Ooops, sorry. But, eh, better to find out now than after you've written a thousand words going the wrong direction. Teyla genuinely feels she killed Purdy, because he was dying from what she did. Rodney feels he killed him.John, of course, blames himself, because the escape happened because of him, so all collateral damage accrues to his karmic balance.
Just because John tells them how long Garner was down there doesn't mean they accept that. And, hey, the earlier nature of his 'attack' on Garner could be used as an argument that they were secretly planning the great escape all along and it didn't happen because of the disposition from the SGC.
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Teyla genuinely feels she killed Purdy, because he was dying from what she did. Rodney feels he killed him.John, of course, blames himself, because the escape happened because of him, so all collateral damage accrues to his karmic balance.
Just because John tells them how long Garner was down there doesn't mean they accept that. And, hey, the earlier nature of his 'attack' on Garner could be used as an argument that they were secretly planning the great escape all along and it didn't happen because of the disposition from the SGC.