Posted originally on the Archive of Our Own at
http://archiveofourown.org/works/246964.
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Archive Warning: Choose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Category: Gen
Fandom: Stargate Atlantis
Character: Rodney McKay
Stats: Published: 2011-08-30 Words: 1874
Academic
by domarzione
Summary
Rodney McKay carries a gun in Pegasus, but he doesn't always
need it to win a gunfight.
"The simple fact of it, Colonel, is that you can only get one of us out of here
at speed," Rodney said, talking quickly even by his own standards because if
he slowed, if he paused, then he'd realize just what he was doing. "The Genii
want me alive and there's at least one of them that wants Teyla dead."
"I'm not sacrificing you to--" Sheppard began, but Rodney cut him off.
"If we wait for an opening, they'll get everything they want," he said, forcing
himself to look at Sheppard. The look he got back was one of the sort of
determined fury that he imagined Sheppard had worn the entire time the
Genii had been in Atlantis. "It's not exactly Sophie's Choice here. More like
Hobson's."
He looked over at Teyla, lying small and pathetic in Ronon's arms. Barely
conscious, brow furrowed in either concentration or pain or both, she
trembled and Ronon's arms around her tightened even as he tilted
awkwardly to keep his own blood from running into hers. Rodney ignored
his own pain, Sheppard's field dressing making the wound nothing more
than a sharp throb when he stood still. Walking -- running -- was another
matter. The throb became a dagger, slicing up and down his leg, making his
knee unresponsive and he cried out involuntarily with each footfall. Even
leaning on Sheppard, who was more than half-carrying him, he was too slow.
And they all knew it.
"I know you don't leave people behind," Rodney went on after taking a deep
breath and closing his eyes. "I know what I'm asking you to do. But if you
don't get Teyla back to Atlantis now, she'll die and then we'll still get caught
because I'm too slow and then they'll kill you and probably Ronon and I don't
want anyone else's death on my hands because I couldn't make the decision
on my own."
Sheppard's anger faded for a moment, melting into something close to
recognition and maybe even understanding, before returning with a
vengeance. "This isn't about Gaul, Rodney."
"It's not," he insisted. "Okay, maybe it is a little, but for god's sake, Colonel,
you know I'm right." He licked his dry lips. "Look, you know they want our
weapons and our technology and I'm sure if I talk atomic physics at them for
a bit, they'll hold off on shooting me until you show up with the rescue. You'll
rescue me, right?"
"I'm not ready to let you need rescuing!"
Teyla made noise then, a quiet gasp made all the more terrifying by the
accompanying wet gurgle.
"Sheppard," Ronon warned.
"Fine," Sheppard replied, defeated and defiant both. He started opening up
pockets of his tactical vest, pulling out various items and replacing them
before finally coming up with a tiny device the size of a nickel. He dropped to
one knee, reaching out and undoing the knot on the field dressing.
"Stand still," he ordered harshly when Rodney flinched involuntarily at the
pain. The device was a tracker, a beacon. And Sheppard was going to bury it
next to his thigh bone. Rodney fought back vomit as Sheppard's fingers
pressed and pushed at flesh and muscle and he swayed at the feeling of
metal and plastic grinding against bone.
"Don't let them look here," Sheppard warned, redressing the wound tightly
with the remainder of his already-depleted medical kit. His words dripped
fury, but his hands were as gentle as they could be under the
circumstances. "Get everything else treated if you can, but not this."
The first thing Rodney did was not show panic when he saw the laughably
inadequate shielding on the generator. He was panicking -- in the
hyperventilating, oh-my-god-didn't-you-see-the-end-of-Star Trek-2? way -- but,
for the first time in what felt like forever, or at least the last time the Genii
had him prisoner, he kept it to himself. One day of this wouldn't kill him. Five
days of this wouldn't kill him. It would have him getting cancer screenings
six times a year once he got back home, but it wouldn't kill him. However, it
would, eventually, kill everyone around him. And maybe he'd been in the
Pegasus galaxy for too long or maybe he had just finally spent too much time
with people like Sheppard and Ronon, but that prospect was increasingly
not bothering him. At all.
Rodney hadn't spent almost two decades in academia without learning how
to play the game. He chose not to play it, seeing it as a waste of time better
spent elsewhere. But he knew the rules and, like everything else that
followed a pattern, he was very, very good at it when he bothered to pay
attention.
Browbeating colleagues and breaking down challengers and twisting the
words of those who would question was not a challenge in the closed,
vicious, back-stabbing world of Earth's academic universe. Here it was not
even enjoyable because it was too easy. It was like lying to children -- it was
lying to children, at least intellectually -- and it was only a couple of hours
before he had the brightest minds the Genii had to offer completely turned
around on everything from basic atomic structure and electromagnetism to
the nature of Ancient technology.
What made it easy was that the Genii were, in fact, more foragers than
creators. They were like the Goa'uld -- appropriating from others more than
coming up with ideas themselves. As a consequence, they didn't always
know the how and the why of what they had. And Rodney, an expert at
finding just that chink in an opponent's armor, exploited it ruthlessly.
Couched in terms no less ridiculous than Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy,
Rodney lectured on the history of science, conveniently changing topics
before getting to the point of the story where error gave way to truth. He
built them a world where Kepler's harmonies of the world were real, Hobbes
and Wallis squared the circle, and vision worked by extromission. He veered
their calculus into a death spiral that would have them fighting tooth and
nail for at least a decade before they got back to Isaac Barrow, forget about
Isaac Newton. He left them all of the challenges of Euclid's fifth postulate
without giving them any hint that Lobachevsky and Bolyai would throw it
over for hyperbolic geometry. He sabotaged their cosmology, their
astronomy, their faith in their ability to count past "one, two, many".
He was ruthless and brilliant and, in rare moments, he wished that there
was someone there who understood just how brilliant. And then his thigh
barked and the tracker shifted against bone and he shivered and
remembered that he really, really didn't want anyone else there just now.
Not until it was Sheppard and a whole lot of Marines carrying rifles.
When Sheppard did show up, it was with a whole lot of Marines and and
great show of force and Rodney heard their approach long before the heavy
metal door swung open. It sounded like the audio track of Terminator, the
part with the siege of the police station, complete with explosions and
screams and the rat-tat-tat of old school pistols (because that's what the
Genii had) up against far superior weaponry. The noise drew closer, the
screams got louder, and the barked orders of a commander under siege
could be heard if you listened closely enough.
Rodney listened.
He also worked. Five armed guards kept watch over him and the four
assistants he'd kept -- he'd banished the fifth, a beautiful young blonde with
pale skin and sad eyes and not nearly enough insight to be any advantage to
the Genii nuclear program; he'd sent her weeping from his sight, publicly
belittling her intelligence and privately wishing her a long, healthy life. He
barked orders, rewired components, and used sheer force of will and
personality to assure that these four prodigies did what he said and not
what they had previously thought to be correct and in fact still was.
It took balls of brass to insult a trained engineer -- even by the Genii
standards -- into believing that no, he didn't just cross his wires. Especially
under the gaze of five twitchy soldiers who weren't sure if they were
supposed to kill him before he could escape or be rescued. That he'd done
this sort of thing before in this galaxy -- more than once -- didn't make it
easier or harder, but it did make the repertoire stronger.
The doors of this level were all closed as a matter of course and Rodney
could hear the Marines clearing each room, their voices in the hallways
getting closer, the clatter and crash of destruction growing louder. There
were fewer screams and more gunfire and the sounds of explosive chemicals
being set afire near other human beings.
The door to the lab he was in banged and rattled, but ultimately held when
the Marines got to it. Four of the guards took their position and one of them
kept his back to them and his rifle on Rodney.
The door was cast iron, bolts as big as his fists, at least three locks that he
could see and if it stood up to the battering ram, it didn't hold against
explosives. The guards didn't stand against a P-90 set on automatic and
then the lab was full of Marines in battle armor, Lieutenant Gillick coming
through after the all-clear is given, followed shortly after by Yoni Safir and
Sheppard himself.
The four assistants were herded into the hallway. One of them must have
made a move. There's one cry and three screams and then nothing. Rodney
didn't even wonder which ones it was.
"You okay, McKay?" Sheppard asked, standing back so that Safir could work
unencumbered. "Take your time, Doc. We got a minute if you need it."
In the cold, fluorescent light of the medical suites in Atlantis, Safir was
usually brusque and unsympathetic and impatient and mean. In a dim, foul-
smelling lab, he was brusque and unsympathetic and impatient and
possessed of the nimblest fingers this side of Vladimir Horowitz. At his
orders, two Marines cleared off a table and unfolded a stretcher and Rodney
was on his back with an IV taped in place and his thigh examined before he
could even register that Sheppard was still waiting for an answer.
"I'm fine," he said, because it took too much energy to explain all the ways
that he wasn't. He'd put everything he had into keeping himself together
long enough to be rescued and now he didn't have to do it anymore and all
he wanted to do was sleep.
"Torch this place," Sheppard ordered. "Nothing intact."
"No!" Rodney cried out, it coming out more like a petulant whine than he'd
have liked with Safir still standing over him. "I spent the last nineteen hours
sabotaging everything they have. Let them rebuild from this. They'll destroy
themselves and won't know why."
Sheppard gave him a look, one Rodney tried to remember to save for later
because it was complicated and rare, but nodded. "Gillick, start the exfil.
Patterson and Velendez, you keep an eye on the stretcher and the Doc. We
got what we came for, so let's get out of here."
Please drop by the archive and comment to let the author know if you enjoyed their
work!