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Chapter 222: Shockwaves Part 3 New
Chapter 222: Shockwaves Part 3

Research Station Alpha, First Moon of Enchantment, February 7th, 2002 (Earth Time)


"No, no - that column needs to stay. It's far too easy to realise that the data has been tampered with if the basics are wrong."

"That's data directly taken from Apophis's experiments, Loki. How could anyone know they have been tampered with without the original data?"

"It is obvious if you have experience with such experiments - and Nirrti will have such experience, Morrison. No, if we want to feed her data that won't be of any use to her but actually sabotage her research, we have to be far more subtle!"

"That presumes that she actually has advanced her research past this point already. And if she did that, why would she care about Apophis's research?"

"If she knew the exact extent of his research, she wouldn't have bothered with sending a ship to steal his data. So, the fact that she tried to raid his laboratory proves that she is still ignorant of his research, Morrison. If she had merely wanted to stop a competitor, she would simply have bombarded the entire installation from orbit."

"Unless she wasn't after the data, but after the resources. She must have had a spy in his court to know about the laboratory in the first place, and a highly-placed spy at that - few knew about the place. So, we cannot exclude the possibility that she actually was behind Apophis in her research - at least in that specific field."

"If Nirrti were still at that level, after dedicating thousands of years to her research, and even risking her position as a System Lord for it, then we wouldn't need to bother with this entire plan since she wouldn't be a threat at all!"

Samantha Carter suppressed a sigh. Watching Dr Morrison and Loki squabble like this was frustrating. Loki's reasoning for why he thought Nirrti would easily see through any tampering with the raw research data from Apophis's lab would have been concerning if Sam weren't already aware of his questionable ethics and history. They had a point - the Alliance had to be very careful with tampering with the data, to avoid giving the game away too easily and avoid giving away actually useful data that wasn't already obsolete. But the way they were going at it wasn't very productive.

"I once again want to state that I question the ethics of tampering with research data as a matter of principle."

The two were still more productive than Alpha, of course. The bot was doing everything short of insubordination - and Sam was pretty certain that Alpha refrained from that merely because the bot couldn't go against the specific orders Adora had given her - to stop the project altogether. Appealing to scientific ethics was one of the milder forms; malicious compliance was far more frustrating.

It figured, of course, that when the bot finally discovered ethical lines it didn't want to cross, after demonstrating a total lack of remorse and care about unethical experimentation as long as it furthered its goals, it would hinder the Alliance's plans.

Not for the first time, she felt as if she were herding cats. Big cats, like tigers, lions, or some genetically engineered combination of both, with alien parts grafted on them. "We're not destroying data - we're ensuring that an enemy cannot use our data to advance their research."

"But information yearns to be free."

Sam narrowed her eyes. Either Alpha had been watching Earth media - and she didn't think the bot was interested in anything not related to genetic engineering and research - or Entrapta had failed to explain a remark. Or the bot was just trying every argument, no matter how nonsensical. "Some information cannot be shared because it's far too dangerous."

"But basic genetic engineering research data isn't that dangerous."

Right. Alpha was a bot created by the Ancients, and Sam was already aware that their definitions of what was safe and what was dangerous left a lot to be desired.

"That still doesn't mean we should freely share it," Loki said.

"Not without a licensing agreement, at least," Morrison added.

"This is a military operation," Sam reminded them.

"Under Bright Moon's supervision," Angella said. Apparently, the ethical issues raised by everyone were not important enough for her to comment, but a reminder of who owned the station was. Then again, Angella was the only other being, next to Alpha, who had been in this base when it was built and used by the Ancients, but she wasn't a scientist.

Sam was, though. And she knew how to tackle the three squabbling biologists. "If it is too difficult to tamper with the raw research data without the results being obvious, we might have to consider alternatives."

"I never said it was too difficult." Loki, as expected, spoke up at once, his substantial pride and ego pricked. "I questioned the need to tamper with the data."

"We're playing it safe," Sam said.

"Risking Nirrti seeing through the deception straight away doesn't sound particularly safe to me," Morrison said.

"If it is too difficult for you to devise a way to sabotage the data that isn't obvious to an expert…"

"I never said it was! I merely pointed out the risks."

The two biologists glared at each other, then started typing on their respective computers and consoles, and Sam sighed softly with relief.

"If we're already poisoning data, wouldn't that mean we could use a poison or other agent to strike at Nirrti as well?"

Sam closed her eyes. Alpha defaulted to war crimes involving bioweapons again. That said a lot of things, and none of them good, about the people who built her. Mostly, though, it was giving her a headache. But as long as they could accomplish their task, it might be worth it.

Nirrti needed to be dealt with sooner rather than later.

*****​

Field Base Bra'tac, Saqqara, Saqqara System, February 8th, 2002 (Earth Time)

Catra frowned as she went over the next report. Another Goa'uld scouting force stopped by Alliance ships. Two Al'keshs this time, and one Tel'tak. The crews had tried to blow up their ships, but one Al'kesh had been taken more or less intact - well, still intact enough to have surviving crew members on board after the scuttling charges had been destroyed by precise fire; the Alliance wasn't about to risk their boarding parties against suicidal enemies. The captured Jaffa had been identified as serving Heru'ur, which matched what Analysis had recovered from the debris of the scouting force and fit the location - not too far from the border of Heru'ur's new territory. All pretty much as had been expected.

Although the composition of the force was slightly weird, in her opinion - usually, larger ships were escorted by more numerous smaller vessels. Was that a scratch force, drawn from what was available (and expendable), or was there some method behind it? If Heru'ur was lacking Tel'taks for scouting and recon deployments, which was one of their core missions, then shouldn't a lack of them have been noted by Apophis's spies and battlefield commanders beforehand? Or had Heru'ur been using his Tel'taks overly much, and now too many were either destroyed or down for critical maintenance and repairs at the same time?

She earmarked the report for Analysis and highlighted her remarks. They needed more intel about Heru'ur; both he and Cronus were likely to be the next enemy the Alliance would be focusing on. Though Nirrti might usurp that position if she continued trying to raid Apophis's old territory.

Although the Alliance hadn't encountered another raiding or scouting force sent by Nirrti. Either she was staying out of Alliance-occupied space, wasn't sending any such forces - or she had found a way to escape the Alliance sensor networks. The latter wouldn't be too difficult; space was so big, the spy bot network was struggling just to cover Alliance territory and the known systems of the Goa'uld bordering it. Nirrti would only need a bit of luck to slip through the net.

On the other hand, to actually get close enough to catch actionable intel, she would need advanced stealth technology that could fool Alliance sensors; they were covering the area around Earth for lightyears out to catch any ships trying to pick up radio transmissions after First Contact, and the policy was extended to the rest of Alliance space. No, Catra didn't think Nirrti was somehow sneaking past the Alliance pickets and sensor networks with stealth ships.

But neither did she think Nirrti had given up on looting Apophis's old territory of anything she wanted; the Goa'uld was, according to all accounts, obsessed with her research, and this was an opportunity she wouldn't miss. She could be going after the parts of Apophis's realm that the Alliance hadn't been able to secure (yet), but the spy network coverage was pretty dense there, so they should have noticed something.

But if Nirrti wasn't doing that either, what was she doing? She was a biologist, specialised in genetic engineering. And she had used her speciality to strike at Stargate Command before. Catra wouldn't put it past her to use similar means to spy on the Alliance. She couldn't insert spies on already occupied worlds, but on worlds the Alliance was securing later? It wouldn't be too hard to plant a few prepared agents, whether willing or not, or even ignorant, on such worlds and then wait until the Alliance forces arrived. And it was almost certain that she had placed spies on Saqqara and other worlds during Apophis's reign.

The Alliance was aware of that danger, of course, and was taking precautions - but a spy who had escaped Apophis's guards wouldn't be easy to catch. If they were biding their time and wouldn't attempt to contact Nirrti, they would be almost impossible to catch. And the Alliance could only do so much; sooner or later, there would be slip-ups, people would relax their guard… Catra was well aware of how soon complacency set in, even at the front. It would be much harder for every soldier to keep sharp on supposedly safe planets.

Well, Alliance planning was already taking into account the expectation that they would end up being exposed. Still, the longer they could delay that, the better. Though Nirrti might not cooperate…

"Are you going through with it?"

Catra set the tablet down and looked at Adora. There was no need to ask what she meant. "Yes." Adora frowned at her, so she added: "I'm the obvious choice, and if things go wrong, I have the best chances to escape." She held up her right hand and unsheathed her claws to emphasise the point.

"Glimmer could just teleport out."

"If we're on a world where you released the magic," Catra shot back. "And if you do that, you can't do it again and use the power."

Adora pouted at that, and Catra snorted. But her lover grew serious almost at once. "It's still very dangerous."

Catra shrugged. "I'm used to playing bait." She forced a cocky grin on her face. "And who else would be seen as a perfect host? Everyone else is using magic, and the Goa'uld can't use magic even if they take over someone who can. Me, on the other hand…"

Adora scowled at that. "Still…"

"I volunteered. If you want to veto that, I get to veto your next stunt." Catra bared her teeth; she wasn't budging about that.

"Catra…"

"Someone has to do it. Might as well be me." It wouldn't pay back what she had done before she had come to her senses, but it was a start.

Adora was unhappy, but, maybe, she might stop risking herself so much if the shoe were on the other foot for once.

*****​

Field Base Bra'tac, Saqqara, Saqqara System, February 9th, 2002 (Earth Time)

"Hyperspace sensors have detected a single ship headed to the system. Preliminary classification is Al'kesh. Preliminary data shows the exit area outside the planetary orbit."

Jack O'Neill muttered a brief curse as he read the report on his HUD - you really got used to the thing; he had secured a copy of Adora's version for himself so he could use it in his daily duties without having to wear a helmet. He was still trying to find a way to play games on it, though; Sam hadn't been amused at his 'joke' when he had brought it up, and he hadn't been able to get Bow or Entrapta alone yet. "We're getting a visitor," he commented when General Müller, the base commander, looked up from his tablet.

"Yes, sir." After a pause, the man added: "I was under the impression that such small intrusions were not considered a problem by the guard fleet stationed in the system."

"Well, they are dropping out pretty close to the planet, so they might be here for diplomacy. And protocol for such cases means I need to hide my face so there's no risk of exposing the Alliance's ties to Earth," Jack said. "And that means putting on a helmet."

"Ah." The General nodded, but his carefully neutral expression - even for the German - clearly stated that he didn't see a problem. The guy had probably been born with a helmet, or had his first helmet welded to his head in Kindergarten or something, to get used to it.

But Jack didn't like wearing a helmet. The Alliance combat suits were very comfortable - in fact, more comfortable than his regular uniform - and the helmet had been designed by the same team and was lighter than it looked, and far more comfortable, but… Jack still felt isolated and prone to missing stuff when he wore one. There was a reason, well, in addition to 'we don't want to spook the locals looking like we're looking for a fight', that Stargate Command hadn't worn helmets on most missions; wearing a helmet impaired your hearing and field of vision. Not very much, of course, but every little bit counted on some missions, but Jack had spent two decades internalising that, according to Daniel.

So, while he trusted Sam that the new suit's helmet was actually enhancing his senses - and had tested it - his gut still felt half-blind and deaf when he was wearing it.

Hiding his face also made him feel like a sort of stormtrooper, but that was beside the point.

"So… let's find out if that's a stealth mission or if whoever is behind it wants to talk while spying on us," he said.

"Would they send single ships for a stealth recon mission, sir?" Müller asked.

Jack shrugged as he grabbed his helmet, just in case, and checked on his HUD that his shuttle was ready to take him into orbit, also just in case. "They might have decided to reduce their losses." The snakes might not care about the lives of their slaves, both humans and Jaffa, but they didn't like losing ships or warriors for no gain. Hell, Jack wouldn't be surprised if some ambitious underling used such missions to squirrel away ships for their own use and get rid of rivals or subordinates loyal to their System Lord. Analysis was chasing every possible lead about such internal fractures amongst the Goa'uld, without success so far, but that wasn't a surprise either; any snake pulling such a stunt would have to fool whoever the head snake had watching them, and that meant they had to be sneaky even for a snake.

Jack blinked and made a mental note to use that line in the next command meeting; some of the Alliance officers' reactions would be great to watch.

"The Al'kesh has dropped out of Hyperspace. It's broadcasting."

A moment later, the voice of a Goa'uld came through the communicator. "Greetings, warriors of She-Ra. I come in the name of the most supreme genius of the Goa'uld, the System Lord Nirrti, praised be her name! She requests a meeting between her and your leader to establish diplomatic relations."

Jack bared his teeth in a grin. For a Goa'uld, that was almost succinct. So, this was the diplomatic overture Analysis had expected for days. And now it was time to play nice and talk with people who wanted to subjugate or kill you while they (correctly) assumed you wanted to kill them. "Almost feels like a meeting with the soviets, back in the old days," he said with a chuckle.

"Yes, sir. Anonymising protocols are now in effect," Müller replied.

"Good. You've got the base. I'm heading up," Jack told him while he ordered his shuttle to be readied for takeoff through the HUD.

There was no way he was missing this.

He grabbed his helmet on the way; even if he didn't have to hide his face, for a meeting with one of Nirrti's goons, he wanted to be fully suited up, and preferably in an actual vacuum.

*****​

Saqqara Orbit, Saqqara System, February 9th, 2002 (Earth Time)

"The Al'kesh has followed instructions and retreated to the edge of the inner system, leaving the planet outside its known sensor range, Your Divine Highness. We have detected no communication with anyone else in the system."

"Thank you." Adora nodded at the Clone officer in charge of the sensor station before the image faded on the screen on the wall, and she turned to address the rest of the room. "What are your thoughts about this offer?"

Jack snorted. "How big are the odds that this is just an attempt to get you with a bioweapon?"

"About even," Catra replied before Adora could say anything. "Depends on whether she thinks she has something that will affect First Ones or not."

"Yes." Anise nodded. "The temptation to take you down and take over your territory, no matter how unlikely it is for her to achieve the latter, will be near irresistible to Nirrti."

Adora didn't glance at Catra, but she was briefly struggling with the temptation. She could be a better bait than Catra, so there was no need to risk her lover!

Catra snorted; she must have realised what Adora was thinking.

"But does she have a bug that would affect First Ones? And would it work against She-Ra?" Jack asked.

"Nirrti has been honing her craft for thousands of years; we have to assume that she has agents that will affect any known organism," Anise said.

"But she must also know that any failure will lead to retaliation against her," Catra said. "That's a risk she has to take into account. You've told us yourself that she didn't cross such lines with other System Lords."

"Or she wasn't caught," Jack said.

"She might also prefer to make a deal with us to get the data she wants," Adora pointed out. "Since it will be cheaper and easier for her. We know that many of her past conflicts with other System Lords came because she raided their territories for slaves and other resources."

"Do you think that the opportunity to achieve the data she wants peacefully will stay her hand?" Anise sounded sceptical.

"The opportunity to get what she wants without having to fight for it, and the threat of retaliation if she does fight us," Adora corrected her.

"She would still expect to pay a price for the data," Catra said. "She might not want to pay it - or think she cannot afford to pay it."

That was a possibility, of course. Adora knew that Nirrti could have already decided to strike at them under the guise of a diplomatic meeting. Goa'uld could be greedy to the point of being shortsighted. "We need to be prepared for treachery on her part anyway. Whether she is planning from the start to attack us or just as a backup plan in case negotiations fail."

"It's not as if we plan to actually sell her the data she wants. Or let her continue to murder people," Catra added.

Adora nodded. Like all System Lords, Nirrti had to go. "But we will not break a truce to get her under the guise of a diplomatic meeting." The consequences of such an act were too grave to make it worth it.

"Unless she breaks it first," Jack said.

"Yes." Adora nodded. If Nirrti struck first, they would strike back. Even though that would allow their enemies to claim they had broken the truce.

"So, you will bet your life on the chance that you have better protections than she estimates?" Anise asked.

Adora nodded. "Yes. Between She-Ra's power and Alpha and Loki's technology, we should be able to neutralise or counter whatever Nirrti might be planning."

"That's still quite a risk you are taking," Jack said.

"That we are taking," Catra grinned. "We can use this meeting to further push our cover story as well. And dangle me in front of her to catch her attention." She might not want to use a bioweapon if she wants to take me alive."

Adora pressed her lips together. Nirrti might just want a sample of Catra's DNA, and she could get that from a corpse as well. Easier than from a living, fighting Catra.

"Do not underestimate her. She will have bioagents that disable people instead of killing them as well," Anise said.

"Well, we're not going to meet her without being all suited up," Jack said.

"Except for me," Adora said. "My power should keep any bioagents away." She could fight without any trouble in the vacuum of space.

"'Should'. We'll need to test that before the meeting," Catra said. "I'm sure Alpha and Loki can prepare a suitable test easily. And eagerly."

Adora would bet that they had already prepared a test, at least Alpha. The bot was obsessed with her research. Though that was a little unfair - Alpha had been built for this purpose. She couldn't go against her core nature. "So, we'll tell Nirrti's envoy that we accept. But we'll meet in a location of our choice."

"She might insist on a meeting on neutral ground," Anise said.

"What do the Goa'uld consider neutral ground?" Jack said. "Unless it means 'where we control the location'."

"Traditionally, the Alliance of Four Great Races could have handled such a meeting upon a request from both sides, but it has been defunct for millennia," Anise said. "Of the four members, only the Asgard remain, and even they are barely active in galactic politics these days. And since Adora is a Gate Builder, the Goa'uld might not consider the Asgard as a neutral arbiter in the first place."

"And they want to arrest Loki, so if we show up with him to a meeting, things will get complicated," Catra said.

"Yeah. Best not involve the little grey men," Jack agreed.

"We will have to find a meeting location that is acceptable for both, then," Adora said.

"I suggest an airless rock floating in space," Jack said.

Despite his flippant tone, that was actually a good suggestion, in Adora's opinion.

*****​

Near Asteroid S-1842, Saqqara System, February 12th, 2002 (Earth Time)

"So, were you kidding about picking an asteroid as a meeting location, Jack?"

"Of course not, Daniel! Everyone agreed that it was a good suggestion, remember?"

"I do. That's why I wonder if you mentioned it as a joke."

"Hey!"

Samantha Carter suppressed both a sigh and a smile at hearing her friends banter - her boyfriend and her friend, actually, she reminded herself. And her superior and her teammate, of course, but she didn't need a reminder of that - the rumour mill made sure of that. At least four times, someone had asked when they had gotten together and insinuated that it had happened at Stargate Command. One had said so straight away, even, and Sam still wasn't certain if she should have reported the officer or not. She didn't want to appear guilty or petty, but she also didn't want this rumour - or slander, since they would have broken regulations if it had been true - to continue circulating.

But that was a problem for another day. Today, she had to focus on their upcoming meeting with Nirrti, provided the System Lord showed up in person and didn't send a body double. The Goa'uld envoy certainly had argued long for a meeting spot in a 'neutral system' and guarantees, even though it should have been obvious that if the Alliance wanted to ambush Nirrti, they could just send a fleet wherever they were meeting, since Adora wouldn't be travelling without an escort that could fight whatever fleet Nirrti might gather to attack them.

Catra certainly wouldn't let Adora take anything but a task force with her. Although, in this case, with Catra playing bait, Adora might insist on the fleet herself.

"The meeting location will make it harder for Nirrti to use her weapons," Teal'c commented. "Although we should not assume that she has no access to tools that will allow her to infect her victims even in the absence of an atmosphere."

"We aren't," Jack said. "That's why it's sealed suits only, and full decontamination procedures for everyone in the vicinity of the rock. And no one will leave their ships afterwards for a week or two."

Quarantine, in other words. Part of Sam thought this was a little excessive. Alliance technology had sensors that could track single molecules under certain conditions, and the vacuum of space qualified as such. But another part of her remembered Hanka, and what Sam had read in the reports the Tok'ra had provided. You couldn't be too cautious when dealing with this System Lord. Sam wasn't even certain if deliberately breaking the truce in effect for this meeting wouldn't be worth it if they could eliminate Nirrti in exchange. If Analysis didn't expect the Goa'uld to betray them anyway, she might even have supported the idea when it had been brought up.

Not that it would have gone past Adora either way, of course - she wouldn't break her word like this.

Behind her, she heard Loki snort. "I maintain that you vastly overestimate the threat Nirrti poses to the Alliance. She might be more creative and scientifically inclined than most of her peers, but the Goa'uld are not known for their research and development to begin with. They have stolen their technology from all sources they could access and adapted it rather than developing their own. There is no reason to fear a secret bioweapon that could do what neither my own research nor the Gate Builder's scientists managed."

"Just because you can't do it doesn't mean it's impossible," Jack pointed out.

"I didn't say it was impossible. In fact, I have a possible solution in mind to bridge the gap which vacuum presents!" Loki retorted - his ego must have been pricked by Jack's comment.

"And what would that solution be?" Daniel asked.

"Bioengineer an agent that has a higher-dimensional presence so it can be transported across vacuum through hyperspace to the target organism."

That was… Sam shook her head. "If we can use a transporter, we don't need a special agent as a payload; we can just use any biological agent we have access to."

And now Loki was pouting at her, and Jack was grinning widely. "So, we'll rely on you to spot any snake transporters near us, Colonel," he told her.

"Yes, sir." She nodded curtly. That was why she was on the ship. And part of the reason why she wouldn't be at the actual meeting. The other part was that she, like Jack, was too well-known amongst the Goa'uld. All of SG-1 would be staying on the task force's flagship.

It was logical and made sense. Sam still didn't like it. And she knew Jack didn't like it, even though he had defended the reason in her case.

She didn't like seeing her friends take such risks while staying safe. Relatively safe, of course - she was still on the ship that would drop off the delegation meeting Nirrti on the asteroid, of course. But she needed to be so close to operate the special scanners they had procured for this. If Nirrit tried anything, they needed to know it at once.

*****​

Asteroid S-1842, Saqqara System, February 12th, 2002 (Earth Time)

Catra looked around, ears twitching - as much as they could inside the helmet of her suit - as she stepped off the shuttle's ramp. The asteroid didn't have much of a gravity field, barely more than micro-gravity. Enough so you could walk without accidentally launching yourself off - as long as you were careful.

She had the urge to dig her claws into the rock beneath her boots to anchor herself, but resisted it. Entrapta had designed her suit with seals to allow her to slide her claws out, making it quite a bit more expensive than the regular suits for Alliance marines, but she wanted to keep that a secret from the Goa'uld they were about to meet. An ace in the hole, as Jack would say.

Seeing no threat, she activated her communicator. "Did Nirrti try to sneak in a stealth ship?"

"Negative. All ships of Nirrti's force currently in the system are accounted for. No readings on the hyperspace sensors, either."

Catra huffed - with her communicator off, of course. If the snake had tried to have a cloaked ship ambush them, it would have simplified the situation enormously. Catra had been involved in the contingency plans for that situation, after all.

"She might be honestly looking for a deal," Adora commented next to her. Unlike everyone else, she wasn't wearing a spacesuit; She-Ra's power was protecting her from the vacuum and radiation. And, at least according to the tests they had done, any form of airborne agents as well.

Catra snorted. "Even if she got what she wanted, she'd try to stab us in the back." She'd read the files from the Tok'ra quite thoroughly. Nirrti was a treacherous snake even compared to other Goa'uld. Not a bit of loyalty. The only way she'd stick to a deal was if she saw no way to break it without suffering for it. No, the question wasn't whether Nirrti would try to attack them but when. And how.

But, apparently, "now" and "with a stealth ship" weren't the answers. "Let's go meet them," she said.

"Yes." Adora started walking to the designated meeting spot. They hadn't set up any structures, not even folding chairs and tables. It was mostly for show - and pointless; if they wanted to hide bombs or such at the meeting spot, they wouldn't need furniture as a cover; they could bury them in the rock, and do so from afar without leaving any trace. That Nirrti had insisted on that kind of setup meant she had wanted to use that as a bargaining concession to get something else, in Catra's opinion. If she trusted her sensor technology to detect bombs buried in the rock, she would trust it to detect such traps in chairs and tables as well.

Then again, who knew what really went on in a snake's mind that was thousands of years old? Especially if she had used a sarcophagus a few times too often.

Catra had trust in the Alliance sensors, though, and that meant that the Tel'tak, which had brought Nirrti's delegation - Catra still wasn't sure if the Goa'uld had actually come in person - didn't carry any weapons or explosives. Of course, you could rig a ship to turn into a bomb. Overload the rector, set the course on autopilot if necessary; Entrapta, Sam and Bow could do it in their sleep. But that would take a bit of work and some time, and they were watching the enemy's ships, including the unarmed Tel'tak, like hawks. The latest improved beam cannons outranged Goa'uld naval weapons quite a bit, and Catra was positive that they could blow up the Tel'tak before it could blow up by itself.

But while she wasn't sure, she also leaned toward Nirrti knowing or suspecting that, so Catra didn't think Nirrti would attempt such a ploy; it wasn't playing to her strength, either. No, whatever shape the attack would take, it would be based on Nirrti's bioweapon research.

"Three people left the Te'ltak. One Goa'uld host and two Jaffa."

They had stipulated no more than four participants per side. Adora and Catra had no one else with them, so had Nirrti planned to show up with one less than allowed as a show of strength? Or had she left one guard on board her ship so she didn't look afraid but still had two guards or something?

That was for Analysis to puzzle out later. They had reached the meeting spot - Catra double-checked on her HUD - and were now waiting for the Goa'uld.

And here they came. They were wearing space suits that looked like traditional models used by the snakes for thousands of years. Her HUD confirmed, however, that they had been upgraded, sporting more advanced technology. No explosives, though both Jaffa carried staff weapons and zats, as allowed for this meeting, and the Goa'uld carried a shield and a torture device as well as a zat.

Nothing that looked like a delivery device for biological agents, though. So, how was she planning to attack them? Catra wondered while Adora nodded at the three.

"Greetings. I am She-Ra, Princess of Power. This is Catra, my consort."

The Goa'uld smiled. "I am Nirrti, Goddess of Death. I am here to get my due."

"Voice matches what records we have."

That didn't have to mean that this was the real Nirrti, of course. But she had the attitude for it, in Catra's opinion.

Though through the Goa'uld's faceplate, Catra could see the woman's eyes narrow as she looked at Adora standing there in all her glowing glory. "You are no Goa'uld." Had she realised that this was magic? The snakes couldn't use magic, not even when using a host who could, so that would be a definite tell.

Adora nodded. "I have never claimed to be a Goa'uld. I am a Gate Builder."

Nirrti - if it was Nirrti - scoffed. "All of them are long since gone. Only their works remain."

Adora looked at her. "Not all of us are gone. But many fell to Horde Prime, until I slew him."

"And took his armies for yourself."

"They chose to join me. I didn't take them."

For the first time since she had arrived, Nirrti turned to look at Catra, and once more, her eyes narrowed. "Your consort is no sekhmet."

Catra flashed her fangs in return. "You're more perceptive than Apophis was."

The Goa'uld looked angry for a moment before turning back to Adora. "Did he mistake you for Bastet?"

Adora shrugged. "I don't know what he thought. But he spoke about Sekhmet, not Bastet."

Catra felt the urge to add 'the Goa'uld, not the species'. Nirrti seemed to resent her inclusion already, and if she lost her temper, she might spring whatever trap she had prepared. On the other hand, they had barely begun to talk, and Nirrti might simply withdraw at this point, which meant the Alliance would miss out on potential intel. Catra really wanted to annoy her, though.

"I would have heard if Sekhmet had stopped pretending not to care about the fact that her namesakes follow Bastet and acquired some for herself."

Adora shrugged again. "As I said, I don't know what he was thinking. Our encounter was rather brief."

"He didn't last long once he couldn't hide any more," Catra added. "He did survive longer than Sokar, though."

Nirrti kept facing Adora, but, once again, her eyes darted to Catra for a moment. "So, you have defeated two System Lords when they were at their most vulnerable, fighting each other." She added a little sniff.

"Three. Ba'al's machinations angered me," Adora said.

Catra noticed Nirrti twitching slightly at that. Had she really not known, or was this just an act to make her appear less informed than she was and hide the extent of her spy network?

"And you've been fighting the forces of three more System Lords," Nirrti went on.

Catra snorted loudly. "Our forces are fending off spies and scavengers. I wouldn't call that fighting."

"I haven't ordered any retaliatory strikes," Adora added, and Catra heard the unsaid 'yet' as clearly as Nirrti would have. "You're here for the data from Apophis's experiments, right?"

Nirrti shrugged. It looked a bit forced to Catra, but that could just be her bias. "You shot down a ship of mine when it was engaged against Apophis's base."

"I took the planet. I protect my people," Adora retorted.

Once more, Nirrti's eyes narrowed. "Are you laying claim to all of Apophis's former domain?"

"Are you asking whether I will continue his research?" Adora shook her head. "No, I will not."

"Because you have already surpassed his work?" Nirrti smiled, showing her teeth, and made a point of looking at Catra. It seemed she really wasn't interested in Apophis's territory or people, except as research subjects.

"His work was surpassed long before I was born," Adora replied. "Are you still interested in his data?"

"Apophis could never rival my own work, but his data might be based on data stolen from me."

Was that true, or just a cover story? Catra couldn't quite tell. But if it were, then she would have to admit that Loki's insistence on not tampering with the raw research data had been a good thing. Nirrti would indeed have quickly spotted the alterations in such a case.

"And what do you offer in exchange?" Adora asked.

"Information about Cronus and Heru'ur. They will not let you take Apophis's and Sokar's realm without resistance."

"I'm aware of that, and preparations have been made to deal with their interference," Adora replied. "However, information directly taken from their courts might result in reduced casualties."

Catra refrained from wincing; Adora had trouble acting that callously, even though she was telling the truth. They had to hope Nirrti would take this as Adora trying to appear more powerful than she was.

"So, do we have a deal?" Nirrti sounded eager, but this seemed to be a bit too quick for Catra's taste. She hadn't even offered any details.

Then Nirrti held out her hand for Adora to shake, and Catra felt her fur bristle. "That's a trap," she hissed on the private channel.

Adora, the dummy, went and shook Nirrti's hand anyway. "Yes."

A moment later, Sam's voice rang out over the communicator: "Nirrti's gloves have altered their surface!"

*****​
 
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Chapter 223: Shockwaves Part 4 New
Chapter 223: Shockwaves Part 4

Near Asteroid S-1842, Saqqara System, February 12th, 2002 (Earth Time)


"Nirrti's gloves have altered their surface!"

Jack O'Neill cursed at hearing Sam's alert. "There's the trap!"

"The gloves are… the gloves' outer layer has liquified into a solution!"

"Adora!"

On the screen, Jack could see Catra rushing forward, towards the guards Nirrti had brought. They were fast, but she was faster; she reached the left one and grabbed his staff weapon before he could bring it to bear, then spun him around using it as a lever - directly into the line of fire of the second guard when that one shot at her.

The staff weapon blast hit the first guard in the back, blowing through his suit and chest. A red burst spewed from the hole as air and blood were vented into the vacuum, and Catra shot the second guard with her zat before he could fire again, then jumped back from the gory mess.

Nirrti hadn't reacted to the display - not that Jack could see it on the screen, at least. The snake sounded smug on the comm. "Now that my special agent has entered your blood, you are doomed unless I provide you with the remedy which will prevent it from liquifying your organs!"

Adora hadn't reacted either - she was still holding Nirrti's hand and wrist, Jack noted.

"Did the solution penetrate your force field, Adora?" Sam asked on the private comm channel.

"I think so," Adora replied.

"What?" Catra shrieked.

"Ah! Nirrti must have found a way to transport biological agents past force fields, probably both magical and technological, since it penetrated the protections of She-Ra! Secure a sample, please - this could be a breakthrough for several projects!" Loki sounded more excited than Jack had ever seen him.

"Loki!" Sam snapped. "Adora has been infected with a bioweapon!"

"Of course, I am aware of that - that's why I am asking you to secure a sample before you heal yourself, Adora."

"Ah…" Adora seemed to be at a loss for words.

"Heal yourself, damn it!" And Catra was angry. As expected - Jack was pretty sure that Loki would have been sporting bruises at the least, if Catra had been on the bridge with them.

"It's not that bad yet."

"Adora! We're talking about a bioweapon!"

"Yes, but Loki has a point - we should secure a sample so we can find a cure."


Bruises or cuts, Jack amended his estimate as the exchange on the private channel continued.

"Didn't you hear me? I hold your life in my hands! You need my remedy, or you will die as my agent liquifies your organs!" Nirrti stated on the open channel. She must hate being ignored.

"It obviously started already with your brain."

"Catra!"

"We can't take a sample out here, and we're not taking you inside the shuttle while that stuff is still dangerous! Heal yourself!"

"We need that sample to test if I actually healed it,"
Adora retorted.

"Correct!" Loki cut in. "We cannot be certain that you are no longer infected or infectious without a sample."

"I doubt that," Sam said. "The scanner is picking up the agent in the remains of the layer Nirrti's glove shed."

"A sample would still speed up our testing," Loki replied.

Jack squinted. Was the snake trying to pull herself out of Adora's grip? She was! He chuckled, once, at the sight. Whatever Nirrti had done to enhance her host, past the normal boost from Goa'uld, wasn't even enough to make Adora strain herself.

"We can get a sample from Nirrti," Catra said.

"As long as you can target your healing to exclude the agents on the ground."

"Are you listening to me? You are going to die unless you bow to me!" Nirrti was starting to sound slightly hysterical, in Jack's opinion.

"Can you send a spy bot to pick up a sample?" Catra asked.

"We can send a bot from your shuttle," Sam replied. She turned to look at Jack. "But that might trigger a response from Nirrti and her forces."

"Right. Permission to crush them?" Jack asked.

"Granted," Adora replied.

"What are you doing? Do you wish to die?"

Jack ignored Nirrti's increasingly screeching complaints and turned to the Clone captain on the bridge. "Take out the enemy ships."

"Yes, General!"

"The longer you wait, the worse will be the lingering effects! Only I can give you the remedy - and I do not have it on me!"

A moment later, the comm net on Jack's secondary screen lit up with orders, and the task force split up as half the squadrons raced to smash into the enemy formation and the rest fanned out to envelop Nirrti's fleet.

The Goa'uld ships were just beginning to react when the Jamming started, and their formation grew more ragged as their coordination fell apart and the frigates tore into them.

"Looks like Nirrti didn't care too much about her naval forces," Jack commented when sensors confirmed that the Goa'uld ships were using standard weapons, not on par with Apophis and Ba'al's latest designs, much less Horde or Alliance technology.

"Do you have a death wish?"

"Bot deployed," Sam reported.

"Can we knock her out?" Catra asked. "And hurry with that bot!"

"She might be infectious," Loki replied. "Just block her communicator; I did that."

"Good idea."

"What are you doing? Do you think a sample will allow you to develop a remedy in time to save yourself? Are you a fool? It takes months to counter one of my creations!"


"Sample taken."

"Unhand me!"

"Nirrti secured. Now heal yourself, Adora, you idiot!"


Just as the last enemy ship blew up trying to escape the task force - and running into the reinforcements dropping from hyperspace to block that line of retreat - Jack saw Adora conjure and raise her sword. Then the camera was briefly overloaded as she used her magic.

*****​

Asteroid S-1842, Saqqara System, February 12th, 2002 (Earth Time)

Adora shuddered slightly as her power filled her, and she could no longer feel the aches from whatever Nirrti's bioweapon had been trying to do to her body. Liquifying her organs, the Goa'uld had claimed. But it was no match for She-Ra's magic.

She took a deep breath and lowered her sword - two assault shuttles were flying overhead, headed to the Tal'tak Nirrti had used - and looked at her captive.

The Goa'uld had stopped trying to pull out of Adora's grip and was staring at her. "Who… what are you?"

"I told you," Adora replied. "I am She-Ra, Princess of Power. I am what you call a Gate Builder. A First One."

Nirrti was frantically shaking her head. "No! No one can withstand my virus! It is perfect! Nothing can stop it!"

"You're an even bigger idiot than Adora," Catra grumbled behind the Goa'uld. "Nothing and no one is perfect!" Adora winced when she caught the glare her lover aimed at her. "Something you forgot!"

"I healed myself," Adora replied. True, she hadn't expected that Nirrti could get through her protection like that, but she had managed to counter it anyway!

"That's not possible!" Nirrti screeched. "Only I have the remedy!"

Oops. We should take this to the private channel, Adora thought, then did so. "I am fine now."

Catra narrowed her eyes. "You think you healed yourself." She cocked her head to the side. "What do the scans say?"

"We don't detect any foreign agent in Adora's body any more."

"See?" Adora smiled as widely and confidently as she managed. Which wasn't much.

Catra's glare didn't fade. "That doesn't mean it's really gone."

"You cannot heal from this! Even my remedy can only delay death!" Nirrti kept yelling. "You are doomed without my help!"

"Was that your plan?" Catra addressed the Goa'uld. "Infect Adora and then make her serve you in exchange for some ineffective cure?"

"Yes! And if you don't want to die, you'll obey me!"

"You don't know Adora at all." Catra sighed. "The idiot would rather die than bow to you, or anyone like you."

"She will die then!" Nirrti hissed.

"If she dies, then it's because I am killing her for being an idiot," Catra retorted.

Adora winced again. "Let's get to the shuttle."

"Let me go! You will die unless you…"

Nirrti's tirade was cut off by Catra stunning her with her zat'nik'tel. "Should have done that right away," she muttered. "Before she touched you."

"That would have been breaking the truce," Adora said.

"She was going to break it anyway, just as I said." Catra scoffed and ordered the bot to take another sample, directly from the Goa'uld's suit this time.

She was right, but they couldn't have been sure that Nirrti would attack them. Adora shook her head and slung Nirrti over her shoulder. "Let's go."

The shuttle wasn't too far away. They covered the distance in a few leaps in the low gravity, the bot with the samples following them easily.

"The Tel'tak's engines have been disabled," the officer in charge of the attack on the Tel'tak reported. "Perimeter secured."

The Alliance soldiers wouldn't enter the ship until it was deemed safe. And Adora and Catra wouldn't leave their own shuttle until they were sure they were safe - you didn't take any risks with Nirrti's bioweapons in play.

That didn't make the next few hours any more comfortable, though, as they were scanned dozens of times by increasingly complicated-looking devices dropped off by shuttles - Sam apparently had to threaten Loki to keep him from personally coming into the shuttle - while the remaining survivors of Nirrti's force were taken into secure (and quarantined) custody as well. After Nirrti's attempt on Adora's life, they weren't taking any chances with her followers.

Still, even with being able to use the shuttle's comms to give orders to the task force, Adora felt restricted as long as she was under quarantine herself. And Catra still giving her the evil eye, even though every scan came up clean, wasn't helping. Nor was the fact that they did find some nasty surprises implanted into the bodies of several Jaffa; Nirrti apparently used the 'obey me or die from my bioweapon' plan on her own people, which should have been obvious in hindsight, according to everything they knew about her.

Interrogating Nirrti wouldn't be fun. If their prisoner even was Nirrti and not a body double - they had taken samples and scans, but the quarantine conditions slowed down analysing them.

*****​

Saqqara System, February 12th, 2002 (Earth Time)

"...and the last analysis also has not found even the slightest trace of the biological agent that Nirrti used inside Adora's body. Even taking into account the virus's ability to penetrate energy and magic fields, the conclusion is that Adora is not infectious."

"Thank you, Loki." Samantha Carter nodded at his statement while she double-checked the readings. Not that she thought that Loki would lie about such an important question, but the Asgard scientist tended to be too optimistic about his own skills and judgment than his results, impressive as they were, justified.

Of course, the fact that, disproving all but the most negative projections, Nirrti had managed to infect Adora while she was She-Ra, influenced Sam's judgement; it had driven the point home that they couldn't afford to underestimate their enemies. That Loki was not concealing how smug he was that Nirrti had managed to develop a virus with capabilities he had speculated about just before the meeting didn't help, of course.

Still, all the scanning and tests came up the same: Adora had healed herself and purged the virus from her body. And while the virus could pass through force fields and magic shields, and through most materials, it couldn't penetrate the containers and probes they had used to take the samples.

Sam was still building specific containers reinforced with the alloy Nirrti had lined her glove with to avoid infecting herself. And shooting the bot and all the gear used for the sampling and analysis into the local sun.

Loki was looking at her expectantly, and she refrained from frowning; the Asgardian was already too smug. "I concur," she said after a third check. "We can lift the quarantine."

Fortunately, Catra had not used her claws on Nirrti, or touched the gloves - the sealant on her gloves and boots wouldn't have kept her safe, and while they still had to test the Alliance vacuum-rated combat uniforms against the virus, Sam suspected that they wouldn't offer sufficient protection. They would need better uniforms for any deployments against Nirrti's forces. Or in areas where Nirrti's forces might operate.

And speaking of that… "What's the status of the analysis of the samples taken from Nirrti?" she asked.

Loki frowned a little. "The pattern of her genetic micro-drift matches Sarcophagus use consistent with Nirrti's estimated age. However, her demonstrated skill at bioengineering should allow her to artificially induce that pattern into a double's genes."

"Or put the body double repeatedly into a sarcophagus to facilitate such a deception," Sam said.

"Yes." Loki nodded. "Although that would still require additional manipulations to hide that the intervals between the uses would be far too short to be genuine. Not impossible, of course, but not as easy as it may sound to a layman."

Sam knew Loki considered pretty much everyone except himself, Alpha, and possibly Morrison a layperson when it came to genetic engineering. She still snorted softly; for Loki, that was a pretty tame insult. "Good. Melog confirmed that the prisoner thinks she is Nirrti, but as we know from Ba'al, that's not conclusive evidence for her being Nirrti."

"The fact that she didn't carry any suicide implants would support that as well," Loki said. "It seems implausible that she would allow a body double that genuinely considered itself Nirrti to exist without such a precaution."

Sam nodded in agreement; Nirrti didn't seem to be the type to risk such infighting. Of course, the Goa'uld had acted rather recklessly when she had tried to take Adora hostage during their meeting, but if an enemy captured her body double, the ruse would be exposed as soon as the real Nirrti continued to command her forces, so why risk the double turning against her?

That Nirrti, like many Goa'uld who had repeatedly used a Sarcophagus to extend their lifespan, likely had a tendency to overestimate themselves and underestimate everyone else supported that conclusion. For a megalomaniac, a convincing body double likely was seen as the greatest threat because it would be so close to the real Goa'uld.

It was a solid deduction. Good enough, at least, to present to the Command Council. She nodded again.

"It seems the operation was a complete success then," Loki said.

"Yes." It said a lot about the Goa'uld that a System Lord attempting to betray them the very moment they had come to an agreement during a meeting under truce was considered a success. Some would argue that making a lasting deal with a System Lord would have been more of a success, of course. Sam wasn't amongst them. Someone like Nirrti could not be allowed to continue to rule anything. Not even if they really stuck to their own worlds and didn't attempt to raid or conquer more worlds. They had genocided entire worlds, after all. That could not be forgiven or forgotten.

Of course, after Nirrti had just demonstrated that she couldn't be trusted to hold to a truce, anyone suggesting negotiations with the Goa'uld would have a much harder time in the Alliance. Sam really couldn't understand those people. No peace with the Goa'uld could last. Not as long as the megalomaniac System Lords were in charge.

*****​

Saqqara System, February 13th, 2002 (Earth Time)

"You know, those Jaffa have cost us more ships by getting captured than by fighting us," Catra commented as she studied the latest reports in Adora's reclaimed admiral's room on the flagship of the task force.

"Because we are using an entire squadron of frigates as quarantine ships?" Adora asked.

"Yes."

"We can't risk taking any of those prisoners to a holding facility on a world," Adora went on.

"I know." Nirrti hadn't really cared about collateral damage when she had picked the viruses she used to ensure her commanders' loyalties. The System Lord raiding rival realms for more slaves made a disturbing amount of sense, now - she probably had wiped out more worlds than any other System Lord just to kill a potential traitor. Or by accident.

"Not until I've healed them all."

Catra rolled her eyes and scoffed. Her love wasn't being very subtle. "You can heal them once we have things set up to hold them, and medical facilities to test for bioweapons."

"We have medical facilities."

Medical facilities that were currently upgraded because no one was taking any risks after Nirrti had managed to inject a virus into She-Ra. Even Loki had just been speculating.

"We'll need dedicated prison transports," Catra said, "if we want to strike at Nirrti's territory." Converting freighters would take time, and put more pressure on their already straining logistics - every freighter they converted not only took resources, and quite valuable ones for all the medical and security systems needed, but was also a freighter no longer available for transporting supplies.

Adora grumbled but didn't have an answer to that.

A ping announced a priority message on her tablet. Catra checked it - it was a report from Sam; she had cracked the encryption on some of the data banks they had recovered from Nirrti's destroyed ships.

"We found her capital!" Adora said. She looked more grim than happy.

Catra understood that. Going off unprepared to take over Nirrti's territory while they were still trying to secure Apophis's and Sokar's realms and consolidate their hold on Ba'al's realm would be madness from a purely military point of view. They didn't have the troops and ships for it, especially not the medical and bioweapon specialists needed. But they had to take into account that Nirrti might have left more infected subordinates back home who depended on regular remedies to stay alive. And who might infect entire worlds if they didn't receive the remedies in time.

At least, they didn't have to worry overly much about other System Lords taking control of Nirrti's realm; who would want to risk taking over a world where she had planted plague carriers? Of course, if the world were valuable, a System Lord might just kill off everyone themselves… So, the Alliance had to move in or risk multiple genocides.

Catra sighed. "Logistics is going to kill us."

"We can shuffle some things around," Adora replied. "But it'll be tight."

Too tight - Catra had run the numbers. "We cannot support such an operation. Not without exposing half the worlds we've just liberated."

"We cannot let those people die."

Catra pressed her lips together. "Then we have only one option: We need to know where Nirrti hid her contingencies." Her genocidal plagues. And only Nirrti knew that.

"We're not going to torture her," Adora said, frowning.

Catra knew people had already mentioned 'enhanced interrogation techniques' to make Nirrti talk. Torture, in any other word. Adora had shot that down, of course. Not that it would work, anyway - nor would it be feasible if it worked until Nirrti was extracted from her host. And that would take time as well; despite all the scans and tests the Alliance had done so far, the Tok'ra wanted to run their own tests before taking Nirrti in for extraction.

Sometimes, Catra wished she had given in to her first urge and just disintegrated the bitch with her zat. Of course, that would have left an unknown number of worlds in danger of being wiped clean of people. Doomed countless people.

"We need to speed up her extraction," she said. "Her host might know what we need." Provided they were stable enough to talk about it. Apophis's host was still too traumatised to provide any intel. And Nirrti's host would probably be worse off.

"We need to talk to Nirrti," Adora said. "If we can convince her to talk, we can launch raiding missions to secure the infected people."

"If," Catra muttered. She didn't think Nirrti would talk - none of the captured System Lords talked easily. Too proud, too paranoid, too delusional. It took time to convince them that they wouldn't be killed out of hand as soon as they had given up all they knew. More time to confirm whatever they said. 'Build a rapport', the interrogators called it. They hadn't had much success so far with the other System Lords. At least there had been some progress.

"We have to try it," Adora said. "We have no other choice."

Catra nodded. Her love was right. She usually was. Unless it involved herself, of course - the idiot was still far too willing to sacrifice herself whenever she had the opportunity.

*****​

"I still think we should just keep her stunned until the Tok'ra pull her out of the host," Jack O'Neill said, crossing his arms over his chest.

Daniel frowned at him, as Jack had expected. Behind him, Sha're nodded - which Jack had also expected. Teal'c didn't show any reaction, and wasn't that a surprise!

Catra snorted, which could be taken several ways, but Adora grimaced a little. "We do need more information about the bioweapons she left as 'insurance' against betrayal so we can surgically take them out." She blinked. "I didn't mean that literally, well, also literally, but so we can remove those threats without having to invade entire worlds."

"And trigger the bioweapons we want to stop in the process," Catra added.

Jack looked at Sam. She hadn't said anything yet, but met his eyes. "The probability of one or more such hidden bioweapons being triggered during an invasion is very high," she said. "They were not only deployed to prevent subordinates from betraying Nirrti but also to ensure that an attacker would be left with a devastated planet should they win it."

"And what's the probability that Nirrti will tell us lies so we'll miss the real bioweapon carriers - or trigger them?" Jack asked.

"Ask Melog?" Catra smirked, and Melog managed somehow to look more smug than the alien cat usually did.

Jack frowned in return. "And can you guarantee that she won't manage to hide critical information?"

Catra shrugged. "No, we can't. But if we don't try, we won't get any critical information, so we can't really make things worse. Melog is sure that they'll detect a deliberate trap."

That Jack agreed - he didn't think the snakes would be able to hide their glee at trapping and hurting others from Melog. Hell, they tended to shout out their boasts and taunts even when they would be much better off if they kept quiet. Still… "We'll also hand her critical intel. Namely Earth's involvement."

"She'll find out about that as soon as she is transferred to Thule, anyway," Catra said. With a toothy grin, she added: "And you want to talk to her in person anyway, right?" Jack glared at Melog, and Catra snorted again. "We don't have to read your mind; we know you."

"Yes, Jack. Everyone knows you like confronting the Goa'uld if we have the upper hand."

"Indeed."

Jack glared at his two friends, narrowed his eyes at Sha're, who merely smiled, ignored Adora and Catra, and looked at Sam.

Who, he noted, kept her face perfectly neutral. "If you feel such an urge, it would be a perfectly natural reaction to the situation."

Alright, he did enjoy rubbing the snakes' faces in the fact that they had lost. Who wouldn't? Goa'uld System Lords were the scum of the galaxy. And Nirrti was one of the worst. One of the worst they had encountered so far, he corrected himself, and yet, she had beaten stiff competition.

He sighed. "Alright, if you insist. But if this goes wrong, I'll remind you I told you so."

"Then let's wake up Nirrti." Adora nodded, and Jack ignored the grins on everyone else's faces.

After suiting up and going through two airlocks lined with scanners, they stepped in front of the armoured glass door that sealed Nirrti's cell. The host was strapped to a bed inside, but two bots were untying her.

"Counteragent to the sedative has been administered," one reported while Jack checked that his polarised visor was still hiding his face.

They didn't have to wait very long; between the counteragent and the Goa'uld's effects on their hosts, Nirrti woke up within a minute. At least, according to the sensors covering her cell - she played dead for a bit longer. After half a minute, Jack loudly scoffed. "We know you're awake, Nirrti. No need to keep pretending."

The Goa'uld kept her eyes closed for a few more seconds, then opened them and sat up, looking at the group - no, at Adora. "So. Have you come to gloat? No. You wouldn't be so… polite. You wouldn't have to be." Her lips twisted into a grin. "You need something from me. That's why you woke me up."

"We want to know which of your subordinates are carrying implanted bioweapons. And the list of the bioweapons hidden on your worlds that will be released in case you lose control of the world - or get captured," Adora said.

Nirrti laughed in return.

"I don't think that's going to be an easy interrogation," Jack mumbled through the communicator.

*****​

Adora didn't frown at Jack for his smart-ass remark even though she wanted to. But she had to focus on Nirrti. "You are our prisoner," she went on. "If you cooperate, you will receive amenities that will make the stay in your cell much more comfortable."

"And if I don't, you will torture me, right?" Nirrti laughed again. "What fool do you take me for?"

Adora suppressed a sigh. "I am not a Goa'uld. I keep my word. If you cooperate, you will be rewarded for it. But even if you do not, we will not torture you."

"You need more convincing lies."

Adora wanted to sigh again. She wasn't a good liar, everyone knew that. Just as Adora knew that honesty was the best policy. But she was telling the truth. Nirrti just wouldn't believe her. "It is no lie," she said. "If you cooperate and help us save the people in your realm, you will be rewarded."

"If you don't, and the bioweapons are triggered, we might hand you over to the survivors to judge you," Catra added, flashing her fangs.

Adora pressed her lips together. They would only hand over a prisoner to someone else if they would be treated humanely and not killed. But technically, Catra was correct.

Nirrti chuckled. "You think there will be survivors? My weapons are far too advanced for that!"

"There are always survivors," Jack spoke up.

Nirrti turned to look at him with a sneer. "And what would you know about my work? I have no peers in my field!"

Well, they wouldn't find a better opening. Jack must have agreed with Adora's thoughts since he tapped his helmet, and his faceplate depolarised. "We already foiled one of your ploys, and that was before we met our allies."

Nirrti gasped. "O'Neill!" Her head jerked back to Adora. "You… You have recruited the Tau'ri?"

"We're allies," Adora said, nodding slowly. "We share information and technology."

Nirrti sneered again, though she looked enraged and no longer as arrogant. "You're a fool! They cannot be trusted! Given the chance, they will destroy you!"

"Why would we do that? They're our friends," Jack said.

"Besides," Catra cut in with a grin, "Jack's also a Gate Builder."

Nirrti's head turned back towards Jack. "A Gate Builder? Of course, that explains how you managed to destroy Ra! And his would-be successors! It all makes sense now! You were using the Tau'ri to hide your involvement!"

Adora wanted to wince; Jack wouldn't like that. Catra, of course, was laughing at Nirrti. "And your work isn't as good as you claim. Barely adequate compared to the work that created me!" She patted her chest with such a wide smile, Adora couldn't tell if she was genuine or not. Unlike others, Catra had never shown any issues with the revelation that the First Ones had created the ancestors of so many people on Etheria.

Nirrti scowled at her. "Who are you?"

"I'm Catra, Adora's consort, duh," Catra replied. "Adora told you so, didn't she?"

"I didn't lie to you," Adora added.

Catra nodded and went on: "You think your research is advanced? You've never seen what Adora's people did way back. Or what we're doing now. Hell, you tried to raid Apophis's research."

Nirrti's glare intensified. Yes, she really didn't like being taunted like that. "I just wished to check what he was doing. I knew already that he could never eclipse me."

"That's why you wanted his research, sure." Catra shook her head and glanced at Jack.

And Jack grinned in return. "Sounds very believable. You knew his research was so far behind yours, you not only sent a ship to raid his lab, you came to meet us to trade for the data. Yeah, you're so far ahead of him, you don't need his data at all."

"I was just covering all my bases!" Nirrti spat. "I am the most accomplished researcher in the Galaxy!"

"Even amongst those we know of, you're not even in the top five," Catra replied.

That wasn't true, of course - both Alpha and Loki were better geneticists, but Adora didn't think Earth or Etheria had anyone who would compare.

But the comment certainly riled up Nirrti. "You lie! No one is better than me! I am the only one who dares to do anything necessary for my research!"

"You haven't met some of our other allies," Catra commented.

Time to make the offer. Adora nodded. "But if you cooperate, you could meet them. You might even be allowed to do research in a genuine research station of my people - the same that created Catra's ancestors."

Nirrti seemed shocked, but then sneered again. "How gullible do you think I am?"

"You'd be under heavy supervision, of course, and confined to your quarters and prevented from violating our ethics," Adora added. "But yes, if you cooperate, you could do research in our lab."

"I'm not falling for such lies!"

"Earth has a pretty solid tradition of recruiting scientists from captured enemies," Catra said. "That's how they started their space program."

That wasn't entirely true - but not entirely wrong, either, according to what Adora knew about it. But what mattered was whether Nirrti would believe it. If she was arrogant enough…

"Operation Paperclip," Jack added. "I wasn't personally involved, but I know the results."

A slowly growing smile appeared on Nirrti's face. "So, that's why you have kept me. You want, you need me for your own research! That's why you are so generous!"

Adora slightly tilted her head to the side. All they needed from Nirrti was the information about her bioweapon traps. But as long as she cooperated, what she thought they needed wouldn't matter. "So, what is your answer?"

Nirrti laughed. "Show me that research station and I will decide whether it's worth it!"

*****​

Research Station Alpha, The First Moon of Enchantment, February 13th, 2002 (Earth Time)

Samantha Carter had thought supervising - 'babysitting', a voice that sounded like Jack corrected her in her head - Loki and Alpha was a strenuous task, even worse than trying to handle the latest request from Naval procurement. But she had been wrong. "You're letting Nirrti work here?" she asked, her self-control enabling her not to yell.

"We've proposed to let her do research here - under controlled circumstances - if she cooperates and tells us how to disable all the bioweapons she left behind in her realm." Adora's voice was steady, but her smile looked a bit guilty. "Too many lives are at stake."

"It's sorta like Operation Paperclip," Catra added. She didn't look or sound guilty at all. "As long as you keep her under close supervision, it should be OK."

Sam glanced at Angella, who was officially in charge of supervising the research station. She knew from experience how much of a challenge it was to keep Loki and Alpha from crossing ethical and legal lines. Or to keep them from committing another mistake like the one that had led to Horde Prime's creation.

But Angella nodded instead of protesting. "Yes. You will need to give Alpha strict orders, though, Adora, to run all proposals from Nirrti through me first before allocating resources."

"Of course, Angella."

Sam pressed her lips together for a moment before speaking up. "Allowing someone like Nirrti access to any tools, even indirectly, is dangerous. She has managed to create a bioweapon that could penetrate She-Ra's force field, so we cannot expect our containment protocols to be effective."

"Then we need to develop better procedures," Adora said. "But between everyone here, we should be able to prevent Nirrti from escaping or spreading a bioweapon - not that she will be allowed to produce such a weapon in the first place."

Granted, according to the proposal Sam had read, Alpha would observe and analyse every step Nirrti desired and not proceed if there was any chance of it turning out a dangerous result, but… Nirrti was a brilliant scientist. Sam wasn't certain if even that could guarantee that the Goa'uld couldn't manufacture something to break out of her cell. In her place, Sam would certainly try to hide such research among harmless research projects, construct something out of multiple components, all of them individually harmless, some seemingly just waste products, but combined…

Of course, assuming that no one would spot her plan was more than a little arrogant. And yet, Sam would rather err on the side of caution when it came to bioweapons. Still, with so many lives at stake…

"If it helps, I expect her to break whatever agreement we manage to make within a month," Catra said, flashing her fangs.

"Catra!" Adora glared at her.

Angella nodded. "Based on what I read about her, I concur. She does not sound like someone who will admit defeat, and will likely be undone by her own belief in her superiority over everyone else."

So, they were setting up Nirrti - handing her enough rope to hang herself. "She tried to betray Adora once before. Do you think she will make another attempt despite her earlier failure?" Sam asked.

Catra nodded. "Yeah. She isn't the type to accept that someone bested her. If Adora were here while she worked, I'd give her two weeks until she tried something, as long as we make her think we didn't catch her when she tests us with some minor thing she thinks she has a good excuse for."

That seemed plausible for the Goa'uld mentality, Sam had to admit. And keeping Nirrti under control for a month or two would be a much different prospect than doing so for years.

"We're not going to entrap here!" Adora said.

"No. But we'll let her try something," Catra retorted.

Adora frowned, but everyone else agreed.

Now they had to inform Loki and Alpha, since they would be tasked with supervising Nirrti's research. And each other, of course.

*****​

"...and that concludes the tour."

Sam watched Nirrti's face when Alpha finished its running commentary. The Goa'uld had tried to keep her expression impassive, but she had slipped on a few occasions - mostly when watching the equipment in the primary research lab and when she met Loki for the first time. The former System Lord was impressed, Sam was certain of that.

"So, what do you think? Is working in this laboratory worth your cooperation?" Adora asked.

"Instead of being locked up in a cell with only selected Earth media as entertainment?" Catra added.

"You expect me to conduct research without a host!" Nirrti retorted.

Ah. That was the critical issue, of course - without a sapient host, Nirrti's own mental faculties would be impacted. As the Tok'ra had said, some would consider it a fate worse than death. Nirrti's complaints when she had been informed that she would have to be extracted from her current host had been very vocal. Yet, she had still agreed to visit the research station.

Sam cleared her throat. "An obvious research subject would be designing a host that was not sapient yet provided the same benefits." She ignored how Loki scoffed at that - he had tried his hand at that task but had not found a way to solve it.

"With my own mind crippled," Nirrti spat.

Sam didn't try to manipulate the Goa'uld by asking if she wasn't brilliant enough to do without a host; that would have been too transparent.

Loki's dismissive scoff, of course, conveyed the same meaning, though the feeling seemed quite genuine.

And Nirrti glared at him before turning to Adora again. "I want to see the tools I could use here without a host."

Adora nodded. "Alpha?"

"At your command."

While Nirrti studied the holoprojections of tools that Alpha had made appear near them, Sam closely watched her again. Seeing the way the Goa'uld's gaze lingered on the various waldos and computers, Sam was leaning towards Nirrti accepting the deal.

She could only hope this wouldn't backfire on the Alliance.

*****​
 

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