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FOUR DRAGONS

By Diana Dru Botsford

An original publication of Fandemonium Ltd, produced under license from MGM Consumer Products.

Fandemonium Books PO Box 795A Surbiton Surrey KT5 8YB United Kingdom Visit our website: www.stargatenovels.com

MGM TELEVISION ENTERTAINMENT INC. Presents in SG-1™ DON S. DAVIS Executive Producers JONATHAN GLASSNER and MICHAEL GREENBURG RICHARD DEAN ANDERSON Developed for Television by BRAD WRIGHT & JONATHAN GLASSNER

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CONTENTS

Four Dragons About the Author Sneak Preview of Stargate SG1: Oceans of Dust

For my husband Rick, who keeps my feet firmly planted on the ground while my head and heart travel beyond the stars.

Thanks to: Lindsey Allen for pushing me through the gate while Maureen, Kristin, Carol, and Trupi kept open the iris. Sally and Tom for allowing me to play in their sandbox, and to my editor, Laura, for helping me actually keep the sand inside the box! Capt. Angela Webb and the United States Force — not only for technical advice, but more importantly, for the inspiration they instill through their dedicated service. RJ Alban for indoctrinating me into the rules of Wéiqí — otherwise known as Go. Gateworld.net for its extraordinarily extensive website for all things Stargate. The cast & crew of SG-1, including Joel Goldsmith whose music kept me joyfully planted in the while writing this story. My family as well as the students & fellow faculty at Missouri State University for humoring my geekiness (is that even a word?). And lastly, but most importantly, to Jen Brooks and Laura Gerling for their support, their edits, and their ability to keep me from slowly going nuts!

Author‘s Note: This story takes place shortly after the events in season seven‘s ―Orpheus.‖

PRELUDE

PLANET DESIGNATION: LORD YU’S HOMEWORLD (P3X-042) STATUS: ENEMY OCCUPIED TERRITORY APPROX 2130 HRS LOCAL TIME 3 JUL 03/1050 HRS BASE TIME

CLINK. SNAP. Clink. Snap. A Zippo was forever. A modern miracle. An endurable lighter, bar none. Sure, the thing needed refueling. Sure, the flint wore out, but that was an easy fix. No need to futz. No cajoling, no arguments. Just a flick of the wheel and poof! A steady, reliable flame. Clink. Colonel Jack O‘Neill flipped his lighter open once more. Worn dull from seven years of Abydonian sun, sand and sweat while under Skaara‘s care, the thing worked just fine, thank you. That‘s what made a Zippo so damn reliable. It never tried to ascend, descend, or worse, let some overdressed, fortune-cookie style snake-in-the-head Goa‘uld snatch it away. At least, not without a fight. Damn it, Daniel. Snap. Jack slapped the old Zippo shut. He was positioned on the hilltop in order to stand first watch, not to feel sorry for himself… though it wasn‘t like he couldn‘t do both. There pretty much wasn‘t anything else to do… for the moment. The sun had dropped hard and fast, but the moon was still on the rise, casting a bright, grey haze across the landscape. Any sort of covert mission would be impossible until that moon set as well. He scanned the valley floor with his pocket scope. Ten klicks to the west, the high curved walls and copper-topped turrets of Lord Yu‘s fortress jutted out from a bedrock of limestone. The whole thing was lit up like a nightmare version of that old Chinese theatre in Hollywood. Not as showy as some other snakeheads‘ big, bad domains, but the effect was still the same. A giant thumb to the nose. A reminder of how Jack had most certainly screwed up. Hell, he‘d practically delivered Daniel into Yu‘s hands. Stupid, stupid Jack. What the hell had he been thinking? Daniel had come back, descended, returned from Oma-land less than a month ago, but Jack couldn‘t let it lie. He had to push. He had to make his point. He had to piss Daniel off enough to make him an easy target for that no good, slimy, bottom-feeder, Lord Yu. The recognizable thrum of a death glider yanked Jack from his one-man pity-fest. The ship swooped down from a terrace to one side of Yu‘s not so little compound and headed north, flying parallel with a range of mountains at the valley‘s far end. The glider dipped lower, raking by a pile of crammed together shacks which most likely housed Yu‘s slaves. A nice little dose of harassment to keep the folks at bay. The glider changed course on the spin of a dime, moonlight bouncing off its arched wings as its canted bow tilted upwards. The ship climbed into the night sky, tossing gravity aside as it ascended at break-neck speed. The engines accelerated, became a high-pitched whine, and then the telltale cone of clouded air puffed up in its wake. A moment later, a sonic boom echoed off the distant mountains as the glider disappeared beyond the moon. Carter would have rattled on about how the glider didn‘t really disappear. How the naked eye can‘t see objects travelling that fast without a light source. That is, if she was speaking to him. Which she wasn‘t. Not that Jack blamed her. He had no one but himself to blame. Clink. Still, one less glider was good news. It meant one, maybe two less Jaffa. More luck in their favor when they went in to rescue Daniel. Who was he kidding? A chimp with boxing gloves would have better luck. Still, for the amount of trouble Yu had gone to, the Goa‘uld had to have a good reason, which meant maybe, just maybe, Daniel could be alive. Snap. Ignoring the ache in his knee, Jack crouched down beside a sparse, puny-looking tree. Until that damned moon set, no one was going anywhere. Not unless SG-1 wanted a one-way trip and suicide was pretty much considered passé these days, even by him. Suicide and Zippos. Jack snorted. He‘d become his own personal walking, talking cliché. Memories could be such pains in the ass. Distracting, sneaky little bastards. So why the hell then had he taken back Skaara‘s lighter when the kid died… left for the next level of existence… went off to Oma-ville? What was that all about? Clink. He thumbed the wheel, half-tempted to light it up, wave it in the air. Let Yu know they were coming. But then, he didn‘t really have a say on how this mission went down. Not anymore. Carter was in charge now. Her big, blue eyes, torn between anger and regret, had pinned him down almost as badly as her last words. I’m sorry, sir, but by General Hammond’s authority, you’re relieved of command. Snap.

Chapter One

Three days earlier

STARGATE COMMAND STATUS: STANDBY/MISSION READY 30 JUN 03/0850 HRS BASE TIME

JACK DIDN‘T hover. That was normally Daniel‘s department. He, on the other hand, preferred direct action. Get it done, move on. Next. Yet here he was, doing just that. Hovering by the gate-room‘s blast doors, staying way out of the way, while Teal‘c received the honorary rank of Chief Master Sergeant at the hands of Walter and Siler. After all, it was an enlisted man‘s ceremony, pretty much the highest rank one could get without being an officer. Jack, Carter and Daniel had been relegated to the back of the gate-room as observers. Which was fine. Anything to give the big guy his due. Well, almost anything. Walter recited the presidential decree in that thin little voice of his with quite a bit of showmanship. Not that Jack could blame the guy. Must get tiring, saying the same thing over and over again. Chevron One, locked. Chevron Two, locked. Etcetera, ad nauseam. A sea of uniforms crowded the gate-room. SG teams, support personnel, the whole nine yards. Civilian workers had shown up as well. Researchers, medical support, even a few cooks had managed to squeeze their way in, though that was no surprise. The kitchen staff‘s fondness for Teal‘c was legendary. Jack fought the urge to wrench off the tie that was part and parcel of wearing dress blues. Loved the job. Loved the pay grade. Hated the uniform. Bury me in my BDUs. To Jack‘s right, General Hammond leaned in and whispered, ―Any chance you‘ll change your mind, Colonel?‖ ―Sadly, General, I‘ve never been more sure of anything,‖ Jack whispered back. As Walter droned on, and on, about enlisted men traditions and presidential decrees, Siler escorted Master Bra‘tac up the ramp. Keeping with tradition, Bra‘tac stood in for Teal‘c‘s family. Dressed in what seemed a mile of ceremonial robes, the normally solemn Jaffa Master seemed impatient today, as if he didn‘t quite ‗get‘ the fuss. ―Too bad Rya‘c couldn‘t be here to see his dad get his due,‖ Carter commented. ―Shhh,‖ Jack warned. ―Let‘s just get through this thing so we can get on to the important stuff.‖ Like cake. Still, the major was right. Rya‘c should‘ve been there. Okay, it wasn‘t the same as being First Prime, leading thousands of men into battle, but nobody got that job on Earth save for General Jumper or the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Considering what the kid had recently been through, forced to slave away on one of Baal‘s labor prisons like a dog till Daniel paid a little walk down ascension memory lane, it might have been nice for Rya‘c to see his dad get honored. But Rya‘c had volunteered to assist the relief effort at the Alpha site, after relocating the freed Jaffa prisoners from Baal‘s little slave labor camp on Erebus. With any luck, Rya‘c would recruit a few dozen rebels to the Jaffa Fifth Column. Every bit helped. The kid had his priorities straight. As awesome a soldier as Teal‘c was, he‘d turned out to be an even better dad. For a brief moment, Jack tried to imagine Rya‘c and Charlie as buddies. Charlie would have been only a few years younger.