Title:
Wonderland
Author: cgb
(luberluber@yahoo.com.au)
Web: http://appelsini.tripod.com/Christine/
Category: Sam/
Janet f/f
Rating: PG -
13 (mild sexual situation)
Archive: Yes
Spoilers: Everything
and anything up to and including
Season 6.
Summary: "They
saved the world then and later it
became a
habit."
Author's notes: Set
mid-Season 6 and at the end of
Season 1. Yes, it's
all about the flashback.
Thanks, love,
chocolate and margaritas to Teanna, who
keeps reading my
stuff.
*
She was on her back staring up at the light. It was anodd shape, irregular in outline. She couldn't identifyits source. She blinked. Maybe it was the sun filtering in throughher bedroom window? This made sense. This meant shewas home and, quite sensibly, in bed. But she wascold, and her head hurt, so that couldn’t be right. Something small and light fell into her eye. Sheblinked rapidly. It was rough and gritty beneath herfingertips - sand, or possibly dirt. The tears washedit away. She decided she should sit up. She tried to move herarm and pain shot up her left side, from her chest toher neck. She'd broken something. She'd probablybroken a few things. And her head hurt - really hurt.She found it difficult to focus, difficult to rememberthings, important things she knew she should remember. And maybe that was why the big bright blur above herwasn't getting any clearer. She could hear voices. Yes, she was sure of it now - murmured voices, comingfrom somewhere above her, seeming to emanate from thelight. "I found something!" one of them said. She strained her ears against the pain in her head.She could hear footsteps, people yelling. "Get over here!" someone said. It sounded like ColonelO'Neill. She blinked again and her eyes focused momentarily.The light was shining through a hole in the ground.She had fallen through the earth and was now lying onher back in an underground cavern. She remembered. She'd wandered off on her ownfollowing a magnetic field distortion. She'd expectedto find naquadah - or something similar. And this wasprobably a former mine so she had indeed chased herrabbit down the rabbit hole. She tried to guess at the distance between the openingand her position. Twenty, thirty feet? Heck of a fall.She was lucky - or she would be if they found her. She tried to call out, but the pain in her cheststopped her from drawing a deep breath. A stifled crycame from her mouth, it sounded like a whimper. She closed her eyes again. God, her head hurt. The light fell on her face. It was warm and somehowcomforting. She forced the pain to the furthestcorners of her mind and tried to imagine she was Alicelying in the Sun, waiting for someone to wake her andtell her that the rabbit and the rabbit hole were justa dream. Her mind drifted and she remembered that first summer. *** This was a time before. Before Jonas Quinn, beforeDaniel ascended, before the Russian's found theStargate and before her father had cancer. Before Jolinar. This was a time of Sam Carter - Captain in the USAFand physicist privy to the most extraordinarydevelopment in Earth's history since Homosapiusstepped out of the cave. This was a time when it was still new - its slightestmovement mesmerising, the way it bent and stretcheddepending on your perspective. In those days they did things that were inconceivableto ordinary human beings. She took such events in herstride, the way a good soldier should. She was levelheaded and grounded - a paragon to those who cameafter her. And then there they were, looking out the view port ofan alien space ship at a big blue marble they knew tobe home. She remembered she'd once dreamed of being anastronaut but the SGC gave her something bigger -something more incredible. Still, this was a sight shenever expected to see. And especially not like this. They saved the world then and later it became a habit.But this time, this first time, it was unreal,impossible to comprehend. After that there was a slow Summer and for a while,they pretended to be normal again. The SGC operatedlike an efficient military base. The CO worried aboutchecks and balances and subordinates saluted in thecorridors as she walked by. The Colonel insisted on a break for the team andHammond agreed. Teal'C rejoined his family, andO'Neill retreated to cabin in the hills. Daniel had"catching up" to do, as he put it, which left her asthe only member of SG1 still on base. She considered that it wasn't so unreal to them.Hadn't they done it all before? That first year, when she had time to think about it,she felt alone. She refused leave and chose, instead, to run isolatedwormhole simulations in one of the SGC labs. Theynever could reproduce wormhole technology without thegate, but it didn’t stop her trying - even on a microlevel. The days were slow and the nights were even slower asshe lay on an unfriendly bed, covering herself with asingle sheet and watching the hours tick away on thebedside clock. A week ago they saved the world. A year ago she'dnever set foot through a Stargate. When she was achild she said words over and over in her head untilthey became unreal, words like "linoleum" and"anorak". So she tried repeating the word "stargate"in her head to make the simple word into somethingabstract - something that suggested the experience oftaking a step across the galaxy as if it were thateasy. She'd repeat it to herself until she fell asleep. * Janet visited the lab. "What does it do?" she askedindicating the model on the screen. "It's a micro-wormhole simulation. We've been tryingto reproduce one ever since the expedition to Abydos." Janet nods and takes in Sam's appearance. "You know,you look a little pale - are you feeling okay?" Sam's eyes never leave the screen. "I'm fine. I had arough night - weird dreams." "Why are you here, Sam? I thought Hammond ordered youto take some time off?" "He gave us the option - I think the Colonel is goingfishing or something." "You could use a week off, Sam." Her voice has an oddinflection - something Sam can't name. She didn't want a week off - where would she go? Shecould spend more time in her home alone, staring atthe ceiling in her bedroom and thinking of thegalaxies upon galaxies just out of arm's reach. Shethought about getting one of those glow in the darksticker sets, because the dark above her seemed like alie. "I'm fine," she repeated. "I have work to do." And shenoticed Janet bit her lip instead of answering. *Less than a day later, Hammond ordered her to take aholiday. "Have you been speaking to Dr Fraiser, Sir?" Shesuspected the Doctor played a large part in the order. "That's not important, Captain - what is important, isthat you've been on duty for nearly 365 days straightand it's time you took a break." "Sir, whatever Dr Fraiser told you, I'm fine and Ihave some projects I've been working on…" "Have you seen your father lately, Captain?" Her father. A subject and a person best avoided. Shewas never sure what to say to her father and hercurrent position only made the situation worse. Shehated lying to people. "He's been busy, Sir." "Take some time off, Captain. Go see your father, goshopping, go to the beach - just make sure you're notback here for a week." "Sir…" "Dismissed, Captain." She hovered in the office for a moment, hoping for ajustifiable protest to come to her. It didn't. "Yes, Sir," she said. * She emptied her locker piling books, shampoo,toothbrush and underwear into a bag along with herlaptop. She left everything here now. Sam turned at the sound of the locker room dooropening. Janet appeared unsmiling and hiding her handsin the pockets of her lab coat. She had a way abouther that suggested she never apologised so Sam didn'texpect one now. Sam turned her attention back to the locker. "Thisreally wasn't necessary." "I disagree." Sam stuffed a hairbrush and a pair of sunglasses intothe bag with exaggerated force. She was sulking and itwas childish and petulant but she felt betrayed. Janetwas supposed to be on her side. "Is it that bad, Sam?" She turned around and dumped the bag on the bench."What are you talking about?" Janet shrugged. "Well there must be something prettyawful about home - you're going to incredible lengthsto avoid being there." "I have work to do, Janet - there are things I couldbe doing. And besides, I like being here." "Which is why you need a break. You can't make the SGCyour world, Sam, it's not healthy." "My world is unusually expanded, don't you think?" "You need perspective. You need to hang out with realpeople…" "How many civilians do you have for friends, Janet?" "That's not my point - you need to hang out withpeople who…" Janet paused. Her eyes flicked to thefloor and back again, barely noticeable. "You need tobe normal for a while." Sam sighed. She picked up the bag and slung it overher shoulder. "In that case, I'm going home - to mynice normal home and my nice normal bed in a nicenormal suburb." She walked out before Janet could reply. * The nights were warm and still. She sat on the bedstaring at the alarm clock. The routine was: set thealarm just before turning out the bedside lamp. Thewaking hour changed in time with the scheduling of hermissions, but it was always there. She let out a breath. If a break in the routine wasliable to affect her sleeping patterns then it wasgoing to have to take a number. She flicked the switchon the lamp and slid beneath the sheets. That night she dreamt about exploding ships - likefireworks in the night sky. It was a carnival and shewas holding cotton candy and her mother told her notto let go of her hand but she did anyway. And the explosions were frightening but not asfrightening as the sea of arms and legs in front ofher that didn't belong to her mother. And everyone was watching the sky, watching the shipsburst apart in blazing colour. When she woke it was daylight. * Daniel called on the second day. "Hey Sam, how are you?" He sounded too jovial. She wasinstantly on alert. "I'm fine." "Great! Great… Soooo… how's the holiday?" "Fine. I've done all my laundry, and I'm thinking ofre-painting the bathroom." "Oh really? That's great, that's - very industrious." She frowned at the phone. "Daniel did Janet tell youto call?" "Um, no - no, I haven't spoken to Janet." Daniel was an appalling liar. "Well, when you report back to Janet be sure to tellher I'm fine and completely normal, okay?" There was silence on the other end of the line."Okay," Daniel said, eventually. She looked out the window. The Sun was reflecting offthe metallic roof of the neighbour's garage into hereyes. It was extraordinarily bright outside. * Cassandra was on holidays from school so Sam spent herthird day with Cassandra. They sat on the floor withcrayons and large rolls of paper drawing pictures ofgreen suited people being chased by yellow-eyedmonsters. "I can't see gray…" Cassandra said eyeing her crayoncollection, most of which was scattered across thefloor. Sam looked at the drawing. "Why do you want gray?" "For Colonel O'Neill." Sam laughed - and she realised it had been a whilesince she'd done that. Cassandra talked about school, about her dog, aboutthe fact that Janet wouldn't let her wear sandals withheels. "Did your mother tell you what to wear?" She askedSam. "Yes, she did." "Where is your mother now?" She paused for breath. It never got easy to say. "Shedied. She was sick." "Like my mother - my real mother." "Yeah. Except it happened a long time ago." "Did you cry?" "Yes." She never saw Cassandra cry. Maybe she did at firstbut by the time they found her she was in shock. She knew that stage of grief too. She took a piece of paper and a crayon. "This is apicture of my mother," she said and she began to draw. * Eventually she took to lying in the sun. She didn'tread, didn't listen to music. Sometimes she poured aglass of wine and sat for a while watching the sunmake its way toward the horizon, but on most days itwas just she, lying on a rug, barefoot, staring at thesky. She watched until the first star appeared, and thenshe waited until she could identify it, watching formovement - something unexpected. Some days she tried to imagine space behind the bluesky. Space - a galaxy full of people and aliens andtechnology unimaginable. Only a year ago it was all unimaginable. * Eventually Janet called and said she was coming over."Why?" "I have a day off - I thought I'd visit." "Oh - sorry. Of course, Janet, come on over." She was distrusting. She didn't mean to be. Herrelationship with Janet bordered on familial. Theyshare-parented a child. They discussed Cassandra'sschool grades, her friends and her participation inschool events. But it was more than that. She should have been able to do this. Janet arrived with wine and fruit and canapes and abizarre story about her ex-husband suggestingCassandra was a child of his that Janet had beenhiding from him. Sam shook her head in disbelief and murmuredappropriate things, like, "I can see why you lefthim." And because Sam had grown used to the evening sun theysat outside on a blanket on the lawn and watched thesun getting lower in the sky as the afternoon wore on. "I think you were right. I think this holiday has beengood for me." It was an apology of sorts. Janet raised an eyebrow. "Sam, I don't think youactually believe that - but it's good of you to say." Sam raised her hands. "I just don't do this very well.I've never been the sit around at home and relaxtype." "And your job is far from ordinary - I understand,Sam, really I do - but things are going to change,you're going to change, and if you don't practicegrounding yourself now it's going to be even moredifficult later." Sam watched the sky. A helicopter passed overhead andshe tried to make out the symbols on the side. Acommercial charter perhaps. "I thought you had abackground in infectious diseases…" "My background is pretty extensive." "Psychology?" "Hum a few bars and I'll wing it." She smiled. Samsmiled too. "But Sam - this is not psychology - thisis plain old good sense. Don't let this 'thing'consume you." "Janet - it is consuming. This is big - we do thingsthat affect the entire planet - other planets. Youhave a daughter who was born on the other side of thegalaxy - don't you feel different?" "Well sure, I do. But I still have to pay the gas billat the end of the day." Sam ran a hand along the side of her face tuckingerrant tufts of hair behind her ears. She barelyremembered her life before this. Before an armedescort brought standing orders to her front door.Before she opened the envelope. Before she read wordafter word of Colonel O'Neill's report on the firstStargate mission, not quite believing it. "Janet, what did you think - the first time you sawit?" "The Stargate?" "Yeah." Janet shrugged. "I didn't know what to think. I knewwhat it was, what it was for, and it was incredible,but I had to actually go through it to reallyappreciate what it could do." "And then what did you think?" Janet paused. "I was surprised at how easy it was. Iexpected to fall down it - like falling down a rabbithole, Alice in Wonderland style. I'm still not surethat analogy doesn't apply." "Or going through the looking glass?" "That too." Janet turned onto her stomach and leanedon her elbows. She sighed as she did so. "What aboutyou?" "I expected it to be smaller." "Really? But you must have known how large it was." "I did, but my perspective had changed. I worked onmodels on computer screens. Until I saw it, I expectedsomething smaller - something body sized." "Hmm…" Janet lifted a hand to her neck and scratched."Do I have a bight on my neck?" Sam leaned in close to take a look. A small red weltwas forming on Janet's neck just below the hairline.Sam touched it lightly. "A mosquito. I have somerepellent inside - if you like I could…" "No, no - it's fine," Janet said. She turned her headslightly to face Sam. Her eyes were big and brown.Like the shimmering event horizon of the Stargate theydrew her in, invited her to step through. She leaned in closer. She kissed Janet then. Shekissed Janet and the world toppled down a wormhole.She came out the other side gasping for air, remindingherself to breath. And Janet's hand was on her shoulder, pulling herclose. She rose onto her knees to meet Sam. Her handswere in Sam's hair, on her neck, sliding down herclavicle and dragging a trail between her breasts. Sam lifted Janet's thin, shift-life blouse overJanet's head. She slipped Janet's bra from hershoulders. She wanted her, wanted her naked beforeher, naked and vulnerable and desperate for her touch. Her mouth lowered to Janet's nipple and she bit itlightly. Janet gasped. Janet's hands were in the waistband of her shorts… *** She blinked. That never happened. It wasn't like that. There was a summer and sun and the universe stretchedout before her like the night sky. And there wasJanet, lazily reflecting on life and itsimpossibilities in Sam's back yard. But it wasn't like that. She had been dozing. The sun was moving in the sky andits warmth was now on her neck. Half an hour, an hourpossibly had passed. In her semi-consciousness statethe memories and the dreams had mixed and the resultwas disturbing. She wondered what it meant. Her broken body reasserted herself and she was forcedto acknowledge her current predicament. She listened once again for the sound of voices. Sheheard none. She took a deep breath, forcing herself to ignore thepain in her chest, and she screamed with all herstrength. "Help!" There must have been a search party. They must stillbe looking for her. They wouldn't give up on her. She closed her eyes and rested, letting the pain fromher last effort dissipate. And then she tried again. "Help!" She kept trying. It got easier each time as she gotused to the pain. "Major Carter!" She blinked. Was that real or had she imagined it?Without thinking she called out again. "Help!" The voice was closer this time. "Major Carter!" "Down here!" she yelled. "Major Carter!" And this time she heard footsteps -the sound of someone running. "I heard something!" Thevoice yelled. "I'm down here." The pain in her chest was searing,running from her chest, to her neck to the back of hereyes. She hoped to God they found her before shepassed out. And then the voices were right above her and they wereall shouting at once. "Hold on Major," a voice said."We're coming down." She let out a breath and everything went black. * "How are you feeling?" Sam took a deep breath. It still hurt, but thepainkillers made the pain tolerable. She'd be groundedfor a month or two, though, and she wasn't sure howshe felt about that. "I'm fine," she said. "Can't feel a thing." Janet looked sceptical. "Your grounded until I sayotherwise, Major. Don't forget that." Sam smiled. How could she? "I won't." "In that case, I guess you can go home - but you'll beflat on your back, Sam, no building a naquadriahreactor in your backyard." "Yes, Ma'am." "Sam," Janet's face was serious. "I mean it." Sam held her eyes for a moment. "I know." She swung her legs over the side of the bed. Herbeaten and bruised body protested and she grimacedwith pain. Immediately she checked to see whether theDoctor was watching and was relieved to see Janet hadher back to her. "Sam?" Janet turned around. "Yes?" "Do you remember what you said when they brought youhere?" Sam searched her mind. The time between fallingthrough the Earth and waking up in the SGC was foggy.She remembered being found. She remembered waking up "No, I don't, she said. "What did I say?" "You said, 'Alice'." Sam's breath caught in her chest. "Really?" "Yeah. At first I thought you were delirious, and thenit dawned on me - Alice fell down a rabbit hole, likeyou. We talked about that years ago - do youremember?" Sam felt the worlds slipping past her, worlds thatfell away as the wormhole drilled into the universe,tunnelling below a surface of strangeness and wonder,enemies and allies. "I had this dream…" Janet raised her eyebrows. "Yes?" Sam wanted to tell her, wanted to take that final stepacross the threshold and find herself falling down therabbit hole into the unknown. "Sam?" Janet was staring at her expectantly. "It's nothing," Sam said. Janet shrugged. "Some other time." "Yeah," Sam said. "Some other time." She was about to leave when Janet stopped her. "I'llcome by later - I'll bring a movie." "That'd be great." * It was still daylight when she got home and she foundherself staring up at the sky. It was deep blue,darkening slowly as the Sun set. She watched until thefirst star appeared and she went inside. Wonderlandlay beyond the sky and Alice lived there now. Fin Back to SG1 Menu HOME