DISCLAIMER: Yeah, the SG-1 guys are all property of MGM, World Gekko Corp and Double Secret productions. This is all in fun, no infringement on copyrights or trademarks was intended. All other characters, ideas, etc., herein are copyrighted to the author. TITLE: BLUE LIGHT AUTHOR: Rowan Darkstar EMAIL: rowan_d1@yahoo.com WEBSITE: http://www.beautyinshadows.net RATING: Teen CATEGORIES: Angst, hurt/comfort, Sam/Daniel UST ARCHIVE: Yes, just let me know. SUMMARY: "The teasing was good; nice, and warm, but he knew her lightness was a bit of a glitz and show, knew it would wash off with the lipstick and mascara, and he wished they could really...talk for a moment." Post-ep to "The Tok'ra II" AUTHOR'S NOTES: Yes, I'm at the Sam/Daniel thing again, but it's not my fault this time.:D Honest, I was working on a Sam/Jack, and then this thing happened on LJ in which I suddenly owed Courser a Sam/Daniel UST scene, and I thought, what the hell, combine it with the GWS and kill two birds with one stone.:D So, there you are... Many thanks to Teddy E and Kudra for the fabulous spur-of-the- moment beta!!:) This story is for Courser, whom I am now quite priviledged to call friend thanks to all this fic passing back and forth and turning into brilliant conversation and affection. So glad you enjoyed the story.:) "Blue Light" by Rowan Darkstar (rowan_d1@yahoo.com) Copyright (c) 2005 "Never got to tell you I don't know what I mean to you No need to explain" --"Cry" by Alex Parks It wasn't quite like Jack to pile them all into his truck, drive them all into town, then be the one to get too drunk to drive back. Normally, Jack was the caretaker, the one being the responsible CO looking out for the safety of the team. But this had been a grueling mission. They'd all needed a night away. The conversation had been good, and Sam had been smiling--in her way, at least--after too many days on the verge of tears. By 11pm, the only one of the foursome fully free of alcohol had been Teal'c, and Jack had insisted in loud and graphic terms that Teal'c not get behind the wheel of his truck no matter how many 'driving lessons' Siler had given him. So, Jack and Teal'c had shared a cab back to base, where Teal'c could make sure Jack fell directly into his quarters and slept it off. Daniel and Sam had called a second cab for themselves. Theirs was taking longer. "I need some fresh air. Do you mind?" Sam had asked. So, they were waiting, in the semi-shadows to the side of the bar entrance, watching the distant road for signs of life. Surprisingly sober, considering the drinks he had ingested, Daniel found himself feeling like he was out in the open after days in a box. The air tasted sweeter tonight, despite the traces of over-grilled food and cigarette smoke. Everything felt...more real somehow. Like pieces of a three-dimensional life he had left behind. He looked across at Sam in the shadows of blue light. Her hair was longer right now. She'd probably been too busy to have it cut in the chaos that had ruled their lives these past days. But she had taken advantage of the added softness tonight, letting her hair hang in loose waves around her face, gazing up through the filter of fallen locks, her lips ruby red against the sweetness of golden blonde. He remembered every now and then that Samantha Carter was breathtakingly beautiful. Most days he tried to forget. Sam leaned her hips against the wall, watching her shoes as she crossed and uncrossed her ankles. Her shoes weren't practical tonight. Black, with slightly chunky high heels. He didn't know the right terms for women's shoes anymore. Sara had tried to teach him once upon a time. He hadn't listened any better to what she'd had to teach him on that front than he had on any other. More pieces of that life just out of his reach. Sam shoved her hands in the pockets of her denim jacket, pulling up her shoulders against the bite in the late night wind. "They're slow tonight," she said softly. "Well...at least I think it's a pretty safe bet the boss won't be in early in the morning," Daniel offered, quirking a sidewise grin her way. Sam smiled and gave a low, husky laugh, still gazing at her shoes. She glanced across at him, playing coy behind her hair. "I haven't seen the Colonel that smashed since last New Year's Eve." "Oh, God, please don't remind me," Daniel groaned. Sam straightened up and pressed the length of her spine to the uneven bricks, gently touching her head to the rough surface, and he thought of the texture of the Tok'ra tunnels and the taste of fear both terrestrial and alien. "Not much to remind you of," she said. "You didn't actually remember any of it, did you?" He tossed her a look of feigned lack of amusement. "Which would be fine, if the rest of you didn't take such perverse and undue pleasure in recounting the details at every opportunity." Her smile melted into something more genuine, and he found it felt good to see, even if he was subject of the humor. "You were cute, Daniel," she said, youth and kindness bleeding through the lipstick and low-cut blouse. The teasing was good; nice, and warm, but he knew her lightness was a bit of a glitz and show, knew it would wash off with the lipstick and mascara, and he wished they could really...talk for a moment. He was never sure where he fell in her life. Someone from the bar staff pushed open the doors and the motion and sound drew their attention. The man took a chair and propped open one of the doors, presumably hoping to pull in a cool breeze. He glanced at Sam and Daniel, registered only momentary curiosity, but probably cared only to make certain Sam wasn't turning tricks or Daniel wasn't selling drugs. Apparently, the two of them passed judgment as legal and harmless, because the man headed back into the bar without a word. The music from inside wandered freely into the night. "Were you mad at me?" Sam asked, and Daniel blinked at her, utterly displaced. "What? No, I when--wasn't? I mean, what--" "On the planet. When I was...talking...to Martouf." *Oh.* "Oh." *Oh.* *Oh.* She was staring at him, waiting for a reply, and he hoped the glare on his glasses hid his eyes while he fought for balance. The music and voices from inside flared and ebbed but weren't enough to drown out their speech. "No," he said firmly, grateful for the confidence in his tone. He shook his head for emphasis. "No. I was not mad at you. I just...I just wanted to make sure you were safe." Sam watched with narrowed eyes, her skin so flawless in the muted light. She was reading, assessing; evaluating the veracity of his claims. A scientist in all things. She turned back to her shoes and nodded. "Okay." Something like defeat in her voice soured his stomach. "Hey. Sam. I wasn't mad," he said again, and he wished she would lift her eyes. The skin of her throat flickered white in the moonlight. "Okay." Her tongue slipped across her lower lip, and she captured the tender flesh between her teeth. He wanted to smooth his fingers over the tension in her jaw, ease the strain. He wondered if he was feeling the beers more than he realized. Sam didn't speak, and he didn't know what to say. Reluctantly, he let his gaze return to the highway. Her voice startled him when she tumbled through her next words, speaking in a rush as though she feared she'd lose her nerve. "It's just that I really need you not to be. I mean, I just...it's just important. To me. Right now. That you not...be. Mad." For the life of him, he could have sworn there was a slight tremor beneath her last words, but she still hadn't made eye contact and he was guessing in the dark. He reached out a hand and rubbed up and down her arm, offering warmth and comfort, or either one she needed. "I'm not, Sam. Are you okay?" She nodded. "I'm fine, yeah." "Sam, you've had one hell of a week. You know, it's okay if you- -" She scoffed at his words, turned to face him with eyebrows lifted and jaw set tight. "Are you kidding me? I've had an amazing week. Last week my father was dying. Virtually no hope of survival. This week he was given a second chance at life and a job most people on this Earth wouldn't even think possible. I got to tell my own father what I do every day. How many of us can say that or ever will? I've had a fabulous week. I should be brilliantly happy." "'Should be,'" he repeated, quiet against her force. She closed her eyes and turned away. He caught the edges of anger, and he knew enough about Sam Carter to catch the hurt. She had taken her hands from her pockets to gesture as she spoke. Now she crossed her arms tight across her chest, tucking in against the cold. "All of that is true, Sam, yes. And it's good. Wonderful, even. But I think you skipped around a little. I think you left out the part about meeting people from Jolinar's past," he said gently. "About awakening a whole world of new memories for you to deal with and try to mesh with your own history. And the part where you watched your father in end stage cancer, thinking he might die in front of you at any moment. The part where we were ALL being held prisoner Offworld, not knowing when or if we would ever make it home. The part where your father now lives Offworld, and you don't even know where." She was quiet for a long time, eyes lowered, and the music waved over them. Something softer, more elegant than this bar's usual fare. He wondered if this song was something she liked, wondered if they would ever talk about their tastes in music. Wondered if she liked to dance. When she spoke, her voice was so quiet he had to strain to decipher the words. "It was just all happening at once, you know? It was like I couldn't wrap my brain around anything before I had to be worrying about something else. And then it was all over, and I don't feel like I've had the chance to really feel anything or sort it out in my mind." He was listening quietly, nodding; he was about to encourage her to continue, when she drew in a sharp breath, pulled herself up straighter and lifted her chin. "Sorry," she breathed, tossing him a quick glance. "Not enough sleep, too much alcohol." She was reining in, closing the cracks. She dug at the asphalt with the heel of her shoe. "I'm fine." Daniel refused to be brushed off. "If it makes you be honest about what you're feeling, maybe it's not such a bad thing." She turned and looked at him, eyes narrowing in a cautionary fashion, cockiness and flirtation returning to her gestures. She was too damn beautiful for this job. He countered with a wry smile. "Ahhh. Yes, the 'you're not military, Daniel' look. I know it well." She flinched, but he let it slide. "I might remind you, Sam, that you weren't always military either and you won't always be, and I'm pretty damn convinced there's a woman named Samantha in there that doesn't cease to exist on schedule according to regulations. And that woman's been through hell this week." He paused, capturing her gaze in the wavering light. "And she's my friend," he finished. She didn't speak for a beat. She moistened her lips, nodded, then whispered. "Yeah, she is." He offered a gentle smile, reached up and touched her hair and wondered if he had ever had the nerve to do that before. He remembered how her hair felt beneath his fingers, but there were a million reasons they had been crushed together before. A car swished by on the side road to the bar, and the headlights reflected off the sheen of tears in Sam's blue eyes. The heel of Daniel's hand brushed against her earring as he moved away. He thought again he had had too much to drink. And so had she. Sam was painfully lovely when she cried. He could never walk away from her. Even when she didn't want company. Because they were friends. And he was married. And she never looked at him the way she looked at Jack when she thought no one was watching. Sam cleared her throat. "I guess I just thought...I thought he could help...explain things to me. Like I thought...maybe I could talk to Selmak, get to know him. That he could help me understand what's left in my head." "Of course, you did. God, Sam, I can't even imagine what this must all be like for you." "It's not so bad." "Yes it is." Silence. Then, "A little bad." But she was looking out toward the tree line beyond the bar grounds. A moment later, she was crying. Silently. He moved a bit closer, not touching. Being there. She kept her gaze in the distance, but he sensed the warmth in her body, the welcoming of his nearness. Sam had never pushed him away. Another thought he shouldn't follow tonight. "It's just...I know my father loves me. I do. And I'm so lucky, because not everyone can say that. Hell, you don't even have a father, anymore, Daniel. And my dad would do anything for me. Always." "But..." There was no accusation in his voice. Only kindness. She shook her head, wrinkling her nose with a bitterness that made him ache. "But, no matter what changes, no matter what I do...he just can't seem to fit me into his life. I guess I just thought..." She faded out and looked away, drew a trembling breath. Clearly hated herself. "...thought maybe this time would work," he finished. "Joining the Air Force didn't do it. But bringing him into your secret world, making him a vital part of the Stargate program, joining him with a Tok'ra..." "Selfish and stupid, hunh?" she said, glancing his way with a cold he knew he wasn't meant to receive. He didn't speak. She caught her lip in her teeth again and drifted into thoughts he couldn't reach. "I know I was young," he said at last, "but...I became an archaeologist, because no matter how much my parents loved me...they would still leave. They would still go out on digs and say I was too young to have all the shots, it was too dangerous, I needed to be in school, I... There was always a reason. And I thought if I became an archaeologist, too, then some day..." Sam looked up at him, all wide blue eyes and sincerity and beauty and tenderness, and for the moment her own pain seemed forgotten. "But they'd been gone so long by the time you went to college. You couldn't have..." "Pain doesn't always follow logic, Sam. I think you know that. And I love what I do, of course I do. You love the Air Force, I know you do." She nodded. He reached out and caught her hand in the darkness. The music inside the bar changed, and for a moment, Sam closed her eyes and let her head fall to the side. "I love this song," she whispered. And he knew for certain she had had too much to drink, and so had he, because she was soft and unguarded and he knew she would dance with him if he asked. He would never ask. "Did Martouf help you, Sam?" Her brow furrowed at the memory, eyes still closed. "He explained a lot. He also made me remember too much. But it's better to know. I have to know." "I would never be too mad to be here for you. I hope you know that." She drew a slow breath, met his gaze in butterfly flutters, and he realized he was still holding her hand and she hadn't let go. He felt the calluses on her palm. Tears in her eyes. "Where the hell's that cab?" she said, looking out at the highway again. "It's okay. We'll wait," he said simply. "It's cold." Daniel slid along the wall. He let go of her hand and closed an arm around her shoulders and thought of Sha're on cold winter nights. Sam's body warmed to his, but she wouldn't meet his gaze. "Okay," she whispered. "We'll wait." *Yeah.* He breathed. *We'll wait.* ***** rowan_d1@yahoo.com