SGA ShepFic "Coherent sources" 2/2

Jan 09, 2011 11:24

 

Voices.

His head hurt.

His body hurt.

Voices loud, near and farther away, called his name and then someone touched his neck and felt gently round his head. He jerked as fingers found the painful knot.

“Whassssup?” he groaned. Where was he and what had he been drinking to feel this battered? He was going to put Lorne on KP duty for a whole month. Meanwhile, he was going to sleep this off a little longer.

“Sheppard! Wake up!”

“Hhhngh?”

He jerked his head. Everything shorted out for a second. He held his breath as he fought the pain. He tried again, opening his eyes and squinted, pushing himself off the control levers digging into his ribs. The view screen was cracked and everything outside was white. Huh. His blurry vision was captured by the red smears on the console.

“Careful, now. How is your head?”  Teyla stood next to him, her dark eyes looking worried as she assessed him. He blinked slowly at her.

“Think I’ll live.” His brain whirled. Farms, cattle. Valley. Jumper snafu. Snow. Too many birds. Crash.

“Ahm, everyone okay?” he finally thought to ask as he gingerly leant back in his seat, his chest aching. He was glad not to feel the sharp pain of broken ribs, but he was bruised for sure. He was trying to focus on the finger Teyla was moving in front of his nose in lieu of a doctor’s penlight. He swallowed hard against the threat of bile and breathed in and out slowly.

“I’m permanently disfigured, but at least I’m still a genius!” Rodney said through cut lips, the bruises on his cheek and forehead beginning to swell up. He held a tissue wadded up against his nose, which slowly turned red.

“Ronon?” Teyla asked looking towards the back of the jumper.

“I think the box that got the window hit me on the way past,” he replied through clenched teeth, holding his left arm tight to his body with his right.

“There could be another avalanche. Do you think the jumper will fire up after your version of a Microsoft reboot?” Rodney asked him.

“Even if it would, we aren’t space worthy with that crack. Besides the windows are all shut Rodney, we just need to exit and everything will be alright.” John couldn’t believe how unreal this felt, jokes aside.

“Teyla?”

“I am battered and bruised but unharmed.” she said as she went to help Ronon.

“Get patched up, grab as much gear as we can, and let’s move before this slides or we get trapped inside. We need to see exactly where we are.” Ronon urged, holding one hand to the side of his head, blood seeping through. Teyla started to fit a sling for his left arm from the open First Aid box.

“We’re on the side of a mountain. Lovely. How far is it to the bottom? Miles. How far away from the town are we? Even more miles” Rodney bitched.

“Then we had best start” Teyla said grimly, opening antiseptic wipes and Band-Aids.

John agreed with that and tentatively stood up to help but lurched to one side at the first step with a yelp as  he fell to one side.

“Sheppard!” several voices yelled his name.

“’M fine, just stepped wrong. We’re at an angle” he fobbed as Rodney helped tug him back upright, eyes wide with worry.

“I think you’d better sit down and let me check that ankle out,” Teyla warned heading back his way.

“Yeah, okay. I do feel kinda off.” He bent over to untie his boot. His head throbbed viciously and dizziness slicked hot, cold, and black through him. Someone’s strong hands stopped his sudden forward momentum as he almost passed out.

“Off? We just crashed into the side of a mountain!”

“Sheppard!”

“Colonel? John?  Stay awake” Teyla urged.

“Yeah.” He licked his lips and eased himself back into the seat and stayed still as she painfully lowered herself to the floor and calmly untied the boot he pointed to. As she peeled his sock off, he was surprised at how cold her hands felt. She gasped in surprise.

“What? What!” Rodney peered over her shoulder, and John looked down at the revealed swollen joint and red marks heading up his shin.

“Oh, not good!” blurted Rodney, causing Ronon to join the huddle around him.

“I don’t understand” John said shocked.

“How does something like this go unnoticed John?” Teyla reproached.

“I was fine yesterday!” he protested. “I swear!”

“You went surfing, Sheppard” Ronon reminded them.

“Salt, sand and few scrapes….oh…” he broke off as he remembered the baby Godzilla.

The tale did not improve with retelling.

“I cleaned it up- put antibiotic cream and everything on it!” he repeated.

“Yes, but I’m betting there’s like a bazillion nasty bacteria in its saliva, and you said you had scraped skin from surfing.” Rodney pointed out, hypochondria in full flow.

Teyla said nothing but passed him the bottle of heavy duty Tylenol and a bottle of water. As he struggled with the bottles she stood up and stuck the thermometer in his ear.

“Hey” he protested, but her mouth set in a grim line as it beeped and she read it.

“Well?” Rodney prodded

“99.8F” she said, wiping it and tucking it back in the box.

Tallying of supplies and packing of bags, and scavenging of the jumper started with renewed fervour.

“We’re sure about not staying in the jumper?” Rodney asked, looking a bit wild already with the dried blood smears on his face. John couldn’t blame him really; being outside would be no fun at all.

“I’m not staying here. We have a choice between possible avalanche or a snow storm trapping us inside. This way, we’ll get some miles under our belts. We need to be seen. We’ll deal with whatever happens. We’re running out of time, too. The light will be gone in another hour or two.” Ronon said forcefully.

They set off, John leading so they could see him in case of problems and so that he could set the pace as the slowest party. At least they wouldn’t lose him.  They could swap around later. Maybe the snow would cool down the infection he was brewing. Then again, all this exercise might speed things up. He didn’t have much choice between blood poisoning or freezing to death while they waited in the jumper, which might or might not fall off the mountainside.

Jeez, John- way to be cheerful.

0o0

John lurched to an exhausted stop, still in front. They’d been going for about an hour. He needed a moment, just one moment, to catch his breath and gather some reserve of energy in the dry cold.  Rodney, on autopilot, trudged into him, almost knocking him over.

“Hey, mind the glasses!” John gingerly bent over to pick them up and put on again to mute the whiteness of everything.

Bitter sharp cold attacked his static body at once. His cheeks were numb with cold, his nose tingled, and his hands cramped in his gloves as he flexed them. Teyla and Ronon waded to a stop beside them. He looked down. His feet were in his boots somewhere in the deep snow and he tried to wiggle them, desperate for movement and warmth.  He looked up again and smiled at everyone’s questioning look.

“Just need a minute,” he said his words pluming in clouds. He supposed that he looked as cold and pinched and snow drifted as they all did.

Briefly, John wondered if the others felt the same about drifting away from each other with SGC duties, Torren, and other Atlantis life minutiae. This was not what he’d had in mind to get back together as a team. He did not want to die in the snow. He did not want his friends to die in the snow, either. The snow was thigh deep. It was exhausting to wade through and they were all a little battered to start with. Nightfall came fast at this time of year, and he wondered how much longer they should go on for before building shelter. The foot of the mountain and shelter in the dense tree line was many miles below in the gathering gloom…

“Teyla’s probably doing better than us, actually, more fat...” Rodney said out of the blue as they all paused for breath. There was a silent intake of breath and John turned and thwapped him upside the head.

“Ow. What was that for?!”

“What you just said, Mr Personality!”

He could see Rodney mentally rewound what he said “Oh, ah I didn’t mean that you were fat, as such.”

Teyla stared at him “I am pleased to hear it.”

Ronon growled and John despaired. “No, I mean she’s got more body fat, better distributed to cope in the cold than us guys.”

“This helps us how?” Ronon butted in before Rodney got going.

“I’m just…. I don’t know!”

“I forgive you Rodney.” Teyla said with a smile.

John saw it and knew she was inwardly laughing at them. He knew that Rodney would never imply anything so ungallant; it wasn’t in his nature- not where she was concerned. He guessed they drove her nuts, opening doors and protecting her when she thought she didn’t need it. She was just as capable, if not more so on occasion, as they, but it was how they were and she just had to lump it.

“Thank you,” Rodney replied gratefully and no doubt wondering if it meant he had to try the bantos training again. Or worse- meditation.

“I think we have about another hour of light. We cannot walk in the dark and we need shelter” Teyla said.

“There isn’t any!” Rodney pointed out.

“Snow cave. Survival 101.”

“Oh, don’t remind me.”

“You know how to build one?” Ronon asked surprised.

“Hello? Outcast to Siberia!” Rodney snapped in reply. “Yes. Well, in theory. I never actually had to make one in the field so to speak.”

“I have.” John reassured them.“We need to build it on leeward side of a slope. Gotta be big enough for all of us, but not too big. Good thing the jumper has collapsible shovels. Take it in turns to dig. We get too damp and sweaty, it’ll freeze and that means…”

“Hypothermia. And we have layered clothes” Teyla finished.

“Right. Don’t forget the cold air pit.”

“Is that important?” Teyla asked as Rodney unhooked the shovels from the sides of the packs.

“Cold air sinks. It’ll settle on us. Pit will sink it away. Also don’t block up the entrance” John instructed.

“Absolutely. No suffocation” Rodney huffed as he dug.

It was going to be close even taking turns. They were all battered and Ronon was one handed. John could only work in short bursts anyway. Finally in the near dark they crawled in, having put thinsulate sleeping bags down and got out their space blankets. They used flashlights for a while to sort out food, then turned them off to conserve batteries.

John reached up and smoothed the roof

“What are you doing now? You should be resting. Take your pills!” Rodney ordered

“Smoothing off the roof so it doesn’t drip on us too much in the night.”

“Oh.”

They all huddled together for warmth in their bottom layers of clothing, hoping the rest wouldn’t freeze too much. The flashlight went back on for a final round of first aid and triage and, then they all tried to get some sleep.

Atlantis

“Mr. Woolsey has Colonel Sheppard and his team returned yet?”

“No, Dr. Keller. There’s still another hour to go.” He looked up, surprised to see the young doctor in person. She was usually so busy in the infirmary.

“I’m worried that Colonel Sheppard may have a medical crisis if he doesn’t get back then. Something happened when he went surfing yesterday and this morning’s blood tests show some abnormal blood counts. I’m running cultures now just in case. That’ll take at least 24 hours to run before I have some answers.”

“It’s that serious, Doctor? I take it he didn’t report anything unusual. Aren’t there protocols and procedures in place?”

“Yes, but sometimes what seems a trifling thing can escalate. I wasn’t here and it’s the colonel….”

“I see. One hour then. Perhaps Major Lorne would be the best officer to put in charge of any potential rescue or delayed travel on the Colonel’s part.”

“Thank you.”

Planet. Day 2

They were all cold and no one had slept terribly well- perhaps a good thing in light of John being knocked out in the crash-but at least they were still alive. The wind had picked up over night and more snow had moved down the valley towards the town, making them all wonder just what they’d find if they ever got there or if anyone was looking for them. At the very least, they were overdue back home. The question was how long would Woolsey wait before sanctioning a search team?

Before they could get going, Rodney insisted they check for frostbite on toes and fingers. They carefully warmed cold pale fingers under their armpits and cold toes were resolutely planted on each others torsos under their shirts. They were all relieved to see them redden into a mottled colour. Not pretty but not in any danger.

John’s ankle was still too warm, the red streaks spreading up. He was shivering even though his heart pounded, and not just because it was cold. He had a fever. More T3’s were dished out for all and he picked at a powerbar. Ronon was suffering. The relentless pain of the broken limb and cold was dangerous for him too. Teyla and Rodney had aches and bruises all over as well. Today was going to be a hard day. They hoped for rescue but could not count on it and so they made plans for the day after that.

Make a plan. Keep going. Do something about the situation.

They crawled out of the snow cave and shook everything out, packing it up tight. At least it gave them an opportunity to walk around a bit and get warm.

“Sheppard? You okay?”

“No, Rodney. I ache everywhere.”

“I hear you. It would actually be quite beautiful if it weren’t so potentially deadly.” Rodney remarked as he looked round. He grabbed for John’s arm as he saw him wobble and fall to one knee. “Whoa.”

John scrubbed some snow onto his face to wake up from the fog he was in. Suddenly, Rodney and Ronon pulled him upright.

“Did you ever find yourself in snow like this, Ronon?” Teyla asked as they set off.

“Once or twice. I was lucky to find a cave that blocked the signal. I waited out the storm and the Wraith. Just me, though.”

“Well, this time there are four of us” she replied firmly.

0o0

John stumbled on in a haze, not quite sure who was ahead of him and who was following and how many. He never questioned the route or that they would make it. It was a feeling that surrounded him. When they stopped for a break he automatically held out his water to the person next to him, blinking when it turned out to be thin air.

“John?”

“Thought I saw…never mind.”

They were still cold and windblown and miles from the town. In the distance, a dull grey white haze hung. A snowstorm probably. That would hamper scouting parties and maybe jumpers if the wind was right.

“Does anyone else have grit in their eyes?” Teyla quietly asked. Both Ronon and Rodney replied yes. John turned round to look at them trying to ignore the vicious backache that had set in. They all had slightly reddened teary eyes.

“I’m stupid!” he groaned, painfully shrugging his pack off and clumsily opening it up with numbed fingers.

“Well, only on bad days!” retorted Rodney “What’s 509?”

“Prime” he answered automatically and grunted painfully as he dug out his spare black t shirt and started ripping it into three broad strips. The bending over and jostling motion was getting to him.

“Rodney, take these,” he said urgently, thrusting the strips and his knife at him.

“What? Why?”

“Blind!” was all he could say before lurching two steps away and being violently sick. The little food and the pills he’d just eaten were now gone. He felt lousy as he rinsed and spat out water.

Snowblindness. How could he be so stupid? He had sunglasses. It hadn’t been full sunshine yesterday afternoon, but it still counted. Today was going to be a long day. He hoped they’d make it to the tree line later and could make snow shoes. The wading through deep soft snow was killing their leg muscles.

A little clarity returned. He kicked snow over the mess and turned back to his friends. Hopefully, it wasn’t too late.

“Don’t rub you eyes, no matter what. I mean it. You should try to make some cold compresses with the rest of the shirt to take the sting out of the burn first. Make slits in the strips to see out of and use them to block out most of the light.”

He helped hold ice packs over Ronon’s eyes while the others did their own. Then they tied the improvised sunglasses on, no doubt feeling foolish. Teyla made sure they topped off their water bottles with clean snow and tucked the bottles into their jackets.

“Cool dude and three Zorros!” he said as they set off once more  toward town, the never ending goal.

The town, late evening, day 2

Major Lorne was frustrated. He’d been delayed from even landing the first time by the winter storm that blew in just as his jumper broke orbit round the planet. He could only get so far before returning to base and reporting in. The colonel wouldn’t want him to risk his team’s lives when it could be avoided. He knew that. It was just…frustrating being at the mercy of wind and precipitation. From the look on Dr.Keller’s face, she had probably expected him to pluck the colonel and his team from the storm no matter what. Everyone on Atlantis wanted them back.

Hours later, he returned with more jumpers because the township would need manpower and shovels to help dig and one to search for the colonel. He landed and met with the leader who filled him in on the what, when, where, and why. He deployed the S&R teams and took Dr. Keller and a spare medic in his jumper, then took off toward his search grid.

The jumper hummed along at speed, Lorne scanning the HUD and looking out the window out of habit. His co-pilot’s eyes were glued to the LSD keeping watch for sub-qs and the signature of the other jumper.

They went much farther up the valley than he expected before the LSD bleeped at last.

“Got them sir! All four bright and tight!” the Marine lieutenant shouted.

“Outstanding. Let’s scoop and run.” He glanced back at the doctor who was checking her warmer bags and IVs. “You hear that?” he yelled.

“Yes.” She edged nearer to the exit.

“I guess we ask about the jumper later.” Lorne said.

Lorne set the jumper down on the edge of a thick snow-covered forest. They zipped up thick coats and exited in a rush. Lorne and the LT helping the slim doc with the bags and the LT with the stretcher. They headed into the tree line. At first, he couldn’t see it, but guided by the LSD, they found the shelter made from folded over tree branches and saw flickering flames from a banked fire.

“Hello? Colonel Sheppard? McKay? Teyla? Ronon?” he shouted.

Nothing happened at first and his gut tightened with worry. So close and yet….

He reached the shelter just as Teyla poked her head out. They all blinked at the black cloth round her eyes.

“Major Lorne? Thank goodness!”

“Brought the Doc and Lt Jones. How’s everybody doing?”

“Jennifer? The colonel is very ill! He was talking about people that were not here and now we cannot rouse him.”

“I was hoping this would not be the case. But I hope I’m in time, but I came prepared. What’s with the Zorro masks?”

“Sheppard kept calling us that. Snowblindness.” Ronon said as Lorne and the Lieutenant helped him out of the cramped shelter.

They returned for Rodney, who sat next to the Colonel.

“Come on McKay, let’s give the doc some room. Sit next to Ronon for a minute. The Lieutenant is a medic too, so he can help patch you right up so she can concentrate on the colonel.”

“Tell us what’s going on! It’s hard with these things on.” Rodney pleaded. The Lieutenant replaced the black cloth with pads and bandages round three pairs of sore eyes and putting an air splint on Ronon’s arm.

“She’s fixing those sticky pads on his chest and hooking up the portable heart monitor. Now she’s putting that thing in the hand for the IVs. Jeez, that’s a big needle full of something. Hope that works. She’s got him on oxygen. She’s checking out his eyes and stuff, too.”

“He had his sunglasses, but he did get knocked out when we crashed.” Teyla piped up.

“Crashed?! What the hell happened out here?”

“Not now, Major.” Rodney said, subdued.

Lorne left the huddle and peered in, watching the doctor work. “How long?”

“Give me another few minutes.”

Lorne returned to the other three, heads cocked listening out for him.

“Okay, listen up. The Lieutenant and I are going to walk you to the jumper. Let me place you here…. now put your right arm on the next shoulder. It’s not far. We’ll return for the colonel.”

“Take him first!” Teyla urged him.

“No, the doc still needs a minute, and if he’s on first, we still have to wait for you to shuffle in. This way I can take off as soon as he’s in.

“Don’t forget the snow shoes.” Rodney said pointing vaguely at the shelter.

“Snow shoes

Five minutes later he took off with a full load, wrapped bandaged survivors hugging blankets and warm drinks. Ronon could take nothing by mouth in case they had to go in surgically for his arm.

Dr Keller and the Lieutenant constantly monitored the colonel all the way back to Atlantis and relayed updates to her emergency team. Lorne had done all he could. It was now up to the doc and the colonel to make it through.

Piled in a corner were the team’s packs, snow shovels and a slowly melting puddle of snow dripped from four pairs of sapling snow shoes.

Atlantis, two days later.

Even though Jennifer had reassured them the mild snow blindness they’d experienced would wear off, he hated the reality of the bandages. Rodney still worried there would be problems. He couldn’t help it. Nothing to do but wait for their eyes to heal and for their fingers and toes to pink up properly. Their vigilance had warded off life threatening frostbite and loss of digits.  There was also nothing to do but wait for the colonel to come off the critical list.

They couldn’t see the colonel, but they could hear the machines beeping and alarms going off and bustle of Jennifer and her staff all around him. The tense atmosphere seemed to have relaxed and things sounded less frantic. Restrictions were finally eased allowing everyone longer visiting times.

It was another day or more before he, Teyla, and Ronon could graduate to very dark sunglasses. They weren’t mobile and Ronon was winged anyway, but there was no way they were leaving Sheppard on his own. He had someone there next to him as often as procedures and crises allowed, encouraging him to make it. Although they couldn’t read to him, others did. Lorne came and read comics. Radek had rigged a computer version of Rodney talking and they’d tried it get it to read a book, but it didn’t sound quite right. Rodney was convinced it would make Sheppard hide rather than come around.

Not being able to see made him hyper aware of the noises in the infirmary, but there still plenty of time to over think everything. The first long night back, as Sheppard struggled desperately for life they had talked amongst themselves. They were all sure they wouldn’t have made it as far as they had without Sheppard. They had all contributed to their survival. It had been their blind fingers that wove most of the snow shoes while Sheppard had cut the sapling frames and fixed cross beams. Teyla and Ronon had conferred with each other about moss when they made it to the forest and Sheppard had found some. They had used it on the cuts and scrapes they sported and Teyla had wrapped some around Sheppard’s wonky ankle. Something about it being an astringent.

Sheppard had been very ill towards the end, but some how he’d kept going in little bursts of energy. He never seemed to waver in his belief that they weren’t lost, that they’d be found, that they’d make it. At times he talked to himself or to thin air, but he was delirious at the time. Actually, he seemed to play Prime Not Prime with one-sided answers. Spooky, but still- it was Sheppard. Freaky things happened.

It was his sureness, his blind faith - ha- that bonded the others to him. All for one and one for all.

A change in the machine’s beeping rhythm and the twitch of a nerve in Sheppard’s arm under Rodney’s hand diverted him from his sappy introspection.  Footsteps pattered over to the bed. Currents of air moved round them as a nurse or maybe Jennifer did doctor things and tweaked dials and IVs.

“Well?” he asked out loud since no-one was going to say anything.

“Temp’s down half a point. His blood pressure is stabilising .The kick ass antibiotic appears to be winning.” said Jennifer.

“That’s good news,” Ronon rumbled next to him.

“Yes it is. But he’s not going to be with it for a while yet. He’s lucky he still has his leg and suffered no heart muscle damage. He’s still going to get a rocket from me for not reporting his little lizard encounter. This could have been avoided, or at least not half so bad.”

“We didn’t know these freaky things would happen!” Rodney tried to defend him.

“I know.” She sounded tired. “I’m relying on you three to help him through his rehab and keeping him sane while he’s in here for the next week at least.”

“Count on it. It’ll drive us all completely nuts as well, but he wouldn’t have it any other way. He’ll only dig an escape tunnel if we leave him alone.” Rodney agreed, and he heard Teyla, Ronon, and Jennifer chuckling.

0o0

He could hear singing.

He wondered if he’d died. It certainly felt like he had. There were vague memories of feeling overwhelmingly ill and out of control. He could only lie there. He felt unconnected and a little worried. He didn’t like not doing things, but his body seemed to have no strength. No muscles moved. One ton weights were holding his eyelids down. Too hard. Try again  later.

0o0

Thirsty. He was thirsty. He tried to lift and arm and frowned at the lack of response, but something happened. A hand was on his arm and voices urged him to open his eyes. He tried to ask for water, his throat ached and his tongue had stuck to the roof of his mouth.

Suddenly, a cool melting sliver was pushed into his mouth, then another after a pause.

A light hand touched his face, wiping a dribble that escaped. He turned his face into the touch, desperate for contact for proof of his own existence. The hand moved to his forehead and fussed with his hair. It sparked a memory of his mom and then in a rush, flashing snippets of his team and snow and walking forever and a forest.

“What are you smiling about?”

He took another few seconds to really process the sounds and smell and the hum of Atlantis scratching in his brain.

He lifted his head a millimetre off the pillow and coughed. More slivers of ice. With a mighty effort, he dragged his eyes open. Bright light made his eyes water for a second, as he stared at his team. He frowned, confused, not sure if he was imagining being awake. It was like looking at a Blues Brothers reunion. Dark glasses all round.

“Sheppard?” Rodney prompted, worried when he didn’t say anything.

“Yeah.?” he replied warily, closing his eyes.

“Oh, for heaven’s sake. We’re fine. The dark glasses come off in another day or two. Jennifer’s being over cautious. We’ve been waiting for you to wake up.”

He let out a sigh of relief and opened his eyes again. He felt a little more awake this time. He drank in the sight of them. All hale and hearty. All alive and all staring at him like he was a bug under a microscope.

He grinned. They’d made it.

“Hope that wazz Teyla’s hand in m’hair!” he rasped.

Keller came and poked and prodded but he only had eyes for his team. So tired, but he wanted to stay awake

“Heard singing.”

“I was here with Torren. Shhh. You need to rest.”

“Tell me ‘bout wha’ happened. The jumper?” he was slurring badly now, almost gone again.

“Later, Sheppard. We’ll still be here when you wake.”

He counted on it.

END

Prompt for: sgafan

Request: I would like to see Sheppard and team off world, fighting for their lives. The threat is something native, human or animal (No Replicators, Wraith or Genii) and unexpected. Whump Shep of course, but I want him to be strong (or trying to be), still trying to lead his team and fight for them even if he’s injured badly. Bonus points for good team stuff, an unusual but bad injury for Sheppard and heroic Sheppard.
Do Not Want: Sheppard weak mentally (hey if it’s the injury and he’s still heroic and trying to be strong, that’s great!) No Death!Fic or permanent maiming. Gen only please.

A/N 1 Robin Williams quote from “Good Morning Vietnam”  What does the ‘o’ stand for?

A/N 2 coherent sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherence_ (physics) Waves of different frequencies (i.e. colors) interfere to form a single pulse if they are coherent. Two or more sources of light are said to be coherent if the waves emitted from them have the same frequency and are 'phase-linked'; that is, they have a zero or constant phase difference.

A/N 3 Hitch Hikers as in The Hitch-Hikers Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams comic  British sci-fi fantasy in which Arthur Dent’s best friend is really from Betelgeuse, the Vogons write awful poetry before blowing up Earth to make way for a Hyper Space Bypass and the answer to Life,  the universe and everything is 42. Amongst other things.

sga fic, secretsanta 2010

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