mashimero: my emoji (Stargate Atlantis Reverse Bang)
mashimero ([personal profile] mashimero) wrote in [community profile] sgareversebang2010-07-19 06:40 am

Encircled/Figure Eights, Infinity, Helixes Forming

preview

Artist: [personal profile] crysothemis
Title: Encircled
Medium: pencil, colored pencil, photoshop
Pairing(s): none
Notes: nonsexual nudity (no visible dangly bits). Lots of room for interpretation, potential for angst (or not -- it's really how you want to look at it), science fiction elements.

Author: [personal profile] sheafrotherdon
Title: Figure Eights, Infinity, Helixes Forming
Wordcount: ~5,000
Rating: PG (for swearing)
Pairing(s): John/Rodney, past Teyla/Kanaan
Summary: Teyla dreams
Notes: With grateful thanks to [livejournal.com profile] dogeared for brainstorming help and invaluable beta skills, and to [personal profile] mashimero for her kindness and understanding.



Encircled by crysothemis



Figure Eights, Infinity, Helixes Forming


In her dream, each was vulnerable, baring the nape of his neck to whomever might look. It was this at which Teyla marveled. Standing at the edge of an unfamiliar dreamscape, she looked upon her team curled waiting, poised in what seemed like sleep. That they were naked did not shock her. She had seen their bodies – filthy, bleeding, sweating, vivid – too many times to count.

But these bowed heads, these touched her – the curve of Ronon's spine and the fall of his hair; the loose, weary circle of John's arms about his knees; Rodney, so rigid, his body tensed and eyes closed as he willed the world away.

She had questions, but what words came to mind fell away before she could speak them – this was not a place for talk. Quietly she kept her vigil as her team, in utter stillness, kept theirs.

*****

"Did any of you experience unusual dreams last night?" Teyla asked at breakfast.

There was a moment's silence, a brief lull in the general mayhem of eating, drinking, and exchanging information, ribald gossip, and sports scores from Ashnik on the outer edges of the solar system.

"Define 'unusual,'" Rodney said, breaking the moment, peering warily over the rim of his coffee mug.

"A dream you have not had before," Teyla offered. "A dream that could . . . " She thought about how best to articulate her meaning. "Something to which you have not paid sufficient attention."

"Is this going to end up with me punching myself in the face?" asked John.

Teyla sighed.

"I don't dream," offered Ronon.

Rodney typed a string of letters and numbers into his datapad. "I'm pulling up the mission reports for the last 72 hours. If anyone been near anything that . . ."

"I do not suspect the involvement of outside forces or other species," Teyla interrupted, trying to invest her words with a patience she didn't necessarily feel. "Nor do I believe," she continued forestalling Rodney's next question, "that there has been Ancient or Wraith interference in my sleep patterns. I was just . . . curious."

"I dreamed I was chopping lettuce," said Rodney, waving his fork. "Not the iceberg kind, the expensive kind with the fancy colored edges, doesn't need chopping, it's the kind you rip, but there I was, chopping lettuce in this air hangar in the middle of nowhere and I was trying to remember the fingering to the Chopin piece I played for the North Shore Music Festival back in – anyway, that doesn't matter, because then? Then? Then I woke up and found Zelenka had frozen himself in carbonite, only I wasn't really awake, that came after."

"You get him out?" John asked.

"Of course. Same sequence Leia used."

"So this is about a dream you had?" Ronon asked Teyla, bumping his tray against hers to get her attention.

"That is not important."

"Of course it's important!" Rodney blustered. "It's the difference between a hypothetical situation and a concrete matter of . . . what did you dream?"

"Again," Teyla offered, raising her mug of tea to her lips. "It is not important."

John raised an eyebrow. "Ohhhh. One of those dreams."

"It is not any particular kind of dream – "

"Naked," Ronon suggested.

"Totally naked," Rodney agreed. "Who was it? Caldwell? Sam?"

"Hermiod," John murmured gloomily.

Teyla let out a long, slow breath. "The content is immaterial . . . "

"Naked," Ronon said again, grinning.

Teyla decided upon a change of tactics. "Yes. You were all extremely naked."

There was a long moment of silence.

"Well," Rodney offered, his voice a little strained. "This isn't awkward at all."

*****

She was visited by the dream again two nights later. Her team rested as before, curled in supplication or defense or sleep – she could not tell which of these caused their silence, their bowed heads, their inactivity. She tried to move closer but was prevented, by what she could not tell, and so she loosened her body, stood as witness, watched to see what clue the dream might give.

Pillars stood, sentries between stone and shore, a circle to surround her team, to separate them from the water that lapped serenely in the distance of the dreamscape. There was light amid the scene, light above, light beyond them, winking, blurring as though shining through cloud, streaming from heights she could not fathom, forming patterns that shifted and were gone. There was warmth here, trust, and yet still no one spoke. Teyla closed her own eyes, let herself fall into the welcome of the nowhere place.

*****

"Rodney!" Teyla called, catching sight of Rodney's back just before he turned a corner. "Rodney – wait." She hurried down the corridor after him, catching him by the elbow. "You missed our appointment this morning."

"Ah, yes," Rodney said waspishly. "Ritual beating with sticks. How silly of me."

Teyla slowly raised one eyebrow. "And you could not radio to let me know?" She let her hand drop. "That has been your practice on previous occasions where you were called away to urgent business."

Rodney colored slightly and his mouth tightened. "I. Might have been distracted," he said, voice pitched just a fraction too high.

"Oh?" Teyla waited.

He sighed and pulled three thick envelopes from the inside of his uniform jacket. "Mail from Earth."

Teyla could see the scrawl of Jeannie's familiar handwriting. "Is there bad news?"

"I don't know, I haven't opened them yet." Rodney's neck turned a darker shade of pink in the seconds that followed. "Look, it's very disturbing, okay, to do my job, and to know what I know, and to have a sister out there, willy nilly just – " he waved his hand, "gallivanting around Canada when the Ori could strike at any minute, and then there's the fact that the Wraith could find Earth, I mean, that's surely only a matter of time don't you think, before they figure it out, or adjust their engines, or, god, adjust their engines, everything I'm saying right now is making me stupider." He slumped against the wall. "And I'm saying all this to you? I mean, you've lost, oh, god, only almost everyone to the Wraith already and you've been through all kinds of things, and your son is off doing his – what do you call it – elder year, learning things with berries and old people and you have to trust that your whole community is going to be safe or he's – and here I am, worried about the statistical probability of my sister being eaten by space vampires when the space vampires are actually here? Please, just shoot me now."

Teyla hid her smile and laid her hands on Rodney's upper arms, bent her head and waited for him to respond, to rest his brow against hers. "And so you do not read her letters for fear that you will think all this?"

"Well." Rodney huffed a breath that brushed over Teyla's nose. "That's the theory."

"Only . . ."

"Only I already am thinking about it, I know, I know." He made a strangled noise.

Teyla squeezed his arms and straightened slowly. "Perhaps we might go somewhere quiet. I am always fascinated by the photographs Jeannie includes – the magazine articles about the injuries sustained by hockey players are quite interesting. You could open the letters. For me."

Rodney pressed his lips together, staring at the letters in his hand. "I try to only care about people who can use a gun, these days," he said wistfully, one corner of his mouth twitching in something like wry humor. "At least they can defend themselves."

Teyla smiled. "I have heard Jeannie's turns of phrase. She is not defenseless."

"Ha." Rodney met her gaze. "Point."

"So. The magazine articles?"

"Fine." Rodney nodded determinedly and hooked her hand around his arm. "Fine. I'll open the letters. But only because you want to see what's inside. It's just one of a hundred things I do daily for other people. I give and I give . . . "

"You do indeed," Teyla said, nodding gravely, and she only let herself smile after Rodney had done so first.

*****

When the dream came next, it was changed. Where Rodney had once sat, tense and rigid, there was only light – light that swooped and changed, tumbling in and over itself, wrapping figure eights, infinity, helixes forming in front of Teyla's eyes. She glanced at John, who remained quiet and still; at Ronon crouched as though he might spring forward at any moment, as though he might run . . .

Oh, Teyla thought, and pressed a hand over her heart. Is this your purpose?

The light tumbled on.

*****

John's skill with a bantos rod was still that of a reasonably competent child, but, like a child, he was sometimes gifted with moments of accidental genius, and as he tripped Teyla that morning she was surprised he did not throw back his head and crow.

"Well done," she said generously as he offered her his hand, smirking all the while. "It has been some time since you attained m'atachanaa."

Confusion flitted across John's face, but he hid it quickly. "Yeah," he said, nodding with forced nonchalance. "Sure. That."

Teyla laughed softly. "I see your lessons in Athosian have not yet taken root." He did not respond. "M'atachanaa is a proficiency in song, usually fulfilled by a child's third birthday."

"I knew that." John twirled his bantos rod. "Just – you know. Playing along."

"Quite." Teyla ambled to the window seat. "Perhaps we call an end to our practice for the day."

"Eh, I could go some more, but if you're tired . . ."

Teyla narrowly prevented herself from rolling her eyes. "Instead, might I pose a question?"

John flopped down on the window seat beside her. "Okay."

"When thinking of Ronon – is there any particular . . . vulnerability that comes to mind?" She wiped down her bantos rods with a soft cloth. "Something that might . . . "

"Left shoulder." John nodded when she looked up at him. "Makes him slower if you're coming up with a jab to the . . ." He demonstrated, making pow pow noises as he pretended to box.

"His shoulder," Teyla repeated, feeling a little dazed.

"Other than that – nothing. Guy's a fortress."

"I was thinking," Teyla said gently, choosing her words, "more of . . . personal vulnerabilities. Emotional."

John froze, eyebrows raised. "Huh," he said, looking slowly toward the door.

Teyla tsked. "I realize this is not your forté, and I would not ask if not for . . . " She raised a hand, then let it fall when she realized she had no gesture that could make this more comprehensible. "You are good friends. I wondered if, perhaps, you knew something that . . . You must talk?"

"Talk." John nodded slowly. "Sure. We talk."

"And that perhaps he would confess to you things which he might . . ."

John leaned in closer. "Sex things?"

"No, no, not – " She paused, revising her thoughts. "It is perhaps possible that yes, matters of the body may be involved, but no, that is – you talk about sex things with Ronon?"

John folded his arms and looked up at the ceiling. "No." He glanced sidelong in her direction. "I mean. He can have a girlfriend. Or a boyfriend."

Teyla stared at him. People from Earth were utterly confounding. "Is that not obvious?"

"Right." John looked at the ceiling again.

It seemed there was no particular insight she might glean from this conversation – only a headache to be bought by pursuing things further. "Well. I am grateful for this . . . frank conversation," Teyla managed. "Perhaps later we might shoot things."

"Awesome." John's body relaxed in a moment and he grinned at her. "Yeah. Okay. So, I'll radio you after – I got a thing with . . . " He stood, and clapped her on the shoulder. "Good sticks." And he left.

*****

With the datapad that she and Rodney had customized to her needs, Teyla could access all the files of the Atlantis expedition for which she had clearance, including most reports related to her team. She spent the afternoon rereading Ronon's debriefing after his arrival on base; his memories of Sateda; the tactics that had allowed him to survive, defying the anger of the Wraith for so long. That avenue too quickly exhausted, she turned to the Ancients' own libraries, to the texts that spoke of ritual and ceremony on a thousand planets, to the cultural observations that preserved ideas and hopes and religious rite where none were left to imbue them with life.

It took time, after that – days that stretched into trying weeks – to find the correct silk on an off-world mission; longer still to find someone who might weave what she required. The dream came twice more while she laid her plans, and was still the same – light where Rodney had existed, John, silent, Ronon poised as though pleading and yet readying himself for flight at the very same time.

By the third Betnah moon, Teyla's gift was ready – a blanket woven in greens and blues, a thin red thread running hem to heel along one hand-stitched edge. She waited with patience for the means to transfer ownership, seized her opportunity one darkening evening, seeking Ronon at his quarters after a day in the field. "I understand it is traditional," she said, standing at his threshold. "A Tedat bolt for the base of your bed."

Ronon took the fabric in his hands, stepped back from her unsteadily. "At home, yeah."

"And is this not your home now?" she asked.

Ronon's expression, when he met her gaze, was haunted, and for a second she wondered at the wisdom of what she had done. When he spoke, however, it was without anger. "Maybe," he said.

"Maybe?" she repeated.

He ducked his head, crossed his room, and with an easy hand beckoned her inside. "Home's permanent."

"Do you wish to leave?" she asked as the door closed behind her.

"No." He rubbed the Tedat between thumb and forefinger. "But that's not always a choice a person gets to make."

"Ah." She smiled carefully, and sat at the edge of his mattress. "You believe they will come here, looking for you." She meant the words as a question, but when they rolled off her tongue as a statement of fact she could not dispute their sincerity.

"Maybe." Ronon shrugged, but the gesture was awkward, an ill-fit across shoulders that had borne much.

"And if they did, do you think that we would let them take you again? We did not let them take you before. We brought you home."

Ronon grimaced, wrestling with something inside before he spoke. "And every time that happened, one of you would be putting your life on the line," he said, his teeth gritted fast. "There's been too much – all of it. Death. Killing. Sacrifice. I won't . . . " He bit off his own words.

Teyla studied the floor tiles beside his feet. "You had good friends on Sateda."

"And?"

"You would have given your life for any of them just as we would give our lives for you." She looked up at him. "Is that not the very definition of home, given all that we face? That I will stand beside you if they come, that I believe your life as worthy as mine?"

Ronon made a face and swallowed hard. "Look what happened to my homeworld, to – "

"And my people also. And a hundred thousand more."

Ronon said nothing.

"Accept this place as your home," she whispered. "Can ill come from setting down roots in such a place?"

"If I could . . ." Ronon stepped forward, halted, then sat beside her, cloth still wadded in his hands. "Roots are . . ."

"They are what we have left," Teyla offered, laying her hand atop his. "Will you not spread the Tedat? It was, as John might say, a royal pain in regions best unmentioned, for me to supply."

Ronon barked a laugh, his face lighting up briefly with unexpected mirth. "How can I refuse when you say it like that?" he asked, reaching behind her to shake the blanket out. He tugged at the cloth, smoothed it a little. "Good color," he said. "Clan."

"And red for Atlantis," she smiled.

He smiled wryly. "Sounds about right." And he kissed her roughly on the brow.

*****

Only John lingered on in Teyla's dream after that, forehead still pressed gently against his knees, face all but hidden. Light chased lazily around him, spinning warmth from the dreamscape's twilight hues, yet he did not stir, did not sweat – he breathed slowly, his spine stretching skin as he lingered in something that seemed like peace.

But the scene was lonely without Rodney and Ronon. That John sat, showing no expectation that much might change, did not surprise her – here, head bowed, neck bare, he was something more than a military commander, someone quite different from the man who might issue orders and shoulder a gun. Here he was naked in every sense, and yet lingered in solitude. Teyla wished she might move toward him, but the dream held her fast.

*****

"I have not seen John today," Teyla remarked as she sat down to dinner, placing her glass of cold fyka ale away from the reach of Rodney's elbows. "There have been messages, but . . . "

"Oh, you won't," Rodney said blithely, tucking into an enormous sandwich of something he liked to call bacon, although there was no baking of the Taag beast involved. He chewed enthusiastically, humming a little. Ronon was similarly occupied, although without musical accompaniment.

"I will not?" Teyla prompted, hoping to coax Rodney from his reverie.

Rodney chewed a little faster, and mercifully swallowed before he said much more. "It's the anniversary of when his mom died."

Ronon paused in his chewing. "Huh."

Teyla turned the new information over in her mind. "I did not know that he marked such a day. "

Rodney nodded. "He doesn't like to – you know. Talk about it. Ever, really. I mean, I know, and I'm sure it's okay that you know, but it's probably best you don't say anything to him about it. He gets . . . weird."

"Was his loss recent?" Teyla asked.

"No, no. He was a kid. It's just . . . " Rodney scrunched up his face for a second. "Things got kinda rough after that. He and his dad . . . "

"His brother's a prick," Ronon offered.

"That too."

Teyla picked at the poultry on her plate. "Is he well? Does he need . . . "

"Trust me," Rodney said, and for once there was no bluster or self-aggrandizement in his tone. "He just needs to be alone."

Teyla thought of her dream, and wondered.

*****

There was much to contemplate about the situation. It was not only that John chose solitude – his defense against all that life could throw into his path was studied disinterest, a wry humor that side-stepped rage. She knew his regard for her best from his banter, from his trust in the field – he avoided touch, and spoke of his heart only under the gravest duress. Yet he had told Rodney about his childhood, about a mother lost and a family undone; he had trusted him with the knowledge of the places from which he had come.

Teyla watched, and saw much now that she had not seen before – saw John match his steps with Rodney's when their trips off-world were peaceful and unrushed; saw him glance with frequency and feign ignorance of the same; saw him reach out a steadying hand that lingered while Rodney seemed oblivious to all that it entailed.

There were times, Teyla thought, when caution and grace might make a fix, and others where a physical challenge might make right what was wrong. But this, this well-masked wanting, this hidden self – there was no subtlety she could imagine effecting change. John was too stubborn; Rodney too obtuse.

And so: "I wish to understand Do Not Ask, No Don’t Tell," she said one day as the morning briefing was almost done.

John choked on his coffee. Rodney clapped him on the back. Ronon ate a pastry – he seemed ready to listen to what was said.

"And what do you wish to know, Ms. Emmagan?" Wolsey asked.

Teyla was not entirely certain – as strategies went for encouraging a man like John Sheppard to consider partnership, this was not exactly the most well thought out. She rallied. "As I understand it, a member of your military may not enter into relations with a member of the opposite sex."

"United States military," Rodney corrected. "We Canadians can fuck whomever we want."

John choked again.

"Provided we're in the military, I mean," Rodney continued. "Well, no, actually, I mean – I can fuck anyone I want, because I'm Canadian and a civilian and really, I've always enjoyed the pleasures provided by both men and women – I would say 'both sexes' but that's a patently reductionist approach to the complexities of both biology and culture, and anyway, where was I? Yes, yes – I can fuck anyone, provided that they would also like to fuck, because consent is very important, and I actually, fucking is rather coarse a term for the activities that I prefer because . . . "

"Dr. McKay," said Woolsey, who was passing his pen rather fervently back and forth from hand to hand. "If you could . . . at least curse a little less . . ."

"Yes, right, so – I am a civilian, Canadian, open to all kinds of propositions, no rules preventing me from, well, doing things with people who also enjoy doing things. Sheppard on the other hand . . . "

Teyla whimpered a little inside.

"He's military, so if he wanted to engage in things with people who also enjoyed other things, he'd have to be doing things with women who liked those things, not men. Because the Congress of the United States has decided that women who like doing things with women and men who like doing things with men, or perhaps men and women who enjoy, like me, a variety of propositions including periodic enjoyment of things with people like themselves, well, they can't use guns. Or something. Things are bad for morale – which, I think you'll agree, is patently untrue."

"Things are great for morale," Ronon put in. "I was in the Army. I had things."

"Exactly! So, Sheppard here, if he wanted to do things of that sort, would supposedly have very poor morale indeed. But Congress is happy. Which is oh, so important because they're several thousand light years away. Which reminds me – why haven't we just decided we're going to be thing-friendly because anything else would be, I don't know, culturally backward out here in Pegasus?" Rodney asked.

Woolsey blinked several times and wiped his forehead. "I – uh. Well. Such a change would require research and, uh . . ."

John seemed to be frozen in his chair.

"So if I understand this correctly," Teyla said, glancing at John. "Your men and women are not free to form lasting partnerships with those for whom they feel affection, regardless of their military record and service in the field?"

John opened his mouth but nothing came out. He cleared his throat, took a swallow of coffee, and said, "Yes."

"May they have these relationships if they keep them secret?" Teyla asked.

"Uh, yes," John said, and pulled at his coffee again.

"As long as no one finds out! What good is that – it's positively ridiculous," Rodney spluttered. "I mean, if I wanted to do things . . . oh, right, Canadian, bad example. If Sheppard wanted to do things with Ronon, he should be . . . "

"Ronon?" John said weakly.

"Yeah, you're not my type," Ronon offered.

"But my point is . . . "

"He's more your type," Ronon said, nodding in Rodney's direction.

Rodney halted, mouth flapping uselessly for a good ten seconds. "Huh?"

Woolsey seized the moment as best he could. "So, I could perhaps, I believe that – " He cleared his throat. "I believe Dr. Weir once made inquiries into . . . I . . . " He blew out a breath. "Let me be frank. Dr. Weir assembled an admirable dossier on the sexual, kinship, and friendship practices across several dozen worlds here in Pegasus during her tenure as commander. Her research was exhaustive, and her conclusions . . . I am inclined to agree that we might . . . If I could just have a day or two to think this through. And I had quite forgotten that at – yes, I am due, an appointment with . . ." He gathered up his papers, his pen, his datapad. "If we could convene again tomorrow, as usual, thank you. Thank you."

Teyla watched him go.

"I'm his type?" Rodney said.

"Yeah," Ronon offered. "I mean, it's obvious."

John slid down in his chair by at least three inches.

"I confess," Teyla said quietly. "I too would . . . imagine you well-suited as partners."

Rodney blinked, looked at John, looked at Ronon and Teyla, and looked at John again. "Oh my god, did you tell them something? Do they know something that I don't?"

"What?" John squawked, sitting up. "I – what? Nothing – no!"

"Did they get you drunk and you confessed your thing to them instead of, oh, say, to me? Because if you're looking to get laid, telling me is just a tad quicker than trusting it to your fifth-grade minions!"

"Am I offended by that?" Ronon asked Teyla.

"No," she said. "It is – let us move along."

"But – " John lifted a hand and let it fall. "I don't even – " He pointed dumbly at Teyla. "She had questions! That's all!"

Rodney shook his head, staring at John as though he were some sort of vaguely attractive but definitely dull-witted lifeform recently emerged from under a rock. "Hopeless," he said, and leaned in to place a kiss squarely on John's mouth.

"Um," John said faintly, but then he was kissing Rodney back, and Teyla felt a surge of relief, that such an ending might arise from such chaos.

*****

Dinner that night was pleasant – deeply so, all of them gathered together with their burdens lightened, though none would say as much aloud. Teyla watched Rodney tease John, saw the quiet delight in John's eyes, a subtler indicator of joy than his braying laughter. Ronon, too, played his part, stealing Rodney's food and suffering insults, though none appeared to sting. Teyla smiled, her heart full to see her team so contented, and if she stared out over the water, it was only to contemplate those who were not near: her son; his father – friend now, not partner, but dear nonetheless; those lost; those missing. It was a wearying business, to be the one who yet stood strong, the caretaker for those long dead and yet unborn as well as those who lived. She relished the heat of Ronon's arm against her own, the infantile gesture of John flicking peas, the stories Rodney told. All of this was ward against darkness.

She did not expect the dream to come again, but it did that night – a vision of an empty stone circle, pillars rising toward the sky, light painting joyful filigree where her friends had once rested. She smiled at the beauty that lingered, the colors of stone and sea and shore, and she wondered that she was still given grace to visit, that the work was unfinished though her team was gone.

"We're right here," Ronon said, standing beside her – focused on the shore, Teyla had not realized that she had company, that her team, stripped bare like herself, flanked her on either side. "All of us."

"Yeah," John said.

"Right here," Rodney offered.

"I do not understand," Teyla said, and she reached carefully to touch a shoulder, a face, an elbow. The men beside her watched her fondly – it was unexpected; their presence as baffling as their patience beneath her touch. "You came back?" she asked.

"We never left," John said.

"We were always here," Rodney confirmed.

Teyla shook her head as if she might dislodge her confusion, only relaxing a fraction when Ronon gently pressed his hand against the back of her neck. "You didn't think this was all about us?" he asked.

And when Teyla woke to the gray light of a new morning, the swell of the ocean calling softly from beneath the piers and bridges of her home, she smiled. Her pillow was soft, her blankets warm, and the tang of salt against her lips linked her with dreams fading fast.

She rested, content.

[identity profile] dancinguniverse.livejournal.com 2010-07-19 11:01 pm (UTC)(link)
"Things are great for morale," Ronon put in. "I was in the Army. I had things."

Also:

"Am I offended by that?" Ronon asked Teyla.

"No," she said. "It is – let us move along."

This was lovely. I mean, those things I quoted, those were hilarious. My new roommate, with whom I have not yet shared my fanficcy tendencies, was like, "What are you giggling about?" And I just had to say, "Not important!"

But the story as a whole was lovely, and the artwork was gorgeous, and I love this.

sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-19 11:40 pm (UTC)(link)
thank you so much!

(no subject)

[personal profile] crysothemis - 2010-07-20 01:13 (UTC) - Expand

[personal profile] darklock 2010-07-19 11:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Beautiful. Thank-you. :-)
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-19 11:40 pm (UTC)(link)
thank you! :D
laitaine: (sga - team - field)

[personal profile] laitaine 2010-07-19 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh wow! Ladies, you are amazing!

The art is absolutely breathtaking - the composition and the colours... it's gorgeous!

And the fic has given me a lovely warm-fuzzy-happy feeling. Glorious :)
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-19 11:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm so glad for warm-fuzzy-happy! :D Thank you!

(no subject)

[personal profile] crysothemis - 2010-07-20 01:13 (UTC) - Expand

[personal profile] linziday 2010-07-20 12:38 am (UTC)(link)
OMG, absolutely lovely fic for an absolutely lovely piece of artwork!

Heartbreaking and heartfelt, tinged with moments of startling but realistic humor. You always write the team -- individually and together-- so very, very well, but some of the character moments you have here are breathtaking. Some of my favorites:

It seemed there was no particular insight she might glean from this conversation – only a headache to be bought by pursuing things further. "Well. I am grateful for this . . . frank conversation," Teyla managed. "Perhaps later we might shoot things."

"Awesome." John's body relaxed in a moment and he grinned at her. "Yeah. Okay. So, I'll radio you after – I got a thing with . . . " He stood, and clapped her on the shoulder. "Good sticks." And he left.

--

"He's military, so if he wanted to engage in things with people who also enjoyed other things, he'd have to be doing things with women who liked those things, not men. Because the Congress of the United States has decided that women who like doing things with women and men who like doing things with men, or perhaps men and women who enjoy, like me, a variety of propositions including periodic enjoyment of things with people like themselves, well, they can't use guns. Or something. Things are bad for morale – which, I think you'll agree, is patently untrue."

"Things are great for morale," Ronon put in. "I was in the Army. I had things."



--
"Did they get you drunk and you confessed your thing to them instead of, oh, say, to me? Because if you're looking to get laid, telling me is just a tad quicker than trusting it to your fifth-grade minions!"

"Am I offended by that?" Ronon asked Teyla.

--

Love this.




crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-20 01:14 am (UTC)(link)
Yay, thank you!

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d_odyssey: (Default)

[personal profile] d_odyssey 2010-07-20 12:40 am (UTC)(link)
Gorgeous artwork. I love the use of light and the bright colors. The poses are fascinating, so cool the Rodney and John's positions mirror one another and Ronon seems in motion, rising. Stunning.

Thoughtful and wonderful take on the picture. Perfect way to tie Teyla into the story. Enjoyed her POV, how she took the dreams to heart and tried to help her family. The story was poignant, cute, clever and heart tugging. The DADT conversation was hilarious - Rodney totally oblivious, John ready to implode and Woolsey wanting to get the heck out of Dodge. Yay for Teyla and Ronon giving Rodney the shove/wake up call. Love this story.

Great art and great story - winning combination.
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-20 01:14 am (UTC)(link)
Ooh, thank you! So glad the poses and light and colors work for you.

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(Anonymous) 2010-07-20 12:42 am (UTC)(link)
How very lovely, indeed. Yes, I think Teyla would definitely communicate with herself in dream language and you use it most effectively.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 01:41 am (UTC)(link)
thank you so much!
reddwarfer: Rimmer art (You ass)

[personal profile] reddwarfer 2010-07-20 01:29 am (UTC)(link)
Sorry for not commenting on it earlier as I fail...

Crys, your art was absolutely gorgeous. The colours and the imagery are just lovely.
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-20 01:42 am (UTC)(link)
Aww, no fail! Thanks so much, I'm so glad you liked the art as well. (And don't worry -- I totally understand about getting distracted by the story. *pages up to reread yet again*)
winter_elf: Sherlock Holmes (BBC) with orange soft focus (Default)

[personal profile] winter_elf 2010-07-20 02:08 am (UTC)(link)
Lovely art! .... which I've mentioned :)

Cool story - I enjoyed how you worked in Teyla helping out the boys - and then them being there for her! Oh John! Yea, I can see him being a tough nut to crack. And lovely insight into Ronon. Nice team fic.
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-20 04:16 am (UTC)(link)
You have! But thank you again. ♥

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foursweatervests: Natasha, hidden (I've got sunshine)

[personal profile] foursweatervests 2010-07-20 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, so lovely.
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-22 05:21 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you!
kashmir: (Default)

[personal profile] kashmir 2010-07-20 03:45 am (UTC)(link)
This story is just so, so beautiful. I love how it showcases the threads of friendship that these four have woven together and oh, the ending, when Teyla has the dream again and her boys are all standing with her! I have to be truthful -- it brought a tear or two to my eye. Lovely, lovely story. <3

And oh, oh -- how could I forgot about the beautifully crafted art that inspired this! So beautiful and so interesting!
Edited 2010-07-20 03:48 (UTC)
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-20 04:18 am (UTC)(link)
*beams*

Thank you! So glad you liked.

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(Anonymous) 2010-07-20 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
Beautiful art and a wonderful team fic! I absolutely love the way you've capture their voices.

stillwaters11
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-20 04:18 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you! ♥

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sentientcitizen: Rose Tyler throws her head back and laughs. (Default)

[personal profile] sentientcitizen 2010-07-20 05:06 am (UTC)(link)
"Well. I am grateful for this . . . frank conversation," Teyla managed. "Perhaps later we might shoot things."

Best. Line. Ever. Also:

"Things are great for morale," Ronon put in. "I was in the Army. I had things."

^Made me snort water out my nose. This whole thing was an improbably wonderful combination of beautiful and hilarious. Gorgeous artwork, gorgeous wordsmithing - much applause to both of you!
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
\o/ a water snort! Win!!! :D :D

[personal profile] fanficfan_123 2010-07-20 05:49 am (UTC)(link)
A warm, wry story,with Teyla's subtle and growing insights into her teammates and, finally, herself. I particularly enjoyed the banter over the conference table about "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"--Rodney-speak so finely-tuned in its pointed vagueness. I appreciated how the story--and its title--interpreted the art's glowing mysteries: taking the individual elements,redefining them in ways that connected them, and then gave them the "ultimate connection," the helical linkage essential to life.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
thank you so much!

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shrift: batman: crime fighters never sleep (crime fighters never sleep)

[personal profile] shrift 2010-07-20 05:58 am (UTC)(link)
YAY, TEAM! ♥ Also: MARRY ME, TEYLA.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
ahahaha, she accepts your proposal!
sage: Still of Natasha Romanova from Iron Man 2 (sga: teyla smile)

[personal profile] sage 2010-07-20 06:10 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, yay TEAM! ♥

I love how this weaves together. It's really fascinating how Teyla mediates "home and security" for all three of them in different ways -- how she's lost so much but she works so hard to create a safe space for the others to allow themselves to accept love (and thus dare to love). Having that mirrored back at the end is lovely. *smishes them all together*
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
eeee, thank you, love!
danceswithgary: (Default)

[personal profile] danceswithgary 2010-07-20 01:39 pm (UTC)(link)
A lovely piece to go with beautiful artwork. I really liked how you chose to center it around Teyla as the only team member not appearing in the art.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much!

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zing_och: Teyla from Stargate Atlantis - caption "fights like a girl" (fights like a girl)

[personal profile] zing_och 2010-07-20 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I really liked this! I don't actually have words for the art, but I love looking at it all, especially the composition - the rings the men are sitting in, for example. It's is actually very dream-like, so picture and story fit well together. As for the story, I love Teyla here, of course *g*, but I enjoy the subtle way the rest of the team (and poor Woolsey) is drawn, too.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
thank you!!

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lou: rodney in his orange fleece (SGA Rodney fleece)

[personal profile] lou 2010-07-20 05:07 pm (UTC)(link)
first, I must say how much I am awed at the art piece. it's absolutely gorgeous! I love the colors and the ethereal quality of it (fitting that it was translated into a dream). The light effect is particularly beautiful, with the reflexions and flares. The curled forms of the boys are also fantastic, each showing something different in their character - Ronon is stunning -. I love it.

the fic takes all of this and the result is just perfectly fitting. Teyla as the POV character makes it complete and her voice is so wonderful. so much humor and patience dealing with those guys. Especially the emotional moron known as John Sheppard and his love for shooting things [nice sticks. OMG, it's epic! lol!], jeez. Woolsey made me laugh so much, too, poor him. it's one of those fics that will stay with me, no matter what, because it's TEAM and it made my heart grow two sizes for them when I thought it was impossible. ♥
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:57 pm (UTC)(link)
eeeee, I am so glad you liked it! Thank you!

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sarkka: midsummer bonfire that looks like a feenix (Default)

[personal profile] sarkka 2010-07-20 05:58 pm (UTC)(link)
WIN !
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-20 07:57 pm (UTC)(link)
thank you!
omg_wtf_yeah: Omar Little in side profile, with the text "All in the game" over his head. (Default)

[personal profile] omg_wtf_yeah 2010-07-21 04:01 am (UTC)(link)
That's really sweet. Funny and cute. And -- Weir compiling a study of friendship, kinship, and love across the Pegasus cultures -- makes me miss her like crazy.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-21 04:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you!!
nellacitta: (Default)

[personal profile] nellacitta 2010-07-21 04:28 pm (UTC)(link)
This is so so wonderful! I love how much Teyla cares for her team, and how she's able to show it in such careful ways (and oh, asking about Don't Ask Don't Tell was priceless! So funny, so true to them all.) But most of all, I love how she's not just the observer, but she's part of the scene crys painted as well, and that she has the support for her team as they do from her. <3!!!
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-22 01:14 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much! I'm really glad you liked Teyla being an active part of the scene!
tropes: (I'm peeing STARS!!!)

[personal profile] tropes 2010-07-21 04:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved it. :)
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-22 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
yay, I'm so glad! :D :D
oxoniensis: sheppard and mckay (fandom: sga big damn heroes)

[personal profile] oxoniensis 2010-07-21 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
That was gorgeous - such a lovely partnership between art and story.
sheafrotherdon: Two men, seated, leaning in to touch their foreheads together (Default)

[personal profile] sheafrotherdon 2010-07-22 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
thank you so much!

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[personal profile] crysothemis - 2010-07-22 05:19 (UTC) - Expand
saphirablue: (Default)

[personal profile] saphirablue 2010-07-22 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm still fascinated with the art! :)

Fic: I love the Teyla POV! I love her thoughts and how we see the men through her eyes. I love that she supports them and that they support her.

Thank you once again for the art and thank you for the fic! :)
crysothemis: (Default)

[personal profile] crysothemis 2010-07-22 10:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you!
ozsaur: (Candy Apples (14 Valentines))

[personal profile] ozsaur 2010-07-22 10:20 pm (UTC)(link)
So funny! Laughed out loud a couple of times. *g* But sweet too, made my heart squeeze a little bit. Wonderful Teyla POV.

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