since that day.
Even with how our story ended, Sam, I would never take back a single day
we had together.
Destiny sure went out of its way to bring us
together ...
... and took such cruel, equal measures to split us
apart.
I suppose that’s something I never understood. I mean, why would fate do that?
I’ve never found the answer.
I’m not even sure there’s one to find.
But we can’t look back anymore, Sam.
Dwelling on the past – it’s destroying us ...
... it’s destroying who we were ... who we could
be.
Before this, before the stargate, we *had* lost us
... the good memories, even the bad ones.
But thanks to a piece of alien technology – and
fate, I suppose – we rediscovered each other ... as friends.
I’m thankful for that.
I’m thankful for you.
Always.
I guess it was there all along, wasn’t it?
My legacy ...
the one thing in my life worth writing about.
You.
You and Charlie.
It always was, Sam.
And, thanks to this insignificant piece of paper,
it always will be ...
... forever.
******
He felt his youth returning already, despite the
passing of only twenty minutes; so much so, Jack decided to walk about the
place one last time. His team busied
themselves amongst the Argosians, readying them for life after a hundred
days. Feeling like a decrepit, old man,
Jack needed action, even if his elderly feet could only advance one tiny step
at a time.
Notwithstanding his ‘experience’ on Argos, Jack truly appreciated its beauty, especially the water. He paused along the beach, his heavy boots imprinting their silhouette in the soft sand. A contented breeze ruffled his straggly hair; the wind shepherding beads of salt that stung his eyes as they beheld the listless ocea