Title: Mismatched
Author: Moonshayde
Season: Six
Category: Drama, Angst, A/A
Spoilers: Ascension, Meridian, Abyss
Pairing/Character: Sam/Daniel UST or friendship
Summary: When Sam is trapped and injured off-world, she is
rescued by an old friend. But she soon realizes this isn't the Daniel she once
knew.
Warnings: Sam whumping
Rating: PG-13
Author's Notes: I'm
sorry for some of the clichés. I hope I did it justice. Thanks to MegTDJ for
the beta.
Disclaimer: Stargate, Stargate SG-1 and all of its
characters, titles, names, and back-story are the property of MGM/UA, Double
Secret Productions, Gekko Productions, SciFi Channel, and Showtime/Viacom. All
other characters, the story idea and the story itself are the sole property of
the author. This story cannot be printed anywhere without the sole permission
of the author. Realize this is for
entertainment purposes only; no financial gain or profit has been gained from
this fiction. This story is not meant to be an infringement on the rights of
the above-mentioned establishments
At first, she had caught him
in flashes:
At the Gate, his lips pursed
with pain.
In the field, his eyes
filled with worry.
After the blast, his face
marred with anger.
But it couldn't be him, not
here, not now.
* * *
*
The attacks had happened
without warning. They had bolted to the Gate, pounding through the tall grasses
that stretched through the meadow. Jonas had already made it to the DHD,
dialing home while she punched the current code to open the iris. She'd heard
O'Neill's shouts, urging her and Teal'c to close the gap, and she'd heard his
P-90 barrage the air with fire.
Sam knew it wasn't enough.
The Jaffa were hiding in the cave walls of the mountains surrounding them. One
by one, they would pick SG-1 off; the open platform by the Stargate left them
vulnerable. The mission would be in vain.
She knew what she had to do.
Quickly, Sam handed her pack
over to Teal'c. Between the volleys of shots, he glanced over to her, his face
a mix of slight confusion and apprehension, before it melted into a stern
understanding.
"I will not," he
said, ducking as a blast charred the grasses beside him.
"I'll be okay,"
she told him, her tight voice betraying her. "We can't let Anubis get his
hands on this technology. You know that."
Teal'c nodded. Though reluctant,
he grabbed her gear and slipped through the grasses, zigzagging as enemy fire
continued to rain down on them.
Between the grasses, Sam
could see that Jonas was hiding behind the DHD, shooting at the caves, trying
to provide them as much cover as he could. While she couldn't see Colonel
O'Neill, she knew that he was nearby, obscured by the grasses, waiting for his
team to reassemble so they could make one last break through the event horizon.
Sam wasn't going to back
down.
When she was certain that
Teal'c was close to Jonas and O'Neill, Sam dug into her vest and took out one
of her two remaining flares. She only hesitated a moment before she grabbed her
radio.
"Phoenix is coming
home," she shouted, giving her most recent code for the Alpha Site. She
snapped off the radio before O'Neill could order her back. Then, gritting her
teeth, she ignited the flare and ran.
Immediately, the Jaffa
concentrated their fire on her. She weaved through the grasses, placing as much
distance between her and the Stargate as she could without sacrificing her
advantage. However, as she continued to move, she felt the grasses beginning to
thin. Sam found it more and more difficult to find shelter from the blasts.
Only when she heard the Stargate snap off did she dart back into the thick of
the grasses.
That proved to be a fatal
mistake. As she dove into the grasses for more cover, one lucky shot hit her
thigh, sending searing pain through her body. Sam cried out, her legs buckling
underneath her as she hit the ground. All around her, she heard the buzz of
movement, the Jaffa reassembling, coming down to snatch their prize or maybe
even finish her off. And though she tried to bring herself back up, part of her
felt the blow of defeat, of just wanting to know if this mission hadn't been in
vain.
Neither option mattered
right now. Already, she felt fuzzy, her head clouded while her leg throbbed
with pain. Everything faded into the distance, and with a rush, she felt
herself whizzing through the grasses as she lost consciousness.
* * *
*
Sam rested quietly,
concealed in the shadows of an abandoned shack, trying to reconcile her reality
with the one before her. Daniel finished dressing her wounds, more expertly
than she recalled, with a gentle touch that spoke of years of experience. That
made her wonder if she was hallucinating. She couldn't tell just how badly
she'd been injured or if maybe this was something more.
"Daniel," she
finally said.
He lifted his head, turning
away from his work, and managed a small smile. While he was mostly obscured by
the darkness, she could still see the twinkle in his eyes and the grooves on
his face, familiar comforts that she hadn't realized she'd missed. He seemed
too real for a hallucination.
"You can't be
here," she said between heavy breaths. "It's impossible."
His smile softened. "I
know you better than that, Sam."
He did know her. She didn't
doubt he knew why she was here, either.
Sam swallowed hard, trying
to keep the fogginess at bay, and ignored the doubts that threatened to
overwhelm her. "I knew you'd come."
Daniel didn't say anything.
He tied the bandana a little tighter around his head and sat back, slipping
deeper into the shadows.
Sam wasn't sure how he did
it. Somehow, Daniel had managed to take her past the meadows and back to the
old ruins left by the settlers before they had reestablished a new settlement.
Why he hadn't brought her back to the sparsely populated village beyond the
ruins, she didn't know. Maybe the Jaffa had them cornered. Maybe he just couldn't.
She winced, feeling the pain
radiate down her leg as she shifted. Daniel moved to intercept her, to keep her
from fidgeting, but she shook her head. With some effort, she pushed herself
against the wall while keeping her leg elevated. She ignored the pain and
looked away from her mangled leg.
"Colonel O'Neill?"
she asked, biting down the pain.
"I didn't see
him," Daniel said softly. "I didn't see any of them." When she
felt panic rising in her chest, he shook his head. "Just rest and stay
with me. They'll be fine."
"Can you see it?"
she found herself asking, unable to hold her curiosity despite the situation.
"Can you see where they are or what will happen?"
When he frowned, the doubts
Sam had were drudged up to the surface. Suddenly, she felt that maybe she had
been wrong all along. It made her a
little lightheaded.
Sam felt her body waver, but
she snapped back to reality when Daniel grabbed her arm.
The worry sunk deeper into
the lines on his face. "Sam."
She shook him away and
breathed out, wiping the cold sweat from her brow. She would be okay. She just
had to know.
"As an Ascended,"
she stated bluntly. "As an Ascended, you must be able to see and feel
things differently."
Daniel remained silent.
Sam felt her anger start to
outweigh her doubts, and she glared at him with determination. "According
to the locals, Oager is a place where people can see the dead. Jonas and I
theorized conditions were favorable on this planet to communicate with the
Ascended." When he still didn't say anything, Sam scowled with
frustration. "You can't be a hallucination."
Daniel looked away. There
had been a time when Daniel would have jumped right in with her, arguing for
this possibility and that, when she would stand by and refute him until they
had met some common ground. He had always been the one to help her push past
the mundane; she had always been the one to give substance to his lofty ideas.
She refused to believe that he was gone, truly gone.
"Daniel, I did the
research." Sam leaned forward and tried not to wince. "The magnetic
field emitted by this planet allows various forms of energy to enter the
visible part of our spectrum."
"So, that would make it
easier for people to see those who have Ascended without the Ascended
purposefully making themselves visible."
"Yes, exactly,"
she said.
He gave her a look of
sympathy. "Sam…"
"I checked,"
she stressed. Sam ignored the voice inside her that begged for reason. She
remembered O'Neill telling her that maybe this place made you see only what you
wanted to see. She remembered Jonas interviewing the people and having
conflicting reports. She remembered Teal'c looking for anything similar to Oma
Desala's place but coming up empty. She glanced down to her fingers. "I
checked," she repeated softly.
Just like many times before,
Daniel slid near to sit beside her. He kept to a small distance, as he always
did, but was close enough to help her take comfort in his physical support.
Then, he did something
unexpected. He leaned closer and cupped part of her face with his right hand,
using his thumb to rub away the dirt that smeared across her cheek. His hand
was warm and smooth, smoother than she'd expected, but radiated a gentleness
that calmed her.
She grabbed his hand and
closed her eyes. "Orlin could take physical form." She squeezed
harder. "Come back with us, Daniel. You're here now. You can come
back."
She felt a sharp withdrawal
and snapped open her eyes. Daniel kept his hand raised, lingering in the air
for a brief moment, before he brought it to his lap. His eyes were sad –
distant – as he gazed ahead.
"I can stay until the
others come," he said quietly.
"You've taken human
form," Sam said, her frown deepening. "Orlin couldn't go back."
Without a sound, Daniel
reached over and grabbed her hand. He brought it to hover over him, hesitating
for a second, the pain and uncertainty swelling in his eyes, before he sighed
and pushed her palm against his chest.
Sam opened her mouth, but
was speechless. Nothing. No thump. No pulse. No heartbeat.
She stared at him, stunned.
"I'm sorry," he
whispered.
"That's not
possible," she finally managed as she paused to study his face. His eyes
shimmered. His skin was tight and youthful.
His long hair was pulled back away from his face and held in place by
his bandana. For the first time that day, she realized just how much he looked
like the Daniel she'd met years ago. Except for his eyes. There was something
deep, something she couldn't explain in his eyes.
Not that it mattered. A sigh
escaped her lips and she slumped into the wall behind her. Daniel was gone. He
truly was gone.
"You can't be
here," she mumbled. "All of you were destroyed."
"It's
complicated," he said with a sigh. "There's always a way…"
Sam chewed her lip, watching
his gaze became distant, almost pained. Then, another thought struck her.
"Then there must be more of you. Colonel O'Neill, Teal'c, myself…"
To her surprise, Daniel
shook his head. "No. I'm the last one. They're gone. The technology is
gone."
"How?"
He shook his head again.
"Sam, it's not important. Just stay focused. Stay with me until they
come."
This time, Sam didn't reply.
When SG-1 had first encountered Avlis and her people, Sam had thought they
would finally be able to see Daniel again. Though she had witnessed him
transform and leave to go wherever he had to go, that scientific skeptical part
of her couldn't accept that he was somewhere else, something else. He had died.
They had watched him die. Reconciling his death with the possibilities beyond
still caused her to stumble even with everything she'd seen and experienced.
This was going to be the
proof. This was going to show her that he truly had lived on.
Now, that was just another
impossibility.
Sam raised her head, intent
on remaining strong. She bit back the pain, the dizziness, and the hurt she
felt both outwardly and inwardly, and stared ahead, past Daniel. "I miss
you."
"I miss you, too."
And she believed it. He
wasn't Daniel. He never would be Daniel. But she believed him just the same.
She caught the robotic Daniel
stiffen, his head cocked to the side as he listened to something she couldn't
hear. Then his sad eyes were back on
her and she knew that now it was time.
"I have to go," he
said.
Part of her wanted to ask
him to stay. Yet, Sam knew that wouldn't be fair to him or to the memory of
Daniel. He would be just a replacement, her way of holding on. He would know
it. Daniel – their Daniel – wherever he was, would know it.
She nodded, giving him her
blessing. When he rose, she quickly grabbed his hand, holding him for one last
time.
"Where are you
going?" she asked.
He smiled again, but this
time the pain was deeper and more intense. It was a smile of finality. Again.
"It's going to be okay,
Sam. You'll see."
With that, he let go and
before she had a chance to say goodbye, his body disappeared in a blur through
the rotting doorway. Not even seconds after he had gone, she heard the thunder
of boots on the rock as they approached. On instinct, Sam grabbed her P-90 and
aimed for the opening. If this was going to be the end, she was going to go out
with a bang.
One, two, three…
Sam let out a sigh of relief
as Colonel O'Neill slipped through the opening. Armed and ready, he stepped
over some debris in the room and moved toward her. Behind him, Jonas and Teal'c
entered the shack.
Jack lowered his weapon when
he realized she was alone and safe. "Carter?"
She breathed out again and
wiped the sweat from her face. "I'm okay, sir."
"I'm glad we
established that." He crept to her side and looked at her wound, wincing
as he lightly touched the bandages. "Because if you ever pull a stunt like
that again, I'll shoot you myself."
She chuckled, trying not to
wince too much as the pain rattled her bones. O'Neill didn't look happy.
"You were supposed to
meet me at the Alpha Site," she said, holding her leg.
"Like that was going to
happen," Jack mumbled. He nudged his chin toward her wound. "How's
the leg?"
"I'll be fine."
She winced again. "You should have gone through the Gate."
Jonas raised his eyebrows.
"You didn't think we were just going to leave you?"
She couldn't help but smile.
To be honest, she never thought they would leave her behind. Only her concerns
weren't for herself right now.
"The package?" she
asked.
"It is secure,"
Teal'c answered, motioning to the knapsack on his back. "However, I do not
believe we can keep the Ancient device concealed for long."
"We got Jaffa on our
back," O'Neill explained.
Some of the panic Sam had
felt early returned. "How many?"
"Oh, there's
enough," Jonas said, motioning to the door. He came over to Sam and helped
her to her feet, bringing one of her arms around him to help her up. "Are
you going to be okay to walk?"
She nodded. She didn't have
a choice.
"Good," O'Neill
muttered, swinging her other arm around his shoulder. "There are Jaffa
everywhere. It's going to take a mir—"
The explosion rocked the
land, shaking the shack at its very foundation and bringing SG-1 to their
knees. Sam bit back the howl of pain that begged to escape, a cry not just for
her wounded leg, but for the life she knew had just ended.
"What the hell was
that?" Jack asked, quickly helping Jonas bring Carter back to her feet.
"That was your
miracle," Sam said, feeling a cold shiver.
He frowned with confusion,
searching her face for an answer. But when he didn't receive one, he urged her
and the rest of the team onward. They all knew they could use the explosion as
a distraction so they could make it back to the Gate.
Together, the four of them
crept out of the shack and into the sparsely grassed land, on the lookout for
any activity. Just ahead and to their right, Sam noticed a blazing fire in the
meadow, the smoke rising and blocking the line of fire from the mountain caves.
"Nice," O'Neill
said, pressing her to move faster. "We just got our break. Let's go!"
They hobbled across the
meadow, Teal'c taking point with his staff weapon in the event any stray Jaffa
happened into their path. The four of them pushed and pushed, cutting through
the singed grass. Ahead, the Stargate loomed with the sweet promises of escape,
of comfort, and of home.
As Jonas broke away to start
dialing, Sam stared ahead, studying every chevron with longing detail. It
seemed like only yesterday she had discovered the beauty of its true function,
but it seemed like a lifetime since she'd been able to feel that wonder and
excitement. There were too many wounds, too much pain, too much loss.
Though, now that she had
come to this planet and faced her hopes and fears, she felt refreshed. Nothing
would ever be the same. The pain would still linger. But she knew that it was
over and she could finally give Daniel the peace his memory deserved.
The Stargate sprung to life.
Her head held high, Sam walked through the even horizon and promised herself
she would put the past behind her.
Far above the Stargate,
Daniel watched SG-1 slip through the event horizon. He sighed, part of him
wishing to go after them.
"The longing
remains," he heard her say.
Daniel stole a quick glance
at Oma before bringing his attention back to the Stargate.
She didn't have to
explicitly voice her disapproval. He could feel it emanating off her like heat
from a cooling fire. He was getting bolder, more impatient. He'd nearly crossed
the line with Jack and now he'd nearly done it again with Sam. It had taken a
lot of finagling on his part to work through the loopholes in the system to
restart Harlan's machinery and recreate an old copy of himself. Luckily, his
expanding consciousness allowed him to cut some corners and create only his
physical likeness without copying any of his old personality, thoughts, or
memories.
The Others couldn't get mad
at him for this. He had only inhabited an empty shell, after all. Technically,
he hadn't really interfered. Besides, the likeness was gone.
He watched the event horizon
disappear with a snap. "Is it true the technology Anubis was after can
control Ascended beings?" he asked.
Oma gazed ahead with him.
"Mere dreams in a landscape of impossibility."
"I'll take that as a
no."
Though, the revelation was a
relief to Daniel. Even if the device couldn't be used to force Ascended beings
into the operator's control, he was glad that it wasn't in Anubis' hands. He
didn't want to even consider the outcome.
Yet, as he continued to gaze
down the empty meadow, through the fading fire and the dissipating smoke, he
knew that if he trusted anyone in the world with the key to control his soul,
it was Sam.
And that was enough to keep
him going.
THE END
Return to Soft
Touches (Main Ship Page)
Return to Scribal
Traditions (Main Fanfic Page)