|


Click image to enlarge
ISBN-10: 1-905586-04-3
ISBN-13: 978-1-905586-04-2
|
Roswell
Roswell includes
all of the original SG-1 team plus Vala and Mitchell. The title is self
explanatory --and if it's not, what planet are you from, again? <g>
So, all I'm going to say is that I spend several months re-reading more
accounts of this saga than is good for one's sanity, and even managed
to pick up a copy of the Roswell Daily Record for June 7and 8, 1947. Having
the team romp through ground zero of the most enduring mystery -- or myth
-- of the twentieth century was way too much fun. I hope you enjoy!
[deleted
scenes]
Chapter 1
“Kill
the unbelievers!”
Lieutenant
Colonel Cameron Mitchell knew to the second how long it took to dial Earth
and for the Stargate wormhole to stabilize. With a couple of hundred screaming
villagers on their sixes, all of whom seemed to be waving ugly looking
pikes and other various nasty, not to mention dangerously pointy objects
at them, they were going to come up short by about eighteen seconds.
A familiar
chorus of, “All hallowed are the Ori!” accompanied
the murderous mob around the bend in the track where it opened out on
to…
“Okay,
this is going to be fun.”
Last night’s
rain had transformed the ground around the Stargate platform into the
perfect venue for the next intergalactic mud-wrestling championships.
Now Cam understood why previous SG teams, as well as remarking on the
issue of the local hospitality—or lack of it—had labeled this
place Bayou. A full day’s rain had turned the already sodden ground
around the platform into a puke-green quagmire. If Sam’s progress
through the stuff as she fought the sucking, thigh deep crud to reach
the DHD was anything to go by, his eighteen-second shortfall was wildly
optimistic.
And the
stench… Cam’s olfactory nerves recoiled as he tried to identify
it. Nope. He couldn’t name it. This stuff was in a league of its
own. A whole new species of putrescence.
“Butcher
the blasphemers!”
Daniel Jackson,
who’d been a dozen steps ahead of Cam and Teal’c, hesitated
on the edge of the bog.
“After
you, Jackson,” Cam invited, turning to cover his escape. With a
grimace, Daniel lifted his P-90 above his head and waded into the slop,
while Cam raised his weapon and planted a short burst into the mulchy
ground just ahead of the oncoming mob.
Pivoting
around beside Cam, Teal’c also fired off a long burst into the base
of a tree before bolting after Daniel, changing clips as he went. The
C4 Teal’c had thoughtfully planted at the tree’s base on their
arrival exploded, temporarily halting the onslaught.
“We
will defend ourselves!” Cam yelled, the warning more a matter of
protocol that any real hope the bucolic citizens of this particular hellhole
of a planet were listening, even if they could hear him after that explosion.
Still, if the UN ever took it into its collective head to play off-world
diplomacy, he could honestly say that he’d given fair warning. Several
times.
“Wasting
your breath,” Daniel yelled back at Cam, pushing through the mud
after Sam. “They’re convinced death is the road to Ascension.”
“I
know. I just keep hoping.”
Different
planet; same fundamentalist argument. First it was the Goa’uld playing
god, now the Ori. As far as Cam was concerned they were both parasites,
it was only a question of magnitude.
“Strike
down the unbelievers!”
And to increase
the crap factor by a few notches, the not-so good people of Bayou weren’t
baulking at making the whole religious crusade thing a family affair.
The first
to recover from the explosion were a horde of raggedy-assed kids, armed
with slingshots, long knives, and the glazed expressions of fanatics-in-training.
They clambered over the tree that the C4 and Teal’c’s shooting
had brought down and just kept right on coming.
Cam raised
his weapon again. If what they’d witnessed in the village was anything
to go by, these same kids had been responsible for butchering the diplomatic
team the International Oversight Committee had—in all its naïve,
bureaucratic wisdom—seen fit to send to this planet.
“All
hallowed are the Ori!”
A short
burst from either Daniel or Sam’s P-90 behind him sent a splattering
of mossy clods into the kids’ faces, slowing them just long enough
for Cam to turn and size up his teammates’ progress. Daniel was
fighting the suction every step. Teal’c—whose feet were just
smaller than those of a Kodiak bear—had been reduced to plowing
his way through using brute force. Opting for a different tactic, Cam
took the mud at speed, managing to get well ahead of his Jaffa teammate
before the goop sucking at his boots slowed him to Daniel’s pace.
“Destroy
the heretics!”
Being lighter,
Sam was having more success. She had almost reached the platform. That
might buy them an additional couple of seconds. Still not enough, but
once he and Daniel got through this gunk, they’d be able to provide
suppressing fire from the elevated position of the Stargate platform.
Assuming suppressing fire actually worked on people hell-bent on martyrdom.
“Hallowed
be the Ori!”
Something
hit Cam’s backpack. It was followed a moment later by several more
thumps from what he was certain were the small, spiked iron balls the
Bayou kids used in their slingshots. If one of the dartballs connected
with his head, it would penetrate his skull just far enough to puncture
the meninges and allow the fluid to leak out. Enough dartballs would eventually
kill him.
Eventually.
He knew
that because one of the Marines who’d gone missing with the diplomatic
team three days earlier was still alive when they’d found him hanging
in the trees just outside the village. A veteran of a hundred encounters
with the Goa’uld, the sergeant had stubbornly refused to die until
he’d been able to report exactly what had happened to the eight-man
IOC delegation to Bayou.
“Kill
the blasphemers!”
Another
dartball struck Cam, this time in the fleshy part of his butt.
“Ow!”
That was gonna smart when it came time to sitting down and writing up
this report. And since his reports tended to be influenced by how much
pain he was in at the time, he wasn’t going to have a whole lot
of nice things to say about this place. “Sam?”
“Almost
there!” Carter had reached the platform. She grabbed the pitted
base of the DHD to haul herself out.
“Hallowed
are the Ori!”
The stinging
in his butt was real, but it was the burning in Cam’s quadriceps
that spurred him on. It was a familiar pain; an old friend that, along
with a promise from General O’Neill that he could have anything
he wanted, had hauled him out of a body brace after his F-302 had plowed
in at the Battle of Antarctica.
Focused on
making his way through the thigh-deep muck, Cam had tuned out both the
smell and relatively unimaginative rhetoric until, “Strike down
their woman!” caught his attention.
He glanced
over his shoulder—and ducked to avoid one of the incoming dartballs.
Okay, that was a mistake, because it put his face in the direct path of
another dart, which sliced open his cheek and took out a piece of his
nose as it passed. Still, that didn’t bother him nearly so much
as the realization that the villagers, who’d grown up running through
Bayou mud, had recovered any ground they’d lost through smoke grenades,
C4, and Teal’c’s one man deforestation program.
SG-1 would
be lucky if they had eighteen seconds.
Sam was punching
in the first symbol on the DHD when one of the golf ball sized missiles
caught her in the calf. She kicked her foot back, shaking the thing off
like a pesky mosquito, but then a whole slew of them started pounding
her legs. Specks of blood appeared through the small rips in her pants.
“Blessed
are the Ori!”
Daniel hauled
himself up onto the platform, spread out his arms and, dripping mud and
looking more like the Creature from the Black Lagoon than an archeologist,
stooped over Sam to shield her. Their attackers responded by fanning out,
continuing their barrage on Sam from different angles, knocking her arms
aside before she could finish the dialing sequence. Angling her body lower,
she finished punching in the symbols with her elbow.
The amber
glow of the first chevron locking into place in the Stargate offered Cam
only minimal reassurance. While his pack protected his back, and hunching
forward kept his head from taking any hits, nothing could stop the darts
striking his arms and butt. They were all taking a pounding. Dozens of
tiny gashes down Daniel’s arms and legs were turning dark with blood.
The Chinese might’ve invented death by a thousand cuts, but these
slingshot-wielding youths from the Village of the Damned had discovered
a whole new variation.
“Kill
the heretics!”
“That
chanting is really starting to piss me off.”
The third
chevron locked. More dartballs zinged past, lodging in Daniel and Sam’s
pack and legs while they angled around to take cover behind the DHD. The
darts started bouncing off the Stargate and DHD platform with staccato
metallic twangs.
Lunging
forward, Cam grabbed the edge of the platform, hauled himself out of the
mud and, almost slipping on the slimy crud, spun around and brought his
weapon to bear. “Crap.”
Teal’c
was wrenching his body about, trying to fling off two greasy-haired kids
hanging from his arms. The bloodied punctures in his neck were testimony
to the number of dartballs he’d taken. Hopefully the recent addition
of curly black hair on the Jaffa’s head had prevented the spikes
from penetrating his skull too deeply.
The fifth
chevron slammed into place with a solid reassuring thunk.
“Stop
the blasphemers!”
Completely
unmindful of his pals, one of the youths raised a long knife, flashed
a set of cavity-filled teeth, and took a swing at Teal’c’s
momentarily exposed armpit. The knife abruptly flew backwards, its force
propelling the wielder into the green slop. The shot rang in Cam’s
ears. He glanced at Daniel. For a civilian, he wasn’t a bad marksman.
But Teal’c was in peril. Three more kids had converged on him, swinging
curved knives. The adults were right behind them, egging them on.
“Hallowed
are those who kill the unbelievers!”
More fire
from Daniel targeted the weapons rather than the wielders, but then one
guy picked up a boy of about seven and flung him at Teal’c’s
head, distracting the Jaffa so the rest of his brood could slash at his
exposed chest. A spark of cold rage briefly tempted Cam into emptying
the contents of his P-90 into the whole pious pack of ’em. What
kind of sick religion used kids as weapons?
He sighted
his gun. An unwelcome memory dredged up by Varrick’s godforsaken
machine momentarily filled his vision: three trucks crammed full of refugees
destroyed in a fiery blast from a bomb he’d dropped on them. He
never did learn exactly how many civilians—how many kids—he’d
killed that day, because from fifteen hundred feet and four hundred knots,
there wasn’t a whole lot to see.
And then
the event horizon shot out behind him like a blast from a jet engine punching
through water.
“Destroy
all those who do not believe!”
Cam fired
off a long burst in an arc around his teammate. The impact of the bullets
plowing into the gunk sent needle sharp spurts of mud out everywhere,
startling the kids into letting Teal’c go. Others still clambering
to reach him, were momentarily driven back just long enough for Teal’c,
eyes narrowed in determination, to surge forward, grab the platform and
haul himself out.
“This
is SG-1. We’re coming in hot!” Sam announced into her radio.
“The
Priors,” a woman cried out over the melee with a manic squeal of
delight. “The Priors come to vanquish the enemy!”
And that’s
when Cam saw two…no three—wasn’t that kind of overkill
for a backwater planet?—of the baldy priors appear from behind the
nearby trees. The large aquamarine stones set in the tips of their wooden
staffs glowed ominously.
Why did
he get the feeling that this was planned?
Teal’c
staggered to the ’gate while Cam and Daniel continued to lay down
suppressing fire.
“C’mon!’
Sam yelled.
The last
thing Cam saw before he and his teammates ducked low and backed into the
wormhole were three bright beams of light shooting from the priors’
staffs, over their heads and into the Stargate.
|