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  Rising

  Sally Malcolm

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

  Fandemonium Books

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  Surbiton

  Surrey KT5 8YB

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  Visit our website: www.stargatenovels.com

  ©2011 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. All Rights Reserved. Photography and cover art: Copyright ©2004-2011 MGM Global Holdings Inc. All Rights Reserved.

  METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER Presents

  STARGATE ATLANTIS™ “RISING”

  JOE FLANIGAN TORRI HIGGINSON RACHEL LUTTRELL

  RAINBOW SUN FRANCKS and DAVID HEWLETT as Dr. McKay

  Guest Starring RICHARD DEAN ANDERSON MICHAEL SHANKS GARWIN SANFORD PAUL McGILLION ANDEE FRIZZELL CRAIG VERONI

  CHRISTOPHER HEYERDAHL and ROBERT PATRICK as Colonel Sumner

  Executive Producers BRAD WRIGHT ROBERT C. COOPER MICHAEL GREENBURG

  Created by BRAD WRIGHT & ROBERT C. COOPER

  Written by ROBERT C. COOPER & BRAD WRIGHT

  Directed by MARTIN WOOD

  STARGATE ATLANTIS ™ & ©2004-2011 MGM Global Holdings Inc. STARGATE ATLANTIS is a trademark of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.

  WWW.MGM.COM

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written consent of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

  In Memory of

  Hamish

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Author’s note:

  This book is based on the original teleplay written by Brad Wright and Robert C. Cooper. The observant reader may notice some differences between the episode, Rising, as it aired on TV and this book – this is primarily due to changes during shooting and editing of the show.

  Prologue

  The ice was encroaching. At the frozen edge of a world that had become their graveyard, a vast and hungry wilderness was invading the last vestiges of their civilization – Atlantis, their crowning glory.

  It was more than a city: it was their past and their future. It would take them from this desolation to a place of hope, far beyond the stars that glittered in the icy night sky.

  And yet the leaving tasted bitter. New hope required the sacrifice of past dreams, of generations who would never know the perfect beauty of a sunrise over the forests and oceans of Earth. Generations who would never know their true home.

  Cyla Urbanus looked at her companion as above them the final ship returned. Now was the time, the closing moments when all had to end. She held his eye; he was torn, at the last, over what he needed to do. But he did not hesitate in his duty, and she turned to watch as a tremor shook the city.

  Separation took mere moments. The star drive activated and Atlantis broke free from the icy fist that held it prisoner and rose from its base embedded deep in the rock.

  In the fading light Cyla could just make out the small energy dome below, protecting the tiny outpost they were leaving behind. A beacon for the future, she thought. A beacon to guide those who come after. But soon its light was lost beneath the snow that blew in waves across the barren planes that had once been their home.

  Will they follow, those that come after? Will they follow where we lead?

  To that question, she would never know the answer.

  And so the snow blew, for millennia upon millennia. Continents shifted, compacted, retracted. Life came and went, myriad species evolved and among them humanity was reborn. Their birth heralded the arrival of gods from distant worlds, bent on tyranny and war. But the gods were defied; humanity’s second evolution was strong and vibrant. And curious, ever curious. Eventually, millions of years after it had been abandoned, and at a time of great need, the beacon was discovered beneath the ice laid down over eons. But the question still remained… will they follow?

  It was cold. No, cold was the wrong word. It was simply too small a word to adequately describe the razor-edged air that permeated even this far into the base. As the cage-elevator trundled down the borehole, through a mile of ancient ice, the temperature didn’t even get close to anything as balmy as freezing.

  Dr. Elizabeth Weir shivered and glanced at her traveling companion. Lieutenant Ford’s uniform looked thick and warm. She rubbed her freezing hands together and wondered if he felt the cold. Catching her scrutiny, Ford raised a curious eyebrow but didn’t say anything. She just smiled as, at that moment, the elevator came to a bumpy landing in the Outpost of the Ancients.

  Amazing, Weir thought as she stepped out into the cave of ice, how easily that tripped off the tongue. Outpost of the Ancients. A couple of months back she’d never even seen Star Wars; now she was living it.

  As usual, the base – her base – was in a state of controlled chaos. The excitement felt by everyone here was palpable, an electricity that bounced between a dozen brilliant minds, feeding off itself until the whole place buzzed with the thrill of discovery. Weir loved it down here; in this place she felt twice as alive as she’d ever been in her life. It was addictive too, if she left for just a—

  “You see! Nothing!” The exclamation came in an exasperated Scottish brogue.

  Of course, not everything was going smoothly.

  Dr. Carson Beckett, their MD, who reminded Weir of nothing so much as a teddy bear, jumped out of the mysterious Ancient chair from which General Jack O’Neill had only recently defeated Anubis’s attack on Earth. The doctor stormed toward her like a child refusing to do his homework, oblivious to everything around him.

  On his heels was Dr. McKay, all indignant frustration. “Carson, get back here—”

  Beckett turned on him. “I could sit in the chair all bloody day, and nothing would happen! It’s a waste of time.” He noticed Weir for the first time and moderated his tone. “Excuse me, Dr. Weir.”

  And then he was gone, leaving McKay stranded in his wake. He puffed out a sigh. “He’s not even trying.”

  Weir glanced curiously between the two men. “But he’s the one who discovered the gene that Ancient technology identifies and responds to.”

  “Yeah, well, he said he wished he didn’t have it!”

  “Really?”

  “I know. Can you believe that?”

  She smiled. The thing you had to remember about Dr. Rodney McKay was that, as far as he was concerned, the entire world – possibly the entire galaxy – conspired to frustrate him. Once you understood that, McKay was much easier to handle. Putty in her hands. “We could always test you a third time, Rodney.”

  “That’s very funny.”

  She thought so too, but swallowed her smile. “The point is,” she said, as they walked back toward the Ancient chair, “we’ve only found a handful of people who are genetically compatible with the technology of the Ancients, despite your efforts to interface it with our own…” She cast him a serious look. “We need every one of them to take their turn, including Dr. Beckett.”

  “What am I supposed to do? He’s afraid of the thing.”

  Weir stepped onto the platform that accommodated the chair. It was huge, its curved alien design exuding power and threat. When she touched it, it felt slick and warm beneath her fingertips, despite the frigid air. “This chair controls the most powerful weapons known to man,” she remi
nded him. “I’m afraid of the thing…” Which was hardly the point. “Every time someone sits in it we learn something more about the Ancients who built this outpost. That chair – and the weapons it controls – are essential to the defense of this planet. Dr. Beckett should be proud that he’s genetically advanced—”

  “It’s not advancement,” McKay corrected. “It’s a random characteristic.”

  Stepping down from the platform, Weir repressed a chuckle. “It really bothers you, this gene thing.”

  “Clearly I am overcome with envy.”

  “Yet you hide it so well.”

  His undoubtedly snappy reply was forestalled by an excited call from the other side of the room. “You’re just the people I need to see!” It was Dr. Daniel Jackson, deep in thought and brow furrowed. Before either of them had time to answer he had disappeared back the way he’d come, mumbling to himself.

  Weir exchanged a glance with McKay; they’d both had some experience of Dr. Jackson’s eccentricities. She was about to ask Rodney if he had a clue what Jackson had been talking about when the man himself returned.

  Daniel looked at them for a moment, as if struggling to remember why he was staring at them, then said, “Come with me.”

  Who could refuse an offer like that?

  There were days, Daniel Jackson thought as he barreled through the busy corridors of the Ancient Outpost, when life really did seem too good to be true. The thrill of the intellectual chase, the overwhelming high of developing a theory and then proving it right, had driven him his whole academic life. Not to mention the fact that most scientists of any stripe made, if they were lucky, one momentous discovery in their entire career. His running total was now three, because this theory, this discovery, was on a par with the day he’d first deciphered the gate address for Abydos and proven all his detractors wrong. Or the day he’d stood alone beneath the pyramid of Ra and realized that the Stargate was part of a vast network of alien worlds, and that the galaxy had suddenly gotten a whole lot smaller, and a whole lot more crowded, than anyone on Earth could comprehend.

  Today was just like that. Today was historic, literally.

  Drs. Weir and McKay caught up with him as he ducked into his makeshift research lab, and Daniel realized he’d given them no explanation for his summons. Not that he felt the need to explain himself to McKay. Rodney had never been SG1’s favorite person, not since the incident with Teal’c and the Stargate buffers. Jack O’Neill had never forgiven him for giving up on getting Teal’c back, and rumor had it that McKay had actually called Sam Carter a ‘dumb blond’. When Daniel had asked her about it, her only comment had involved McKay’s citrus allergy and a lemon. He hadn’t pursued it any further, partly because he thought Sam had warmed to McKay in the end. Why remained a mystery, and Daniel remained less than well disposed toward the man.

  Elizabeth Weir, however, deserved his respect – and an explanation. “We’ve gotten closer and closer to finding the location of the lost city,” he told her, as they entered the cluttered room he’d co-opted for his research.

  He scooted around the table to the whiteboard where he’d been attempting to decipher the gate address – the one they couldn’t make work – for the past three days. “But it turns out,” he said, “that we’ve been looking in the wrong place all along.”

  Weir’s eyebrows rose as she waited for more. McKay just cast him a look of long-suffering tedium, as if repressing the desire to snap ‘Get on with it!’

  Daniel planned to wipe that look right off his face. Pointing at the symbols scribbled onto the white board, he said, “We thought we had a gate address – six symbols, representing coordinates in space and time that should have determined the location of the planet the Ancients went to after they left Antarctica. Recently we determined the seventh symbol.” He drew it on the board.

  “The point of origin,” Weir guessed. “Earth.”

  “That’s not it.” Daniel shot a defiant look at McKay.

  “So your address must be incorrect,” McKay said, unable to resist the silent game of one-upmanship.

  Daniel repressed a smile, savoring his triumph. “Not incorrect,” he said. “Incomplete.” Swiftly, he drew another symbol.

  “You can’t do that,” McKay objected.

  “I just did.”

  Weir stepped forward, and Daniel could see something burning bright in her eyes; he knew it was mirrored in his own. Excitement, the thrill of opening Pandora’s box. “What are you saying, Dr. Jackson?”

  He paused, just for an instant, just to relish the moment. “It’s an eight-symbol address,” he began. “What we’ve been looking for may be farther away than we ever imagined…” Weir was holding her breath, tense with expectation. Daniel smiled, “But not out of our reach.”

  Even McKay seemed reluctantly impressed. “Atlantis?”

  “Atlantis.” Daniel studied them both, making sure they comprehended the significance of what he was about to say. “And I think we can go there.”

  The silence that followed told him they understood. Humanity was poised to take its first steps into a new galaxy, and they – these people standing before him – were destined to be in the vanguard of the most important voyage of discovery mankind had ever undertaken.

  He envied them more than he could say.

  Chapter One

  The snowfield went on forever. It was enough to render a penguin snow-blind, and General Jack O’Neill was more than grateful for his shades as the helicopter skimmed over the ridges and valleys of Antarctica. The sun had crested the horizon an hour ago, its pale light glittering against the snow. Carter would love it out here – not.

  O’Neill glanced over at his pilot, who was talking a mile a minute and didn’t seem to realize that Jack was only half-listening. He was a kid really, although with a stubborn streak that stood out a mile. Takes one to know one. Which was probably why the kid had ended up based at the backend of nowhere. Over the years, Jack had been threatened with McMurdo a few times. He wondered what Major John Sheppard had done to actually make it. Must get someone back at the SGC to check out his personnel file…

  “…Cobra, Apache, Sea King, Black Hawk, Osprey, Sea Harrier,” Sheppard reeled off, flying like he was born to it and not really needing to concentrate. “You name it, I’ve flown it.”

  “That’s a lot of training for the Antarctic.”

  There was a wry twist to Sheppard’s answer that Jack didn’t miss. “Well, it was the one continent I’d never set foot on.”

  “It’s among my least favorite continents.” And that was no lie. Jack had been here a total of three times, and on each occasion he’d left on a stretcher – or the alien equivalent. He wasn’t planning on making it a fourth.

  “I kinda like it here,” Sheppard admitted.

  There was a determined cheerfulness about this kid that was, frankly, bizarre. “You like it here?”

  Sheppard grinned. “Yessir.” He glanced at his navigation controls, “We’re about ten minutes out.”

  And with that, the helicopter banked steeply and left Jack’s stomach way behind. It was all he could do to restrain a whoop of pure adrenaline and, not for the first time, he wondered what on Earth had persuaded him to trade all this for a desk job…

  Despite what he’d told Dr. Weir, McKay was beginning to suspect that there was more to the distribution of the Ancient gene through the population than random genetic chance. In fact, he was almost certain that it was actually a facet of the ongoing cosmic joke fate liked to have at his expense. Think about it, of all the people on the base – no, let’s not be modest – of all the people on the planet, he, Rodney McKay, was undoubtedly the best qualified to make use of the Ancient gene. He had the mind, the education, the ability to think creatively… If he’d had the gene their research would be leagues ahead of where they were currently stranded. He glanced over at Grodin, who was fiddling with one of the few Ancient drones to have survived the battle with Anubis. It was a case in point; if McKay h
ad the gene he’d be able to pull the thing apart, figure out how to reproduce it and then begin restocking their weapons supplies. Easy as pie.

  But no. Fate had other plans.

  Instead of giving the gene to someone who could actually use it to unlock the secrets of the Ancients, on whom did it bestow this ‘random’ gift? General Jack ‘Smart-ass’ O’Neill, and now Dr. Carson ‘I’m scared it’ll bite me’ Beckett! Seriously, there was no way this could be random chance. The more he thought about it, the more McKay suspected that there was some malevolent cosmic force bent on frustrating him to death, and—

  “I’m a doctor,” Beckett protested, his whines interrupting McKay’s thoughts as he physically dragged the doctor along the corridor. “A medical doctor!”

  McKay strove to sound soothing. It wasn’t a skill that came naturally. “There’s nothing to be afraid of—”

  “You don’t understand.” Beckett was pleading now, actually pleading. The man was beginning to border on pathetic. “I break things like this…”

  Oh, for the love of— “The device has survived intact for millions of years; it will survive you.” Rodney shoved the doctor toward the chair. “Now sit down, close your eyes and concentrate.”

  With a resigned sigh Beckett did as he was told and leaned back in the chair. At last. But his eyes flashed open a split second later. “Again, nothing.”

  Patience, patience… Resisting the urge to pull the damn gene out of Beckett with a pair of tweezers, McKay forced himself to be reasonable. “All right, this time try to imagine an image of where we are in the solar system.” Assuming, of course, that the good doctor actually knew where he was in the solar system…

  “All right.”

  “All right.”

  There was a pause. McKay realized he was actually holding his breath.

  “All right, I think I feel something.”