06 May 2006 @ 11:28 am
FIC: Stargate SG-1 - "(You Remind Me Of) Home"  

This took me over a year to finish. Just. WHAT.

I owe a giant thank you to [info]ruwalk for beta-ing it the first second third time around. The title is from a Benjamin Gibbard song.


(You Remind Me Of) Home
Stargate SG-1 | G | gen-ish | 1,750 words
After the Gatekeeper incident, Jack checks up on Daniel.


The moment he pulled up to the sprawling complex, Jack remembered how much he'd hated Daniel's apartment. Oil-splattered and faded, the place hardly seemed a proper home for a savior of the planet; even in the dead of night a bedraggled old man was shuffling across the street, hauling a gigantic bag of trash to the dumpster. The irony made Jack shake his head in dismay, but then Daniel had never been one for luxury, and he wasn't likely to change.

Parking beside a beaten-up Ford, Jack got out and jogged the eight flights to his friend's apartment and knocked impatiently. After a loud crash and an even louder swear, the door creaked open and a sleep-tousled Daniel stepped out.

"Morning, Daniel," Jack said brightly. "Getting your beauty rest?"

"Ngh," Daniel said, squinting into the darkness with the sluggishness of one woken from a ten-year nap. "What—what could you possibly want from me right now?"

Jack shrugged. "Can't a guy stop by to see a friend?"

Daniel stared at him for a few more seconds while trying to kick his brain into gear, then gave a long-suffering sigh and closed the door behind them. He led Jack into the living room, then disappeared into the kitchen.

Jack took this chance to poke around; the usually-spotless apartment was littered with anthropological journals and greying socks (and, he noted, more than one pair of wrinkled BDUs). Barely visible under the mess were chairs and a couch, and Jack swept several copies of Current Archaeology onto the carpet so he could sit.

It wasn't difficult to remember the last time he'd been here—to pack the place into boxes and send them off for storage in the bowels of the SGC. The apartment still looked like a museum, with Celtic swords on one wall, painted African masks on another, and every surface covered with statuettes and tiny artifacts Jack considered junk and Daniel considered treasure. He had half a mind to sneak a clay doll into his pocket and wait until Daniel noticed its disappearance.

"Sorry about the mess," Daniel said, emerging from the kitchen balancing two mugs and a glass of milk in his hands. He glanced pointedly at the magazines Jack had shoved onto the floor. "The only visitors I get are the maintenance guy and the old lady from Minsk who thinks I'm her son." He grimaced slightly. "Even you're better company."

"Oh, hey now," Jack protested, reaching for a mug. "You're the one who left the egg behind the microwave—the smell didn't go away for weeks."

"What, again?" Daniel's eyebrows drew together. "You're still mad about that?"

Jack stifled an exasperated groan; Daniel's puppy-eyed sincerity was unbearable. "No, Daniel. I'm not mad. I forgive you. Okay?"

"Okay," Daniel said. He took a long sip; the steam from the coffee fogged his glasses and hid the expression in his eyes. "Why are you really here?"

"Well, I was going to hang out with Teal'c, but you know how weird he gets right after kel-no-reem," Jack lied glibly; the excuse hung between them like a lie; no point hiding behind pretense when Daniel would see right through. "All right. Carter was worried about you and she asked me to come. She didn't think you'd talk to her."

"I don't keep secrets from Sam," Daniel said distantly, but his mind was obviously elsewhere, and Jack knew he'd scratched the surface. He'd read the mission reports, of course, both Daniel's and Sam's (Teal'c's were always too dry and clinical to slog through, though he'd never tell), but hearing it from Daniel itself would tell him more than any piece of paper.

Jack folded his arms. "She's not the only one worried about you. Talk. Now."

Daniel gave a petulant scowl. "I don't need you or Sam babying me. I'm thirty-five years old; I can deal with this. I'm fine." But his eyes had grown troubled, and the silence following his comment was telling.

"No, you're not." Jack gave him a knowing, reassuring smile. "I know you."

"Fine," Daniel said. He seemed very small. After a few more sips he set the mug down on the table, settling back against the armchair as if it was a therapist's couch. "I practically grew up in Egypt, did you know that?" He didn't wait for Jack to reply. "I must have caught every possible disease there was to catch—and the camels hated me. They kept tossing me off whenever I sneezed. I must have spent half my childhood buried in sand."

Jack snorted at the mental image of a young Daniel, hair flopping over his glasses and bandages on both pale knees, flopping into a dune. Across the coffee table, Daniel smiled; it was evident he hadn't talked about his past for a long time. "I was an incredible liability to my parents," he continued. "You think they would have left me in a dig somewhere and pretended I'd gotten lost."

"Hell," Jack interjected, "we should do that now." Daniel gaped soundlessly, and Jack laughed. "No, I wouldn't do that—Teal'c would kill me. Seriously, go on, I'm listening."

Daniel's voice quieted. "It feels like blasphemy to say this," he murmured, "but if they hadn't died, then I probably wouldn't be here right now." He picked up the empty mug, turning it back and forth in his pale hands. "When it... happened... all their promises died with them. They said they'd show me the world, but I had to find it on my own. I had to take their dreams and their work and finish what they'd started."

He faltered and looked at his knees, letting his bangs cover his face. Jack reached out to touch his hand, but stopped himself. Daniel didn't need his sympathy, just his understanding, and if Jack touched him now, he would shatter.

"They made me who I am today," Daniel continued, voice trembling slightly. "And I worry sometimes that—that I've disappointed them. That I've let their work go to waste. That what I do every day, fighting this war—that it isn't what they wanted."

"No," Jack said firmly, shaking his head. "You're saving the world, Daniel. Nothing would make them prouder." Jack gave in to impulse then, grasping Daniel's listless fingers and giving his hand a comforting squeeze. "And you know it."

Daniel covered Jack's hand with his own. "Thank you," he said quietly, giving Jack an absent smile, and Jack felt his heart lurch within his chest. This was what Jack fought for—smiles like this, brighter than any star. Like Charlie's. Like Sam's. Like Daniel's. Smiles that patched up his heart where the years had run through and left nothing behind.

Fingertips lingering, Daniel withdrew his hand. His eyes remained sorrowful, though, as they darted in the direction of the door. "I'm good, Jack. Thanks for stopping by."

Jack remained where he was; he opened his mouth, letting the words spill out. "Are you sure?" It came out sounding less casual than he'd hoped, but the look on Daniel's face meant he was grateful for the offer. "I mean, I could stay if you want."

"If you want," Daniel repeated, a smile curving the corner of his mouth.

They sat in silence for minutes that slowly stretched into hours. Jack left the chair and sat on the couch, nudging Daniel over and thumbing through a magazine. Daniel quickly emptied his cup of coffee, then reached for Jack's and downed it with a practiced ease. The only sound came from the aquarium against the wall; the fish wandered around, lost and bewildered, but somehow always found their way back to the plastic castle.

It was three-seventeen by Jack's watch and two-fifty-four by the wall clock when Daniel finally spoke. "Jack," he said quietly, long eyelashes lowered, "it's all right."

Jack raised his head, surprised by the steady tone of Daniel's voice. "You sure?"

"Yeah," Daniel replied with a small smile. He shifted a little, tension visible in his shoulders as he readied himself to stand. "Don't worry about me."

"What makes you think I worry about you?" Jack asked, barely making an attempt to get up. "I've got better things to do."

Daniel laughed, and there was a spark, a hint of the old Daniel flickering in his eyes that gave Jack more than a small measure of comfort. "Go home, Jack."

Jack reluctantly pushed himself out of the chair, stacking the magazines in a neat pile and giving the aquarium a farewell tap. He was almost at the door when he stopped and turned, pulling Daniel to him in one swift movement. The younger man's hair smelled like dust, like ink and black coffee, like his precious books, and Jack inhaled the scent, trying to keep this moment for as long they would need it.

"Jack," Daniel murmured into his shoulder. Jack didn't let go; brushing the bangs away from Daniel's face, he pressed a gentle kiss on the other man's forehead. He held Daniel for a few more seconds, hardly daring to breathe, and pulled away.

Daniel fumbled with the knob, pulling open the door as slowly as he could. "Good night, Jack," he said softly, following the older man's figure with his eyes. "And thank you for," he exhaled deeply and swallowed, barely hiding the tremble in his voice, "taking care of me."

"You're welcome," Jack replied, reaching up and ruffling Daniel's hair affectionately. He waited for a few seconds, unwilling to leave, but Daniel said nothing and closed the door.

Jack stepped out into the night, his guilt growing with every step. It wasn't like him to leave a friend when he was so obviously in pain, but for all his bookish, nerdy ways, Daniel was the strongest person he knew. When Hammond called them back to duty next week, the kid would be perfectly fine, ready to translate his heart out.

Whistling quietly, Jack had unlocked the door of his truck when he heard the patter of bare feet on the pavement. He didn't have to look to know whose cheek was pressed against his shoulder and whose unsteady arms held him tightly in place.

"Stay," Daniel said. The word was muffled against Jack's shirt, but it resounded with hope and Daniel's own unique brand of trust. Jack turned, seeing in Daniel's eyes the promise of too-sweet coffee and a threadbare afghan on the couch, and laughed.

Home was here.

 
 
( 33 — comment )
Warped On The Inside: magic[info]geekgirlofdoom on May 6th, 2006 04:57 pm (UTC)
Fantastic and beautiful. I'm always on the hunt for good "Gamekeeper" tags, but almost all of them are so...sappy. This is wonderful!
sarek! at the disco: find me there[info]introductory on May 6th, 2006 05:06 pm (UTC)
Thank you! (I personally thought it was too sappy myself, but then I'm biased.) :D
JaneDavitt: jack/danielshouldersbyamanda_is_wacky[info]janedavitt on May 6th, 2006 05:16 pm (UTC)
Oh, this was lovely; so many details that felt just right, and so much not said and totally understood.

Loved the ending, too, and that Daniel went after him.
sarek! at the disco: a court-martial waiting to happen[info]introductory on May 6th, 2006 06:05 pm (UTC)
Thank you. *beams*
Lilly: J/D - Always[info]tigerlilly2063 on May 6th, 2006 08:57 pm (UTC)
Mmmmhhhh... this made me feel really warm inside.

I really like your description of how they're drawn to each other, that they don't want to let go.

Lovely job.
sarek! at the disco: find me there[info]introductory on May 7th, 2006 05:42 pm (UTC)
Oh, thank you.
Em Dash: SG-1 Jack/Daniel Serious[info]theemdash on May 7th, 2006 01:40 am (UTC)
You really need to get rid of that intro about "making sure it didn't suck too badly," because This Rocked! I love the way Jack opens Daniel up and then the end where Daniel runs out to Jack. Great friendship thread. And your dialogue is quite good. Nothing to be ashamed of here.
sarek! at the disco: a court-martial waiting to happen[info]introductory on May 7th, 2006 05:44 pm (UTC)
You really need to get rid of that intro about "making sure it didn't suck too badly"

I guess it's just the writer's curse? I don't think any writer is ever comfortable with their own work, and to have to post it and leave it exposed to the world -- it's nervewracking, and if you apologize beforehand then no one can have great expectations.

But thank you for the compliments! Comments like this make my world go 'round. :D
Em Dash: Daniel Humor[info]theemdash on May 7th, 2006 08:55 pm (UTC)
I also write fanfic so that "writer's curse" excuse does not work on me. ;)

Just have confidence in yourself. I've actually found that making excuses like that tend to turn people off.
sarek! at the disco[info]introductory on May 7th, 2006 09:15 pm (UTC)
Okay, okay, I lose. I think you're right, actually. It's so hard to have confidence! But I will try, I promise. :x
Em Dash: SG-1 Mitchell[info]theemdash on May 7th, 2006 10:44 pm (UTC)
Good, good! I hate seeing good writers without confidence. And you are a good writer. I don't hand out compliments easily.
sarek! at the disco: a court-martial waiting to happen[info]introductory on May 9th, 2006 03:16 am (UTC)
Thank you, again.
kellifer_fic: you found me[info]kellifer_fic on May 7th, 2006 07:36 am (UTC)
This is so achingly pretty. Loved it.
sarek! at the disco: only mildly perturbed[info]introductory on May 7th, 2006 05:45 pm (UTC)
Oh, thank you! :D
[info]take_no_ko on May 7th, 2006 04:31 pm (UTC)
very nice and understated, I like it a lot. and the image of the threadbare afghan rug is very nice.
sarek! at the disco: love and happiness[info]introductory on May 7th, 2006 05:45 pm (UTC)
Thank you. *glows*
Izzy Clementine: jack x daniel[info]ruwalk on May 11th, 2006 04:19 am (UTC)
First off, the title was a great start -- the entire story hooked up with the lines of the song, and it was amazing.

But, jeeze, has this story metamorphosized! It was great when I saw it, but somehow you made it ten times better. Each moment holds a certain tenderness, from the moment Jack walks in, to the downing of coffee, to the hugs at the end.

I think the ending is perfect.

And even after reading it three times through, I still love this line best: "the fish wandered around, lost and bewildered, but somehow always found their way back to the plastic castle." They make the entire story -- my mind turn the fish into Jack and Daniel, and the plastic castle becomes home (and everything it entails, including love), bringing the entire story full circle.

Beyond wonderful (as usual), dear.
sarek! at the disco: a court-martial waiting to happen[info]introductory on May 12th, 2006 03:07 am (UTC)
Oh, thank you thank you thank you! I'm so glad you of all people approved of this! (I was worried you'd be like, "We-ell, it was better before...") This has me beaming and fluttering all over the place.

Also, the song.
Izzy Clementine: ben[info]ruwalk on May 12th, 2006 08:40 pm (UTC)
Oh, I wouldn't do that! (I would never say something that mean!) I meant every word I said -- the previous version was good, but this is more than I ever saw it becoming.

Oh, I have the song, dearie. It's so beautiful. ♥
a shooting star[info]_snookums on May 16th, 2006 11:16 pm (UTC)
Oh, this is good. Lovely.
sarek! at the disco: find me there[info]introductory on May 17th, 2006 03:45 am (UTC)
Thank you. :D
petmywings: pic#45627615[info]petmywings on May 16th, 2006 11:20 pm (UTC)
Wow
This really made me smile!
I love your use of imagery...
In fact, it's so sweet I fear I'll develop cavities :D
Great job!
sarek! at the disco: omens[info]introductory on May 17th, 2006 03:46 am (UTC)
Re: Wow
Oh, no, not cavities! *hands you a toothbrush*

I'm incredibly glad you enjoyed the fic. Also? GO love.
Advection[info]advection on May 24th, 2006 12:18 pm (UTC)
So quietly sweet, and they find such happiness in each other despite the painful baggage. I have the same reaction as Jack to the image of young Daniel in Egypt. Just adore this line: "They said they'd show me the world, but I had to find it on my own." And the last line really got to me, with everything that came before just the right build-up for it. Especially like the details of Daniel's apartment, grungy outside and clutter inside, and the way Daniel's hair smells.

Extra hooray for you writing in early seasons! Hope there's more. ::goes to poke around::
sarek! at the disco: talldark&[info]introductory on May 25th, 2006 04:17 am (UTC)
Oh, I'm so glad you liked this! (It's so flattering to get praise from writers like you!) I've always been kind of a sucker for details; usually so much so that I let dialogue suffer. :D

So sorry there isn't any more, but once school lets out I should be able to get a lot more writing done!
babs_sg1[info]babs_sg1 on June 2nd, 2006 12:48 am (UTC)
Sigh
I wish I was more eloquent, but all I can think to say after reading this fic is...beautiful.

Thank you for writing it.
sarek! at the disco: a court-martial waiting to happen[info]introductory on June 4th, 2006 02:51 am (UTC)
Re: Sigh
Oh, I'm very glad you liked it! Thanks for letting me know -- comments like this make me feel more confident in my writing. :D
Never store shuriken in your underwear[info]porntestpilot on October 16th, 2006 12:06 pm (UTC)
This is completely lovely. Thank you.
sarek! at the disco: don't ask[info]introductory on October 16th, 2006 09:35 pm (UTC)
You're welcome! It always gives me such a thrills when other people find my fics lovely.
Never store shuriken in your underwear: Jack/Daniel forevah[info]porntestpilot on October 16th, 2006 11:56 pm (UTC)
I see you also have the worlds most excellent icon!
sarek! at the disco: what is [info]introductory on October 16th, 2006 11:59 pm (UTC)
OR DO I?

That scene was the best scene ever. I played it for one of my SG-1-aversive friends and even she agreed that yep, gay.
Pouncer: Stargate explore[info]thepouncer on December 30th, 2006 10:58 pm (UTC)
Feedback, as promised!
I love The Gamekeeper, because it feeds my angst-hungry heart, so this story had an advantage from the beginning. The idea of Jack going to see Daniel based on something he saw in Sam's report makes me very happy. And it was so *Jack* to try to evade Daniel's question about the reason he came, and then give up and just tell the truth casually. At this point in the series, Jack's perspective of Daniel being that he's a kid works very well, and it always saddens me how Daniel has to change because of his involvement with SG-1. Another couple of years, and he's disillusioned and cynical and doesn't think he can change things anymore, but at this point, the reminder of his parents death forces him to reflect on his childhood and his path. I can see him needing reassurance, and then there was this:

He was almost at the door when he stopped and turned, pulling Daniel to him in one swift movement. The younger man's hair smelled like dust, like ink and black coffee, like his precious books, and Jack inhaled the scent, trying to keep this moment for as long they would need it.

"Jack," Daniel murmured into his shoulder. Jack didn't let go; brushing the bangs away from Daniel's face, he pressed a gentle kiss on the other man's forehead. He held Daniel for a few more seconds, hardly daring to breathe, and pulled away.


This made me very happy - that moment where all the built-up tension breaks into open affection. And then that Daniel reaches out and asks Jack to stay - it reminds me why I love them both so very much.
sarek! at the disco: a court-martial waiting to happen[info]introductory on January 2nd, 2007 09:03 am (UTC)
Re: Feedback, as promised!
Hi! I forgot that you were going to be giving feedback for Christmas!

I'm so very glad that you like this, particularly because of how well you know the characters (I initially took you for a psychology major from reading your commentaries). It's interesting that you added some of your own insight to the fic itself—not many readers think that deeply about what they're reading, or give feedback as such.

Thank you for the feedback! Have a great 2007!
( 33 — comment )