Chapter 5: Learning Curve
Summary: Traveling to Nialla aboard the An Croi, which will take 9 hours at hyperspace ultra (new speed), the teams learn the basics of running the ship. Once they get to the planet, they find a few problems. Of course.
NOTES: 1. The invented science-speak wonât make sense for those who actually know this shit. Apologies in advance. 2. Iâve brazenly stolen ideas from great Sci-Fi stories and made them my own. I make no apologies.
Shipboard
On the way to the conference room, Danielâs attention was drawn to the construction of the shipâs design. There were very few sharp edges. All right angles had a smoothed roundness to them. It wasnât noticeable at first glance but once noticed, it was hard not to get momentarily sidetracked.
Daniel stopped at the doorway to the conference room and ran his hand down the frame. Jason looked back to watch him, then walked over.
âWhatâs up?â he asked.
Daniel rapped a knuckle on the surface of the door frame. âThere are no sharp edges anywhere on this ship.â He squatted down and ran a fingertip along the bottom edge that met the flooring. It was slightly curved. Alina was closest and he looked up at her. âWhatâs this ship made of? Why arenât there any sharp right angles?â
She ran her fingers down the subdued off-white wall. âSilvadyne and Trinium composite. The curved edges allow proper energy flow.â
Sam walked over. âWhat is Silvadyne?â
Finian stood at the table, hand on the back of a chair. âIt is a compound consisting of several known minerals mixed with tritanium.â
âTritanium?â Sam asked. âNot titanium, but tritanium?â
âCorrect.â
âAnd tritanium is . . .?â she asked.
âA proprietary rock found on Lia Fail and other planets in Danu, our solar system. It is not found anywhere else in the known universe.â
Jack picked up the subtle hint in the statement: there wonât be anyone other than the Lia Fail who will mine the substance.
âThatâs unusual,â Sam said. âAll star and planet formation follow a specific pattern and chemical makeup.â
âYes, but there are differences,â he said. âFor example, not all planets contain naquadah, trinium, and other unique metals. While all contain basic elements like nickel, iron, and copper, some have other densities that create different levels of gemstones, like diamonds.â
Sam nodded. âI see what youâre saying.â
Jack just barely refrained from rolling his eyes. âSave that discussion for another time, please. I donât care where tritanium comes from. I only care about the here and now. The makeup of this shipâwhat we have to use, where everything is, and how to run it.â
Jason gave Jack a sardonic grin. âYou sweet-talker you.â
Jack gave him a backhanded slap across the biceps. âSo, letâs get an overall picture of what we have and how weâll attack the problem with the Goaâuld on Nialla.â
He gestured at the table, which was situated with its narrow ends facing the left and right walls relative to the entranceway. Jack moved to sit in the center chair with his back to the wall, facing the door but didnât sit down, preferring to wait for everyone else to take their chosen seats.
Taking the center chair wasnât a conscious move; it was done from ingrained security measures. As everyone moved to sit, those who held the same ingrained security sense and were left with their backs to the door felt a modicum of unease that would stay with them until they stood up again. Namely, Jacob and the other Tokâra. Tealâc sat at the left end cap and Jason had taken its opposite.
There were plenty of open seats for the Lia Fail but they remained standing. It was an annoyance that prickled Jackâs neck. âYou guys wanna take a seat please?â he asked. Before sitting, he asked, âIâd like the ship to set out for Nialla. Who implements the order?â
âAt present,â Alina said, âALTA is running the ship. Sheâs been given a class H protocol.â
âMeaning what?â Jack asked.
âLearning Curve protocol,â Cress said. âUntil you and your crew have fully educated yourselves in the operation of the ship, she will maintain all shipâs functions. Once you have become familiar with the shipâs processes, she will coordinate with your commands. For example, the shields do not operate at all times. You give the order to activate them. They consume a lot of power, and while this ship has an extraordinarily high level, itâs wiser to conserve.â
âGot it,â Jack said. âALTA, do you have the coordinates for Nialla?â
âYes.â
âPlease set course at the highest advisable hyperspace speed needed to get us there as soon as possible.â
âConfirmed.â
The shipâs flight change didnât give a lurching effect, which Jack expected from past experiences aboard both Earth and Goaâuld ships. Instead, there was a heaviness in the air, like a body bloated with excess gas, which then leveled out and disappeared.
âThat felt weird,â he said and looked through the doorway at the long and rounded rectangular porthole. It showed the fluctuating colors of hyperspace.
âWas that . . .?â Jason began, then followed Jackâs line of sight. âOh. Right. Nice change. No lurching.â
âRight?â Jack said.
âThe difference seems to be largely a matter of spatial dynamics,â Sam said, her hand on her stomach. âItâs what makes the change in air densities that occur when traveling between normal speed and hyper light speeds.â She made a face. âThat could have short-term effects on human female reproduction cycles.”
“Messes with your menstrual cycle, in other words?â Jack asked.
âExactly,â Sam said, grimacing. âPain in the ass.â
Daniel squinted at the light show outside the ship. Something was different. Instead of the flow indicating direction, the colors were spiraling, spreading, disappearing, then repeating the pattern.
âALTA, what speed are we traveling?â he asked.
âTrans-hyperspeed,â said the A.I. âI perceive that you have noted the difference between the current speed and what you have previously experienced.â
âCorrect,â Daniel said.
Sam narrowed her eyes and stared at the pattern outside the ship. She then sighed heavily. âI shouldâve detected that.â
âALTA,â Jack said in a âtired ofâ tone of voice. âExplain what theyâre talking about.â
âTrans-hyperspeed is the increased speed of normal hyperspeed. It will take approximately nine-point-seven hours to reach Nialla at this increased speed. At normal hyperspeed, it would have taken twenty-point-two hours.â
âThank you,â Jack said, nodding. âNow thatâs more like it.â
Up to this point, both Lya and Narim had been, regrettably, background noise. Jack winced, mostly to himself, but Daniel caught the emotion of it.
âWhat?â he asked, but then directed his gaze at Lya and Narim and Jack nodded. Currently, Narim sat at the conference table between one of the Tokâra and Major Wagner, Jasonâs second-in-command of SG-2. He sipped at a glass of tea while Lya seemed to be preoccupied with running her hand along the wall as she slowly walked the roomâs perimeter.
âYou guys okay?â Jack asked, first looking at Narim, then at Lya.
âI am well,â Narim said. âThe members of the Tokâra, however, are concerned about their queen, Egeria.â
âWeâre discussing how to proceed,â Jacob said.
Jack nodded. He stared at Lya. âLya? Are you okay?â
She didnât nod or shake her head. Instead, she tilted her head as if listening to something while she pressed both palms against the wall.
âLya?â Daniel asked. âWhatâs wrong?â
âNothing,â she said in a small voice. âThis ship is alive.â
That got everyoneâs attention.
âWhat do you mean, âaliveâ?â Sam asked.
âI feel a presence within the . . . essence of the ship. I believe you refer to it as âmaterial.â What it is composed of.â
âALTA,â Daniel began, âwould you please clarify Lyaâs statement?â
âConfirmed,â ALTA said. âMasteria Lya, the presence you detect is likely myself. The ship itself is composed of inert material that is not alive in any known sentient existence.â
âMasteria?â Jason asked.
Lya blinked. âIt is my Nox title. I do not use it except for ceremonial events.â
âSo noted and logged,â ALTA replied.
âOkay, letâs get down to brass tacks,â Jack said, and sat down finally, not waiting for Lya. He rapped a knuckle on the tabletop. âJacob, whatâs the latest tactical data for the Nialla homeworld?â
âAs Iâve stated previously, this is not up-to-the-minute, but what a cloaked scout ship surveyed and transmitted.â
âGranted,â Jack said.
Jacob set a familiar globe three inches in diameter with a cradled base on the center of the table and pointed a stylus no bigger than a ballpoint pen at it, pressing a button. A holographic map appeared showing a wide rectangular map of a planetâs surface showing several land surfaces. In the center was an additional square that magnified a small dot on the map. It showed a slightly more detailed map of a small town where Seti Ptah had set up his command around a few lakes. Housing around the area indicated the enslaved Nialla people.
The scale of the planet was indicated and drew several raised eyebrows. The planet was no larger than a small moon, at 375 kilometers by 175 kilometers.
âThatâs a planet?â Alex, Jasonâs second, asked.
Jacob nodded.
âAnd what was their total population prior to the invasion?â Sam asked.
â453,â said Senna.
âHow can that many Nialla fit in those buildings?â Jason asked.
âThe Nialla are small in stature,â Lya said, finally sitting down between Narim and Jacob, who had been saving the seat for her. She held out a hand, turning her swivel chair slightly to accommodate. The height of her hand measured only thirty-nine inches. âIn your culture, you might refer to them as Elves.â
âHuh,â Jack said into the ensuing silence. Heâd have mentioned The Lord of the Rings but decided it would be a waste of time. Everyone not from Earth wouldnât get the reference.
After ten seconds of that silence, Tealâc asked, âWhy did Seti Ptah invade such a tiny world?â
âWe arenât certain,â Jacob said, âbut we have an idea. The Nialla home solar system is the source material for all data crystals that both store information and power naquadah-based objects like the stargate and dialing device.â
âYes,â Narim put in, his expression one of clueless superiority so well known to SG-1. If he werenât truly an honest actor, the expression would come off as arrogantly self-important. One worn so well by his superior, Chancellor Travell. âWe have known this for quite some time.â
âAs have we,â Lya said.
Jack pursed his lips as his teammates, Jason and his teammates, and Jacob and his teammates gave looks of long-sufferance. Jack drummed the tabletop with four fingers. Slowly. He had been about to launch into a sarcasm-laden complaint about sharing information but on further consideration, how were the Tollan or the Nox to know theyâd been searching for the source of the crystals for over eight years? He still felt the urge to berate but as leader of this mission, it wasnât appropriate. Dammit.
On the other hand, he had a shiny new spaceship. Things level out eventually.
âOkay. They have crystals and Seti Ptah wants to . . . corner the market, as it were?â
âControl the market,â Senna said. âIf I read you correctly.â
âYes, thatâs what corner the market means, Senna,â Jack said, swallowing another urge to spew sarcasm. He left it out of his tone. Mostly. âNow then . . .â He looked around, forgetting momentarily that he wasnât in the briefing room, where a dry-erase boardâs shelf held a retractable pointer. With a clearing of his throat, he used his finger as a pointing device and felt inadequate doing it. This wasnât a great beginning. He set the annoyance aside.
âThe green lines indicate what? A security measure?â
âCorrect,â Jacob said and pressed a button on the holosphere to bring up a list of technical information. Those who saw the info backward sighed with annoyance.
Jason shook his head as he got up and walked around the table to stand behind Jack. Jack looked up at him with a pained âSorry about thatâ expression. âNext time,â Jason said with a heavy sigh, âletâs arrange to have a projector so that everyone can read the information weâre supposed to have.â
Jacob made a face. âMy bad, my bad.â He got up and moved the holosphere to one end of the table and hit another button. The information was projected on the off-white wall, large enough for everyone to read. Selmak emerged to say, âThis is hardly appropriate.â She then altered the image so that the information filled the entire wall. Jacob then approached with his âpenâ that also held a laser pointer.
Jack grumbled, âPardon me, Jacob. Got any more of those?â
Senna withdrew one of the pens from his inner vest pocket and handed it out to Jack. Jack nodded a thank you and walked over to Jacob. âBefore we go on, let me state that this . . .â He held up the pen and gestured with it in a circle over his head. âis . . . we donât have any of our typical supplies, we donât know where anything is. How the hell are we going to help the Nialla, or anyone else for that matter, when weâre so goddamn underprepared? Iâm all kinds of thrilled with this ship but weâre not operating as professionals here.â
Jacob gave him a pained expression. âWe were sort of hijacked by Morrighan, Jack. Pardon the expression. Our teams are here without our gear, our weapons, or a solid plan on how to help. Exactly what were we supposed to do when we got to Nialla? I fully share your aggravation and embarrassment.â
Daniel said, still sitting, âI think weâre supposed to lean on ALTA for this mission, as a display of what this ship can do for us. Thatâs the reason for feeling out of our depth here. We arenât in full command. ALTA is an A.I. after all. Letâs ask her what our options are and how to get it done.â
Jack sighed. âALTA, um . . . you get all that?â
âConfirmed, Colonel OâNeill.â
âSo?â
A pinkish beam came from no visible source and scanned the holosphere, the beam moving over it six times before disappearing. ALTA then said, âLya, and Narim of Tollana, do you have comparable data devices needed for the successful completion of this mission?â
Lya and Narim exchanged a long look, then Narim nodded and removed from his jacketâs inner pocket a clear data crystal two inches long and a half inch wide at one end that tapered to a point. Holding it up, point down, he waited while ALTA scanned the crystal, six times as before.
âThank you. One moment please.â
âWhile weâre waiting,â Jack said, âJacob, could you throw up the map again?â
Jacob did. This time it filled the entire wall instead of a small holographic area above the conference table. Given the wallâs pale coloring, it was as useful as a projector screen.
The map detailed a large swath of trees that surrounded two lakes. In the center, between the lakes, were two large buildings elaborately decorated with green ceramic tiles. One was labeled âSetiâ and the other, âTemple.â On the North side of the Temple were three rows of buildings labeled âJaffa.â Surrounding the lakes was a three-quarter semi-circle of tightly-arranged buildings, set in four groups. Two said, âNialla Workhousesâ and two said, âNialla Housing.â
These building groups sat outside two sets of green lines marked âLaser Fence,â indicating the laser perimeters, and one perimeter fence sat within the other. The outer perimeter fence was dotted in intervals with fifteen parapet towers. The inner perimeter fence was marked with seven guard stations instead of individual towers. This meant something specific to the Tokâra.
âWe have seen this configuration before and they present a potential problem,â Jacob said, pointing. âThe inner laser fencing is reinforced to block incoming transportation beams, not a ground forceâalthough that protection is also present.â
Jack scowled. âSwell. ALTA, your assessment?â
âThe data crystal supplied by the Tollan does not give the technical specifications of the type of laser perimeter fencing. We will have to wait until we are in orbit to ascertain whether or not the laser can be breached or eliminated.â
Jack made a face. âFigured youâd say that. So, gentlemen and ladies, do we wait to plan the rest of this rescue or proceed on the assumption that the fencing can, or canât, be breached?â
Jacob tapped the wall with a knuckle over the Jaffa garrison buildings. âAssuming we breach, which do we immobilize first? The Jaffa or the Goaâuld?â He looked at Tealâc. âWhat do the Free Jaffa know about Setiâs Jaffa?â
Tealâc pursed his lips as he stared at the map on the wall. âI wish that I had insisted that Braâtac join us. He has much more knowledge about the Jaffa serving lesser-known Goaâuld.â
âBottom line?â Jack asked.
âWhat little knowledge I have suggests that the Jaffa owned by Seti Ptah are fanatically loyal to him. As with other Goaâuld and their Jaffa, it would require severe, first-hand exposure of the Goaâuldâs weaknesses to break that bond.â
âSo he gets dressed down in front of them and they capitulate? Just like that?â
Tealâc gave him an even look. âOâNeill, you know that it is never that simple a task.â
Jack gave a grumbling sigh. âThought so but it never hurts to ask.â He gestured at the map. âSo, letâs assume we can breach the fencing but not the Jaffaâs allegiance. How do we subdue them? ALTA, any ideas?â
âThere are two avenues of approach, Colonel,â the A.I. said. âMethod one, we obliterate the Jaffa and their housing units using the Asgardian plasma beams and the Lia Fail targeting array. Method two, we beam the entire Jaffa garrison to a holding area where they cannot escape or interfere with the rescue plan.â
Both Tealâc and Daniel held up their hands, but Jack held up his own. âI know, I know. We avoid killing Jaffa who want to be freed from Goaâuld control.â
âThen method two should be implemented,â ALTA said. âWe need to first arrange a makeshift prison for the Jaffa. Perhaps a penned-in perimeter stationed in a grassland field. There are several such locations on the planet.â She highlighted the areas on the map using twelve green dots. âI suggest this area on the same continent.â A red outlined circle appeared over the dot to the southwest of their original position. âAccording to meteorological data of the seasons, this grassland is experiencing mild temperature averages at this time of the Nialla year.â
âWhatâs a Nialla year?â Jason asked.
âUsing Earth for comparison, the Nialla year is 567 days, with a day consisting of thirty-two hours.â
âAnd the season, in comparison?â Sam asked.
âLate spring to early summer,â ALTA said. âNialla winters are comparably mild, equaling a late Autumn on Earth. Their midsummer compares to May on the northern American continent. This central landmass is slightly less than the size of the U.S. state of New Jersey.â
âWhat?â Jack sputtered.
âThe planet of Nialla is a tiny world, Colonel. 1/10th the size of your natural satellite, which you call the Moon.â
âWow,â Sam said. âPut like that, itâs a miniature speck.â
âHow far away is the grassland from the town of . . .â Jack began. âWhatâs the name of the town that Seti took over?â
âNialla-Sian,â ALTA said. âApproximate translation, Nialla âcapital.â I surmise you wish to know how far away is the grassland?â
âYes.â
âApproximately twenty-seven kilometers southeast of Nialla-Sian.â
Jack nodded. âOkay. So. How do we corral the Jaffa there?â
Three feet over the middle of the conference table, a hologram appeared showing a slender rod three inches wide and nine inches in length, and a translucent silver.
âThis is a forcefield marker used to mark an area absent of an enclosure, such as the walls of this room. The doorway . . .â
The doorwayâs edges lit up in a green outline.
â. . . has such a mechanism inside the substrate. It can become translucent or opaque.â She demonstrated, and the opaque door retained the green outline. âOnce activated, the green outline indicating the shield will remain until deactivation.â
âAre all doorways like that on the ship?â Jack asked.
âConfirmed.â
âHuh. What happens if your shield systems are hit by outside force rendering them inactive or destroyed while someoneâs inside the room with the doorway opaque?â Sam asked.
âThe shield deactivates and the doorway is open.â
Jack chewed at his lip. âSo if weâre holding someone in a particular room, they can escape.â
âTheoretically,â ALTA said. âBut there is a designated section of the ship used for confinement.â She threw up a 3-D holographic map of the ship with a small section blinking in translucent white. It was on a level labeled âSublevel 3,â and the level they were currently on was designated as âFloor 1, Main, Conference Room 1.â Overall, there were seven levels on the ship: the main level and three levels above and below. Upper levels were labeled âLevel 2, 3, and 4.â
âShould power be cut to the confinement cells, the doors will remain opaque until the power is restored. These are the only doorways that are designated âclosedâ by default.â
âGood to know. And it seems that weâve got some work to do in educating ourselves about the functions of this ship.â
ALTA said, âEducational sessions can begin whenever you wish, Colonel.â She highlighted a room that was three corridors to their right near the center of the ship on the main level. âThis room is designated for learning, but you can repurpose it to whatever function you wish.â
Jack nodded. âOkay. For the time being, leave it as is. Letâs return to the mission planning. Do we place those field rods on the ground in the section meant for relocating the Jaffa or do you do that?â
âSimply mark an area and it will be tagged, or painted, to use your colloquial term, for a size adequate to containing the Jaffa. I cannot, at this time, zoom in to the designated area as this map does not allow for scrutiny. We will have to wait until we are in orbit.â
âThe Goaâuld can tell who enters orbit,â Jason said. âDo you have a cloaking system?â
âConfirmed,â ALTA said. Another hologram of the ship appeared, showing a fine line outlining the ship and the location of the housing unit that contains the shielding computer. It sat in a small alcove within the large engine room situated near the rear of the ship on sublevel 1. It too was outlined to indicate that it was double-shielded to protect it from weaponsâ fire.
âOkay, so we can plan while cloaked?â Jack asked.
âConfirmed.â
Jack let out a tired breath. âThen I guess we can spend the time with an overall planning of the entire operation.â
They took their seats around the conference table, snacking on the food and drink beamed up from the SGC briefing room, and made a rough plan on the stages needed.
âStage 1, recon,â Jack said. âGet all the data needed. And locate that Goaâuld ship or ships. They gotta be there.â
Jacob nodded. âStage 2, locate and isolate all Nialla, Seti Ptah, his First Prime, and the rest of the Jaffa.â
âStage 3, take down the forcefields,â Jason said.
âStage 4, beam the lot to the chosen grassland prison,â Daniel put in.
âMinus the Nialla,â Sam said.
Daniel gave her a look. âNaturally.â
âStage 5,â Jack continued. âConvince them to leave peacefully or beam them back to the ships and destroy them.â
There was quiet. âJack,â Daniel began but paused. Jack knew what heâd say. There must be another way. But if Seti and his Jaffa didnât leave, what choice did they have but to get into a firefight in space? And from all theyâve learned so far about this An Croi ship, it wouldnât be a fair fight. Daniel shook his head as if to say, âNever mind.â
Jack gave him a regretful grin. âI know. Weâll see whatâs what after we relocate the lot into that field and start the negotiations.â
Afterward, as they waited to arrive at Nialla, Senna was looking at Jackâs left hand, then Danielâs and Jasonâs. He said to Jacob, âWhy do they wear the same rings on their left hands but there are no matching rings on the others?â Jacob had no answer and he repeated the question a bit louder to Jack.
Jack fingered the triple-leafed design of his ring composed of Black Hills Gold. âTheyâre our wedding bands.â
Jacobâs brows shot up. âBut . . .â
âYeah, weâre not legally wed, since poly relationships arenât approved, but they signify a commitment to each other as partners.â
Jacobâs brows rose higher. âBut . . .â
âYes,â Jason drawled. âThat means that Jack, Daniel, and I are in a committed romantic relationship.â
Jacob looked at Sam with a slight frown, as if she had withheld information from him.
âDonât look at me, Dad. Thatâs their business, not our own family stuff.â
âI see,â Jacob said, clearly non-plussed and not altogether approving. But after a few seconds, he adopted a chagrined expression as his eyes became unfocused. âSelmak tells me Iâm being old-fashioned.â
âYou disapprove, I take it,â Jack said, but instead of feeling offended, he was amused.
âWhich part?â Jason asked. âThe threesome part or the gay part or both?â
âItâs not disapproval,â Jacob said quickly. âI donât care about sexual identity. None of itâs my business. I just donât get it. The threesome part.â
âWhat donât you get?â Daniel asked, finally voicing his thoughts. âHow do three people work in a relationship?â
âTrust me,â Jack said before Jacob could answer. âWe did a fair bit of adjustment on that score. Daniel wanted a relationship with both of us. It was Jason and me who had to figure out how to work it out between us.â
âDid you?â Jacob asked.
Jason snorted. âI think so.â He gave Jack a slow blink, one adopted from the slow blink he and Daniel had adopted before Jack joined their relationship. It was a non-verbal way of saying, âI love you.â Jack returned the blink with a wink of his right eye.
Daniel eyed Senna and the other Tokâra. âI take this is no big deal to you guys?â
âThreesomes are not unheard of,â Senna said.
Sariel said, âAs Tokâra symbiotes, gender means nothing to us because as our hosts age, a new hostâs gender is less important than their personality and symbiotic willingness. Some of us, like Lantash and Jolinar, prefer male/female host relationships, but it was never a factor in host selection. They loved each other regardless. However, they were blended with Martouf and Rosha for a long time, so the gender became important.â
âSituational,â Sam said, slightly blushing as she recalled Roshaâs memories.
âPrecisely,â Sariel said. âThreesomes, however, are not the norm, and are, in fact, very rare, since we havenât had a long-term home in generations.â
âThough it may crop up now,â Maral said, âsince weâve found, hopefully, our long-term home on Ravenna.â
âGoaâuld notwithstanding,â Faradan said sourly.
The Tokâra, en masse, sighed in unison.
âBut now we have Egeria to lead us again,â Sedjak said wistfully.
âIndeed,â Senna said. âWe need to get her back unless sheâs found a way to eliminate Bastet.â
That was not greeted well by the Tokâra, all of whom were displeased, going by the scowls on their faces.
âSorry,â Connor said into the silence, âbut Iâm confused. You say gender isnât an issue with symbiotes but Egeria is a queen, right? So clearly female.â
âThe queen can be of either gender since the symbiote is genderless,â Selmak said. âIt was the structure of our society, and of the Goaâuld, that decided the queen would be referred to as female.â Jacob smiled ruefully. âHowever, like Jolinar, I prefer to consider myself female as I prefer female hosts. Jacob and I have had to come to terms with that, so his . . .â Jacob took over. âHaving a female host has had an enlightening, and maddening, effect on my lifelong prejudices. Selmak is a great partner and I wouldnât want any other, but it did take a little getting used to.â
âOkay,â Jack said impatiently. âLetâs get back to business.â
âJack, weâve already outlined what we need to do,â Daniel said.
âI know. So letâs use the time we have to get to know this ship.â
âRight.â
âALTA, put the specs of the An Croi up on the wall. Time to familiarize ourselves with its functions and where everything is. That way weâll know what we have and what we donât have to carry out this mission.â
âConfirmed.â
Arrival
Jack walked down the main corridor on level one, heading for the bridge. The corridors, he had learned, were rarely straight. Most curved, and one deck, Level 3, was circular with many straight corridors leading inward. To Jack, it reminded him of a restaurant layout, which was appropriate since a quarter of it housed The Café. Or An Caife, as it was known in the specs. In fact, all sections of the ship were in modern Irish. Engineering was Innealtóireacht. The infirmary was Otharlann. Since no one knew how to pronounce them, Jack had ALTA rename the sections to English.
As he passed an open doorway on his right, which was labeled Rest in soft white over the doorway whose purpose was likened to a break room, he caught sight of Daniel and Jason sitting on a sofa against the far wall. The sofas on the An Croi were pale mint-colored smooth upholstery. Comfortable, but very firm. Jack came to a halt, his bootheels making a squeaking noise.
âThere you are,â he said, entering.
Daniel had an empty plate sitting to his right and Jason was picking at a cake donut. One of the cinnamon kind that Jack had inhaled earlier.
Around the room were two small tables with four stool seats at each and at the far right wall was a cabinet station containing a coffee/cappuccino machine, mugs, plates, bowls, flatware, napkins, and other items. To the right of the doorway were three machines the size of standard refrigerators, and each had a long list of common American menu items on the front with buttons to their right. The items were pastries of all kinds, donuts, and muffins.
Approximately fourteen inches from the bottom sat an open shelf where the chosen item appeared on a small white plate without fanfare. No sparkly beams, no sliding up or dropping down. They just appeared, seemingly from nowhere. Just like on Star Trek. ALTA had given Jack a long explanation on where the food came from and heâd just accepted it, leaving for examination later. Carter had wanted to pull one apartâfrom a break room at another section of the shipâbut Jack had ordered her not to mess with the stuff. God only knew what would happen if she tripped something akin to breaking a freon line in a freezer. No thank you.
âWhatâre you guys doing?â
âChilling,â Jason said.
Daniel said in a dry tone, âWeâd have had sex but the doorway wonât close.â
Jack stared at him. He couldnât tell if Daniel was kidding. He hated that. âNo matter how long weâve known each other, there are times when I canât tell if youâre kidding.â
Daniel gave him a slow smile. âI was kidding. I think we can behave ourselves until the mission is over.â
Jack grunted. âAgain, whatâre you two doing? I thought we were to meet on the bridge in . . .â He looked at his watch. âOh.â Not for another ten minutes. He made a face. âNever mind. But answer the question anyway.â
âStomach was growling,â Jason said. âWe need a better CafĂ©.â
âI know,â Jack said. âALTA says we have to supply the CafĂ© like our mess hall or a civilian cafeteria or we have to program additional machines like those.â He waved a hand at the dispensing machines. Jack then snagged a stool from one of the tables and sat down in front of them. He wished the chair was a normal upholstered one. âSo we have thirty minutes or so. Havenât gotten a clear read from either of you about how weâre doing. Not just the mission but this whole thing.â He twirled an upraised index finger.
âI love this ship,â Daniel said. âTakes a bit of getting used to. Whyâd you change the ship section designations?â
âBecause every time you tried to pronounce the words for everyone, it sounded like you were about to puke.â
âNĂ rinne mĂ©,â Daniel said. I did not.
Jason burst out giggling. âNot now, but pronouncing it slowly, you did sound like you were gonna puke. You only needed to match it with the hunching over.â
Daniel snorted.
Jason sobered a little as he looked at Jack. âThe ship is a nice one. Like Daniel said, take a little getting used to, but for me, itâs no different than learning the design of the X-304s.â
âAnd the mission?â Jack asked. âAny holes?â
Jason and Daniel traded a look. âYeah,â Jason said slowly.
âWhat?â Jack asked, sharpening his attention.
Jason and Daniel sat forward, giving Jack their undivided attention.
Jason said, âWhat do all the Goaâuld weâve dealt with have that the specs on that map donât?â
Jack frowned.
Daniel and Jason both said, âDungeons.â
Jack made a face. âI thought maybe the temple wouldâve been converted.â
Jason shook his head. âDaniel pointed it out as we were looking at a holo image in the engine room. Remember, Baâal had his as a big layout on one of the floors at Belâaâlat. Set had prisons and that open-air town square. Everyone else weâve encountered has had their dungeons. I think this Seti will have his, too, if he follows the Overlord program, and if we canât locate him on the surface, thatâs probably where heâll be. Not on an orbiting Hatak like the ones that Apophis used but underground.â
Jack eyed him. âWhy?â
âHeâs patterned himself after an Egyptian pharaoh. Their dungeons were underground or within the pyramids themselves. Since thereâs no pyramid on Nialla . . .â
âTechnically,â Daniel said, âThey didnât have dungeons. They had elaborate funeral layouts. Hawara, built by Amenemhet III, had a massive labyrinth.â
Jack chewed at his lip. âOkay, so weâll need ALTA to scan for subterranean rooms.â Both men nodded.
ALTA interrupted them. âColonel OâNeill. We will arrive in one minute.â
âEarly,â Jack said, standing, and Daniel and Jason joined him.
âConfirmed,â ALTA said.
The three men couldâve sworn she sounded smug in that one word.
âCloak after we exit hyperspace,â Jack told ALTA as he sat down in the command chair.
âConfirmed.â They exited hyperspace and a filmy, fluctuating translucent wave dropped over the wide viewscreens and settled into place.
Tealâc sat beside him in the righthand secondary command chair and Jason sat to his left. Daniel stood beside Jason and the other team members were spread out with the Tokâra, Lya, and Narim.
In the rear of the bridge was stationed a wide, rounded, half-moon-shaped console with a wide, high chart behind it and short translucent screens attached to the front of the console. Sam sat in the center chair, with Alina to her left, Finian at her right, and Cress stood before the chart which held a live-action view of Niallaâs surface.
At the secondary command chairs, Tealâc and Jason read the information coming up on their screens.
âCloak confirmed,â Tealâc said. âEnergy output at one hundred percent.â
âAll weapons ready,â Jason said, touching buttons on his screen. âTransports ready.â
âAssume wide, outer orbit,â Jack said.
âConfirmed,â ALTA said. Once everyone was accustomed to the ship, ALTA would no longer be in control, switching controls to the command chairs operated by Jason, Tealâc, and Sam. The A.I. would execute commands by the personnel while maintaining the shipâs functions and fixing any errors that crop up. All actions were recorded by the system at Samâs console so they could be examined when the mission was complete or in pre-mission reconnaissance.
âScanning planet per set parameters,â ALTA stated.
âYeah, and do you see what I see, Tealâc?â Jason asked.
âConfirmed,â Tealâc said, making a few people grin because he sounded like ALTA, even though it was a standard response from him. He caught Jackâs grin and smirked. âIndeed,â he said dryly.
âWhat is it?â Jack asked.
âThere are subterranean structures,â Tealâc said.
âDungeon?â Jason asked.
âPossibly,â Tealâc said.
Surprising everyone, Lya walked to the front of the bridge, looking through the center viewscreen before looking over her shoulder. Up to this point, she had kept herself on the periphery, watching.
Jack had a feeling sheâd just been biding her time. In their earlier interactions, Lya had been quiet. Sheâd used an ability to hide a Tollan cannon from an idiot Goaâuld trying to take back Kâlorel before the Tokâra got a hold of him. What was her game this time?
âThere will be crypts,â she said.
âCrypts?â Jack asked.
âThe Nialla are similar to the Nox in their method of honoring the dead. Underground crypts are built, expanding as needed. The access should be stationed under the main temple on the Niallaâs central township.â
âI have the temple on my screen,â Tealâc said.
âPut it on the front viewer, ALTA,â Jack ordered.
âConfirmed.â
âSo,â Jack began. He got up and walked to Lya. âWhatâs your point?â The two looked at the viewscreen map.
âThere will be a complex underneath the ancestral temple. It is how the Nialla preserve their dead. The Goaâuld may have . . .â Her eyes welled up.
Jack thought, good god, no tears, please. âRepurposed the crypts?â he asked.
âYes,â Lya said. âIf you do not find him in the building he has chosen for his throne room and home, he will be there.â
Daniel and Jason exchanged a look. âJust like we figured,â Daniel said.
Jason pursed his lips and nodded. âJack, how about we check, then beam the mother . . . you know what . . . up to the brig?â
Jack cracked a grin when Lya furrowed her brows. She pressed her lips together to form the âmotherâ question but Jack held up a hand.
âDonât ask. It doesnât translate well.â
âVery well. If you transport the Goaâuld to a prison cell, his First Prime may retaliate.â
âAgainst the Nialla, perhaps,â Jacob said, walking over to Jack and Lya. âBut he wonât know whom to send his threat. We would have to find him too and put him with his lord.â
âLetâs get crackinâ then,â Jack said, returning to the command chair. âALTA, can you locate the Goaâuld?â
âYes. And he is, indeed, underground. But the complex he inhabits has a proto-cyclic energy barrier acting as a reinforced shield. For what reason, I am unable to fathom.â
âA what?â Jack asked. âWhat kind of energy barrier?â
No one answered, including ALTA.
Jacob turned to Lya. âDo you know what ALTA is referring to?â
Lyaâs eyes were just a little too wide, but not in startlement or alarm.
Danielâs empathic sense read guilt. It was completely at odds with the woman. Since when did the Nox feel guilty about something? They are always so self-assured, even a bit arrogantâbut that tended toward the feeling an adult had toward a child. It wasnât egotistical. He walked over to her. âLya? What are you feeling guilty about?â
âI . . . I believe I made a mistake. I did not consider . . . and now I feel I have severely disappointed myself, my kin, Narim, and you.â
âDid not consider what?â Daniel asked soothingly. âItâs okay. Weâre hardly in a position to judge.â
Jack wouldâve argued the point but squashed the urge.
âThe crystals used by the Alterans, whom you refer to as the Ancients, originated in this solar system and are the result of exploding twin stars that collided with what you call dark matter. They collected in the rock that formed the planets, including Nialla. Some of the crystals are too powerful to use as energy data collectors typically used for the stargates and their dialing devices.
âMany have been collected and stored to keep them out of the hands of those who do not understand the nature of their power. What the artificial lifeform ALTA means by proto-cyclic could be what we call thermo-cyst crystals. They are highly unstable. You cannot break through them without causing an explosion that would rip apart the planet.â
A Teensy Issue
âOkay,â Jack drawled. âA bit of a problem.â
âThe crystals can only be shut off at the source,â Lya said, wringing her hands. âI am sorry that I did not consider this outcome. My apologies.â
Jacob touched his forehead and winced. âSelmak is pissed, to put it mildly.â
âNaturally, but . . . wait . . .â Jack began, but then squinted at Jacob. âWhy?â
Senna answered instead, and his voice too reflected hot anger. âBecause the Goaâuld implemented this action on purpose. He is risking the lives of everyone on this planet, including himself and his own Jaffa.â
The Tokâra Maral said, âHis own Goaâuld scientists would have warned him and he did it anyway.â
âWait,â Jack said. âThereâs more than one Goaâuld down there?â
âUnlikely,â Senna said. âThey would have been brought in for a single purpose and then sent away.â
âGood,â Jack said dryly. âI donât relish locking up a collective of snakeheads. Iâd rather just kill them and have done.â
âJack,â Jacob said admonishingly.
âI know, I know. A little more bloodthirsty than youâd like to hear but itâs the damn truth.â
The Tokâra Faradan said, âYou are unlike the other leaders of the Tauâri.â
Jack smirked. âYou donât say.â Daniel and Jason let out snorts that somehow managed to convey sarcasm. Jack gave them looks of revenge but it only resulted in toothy smiles. âAnyway,â Jack said, moving on quickly before anyone noticed the undercurrent of sexual tension. âALTA, how do we get through that shield?â
âI will need a small sample of the unstable crystal to analyze.â
Lya said, âBut regular analysis is dangerous. You will have to use low-level scanning beams.â
âConfirmed.â
âSo where do we get a piece of that crystal?â Jack asked Lya.
âScan the planetâs mountains for residual gamma energy signatures.â
âGood. Do so, please,â Jack said.
âConfirmed.â
To Lya, he asked, âAre there any other subjects you didnât think were worth mentioning?â
âSeveral, as they do not pertain to the Nialla or this missionâs success.â
Jack rolled his eyes. âOy. Okay then.â
ALTA said, âColonel OâNeill. I have found a cavern of crystal in the mountains of the northwest continent.â A map appeared on the viewscreen.
âThis is a graphical representation. I cannot penetrate the cave with sensors due to the energy signatureâs instability and therefore cannot beam up a sample for analysis. You will have to physically enter the cave, take a sampleâthat is, remove an undamaged small crystalâand return to the ship and place the crystal in Lab 1âs isolation chamber.â
Jack sighed. âA lot of fuss just to take down a damn shield. All right. Carter, beam down to the location. Get a containment box first.â
âOne of us should accompany her,â Finian said.
âAnd one of us,â Jacob said.
âPick and go,â Jack said.
As Sam headed for the corridor, Alina and Sariel followed.
âNow we wait,â Jack grumbled. He got up from his chair. âALTA, when theyâve grabbed the gear needed, beam them down.â He paused, thought, and grew annoyed again. So many problems arise from not knowing the An Croiâs systems. This was hardly appropriate for a mission of this importance. âALTA, do we have communication devices or something to stay in contact with?â
âConfirmed. But they have not been calibrated.â
âFor cryinâ out loud.â Jack pinched the bridge of his nose. âWhere are they, what do we need to do, and can that be done before they head to the surface?â
âA, in Security Level 1 lockup closet. B, they need to be held in the hand of all permanent personnel. And C, yes.â
âIâll see to it,â Jason said. âAnd bring back other . . . badges, I guess . . . for the rest of us.â He walked quickly off the bridge.
Jack walked to the viewscreen and looked through the holo images to view the planet, thinking. He then turned to the Nox woman. âLya, once the shield is down and the snakehead and his minion are corralled, who do we contact among the Nialla? Do you know any of them by name?â
âYes,â Lya said, smiling for the first time since arriving at the SGC. âNerychna and her title is similar to a queen on your world. Her consort is Opalachi. There are leaders for the guilds. Do you wish me to name them as well?â
âNot necessary until we speak to them face to face.â
âUnderstood.â
Jack sat back down and drummed his fingertips on the wide arm of his console chair. He hated waiting and shouldâve gone down to the planet with Carter. And Tealâc, Daniel, Jason, Alex, Al, and Connor. Going anywhere was an eight-man requirement, not just by new protocols but in his head. Everyone contributed something unique: perspective.
But having been given a ship, Jack felt like Jean-Luc Picard. Nothing more than a desk jockey giving orders while others risked their lives. It didnât feel right. And it grated that he couldnât very well leave the ship with people on board he didnât trust. Or rather, who hadnât earned it, apart from Jacob, but even he had marginal trust because he was now Tokâra and had different priorities. Damn shame that.
On the other hand, he trusted ALTA, though it operated around 99%. There would always be that anti-computer control bug implanted in his brain since The Terminator had come out in 1984. Though as he thought about it, it might have been implanted earlier when heâd read Dune in â76. The universe in that book had an anti-computer law that declared that no computer would mirror the human brain.
âDeep thoughts,â Jacob said in a conversational tone, throwing Jackâs out of his.
âYeah,â Jack said, blinking twice before focusing on the man.
âCare to share?â
âNo. Well, I hate sitting here. Iâm used to leading my people to a planet, not sitting here like Jean-Luc Picard, a literal desk jockey.â
âJean-Luc Picard?â asked Narim. âI am not familiar with this person.â
Interested looks came from the other Tokâra. Lya just looked occupied inside her own head. Probably a natural state. Jack gave himself a gentle kick in the caboose. He needed to be more charitable, although it applied only to those he trusted 100%.
âItâs a fictional character,â Jack said. No one on the bridge except for his own people knew what that meant. âNever mind. Not a real person. And donât ask. Just go with it.â
âI understand what a fictional character is,â admonished Narim. âWe too have such stories. Though ours usually teach something along the way.â
âWe have teaching stories,â Daniel said. âBut we also have fiction stories that are aimed at taking readers to places theyâd never heard of or would never visit. One category is related to historical fiction, which is based on historical fact but embellished for entertainment purposes.â
âDaniel,â Jack said tiredly.
âWhat? If they want to know more, they can. Doesnât sit well to give a cliff notes version.â Jack said nothing. Daniel felt aggravation rolling off him and instantly knew why. âTheyâll be back soon.â He looked at his watch. âGive them an hour.â
Jack nodded slightly. âI hate it anyway.â
âMe too.â
Jack raised a brow and grinned lopsidedly. âYeah?â
Daniel rolled his eyes. âYou know I do. Stop being ornery.â
Jack sniffed. âI am not being ornery. Iâm just . . . impatient.â
Daniel sniffed back. âControl freak.â
âRight backatcha.â
They both grinned.
And if not for the grins, the aliens around them wouldâve thought they were fighting.
âWhen weâre done with all this, say by Saturday, I think itâs time for stew,â Daniel said.
Jack nodded. âStill cold out. Sounds good.â He eyed Daniel, sensing there was more. âAnd?â he prompted.
âAnd I was thinking about using the island stoveâs slow-cooking setting. We havenât used it yet, except for that Chili you tried that damn near killed my tastebuds.â
âWuss,â Jack grinned. âSounds good, but when you make your stew, the smell is enough to put a stop to any slow-cooking method.â
Daniel grinned back. âPoint.â He rubbed his stomach. âBut Iâm starved. Need something rib-sticking, you know?â
Jack nodded, but sourly. âDammit. Iâve been trying to ignore my stomach. Donât go ruining it, Daniel.â
âSorry, Jack,â Daniel said ruefully, still rubbing his stomach. âIâm growling.â
âMe too.â
âStew sounds awesome,â Alex said. âMaybe I can get Cari to make some. I suck at cooking. I can somehow manage to burn salad.â
âMaybe a team night for stew?â Daniel suggested, eyeing Jack.
âYum,â Connor said.
âDitto,â Al said, âbut the wife is set on her Mac ân Cheese to celebrate homecoming.â Appreciable groans made him grin.
âOkay,â Jack said irritably, âstop with the food talk.â
They all went quiet in agreement.
After about ten minutes, Jack and Daniel became aware that they were under some odd scrutiny by Narim and Lya. It grew irritating.
âWhat?â Jack asked. âYouâve been conferring with each other and staring at us. Whatâs the problem?â
âForgive us but the two of you . . .â Lya nudged him. âMy apologies. Both you and your teammates look younger than the last time we met. Is it our imagination or . . .?â
âYouâre not imagining it,â Jack said. âMorrighanâs folk blessed us with something called an Orchid Ritual. How it worked, I donât know, but it regressed our physical ages, minus our memories, by at least ten years.â
âThat is a ritual saved for only the most . . . spiritual or sacrificial . . . of beings,â Lya said, eyes widening.
“On your planet,” Jack sniffed. “Not on Lia Fail.”
âJack,â Daniel said in an undertone, wishing he hadnât put it that way.
âDaniel,â Jack retorted. âWe were just informed that weâre unworthy. And Iâm sick of this superiority crap.â He turned to Lya. âYes, weâre technologically young. Yes, we have control issues. Yes, we make mistakes. Weâre not alone. But by god, we are not all the same. Not all of us are assholes, criminals, and psychopaths.â
Daniel nodded. Sometimes Jackâs bluntness needed saying.
Jack sat back in his chair. He was about to touch the comm button to ask Jason what was taking so long when the man returned to the bridge.
âSorry, Jack,â he said and held out a handful of dime-sized decorated discs. They vaguely resembled the memory devices of the Tokâra. He turned, presenting the back of his right ear. A small disc was positioned behind his earlobe. âPress the disc here. It takes a little getting used to and ALTA can adjust the volume setting individually so it doesnât vibrate or echo.â He handed them out to Jack, Daniel, Tealâc, his own teammates, and Cress.
Notably, there were no devices for the Tokâra, Narim, or Lya.
Trying to be fair after his complaint, Jack asked, âDonât they get one?â
âALTA said they have their own comm devices that can be linked to ours,â Jason said, sitting back in his console seat.
âThey do, huh?â Jack asked, narrowing his eyes as he pressed the disc into place.
âYou knew that already,â Jacob said, narrowing his own eyes back to Jack in a challenge.
âI mustâve forgotten,â Jack said. âOr maybe itâs, âno, Jacob, I didnât know you had comm devices suitable for linking.â
As if responding to his statement, Samâs voice came through the comm, but instead of using their links, it came through the ship-wide intercom.
âColonel OâNeill, this is Carter.â
Jack touched the COM button on his right-hand panel. âGo, Carter,â he replied.
âSir, we have a problem.â
âOf course we do,â Jack sighed. âWhat is it?â
âWeâre surrounded by Jaffa. They had been using personal cloaking devices.â
TBC in Chapter 6: Issues of Command