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Chapter 205: Christmas Season Part 1 New
Chapter 205: Christmas Season Part 1

Alliance Headquarters, Brussels, Belgium, Earth, December 10th, 2001


"According to our operatives, the following System Lords have been sending scouting ships into Ba'al's former territory: Sokar, Cronus, Apophis and Heru'ur. Sokar and Cronus are more active than the other, and their territories are closer as well, so our analysts have deduced that Apophis and Heru'ur found out about those probes and launched probes of their own to find out what their rivals are planning there. So far, nothing indicates that they know that the Alliance has taken over the territory, but they definitely suspect that Ba'al's weakened and occupied with an interior or exterior enemy."

"Thank you." Adora nodded at Lantash/Martouf's presentation. She had read the analysis in advance, of course, but not everyone present at this briefing was cleared for that data. She stood. "We've seen off the recon forces with Ha'taks flying under Ba'al's colours, but as you've heard, we cannot maintain the ruse that he is still in control of his territory for much longer. We don't have enough such ships for the kind of retaliatory strike Ba'al would launch for such intrusions into his territory, not without risking discovery anyway, should our forces get overwhelmed or have to be reinforced by Clone forces."

The assembled Command Council members nodded. Most had already come to the same conclusion based on the data. Those present who hadn't had the clearance for this seemed to take their cues from their superiors.

"So, since our presence will be discovered sooner or later anyway, we have two basic options: We can fight a defensive operation against the expected invasions, using our shorter supply lines and better intel to ambush their forces when they enter our territory before launching a counter-invasion at the weakened territory on that border. Alternatively, we strike at the enemy while they are preparing for an invasion, using surprise and concentration of forces to inflict crushing losses on their forces before they are ready, followed by another offensive in the Earth sector against Apophis. For both strategies, we'll attempt to pose as remnant Horde forces as long as possible, to make the enemy believe that Ba'al was taken out by Clones from Horde Prime's former territory, whom he either attacked or unsuccessfully tried to recruit," Adora explained while holoprojections showing the expected areas of operation and forces present appeared in the middle of the room.

Admiral Larkin raised his hand. Adora suppressed the urge to sigh at the American and nodded instead. "Admiral."

"What about ceding the territory and withdrawing to avoid contact? That would gain us time to further prepare for a decisive offensive."

Adora was a bit surprised at the suggestion - Glimmer had expected the United States Government to push for an offensive to distract their people from the NID scandal. But it was a bad idea in her opinion. "We would have to evacuate or destroy too many facilities, not to mention move too many people, to make that feasible. Our war material production would take a hit that wouldn't be compensated by the time gained, and the enemy would quickly push against our new borders - and be more cautious after discovering that Ba'al's gone." Did the Americans plan to have those factories moved to their country? The other allies wouldn't support that, and it would add months of travel. And the Americans wouldn't be as stupid as to reduce the production capacities of the Alliance as a whole so their own would gain in relative importance, would they?

In any case, the Admiral scowled, but as everyone else seemed to agree with Adora, he didn't push the proposal.

"I support an offensive. Fighting a defensive operation will cede initiative to our enemies and prolong the war. It will also allow the enemy to gain experience fighting our forces before we strike at their territory and give them more time to adapt to our presence, potentially move the various Goa'uld factions to form a united front much earlier than we anticipate." And that would make the Goa'uld much more dangerous. They would still have to deal with their own logistical issues, and they were not expected to truly trust each other, but the numerical advantages would be a threat to the Alliance if they managed to concentrate their forces and make a push for a world the Alliance couldn't afford to lose and had to defend - such as Earth. Technological superiority could only compensate for numbers to some degree, as the Horde War had proven. They had to delay the point when the Goa'uld would realise they were facing an existential threat as long as possible.

"I agree with the assessment," Admiral Brown-Emerson said. "We have enough forces to take on two or even three System Lords with sufficiently superior forces to avoid mass casualties. The longer we wait, the greater the chance that the System Lords are alerted to our presence, and we not only lose the advantage of surprise but also face a more coordinated enemy."

"I concur," Glimmer said. "If we strike against the System Lords currently fighting each other, we should be able to quickly overwhelm them before they realise what is happening."

Catra snorted next to Adora. She didn't really think everything would go according to plan, Adora knew. But this was Catra's plan, and even if not everything went as planned, they should be able to compensate for any setbacks.

At the very least, Adora would rather face trouble in the enemy's territory, where one could fall back if everything else failed, than in their own territory. That was a lesson the Horde War had taught her as well.

As more and more members of the command council agreed, Adora was already going over the coming deployment of the forces available to the Alliance in her head.

*****​

Research Base Alpha, First Moon of Enchantment, December 11th, 2001 (Earth Time)

… and I regret to inform you that due to several classified current assignments that take priority, I am unable for the foreseeable future to assist in the Constellation II design project. Colonel Samantha Carter.

Samantha Carter finished typing her message to the United States Space Systems Command, checked for typos and hit send.

She knew she shouldn't feel quite so satisfied about this, but the cursed Constellation II-class had taken up too much of her time; the chance to have an excuse to ignore the requests for help for the next offensive at least was a godsend. Whoever delusional admiral had thought they could redesign the entire hangar layout of those ships after they had already been built should be fired! Sam wasn't going to waste any more of her scarce time on that project, not after they had kept ignoring her advice. Especially not after she had personally pointed out, multiple times, and with extensive documentation, that the latest version of the Phantom Aerospace Fighter was exceeding the design specs set when the Constellation II was laid down, and they had still gone ahead.

Granted - and this wasn't influenced by her being an officer in the Air Force, which would be using the Phantoms as well - the new aerospace fighter was a good design and she was looking forward to try one out once the General managed to get one for 'testing', better than the Death Gliders in all aspects except for cost of construction, though Horde automation should change that. It fared a bit worse when compared against the Horde Fighters, more agile and acceleration but less firepower and shielding, and inferior in range, even if you put them up against Horde fighters converted for living pilots. But for a first attempt at an aerospace fighter, it was a good plane.

Still, the Navy should have accepted that their boondoggle of a frigate class couldn't carry as many fighters as designed. It wasn't as if the ships would see much, if any, combat anyway - the ships hadn't been cleared for actual operations, and the redesign would delay that even further. But they would be decent training ships at least.

Especially for the maintenance and damage control training squads, she thought with a slight sneer.

Still, she was glad she wouldn't be dealing with the Navy's brass for a while. Working with Entrapta was so much better than trying to see stubborn admirals see reason. Her friend never ignored physical limits - those they couldn't either break or work around, at least.

Although, she thought as she stuffed her tablet into the side pocket of her uniform and walked towards the door ahead of her, now I have to deal with an actual crucial issue. Or a potential problem.

"Hello, Loki," he said when the door opened before her. "Hello, Alpha."

"Colonel Carter," Alpha greeted her, the holographic avatar bowing her head toward her.

Loki took a bit longer to look up from the screen he was staring at and nodded at her. "Greetings." After a moment, he added: "I assume you're here to check up on the host project."

"On all the projects in general," Sam replied. It wasn't quite a surprise inspection - they had done those before - but she hadn't announced her arrival too much in advance. "How are you doing with your main project?"

Loki scowled. "A few inconsequential delays, but we're more or less on schedule."

A schedule that had been extended before. "Viability issues again?" Sam asked.

"Yes. Nothing a bit more work can overcome." He nodded.

Which, as Sam understood the problem, wasn't actually a viability issue; the latest version of the Asgard clones would be viable and able to reproduce. She stepped closer and made a point of peering at the screen in front of him. "They look nice," she said, feeling a bit guilty about baiting him.

He scowled again. "There are several flaws I am still working on."

Meaning, they still looked too much like Horde clones for his taste. "Do you think your people will be easier to convince to use your solution if you alter their appearance closer to their current one?"

"Current data indicates that. If there were no differences in appearance, I could ensure that my solution is adapted by the Asgard."

Sam raised her eyebrows. That was very confident even for Loki, whose confidence regularly crossed into arrogance. So why would…? Ah! "You mean you'd try to change their cloning matrices and replace their old patterns with yours."

"Of course." He nodded firmly.

"That doesn't sound very ethical," She commented.

"If the survival of your species is in danger, duping them into being saved is perfectly ethical according to the vast majority of the material I have consulted," Alpha chimed in.

"It would violate their bodily autonomy," Sam pointed out. "And invalidate their own decisions about their future."

"If they want to die, they have the right and the means to commit suicide at any time they choose," Loki said. "But they do not have the right - and now, they lack the means - to condemn our entire species to extinction. But to fool them into being saved will require a perfect design that is, but for genetic changes that eliminate genome degradation, identical to our current genome."

"And what if you cannot produce such a genome?" Sam couldn't help asking.

His scowl grew more pronounced. "Then my best design will be the base for a reborn Asgard species."

Which had been his original plan. Or his original backup plan; Loki had gone through a few versions since he had started working on the problem.

"Good." They had talked long enough about this. "How is the Synthetic Host Project going?" Sam asked.

Loki sneered again. "In my opinion, the project cannot be completed successfully. Any host organism that provides enough intellectual support to serve as a replacement for sapient hosts will, by necessity, be sapient enough to violate the ethical limits you have stipulated for the project. I have pointed this out from the start."

He had. As had others. But this was a crucial component to winning the war in the long term without committing crimes against humanity.

"Although our co-workers from the experimental subjects native to Etheria are working on a possible workaround for that problem," Alpha said. "It's outside my expertise. However, they sound optimistic."

Sam suppressed a sigh. That meant magic. And she had learned quickly that you couldn't trust much less predict what Mystacor's researchers might come up with. "I see. I will make enquiries there, then."

Dealing with mad sorceresses was still less stressful than dealing with the Navy brass.

*****​

PZ-8623 System, Former Territory of Ba'al, December 14th, 2001 (Earth Time)

Catra watched the holoprojection showing the approach of the Goa'uld scouting ships. One Al'kesh and two Tel'taks. Not a significant force, even for a recon mission. She would have sent more and kept most back, sending one Tel'tak into a system so the other ships could monitor from a safe-ish distance and escape to report back if things went sideways. Or bail the Tel'tak out of trouble if needed and possible.

But whoever sent this force probably thought that three ships would have better odds of detecting anything important and escaping to report in case their communications were jammed or something. And it did look like the Goa'uld still had not realised just how good Alliance sensor technology was. They had to suspect something, though, seeing as they had lost scouting forces using stealth before, though the Alliance forces had only attacked from very close range, so…

The three ships started splitting up. The Al'kesh slowed down, and the two Tel'taks split up, one heading towards the Ha'tak orbiting the habitable planet of the system, the other taking a wider approach.

"They're testing our sensors," she commented. "As expected."

"Standard tactics, then, for the Tel'tak," Adora said. "Try to disable them."

"As you command, Your Divine Highness!" the captain of the Ha'tak replied.

Catra didn't think it would work - the Jaffa crews of the last few ships they had disabled had destroyed themselves before they could be boarded. Loyal unto death to their god, although killing yourself quickly was also a very rational decision if you were about to be captured by Baal's forces. Of course, Tel'taks were too small to offer a lot of safety margins to disabling shots, and it didn't take a lot to blow one up accidentally, either, at least if you were using a capital ship's batteries.

But they might have a shot at taking the Al'kesh intact if their plan worked.

"Spy bots approaching targets," another Clone reported.

Those were special models using the latest runic-enhanced stealth generators. They didn't have many of them, mass-producing them was not yet deemed worth the loss of regular spy bot production, so they were pretty much handcrafted, but given their better stealth generators and a much larger payload, they were perfect for this operation.

Or so the Alliance was hoping. Catra also hoped that this would convince the brass - especially her friends - to switch production. You had to keep ahead of the technology curve, after all. Sure, the Goa'uld didn't quite have the sensors to defeat the regular stealth generators, but you couldn't count on that staying the same, and Catra would rather err on the side of caution in this area. The spy bot network was the biggest advantage of the Alliance, and she expected the war to last long enough to render the current models obsolete before it was over, unlike more optimistic analysts.

"Tel'tak approaching red line," the Clone at the sensor station reported. That was the 'known' farthest detection range that the Alliance had demonstrated so far when dealing with those scouts. They hadn't seen any indication that any of the intercepted stealth scouts had been able to report the range back to their origin before being jammed and disabled, but they couldn't be sure.

"Tel'tak approaching blue line."

"Wait until the green line, then disable it," Adora ordered.

"As you command, Your Divine Highness!"

They would attempt to disable it, at least. Beam weapons would have been more precise, but with the older weapons mounted in this Ha'tak, accidentally destroying a smaller target was always a possibility.

Catra kept an eye on the other two ships. None of them showed any indication that they had detected the bots closing in on them. They were probably focused on the Tel'tak playing bait. Or mine sweeper.

She suddenly heard the slight rumbling from the Ha'tak's main battery, and the closest Tel'tak shuddered as it was hit by standard Goa'uld guns, followed by an explosion.

"We failed to disable it, Your Divine Highness!"

Catra ignored the report and focused on the two remaining ships. The bots had already been on final approach, so…

The projection flickered when the short-range jammers carried by one spy bot went into effect. Then the sensors adjusted - it was just enough jamming to disable the enemy communications, after all - and the holoprojection reported almost simultaneous contacts as the bots hit the enemy ships in groups of two and three each. One clamped onto the engines and blew itself up, taking the engines with them. The other, or others in the Al'kesh's case, used breaching charges to open the ship's hull and flood it with disabling gas, followed by releasing micro spy bots to deal with any crew members in sealed suits.

"Breaches in both targets. Engines confirmed disabled," the Clone reported.

Catra checked the readings from the micro spy bots. Tel'tak's crew was quickly confirmed to be unconscious. No surprise there with the small size of the ship.

On the Al'kesh, though, two Jaffa had managed to throw on breathers and were rushing to the bridge. "They're trying to trigger the self-destruct!" Adora snapped.

The micro spy bots were moving to intercept them, like a swarm of killer toys. But they were too slow. The second of the Jaffa was swarmed and taken down by the one-shot stun guns the bots carried, but the other shrugged off a glancing blow, shot another bot with his staff weapon and managed to reach the command console before the rest of the bots caught up.

The feed from the bots cut off, and a moment later, the holoprojection showed an explosion engulfing the Al'kesh.

"Disabling mission failed for the Al'kesh, Your Divine Highness."

Yeah, Catra thought, we can see that. Still, they had disabled one ship. Time to find out who was behind this set of spies.

*****​

Alliance Headquarters, Brussels, Belgium, Earth, December 15th, 2001

Things were picking up right before Christmas. Usually, Jack O'Neill would make a few jokes about having a good excuse to miss the Holiday stress, but… Compared to running a war on a galaxy-wide scale - or so it felt, no matter what Carter said about the actual astronomical scale - and trying to not think about Kinsey's parting shots, having to shop for presents, deal with relatives inviting him to the holidays and juggling the holiday schedules for his troops while they were about to deploy to the front, just having the regular holiday trouble would have been an actual vacation.

"So… they have been identified as Sokar's scouts," he said once he had skimmed the report from the Ba'al front.

"Yes," Catra replied. "They were wearing Apophis's armour, but the Tok'ra provided intel that tied the ships to Sokar's factory, and when Adora showed them her power, the Jaffa prayed to Sokar as well, according to Melog."

Jack shook his head. That had been a bit sloppy of Sokar - well, the ships; the snake couldn't really do anything about a magical cat reading the thoughts of his frantically faithful praying to you in what they think is their last moment. Not when such faith was what made them so loyal to him. Of course, a mind-reading magic cat would render most black ops procedures to hide your origin pointless, anyway. In that way, Melog was actually as much a crucial Alliance advantage that needed to be kept secret as the spy bot network.

"So, after Cronus's intrusions, we now have confirmation about Sokar's operations," Jack said. Not that he had doubted the Tok'ra's intel; it made too much sense based on Sokar and Ba'al's history - they had been allies, once, until Ba'al had grown too powerful and too ambitious.

"Yeah, but nothing more than that. The scouts we captured don't know anything about Sokar's intentions." Catra shrugged. "They were not even told whether they should expect Ba'al's forces, an usurper's, or anything else."

"Good operational security on Sokar's part," Jack commented. Not that he had expected anything else; you didn't become much less stay a System Lord if you had bad opsec; your rivals would eat you alive. Maybe literally in some cases.

"In any case, we've been gathering forces in deep space, so any scouts we miss won't find them except for sheer luck," Catra went on.

Jack nodded. That would put a bit of additional strain on logistics, but only a bit - the Clone fleet trains could easily handle it as long as they had more transport capacities to get the raw materials from the mining units. And the troop transports were designed for long-range deployments; the Brits had done good work there.

It would mean that the troops couldn't train on a planet while waiting, which would affect readiness levels, but at least Jack's forces - if he ever met the guy who had coined the term ASpecs, there would be words - could train in boarding actions and Zero-G operations; he knew that while they were skilled, they could always get better at those.

Though morale would be affected the most. At least for Earth and probably Etherian forces. No matter how nice the ship facilities were - and military ships, even space ships, were not exactly cruise ships - people stuck on board were likely to get antsy. Cabin fever. Hanging out in deep space without even the opportunity to get some fresh air would make it worse. And they couldn't even use the Stargate to rotate people to planets safely behind the frontlines for exercises or leave; the ships would have to be in a system for the Stargate to work.

Back at Stargate Command, he didn't have to worry about that particular problem. Not when the troops could head outside at the end of their shift. He had people - shrinks - to handle that, but when it came down to it, Jack was the one who was ultimately responsible for his troops.

And besides… "How soon can we be ready to launch recon operations?"

"We're estimating about a week or two until we've finished analysing the spy bot data we got."

That would narrow down the targets, but they would need more intel than that. Which meant planetary recon missions. Which meant work for his special forces since nothing beat eyes on the ground. "We need more runic stealth shuttles," he said. "I don't care what the brass says about the risks of losing one and exposing our technology; I am not sending my troops to infiltrate a planet with inferior technology." Besides, if they got caught, all it would take was one trooper being snaked, and the Goa'uld would know all about the Alliance's true origin, and that was a much bigger risk than a self-destruct failing.

Catra nodded. "We should have half a dozen upgraded by then. Including your own."

Jack grinned. Letting Carter and Entrapta use his own stealth shuttle as a testing bed for the upgrade kits paid out. "So, let's get ready for Christmas at the front."

"It's probably going to be more peaceful than last day gift shopping here." Catra matched his grin.

"Or the family dinners," Jack added. He didn't miss those.

But it would likely mean that they would miss out on the New Year's Parties as well, and those could be fun. Especially since the Etherians had started attending. Well, they would see how things worked out.

*****​

Alliance Headquarters, Brussels, Belgium, Earth, December 20th, 2001

"The Spy Bot Network continues to spread into Cronus's territory, but its coverage is still limited. We're surveilling several possible rallying spots and have detected a concentration of ships in one system, but it doesn't seem to be a build-up for an invasion, merely a home port for a reaction/patrol force. Our operatives are currently investigating to see if that's a new development or has been part of Cronus's border patrols for some time."

"Thank you." Adora nodded at Jakar/Mats's report. That was a good summary of the data they had. The Alliance had increased their reconnaissance efforts towards Cronus ever since they had identified his forces, but he hadn't been a priority so far, so this would take more time. Sokar, on the other hand… "Our surveillance shows that Sokar is building up forces, though they are too spread out so far to form a united invasion or reaction force. Our analysis has drawn the conclusion that he is preparing for a broad offensive, aided by the fact that Apophis and Heru'ur are currently engaged in a slowly escalating struggle over a system, likely fuelled by Sokar's covert operations, and so he can spare forces for a grab of territory. We don't know if he is aware or suspects that Ba'al has been taken out or simply interprets the lack of a strong reaction by Ba'al to his intrusions as a sign of a deeper weakness he can exploit; the Tok'ra operatives within his realm are too low-ranked to have access to such intel."

"If he thinks that Ba'al is too weak to oppose his land grab, wouldn't he wonder about the reasons for this?" Admiral Dubois asked.

"We assume he has intel about Ba'al's dealings with remnant Horde forces," Jakar/Mats replied. "Sokar would have had agents within Ba'al's forces, and while the former System Lord had compartmentalised his realm to a significant degree, he could not hide everything from everyone. We also have confirmed that the news of Horde Prime's defeat and death has spread throughout the entire Goa'uld Empire, so Sokar would be aware of that as well without having to launch recon forces into the former Horde territory."

In the middle of the room, the holoprojection lit up the various territories. "So, we lack enough intel for a strike at Cronus so far, but we have a much better picture of Sokar's realm, although still not complete," Adora said. "However, if we strike at Sokar, that will open up the possibility to strike at both Apophis and Heru'ur in a second phase, potentially eliminating all three System Lords and shortening our borders with the Goa'uld Empire to whatever remains of Sokar's realm and Cronus's territory." With the former Ba'al's territory forming a buffer zone between those and the former Horde territory that included Etheria. Earth would be even further from any Goa'uld realms, greatly increasing the Alliance's security. It would also lengthen their supply lines, but that couldn't be avoided anyway once they started to further advance into the Goauld Empire's territory.

"If we're striking Sokar and then Apophis and Heru'ur, we will need to cover our flank against Cronus," Admiral Brown-Emerson pointed out.

"We'll keep forces in reserve for that," Adora told him. "Specifically, we'll be building up another Clone Fleet in the border area and shift the decoy forces currently posing as Ba'al's ships to that border as well. If necessary, we can have the First Fleet pivot to cover the border as well." Now fully rebuilt and upgraded, it would be serving as a reserve for the invasion.

"Another Clone fleet?" Admiral Larkin clearly wasn't happy with that.

"We have the spare capacity and the experience to raise an effective force there," Adora replied.

"We know that this will work, unlike other attempts to build a fleet," Admiral Dubois added with a smile that had the American scowl at him.

"The build-up of Earth's naval forces will, of course, continue on schedule. More or less, at least," Admiral Brown-Emerson said, probably to head off another row. "We have enough Horde ships available for our training pipeline."

That was true, but compared to the Clone training program, it was still lagging behind. And the Americans didn't want to use Horde ships; they wanted to use their own designs. Not that mentioning that would be helpful.

"Now, that covers the naval forces assigned to this," Adora went on. "We are planning several ground campaigns as well, focusing on the key industrial hubs in Sokar's realm that we have identified so far."

"Alliance Special Forces will conduct recon operations on all potential targets," Jack added. "We'll adjust and detail plans once we have their intel."

That was standard practice, of course. You didn't drop an invasion on an unknown world - not if you wanted to win.

"That's the broad plan. Now, let's focus on the first phase," Adora pointed, and the holoprojection changed, zooming in on the border area where Sokar's ships were located. "This will be a priority target for the first strike, but in order to train operational surprise, we'll have to…"

*****​

Alliance Headquarters, Brussels, Belgium, Earth, December 21st, 2001

"After analysing the remains of the ships that were destroyed recently, we have found no sign of advanced technology beyond the known Goa'uld technology. However, since those were scout ships, and, based upon their mission profile and recorded flight profiles, likely expected to be lost in action, there is a high probability that the System Lords decided not to risk exposing more advanced technology by outfitting ships deemed expendable from the start. We have no evidence so far that Sokar and Cronus lack more advanced technology," Samantha Carter nodded at the assembled officers. "Although, while we also lack any such information about the forces of Apophis and Heru'ur, in those cases intel from the Tok'ra operatives inserted into their courts corroborated that lack of more advanced technology," she went on.

"Let's hope none of them found yet another lost Ancient lab and started playing with galaxy-destroying superweapons," the General commented.

A few of the officers laughed, but after everything they had faced so far in the war, and knowing about the Heart of Etheria, Sam didn't think the General was exaggerating too much, if at all.

"In any case," she picked up her briefing, "even if Cronus or Sokar had access to more advanced technology, they were not able or not willing to outfit their entire force with it; the data from our own recon efforts has shown that their border patrols are limited to standard Goa'uld technology." She illustrated the point by highlighting the weapons, engine and shield generators on a holoprojection of a Ha'tak.

"You've summed up your analysis quite succinctly, Colonel Carter," Admiral Brown-Emerson said. "But what is your personal opinion?"

Sam didn't frown; she had expected such a question. The General would have asked it if the British officer hadn't been quicker. "My analysis is based on the data we acquired. I stand by it."

"But what does your gut feeling say?" And here came the General.

She didn't frown either, but she glanced at him and narrowed her eyes when he grinned. "I think we have to anticipate encountering more advanced technology during the upcoming operation. Due to the System Lords' policy of spying on each other and trying to use plots and sabotage against rivals, they tend to keep any perceived advantage, such as better technology than what their rivals have access to, secret, usually with the intent to reveal it in a decisive action against a rival or to save their realm from an overwhelming threat."

"And do you have any idea what kind of technology we could encounter, Colonel?" Admiral Larkin asked with the hint of a sneer.

Sam kept her face impassive and her tone professional. "As I already said and explained in my report, we have found no sign of advanced technology in either arsenal so far."

"So, you have no idea about potential threats?" Larkin doubled up.

Was he carrying a grudge for her refusal to spend even more time on the Navy's design failures? "Since, as I have repeatedly explained, we have no data about this, any statement about a specific kind of technology would be baseless speculation, Admiral." Sam managed not to sound contemptuous in her reply.

The General, though, didn't bother to hide his sneer. "Last I checked, we didn't have oracles on staff." He cocked his head to the side in what Sam recognised as a decent attempt at a Columbo imitation. "Although now that I think about it, I wouldn't mind if we did hire such people; we could shorten those briefings by heading off such questions from the start. Of course, it doesn't take an oracle to predict some of those questions…"

Admiral Larkin glared at him. "I was merely trying to anticipate our future threats and asked the specialist in charge of assessing such threats to elaborate on their briefing."

Adora cleared her throat. "We'll be on our guard and on the lookout for any sign of such a threat. However, we are here to plan the first phase of our offensive, mainly the space-centred part."

They still had to conduct a detailed recon of the various planetary targets, but they had the naval assets of the enemy mapped out sufficiently, thanks to their spy bots. The task forces gathering should be able to handle them easily, even if they were split up to hit all enemy concentrations simultaneously. But that would leave them vulnerable to a concentrated counterattack, and if they had to concentrate their forces, they would have to do so in systems important for the enemy, to force them to counterattack there. And that would require better ground intel - all the data analysis Sam and the others had done hadn't helped with that. At least, Sam was reasonably certain that there was no upgrade program running on any of the worlds targeted in the first phase; there was no sign of prototypes or test flights, or yards busy with upgrades, just the usual maintenance.

Which was, of course, highly suspicious, at least in her opinion.

*****​

Tokyo, Japan, Earth, December 24th, 2001

"It really looks like a cliche," Catra remarked as they walked through the streets of Tokyo. "The lights, the stars above, and the slowly falling light snow." She looked up. "The slowly falling magical illusory snow that's just falling around this building."

Adora coughed. "Well, Illusa has a talent for that kind of magic, but she can't cover more than a small area."

"And her employers didn't want other businesses benefiting from her work for free," Catra added. The falling snow - that didn't gather on your fur and started to melt, but faded away without leaving any trace - did make for a beautiful scenery that was attracting crowds. Whether it was worth what the business had had to pay to Illusa was a question for the managers and accountants. "Still, to think that they hired a graduate from Mystacor for advertising?" She snorted.

"Earth's magical traditions tend to focus on other areas than illusions," Adora said. "With the exception of certain, ah, controversial myths."

Like those Fae and similar spirits - or gods, or whatever those creatures were supposed to be. The Wild Hunt was one of the most infamous magical events related to such traditions, but not the only one. Catra understood very well why the business here had decided to hire an Etherian sorceress rather than trying to get a deal with anything related to that.

She still didn't think it was worth it for advertising, but she wouldn't complain if it meant she could have a great date with Adora on Christmas Eve. Even if they had to disguise themselves to avoid getting mobbed. And that her idea to disguise themselves as 'cosplayers' of themselves had been shot down by Adora when she had found out that she couldn't just change into She-Ra because her height would have given the game away.

So, Catra was wearing sunglasses after dark, a 'beanie' and scarf to further hide her face, and her tail was wrapped around her waist instead of swinging free. The things she did for love!

And Adora, she noted while she squeezed her love's arm a bit more tightly and leaned into her side, got away with just wearing sunglasses and a different hairstyle. It wasn't quite fair.

Not that she would complain - having Adora to herself was a treat; the idiot was still working too much.

Which was why Catra had pulled some strings (and done some blackmail) and had bribed Bow with a new box of those Earth miniatures he collected to take Glimmer on a romantic date back in Bright Moon before she could get some ideas about spending the evening together as a group. All to ensure that, short of an invasion of Alliance space, no one would disturb this date. Just her and her love, on a romantic evening in Tokyo on Christmas Eve.

They'd have dinner in Tokyo's best sushi restaurant, dance in the hottest club of Shinjuku - she had gotten the perfect suit for this in Milano, after all, and Adora was wearing a hot dress straight from Paris under her winter coat - and then they'd head to the most expensive suite of the best love hotel in the city for the perfect night to conclude the date!

Catra flashed her teeth and rubbed her cheek on Adora's shoulder as they continued walking down the street.

Perfect.

*****​
 
Chapter 206: Christmas Season Part 2 New
Chapter 206: Christmas Season Part 2

Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States of America, Earth, December 25th, 2001


Jack O'Neill was a bit torn about throwing a Christmas Party on Christmas for his friends. This was a day they should be spending with their family. On the other hand, Daniel had no family with whom he was on speaking terms, except for Sha're, of course, and Sha're's family didn't really give a damn about Christmas. The same was true for Teal'c. So, none of them had to pick between him and their family obligations today.

Carter, on the other hand, had family. A father, a brother and the brother's family. Yet, she had picked him.

He wasn't quite sure if and what that said about her, about her family, and about himself. And he couldn't exactly ask her about it - that would be too personal. And, potentially, too… whatever it was. She was one of his best friends, but nothing would change that she was also his subordinate.

Though if he hadn't accepted the promotion to General, they would have the same rank now… He buried that thought.

"So… how about that roast?" he asked. If he asked a bit too loudly, no one commented on it, and he would have an excuse since they had started with a case of beer.

"It's your family recipe, General," Carter replied with a faint smile. "I was just fetching more salsa."

Right. The best thing his family had ever left him. No, that sounded a bit too whiny. Or 'emo', as the kids these days would say - at least, according to Daniel's explanation for Sha're that Jack had caught while preparing the roast.

Which, incidentally, was doing fine, as a check at the oven showed.

He returned to the living room, where Rya'c had found Jack's Gameboy and had managed to persuade Daniel to explain how it worked. Judging from the sound, he was playing Super Mario World 2. Good game.

"It seems my son is fond of your 'training device', Jack O'Neill."

Jack didn't wince even though he recognised that tone. "It's just a game, Teal'c. Let the boy have some fun."

"I have seen how easily those devices can lead a grown warrior to neglect their duty."

Was that a dig at Jack? He grinned. "They are a great way to relax and keep from burning out." That was his own excuse, and he was sticking to it.

"I do not believe that my son is in danger of experiencing such a 'burnout'. He has yet to see combat as a warrior."

And if Jack had anything to say about it, he wouldn't for a long time. Jaffa and Etherians might not see anything wrong with sending kids to war, but Jack did. But this wasn't the time to debate that, so he nodded. "Then playing a game won't hinder his duty, right?"

Teal'c raised his eyebrow with a slight twist of his lips before taking a sip from his second beer or so, and Jack couldn't quite tell if his friend conceded the point or had just let slip that he had been pulling Jack's leg. For the benefit of his ego, he assumed it was the former rather than the latter. Also, Drey'auc was watching her son with quite a fond expression, so that was a further point in favour of Teal'c ribbing him.

He looked around. Carter was going through his stack of magazines, bowl with nachos and chips in hand. Daniel and Sha're were on the couch, next to Drey'auc, and going over something on Daniel's tablet that seemed to be of interest to all three. Even odds it was something related to ancient history or modern civilisation.

Jack blinked. Oh, he'd just had the best idea to get one over on Teal'c. "Say, Teal'c, have you ever played one of the classic Star Wars games?"

Teal'c's eyebrow rose again. Definitely interest, there. "I have not."

"Then let's see if we can persuade Carter to get X-Wing vs. TIE Fighter going on the TV! We still have one hour before the roast will be done."

"You want me to emulate an old PC on my computer so you can play an even older game on your TV, General?" Carter must have overheard them.

"Well, only if it's not too much for you - wouldn't want you to waste an hour trying to get it going." He shrugged. "I know the cable guy I had to call to set up the TV had a lot of trouble with the connections, so…"

Carter narrowed her eyes at him, and he put up the most innocent expression he could manage. It must have worked, since she made that cute huff she sometimes did when she felt challenged and was about to show off. "It won't take nearly that long."

It didn't. Though, in hindsight, Jack should have known better than to show his friends a Star Wars video game that featured flying starfighters. By the time the roast was done - thank God for the alarm clock - Carter and Teal'c were halfway through designing a new Aerospace fighter based on the X-Wing, though with the flight characteristics of a "Starfury" from a sci-fi show Jack had apparently managed to miss for years.

"If that gets you into trouble with Lucasfilm and the Navy and whoever owns that other show, don't blame me!" he muttered as he retreated into the kitchen.

*****​

PZ-8623 System, Former Territory of Ba'al, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"Five of the six recon missions on the selected target worlds currently held by Sokar are finished, Your Divine Highness."

Adora nodded at the Clone who gave her the report. "What about the sixth?"

"They have discovered another base on the planet in the TX-5842 System and require more time to scout it out, Your Divine Highness."

Catra, sprawled in Adora's command chair, and, as expected, reading the written report on her tablet, added: "That's an underground base. Pretty strange - they didn't hide the entrance at all. It got a space port there, even, but except for a few structures likely built to service ships, and what seems to be the entrance building, everything seems to be underground. Look at those lifts."

Adora took a look. Indeed, those were lifts bigger than on some of Earth's obsolete aircraft carriers. "Big enough for an Alkesh," she said after checking the dimensions.

"Yes." Catra nodded as she took her tablet back. "Though the team hasn't observed the base long enough yet to tell if there's a production line for ships, they have seen such ships landing and then being transported underground."

Adora checked the report herself. Standard bases on the planet - one to guard the Stargate, two serving as resource-extracting hubs for minerals. A number of villages around the Stargate, for food production and ease of shipping, presumably.

And yet, there was an underground base on the opposite side of the planet. "There has to be a reason for the base being there." She brought up the preliminary scans from the spy bots in the system. No Naqahdah veins, at least that had been confirmed, but the spy bot's scanners had not been able to completely map out the underground base. They had a rough overview, but no details. "It's big enough for production lines, and the amount of Naquadah in refined form is greater than a mere garrison would need," she said.

"Yes," Catra agreed. "Though we can't tell if those reactors using it are for power supply or in ships being built."

Another reason to upgrade the spy bots to the latest design… though there were so many of them, they couldn't feasibly do that, much less replace every bot with a new model. So, they still would depend on recon teams on the ground. "The team down there plans to enter the base?"

"According to their last report, yes, Your Divine Highness," the Clone Communication officer said.

"They're taking the initiative," Catra commented.

They were also taking a huge risk, Adora knew. It was one thing to observe a base from the outside, quite another to sneak into it. Even with the new uniforms. And even more so since this was an underground base. She checked the team members. Campbell, Isa. Both were veterans and had gone on missions with Adora and the others. Their team was led by Lieutenant Jim Averis, a former Royal Marine Commando, also skilled - Jack wouldn't have him leading them otherwise. And the last member was Sergeant José Vega, a former US Marine. Yes, those would be taking the initiative and taking huge risks.

Like you would, a small voice whispered in the back of her mind.

But she was She-Ra, Princess of Power, and she could easily withstand enemy staff weapons. None of the soldiers in that team could; even Isa would get hurt if a staff weapon hit her at a vulnerable spot.

And if they got into trouble, the Alliance couldn't easily retrieve them. Not with the Stargate under Sokar's control. They would have to launch a full invasion, early - although if the team got spotted, surprise was lost anyway - and hope to quickly conduct a landing operation and secure the Stargate.

That was the same for every such recon mission, of course, and the teams knew that. Still… None of the other teams had discovered an unknown and atypical base like they had. "Move the task force assigned to that system closer," she ordered. "And increase the readiness of the entire invasion force. We'll launch the operation as soon as the last team reports in." Or fails to report.

"Yes, Your Divine Highness!" the Clone bowed.

Padre, the leader of Fourth Fleet, acknowledged the order soon afterwards.

"I'll organise a move to the frontlines for us," Catra said behind her. "Shouldn't take too long to reach the task force assigned to the TX-5842 System. We can pick up Glimmer, Bow and the others as well."

She didn't have to turn around to know Catra was shaking her head at how transparent Adora was. "An unknown underground base is important enough to prepare a special team," she said.

Catra snickered, and Adora heard her claws tap the tablet's screen.

Well, at least it was happening after Christmas. Adora would have felt pretty guilty to interrupt the celebrations of most of the Earth forces in case they had to launch the invasion early. Just getting to increased readiness would finish all leave and put a damper on the holiday activities the troops managed to organise in the fleet.

But that couldn't be helped. They were at war. But when she thought that just two days ago…

"We were on well-deserved leave for our date. Don't you dare feel guilty about that - everyone else on Earth who had leave did the same," Catra scolded her from behind.

Adora did wince at that.

*****​

Deep Space, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

Samantha Carter studied the data they had from the TX-5842 System. She had done so before, but the spy bots inserted into the system kept adding more information, and there was always the chance they managed to record something crucial that they had missed so far. Even though the chance was rather small - she had written part of the routines governing the scanning cycles herself, after all.

"So much for the holiday season," the General commented nearby.

"Jack, we were scheduled to transfer to the front tomorrow anyway."

"That's one full day of leave, Daniel."

"You were checking your messages during dinner yesterday. I bet you were doing remote work today. Or actually going into your office."

"I was taking my private shuttle for a spin." The General's defensive tone told Sam Daniel was correct - not that she had had any doubt anyway; it had been a miracle that the General had actually taken half a day off on Christmas with his people in the field.

But she had a job to do. Even though the data didn't really show any changes from the data they had. Just enough to know that the underground base was housing something important enough to require a lot of power, but not enough to determine what it was. "We need to get the recon teams better scanners," she commented. They had thought the ones provided would be enough to cover all eventualities, but, obviously, that wasn't true.

"Yes!" Entrapta unsurprisingly agreed - she loved getting more data. "If we can shrink a shuttle scanner some more, we should be able to fit it in a module that would fit the new bots."

That would certainly provide the recon teams with a much more advanced sensor capability. But it would add another bot to their roster, and they were already on the larger side, with the shield and cargo/med bots. And the larger a recon team was, the higher was the risk of being detected by the enemy. On the other hand, gathering information was the primary goal of such teams and missions, so even replacing a bot with medical and other supplies with a sensor bot would make sense, even though it would mean the team members would have fewer supplies and support should anything go wrong.

Sam didn't like to make such calculations, but a failed recon mission would endanger far more people than the recon team themselves.

"It's close to the scheduled time to report in," the General said.

They hadn't heard from the team since it had entered the underground base. That was a bad sign in itself - the team would report back as soon as they had finished successfully scouting the base. If they hadn't, they either had not finished the mission yet - which would make it harder for them to report; communication with the waiting shuttle, which would relay it to the task force through the spy bot network, might be blocked or compromised - or they had been captured. Or killed.

But the activity in the system and on the other bases on the world hadn't changed. If the team had been captured, the system would have been put on alert at the least. So… they would wait a bit longer.

"We could fly a shuttle into the system," Daniel suggested. "So we would be ready to intervene at a moment's notice."

"If we go in, we'd go in with the task force," Adora said.

"We'd still gain some time," the General pointed out.

"And we wouldn't be able to communicate as effectively as we might need with the rest of the theatre while the shuttle is in stealth mode," Catra said.

Which was about the closest Sam had seen the Etherians come to acknowledging that there were certain drawbacks to having their commanders fight at the front.

"And that won't be the case once we launch the invasion," Adora added.

"Hm…" Entrapta spoke up before anyone else could continue the argument. "There's no sign of any dimensional displacement or transfer. Even a closer scan by a bot didn't reveal any of the trace energies such effects commonly leave."

"Finally, some good news!" the General exclaimed. "If I never encounter another dimension, I'll be happy."

Sam was inclined to agree. While working with dimensional transportation technology was fascinating and offered all sorts of potential breakthroughs, their encounters with Ancient or Goa'uld experiments in the field so far had been rather harrowing. Still… "That doesn't mean that whatever is going on in that base would be harmless, though," she pointed out.

"Yes!" Entrapta nodded. "There are lots of experiments that could be very dangerous without touching pan-dimensional technology. Like bioweapons."

A sane person would conduct such research in space, where the risk of a containment breach could be minimised. But the Goa'uld demonstratively didn't care about that, as the fact that the Tok'ra had destroyed such laboratories on planets before illustrated. Apparently, ease of travel beat security from accidents for them - a foolish stance, in Sam's view. Stargates increased the risk of biological weapons spreading by orders of magnitude. Still…

"Emergency signal from the recon team!" the Clone officer in charge of communication reported. "Geophysical movement in the target area."

Geophysical movement? An Earthquake? Sam checked the readings. It wasn't an Earthquake, but something was moving large quantities of the ground below the base. And inside the base. "Switching to a visual from the closest spy bot," she announced.

The picture on the large screen had low resolution, but the enhance routines were working.

Sam stared.

"Looks like… are those worms?" Daniel asked. "Giant worms?"

Worms the size of trains - no, much larger in some cases, one the size of a light freighter had just surfaced, sending a shower of earth and rock throughout the area.

"Sandworms. Just without the sand," the General said.

"Launch the invasion!" Adora ordered. "We're going in."

*****​

TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

As the flagship of the task force, surrounded by its escorting squadrons, dropped out of hyperspace near the main world in the TX-5842 System, Catra's eyes remained on the holoprojection showing the entire system. The task force frigates had been split up, jammers lighting up as soon as they arrived, to disrupt enemy communications, so the projection was lagging a bit, but there were enough spy bots spread out to provide decent enough coverage.

The enemy ships were surprised, even the ones already reacting to the worm outbreak. Or especially those, she corrected herself when she saw how their formation, in the process of shifting to provide orbital fire support, completely broke apart when they were suddenly pounced on by Horde frigates. Ba'al's crews would have kept trying to execute their latest (and likely last) orders, but Sokar's apparently either were not quite as terrorised into obeying without question, no matter how suicidal or they were expected to take the initiative but not actually trained to do so.

In either case, it didn't take the frigates long to clear the orbitals, not with half their already outnumbered enemies caught in the middle of atmospheric re-entry. Most of the Ha'taks caught out like that never made it back into a higher orbit, and their smaller escorts didn't fare any better.

That left the Death Gliders, and those were uncoordinated as well and could be winnowed down by Horde fighters piloted by bots - and the batteries of the frigates when the Death Gliders managed to get into range for an attack run on the troop transports, from which assault shuttles sped down to the planetary surface.

The enemies in the rest of the system had fared marginally better, as in they were still fighting by the time the last Al'kesh near the world had been sent crashing onto its surface, but they were, if not outnumbered, then outfought easily enough. Although… Yeah, unlike Ba'al's forces, Sokar's forces started to scatter, the Tel'taks and Al'keshs trying to use stealth to escape when the remaining Ha'taks were making their last stand.

Horde frigates tried to stop them, but there were too many; Catra could already tell that a few would escape. Hopefully, the fact that the task force was flooding the channels with demands to surrender to Her Divine Highness would muddle the waters and keep Sokar and the spies in his court guessing if this was a second Horde Prime or a Goa'uld who had managed to recruit more Horde remnants.

But the system was about to be secured. More or less. So were the other systems hit by the first wave of the operation, as a quick check on the screen next to her showed.

That left the major problem that prompted the early launch of the entire invasion.

"They swallowed the entire base!"

"Not quite, sir. Scans show that seventy-five per cent of the base's structure is destroyed."

"What about our team, Carter? Is it inside the remaining twenty-five per cent?"

"We're still scanning, sir."

"Uh, it looks like the sensors cannot find a trace on them, but the worms seem to emit a sort of low-level jamming field that hinders our scans. We'll need to get more bots much closer if we want to pierce that. Also, those worms seem to have internal bioreactors that have an output close to standard Goa'uld reactors but slightly smaller - and using trace amounts of Naquadah. Oh, I cannot wait to see if there are similarities to the creatures on Beast Island!"

Entrapta sounded far too excited about those monsters, but then, Catra should have expected that. She studied them on the screen she had taken over.

They looked like giant worms, though with gaping maws big enough to swallow a skiff whole. At least the bigger ones; the smaller still were big enough to swallow a person as big as Scorpia without having to unhinge their jaws. Not that they seemed to have jaws - just muscle. Coated with some skin tough enough to easily shrug off staff weapons, as the futile attacks by Death Gliders demonstrated.

And those were the smaller ones. The larger ones would have proportionally thicker skins. And those muscles… They were shredding armoured concrete as easily as they were digging through earth and rock.

One of the worms flicked its tail, and a Death Glider who had flown a bit too low was literally smacked out of the sky and into the ground, where it blew up on impact.

"Frank Herbert has a lot to answer for," Jack grumbled.

"They do not exactly match the popular depictions of Sandworms. The maws are different, Jack."

"They're giant worms travelling under the earth and able to wreck shit. Close enough for government work. And those bastards have eaten my people."

"We don't know that, sir. We're still moving spy bots closer to be able to break through the biological interference."

"Do you think that anyone survived the total collapse of the base, Carter?"

Catra agreed with Jack's assessment. The base was nothing more than warped metal, crushed concrete and a network of freshly-dug tunnels that had been carved straight through the entire area. She couldn't think of any way for someone caught inside the base during the attack to survive.

"Alright! We've got three spy bots close enough, coordinated from orbit, and with the shuttles descending and the frigates ready for orbital artillery support…"

"Contact!" Sam sounded excited. "Life signs - they are alive! They…" She suddenly trailed off. Catra looked at her and saw her swallowing. "They are alive, but inside of a worm, sir."

"What the hell? Sandworm Sarlaccs?"

*****​

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"That Worm ate my team?" Jack O'Neill was livid.

"It seems so, sir," Carter replied.

"Can you shoot it from orbit? The parts of it that aren't digesting our people?" he clarified.

Carter shook her head. "No, sir. It's moving too much for that, and our beam cannons' yield is too large for such a precise strike. Even if we hit the ends of the worm, we couldn't guarantee that it wouldn't kill the team."

"And there are more life signs inside the largest worm," Entrapta spoke up. "Over a dozen."

"Then we need to get down there and personally cut them out," Adora said. "But we can't risk more forces. Call back the shuttles assigned to the former underground base and assign them to the reserves."

"Yes, Your Divine Highness!"

A sound decision. With the base destroyed by the worms, they didn't need the battalion of troops to take it any more. And Jack would rather not risk more troops fighting worms.

He checked the situation of the landing operation. The first wave was just touching down. Near, but not quite on top of the enemy bases, covered by orbital fire support and air support. And, of course, the assault shuttles themselves up close.

"The attacks in the other systems are proceeding according to plan," Catra said.

He was confident that the troops could handle it - they had picked the commanders with care. "Let's get our shuttle!" he snapped. They had a recon team to save.

"Yes." Adora nodded. "Commander Acolyte!" She turned to the Clone in charge of the Task Force. "Proceed as planned. Keep us informed if anything requires our intervention."

"Yes, Your Divine Highness!"

Jack was already moving towards the hangar. To be digested alive… The uniforms must have saved them from dying from the acid or the lack of air, and the sheer size of the thing was probably too big to simply crush them in the bowels. Still, they couldn't waste any time; giant worm stomach acid would probably eat through the best suits sooner or later.

He shuddered as he reached the hangar. The shuttle was already being prepared - the Clones were good - and the ramp was down. He was the first into the cockpit, but Sha're was hot on his heels and slid into the pilot's seat when he was buckling up in the co-pilot's.

They were rushing through the pre-flight checks while the others filed in, Entrapta bringing up the rear with Emily.

"We're clear to depart," Sha're reported as the ramp went up.

"Let's go!"

"Engaging stealth generator."

The hangar doors opened, and Sha're took the shuttle up and through the force field keeping the air in. Around them, several frigates were still dealing with a few stragglers from the Death Gliders that had been covering the orbitals; Jack could see beam cannons lashing out in short bursts.

Ahead, one frigate was providing orbital fire support; the main batteries were shooting down on the planet's surface. Next to it, one troop transport looked like a beehive, shuttles coming and going in rapid order.

"We're moving a squadron to cover the entire area. Just in case," Catra reported. "Wouldn't want the worms to get away."

No, they really didn't want the worms to get anywhere near the landing zones for the invasion. That would be catastrophic. They would have to blow them up from orbit before that, even if that would doom Jack's recon team.

The stealth shuttle flew towards the target area. Beneath them, the shuttles originally headed there were returning to the troop transports in orbit. One lone Death Glider tried to attack them, but three Horde fighters were already on its tail, and the ship exploded before it could get into range.

Sha're gave the Alliance formations a wide berth. The shuttle was using advanced stealth generators, and Jack would rather not risk an accident; pilots tended to fly more evasively in combat, and while the odds of a collision were low, they were never zero.

But they were in the clear now. Beneath them, the vast steppes separating the underground base from the mountains that ran across the continent rushed past. He could almost make out the smoke and dust rising above the ruined base… There it was!

"Damn!" he muttered as he saw the worm. That thing was huge. The maw was bigger than their shuttle. And those teeth… They could likely crush even a tank in seconds. That anything had survived past those things to enter the stomach… Wait! Something was glowing inside the mouth!

"We're detecting an energy spike inside the worm!" Entrapta yelled from the shuttle's cargo area. "It's like… Oh! Wow!"

Jack stared as the Worm released a beam of energy into the sky. It didn't come close to the shuttle, but…

"Near-miss on one of the covering frigates!" Bow reported. "Should they return fire?"

"Pull them back!" Adora said. "We cannot risk killing our people. We'll handle them on the ground."

Jack clenched his teeth. If that thing could track and engage ships in orbit, he really hoped that it couldn't sense the stealth shuttle. Or the other worms - half a dozen surrounded the largest one. Like a pack, they were moving in formation. Or like escorts.

Damn.

This would be trickier than he had thought.

"Zoom in on those maws!" Catra said. "There's something…"

"Zooming in!"

Jack checked the screen. One of the spy bots got even closer, flying directly in front of the worm's giant maw. And…

"Are those people standing there?" he said.

*****​

TX-5842, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

Adora stared at the feed from the spy bot. Yes, people were standing there, in the maw of the largest worm.

"Not humans," Catra said. "Proportions are wrong."

"That could just be the armour and the helmets," Daniel argued.

"No, Catra is correct - the limbs' proportions do not match human range," Sam spoke up.

Adora activated her communicator. "Pull the frigates in orbit over the worms further back!" They needed to avoid an unnecessary confrontation. And those large beam shots from the worm's maw.

"Oh! Scans are getting more results now - that's a powerful bioreactor, I mean, a biological reactor!" Entrapta sounded as if she was gushing. "And they must have a biological laser cannon - likely a chemical base, though to reach orbit with that energy output despite the atmosphere… I'd say that has to be magical in origin, but the planet hasn't had its magic restored, right?"

"Not yet," Adora said. "But if they had no Stargate when the First Ones used the Heart of Etheria, they could have kept their magic…"

"I can't teleport here," Glimmer said. "So, the magic is still blocked."

"Then they have one of the most powerful biological power generators we've ever seen!" Entrapta cheered.

"Aimed at our ships," Jack commented. "And they got our people in their worm thing."

"I think in light of the new information, we have good reasons to hope they aren't in immediate danger, Jack," Daniel said.

"Unless they are about to be turned into fuel for the worm laser," Jack shot back.

"I don't think that is the case," Entrapta said. "The human body doesn't contain enough energy to make that a viable choice of fuel."

Adora felt relieved. That would have been horrible.

Then her friend went on: "Of course, if they use a matter-to-energy convertor working on a nuclear scale, well… then one body would provide more than enough energy to make that viable. Actually, given the power output we've detected, it couldn't have been a chemical process - the laser was probably chemically based, but the power it needed could not have been provided in the same way. At least, I don't think so - I could be wrong, of course!"

"Great." Jack shook his head.

"We're still tracking the life sign and transponders, although those only intermittently, from the missing recon team, sir."

"So, they are still alive. And I think we can assume that the people in the worms won't kill them since they are aware of our ships now," Adora said. They had to be aware of them, having shot at them - well, it had likely been a warning shot. Or an embarrassing miss.

"They did destroy the Goa'uld base," Daniel said. "They could be potential allies. Or at least co-belligerents. We should contact them."

"In a shuttle that would be vaporised by their worm laser?" Jack scoffed.

"Well…" Daniel shrugged. "If it doesn't matter whether we're in a shuttle or not, we could meet them on foot to show we have peaceful intentions."

"We're currently invading their planet," Catra said.

"We're fighting the Goa'uld who have taken possession of the planet," Glimmer objected.

"Doesn't mean we're going to be seen as allies or liberators - we haven't asked them if they wanted our help in the first place," Catra pointed out.

"If they don't want our help, then they are stupid." Glimmer scoffed. "Even if they manage to wreck all Goa'uld bases, the Goa'uld could wreck them from orbit. Unless those laser cannons are much more powerful and effective than we think."

"Unless they have held back - and we can't exclude that - they would need several hits to get through a Ha'tak's shield," Bow said. "Though power is not as important as their targeting systems and their rate of fire, and we don't know much about that."

"The snakes wouldn't think much about just dropping bombs from cloaked Al'keshs," Sha're said. "Even if they lost a fleet's worth of such ships, it would be acceptable as long as the rebellion would be crushed."

"We don't know if they consider those worm people rebels," Daniel pointed out.

"Sokar built bases here; he would consider them rebels for attacking his base - and even if he didn't, his rivals would, and he cannot afford to show such a weakness." Sha're shook her head. "Though I don't know if those people are aware of that."

"Well, if they have known the Go'auld long enough to wreck their base, they probably do," Jack said. "But do they know us?"

"Only one way to find out, Jack." Daniel smiled a bit weakly.

"There are a few ways, actually," Bow said. "We can send a bot to contact them."

"Not a spy bot, so they don't become aware of that capability," Catra said.

"And not Emily!" Entrapta added.

"Yes." Adora nodded. "Prepare a bot. We will talk to them."

And hope that they are interested in peaceful relations.

*****​

Preparing a bot to make contact didn't take long. They had bots with transport modules on the shuttle; Samantha Carter just had to strip them of the medical and other supplies - and to ensure that they could be destroyed remotely without endangering anyone else in case the worm people - and now she was using the General's terms; they really needed to find out what those people called themselves - tried to capture the bot.

But that was a solved problem; they had charges that would wreck the bots' insides without exploding. They also had charges that would turn a bot into a bomb, of course - the General had insisted that such a capability would be useful in the field, and Sam couldn't disagree.

"Alright! Don't be afraid - they shouldn't fire at you. They haven't fired at us since their warning shot. So, just be friendly!" Entrapta patted the bot's top as they prepared to lower the ramp so it could fly out.

Her pep talk was entirely unnecessary; the bot didn't have an advanced decision matrix to consider such actions, and it would be remotely controlled anyway. But it didn't do any harm either. Sam drew the line at patting the bot herself, though. Humanising machines that were likely to be destroyed in service was not a good idea, in her opinion.

She heard the General's voice on the communicator. "We're in position."

That meant they were behind hard cover, shielded from view and hopefully worm laser fire, and would not expose their stealth capability by having a bot appear out of thin air. "Launching bot," she replied.

They lowered the ramp, and the bot flew out.

The shuttle immediately changed position, just in case, while Sam went back to the lounge where the console to control the bot had been set up.

The General was just joining the others there, who were watching as Bow piloted the bot towards the worms - which had spread out a bit, the smaller ones forming a perimeter around the larger ones, with the largest in the centre.

"Slowing down now," Bow said as the bot approached the closest worm - which turned to face it, opening its maw. It was small, but still bigger than a bus, though not quite as wide. If anyone was riding inside it, they would be a bit cramped, at least, next to the worm's innards. Though Sam couldn't spot any passengers or pilots. Or maybe symbionts - they didn't know if the worms were sapient, after all.

Bow brought the bot to a stop, and they waited a moment.

"It hasn't shot at us. That's a good sign," Adora said.

"It hasn't shot at us yet." Catra snorted. "Might be asking for permission to engage."

"Let's hope not," Adora replied. "Let's see if they can hear and understand us." She nodded at Daniel.

"Ah, right." He cleared his throat and grabbed the microphone in front of him. "Let's try Ancient first."

It was better not to talk to the Worms in a language used by the Goa'uld.

They used both what Daniel called 'classic Ancient' and the language the First Ones had used to greet the worm, but it didn't react.

"Well, so they haven't had bad experiences with Ancients," the General said. "At least that's something."

"And they won't attack us just for being their descendants," Adora added.

He frowned at the reminder that, according to the surviving artificial intelligences, he qualified as an Ancient, and Sam pressed her lips together so she wouldn't comment. There was nothing wrong with having those genes.

Daniel went through a few more languages, and the worm didn't react either.

"Are we sure that it can hear us?"

"No. We haven't been able to get a detailed scan of their body," Sam replied. "We know it has detected the bot, though."

"I'm using the searchlights then," Bow said. "And trying to contact it that way."

The worm didn't react to the blinking lights either.

But someone did - Sam saw a smaller worm move to the giant one, and then one of the suited people stepped on top of it - and rode it, standing still, towards the bot.

"Better stabilisation than an Abrams tank," the General muttered.

He was correct - the worm moved quickly, yet the figure on top of it was easily standing still.

It came to a stop in front of the bot, maw open and aimed at it, and the figure gestured at it.

"Maybe they communicate using signs?" Daniel speculated. "Though how would they control the worms that way? Maybe it's telepathy?"

The figure fiddled with something on their helmet, and suddenly, a slightly hissing, alien voice was heard speaking…

"Ancient Egyptian," Daniel blurted out. "They are asking who we are."

Sam felt relieved. Communication was possible then.

"And they just told us to leave," Daniel added.

Oh.

*****​
 
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Chapter 207: Christmas Season Part 3 New
Chapter 207: Christmas Season Part 3

TX-5842, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)


"They told us to leave? Even before we could tell them who we are?"

Adora sounded surprised, Catra thought. She wasn't. Not really. If the first contact with aliens were Goa'uld, she probably wouldn't want to meet anyone else. Still, to skip straight to telling new arrivals to get lost in the middle of a war… "Do they know we're fighting the Goa'uld?"

"Tell them we're an Alliance fighting the Goa'uld," Adora said.

"We're the Alliance against the Goa'uld," Glimmer added.

Daniel nodded. He'd do the diplomatic thing, Catra knew.

"We're not going to leave without our people," Jack said.

"Of course not!" Adora told him, and Catra knew from her tone that her love was frowning.

She snorted. As if they'd leave anyone behind!

"They repeated that we should leave," Daniel spoke up.

Catra suspected that he was toning down the message a lot - he had that slightly guilty expression he usually had when he was doing something which wasn't entirely correct but that he thought was necessary.

"Tell them not without our people. We're sorry for invading their planet, but we are at war with the Goa'uld, and they have - had - a lot of bases on this world and were ready to invade us, so we struck them first," Adora said.

"Wait! We don't even know if that's their world to begin with," Glimmer made a good point. "They could have arrived through the Stargate. They speak Egyptian, don't they?"

"We haven't heard of such people travelling the stars. Wouldn't the Goa'uld have known about them before?" Bow asked.

Glimmer shook her head. "The Goa'uld don't know everything about the galaxy and the Stargate network - we don't know everything either."

"The must have been here for a long time if their worms were small enough to fit through a Stargate," Bow objected.

"We don't know how quickly the worms grow," Entrapta cut in. "If they can use their bioreactors to feed their growth, they could quickly grow to that size."

"Then they should have more such worms, and fewer smaller worms," Glimmer said.

"That could be related to their culture - or to biological factors we aren't aware of yet," Sam replied.

"And they could have picked up the language from the Goa'uld on this planet," Daniel said. "That has happened before. The Goa'uld's far-reaching influence has resulted in its use as a sort of lingua franca."

"Ask them who they are, and what they are doing on this planet," Adora said.

"Alright." Daniel nodded and turned back to the communicator.

More exchanges followed before he smiled sheepishly. "They call themselves 'the people'. And they say this is their world. That would fit common naming conventions for many civilisations that do not know about other salient species."

"They could be lying," Glimmer said with a scowl.

"We can't prove that," Bow said.

"Tell them to release our people," Jack said.

Daniel looked at Adora.

"Ask them why they took our people prisoner," Adora said. "And if we can meet to talk about this - we're ready to leave the planet as soon as we're sure that the Goa'uld here aren't a threat to us any more."

"Or the worm people," Catra added with a smirk. "Don't tell them that."

Daniel nodded.

This time, the exchange lasted longer, and Catra checked the news from the other battles. As she had expected - no alert or priority messages had arrived - the fighting was, if not over already, wrapping up. Some holdouts would take more time to dig out of whatever basement they had retreated to, but the invasion had been a success. Now they had to ensure it wouldn't turn into a diplomatic defeat. And get their people back.

Daniel was wincing when he finished and turned to look at them. That wasn't a good sign. "So… they said they - the team - was trespassing on their holy ground. And they took everyone who trespassed prisoner for later judgment."

Catra narrowed her eyes. "Did you ask what judgment that would be?"

"They just said that they would be judged by the God-Who-Crawls."

"They worship the worms?" Jack narrowed his eyes.

"That seems to be the case, though I am not sure - I didn't want to pry and risk insulting their religion out of ignorance," Daniel said. "It could be that they don't consider the worms gods, but aspects of their god. Messengers or servants."

"Or there is an even bigger worm hidden beneath the earth, and they can wake it up for such a judgment! If their biological sensor dampening field scales, we probably wouldn't be able to detect it unless it's moving, since then, we could track the seismic activities that would cause!" Entrapta beamed.

Catra really hoped her friend was wrong. So did everyone else, judging by their expressions.

"Tell them that we would like to meet, and that we apologise for trespassing, but we didn't know - we thought this was a base of our enemies," Adora said.

"We could offer to return magic in exchange for our people?" Bow suggested. "I mean, I know we'll be doing that anyway, but it might be a nice apology?"

Catra nodded. "Smooth, Bow."

Adora frowned. "It's not exactly honourable or honest…"

"Neither is taking people prisoners for something they couldn't have known and refusing to release them," Catra pointed out. "And it's better than to tell them that they give us our people back or we'll use force. We don't want to fight them." And a demonstration of what they could do with orbital bombardment might trigger such a fight.

"Alright. Ask them if we could meet in person and discuss this," Adora said.

Daniel took a bit longer, but when he started smiling, Catra already knew he had managed it.

Of course, this could just be a trap by those worm people. But if they tried anything, they would regret it.

*****​

Jack O'Neill wasn't looking forward to meeting the 'Worm People'. While he could understand being a tad suspicious if foreign people started fighting on your world, and stepping on your holy ground or whatever, it hadn't been the Alliance that started this, but the Goa'uld. The Alliance had just arrived to fight them. Treating them both the same and throwing out (or trying to, at least) those who had just liberated the world from the snakes wasn't exactly a smart move in his books.

But mainly, he didn't like them for capturing his troopers and wanting to judge them for infiltrating a Goa'uld base that happened to be on some holy wormy site. The team hadn't known that, for one, and they were trying to scout the Goa'uld who had actually built the base there. That didn't make them criminals.

Well, if push came to shove, the Alliance had a fleet in orbit, and the Worm People didn't. Even if their no-sandworms could fire lasers into orbit, they were still pretty vulnerable to orbital bombardment. Even stubborn aliens pissed off about their religion should realise that they weren't exactly in the best position to make unreasonable demands.

Of course, Jack knew better than most that people, Worm People or other people, weren't always rational. Which was another reason why he wasn't looking forward to meeting the Worm people.

And despite his jokes, it had nothing to do with the fact that they reminded him a bit too much of the sandpeople from Dune. Though if they ever mentioned a holy war, he'd support bombing the hell out of them.

"Alright. We've managed to locate the meeting spot they demanded," Sha're reported. "Course is set."

Jack nodded as he checked the location in the shuttle's navigation system. It might be overkill, seeing as the location was just next door, so to speak, and the navigation system was ready to handle interplanetary travel. But when meeting suspicious new aliens, it was best to dot all the i's and cross all the t's. Though he found nothing amiss. Except, of course, that the location was in easy range of the laser worm, and without any decent obstacles to shield them, should this be a trap. The shuttle's shield wouldn't be enough - Entrapta and Carter had already confirmed that.

Of course, Adora was going ahead anyway, and Jack wouldn't let her face those aliens alone. Those were his people facing some worm inquisition. And since Catra would come along as well, and Daniel to interpret - he had argued convincingly that he couldn't do it as well from a safe distance since he might be missing some clues from body language or whatever, and Sha're would be piloting the shuttle… "Well, we're bringing the whole gang," he muttered.

"We're staying behind per the last orders, sir."

Of course, Carter had to overhear him and make her displeasure about those orders clear!

"Half the gang, then," he corrected himself with a wry grin.

"Numbers would disagree, sir."

"You are certainly worth half our number," he replied before he could help himself. "Entrapta too," he added.

"I don't think you can weigh people's worth like that, sir."

Carter had her 'I am not showing what I think' face on, so Jack couldn't tell if she had caught his little slip. Not that it mattered; he wasn't going to let her risk her life in a meeting like this. She could support them remotely just fine.

He shrugged. "It's a matter of reducing the risks for the Alliance if this goes pear-shaped."

"By sending in the Supreme Commander," Carter retorted, though this time, he could tell it was half-heartedly - she knew as well as he did that Adora was about the only one around who might be able to withstand a worm laser beam if she got her shield ready.

But they had a trip to make and a meeting to start. "Alright, time for everyone who isn't on the guest list to switch to the other shuttle." Which had arrived a few minutes earlier, as ordered.

Carter gave him a slight glare but nodded. "Yes, sir."

A few minutes later, they were on the way to the meeting spot - not using stealth, of course. No need to give that away. It might be the ace in the hole they needed to get away.

Jack tensed as they crested the last hill between them and the meeting spot - now they were fully exposed. If this was a trap… Perhaps they should have returned magic first, then sent in a remotely piloted shuttle and had Glimmer teleport them into the shuttle once it had landed and it looked safe?

Too late now. Sha're was already starting the final approach.

Jack kept his eye on the half a dozen smaller worms surrounding a medium-sized one. All of them were facing the shuttle, though a group of five Worm People in their suits was standing in front of the things.

Unless those were expendable bait, this didn't quite look like an ambush.

"Alright," he announced as the shuttle touched down. "Time to talk to worms."

"To the People, Jack," Daniel corrected him.

"Worm People."

"They don't call themselves that," Daniel said.

Jack shrugged. "Shouldn't ride in or on giant worms, then."

"Let's go," Adora said, and the ramp went down.

*****​

Five of the people of this planet were waiting for them, in front of seven worms. Adora straightened as she stepped down the ramp, her sword in shield form on her arm - she was here in good faith, but if the local people wanted to ambush them, she would be ready to defend and protect the others.

As she walked over, she studied the people. They were wearing dark suits that looked like they were vacuum-rated, and up close, it was obvious they weren't humans. She couldn't see much armour - some plates might be armour, or might just be an aesthetic choice, or carry integrated circuits or something - but the helmets looked massive, double the size of Alliance helmets, and had opaque visors in the same dark colour as the suits and helmets.

And they were armed - four of them carried short staffs with hooks on one end and a sort of crystal on the other. Probably a laser rifle. The one in the middle didn't carry a stick but had one strapped to their thigh.

"Hello!" she said once she reached them, bowing her head slightly as she stopped about two yards from them. "I am She-Ra, Princess of Power and Supreme Commander of the Alliance against the Goa'uld."

Daniel translated, and the people cocked their heads, turning to look at the others and then at themselves. Then their apparent leader said something in old Egyptian.

"They are the people. Their leader is the Speaker for the God-Who-Crawls. I am not sure if that is a title or their name - they haven't given any names," Daniel said.

That was… not bad. "We apologise for invading your planet. We've been fighting the Goa'uld, and they were building up a force on this world, so we struck them first," Adora explained. "Our people didn't know about you and didn't mean to trespass. If you release them, we'll leave your planet."

Daniel translated, and the people seemed to communicate amongst themselves again. They were moving quite… gracefully was not the right word, Adora decided. It was more like… they moved as if they didn't have joints.

"They say that our team trespassed in their holy site," Daniel said. "That they will be judged by the God-Who-Crawls."

"Like Hell!" Jack blurted out behind her.

Daniel didn't translate that.

"Tell them they had no intention to offend them, and we do not consider punishing people for honest mistakes just," Adora said.

Daniel did. When they replied, he winced. "They say that this will be their god's call."

Adora frowned. "Ask them what the punishment might be." She doubted it would be a fine or something, but best to ask before switching course.

"To nourish the God," Daniel translated. "I am not sure what exactly it means - they didn't elaborate when I asked."

"I doubt that they mean stimulating philosophical discourse," Jack commented.

"We would consider killing our people a hostile act," Adora said with a scowl.

"They claim that this is their world and their laws, and their god demands obedience from everyone."

"We've killed false gods before," Jack growled. "This is just a bigger worm than the usual ones."

The people jerked back and started pointing their sticks at them.

"Looks like they understood you, Jack," Catra whispered behind Adora.

Adora got ready to expand her shield to protect the others.

Their leader spat something intelligible, and Daniel translated: "He said: To threaten the God-Who-Crawls is to die. They seem to understand us, but either cannot or refuse to speak our language."

How could they have learned their language? Had they done something to the recon team? Read their minds? But if they had, would they risk offending the Alliance?

The Worms seemed agitated as well - and aimed their maws at them.

Adora tensed. This was turning into a disaster. How could she defuse it?

"Our goddess is much stronger than your god," Catra yelled behind her. "Don't test her."

"Catra!" Adora hissed. That was the last thing they needed!

More Egyptian words followed. The people's leader sounded angry.

"Uh, he said the God-Who-Crawls will crush our goddess should she dare to show her face here," Daniel translated.

"Sounds like a challenge," Catra said.

Adora narrowed her eyes at her. Was that her plan?

"Go on, accept the challenge," Catra hissed. "Best way to get our people back."

Adora looked at the other people. They were clearly hostile. And the Alliance had now insulted their god three times. One without knowing what they did, once without knowing they could understand them, and once deliberately.

She clenched her teeth and raised her head. "I am She-Ra. I challenge your god to prove its strength. If I defeat them, we'll take our people back and leave." In a much lower tone, she added: "If I end up being eaten by a giant worm, you'll regret it."

"You can restore the magic of the planet. You'll be fine," Catra whispered back.

That was… actually a good plan, Adora had to admit. But only if…

"They accept your challenge," Daniel said.

Catra looked way too smug, in Adora's opinion.

*****​

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"Adora is going to fight a worm god?"

"Yes." Samantha Carter wished she could say that she was surprised, but such a development had been in the cards as soon as they had heard about the so-called God-Who-Crawls. Personally duelling the enemy leader was an ingrained part of Etherian warfare.

"Oh! Do we know who this god is?" Entrapta asked. "Did they tell the others?"

"No. We don't know what this god is," Sam replied. "We don't even know if it has or can take a physical form." History was full of various examples of supposedly divine punishments or judgements that were either coincidences or frauds committed by the associated priests and clergy.

"Well, Adora can blast a metaphysical form as well. Especially if she can use the world's magic right after restoring it." Entrapta was obviously not concerned about the possibility that Adora might have to fight an actual… A being that might qualify as a god according to certain criteria. Not that Sam was surprised about that, either.

"Her Divine Highness shall vanquish the pretender!"

Nor was the Clone pilot of their shuttle, of course. Sam had no doubt that the entire Clone part of the task force was looking forward to Adora fighting some sort of worm god, whether physically manifest or not. Despite, or, perhaps, precisely because of, the potential consequences such a fight would have on the native religion and culture. "It will certainly not help with the colonialism accusations back home," she muttered.

But she was a physicist, not a theologian or anthropologist. Or a diplomat. As their shuttle entered the flagship's hangar, she checked the reports from the rest of the task force. While fighting was still going on with some Jaffa holdouts, the bases had been secured. Though, given the discovery of an - apparently - native population wanting the Alliance to leave, efforts to restore the bases and retool existing production lines for Alliance use had not been started yet. It would be a waste of effort and resources; the Alliance wasn't going to occupy a planet against the wishes of the world's native population.

Instead, Sam started the teams originally assigned to assess the bases the troops had taken for retooling to prepare to pack up the useful parts of the bases for transportation off-world. The Alliance Command Council had the final word, but Sam, personally, would rather not leave Goa'uld technology with a potential hostile alien species. Especially not one that talked about people 'nourishing' giant worms. In fact, it would probably be best to be ready to move the Stargate as well, depending on how the confrontation between Adora and their worm god went.

"Oh!" Entrapta's exclamation interrupted Sam before she could finalise the last order. "Look at the latest scans from the destroyed underground base!"

Sam checked the data on her friend's screen. "Those broken tools and the traces of the resources they were using.. They were doing biological research."

"Yes!" Entrapta nodded. "But we don't know what kind of research. We need to get more data! Send in stealth bots to take samples of the ruins!"

"We need permission for that," Sam said. This was a holy site for the locals, after all.

"Oh, right. Though this could be very important to understand the whole situation, couldn't it?"

Coming from anyone else, Sam would have taken this as a blatant attempt to make up an excuse for sending the bots. But Entrapta didn't think like that. This was an honest question.

Sam nodded. "Let's ask Adora and the others." They were still waiting for the local people to tell them where the fight would take place, so this wouldn't be a distraction.

It took a while for an answer to come. Sam checked the reports from the other task forces. They hadn't discovered any research bases and were already starting to repair and retool the captured bases and what production facilities they had taken - mostly smaller factories producing spare parts for maintaining ships and weapons. The Alliance didn't field much Goa'uld technology, but it would still be useful in maintaining what they did use and free up other production facilities to be converted.

Her computer announced a priority message from Adora. Permission to investigate discreetly was granted.

That was a bit of a surprise - Sam had expected Adora and the others, except for the General, to tell her to leave the supposedly holy site alone. It seemed that the meeting with the local representatives had left a sufficiently bad impression that even Adora had judged the need for potentially critical information more important than the locals' religious beliefs.

Well, Sam wasn't going to question that. If Sokar had spent resources on biological research here, then he must have had a good reason - and that was a potential threat to the Alliance they needed to know about.

Not to mention that it might help with dealing with the locals if they knew more about their holy site here. You couldn't make an informed decision without information, after all. "We've got permission," she said.

"Yes! More data!"

Entrapta, as expected, was enthusiastic, and less than a minute later, half a dozen spy bots, some carrying micro spy bots, were on the way to the wrecked underground base.

*****​

TX-5842, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"Are you really sure that we should be violating their holy site?"

"No, we aren't sure," Adora replied. "But we need more information."

As you should know, since we've talked about that just before, Catra thought as she rolled her eyes at his question. She wasn't looking at him, though - she was focused on the data on her tablet. So far, the Worm People hadn't told them yet where Adora would defeat their god, but the fleet in orbit was tracking their movements any way they could, including seismic sensors planted on the surface, and the results from deep below…

"And we aren't going to let them kill our people for their god," Jack said. "When they let the Goa'uld turn their holy site into an underground base or research lab, they don't get to judge us for infiltrating it."

"To be fair, they did destroy the base," Daniel pointed out. "Though I wonder why they didn't do it sooner."

"Good question." Catra held up her tablet. "Check the data. There are a lot more such worms making their way through the underground than we thought."

"Where were they when the Goa'uld arrived?" Glimmer asked. "With those many worms, they could have wrecked all the bases."

"Those are mostly smaller worms," Bow pointed out. "I don't think they would be as effective as the larger worms." He frowned. "And there aren't many large worms. Maybe those smaller worms are freshly hatched, and the Worm People didn't have the power to destroy even one base until now?"

"You think they were building up their forces?" Adora asked.

"It looks like they still are building up their forces," Catra said. "If all of those worms grow as large as the one we saw shoot lasers into orbit…" She would have to re-evaluate the balance of power against the task force. Focused fire from multiple such worms would be a threat to Horde frigates. She'd still bet on the Alliance winning, but it would likely be more costly. Unless they could leverage their stealth capabilities. Use shoot and scoot methods for orbital fire support, depending on how fast the worms could track and engage a firing target. Or use spy bots to drop bombs on worms from up close.

"But how could they grow so large?" Daniel asked. "What are they eating?"

"Apparently, people who trespass on their holy grounds," Jack replied.

"They can shoot lasers from their maws," Glimmer said with a snort. "They might be able to eat rocks and convert them to energy. Magic would make sustaining themselves easy, but the world doesn't have its magic released yet, so it's not that."

Which might put a cramp into Catra's 'Let Adora unleash magic on the worm god' plan. "We need to consider whether releasing magic would be a good idea?"

"Oh, now we do?" Adora frowned at her.

Catra shrugged, but she did feel a bit bad about pushing the duel now. On the other hand, it was still better than a war with the Worm People. Probably. "They are moving towards the other bases we have taken," she said.

"We need to evacuate the bases," Adora said. "Move the prisoners and liberated slaves out before the worms decide to attack."

Catra nodded. If the worms attacked, the Alliance would respond, and they would be at war.

"And wreck what we cannot evacuate," Jack added. "I don't trust those people."

Catra agreed with that as well.

Adora used her communicator. "This is Supreme Commander Adora. Start evacuating the bases you've secured, priority given to civilians and prisoners. All forces are to avoid hostilities with the worms and local people when possible, but defending yourself and the prisoners and civilians takes priority. Supplies that cannot be evacuated are to be destroyed."

While the acknowledgements from the various officers came in, Catra studied the movement patterns again. And the other data. "The worms are growing slightly as they move through the earth," she said. "It seems they do eat rocks and soil."

"Great. We're on a sandworm hive world," Jack muttered. "Ruled by religious nutcases. We really need to look into Frank Herbert's life."

"Guys! Look at this!" Bow held up his tablet, a red circle showing a particular area.

Catra quickly focused on the same area on hers. "Damn!" she hissed. Those were some massive seismic disruptions. "Something really big is moving there. And lots of the smaller worms are moving towards it."

The tablet kept collecting and adapting data from the sensor net. And the results…

"That's as big as an aircraft carrier!" Jack exclaimed.

"How can that thing move through the earth?" Sha're exclaimed.

Badly, Catra thought - the thing, the giant worm, was causing earthquakes that registered across the world. And the sheer size… She grimaced. "Alright, I don't think you can beat that thing without unleashing the planet's magic."

Adora gave her a look that said she was well aware of that already. And blamed her.

Which was fair. Though who could have known how big those worms could get?

*****​

Back in the shuttle, Jack O'Neill kept staring at the tablet. The screen didn't show an actual picture taken by a camera, much less a live feed. As Carter liked to say, it was a depiction of what the sensors were detecting, a visualisation of sorts. But the size was shown to scale - a small picture of Entrapta and Emily was shown next to the worm - and with measurements. And those were… It really was the size of an aircraft carrier. And about the same mass.

At least it couldn't launch planes. He blinked. They thought it couldn't launch planes. They knew those worms had lasers in their maws, and the sheer size of that worm would mean that its laser would cut through any ship in orbit. Or vaporise it instead - Jack wasn't the scientist of the team; Carter would know whether they would have sliced frigates or firgate dust as a result of a hit.

"The location where the worm is estimated to break the surface is under close observation," Carter announced over the communicator. She was safe in orbit - well, relatively safe given that worm lasers could fire that far. But she wasn't on the surface surrounded by worms, and in a frigate, not a shuttle.

He glanced at the screen showing the worm people outside. They hadn't moved much - and they hadn't said anything since they had agreed to the fight. And they didn't seem anxious or nervous, though Jack knew he couldn't just project human mannerisms on aliens. They might be sweating bullets in their suits for all he knew.

He surely felt more than a bit nervous - and he wasn't the one who would have to fight that monster. "We should have brought Godzilla," he muttered.

"I can ask Alpha and Loki if they can create a huge lizard." Catra was grinning at him. Of course, Catra would pick up his comment.

"No, we don't actually want more huge monsters," Adora said.

"Or monsters worshipped as gods." Glimmer was scowling at Catra.

"Or monster gods," Bow added.

"Jack asked for Godzilla," Catra replied, pointing at him. "I was just telling him how we might get one."

"I was just joking. Unlike someone else." Jack wouldn't let her deflect the blame onto him; the whole fight had been her idea.

"I didn't think they would get that big." Catra sounded a bit defensive; quite a rare occasion in Jack's experience.

Glimmer huffed. "Yeah, that doesn't change the fact that Adora is committed now."

Adora didn't have to fight the monster. But that would see Jack's team fed to the worm instead. Still… "Can you take it?" he asked in a low voice.

Adora grimaced. "If I can use the planet's magic surge? Yes. It's far smaller than the Velvet Glove was. But we don't know what returning magic to the planet will do to those worms."

And that was the big question. No one wanted to supercharge giant worms with lasers. If magic allowed those worms to fly or turn into space worms, like those things in Star Wars…

"Well, we know they contain people inside them. If you can get inside the worm, you could probably wreck it from there without the worm being able to do anything," Catra said.

That sounded like a workable plan.

"We, ah, don't exactly know how they will be fighting," Daniel spoke up. "This could be a formal challenge of strength, not an actual fight."

"We haven't agreed to that, though," Catra said. "If they want to play such games, we don't have to let them. If you turn their god into a plant, they probably have to admit defeat."

"That would require magic," Glimmer pointed out.

"And they might react very violently to such an act," Daniel said.

"As long as we can get the team back and get off the planet, who cares?" Catra shrugged. "We're just doing this to get the recon team out. We could use the whole thing as a distraction and spring them while Adora plays for time."

That sounded better, at least to Jack.

"That wouldn't be very honest," Adora objected, though.

"They aren't very honest either," Catra shot back. "We didn't spy on them; we spied on the Goa'uld."

"But we're spying on them now," Bow said. "Our bots are scanning and searching the ruins of the underground base."

"I think taking a few of our people prisoner to feed them to a giant worm justifies more than a bit of scanning," Jack said. It would justify a hell of a lot more. If he had to nuke that worm god to save his team, he'd do it in a heartbeat.

"Yeah." Glimmer nodded emphatically. "But if we want to do that, we should prepare."

"We would either need magic restored so you can teleport, or find a way to sneak inside the worm where they are held," Adora said.

"Or find a way to cut through the worm's skin without hurting anyone inside," Glimmer told her.

"That would hurt," Adora said. "And if the worm starts thrashing around in pain, that would make saving the people even harder."

Jack had to agree with that. He'd still prepare for it. At least that way, he wasn't useless. But it was a challenge to breach the hide - and muscles, and whatever other stuff was keeping the thing together - without turning anything else inside the worm into paste. They would need something that could cut precisely through skin that might be as thick and tough as battleship armour.

And short of She-Ra's sword, he didn't know anything that could do that quickly enough. Lasercutters that could go through bunker doors needed time and a target that couldn't move. Breaching charges were a gamble on the best of days, and they didn't exactly know how tough those hides were. They would have to enter through the maw, but there were guards there, so…

"They are approaching the shuttle," Sha're announced from the cockpit.

Jack was at the ramp one second behind Adora. Yeah, there the worm people were, still wearing their suits - and he wasn't going to make another Dune joke about them.

Daniel arrived, greeting them in Egyptian - Jack had heard him and Sha're talk often enough to recognise the words.

The worm people leader replied, and Jack was reminded of the Goa'uld he had heard. All curt and harsh, and with an inhuman tone - though not quite like a snake's.

"They said we're to follow them to the Holy Ground," Daniel said. "They don't mean the destroyed underground base, but another location. Presumably where the God-Who-Crawls will be surfacing.

Great. It was showtime, and Jack still had no plan. He'd have to improvise. Well, he was used to thinking on his feet. And while dodging death rays.

*****​

"It's as big as a mountain!"

Adora had to agree with Bow's exclamation. The God-Who-Crawls was not just huge, it was… colossal. Bigger than a frigate. Like the land itself was alive and moving. You just couldn't understand how big it was until you were standing close - well, standing in the shuttle's cockpit and staring through the windows - and saw it with your own eyes.

"I bet it could swallow Darla whole," Bow added.

Glimmer just cursed. Same as Jack.

But Catra was silent. Uncharacteristically silent.

Adora glanced at her love. Fighting that thing had been her idea. Was she having second thoughts? She looked serious, even grim. Grimly determined.

Adora forced herself to chuckle. "Well, I shouldn't have any trouble getting inside it."

"Forget about fighting it with your sword, Adora," Catra said. "Just use magic to turn it into a plant or stone."

"We don't want to restore magic before we know more about this planet," Glimmer protested.

"We want to impress those worm people so they will release the recon team," Catra replied. "Having Adora kill that thing from the inside with a thousand cuts of her sword until she emerges covered in worm innards won't do that."

"We don't know that. We are dealing with an alien species and unknown cultural norms," Daniel pointed out. "Defeating an enemy in such a manner might be impressive from their point of view."

"They are worshipping a giant worm as a god. Not the smaller ones. Looks to me they're all in on the 'bigger is better' stance, Daniel," Jack objected.

"That's blatantly projecting our views on them, Jack!"

Adora shook her head without taking her eyes off the worm. "Let's not start with releasing magic." She didn't particularly want to fight inside a worm - especially not getting covered in worm blood and guts - but using the magic of a worm planet against the planet's worm god? That felt a lot like what the First Ones had tried to do when they tried to use She-Ra's power to sacrifice Etheria. Not that she was a goddess or wanted to be one. She straightened and turned to smile at the others, especially Catra. "I'll face it. Stay safe."

"Adora…"

She reached out and caressed Catra's cheek, feeling the soft fur under her hand. "I'll be fine."

Catra clenched her teeth, then suddenly lunged and kissed her. "Don't you dare to die!" she whispered when she released Adora.

"I won't," Adora whispered back. She nodded at the others with a smile, then stepped out of the shuttle.

More worm people were waiting for her, saying something in Egyptian.

"They said to follow them."

She turned and frowned at Daniel.

He smiled. "You'll need a translator."

"You could do that over the communicator." As he should!

"I would miss some details."

And he wasn't budging - she knew him well enough to tell.

Grumbling, she followed the worm people up a small hill. To face a living hill.

More Egyptian followed.

"They… say you are to face it and open your mind."

She blinked. Open her mind?

"That's what they say. The God-Who-Crawls would face you then."

Oh. That was… unexpected. Adora tensed. Was she to fight the worm god in her mind? That was… Wait. Could the worms read minds? Had they been reading her mind? Her friends'? She flushed a little but forced herself to nod. She was She-Ra, Princess of Power. Protector of Etheria. She could do this. She would do this. And she didn't mean harm to the worm people.

She looked at the giant maw, into the dark opening. Open your mind… She had communicated with Gaia in a similar fashion. That had been with magic, though. Not like this. Still… She closed her eyes and remembered how it had felt to touch the spirit's consciousness. To communicate with her. To…

Warmth filled her. It felt like… Like coming home to Bright Moon and seeing her friends smile at her. Welcoming.

Hello, she thought.

More warmth. That was a good sign. It felt like one, at least.

Sorry for intruding on your planet. But we were fighting the Goa'uld. Enemies of both of us.

Anger. Sadness. Loss.

Sorry. We'll be leaving - but we need our people back. They weren't trying to harm your people.

Possessiveness. No, protectiveness. People. Children.

They're your children? The smaller worms?

She briefly saw both worms and worm people. Oh. Those were worms, too. Just… different.

She tried again. She pictured the worms she had seen, next to the giant worm. And then the missing recon team next to her. We need our people back. They're ours. Mine.

Understanding. But also… Hunger? No. Need. Need for…

She blinked. Magic?

She saw Goa'uld, briefly. Fighting worms. Killing them. And felt loss and sadness. So much loss. Helplessness. And anger.

Oh.

You need magic to protect them. To heal them.

That felt like agreement. And more sadness and loss.

Well, she could help with that.

*****​
 
Chapter 208: Christmas Season Part 4 New
Chapter 208: Christmas Season Part 4

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)


One moment, Adora was staring at the colossal worm, seemingly frozen. The next, she raised her sword and lit up with magic. Magic so powerful, the feed tracking her suffered a whiteout for a second before the system compensated.

Samantha Carter was already moving. Adjusting sensors, tracking the movement of the worms likely to have lasers large enough to threaten the ships in orbit and moving spy bots closer to the location. They were carrying ordnance. Not explosives - orbital bombardment would be much more suited to engage the larger worms - but smoke charges modified to absorb energy. Such as lasers firing through it.

Enough of those bots could lay down a smokescreen that would protect the General's shuttle down there from laser fire - at least to some degree. Hopefully, it would be enough so the shuttle's shields could withstand the weakened laser fire.

She clenched her teeth as she saw the magic glow even brighter - and form a veritable hurricane around Adora. What was she doing? Shouldn't she be aiming that power at the worm god?

"We've lost the spy bots at the underground base!" Entrapta blurted out.

"What?" Sam glanced to the side before she could force herself to look at her screen again. She had to focus on Adora and others facing the colossal worm, not on this distraction!

"Switching feeds to other sensors… Oh. The base ruins are vanishing - no, transforming. Magic! That's a magic effect!"

What? The magic was… "What's Adora doing?" Sam muttered. This was… She checked the feed on her screen, opening a smaller window with the sensor data from Entrapta. The sheer amount of magic was playing havoc with the sensors, but some data was still being gathered. "It's… It's forming a cave."

"The effect is reaching down, far below the former base's basement," Entrapta said. "It's like… It's headed to the aquifer in the next layer!"

What? Was Adora about to drown the cave in water? The cave she had just formed? Sam checked the situation at the meeting spot again. Adora was still lit up like lightning was constantly striking her. And the worm god had frozen. The smaller worms seemed frozen as well.

"Water's rising," Entrapta reported. "Warm water - oh, it was diverted before the cave bottom. But the temperature is rising anyway. It's like… Floor heating!"

Floor heating? Sam blinked. But her friend was correct. The cave was now heated. By a hot spring. What was going on?

Her sensor feed showed an alert. Life signs inside the cave? She started a more detailed scan. Even with the magic interference, it should net them something.

Meanwhile, the situation at the shuttle was unchanged. No one seemed to have moved at all in the… forty-three seconds that had passed.

"Orbital forces report multiple such events," Entrapta said. "It's happening all over the planet!"

Sam drew a deep breath. She could only hope Adora knew what she was doing. "Any changes to the planetary ecology? Macro-scale?"

"Nothing yet, and the addition of heated caves and the redirecting of aquifers shouldn't influence the planetary climate."

And local changes wouldn't be significant from a global point of view. Still, to see Adora wield magic on such a vast area… Sam pressed her lips together. Priest would love this.

A few more seconds passed, and then, finally… "It looks like the magic surge is ending," Sam said as the sensor data started to change.

"Yes. Magic sensors are starting to give us information again," Entrapta said. "Like… Oh. Those life forms in the caves."

Sam hit a few keys to bring up the relevant feeds. "They're… eggs." Probably worm eggs.

"Yes. Lots of them."

"We've got movement!"

"Adora, what did you do?"

"Adora!"


On the screen, Adora stood, sword lowered, smiling at the giant worm. Which slowly lowered its front end before turning towards the worm people and smaller worms.

Sam couldn't hear anything - if any communication happened, it wasn't verbal. She checked the shuttle's sensors. No changes to the pheromone levels, either.

But the worm people dropped to their knees - no, dropped flat down and started wriggling. As did the smaller worms. And it was happening at the other locations as well - all the worms and worm people they were tracking were doing it, and facing the direction of the giant worm.

"What did you do, Adora?" the General asked on the communicator.

"I returned magic to the world and its people. They needed it."

"We kinda gathered that."

"And what did the worm god promise in return?"
Catra asked.

"Nothing."

"What?"


On the screen, Sam saw the worm people get up and rush to the worms, boarding them or mounting them. Then they started heading out. Without even looking at the shuttle.

"They're headed to the caves," Entrapta said.

Sam trusted her but checked the vectors herself. Indeed, all the worms were headed to the new caves. They seemed to ignore everything else. "Where is our team?"

"Checking!"

Sam ran another scan. With the magic returned to the planet, some adjustments were needed for their magitech sensors, so this could…

"This is Recon Team Five. We were just dumped on the ground. Requesting pickup."

Sam sighed with relief. She still didn't know what had happened - and she would get answers - but it seemed that at least their missing people were safe.

*****​

TX-5842, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 26th, 2001 (Earth Time)

Catra jumped out of the shuttle before the ramp was halfway down and raced towards Adora. She barely heard Jack sending a shuttle to pick up the missing recon team. What had the idiot done now? What had she done with all that power from unlocking the planet's magic?

"Adora!"

"Catra!" Adora turned to smile at her - in the same slightly too-wide and slightly too-forced manner that told Catra she felt guilty about something.

"What did you do?" Catra asked while she took a close look at her stupid lover. Everything seemed fine - no wounds, not even the hair was messed up.

"I returned magic to the planet."

"You already told us that. What did you do with the power from that?" Catra glared at her.

"I ah… I don't exactly know."

"You don't know?" Catra blurted out. "Enough power to turn half the planet to ash, and you don't know what you did?" How did she manage that?

"Adora!"

"Adora!"

And Bow and Glimmer had arrived as well.

"Are you OK?"

"What did you do?"

"That's my question," Catra said before Adora could use the distraction. "You don't know what you did?"

"Ah… I mean, I kind of… let the Worm guide me there." Adora's smile looked faker than Bright Moon's cheapest Christmas merchandise.

Catra turned her head to stare at the freighter-sized worm nearby, then turned it back to glare at Adora.

"We… kinda connected. Like with Gaia," Adora finally started to explain.

"You mentally communicated with the worm god?" Bow sounded excited.

Catra didn't care. "Like with Gaia?" So, that worm was intelligent. She would have to watch her tongue so she wouldn't insult them.

"Yes. They didn't have the magic to help and protect their people. At least that was what they showed me. So, I returned the magic." Adora shrugged. "And, well… I kinda let them use it."

"So, what did they do?" Catra asked through clenched teeth.

Adora winced. "We kind of restored the caves the Goa'uld had destroyed or taken over - or caves which had disappeared. It was a bit confusing. I mean, when we used the magic, it was all clear, but it's a bit hazy now."

"Hazy." Catra balled her hands into fists.

"Entrapta, Sam - do you have any idea what happened to the worms' holy site?" Glimmer asked over her communicator.

"It - and others like it - seemed to have been turned into breeding caves," Sam replied.

"Or turned back into breeding caves, maybe!" Entrapta added. "We've detected lots of eggs that are probably worm eggs - it's hard to get a precise scan since they seem to have the same resistance to our scanners, well, more like interference, I think, that the worms have."

"You made breeding caves. For worms." Glimmer didn't sound amused.

"Yes. I think - though it's more a feeling - that without magic, they couldn't breed. Or grow. It was not entirely clear."

That is correct.

Catra hissed at the sudden voice in her mind.

Everyone tensed, but Adora turned to look at the huge worm. "Is that you?"

Yes.

"You couldn't speak before…" Adora trailed off. "Oh."

Yes. Without magic, I couldn't express myself very well. My children were left without guidance. Without protection. They tried their best, but… it wasn't enough when the Goa'uld returned. I could not protect my world. I was too weak, and too… limited. So, I had to hide and leave my children to face the enemy alone, at great cost.

That was a very wordy worm, Catra thought, then winced. If they could read her mind…

But now, with my magic restored, I will be able to handle the Goa'uld. And my children will be able to hatch and grow once more. Thank you, She-Ra, Princess of Power.

"Ah… you don't have to thank me," Adora said with a grimace. "I just returned what my ancestors stole from you."

Their actions do not reflect on you, nor do yours on them.

And a mature worm as well, Catra thought. Then again, if they have lived for over a thousand years… She blinked. Then cursed. "You're like She-Ra!"

Yes. We are the protectors of our worlds.

And worshipped as gods, Catra added in her mind. She pushed the stupid thought away. This was more important. "And you're like Gaia."

So it seems.

"You mean…" Glimmer trailed off, looking at Adora, then at the worm, then back. "You're the protector of this world."

"They just told us that," Catra couldn't help saying.

"Yes, but… what if every world has such a protector?"

Catra whistled. That would be… good news, probably. And bad news for the Goa'uld, probably.

Adora gasped. "And the First Ones crippled them by taking magic from them…"

Catra winced. That was bad news.

"They might have destroyed worlds by taking away their protectors!" Glimmer looked shocked as well.

"Indirectly," Bow said. "But… we need to check if this is true. If it is…"

"...then this could change the war," Catra finished for him.

*****​

"So… this planet's She-Ra is a worm. What is their name? Worm-Ra? She-Worm?" Jack O'Neill asked when he joined the others. After he had confirmed that his people were safe, of course.

My name would be unpronounceable for you. You lack the organs to produce the vibrations. You can call me They-Who-Protect, though my actual name encompasses more than that.

Jack froze. Right. Psychic giant worm protector. He'd have to remember that. Also, probably a nerd.

"Yes. They-Who-Protect are my counter-part, so to speak," Adora said. "And they were hurt and weakened when their world's magic was stolen by the First Ones."

"Which is the important part. If more worlds, if every planet has its own She-Ra, we need to take that into account when fighting the Goa'uld," Catra said. "Restoring magic to the worlds under Goa'uld occupation could be the key to liberating and holding them."

That was true, but… "I wouldn't assume too much," Jack said. "The Goa'uld already had their Empire when magic was still around."

Catra frowned at that, and Jack shrugged. There were no easy solutions in a war of that scale. It usually required reckless actions against desperate odds just to hold the line. Well, it had before the Alliance. And, speaking of the Alliance… "So, are you going to join the Alliance against the Goa'uld?"

Unfortunately, I have too much to do to restore my world. Joining the Alliance would be a symbolic gesture on my part, not a substantive contribution to the fight against the Goa'uld.

"We would welcome you anyway," Adora told them. "You did fight the Goa'uld here, and you will defend your world against them, should they return, right?"

"And symbols have power," Daniel added. "Even and especially in war."

You are correct. But my world is not yet ready to engage on such levels with outsiders. My children have grown hostile and suspicious of aliens, and even my sudden restoration will not be enough to quickly change that. It would not be a profound, lasting change, at least, since they would merely follow my views without actually embracing and adopting as well as adapting them. Also, they will be very busy just handling our first brood after a thousand years. They need to focus on that, or the next generation will suffer as a result.

Well, the worm protector had their priorities straight. Jack could respect that. And he would rather not have to deal with whatever transports for giant worms the navy might come up with, he added with a snort.

"This doesn't change the fact, though, that we may have worlds with protectors who were weakened, maybe even killed by the theft of magic," Glimmer said. "We need to find out if that's true - and which worlds have such protectors. If the Goa'uld have their own protectors, that, too, would be a huge factor for the war."

Jack grimaced. Right. The last thing anyone needed was a Goa'uld with She-Ra powers. On the other hand… "We don't have any records of the snakes having such protectors, and the Tok'ra should have known."

"Without more information, this is just speculation," Glimmer said.

"Apophis's capital had had its magic restored," Daniel said. "And, if we take Gaia's example, enough time has passed for their protector, if they exist, to reemerge. It seems to be the most obvious example. It has a sizable population and has been under his rule for millennia, if that's a factor."

"So… return to Saqqara?" Jack asked. They would have to do some recon there anyway, for phase two of this offensive, but doing it now would throw off their schedule since this was a job for SG-1 and the BFS.

"We need to at least start planning a mission to that planet," Catra said. "But we also need to check more planets that we liberated and restore magic to them."

"We need to do that anyway. Restoring magic, I mean. The First Ones stole it from so many worlds, we will return it to set things right again," Adora said.

You are not to blame for their actions.

"Well, yeah, that doesn't mean we will just do nothing to help make things right," Glimmer replied.

Jack didn't feel guilty for what the Ancients had done, whether a few million years in the past or a thousand years ago, just because he shared some genes, but Glimmer and Adora were right about not just letting things be. Still… He had mixed feelings about magic. And who could say if every protector they met would be as nice as She-Ra? Gaia was a mixed blessing at least, and he was withholding judgment on the Worm Protector until they knew more about this planet and how things were done. And, speaking of… "What about the slaves the Goa'uld brought to this planet? Do you want them removed as well?"

This world is not their world. But they were wronged by the Goa'uld as well, and if they wish to stay, they can - although that would be up to them; in the past, not every visitor was comfortable with us.

Well, Jack wouldn't want to live on a world populated with giant worms and worm people either.

"We'll ask them," Adora said. "They are free now, just as your world is."

Indeed.

Jack narrowed his eyes. Was the Worm sassing him by imitating Teal'c? He couldn't wait until they were off this world.

*****​

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 27th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"So, to sum it up, operations on the other five worlds taken in the first wave are proceeding as planned. The final sensor sweeps for holdouts in hiding are finishing, and we're already embarking troops again on the transports in preparation for the next wave."

Adora nodded at the officer - Capitaine Amélie Besson - giving the briefing. She had already studied the reports, of course, but not everyone had had the same access or time to do that, and summing up the current situation was a good way to get everyone on the same page for the planning meeting.

"The spy bot network is adjusting its expansion to cover two systems we've discovered after analysing the data recovered from disabled ships and bases that we've taken. They seem to be central hubs for Sokar's logistics. Meanwhile, closer scans are already underway in five systems already targeted for the second wave. However, we are still lacking up-to-date intel on most of Sokar's remaining forces. We expect them to be positioned so they can cover the borders with Apophis and Heru'ur as well as Cronus, but we don't have first-hand information or actual numbers yet," Capitaine Besson went on.

In the centre of the room, the holoprojector showed the areas she had mentioned and highlighted known systems.

"We expect to discover more as the spybot network expands and Sokar starts reacting to our offensive and repositioning his forces, though he will be acting under constraints since he cannot remove too many forces from his other borders without inviting attacks from his rivals. However, our forces covering the border with Cronus have spotted increased probing attempts into Alliance-held territory, and analysts expect that the same takes place on his border with Sokar. Whether or not our decoy forces have managed to keep fooling him into assuming Ba'al is still present remains unclear." Besson nodded to signal she was finished.

Adora returned the nod. "Thank you, capitaine." While the woman sat down, she turned to address the rest of the room. "We're proceeding as planned by preparing the second wave, though we have to be ready to adjust our operations once Cronus, Apophis or Heru'ur become involved beyond mere scouting missions."

"One of them will try to get clever and strike at what he thinks is Ba'al overextending his forces tackling Sokar," Catra commented. "We assume that they still believe Ba'al is behind this, just using Horde forces he recruited, but we don't expect that to last for too long. As soon as they attempt to contact Ba'al diplomatically, we will probably have to go with the 'Ba'al angered Horde remnants and got pasted, and now Sokar did the same and got attacked in turn' cover story that we have prepared."

Adora nodded. In three systems, some of Sokar's forces had managed to activate the Stargate and escape - or send messages out - before the gate had been secured, and they were still trying to sort out if a tel'tak had escaped from a system, so to be on the safe side, they had to assume that Sokar was getting better intel.

"Based on their history, Sokar will likely have spies in Ba'al's ranks, since Ba'al managed to turn many of Sokar's forces, and so he might be aware that Ba'al had recruited Horde forces and was attacked by them in turn," Daniel pointed out. "But that deception won't last too long; Sokar knows Ba'al too well to be fooled like that, in our opinion."

Sha're nodded. "They were allies before Ba'al betrayed Sokar."

Some analysts disagreed, but Adora trusted Daniel and Sha're over them. They couldn't underestimate Sokar - or any of their enemies. "We'll have to keep a high operations tempo so by the time the Goa'uld realise that they are not facing an internal rival or a smaller force of Horde Clones left over from Horde Prime's defeat but an Alliance aimed at them, we've eliminated as many of their forces as possible."

She saw a few of the officers frown at that. She could understand them; launching invasions, especially against multiple systems, with incomplete intel on the enemy, was not a good idea. But they couldn't wait and waste the advantage of surprise and deception. They had to exploit the Goa'uld's ignorance about the Alliance as long as and as much as possible, despite the risks.

"That said, we've concluded negotiations with the people on this world. They-Who-Protect said they won't join the Alliance for now, but they remain a friendly force, and they have agreed to let any of Sokar's former slaves who do not wish to relocate stay on the world. We have extended an invitation to join the Alliance anyway, and once they have rebuilt what they have lost from Goa'uld aggression, they might reconsider their decision." She sounded a bit more optimistic than she was - the world had been devastated by the loss of magic, and the worm people and worms had almost died out. They would take a long time to recover from that, and They-Who-Protect wanted to focus on rebuilding rather than revenge.

She couldn't disagree with that.

"Now, let's address our logistical situation. Currently, we…"

*****​

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 27th, 2001 (Earth Time)

Samantha Carter pressed her lips together as she looked at the data they had recovered from a half-wrecked memory crystal their bots had scanned in the ruins of the research base. The original crystal, like the bot that had done the scanning, hadn't survived the magic that had transformed the entire area into a breeding cave, but the data had been transferred in time to the ships in orbit.

Decrypting the data - they hadn't managed a complete dump - had taken some time; Sokar was as paranoid as Ba'al - and most System Lords, to be fair - and had not skimped on encryption. It was not complete, of course. The crystal had been a backup system and damaged, and between the encryption and the violent destruction of the base, they had only been able to reconstruct fragments of the data.

But what they had was damning enough. "They experimented on worms and worm people," she said. With all the cruelty a Goa'uld could muster. Sokar's researchers had been trying to breed more pliable worms. Worms that were not sapient enough to disobey orders, but smart enough to be able to be used as weapons in war. They had been working on getting a baseline by lobotomising their captives. If any of the researchers and staff of the base had survived, Sam would have been happy to see them executed. Death by worms had been too kind for them. It was a miracle that the worms hadn't killed everyone in the base.

"Yes." Entrapta was uncharacteristically quiet, which made Sam even angrier.

"It's over now," Sam told her friend. "And the worms managed to save some of the captives." And had probably euthanised the ones who had been lobotomised. Sam didn't know, and wouldn't ask, but since no one had asked Adora to heal wounded worms…

"I don't understand why they would do this," Entrapta said. "Bots could have done everything they wanted, without needing any of this. And easier to scale."

"But bots would be more vulnerable to subverting by saboteurs and rivals," Sam pointed out. "Indoctrinated slaves cannot be hacked and turned against you." And the Goa'uld preferred to use people over machines because they preferred sapient slaves.

"But they can be freed and will willingly fight you," Entrapta replied.

"If they can be convinced that they were serving a false god," Sam cautioned. That was not as easy as some people back on Earth thought. People who were raised from birth to worship the Goa'uld as gods were not quick to abandon their religion, even after seeing their god's guards defeated. According to Daniel, the Church of She-Ra had the best success rate in converting former slaves of the Goa'uld mostly because many of the converts had personally experienced She-Ra's power, either by seeing her use it against the Goa'uld or healing them after liberating the planet, though the fact that She-Ra fit the image of a goddess most former slaves had also played an important role. Compared to a tall amazon warrior goddess that could not only strike down her enemies with a magic sword and heal people with her power but literally heal worlds, an invisible, intangible god that preached love but couldn't deliver miracles on demand simply didn't hold the same appeal.

Or, as Daniel had put it, She-Ra was what the Goa'uld tried to fake. People who were raised to follow a false god didn't have to change much to worship her instead.

But Sam had a job to do, and pondering religion and politics was a distraction. "We need to inform Adora and the others. And the worm people." Who were, as the data they had recovered proved, almost literally worm people. Sam suspected that they were the result of Ancient experiments with the original worms - it would certainly fit what Alpha had been doing on Etheria - but she had no way to confirm that. Except, possibly, for asking They-Who-Protect, and Sam was a bit loath to do that. A colossal worm who could communicate telepathically? She already had had one alien worm read her thoughts; she didn't want to risk another doing the same.

And she was a physicist, not a biologist. Even though she knew enough about biology and genetics to keep an eye on Alpha and Loki. Who could never meet They-Who-Protect - their attitudes would remind them far too much of the Goa'uld 'scientists' working here, Sam feared.

She sighed. "So, let's review the technology we secured here."

"Oh, yes!" Entrapta perked up. "It's generally standard Goa'uld technology, but there are a few improvements we haven't encountered before. Incremental improvements, nothing that would shift the basic paradigm, but according to my analysis, it's based on two different approaches, so Sokar either has two fundamentally different research programs without much cross-referencing, or he's using stolen technology. Goa'uld technology."

And since they were well aware of what Apophis, Heru'ur and Ba'al were or had been using, Sokar might be using technology he had stolen from Cronus or another System Lord the Alliance hadn't yet met.

It was something to consider. They still didn't know enough about Cronus's forces; the scouts they had caught hadn't been using anything but standard Goa'uld technology - no doubt by design, so they would not risk revealing secrets in case they got caught. Sam was certain that Cronus had more advanced weapons programs running in safer locations.

And she couldn't help shudder at the thought of what kind of horrors the System Lord was trying to build.

*****​

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 28th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"We can't use the Stargate to go to Saqqara. After we used it to infiltrate his capital, Apophis has increased security. According to Tok'ra analysts, he has increased security to such levels that using the Stargate is now so time-consuming, it has deteriorated his ability to react rapidly to crises. In some cases, couriers are held up so long, they cannot deliver their messages and packages in time."

Catra smirked at Glimmer's briefing. Since most System Lords didn't trust communicators for the most critical orders and reports, such delays affected Apophis's response time. Although, to be fair, few crises were actually affected in significant ways - though every little bit of such problems and inefficiencies added up, as she knew from her experience as Horde Commander.

"That leaves insertion through stealth craft," Glimmer went on. "Or through magic means."

"Like teleporting," Adora said.

Glimmer smiled. "Optimal would be a combination of both. A stealth shuttle to approach the planet, and teleporting down once we find a landing zone that is sufficiently hidden. That would reduce the risk of being discovered by unknown enhanced sensors."

"We don't know that Apophis has such sensors, but since we escaped from his palace using a Tel'tak last time, it's better to assume he has taken steps to deal with such a tactic," Bow added.

"Yeah." Jack nodded. "If the snake's paranoid enough to cripple his own Stargate traffic, he is paranoid enough to invest in better sensors."

"Or alternate ways to detect stealth craft," Sam said.

"Like shooting blindly at random times?" Jack grinned.

"Not quite, sir. But our latest scans show that the air pollution on Saqqara has significantly worsened, and while we need to catch a sample, preliminary analysis points to Apophis using specially altered smoke to surround his palace so anything moving through it will be detectable by the way the air it displaces while moving. It's not a very effective system - wind will all but stop it from being of any use - but I can think of a few ways to combine that with other sensors or methods to make it easier to spot cloaked ships."

"So, Apophis is trying to use the good old flour trick against invisibility?" Jack chuckled.

"Dungeons and Dragons references aside," Sam said with a slight frown, "I agree that we should not trust our stealth generators close to his palace and only use them in an emergency."

"Yeah, let's not risk discovery unless we're already discovered," Jack said. "And, if possible, sabotage his system so he can't get any data about our actual capabilities."

"Oh! We will have to hack his systems anyway, so that shouldn't be too hard," Entrapta said with a smile. She had cheered up a bit since their discovery of what Sokar's researchers had been working on here, but she was still a bit subdued, in Catra's opinion.

Still, compared to Sha're, Entrapta was doing fine. Sha're was tense and grim. She shouldn't be on this mission, back to where she had been kept prisoner in her own body by Amaunet for so long - Catra knew exactly how she had felt thanks to her own experience with Horde Prime. But Catra also knew exactly what she would do if Horde Prime were still around and someone tried to keep her from joining a mission against him.

"So, let's not taunt Murphy," Jack said. "We're tracking Apophis's orbital and system security through the spy bots, so we know a stealth shuttle can reach the planet without difficulty once a frigate drops it in Deep Space near the system. But our coverage of the planet itself is pretty spotty."

Limited to a spy bot doing the occasional fly-by and a long-range sensor sweep from close orbit, to be exact. Not the best intel - but then, if they had better intel, they wouldn't need to plan this mission.

Glimmer cleared her throat. She was looking a little annoyed at the interruption, Catra was sure. "The Tok'ra have spies on the planet, but they can only report back irregularly when an opportunity presents itself, and by taking a great risk. Further, as Goa'uld, they cannot use or sense magic, so we cannot depend on them to find out if there's a protector on Saqqara. We'll have to do it ourselves."

"At least that's our story and we're sticking to it," Jack said with a chuckle.

Adora frowned at him. "We are the most qualified for this mission - we have the most experience on the planet and the best chances to get out should anything happen."

Which, worst case, meant they had the best chances to hold out until the task force waiting in deep space would invade. That would upend the Alliance plans, though, even if they managed to take out Apophis in the process. Which was why that was the worst case.

"But we need to find a secure base to hide during our mission first," Glimmer said. "We cannot move until we have that."

Which meant more spy bots moving closer. Possibly even scouting missions by the latest model stealth shuttles. But that couldn't be helped, Catra knew. It wasn't as they were left bored, what with having to move a task force into position near Saqqara and preparing a transfer to them while they were building up to wave two of the offensive against Sokar and starting the operation to secure the Alliance flanks against Cronus.

Catra understood very well why the Command Council was against this scouting mission - or, to be precise, that Adora was going on such a mission in the middle of a major offensive.

But if there really was a She-Ra of Saqqara, then Adora was the best person to contact them and talk with them. And Catra was sure that if this was the case, it was even more important than any offensive.

*****​

TX-5842 Orbit, TX-5842 System, Territory of Sokar, December 28th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"And no, you're off active duty until you're cleared," Jack O'Neill told his four far-too-stubborn people.

"But, sir…" Campbell started to complain.

"Don't tell me you're doing fine," Jack told him. "I've heard you the first time. This isn't even about any trauma. This is about the fact that you were held by worm people whose protector and apparent ruler can read your minds. Until the magic boffins clear you for duty, you're off duty." Boffins? He needed to spend less time with limeys.

"Oh."

"Of course, we understand, sir," Isa added.

Jack glanced at the other two members of the recon team, but neither Lieutenant Averis nor Sergeant Vega brought up the fact that Jack and the Alliance core command crew had spent quite some time with said psychic worm protector. Good for them. "So, you'll be shipped to the rear and spend some time relaxing while they pick at and poke your mind to see if you've been wormed."

"'Wormed', sir?" Campbell sounded amused, but Jack knew from experience that this was an act. In this business, you acted tough and flippantly, lest your mates and, worse, your superiors, might think you couldn't hack it any more.

"I'm pushing to make it an official term. We might need it soon enough, at least for the enemy," he said.

"I thought the worm people decided to stay neutral, sir," Lieutenant Averis said.

Jack snorted. "Until they sorted out their planet. But you know best what the snakes did to them; do you think they'll stay out of the fight for long?"

All members of the recon team winced at that. Yeah, infiltrating a snake research base would do that to you; Jack knew that as well. "They-Who-Protects will probably want to do some pre-emptive protection."

"I see, sir." Averis nodded.

"Good for them," Isa added.

And good that the team apparently didn't harbour grudges against the worm people, Jack noted. Not everyone in his force could handle getting captured that easily; some egos were a bit more prickly than others.

"Anyway," he said, "you've got your orders now. Enjoy the leave, and raise some beers in our honour."

"While you go and infiltrate Saqqara, sir?" Isa asked.

Averis tensed, as did Vega, but Campbell nodded, Jack noted. Well, Isa and Campbell had been working with him and the Etherians a bit longer.

Still, appearances had to be upheld. "That's classified."

"Of course, sir," Isa replied.

He looked at her with narrowed eyes, then snorted. He trusted them not to blap - people with loose lips didn't last long in the Alliance Special Forces Command if they even made it into the force in the first place. "Dismissed."

Once they were gone, Jack sighed and relaxed a bit. This temporary office wasn't nearly as comfortably set up as his usual one back on Earth, nor as roomy, but space was at a premium in, well, space. And he needed the space and privacy to prepare the mission to Saqqara. In addition to handling all the stuff his Command needed for their next missions; the second wave needed intel as much as the first wave had, after all.

He had trusted people for that, of course, but he wouldn't send his teams into harm's way without personally checking things. Fortunately, it seemed that there was nothing amiss, judging by the files he had.

Unfortunately, as this world had just demonstrated, even the best preparation didn't ensure that things would go smoothly in the field. He could only trust that his teams would manage to adapt to any surprise they might encounter.

Because with SG-1 and the BFS off on a mission of their own, they couldn't bail out the next team that got into trouble. And while Jack knew that his people were good, he still didn't trust any of them as much as he trusted his own team and friends.

But that was war for you - no one could be everywhere at once. Even the best prepared missions were dangerous, and even the best planned assaults and invasions would suffer casualties.

No matter how much Jack tried to change it.

He forced the glum thoughts away. He had a mission to prepare. One that might decide the war.

*****​
 
On the other hand, they didn't know whether or not Adora's healing had expelled or killed the Earth parasites; the records from India were not conclusive. If she tried it and the Goa'uld died, that would be... Well, it was one thing to kill an enemy in battle, but it was another to kill them when they were your helpless prisoner.

Morally I'm not sure this is any different from her chopping apart the Jaffa holding a hostage at gunpoint last chapter. The Goauld is holding a hostage and inherently threatening their life or eternal servitude if not removed. Killing the threat is morally no different than killing that Jaffa.
 
Chapter 209: Christmas Season Part 5 New
Chapter 209: Christmas Season Part 5

Deep Space, Near Saqqara System, December 30th, 2001 (Earth Time)


"We're going to miss the Alliance New Year's Party at the Headquarters."

"Yes," Adora said without looking up from her tablet. She was aware of that. And Catra knew she was. The needs of the war took precedence. They couldn't exactly make allowances for every Earth holiday; there were too many. If they were launching the current offensive during the Christmas Holiday season, they certainly couldn't delay a crucial mission for a party!

"Which means others will represent the Princess Alliance in our place," Catra went on.

"Yes." Adora suppressed a sigh. She was also aware of how the chain of command worked - including social and representative functions.

"That could be a problem."

Enough. Adora put the tablet down and turned to face Catra, who was sprawled on their bed at the back of the cabin in what would be a slightly distracting manner if Adora were not so busy and annoyed. "Why would it be a problem?" She trusted her friends!

"Who's going to keep Swift Wind from making a scene or starting trouble?"

Adora opened her mouth, then closed it again. Oh. "Perfuma and Scorpia?" She winced as soon as she had said it.

"They are far too nice to tell him off," Catra said.

Right. Adora couldn't deny that. "Mermista and Sea Hawk… never mind." One didn't care about Earth sensibilities, the other would probably help Swift Wind with whatever plan Adora's friend could come up with.

"And Frosta would make everything worse," Catra went on as if she had read Adora's mind.

"She's not that bad!" Adora protested.

Catra snorted in return. "Just because she isn't a little girl any more doesn't mean she isn't a moody teenager any more. And she's still the youngest ruling princess, with a chip on her shoulder the size of an iceberg."

Catra wasn't exactly unbiased, but she had a point. "And Netossa and Spinnerella are busy at the Sokar front…" Adora winced again. They couldn't call them back to ride herd on Swift Wind. Or Frosta, now that Adora thought about it. That left… "We'll have to ask Angella and Mycah to go."

"That's a job for Glimmer," Catra said.

Adora frowned, but her love was right. Glimmer was their daughter and also the Queen of Bright Moon. And while their relationship was much better than it had been at some points in the past, Adora knew that there were still some tensions at times. Unpredictable times. Best to leave that to their friend. "Yes."

She ignored Catra's smirk and went back to studying the intel on her tablet. After making a note to bring the topic up at dinner. The latest spy bot data was promising. Apophis seemed to be focusing his forces on his palace defences and the Stargate security. The rest of the world was not nearly as defended. Sure, they had slightly irregular patrols of Death Gliders, but those were usually over the areas containing factories - even the fields feeding Apophis's slaves were barely covered. Orbital defences were stricter, Ha'taks in geostationary orbits forming the core of the home fleet, and Tel'taks, half of them cloaked, and Death Gliders circling the planet at all times. Not many Al'keshs, though, which was a bit weird. They were made for ground support as well as attacks on capital ships, so why weren't there more of them?

She checked her data for reports about Al'kesh production amongst Apophis's worlds. No change there. Loss rates weren't that high either. "He's massing Al'kesh somewhere," she said.

"For something that requires a lot of bombing?" Catra rolled off the bed and walked over to look at the data herself.

"The Tok'ra are looking into it according to the latest report, but they haven't found anything yet," Adora said.

"Now, what kind of strikes could Apophis pull off with a few hundred Al'keshs?" Catra mused. "If he concentrates them, he could overwhelm pretty much every planetary defence his rivals could muster. Huge casualties, but the bombers would get through. Depending on the payload, that could lay waste to entire worlds."

Adora clenched her teeth. "Biological or chemical weapons could render a world uninhabitable. If he used enhanced Naquadah bombs, he could wipe out most of a civilisation with a few bombers. A combination of both would wipe out everyone too quickly for any evacuation…"

"Or he uses the bombs and chemical weapons to hide an attack with biological weapons, to strike at the relief forces - and have them spread it amongst the untouched parts of his enemies." As usual, Catra had an even worse imagination. "We'll have to check that our WMD protocols are up to date."

"And be prepared to step in if he unleashes such an attack on a rival's worlds," Adora added.

"Yes, that too," Catra said. "But he might prefer to use that on external enemies. If he uses it on Heru'ur or Sokar, the other System Lords will feel threatened and might decide to strike him before he uses it on them - and to set an example. Or use the same tactics before he is ready for another such strike."

That was also plausible. "We'll have to see if we can find out his plans as well on our mission," Adora said. Gathering intel had just received a higher priority.

*****​

Deep Space, Near Saqqara System, December 30th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"After analysing the latest data and adjusting our estimates on the enemy technology, we've found a good landing zone - outside the sensor grid Apophis has installed around his key installations, in the middle of a maze-like area of canyons," Samantha Carter said as the holoprojection in the middle of the flagship's briefing room lit up the area in question.

"It's not a natural canyon system, by the way," Entrapta added. "It wasn't formed by rivers but is the result of a strip mining operation - sensors have shown some of the remains of the operation."

Sam nodded. The remains were mostly the graves of the slaves who died digging those canyons, with primitive tools - sometimes barely more efficient than picks and shovels, sometimes literally picks and shovels. Better automation and advanced mining equipment would have increased the efficiency by at least one order of magnitude, but Apophis probably didn't want to risk his slaves learning too much about advanced technology - or having access to tools that could break stone as easily as steel.

"It means that Goa'uld sensors will be affected by the remaining traces of metal, including Naquadah, so we'll be protected from their scanners to some degree, even if the stealth generators should fail. We'll be able to move about on foot as well, possibly using light vehicles, but in each case we'll have to ensure we're at least hidden from satellites and patrolling ships," she went on.

"Do we expect to move around on foot?" Daniel asked. "We have a planet to search for signs of a magical protector."

"We don't expect, no, but the option exists," Sam replied. After her experiences with SG-1 and the Alliance, she certainly would not be surprised if they ended up having to hoof it.

"And!" Entrapta spoke up. "Speaking of searching the planet! We will use a magical scanner to search for magic! We've been tweaking the sensors, and we've been using the data from the scans of Earth before and after Gaia's summoning to calibrate it, and we estimate a good chance of detecting plausible locations where a magical protector could be found. We could mount it on a spy bot and send it in to do a scan right now, but we might have to do some more calibrating once we've got the first set of data, and that would take a pretty long time if the spy bot has to return to us each time, so it's faster if we're doing it on the ground. Also, it's currently a unique prototype, so losing it would be kinda bad - we would have to build another one by hand, and that would take more time."

Sam nodded again and gave the General a look, just in case - he better not break it! Building it to the specifications estimated to be necessary for reliably detecting magic concentrations had taken a lot of effort and an almost-all-nighter.

"Right. So, once we are on the ground and run the scan, we'll be ready to move to another part of the planet and look for the protector," Adora said.

"We'll have to ensure that we take a close scan of the planet covering as much of its surface as possible on our approach," Sam said.

Sha're nodded. "We might have to compromise depending on what opportunities we have to descend unnoticed."

Sam was aware of that. Even the best stealth generators couldn't entirely hide the plasma trail of atmospheric reentry - and the Goa'uld had been using stealth ships for millennia, so they would be aware of that weakness. It usually wasn't a problem on more remote worlds, where the Goa'uld occupation force was sitting on the Stargate and perhaps a few mining sites, but on Saqqara, Apophis's capital? And after Apophis had been fooled by a stealth ship once already? Sam expected him to have a dedicated unit of guards just watching the sky for such trails.

Which meant they would hide their trail by tailing another ship until they were safely below the altitude and airspeed where they had to worry about trails. But that meant they couldn't just pick their approach.

Well, they would just take a bit longer to reach the target area; the stealth system didn't have any trouble handling lower speeds, though supersonic might be pushing it - the counter-sound system was still a bit unreliable.

But overall, they were ready for the mission. At least Sam, Entrapta and Bow's part was.

She looked at Glimmer.

"We can't really prepare for a magical protector about whom we have no idea - not even if they exist. We have only met three so far, and all three, She-Ra, Gaia and They-Who-Protect, were very different in their nature, outlook and in how they use magic. If the planet's protector exists, will they conform to the people's ideas about protectors? Then they might be a god - a real god."

"Like the Apophis in the metadimension?" Catra asked.

Glimmer nodded. "But we don't know if that even plays a role. Data from Earth indicates it's not the case, or Gaia would be much more like the god so many billions of humans believe in. But Gaia isn't like the god the majority of humans worship."

"Ah, despite the similarities and partially overlapping myths, I don't think one can claim that the major monotheist religions that represent the majority of human faiths on Earth worship the same god," Daniel said.

"If you ask any of the more religious ones, they will deny it vehemently," the General said.

"Yes, but the basic ideals are the same," Glimmer said. "Yet, Gaia doesn't conform to them. So, we shouldn't expect some 'good Goa'uld god'. It could be a spirit - or a part of the world just now reawakening."

"Or some champion of the people, like She-Ra," Catra said.

"In other words, don't expect anything and keep your eyes open for anything that might be a budding god," the General said. "And try not to violate a religious taboo," he added with a grin at Daniel.

"Jack!"

Sam sighed as the two bickered for a bit. She knew that the General did it to lighten the mood, but she still didn't like how it was dragging out the briefing. She had a lot of tasks left to do before the mission.

*****​

Saqqara Orbit, Saqqara System, December 30th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"Spy Bots signal patrol approaching close range."

"Adjusting position."

"Clear."

Catra sighed as the shuttle changed course again. She had heard the same exchange a dozen times now while they waited in orbit for a ship to descend. Apophis really kept his pilots and ship crew busy. He must be racking up maintenance costs, too. Hm.

She made a note on her tablet to look into how such a high optempo for patrols might affect Apophi's general readiness and availability of forces. Nothing was free, so all the effort and resources he was pushing into covering his capital with as many ships and guards as he could get would be missing somewhere. Of course, with constant patrols, the crews would be well-trained, but not even Jaffa could stand constant sorties without suffering fatigue. And maintenance stressed the technicians as well.

You could avoid that by cycling through a larger pool of pilots and technicians, but then again - that meant you needed more people, and those had to come from somewhere, weakening those areas. And he couldn't simply get more guards unless he had managed to get cloning facilities… Yeah, she would have to check the intel analysis about that again, just to be sure that they weren't ignoring clues about a potential game-changer.

Unless they got more intel during this mission that made that analysis moot, of course. But for that, they would have to get down on the stupid planet so they could actually start their mission!

And so far, they hadn't been lucky during the last few hours. It seemed whatever Apophis was doing didn't require lots of cargo being shipped in. Ships were frequently entering and leaving the atmosphere, but mostly Tel'taks and Death Gliders, and those were too small to hide the shuttle's plasma trail during reentry. They needed at least an Al'kesh, better a Ha'tak, and whatever Apophis was doing with most of his bombers, it wasn't being done here. Since they were in a really high orbit, they hadn't even been able to do useful scans for magic.

She sighed and leaned back in her seat. Maybe she should take a nap until Apophis's forces would finally send a transport down. She wouldn't be tired or frustrated, but well rested for the mission, and she could distract Adora from fretting too much at the same time by using her lap as a nap spot.

She slowly smiled as she considered that. Yeah, that sounded good. Hiding a smirk, she turned towards her love. "Hey, Adora…"

"Catra?" Adora looked up from her own tablet with that guileless expression Catra knew so well.

Catra grinned and slid out of her seat, sliding into Adora's lap before her love could react. "I think I'll nap some."

"Catra! You… We're in the middle of a mission!"

"We're in the middle of waiting," Catra replied with her eyes closed as she shifted around to find the most comfortable - and most distracting - position. "A good soldier gets their rest whenever they can."

"That's… not what the instructors meant!"

"Mh." Catra wriggled a bit more and felt Adora freeze for a moment. Perfect!

"Al'kesh approaching! Projected course… Yes, they're going to land on the surface!"

"Adjusting course to intercept them!"

"On the way!"

Oh, for…! Catra flashed her fangs as she hissed under her breath. "Why now?" she muttered as she slid off Adora.

"Because that's how it works," Bow commented from the other side.

"You were asking for it," Glimmer added.

Catra scoffed as she returned to her seat and strapped in. This might be a bumpy ride. Since the stealth generators were running, the shuttle's sensors were turned off - they were pretty much blind and relied on the feeds from the spy bots in the system. And that meant there was a slight lag as the signals from the spy bots' sensors, which were a bit away from the planet, were transmitted to the shuttle. Not the best conditions to fly very close to an enemy ship.

"Here they come!"

"Matching speed."

"Adjusting course… aligning with the target ship."

"Course matches."

"Reentry in four seconds. Three…two…"

Catra tensed.

"...one. Entering atmosphere!"

The shuttle didn't shake or buck, but Catra's ears twitched as they caught the faint whining noise from the stealth generator changing pitch, followed by the even fainter sound of air turning to plasma outside the shuttle.

On her tablet, she saw the feed, showing both the Al'kesh and their shuttle, so close that the icons overlapped, descending into Saqqara's atmosphere. Yeah, she doubted even improved enemy sensors could detect them - unless they were mounted on the Al'kesh. They were, well, not quite hugging the enemy's hull, but far too close.

On the other hand, they were also surrounded by plasma, and in the past, they had actually touched down on the hulls of enemy ships without getting detected. So, they probably were fine.

"Reentry completed."

"Slowing down."

They were slowly falling back, letting the Al'kesh pull away while minimising the turbulence caused by their flight. Still, if the enemy crew was sharp, they might notice that…

But the Al'kesh kept pulling away without any sudden sensor activity, much less weapons going hot, and soon, the shuttle could safely change course towards their chosen landing zone.

"Initiating magic scans."

Now that they were inside the atmosphere, they could scan for magic on the way to their first hideout. And since they would take a few more hours to reach it without going supersonic and leaving a shockwave in the sky, and she wasn't involved in the scanning, Catra could finally take the nap the Jaffa had so rudely interrupted.

*****​

Canyon Maze, Saqqara, December 30th, 2001 (Earth Time)

Jack O'Neill took a look at the shuttle from the cover of a small overhang and shook his head. With the entrance facing the cliff wall behind it, you couldn't see the thing at all - if you weren't careful, you'd walk into it. Daniel had done that already. It was a far cry from having to use camo netting to hide helicopters behind enemy lines. "I'd say that the biggest danger we face is forgetting where we parked it and being unable to find it again," he commented.

"We have the coordinates saved in our passive orientation systems," Bow said behind him. "I doubt that will be a problem."

Jack frowned slightly. Sure, having an infantry-level inertial navigation system was very useful - even a Second Louie would have to work really hard to get their squad lost with this - but he didn't like depending on technology to that degree. If you couldn't hack it without all the fancy tech, you'd be lost, in more than one way, when the technology broke.

And sooner or later, every piece of technology broke in the field. Sooner if you gave it to Marines. Sure, soldiers would still learn to navigate with a map and compass, but Jack knew that if you didn't use something in actual practice, you wouldn't really keep your skill at it sharp enough to use it when you needed it. Most wouldn't get good enough at it to use it in the first place. He had seen that often enough already in the Air Force.

"Until it breaks," he said.

"If it breaks, Glimmer can teleport us back," Bow said with a smile.

Right. Jack's frown deepened slightly. They had technology and magic. At least, he could still drill his command to be able to work without either in a pinch. "Well, we have confirmed that we're safe from being discovered by a passing patrol. Unless they walk straight into us."

If they were discovered because a Jaffa decided to take a leak at this spot, they'd never live it down. Then again, they had found no trace at all of foot patrols in the canyon, and they had parked the shuttle in a corner so that it was out of the way of any Jaffa crazy enough to race their Death Glider through the canyon.

Bow nodded. "And we're done here. The passive sensors are working."

"Good. Let's see if the rest have finished analysing the data we got." It had been hours, after all. Carter was usually faster than this.

"They should be finished with the latest recalibration," Bow said.

Jack grunted in response. He wasn't a wizard, and he didn't want to be one. Others could deal with magic problems. At least, with the magic problems you couldn't solve by shooting.

They walked around the shuttle, both keeping under the overhang and away from the invisible hull, until they cleared the aft and saw the open air lock above the ramp. "We're back!" Jack announced as he entered the shuttle's lounge. "Perimeter's secure. How's the witchcraft going?"

That made Carter frown at him as he had known it would. "We have recalibrated the sensors once more, and now we're running the next scan using the new baseline."

"This time, we should be on the mark," Glimmer added.

"And we can then adjust the data from the scans we took on the way here and analyse that as well!" Entrapta beamed.

"That's the plan, at least," Glimmer said.

"It's SCIENCE!" Entrapta replied. Her hair tendrils were typing on two keyboards simultaneously.

Jack nodded and went to the fridge to get a soda. He couldn't help with that.

Bow, on the other hand, went straight to Glimmer and plopped down in the seat next to her, pulling out his own tablet. Well, he was the Tech Master.

Jack was Spec Force.

"And now we wait!"

Catra was in the next seat, in a position that looked as if she had been poured out of a cup over it. Jack's spine hurt just looking at it. Hell, a contortionist's spine would ache at the sight. The woman really was a cat.

"Time for a nap," Jack said.

"Already got mine," Catra replied, but she yawned a moment later.

"Going to bug Adora?"

She snorted. "Already did that as well. She's reading up on the latest reports."

"Ah." Jack probably should do that as well. Had to stay up to date. He spotted Catra's tablet poking out from under her belly - that couldn't be comfortable! "Anything important?"

"Things are going according to plan." Catra shrugged. "So, something's bound to go wrong soon."

Jack nodded and swallowed the first three quips that came to mind. No need to taunt Murphy. In fact…

"Look at that!"

"Wow!"

"Uh."

"How is that possible?"

Jack blinked at the sudden, excited chatter from Carter and the others. It seemed Murphy could read his thoughts now… "What did you find?" he asked.

"We have found what looks to be a magically active area of rock, sir," Carter replied. "Dense rock."

"No sign of life at all," Bow added.

That didn't sound too bad to Jack. "And…?"

"And it's below Apophis's palace, sir."

Ah. Shit.

*****​

"Do you think it's a coincidence that Apophis built his palace on top of the most magical area on the planet?" Adora looked at Glimmer. Unlike her friend, Adora wasn't a sorceress, but she had enough experience with magic to grow suspicious of coincidences. Like stumbling over a sword in the woods on an unauthorised recon flight.

"We can't be sure," Glimmer replied with a slight scowl. "We left right after activating magic, and we didn't check for any magic presence the last time. So, this could be a result of magic returning, focusing on Apophis."

"As in, under his control?" Jack asked.

Glimmer shook her head. "That is unlikely. Goa'uld cannot use magic. But it could be a reaction of the planet's protector, building up to attack him. But that's pure speculation - we don't know enough about this world's magic, or about protectors like She-Ra in general, to be sure of anything."

Adora felt a bit of guilt. If she had spent more time at Mystacor and with its researchers, they might know more about She-Ra's magic, and, by extension, about other worlds' magic protectors. Maybe…

Catra pinched her thigh and whispered: "Stop feeling guilty, idiot."

Adora glanced at her but only met a glare.

"Well…" Once more, her thoughts were interrupted, this time by Daniel. "We do know Goa'uld cannot use magic. And while information is scarce, we also know that even before the Ancients removed access to magic on the worlds connected through Stargates, the enslaved population on the worlds in the Goa'uld Empire couldn't use magic. At least, we don't have any records of such a thing happening. The System Lords might have purged anyone with the talent, either out of fear of a power they couldn't control, or fear of letting a rival have access to it."

Adora clenched her teeth. Murdering everyone with the talent for magic would fit the Goa'uld's views and policies.

Glimmer, though, didn't look convinced. "They wouldn't have to do that. Unless they were dealing with princesses, they would have been facing sorceresses, who have a much harder time learning how to use magic. Especially without an instructor. And without written records, they could only have depended on oral traditions to pass on knowledge. Knowledge that could be lost forever with one accident or murder. It wouldn't have been hard for the Goa'uld to keep their slaves from using magic under those conditions."

"Except for people like me," Adora said with a frown. "That wouldn't have worked against She-Ra. Or Gaia. Or They-Who-Protect."

"Yes. But we don't know what is needed for a protector to appear," Glimmer said. "In hindsight, we should have asked Gaia about that. In any case, we don't know what decides if a protector exists, and what form they take. We do know that every planet has different magical traditions - at least, that has been the case so far."

"But most planets' populations in the Goa'uld Empire are descendants of humans taken from Earth by the Goa'uld or other aliens," Daniel said. "Wouldn't they have taken their magical traditions with them?"

"Those might not have been ideal for their new home worlds," Glimmer pointed out. "If they were looking for a spirit like Gaia, for example, they might not have discovered a protector like She-Ra."

"Yes." Adora nodded. "The First Ones had discovered She-Ra on Etheria and then adapted their plans to use her magic through Mara. But Mara was chosen by Etheria's magic."

"As were you," Catra added.

"So," Glimmer went on, "this might be the form of this world's protector. Or it's about to form the protector. Or reform it. Or it might just be a kind of magical rock like some of the crystals on Etheria."

"Well, if it is the planet's protector, or was it, then it would make sense for Apophis to build his palace on top of it since that would allow him to symbolically conquer it. He would have done this at a time when magic was still present, after all," Daniel said.

"It would also have made sense to control a source of magically active - or reactive - material, if only to deny it to others," Sam added.

Adora nodded. "In any case, we won't know more until we can examine it."

Jack's smile was very twisted. "And let me guess, scanning from a distance isn't enough, huh?"

Sam shook her head. "I am afraid we have done everything we could from here, sir."

"Yes!" Entrapta nodded, her hair bopping up and down. "We need samples - well, close-up scans and run a few tests, to know more about the rock. Its magical nature interferes with magic scans, and conventional scanning won't really reveal anything about its magic properties, not unless there's some transformative effect going on with results we could detect without magic, but if that's the case, we haven't detected anything yet, so it probably isn't the case. We need to go to the rock!"

"And we forgot to bring our Tok'ra tunnelling gear!" Jack said with a snort.

That would have come in very handy. But using it on a planet controlled by the enemy would be quite dangerous and risk revealing significant intel about it, even if the devices were not captured by the Goa'uld, so the Tok'ra were loath to use them on such missions.

"The scanners did show some old mining shafts reaching down to the magically active rock, sir. They were sealed off, but we shouldn't have too many problems breaking them open again," Sam said, pointing at the shafts on a holoprojection.

"Yeah. But getting to the top of those shafts looks like a challenge," Jack replied. "I don't think we can use the same way we used before to enter the palace this time."

Sha're shook her head. "It would be suicide. Apophis is arrogant, but he is not that stupid."

Adora agreed. Apophis wouldn't fall for that ruse again. But… "We don't have to. We can use magic now."

"Right. Magic." Jack snorted. "Forgot about that."

Glimmer was smiling widely at that, Adora noted. Well, she could understand that.

*****​

Near Apophis's Palace, Saqqara, December 30th, 2001 (Earth Time)

"Alright, we're in position."

Samantha Carter nodded at the message from the General, even though he couldn't see her - though she could see him through the feed from the micro-spy bot's camera. "Copy, you're ready. Starting infiltration."

"Go, Pathfinder!" Entrapta cheered when the feed changed as the micro-spy bot activated its stealth generator and started its trek towards the palace walls - the back of the palace grounds, to be exact. To conserve power, the bot would only hover to avoid leaving tracks, but generally use its legs. Even so, it was a bit of a gamble that the power would last until the bot found a hidden location large enough for three people. But it was their best bet.

Even if it would take an hour at least for the little machine to get inside the palace, and even longer to reach the lower levels.

"Exfiltrating," the General announced over the communicator, and Sam started tracking his and Teal'c's movements through the sensors of the spy bot in orbit. They weren't too close, safely outside the perimeter, and wearing the latest uniforms with enhanced stealth capabilities - not actual stealth generators, of course, but infrared signatures and limited chameleon-type optical camouflage that adjusted the camo patterns according to their close environment - so they shouldn't be in any danger, but you could never be certain.

So Sam worried a little while the micro-spy bot slowly made its way to the palace walls. And tensed when the general and Teal'c had to hide in an old, defunct drainage ditch that had been grown over until a particularly eager patrol of Apophis's guards finally left the area, and they could continue their withdrawal.

"We should have used a spy bot as a carrier for the micro-spy bot," she muttered with a relieved sigh.

"I thought we agreed that the risk of exposing our stealth capabilities should the bot be noticed was too great?" Entrapta asked.

"Yes. I was just… voicing my frustration," Sam said. She still stood by the argument that Apophis wouldn't suspect they could sneak bots past his sensors if he heard about SG-1 sneaking up onto his palace, and the micro-spy bot could, once self-destructed, be explained as having slipped through because of its small size. But even if it destroyed itself, the standard spy bot was too big to be missed by sloppy guards. But that didn't mean she liked seeing the General and Teal'c risk themselves like that.

"Are you frustrated with Jack insisting on carrying Pathfinder?"

"No," Sam lied. "I am frustrated with the risks we still have to take. But it's OK - it's an irrational frustration."

"Ah!" Entrapa nodded.

"We all go through that," Catra added from where she was faking a nap on a seat at the lounge's opposite wall - Sam had noticed her tail twitching far more than usual when she was actually asleep.

"Oh. I don't, I think."

"You're not as irrational as we are," Catra said.

"Ah." Entrapta nodded with a happy expression. "Oh! Pathfinder found a way inside!"

Indeed, the micro-spy bot was already hovering in front of a narrow opening - with a grill that had come off on one side. Probably a rainsprout.

Sam checked for witnesses and cameras and found none. A brief sensor scan didn't show any inside the pipe, either. "Clear."

"Go and get in!" Entrapta said.

Everyone watched as the bot bent the grill to the side and slipped inside before pulling the grill back to its original position - well, approximately. Good enough to fool a guard.

The bot had no problem navigating the pipe until it reached the roof, but then it had to find a way inside the air ducts. And that was a bit beyond its programming.

Sam had to take over and use the manipulator arms to reroute the current running through the grill covering the intake before cutting a hole into it, then carefully guided the bot through it without dropping the missing piece so she could fix it back in place afterwards.

When she was done, she leaned back, closed her eyes for a moment and sighed. The rest of the trek shouldn't be nearly as stressful or tricky.

As the bot floated down an air shaft, the General and Teal'c reached the shuttle and quickly got inside. "Everything's clear outside."

It better be clear, Sam thought - they had picked this location with care. The shuttle was not quite as well hidden as it was in the canyon maze, but with the stealth generator running, that shouldn't matter.

"Status?" the General went on.

"We're about to reach the basement, sir," she informed him.

"Ah. Good work."

She didn't nod at that and tried to ignore the irrational, if brief, feeling of warmth at his praise. He didn't mean just her, anyway.

"Alright, Pathfinder is in the basement," Entrapta announced. "And it has enough power for five more minutes! Plenty of time to find a good spot to enter!"

It was actually a bit of a close call. But Sam managed to find a small room that wasn't covered by the security system and which was large enough to allow three people to hide inside. And was close enough to a sensor covering the hallway that they could use that to hack the security system.

"Glimmer, you're up!" Catra said with a grin when the bot started to power down everything but the camera.

"Finally! Bow, Adora, grab my hand!"

A moment later, all three disappeared from the shuttle and reappeared inside the storage room on screen.

Phase two of the infiltration had begun.

*****​

Catra stared at the screen showing the feed from the micro-spy bot as Bow started to hack the security system in the basement while Adora and Glimmer stood guard. She should be there with the others, not back up here in the shuttle. She understood the reasons for this - teleporting three additional people three was far more draining than two, according to Glimmer, and still less draining than carrying one person twice, and since Glimmer was their way in and out, they couldn't exhaust her needlessly and Bow was needed to deal with the sensors and Adora was the better protector than Catra - but she still hated waiting while others risked their lives.

And she was going to be the next Glimmer teleported to the basement once Bow was finished. And if anyone objected, they'd better not be in clawing range!

"Alright - security is looped!" Bow announced.

"And the micro-spy bot is recharged."

"Area's still clear of patrols. Proceeding to the shaft's top."


Catra clenched her teeth as the three moved. She could sneak far better than that! But a group was only as sneaky as the weakest member.

Fortunately, they didn't have to go far. Just three rooms down. Apophis's workers had sealed off the shafts with heavy concrete covers when they had built the palace - or when they had finished the basement; the palace might be older than that; they couldn't tell yet. It wouldn't stop Adora, of course, but ripping the concrete away would make it very, very obvious that someone had been here - and where they had gone.

So, Adora didn't just crack and heave away the concrete. No, she changed her sword into a drill. Catra snorted when she saw her lover struggle a bit with drilling a hole with a bore just wide enough for the micro-spy bot, but it didn't take her long to breach the concrete plate. Then the bot floated down, and Bow mixed up some concrete dust and glue from one of his arrows to patch the hole up again. It shouldn't look out of place in the old basement - it wasn't as if the concrete hadn't been repaired before.

And now, with a feed to the actual mineshaft, Glimmer could finally get Catra - and everyone else - down there!

She still had to wait for Glimmer to teleport Adora and Bow into the mine, but as soon as Glimmer reappeared in the shuttle, Catra was at her side. "Let's go, Sprakles!"

Glimmer rolled her eyes with a wry grin, but didn't comment, and a moment later, Catra found herself - and Jack - in a dusty, dark mining tunnel - well, more like a storage tunnel; she could see the remains of a lift's engine and broken mining tools around as her eyes quickly adjusted.

And Adora, of course. Catra quickly joined her love, and they watched Bow direct the micro-spy bot around while Glimmer fetched the rest of the team.

She looked a bit tired, but far from exhausted at the end, Catra noted, but she knew her friend would have enough left to get them out again - and some for an emergency. But not enough for petty stuff.

So she peered down the main shaft. "I hope you got enough rope."

"We calculated the length ahead of time," Entrapta replied. "So we were sure it would be less than the mass for cargo carriers to float down."

Catra had known that - had checked the math - but she nodded anyway. "Then let's get going." All that dust would be hell to get out of her fur - well, the fur not covered by her suit, at least, which was mostly her face and head - so best to get this over with.

This time, Catra took point, She had the best eyes and ears, after all, and no one beat her at climbing. That wouldn't matter much rappelling down, but if she had to get back up in a hurry…

She kept looking down every branching tunnel she passed but didn't see any sign of a threat, or anything alive at all. Just more broken tools and lots of stone. All the way down to the ground.

"I've reached the bottom," she informed the others through her communicator. "Air's clean, area clear."

Too clear, actually, she realised - no litter, no left tools, nothing. Just rock. Magical rock, according to their scanner, and far too smooth to be natural.

On a whim, she pulled off one glove and pressed her palm to the ground. Warm. Warmer than the normal rock that formed the shaft.

A shiver ran through her body, and she gasped. That had felt like… Another shiver cut her thoughts off.

The rock was not just active, it was…

She pulled her hand back and got up. "The rock's sending out some sort of pulse."

"Did you touch it?" Adora asked.

What question was that? "We came here to examine it," she defended herself.

"You didn't have to touch it! Stay away from it! We're coming!"

"I am staying on top of it!" Catra snapped back. "I can't not touch it!"

Really, this was… "Shit!" she cursed.

"What? What's happening?"

Catra drew a breath through clenched teeth before she replied.

"The rock is moving, flowing. Forming… a face."

A face that was staring at her.

Shit.

*****​
 
Morally I'm not sure this is any different from her chopping apart the Jaffa holding a hostage at gunpoint last chapter. The Goauld is holding a hostage and inherently threatening their life or eternal servitude if not removed. Killing the threat is morally no different than killing that Jaffa.
It's not the same if one is an active combatant and the other is a prisoner. They can hold Goa'uld in prison without endagering anyone.
 

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