Show: Stargate Atlantis - 1x15
There you are.
Hey, I was just stealing a breath of fresh air.
I thought you were off exploring the city.
About to.
I picked this up on the mainland.
The athosians made it.
Happy birthday.
It's beautiful.
How did you find out?
Mum's the word.
All right, we're done with the living quarters.
We're moving on.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, before you go, did you see any better than our current quarters?
A few.
Some of them are pretty nice, actually.
Well, what kind of square footage are we talking about?
What am I, your realtor, Rodney?
We're here to unlock the secrets of Atlantis.
Yeah, well, I'm looking for a one-bedroom with a den.
Preferably with a balcony, but I'm not married to it.
Sir, check this out.
We might as well be comfortable, at least until the Wraith get here...
shut up for a second.
What?
What is it?
Some sort of laboratory.
We've come across dozens of those.
The city's full of them.
Something unusual about it?
I'd have to say...
yes.
Season 1: Episode 15 Before I Sleep Team24 and SG-66 for seriestele.
net and Forom.
com Transcript: Raceman Well, we could stand here looking at her all day.
What we've got to do is get her out of this box.
Rodney, we can't take that chance.
Look at her.
She's at least 100 years old.
Which is why every second counts.
I mean, she could drop dead while we stand here arguing.
How can she drop dead?
You said she was frozen.
Technically, she's in a state of metabolic stasis.
Aging slowed considerably, yes, but not entirely suspended.
You are saying this woman is still alive?
Yes.
Life-sign systems indicate viability.
According to the initial data I've been able to access, she's been in that chamber for 10,000 years.
10,000 years?
Doesn't look a day over 9,000.
She'll continue to age at a very slow rate until she dies, which, judging by the look of her, seems more likely to occur sooner rather than later, bringing me back to my original point.
Look at her.
She's so old, I'm afraid the process of reviving her might actually kill her.
We cannot let this chance to talk to a living, breathing ancient slip through our fingers.
Again.
And who knows what state of mind she'll be in?
Not to mention the fact she might carrying some horrifying contagion.
And who knows what she knows about our city?
More importantly, does she know about any ZPMs lying around?
Ah, there's a thought.
Revive her.
But, doctor That's my call.
Thank you.
And all the time we thought the city was abandoned.
Is it possible the atlantians left her behind when they abandoned the city for Earth?
Maybe she wanted to stay behind.
Maybe they forgot about her.
In which case, she's going to be really pissed when she wakes up.
If she remembers anything at all.
Breathing shallow.
Pulse rapid.
I'll run an E.E.G.
To determine any brain activity.
What is it?
I don't know.
Gate addresses, five of them.
M7G 677.
We've been to this planet.
Dr.
Weir...
Hello.
Can you hear me?
Yeah, that's what I was afraid of.
Freezer burn.
I thought she wasn't frozen.
10,000 years, you expect her to dance a bloody jig?
Yeah, but it's the eyes, Carson.
You got to look at the eyes.
The lights are on, but nobody's home.
Doesn't take a medical professional to know that...
of course she can see us...
And hear us.
Hello.
How are you feeling?
It worked.
What was that?
She said, "it worked".
What does that mean?
I assume something worked.
Yes, that's very sharp.
Thank you.
Hello?
She fell asleep.
When she's a bit more stable, transfer her to the infirmary, and I want video on her at all times, recording everything.
We might not get a second chance at anything she may say.
Let's hope we get a first, huh?
Too big, huh?
I'm not saying it's too big.
I'm just pointing out its dimensions.
Well, it's not that big Gentlemen?
We were just wondering whether there are any other frozen bodies out there in Atlantis that we haven't discovered.
And I was just saying there's no way of knowing in the short term.
It'd be like searching every room in every building in Manhattan.
It'll take a while.
God knows what other kinds of surprises are out there, not showing up on the sensors.
Ah, that's what we're here to find out.
Dr.
Weir?
Yes?
You'd better come to the infirmary.
Is our patient awake?
Aye, and she's saying the most peculiar things.
On our way.
She's drifting in and out, still very weak, but there's something a wee bit odd about this woman.
She called me Carson.
She knows my name.
Maybe she overheard you talking to someone.
No.
I was alone in here when she woke up.
What about subconsciously?
I've heard stories of coma patients being able to hear...
No, no, it's more than that.
She knows things.
How are you feeling?
Look at you.
I didn't think I'd see any of you again.
Missed you all so terribly...
Even you, Rodney.
You see?
I'm sorry?
Do we know you?
Oh, yes.
I'm you, Elizabeth.
Time travel?
That's what she said.
She...
somehow found a way to travel back in time to when the Ancients inhabited the city.
How did she...
do this?
That will be one of the first questions I ask her when she wakes up again.
If she ever wakes up again.
Let's not be too quick to exclude the possibility that the woman might be, um...
what is the clinical term?
Nuts?
She may be senile, yes, but that doesn't explain how she knows so much about all of us.
Is time travel even possible?
Well, according to Einstein's general theory of relativity, there's nothing in the laws of physics to prevent it.
Extremely difficult to achieve, mind you.
You need the technology to manipulate black holes to create wormholes not only through points in space, but time.
Not to mention a really nice DeLorean.
Don't even get me started on that movie.
I like that movie.
Results of the DNA test.
It's a match.
She is you.
I know what you're thinking.
If she's been waiting in that stasis chamber all these millennia for us to arrive, why didn't the system automatically attempt to revive her the moment we got here?
Answer: it did.
I've been going over the data from our arrival.
One of the first things we noticed was a sudden power surge in the section of the city where the stasis lab was.
It was trying to revive her, only we didn't know that.
All we saw was more power draining from an already nearly depleted ZPM, so we shut down all secondary systems.
I almost killed her...
you.
How weird is that?
Very.
Very, very weird.
Looking at yourself...
How you will be...
Actually, how you will be will be different than how she is right now.
See, the moment she went back in time, she created a separate reality, a second you, living in a...
in a parallel world, according to one of many interpretations of quantum theory.
I mean, simply put, this interpretation states that the universe is, in fact, split into an infinite number of copies of itself in which every possible outcome to every decision ever made all exists somewhere in this infinitely layered multi-universe.
Simply put.
Yeah, in a nutshell.
Elizabeth?
There's so much to tell you.
The note...
I had a note.
Yes.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
We got your note, and forgive my bluntness, but we really need to know everything about your encounter with the Ancients, beginning at the point where you went back in time.
Specifically, how you went back in time, because that would be very useful for us Rodney...
let me talk.
There was an accident.
I remember...
We arrived through the Stargate...
The lights came on by themselves...
Sensing our presence...
Who's doing that?
The city slowly awoke...
Dr.
Weir, you have to see this.
There are a lot of things I have to see.
Just be careful.
This must be the control room.
This, this is obviously their version of a DHD.
Oh, obviously.
This area is probably power control systems, some sort of a computer interface of some kind.
Why don't you find out?
Well, see, that's the hitch.
We've got lights coming on all over the city, air starting to circulate, but no power coming out of these consoles, so...
Wait a minute.
Back up a second.
That isn't the way it happened.
Everything came online when we arrived.
It was lights, computers, power control systems, everything.
I was able to access the database immediately.
That's not what happened.
Not the first time.
Isn't there something you can give her?
She's in an extremely fragile state.
Her blood pressure is low, her heart is very weak.
If I administer a stimulant, I'm afraid it may induce a dangerous arrhythmia or worse.
I'm not talking about a strong stimulant, just enough to keep her alert for a few more minutes at a time.
We hardly get a couple of words out of her before she dozes off.
Which, I might remind you, is not uncommon for a woman of 10,000.
Carson, I understand your reticence, but trust me when I say I believe she can handle it...
And I know she'd want it.
Okay.
It's okay, Carson.
I'm just as freaked out about all this as you are.
How's our patient doing?
Pressure's improving, and as you can tell, she's much more alert.
Are you up for getting out of here?
Seeing the city like this, sitting on the surface of the ocean.
You can't imagine how relieved I am.
What are you saying?
The city didn't rise the first time 'round?
No.
No.
The city was in serious trouble from the very moment we arrived.
We're trying to interface these consoles with temporary battery power, see if we can access the city's main power systems and get this place up and running.
Dr.
Weir, colonel Sumner.
Can you come down here and meet me, please?
We're three levels down from you.
Right away.
How we doing over there?
Nothing yet.
Well, let's see what we can do, then.
We've only been able to secure a fraction of the place.
It's huge.
So it might really be the lost city of Atlantis.
I'd say that's a good bet.
Oh, my god.
We're underwater.
I'd say we're under several hundred feet of ocean.
This could be a problem.
Oh, no.
Dr.
Weir, I need to see you in the control room immediately.
The city has a shield, some sort of a energy force field holding the water back.
That is, it had a shield.
The power systems are nearing maximum entropy.
Our arrival hastened their depletion, big time.
I mean, you can see, the shield is collapsing rapidly.
Several sections of the city are already flooded.
Can we use our own power generators?
I doubt our naquadah generators can supply enough power to sustain the shield, and we probably don't have time to try.
When I say rapidly collapsing, I mean rapidly.
Colonel Sumner, I need youto order all your security teams to stop searching the city and fall back to the gateroom immediately.
Sumner, do you copy?
Dr.
Weir, this is Sumner...
Colonel Sumner drowned?
And he wasn't the only one to perish.
We should start evacuating people through the Stargate.
We can't.
Whatever power's left in the system has been diverted to sustaining the shield holding the ocean back.
Do we know why this is happening now?
The shield might've held the water back for another 100 years, but power consumption spiked when we arrived.
This is happening because we arrived?
Yes.
What about auxiliary power?
I'll try to interface the gate with one of our generators.
Hopefully there's enough time.
Grodin, access the Stargate control systems, see if you can locate any gate addresses in the database.
Won't be nearly enough power to gate back to Earth, but maybe we'll have enough to gate elsewhere in pegasus.
Some of our team discovered a bay full of what they're calling ships.
As in space ships?
We should check them out.
You think you could figure out I could fly just about anything.
Good.
Go I'll start with this.
You start with one of those.
What am i looking for?
See how many people they can fit.
Maybe we can fly out of here.
Two piers of the city are almost entirely flooded, a third about to collapse as well!
Dr.
Weir, these ships look like a good fallback.
They can hold several people each.
Learning how to fly them's going to be another matter.
I'll see if I can pull up a schematic, find a way out.
This ship seems different than the others.
Different how?
It's a different control console.
I've radioed Zelenka.
He's on his way over to check it out.
Good, I'm on my way, too.
Oh, no.
What's wrong?
The city's going into a last-gasp self-protect mode.
Airtight bulkheads are slamming shut all over the city.
We've got people trapped.
Wouldn't that protect them?
It's too little, too late.
Most of the rooms are already breached.
We've got people trapped with water rising.
Damn.
I'll try to override the system, open the doors, but that's seriously hampering efforts to rig power to the Stargate.
If these ships turn out to be our only way out of here, I don't want you waiting too long to get up to the bay.
Rodney...
yes, yes, yes, I heard.
Go.
How are we doing?
This ship is different than the others.
Yeah, we know that.
Why?
What's it do?
I do not know.
I will need more time.
We don't have time.
It's airtight, I assume.
It's a space ship.
It'd better be.
Major Sheppard, I've located a roof hatch in the gate ship bay.
I'll try to get it open.
What was that?
Bulkhead doors leading out of the control room have all slammed shut.
We're locked in.
Can you get it open?
I'm trying!
Forget it.
The gate room's flooding.
Get them open and get up here.
We're waiting for you.
Elizabeth, we're going to keep trying to retract the roof.
As soon as it opens, you go.
Rodney...
Look, there's no time to argue!
Catastrophic failure is imminent.
Just lock yourself in and go.
Despite your efforts, there was nothing you could do, Rodney.
Within seconds, the control room was flooded.
I died?
You never gave up trying, right until the end.
Well...
A man wonders how he would choose to go out, given such dire circumstances.
Now I know.
Trying to save the lives of others.
But ultimately failing.
I'm sure if I had a few more seconds, I could...
Wait a second.
Why didn't the failsafe mechanism engage and raise the city to the surface?
Because there was no failsafe the first time.
Atlantis remained on the ocean floor.
The shield completely collapsed.
Water came crashing in, flooding every room in the city.
You both drowned while attempting to get our people into ships, and we, along with Dr.
Zelenka, we found ourselves trapped.
We need to get out of here!
Did McKay get the hatch open?
I do not know.
Major, there's six of us stuck in one of the ships!
What do we do?
What did you do?
I don't know.
I think I just turned it on.
Stand by, sergeant.
I'm not much for instruction manuals, but I could use one right about now.
Oh, my god.
It's space.
What happened?
Now what did you do?
I don't know.
I just...
What was that?
We were under attack.
We didn't know where we were or who was shooting at us.
And that's when John...
Carson!
This is Beckett.
I need medical assistance in the conference room asap.
How's she doing?
Stabilized, but still very weak, and getting weaker.
Your own mortality, staring you right in the face.
I can't imagine how you must be feeling.
When she looks at me, it's as if she's sensing my thoughts, and I'm sensing hers.
It's very unsettling.
Just when you thought this place couldn't get any weirder.
Well, it's obvious.
The puddle jumper they escaped in must've been some sort of a time machine.
It had to have an additional component built into it.
Flux capacitor.
Yeah, question is, where is the time machine now?
Why don't we ask her?
What happened?
Can you tell us?
The ship that you escaped in, where is it now?
It's gone.
Who is shooting at us?
Better question is, how do we shoot back?
Did I do that?
Hang on!
The next thing I knew...
I woke up here.
What, you mean now?
No.
Then.
You're awake.
His name was Janus.
He healed my wounds and explained to me what had happened.
Your ship was shot down.
We retrieved it from the ocean floor.
Major Sheppard, Dr.
Zelenka?
No one survived.
Ha!
Ah, the bitter taste of ultimate failure.
Well, if you had just figured out how to fix the damn shield in the first place, none of us would've died.
I did everything I could, including valiantly attempting to save your...
sorry Gentlemens...
focus.
Please continue.
Needless to say, I was very confused.
He explained to me that the ship we had escaped in was...
a time machine.
He was the one who built it.
After I was feeling better, he brought me before the atlantian council.
We welcome you to the city of Atlantis.
Thank you.
Unfortunately, your arrival has come at a time of great conflict.
We've been under siege for many years and have submerged our city as a measure of protection.
Yes, it's extraordinary.
It's how we found the city when we came through the Stargate.
From Earth?
Yes.
10,000 years from now.
It should be noted that our actions have succeeded in protecting the city for so many years.
Let us hope Dr.
Weir's arrival has not altered this eventuality.
By directly encountering the Wraith, she may have already set in motion a chain of events that could lead to a future far different from the one she left.
I'm sorry, what are the Wraith?
They told me of beings called Wraith, a vicious, formidable enemy whose power and technology rivaled their own.
Yes, actually, we've already...
The atlantians sent a delegation protected by their most powerful warships in the faint hope of negotiating a truce...
one on one, atlantian ships were more powerful, but the Wraith were so many.
After that great battle...
it was only a matter of time.
We're awaiting the last of our off-world transport ships before beginning our evacuation through the Stargate.
Where will you go?
We're returning to Earth.
You are welcome to join us.
Thank you.
That's very kind, but...
I'm sure you must understand my desire to return to the future, to my people.
I was hoping I would be able to use the time machine again, and program it to arrive at the precise moment we came through the Stargate, and if it was possible, and you had a ZPM I could take back with me, that would help us considerably.
See, the power systems of the city were virtually depleted when...
No.
Enough of this tampering with time.
Causality is not to be treated so lightly.
No one's treating it lightly.
You are, with your insistence on continuing these experiments despite the condemnation of this council.
We ordered you to cease these activities, and yet here we sit, face to face with a visitor from the future who arrived here in the very machine you agreed not to construct.
We are about to evacuate this city in the hope that it will lie safe for many years, and then one day, our kind will return...
and they have.
It is because of my experiments that we now have the opportunity...
Enough!
We have no time for this.
I am hereby ordering the destruction of this time-travel device and all the materials connected with its design.
You are welcome to return to Earth with our people.
You shall not be returning to yours.
The last set of test results only confirm the obvious.
Her skeletal, muscular, circulatory, and neuroendocrine systems have all been decimated by age.
I'm seeing renal failure, liver failure, and evidence of a stroke from her recent collapse.
How long does she have?
I doubt she'll live out the night.
Please...
I don't know how much time I have left to tell the story I've waited so long to tell.
The council...
they were very upset...
yes.
You said they decided to destroy the time machine.
I tried to talk them out of it.
I couldn't give up hope.
Thankfully, I had an ally.
You need to talk to Moros.
Dr.
Weir was brought here through no fault of her own.
She shouldn't be punished for it.
She's free to come with us back to Earth and live among our kind she needs to return to her time, not remain in ours.
That's not possible.
I'm sorry.
Wait.
I don't think you understand how far we've come or how much my people have sacrificed in the hopes of meeting you.
We call you the Ancients.
The gate builders.
We've crossed galaxies in the hopes of finding a great people.
Please, is there no other way you can help?
We could block the Stargate permanently after the evacuation.
That way, in the future, your team will be unable to come here.
If they can't come, the city may never be found.
But the lives of her expedition would be saved.
Thank you for your generous offer, but we are explorers, just like you.
Which should come as no surprise, since they are the second evolution of our kind.
Don't you understand?
This city will survive 10,000 years.
The council's decision is final.
Of course, Janus refused to concede defeat.
The more someone told him not to do something, the more he had to do it.
So he came up with an alternate plan behind the council's back.
It was all I could do to try to keep pace with him.
May I ask what it is you're doing?
Calculating the necessary power needed.
Needed for...
You said the shield collapsed shortly after your arrival.
I have to find a way to extend the supply of power.
What is it you called them?
ZPM.
Zero point module.
Yes...
They're designed to operate in parallel, all three providing power to the city simultaneously.
However, used in sequence, it may be possible to sustain the necessary power for the needed time.
I couldn't believe my eyes.
Three ZPMs, right in front of me.
There is one small problem, however.
Someone will need to remain behind in the city to transfer the power from one device to the other, to rotate them sequentially.
Over thousands of years?
It is possible.
Janus, please report to central control.
Their transport ship was inbound.
It was taking heavy fire.
Cloaking shields damaged!
We're returning fire, but we cannot access!
There's too many enemy ships.
And there are more coming.
Engage auxiliary power.
Try to outrun them.
There are over 300 people on that transport.
Begin evacuation.
We must leave, now.
Damn, fell asleep again.
Well, you're not the only one.
Are you in any pain?
Would we admit it if we were?
I wish there was more we could do for you.
Oh, look at you.
Always worrying.
You put too much pressure on yourself.
Remember...
that miserable baltic negotiation?
What simon told us afterwards?
Breathe?
Among other things.
Enjoy the moment.
What's here right now, the sun, the breeze...
our birthday.
Sheppard couldn't keep it to himself, huh?
I'm just saying stop being so damn hard on yourself.
Life is quick.
Not for you.
It was my choice, Elizabeth.
I didn't second-guess it then...
and I don't regret it now.
Where is Dr.
Weir?
She's gone through the gate.
She was among the first to evacuate.
Good.
Janus prepared the stasis chamber for me.
Said it would be like a deep, dreamless sleep.
I'm inputting commands for the system to revive you twice, at intervals of approximately 3.3 thousand years so that you can rotate the ZPMs.
I'll give you instructions on how to reactivate the stasis process afterwards.
I'm also entering the necessary commands to commence final revival the moment sensors indicate the presence of your expedition team.
Look, I feel that I must tell you that there is a possibility, remote as it is, that this might not succeed.
I know.
It's impossible to predict what'll happen over such a long period of time.
I'm convinced that you will survive.
But in the highly unlikely eventuality that you don't, I've programmed a failsafe mechanism to protect the city.
A failsafe?
Yes, if the power drains to a critical level, the mechanism holding the city on the ocean floor will release, and it will rise to the surface.
Really?
and then they left, all of them, returning to Earth through the Stargate.
What's all that?
My research.
You're going to build another time ship?
I doubt I'll succeed, seeing that the council will be watching my every move.
I'm sure you'll find a way.
I've blocked all addresses to the gate except Earth.
You will be safe.
Thank you.
Thank you, for giving me the hope that Atlantis will survive another 10,000 years after you discover it again.
I'm ready.
And then I was alone.
I set the city to slumber...
and began my long journey home.
It worked, the stasis, the failsafe.
You gave up your entire life.
No, because we are the same person.
The best part of my life is just beginning.
I'm exploring a new galaxy.
I have years ahead of me still.
Trust yourself, Elizabeth.
All that matters...
is right now.
The note, I wrote it in case I didn't survive.
Has Rodney figured it out yet?
Five gate addresses.
Outposts...
each one with a zero point module.
Janus told me.
The note she left, it's coordinates of planets to have known ZPMs.
They could still be there.
M7G 677's on here.
This is amazing.
Elizabeth, we've got...
We're about to start our mission briefing, so...
I'll be right there.
Actually, John?
Give me a minute, will you?
Sure.
Hey, I was just stealing a breath of fresh air.
I thought you were off exploring the city.
About to.
I picked this up on the mainland.
The athosians made it.
Happy birthday.
It's beautiful.
How did you find out?
Mum's the word.
All right, we're done with the living quarters.
We're moving on.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, before you go, did you see any better than our current quarters?
A few.
Some of them are pretty nice, actually.
Well, what kind of square footage are we talking about?
What am I, your realtor, Rodney?
We're here to unlock the secrets of Atlantis.
Yeah, well, I'm looking for a one-bedroom with a den.
Preferably with a balcony, but I'm not married to it.
Sir, check this out.
We might as well be comfortable, at least until the Wraith get here...
shut up for a second.
What?
What is it?
Some sort of laboratory.
We've come across dozens of those.
The city's full of them.
Something unusual about it?
I'd have to say...
yes.
Season 1: Episode 15 Before I Sleep Team24 and SG-66 for seriestele.
net and Forom.
com Transcript: Raceman Well, we could stand here looking at her all day.
What we've got to do is get her out of this box.
Rodney, we can't take that chance.
Look at her.
She's at least 100 years old.
Which is why every second counts.
I mean, she could drop dead while we stand here arguing.
How can she drop dead?
You said she was frozen.
Technically, she's in a state of metabolic stasis.
Aging slowed considerably, yes, but not entirely suspended.
You are saying this woman is still alive?
Yes.
Life-sign systems indicate viability.
According to the initial data I've been able to access, she's been in that chamber for 10,000 years.
10,000 years?
Doesn't look a day over 9,000.
She'll continue to age at a very slow rate until she dies, which, judging by the look of her, seems more likely to occur sooner rather than later, bringing me back to my original point.
Look at her.
She's so old, I'm afraid the process of reviving her might actually kill her.
We cannot let this chance to talk to a living, breathing ancient slip through our fingers.
Again.
And who knows what state of mind she'll be in?
Not to mention the fact she might carrying some horrifying contagion.
And who knows what she knows about our city?
More importantly, does she know about any ZPMs lying around?
Ah, there's a thought.
Revive her.
But, doctor That's my call.
Thank you.
And all the time we thought the city was abandoned.
Is it possible the atlantians left her behind when they abandoned the city for Earth?
Maybe she wanted to stay behind.
Maybe they forgot about her.
In which case, she's going to be really pissed when she wakes up.
If she remembers anything at all.
Breathing shallow.
Pulse rapid.
I'll run an E.E.G.
To determine any brain activity.
What is it?
I don't know.
Gate addresses, five of them.
M7G 677.
We've been to this planet.
Dr.
Weir...
Hello.
Can you hear me?
Yeah, that's what I was afraid of.
Freezer burn.
I thought she wasn't frozen.
10,000 years, you expect her to dance a bloody jig?
Yeah, but it's the eyes, Carson.
You got to look at the eyes.
The lights are on, but nobody's home.
Doesn't take a medical professional to know that...
of course she can see us...
And hear us.
Hello.
How are you feeling?
It worked.
What was that?
She said, "it worked".
What does that mean?
I assume something worked.
Yes, that's very sharp.
Thank you.
Hello?
She fell asleep.
When she's a bit more stable, transfer her to the infirmary, and I want video on her at all times, recording everything.
We might not get a second chance at anything she may say.
Let's hope we get a first, huh?
Too big, huh?
I'm not saying it's too big.
I'm just pointing out its dimensions.
Well, it's not that big Gentlemen?
We were just wondering whether there are any other frozen bodies out there in Atlantis that we haven't discovered.
And I was just saying there's no way of knowing in the short term.
It'd be like searching every room in every building in Manhattan.
It'll take a while.
God knows what other kinds of surprises are out there, not showing up on the sensors.
Ah, that's what we're here to find out.
Dr.
Weir?
Yes?
You'd better come to the infirmary.
Is our patient awake?
Aye, and she's saying the most peculiar things.
On our way.
She's drifting in and out, still very weak, but there's something a wee bit odd about this woman.
She called me Carson.
She knows my name.
Maybe she overheard you talking to someone.
No.
I was alone in here when she woke up.
What about subconsciously?
I've heard stories of coma patients being able to hear...
No, no, it's more than that.
She knows things.
How are you feeling?
Look at you.
I didn't think I'd see any of you again.
Missed you all so terribly...
Even you, Rodney.
You see?
I'm sorry?
Do we know you?
Oh, yes.
I'm you, Elizabeth.
Time travel?
That's what she said.
She...
somehow found a way to travel back in time to when the Ancients inhabited the city.
How did she...
do this?
That will be one of the first questions I ask her when she wakes up again.
If she ever wakes up again.
Let's not be too quick to exclude the possibility that the woman might be, um...
what is the clinical term?
Nuts?
She may be senile, yes, but that doesn't explain how she knows so much about all of us.
Is time travel even possible?
Well, according to Einstein's general theory of relativity, there's nothing in the laws of physics to prevent it.
Extremely difficult to achieve, mind you.
You need the technology to manipulate black holes to create wormholes not only through points in space, but time.
Not to mention a really nice DeLorean.
Don't even get me started on that movie.
I like that movie.
Results of the DNA test.
It's a match.
She is you.
I know what you're thinking.
If she's been waiting in that stasis chamber all these millennia for us to arrive, why didn't the system automatically attempt to revive her the moment we got here?
Answer: it did.
I've been going over the data from our arrival.
One of the first things we noticed was a sudden power surge in the section of the city where the stasis lab was.
It was trying to revive her, only we didn't know that.
All we saw was more power draining from an already nearly depleted ZPM, so we shut down all secondary systems.
I almost killed her...
you.
How weird is that?
Very.
Very, very weird.
Looking at yourself...
How you will be...
Actually, how you will be will be different than how she is right now.
See, the moment she went back in time, she created a separate reality, a second you, living in a...
in a parallel world, according to one of many interpretations of quantum theory.
I mean, simply put, this interpretation states that the universe is, in fact, split into an infinite number of copies of itself in which every possible outcome to every decision ever made all exists somewhere in this infinitely layered multi-universe.
Simply put.
Yeah, in a nutshell.
Elizabeth?
There's so much to tell you.
The note...
I had a note.
Yes.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
We got your note, and forgive my bluntness, but we really need to know everything about your encounter with the Ancients, beginning at the point where you went back in time.
Specifically, how you went back in time, because that would be very useful for us Rodney...
let me talk.
There was an accident.
I remember...
We arrived through the Stargate...
The lights came on by themselves...
Sensing our presence...
Who's doing that?
The city slowly awoke...
Dr.
Weir, you have to see this.
There are a lot of things I have to see.
Just be careful.
This must be the control room.
This, this is obviously their version of a DHD.
Oh, obviously.
This area is probably power control systems, some sort of a computer interface of some kind.
Why don't you find out?
Well, see, that's the hitch.
We've got lights coming on all over the city, air starting to circulate, but no power coming out of these consoles, so...
Wait a minute.
Back up a second.
That isn't the way it happened.
Everything came online when we arrived.
It was lights, computers, power control systems, everything.
I was able to access the database immediately.
That's not what happened.
Not the first time.
Isn't there something you can give her?
She's in an extremely fragile state.
Her blood pressure is low, her heart is very weak.
If I administer a stimulant, I'm afraid it may induce a dangerous arrhythmia or worse.
I'm not talking about a strong stimulant, just enough to keep her alert for a few more minutes at a time.
We hardly get a couple of words out of her before she dozes off.
Which, I might remind you, is not uncommon for a woman of 10,000.
Carson, I understand your reticence, but trust me when I say I believe she can handle it...
And I know she'd want it.
Okay.
It's okay, Carson.
I'm just as freaked out about all this as you are.
How's our patient doing?
Pressure's improving, and as you can tell, she's much more alert.
Are you up for getting out of here?
Seeing the city like this, sitting on the surface of the ocean.
You can't imagine how relieved I am.
What are you saying?
The city didn't rise the first time 'round?
No.
No.
The city was in serious trouble from the very moment we arrived.
We're trying to interface these consoles with temporary battery power, see if we can access the city's main power systems and get this place up and running.
Dr.
Weir, colonel Sumner.
Can you come down here and meet me, please?
We're three levels down from you.
Right away.
How we doing over there?
Nothing yet.
Well, let's see what we can do, then.
We've only been able to secure a fraction of the place.
It's huge.
So it might really be the lost city of Atlantis.
I'd say that's a good bet.
Oh, my god.
We're underwater.
I'd say we're under several hundred feet of ocean.
This could be a problem.
Oh, no.
Dr.
Weir, I need to see you in the control room immediately.
The city has a shield, some sort of a energy force field holding the water back.
That is, it had a shield.
The power systems are nearing maximum entropy.
Our arrival hastened their depletion, big time.
I mean, you can see, the shield is collapsing rapidly.
Several sections of the city are already flooded.
Can we use our own power generators?
I doubt our naquadah generators can supply enough power to sustain the shield, and we probably don't have time to try.
When I say rapidly collapsing, I mean rapidly.
Colonel Sumner, I need youto order all your security teams to stop searching the city and fall back to the gateroom immediately.
Sumner, do you copy?
Dr.
Weir, this is Sumner...
Colonel Sumner drowned?
And he wasn't the only one to perish.
We should start evacuating people through the Stargate.
We can't.
Whatever power's left in the system has been diverted to sustaining the shield holding the ocean back.
Do we know why this is happening now?
The shield might've held the water back for another 100 years, but power consumption spiked when we arrived.
This is happening because we arrived?
Yes.
What about auxiliary power?
I'll try to interface the gate with one of our generators.
Hopefully there's enough time.
Grodin, access the Stargate control systems, see if you can locate any gate addresses in the database.
Won't be nearly enough power to gate back to Earth, but maybe we'll have enough to gate elsewhere in pegasus.
Some of our team discovered a bay full of what they're calling ships.
As in space ships?
We should check them out.
You think you could figure out I could fly just about anything.
Good.
Go I'll start with this.
You start with one of those.
What am i looking for?
See how many people they can fit.
Maybe we can fly out of here.
Two piers of the city are almost entirely flooded, a third about to collapse as well!
Dr.
Weir, these ships look like a good fallback.
They can hold several people each.
Learning how to fly them's going to be another matter.
I'll see if I can pull up a schematic, find a way out.
This ship seems different than the others.
Different how?
It's a different control console.
I've radioed Zelenka.
He's on his way over to check it out.
Good, I'm on my way, too.
Oh, no.
What's wrong?
The city's going into a last-gasp self-protect mode.
Airtight bulkheads are slamming shut all over the city.
We've got people trapped.
Wouldn't that protect them?
It's too little, too late.
Most of the rooms are already breached.
We've got people trapped with water rising.
Damn.
I'll try to override the system, open the doors, but that's seriously hampering efforts to rig power to the Stargate.
If these ships turn out to be our only way out of here, I don't want you waiting too long to get up to the bay.
Rodney...
yes, yes, yes, I heard.
Go.
How are we doing?
This ship is different than the others.
Yeah, we know that.
Why?
What's it do?
I do not know.
I will need more time.
We don't have time.
It's airtight, I assume.
It's a space ship.
It'd better be.
Major Sheppard, I've located a roof hatch in the gate ship bay.
I'll try to get it open.
What was that?
Bulkhead doors leading out of the control room have all slammed shut.
We're locked in.
Can you get it open?
I'm trying!
Forget it.
The gate room's flooding.
Get them open and get up here.
We're waiting for you.
Elizabeth, we're going to keep trying to retract the roof.
As soon as it opens, you go.
Rodney...
Look, there's no time to argue!
Catastrophic failure is imminent.
Just lock yourself in and go.
Despite your efforts, there was nothing you could do, Rodney.
Within seconds, the control room was flooded.
I died?
You never gave up trying, right until the end.
Well...
A man wonders how he would choose to go out, given such dire circumstances.
Now I know.
Trying to save the lives of others.
But ultimately failing.
I'm sure if I had a few more seconds, I could...
Wait a second.
Why didn't the failsafe mechanism engage and raise the city to the surface?
Because there was no failsafe the first time.
Atlantis remained on the ocean floor.
The shield completely collapsed.
Water came crashing in, flooding every room in the city.
You both drowned while attempting to get our people into ships, and we, along with Dr.
Zelenka, we found ourselves trapped.
We need to get out of here!
Did McKay get the hatch open?
I do not know.
Major, there's six of us stuck in one of the ships!
What do we do?
What did you do?
I don't know.
I think I just turned it on.
Stand by, sergeant.
I'm not much for instruction manuals, but I could use one right about now.
Oh, my god.
It's space.
What happened?
Now what did you do?
I don't know.
I just...
What was that?
We were under attack.
We didn't know where we were or who was shooting at us.
And that's when John...
Carson!
This is Beckett.
I need medical assistance in the conference room asap.
How's she doing?
Stabilized, but still very weak, and getting weaker.
Your own mortality, staring you right in the face.
I can't imagine how you must be feeling.
When she looks at me, it's as if she's sensing my thoughts, and I'm sensing hers.
It's very unsettling.
Just when you thought this place couldn't get any weirder.
Well, it's obvious.
The puddle jumper they escaped in must've been some sort of a time machine.
It had to have an additional component built into it.
Flux capacitor.
Yeah, question is, where is the time machine now?
Why don't we ask her?
What happened?
Can you tell us?
The ship that you escaped in, where is it now?
It's gone.
Who is shooting at us?
Better question is, how do we shoot back?
Did I do that?
Hang on!
The next thing I knew...
I woke up here.
What, you mean now?
No.
Then.
You're awake.
His name was Janus.
He healed my wounds and explained to me what had happened.
Your ship was shot down.
We retrieved it from the ocean floor.
Major Sheppard, Dr.
Zelenka?
No one survived.
Ha!
Ah, the bitter taste of ultimate failure.
Well, if you had just figured out how to fix the damn shield in the first place, none of us would've died.
I did everything I could, including valiantly attempting to save your...
sorry Gentlemens...
focus.
Please continue.
Needless to say, I was very confused.
He explained to me that the ship we had escaped in was...
a time machine.
He was the one who built it.
After I was feeling better, he brought me before the atlantian council.
We welcome you to the city of Atlantis.
Thank you.
Unfortunately, your arrival has come at a time of great conflict.
We've been under siege for many years and have submerged our city as a measure of protection.
Yes, it's extraordinary.
It's how we found the city when we came through the Stargate.
From Earth?
Yes.
10,000 years from now.
It should be noted that our actions have succeeded in protecting the city for so many years.
Let us hope Dr.
Weir's arrival has not altered this eventuality.
By directly encountering the Wraith, she may have already set in motion a chain of events that could lead to a future far different from the one she left.
I'm sorry, what are the Wraith?
They told me of beings called Wraith, a vicious, formidable enemy whose power and technology rivaled their own.
Yes, actually, we've already...
The atlantians sent a delegation protected by their most powerful warships in the faint hope of negotiating a truce...
one on one, atlantian ships were more powerful, but the Wraith were so many.
After that great battle...
it was only a matter of time.
We're awaiting the last of our off-world transport ships before beginning our evacuation through the Stargate.
Where will you go?
We're returning to Earth.
You are welcome to join us.
Thank you.
That's very kind, but...
I'm sure you must understand my desire to return to the future, to my people.
I was hoping I would be able to use the time machine again, and program it to arrive at the precise moment we came through the Stargate, and if it was possible, and you had a ZPM I could take back with me, that would help us considerably.
See, the power systems of the city were virtually depleted when...
No.
Enough of this tampering with time.
Causality is not to be treated so lightly.
No one's treating it lightly.
You are, with your insistence on continuing these experiments despite the condemnation of this council.
We ordered you to cease these activities, and yet here we sit, face to face with a visitor from the future who arrived here in the very machine you agreed not to construct.
We are about to evacuate this city in the hope that it will lie safe for many years, and then one day, our kind will return...
and they have.
It is because of my experiments that we now have the opportunity...
Enough!
We have no time for this.
I am hereby ordering the destruction of this time-travel device and all the materials connected with its design.
You are welcome to return to Earth with our people.
You shall not be returning to yours.
The last set of test results only confirm the obvious.
Her skeletal, muscular, circulatory, and neuroendocrine systems have all been decimated by age.
I'm seeing renal failure, liver failure, and evidence of a stroke from her recent collapse.
How long does she have?
I doubt she'll live out the night.
Please...
I don't know how much time I have left to tell the story I've waited so long to tell.
The council...
they were very upset...
yes.
You said they decided to destroy the time machine.
I tried to talk them out of it.
I couldn't give up hope.
Thankfully, I had an ally.
You need to talk to Moros.
Dr.
Weir was brought here through no fault of her own.
She shouldn't be punished for it.
She's free to come with us back to Earth and live among our kind she needs to return to her time, not remain in ours.
That's not possible.
I'm sorry.
Wait.
I don't think you understand how far we've come or how much my people have sacrificed in the hopes of meeting you.
We call you the Ancients.
The gate builders.
We've crossed galaxies in the hopes of finding a great people.
Please, is there no other way you can help?
We could block the Stargate permanently after the evacuation.
That way, in the future, your team will be unable to come here.
If they can't come, the city may never be found.
But the lives of her expedition would be saved.
Thank you for your generous offer, but we are explorers, just like you.
Which should come as no surprise, since they are the second evolution of our kind.
Don't you understand?
This city will survive 10,000 years.
The council's decision is final.
Of course, Janus refused to concede defeat.
The more someone told him not to do something, the more he had to do it.
So he came up with an alternate plan behind the council's back.
It was all I could do to try to keep pace with him.
May I ask what it is you're doing?
Calculating the necessary power needed.
Needed for...
You said the shield collapsed shortly after your arrival.
I have to find a way to extend the supply of power.
What is it you called them?
ZPM.
Zero point module.
Yes...
They're designed to operate in parallel, all three providing power to the city simultaneously.
However, used in sequence, it may be possible to sustain the necessary power for the needed time.
I couldn't believe my eyes.
Three ZPMs, right in front of me.
There is one small problem, however.
Someone will need to remain behind in the city to transfer the power from one device to the other, to rotate them sequentially.
Over thousands of years?
It is possible.
Janus, please report to central control.
Their transport ship was inbound.
It was taking heavy fire.
Cloaking shields damaged!
We're returning fire, but we cannot access!
There's too many enemy ships.
And there are more coming.
Engage auxiliary power.
Try to outrun them.
There are over 300 people on that transport.
Begin evacuation.
We must leave, now.
Damn, fell asleep again.
Well, you're not the only one.
Are you in any pain?
Would we admit it if we were?
I wish there was more we could do for you.
Oh, look at you.
Always worrying.
You put too much pressure on yourself.
Remember...
that miserable baltic negotiation?
What simon told us afterwards?
Breathe?
Among other things.
Enjoy the moment.
What's here right now, the sun, the breeze...
our birthday.
Sheppard couldn't keep it to himself, huh?
I'm just saying stop being so damn hard on yourself.
Life is quick.
Not for you.
It was my choice, Elizabeth.
I didn't second-guess it then...
and I don't regret it now.
Where is Dr.
Weir?
She's gone through the gate.
She was among the first to evacuate.
Good.
Janus prepared the stasis chamber for me.
Said it would be like a deep, dreamless sleep.
I'm inputting commands for the system to revive you twice, at intervals of approximately 3.3 thousand years so that you can rotate the ZPMs.
I'll give you instructions on how to reactivate the stasis process afterwards.
I'm also entering the necessary commands to commence final revival the moment sensors indicate the presence of your expedition team.
Look, I feel that I must tell you that there is a possibility, remote as it is, that this might not succeed.
I know.
It's impossible to predict what'll happen over such a long period of time.
I'm convinced that you will survive.
But in the highly unlikely eventuality that you don't, I've programmed a failsafe mechanism to protect the city.
A failsafe?
Yes, if the power drains to a critical level, the mechanism holding the city on the ocean floor will release, and it will rise to the surface.
Really?
and then they left, all of them, returning to Earth through the Stargate.
What's all that?
My research.
You're going to build another time ship?
I doubt I'll succeed, seeing that the council will be watching my every move.
I'm sure you'll find a way.
I've blocked all addresses to the gate except Earth.
You will be safe.
Thank you.
Thank you, for giving me the hope that Atlantis will survive another 10,000 years after you discover it again.
I'm ready.
And then I was alone.
I set the city to slumber...
and began my long journey home.
It worked, the stasis, the failsafe.
You gave up your entire life.
No, because we are the same person.
The best part of my life is just beginning.
I'm exploring a new galaxy.
I have years ahead of me still.
Trust yourself, Elizabeth.
All that matters...
is right now.
The note, I wrote it in case I didn't survive.
Has Rodney figured it out yet?
Five gate addresses.
Outposts...
each one with a zero point module.
Janus told me.
The note she left, it's coordinates of planets to have known ZPMs.
They could still be there.
M7G 677's on here.
This is amazing.
Elizabeth, we've got...
We're about to start our mission briefing, so...
I'll be right there.
Actually, John?
Give me a minute, will you?
Sure.